Gajalakshmi Paramasivam
04
August 2017
Boat
People are the Heirs of White Settlers
The
Australian Government’s advertisement, discouraging Sri Lankans from setting
foot on Australian soil, through pathways outside the official process caught
my attention as our train from Colombo got closer and closer to Jaffna. I do not know whether they were on the walls
of stations close to Colombo. But the ads did not feel ‘right’. The law and its
custodians do not always lead us to Truth. They help us travel together. As a society,
if majority Sri Lankans do not consciously follow the Common law, then the lawful pathway may need to be set
aside for personal peace of mind. Where that happens to successfully lead one
to Truth – that person becomes an Equal facility as the Government in relation to
that issue. Hence the role of NGOs in conflict-ridden parts of the world.
As
per news reports under the heading ‘Donald Trump told Malcolm Turnbull ‘you are worse than I am’ in January phone call’, our Australian Prime
Minister said to the American President:
[TURNBULL: Absolutely. We have, as you know, taken
a very strong line on national security and border protection here and when I
was speaking with Jared Kushner just the other day and one of your immigration
advisers in the White House we reflected on how our policies have helped to
inform your approach. We are very much of the same mind. It is very interesting to know how you prioritise the minorities in
your Executive Order. This is exactly what we have done with the program to
bring in 12,000 Syrian refugees, 90% of which will be Christians. It will
be quite deliberate and the position I have taken — I have been very open about
it — is that it is a tragic fact of life that when the situation in the Middle
East settles down — the people that are going to be most unlikely to have a
continuing home are those Christian minorities. We have seen that in Iraq and
so from our point of view, as a final destination for refugees, that is why we
prioritise. It is not a sectarian thing. It is recognition of the practical
political realities. We have a similar perspective in that respect.]
Well, on factual
basis Buddhism Foremost is part of the Constitution of Sri Lanka. All
minorities in terms of religion, including Muslims are adversely affected by this Article in the
Sri Lankan Constitution the influence of which is often seen in practice. Effectively therefore – Mr. Turnbull is
claiming to practice Religion based discrimination which to my mind is in
breach of Australia’s Racial
Discrimination Act 1975.
Recently, my attention was drawn to the Island article
: ‘50 years on: LGB&T equality brings
success’, by James Dauris – the British High Commissioner to Sri Lanka,
in which the High Commissioner states:
[Today we take pride in the UK’s commitment to
non-discrimination on any grounds, including sexual orientation and gender
identity. We talk openly about our commitment to promoting and protecting
rights for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGB&T) people, recognizing
not only that they deserve to be accorded the same dignity, respect and rights
as other citizens, but that it’s in all of our interests that this is so.]
With the Queen as our
Monarch, the UK is the Big Brother of Australia. Britain seems to be blind to
the repeated failures by Australia to uphold the principles on which Racial Discrimination Act 1975 is based.
As a victim of the government’s negligence of its duty to this Law, I noted the
following in response to the above claim by the British High Commissioner:
[A
law could cause unjust discrimination problem or it could cure one. Where a law
is used to show one’s cleverness and/or higher authority, it often leads to
unjust discrimination. Gay marriages becoming lawful have the potential for Equal status being taken where, as per the
Truth – the individual has benefited from the sacrifices made by her/his
parents in man-woman marriages. It’s a greater challenge to know the feelings
of those of another culture. Gender is also a reason why there are cultural
differences at the surface level. Physical differences are the source of attraction as well as unjust
discrimination.
The
example of this in terms of immigration is the Equal Opportunity Laws which
actually require seniors at a place, to forego their seniority and treat new
arrivals as Equals. If Sinhalese were first in Southern Sri Lanka and Tamils in
Northern Sri Lanka, democracy requires them to treat the other side as Equals
instead of their ‘juniors’. The reason is the unknown credits and debits of the
new arrivals which could lead to damaging their self-respect and therefore of
the whole. Tamils of Northern Sri Lanka
who sought separation would have difficulty adjusting to the laws of Democracy
in their new Western Nations where Equality is actively promoted by
Governments. One could not be Equal and Senior at the same time within a global
context. Hence most continue to live as Sri Lankans, Tamils or Sinhalese when
it comes to Governance issues. It’s living in the past and that is ok – so long
as we do not enforce it on others in our current environments.
Gay
partnerships continue to be in the minority and hence carry the risk of unjust discrimination. The
laws of Nature do not discriminate between minority-majority, man-woman,
senior-junior. If one is Naturally gay – it is her/his right to be so. But when
those rights are indiscriminately mixed with the protocols of man-woman marriage groups – there are risks of
unjust discrimination by those who are used to taking senior positions in the
traditional family structures without having earned those senior positions and just discrimination
by those who have earned those higher positions through personal sacrifice to
enjoy unregulated natural pleasures.
In the above example, the laws of Equality when
applied at the surface level are likely to not have Truth as the basis. Seniors
often have to use the law even when their personal Truth says otherwise. Mr.
Turnbull failed that test of leadership.
On the basis of Australians as a whole – our pathways
is different to that of Britain. Our early settlers who are our elders in
immigration did arrive by Boat. No law has the right to deny that to the heirs
of those early settlers of Australia. Many of them were outlawed by the British
system. Mr. Turnbull has spoken as one of those Seniors in authority instead of
those who made a home in Australia, from a negative reputation at the
beginning. LTTE may be Terrorists to majority Sinhalese even though the JVP
(Sinhalese militants) also chose the same pathway. As per the laws of nature –
relativity above the line of Common Belief needs to be transparent on merit
basis applied on level playing field. But within Common Belief – it needs to be
confidential – as if one part is helping the other before publishing the final
outcome of the whole.
As per published news :
[The
Washington Post obtained the transcript of the January 28 call
between Mr Turnbull and Mr Trump days after the US President’s inauguration.
The transcript of the call is
based on records kept by White House note-takers monitoring the President’s
phone calls called a “memorandum of conversation.”
The newspaper said the classified
transcript had been reviewed and classified Trump’s National Security Council
chief of staff, retired Lt. General Keith Kellogg Jr.
It said these transcripts were
commonly circulated to White House staff and senior policymakers.]
The fact
that the material has not been kept confidential confirms that Americans have
paid lip service to Transparency or that Australia was not part of their inner
circle bound by Common Belief. That
Truth now comes out.
By failing to honour our Australian ancestors who arrived by Boat – Mr. Turnbull has confirmed lack of depth in his own commitment to the whole of Australia – beyond time barriers. He sounds more British than Australian – including through his show of commitment to Christianity. A true Australian would value Boat arrivals as the heirs of early settlers and leave them to face the challenges with least help from the Government. Boat arrivals are more likely to set up home quickly in Australia – due to the problems faced. Those problems could include possible rejection as per global laws – but Australian leaders do not have the authority to anticipate negative contribution from such arrivals at a higher rate than immigrants through other channels who may have not endured enough difficulties to come past the economic barrier. In this instance the businessman in Mr. Turnbull seems to have suppressed the humanitarian leader needed by Australia, in terms of refugees. Our ancestors would invoke the right kind of powers to support 'outcasts' to become good and progressive citizens.
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