Gajalakshmi Paramasivam
21
July 2019
Easter
Bombings – Insiders and Outsiders
Today,
two articles about the Easter Bombings came to my attention. One was by the
Australian under the heading [Sri Lankan bomb impact
‘felt like electric shock’]. The other was by Ceylon Today under the heading ‘We Shall Not Forget’.
The
Australian article is at surface level and how individual victims were affected
by what happened. The Ceylon Today article is about Policy failures. Australian
support would help the Australian victims heal faster than their Sri Lankan
counterparts due to weaker commitment to Policy by the Sri Lankan Government, relative
to the Australian Government.
Reading
the Australian article brought back my experience as an individual when my
daughter and husband were seriously injured while crossing the road on a
pedestrian crossing. At community level, my mind was filled by my direct
experience with victims of the bombings of the ethnic war in 2009. Most of those
with whom I shared were Tamil civilians. Some were children to whom I listened with my
heart – as if they were a part of me – a part that had no voice of its own.
In its article - Ceylon Today states [Three months later, we are still grieving.
The pain hasn’t lessened. It never will. But it has now been replaced by
another emotion: anger.
During
the last three months dozens of suspects were rounded up, several groups
identified as harbouring extremist views have been banned. The President
appointed a committee to probe the incident , and the committee appointed by
parliament is still conducting investigations. Former IGP Pujith Jayasundara
and Secretary to the Ministry of Defence Hemasiri Fernando were arrested by the
CID and later released on bail.]
Yes, my pain in the family experience is as intense as
it was 30 years ago if I recall just the accident details. But it is far less
anxiety prone when I recall with those details – my own contribution towards
prevention – after knowing what can go wrong even on a pedestrian crossing,
where the pedestrian has the right of way. It is our personal contribution to
prevention and protection that protects us from anxiety that we felt when we
had lesser credit with prevention and protection systems.
Jermayne, who responded to theAustralian article also identifies with
this in her/his own way:
[The developed world must not forget about the developing world ( third
world).
Lets start with airports. On a recent visit to Singapore from Melbourne I noticed some high tech scanners in operation in both airports. The check points and procedures were similar. However, if one visits a country like Sri Lanka none of these extremely high tech scanners and procedures are present. How does this protect our citizens who visit or any citizen for that matter? Sadly, it doesn’t.
Similarly, local laws in each country, domestic training in terms of intelligence etc to protect people from this menace vary across the globe. Analogous to global warming matters, there needs to be a united and uniform effort to ameliorate the impact of terrorism on humans. ]
Lets start with airports. On a recent visit to Singapore from Melbourne I noticed some high tech scanners in operation in both airports. The check points and procedures were similar. However, if one visits a country like Sri Lanka none of these extremely high tech scanners and procedures are present. How does this protect our citizens who visit or any citizen for that matter? Sadly, it doesn’t.
Similarly, local laws in each country, domestic training in terms of intelligence etc to protect people from this menace vary across the globe. Analogous to global warming matters, there needs to be a united and uniform effort to ameliorate the impact of terrorism on humans. ]
Recently
a Sri Lankan argued with me that using Pythogorean
theorem and a manual measure could not
be directly related. I said that by purpose they were common. Likewise
measuring pain at emotional level and at common level.
When
I learn about similar accidents to Australian individuals – I do feel pain but
not the anxiety that it might happen to me again. My ‘projected vision’ is now
based on my true experience not only of the direct damage but also my
contribution to its prevention. I now know also that I was able to draw on the
Australian system’s true contribution to healing and recovery as if I made that
contribution.
Non-Tamils
known to me did not express feelings for Tamil victims of war - the way they are expressing in the case of
Easter bombings pain as if it was
theirs. Hence one is entitled to conclude that they are ‘outsiders’ to the
victims of the Sri Lankan ethnic war. Likewise Tamils who overwhelmingly identified
with the victims of the 2009 battle – demonstrated weaker identity with Easter
Bombings’ non-Tamil Sri Lankan victims.
This
means that if they think they are Sri Lankans – they are part of the problem.
When driven by benefits – we tend to divide and separate.
Ceylon
Today highlights this as follows:
‘The Executive President of this who is the Head
of State, Head of Government – Head of Cabinet of Ministers and Commander- in-
Chief of the Armed Forces who is also the Minister of Defence as well as Minister of Law and Order –
did not even once apologize to the nation for the failure to safeguard them.’
The
duty of the Governor in President’s position – is to facilitate the nation to
see itself through its truth. If therefore the President did not feel
responsible – it was his duty to show that and he did. Ceylon Today continues as follows:
[The Prime Minister, however, apologized to
the nation for the failure to prevent the attacks. But mere apologies are not enough. Own up to your mistakes. ]
As
an individual – the PM’s apology were to victims as individuals. The truth
within that is that he failed to develop systems that would prevent and
protect. If Mr Wickremesinghe owns up to his mistakes – then he paves the way
for Mr Rajapaksa to become Prime Minister. Then we would have thousands of
deaths instead of hundreds.
A
big part of the problem is the duality of the government. In a reliable
structure – seniors have authority to develop structures and juniors have the
duty to follow Due Process until they know / learn through experience that the
seniors’ structure is not reliable. From then on they are entitled to be driven
by their own truth but not replace the structure including by simple majority
acceptance. Hence the two thirds majority rule in relation to fundamental
structural changes.
Fundamentals
are of exponential value because they are based on truth realized by the
owners. Any place where truth is realized by a person/group – is her/his/their
homeland. If this is not visible – then it is a nation.
Where
juniors such as JVP or LTTE did not win enough votes to form government – they who
opposed the government become their opposition in Democracy. Had the Sri Lankan government developed
Democratic structures that facilitated such opposers to be Equal Opposition –
the Easter attacks would have been prevented as Muslims would have become
opposers of Buddhists in the provinces where they are more independent than the
Buddhists. In provinces where Muslims
are majority they would have hope of becoming government one day. That is the
way of Democratic policy.
This
government called the leadership common but it was really Divided – because it
was born out of a divided country for which the then government took credit.
The parallel of that in a natural environment is for Muslims who defeated the
government – to take credit for their killings as ‘victory’. Emotions without
belief change form according to one’s desires and fears. Truth changes form
according to the needs of the time and place. Both are beyond calculations and
therefore could only be identified with by a self-governing person.
Insiders
don’t need structures. Those insiders who own the problem from the victims’
side – already have the basis for the solution. The path of outsiders is slow
and requires repetitive learning. Even self-governing person who feels at home
in Sri Lanka – contributes to the solution at its roots.
No comments:
Post a Comment