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Lanka
Sri Lankan president offers empty apology for 1983 pogrom
By Sarath Kumara
6 August 2004
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When the Sri Lankan ruling elite starts to speak about honesty,
it is always laced with a heavy dose of hypocrisy. That is certainly
the case with President Chandrika Kumaratungas recent public
apology to the countrys Tamil minority for the
1983 communal pogrom, which cost hundreds of lives, turned tens
of thousands into refugees and marked the start of the countrys
devastating civil war.
Speaking at a meeting to mark the 21st anniversary of the pogrom,
Kumaratunga declared: Every citizen in this country should
collectively accept the blame and make an apology to the tens
of thousands who suffered. I would like to assign to myself that
task on behalf of the State of Sri Lanka, the government and on
behalf of all of us; all the citizens of Sri Lanka to extend that
apology.
The apology was accompanied by nominal compensation
to some of the victims. Just 72.3 million rupees [$US702,000]
will be paid to 937 people or an average of 77,000 rupees [$750]
for the injuries and destruction they suffered. Leaving aside
the cost in lives, the loss of property alone in 1983 has been
estimated to run into billions of rupees.
Kumaratungas sweeping declaration that every citizen
was to blame is to consciously obscure the role played by the
ruling elites in Colombo not only for the pogrom itself but their
deliberate resort to anti-Tamil chauvinism over the preceding
decades and since. Ever since independence in 1948, the ruling
class has responded to mass opposition and every challenge to
its rule by fomenting communal divisions. Between 1958 and 1983,
there were seven major anti-Tamil riots.
While the president now offers an empty apology for the events
of 1983, her Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) was responsible for
institutionalising the anti-Tamil discrimination in the 1960s
and 1970s that paved the way for the pogrom and the war. Along
with the United National Party (UNP), she and the SLFP ruthlessly
prosecuted the racialist war against the Liberation Tigers of
Tamil Eelam (LTTE) to ensure the predominance of the Sinhala elite
over their Tamil counterparts.
Kumaratunga is offering an apology at this point in a pitiful
attempt to ease communal tensions as the 30-month ceasefire with
the LTTE teeters on the brink of collapse. She is well aware that
a return to war would be deeply unpopular not only among masses
of ordinary working people but with corporate leaders, who would
regard such a step as an economic disaster.
Both Kumaratunga and her SLFP are thoroughly steeped in chauvinist
politics. She is as incapable of opposing the slide back to a
war that has already cost at least 65,000 lives, as she is unable
to tell the truth about the events of 1983.
Every citizen was not to blame for the tragic events.
It is open secret that this violence was instigated and organised
by then UNP government of President J.R. Jayewardene. After the
bodies of soldiers slain by the LTTE were brought to Colombo on
July 23, 1983, an organised attack took place on Tamils in Colombo
and other areas that lasted for two weeks.
Sinhala chauvinist thugs armed with sticks, iron bars and swords,
as well as home-made petrol and kerosene bombs, unleashed a reign
of terror with the open support or participation of the police
and military. Tamil residences and businesses were set on fire
and people were murdered in cold blood. In many areas, not even
the tea kiosks and small vendors were spared.
The gangs openly drove around in vehicles from the government-owned
transport board and other departments. They used electoral lists
to identify and attack the homes of Tamils.
At least 500 people were brutally murdered in the capital Colombo
and more than 100,000 fled to the north and east of the island
as refugees. In the country as a whole, several thousands were
killedmany were burned alive or hacked to death. Many young
Tamil girls and women were gang raped. Even Tamil hospital patients
were attacked and killed. On July 27, 53 Tamil political prisoners
were brutally murdered in custody.
Ordinary Sinhalese were horrified at the carnage and many risked
their own lives to try to save their friends and neighbours. They
hid their neighbours, often for days, until they could flee to
a safer place. In some areas, Sinhala workers attempted to save
the property of their Tamil friends by declaring that no Tamils
lived in the neighbourhood and turning away the thugs.
In a letter to President Jayewardene on August 10, 1983, Tamil
United Liberation Front (TULF) leader A. Amirthalingam directly
accused the UNP of involvement. The attack on the Tamil
people is pure ethnic violence planned well ahead and executed
with ruthlessness by forces close to the government. These forces
include the armed forces for whom Mr Cyril Mathew [Industries
Minister and UNP trade union leader] always holds a brief in Parliament,
he wrote.
A few days before the pogrom, on July 17, 1983, President Jayewardene
had already hinted at what was to come in an interview in the
British-based Daily Telegraph: I am not worried about
the opinion of the Jaffna people [Tamils] now.... Now we cannot
think of them. Not about their lives or of their opinion about
us.
The pogrom served a definite political purpose. After coming
to power in 1977, Jayewardene abandoned the previous policy of
national economic regulation and launched an offensive against
workers rights and conditions, as well as welfare and other
services. Faced with mounting mass opposition, the UNP, like the
previous SLFP-led government, deliberately whipped up communalism
to divide the working class and to shore up its own declining
base of support.
In her recent speech, Kumaratunga declared: Something
has gone wrong somewhere down the line. We should do a bit of
soul-searching, cleanse our souls and take the country forward.
But the pogrom was no accident or aberration. The Sri Lankan
ruling class can no more meet the basic needs and aspirations
of working people today than in 1983. And it will just as readily
resort to the communal violence to preserve its rule. The challenge
before the working class is to decisively reject all forms of
racism and chauvinism and to unite to put an end to profit system
that produces such atrocities.
See Also:
Suicide bomb blast in Sri
Lanka threatens ceasefire
[9 July 2004]
Sri Lankan military's intrigues
with LTTE rebel faction threaten ceasefire
[8 July 2004]
Continued killings in eastern
Sri Lanka threaten to undermine ceasefire
[1 June 2004]
Attempts to restart Sri Lankan
peace talks heighten political instability
[20 May 2004]
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