Tuesday, May 3, 2011

When another terrorist was killed in Sri Lanka people danced in the streets, and the West called it triumphalism .

By Charles.S. Perera
Lankaweb.com
May 02, 2011

When President Barack Obama announced the death of  Osama bin Laden, it twas reported that, the «  The news touched off an extraordinary outpouring of emotion as crowds gathered outside the White House, in Times Square and at the Ground Zero site, waving American flags, cheering, shouting, laughing and chanting, “U.S.A., U.S.A.!” In New York City, crowds sang “The Star-Spangled Banner.” Throughout downtown Washington, drivers honked horns deep into the night.”

We Sri Lankans can understand it but when our people in Sri Lanka broke out into similar “outpouring of emotions” the Western media called it triumphalism. It is strange how the reaction of the people of two worlds on  similar issues could be seen differently one as an out pouring of emotions , and the other as rude triumphalism.

It is good to be a rich powerful country to rid of terrorists and be happy that there would be no one to “question  how ? ” nothing  but peace and happiness thereafter.  But regrettably  a developing country which gets rid of terrorism is  not allowed to enjoy that peace after terrorism, without quickly being accused  for war crimes.

In Sri Lanka we suffered 30 years of ruthless terror our innocent villagers were massacred, our  Security Officers, innocent men, women and children were killed by suicide bomb blasts and snipers, our Ministers, Parliamentarians and Presidents were killed or disabled for life, our children were massacred in trains, innocent travelers in  buses were bombed, a bus load of our Buddhist priests were butchered inside the bus, our airports were bombed and terrorism restricted our daily existence.

But yet when we finally eliminated terrorism and saved the suffering of the people and loss of our valued  leaders and heroes, the very same America that rejoices today the death of a terrorist  who was the prime mover for the massacre of  innocent Americans, “  just on one day ” through utter terror,  accuses  Sri Lanka Government and Armed Forces for war crimes and violation of human rights, for eliminating  that group of terrorists who practically every day  for thirty years  killed and massacred over  70 000 of our people in side our own country.

Where is justice, and why is it  that suffering through terrorism is understood only when it happens to the big and powerful,  and  not  when the sufferer is not oneself but others poorer and less powerful.

It was 10 years ago in a September that  the American people were attacked , and the American Government sent its Army to Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan in search of the perpetrator and finally he was hunted and killed.  But in Sri Lank the  attacks were  a daily happening and the perpetrator was helped by the West and the Tamil diaspora living in America and other foreign countries  collected funds to allow the terrorist in Sri Lanka to keep killing the innocent people.

When Sri Lanka finally caught the perpetrator in his den and killed  and removed terrorism from the country,  and the Government started a massive rehabilitation project and  cleared the areas held by the terrorists and removed the  mines and re-settled the displaced Tamil people back in their villagers, the West comes round along with the Human Rights activists, Amnesty International, UN and Ban Ki Moon, Navi Pillai, investigation Panels, Robert Blake , and American State Department to pontificate to us how we should have carried out the elimination of  terrorists, and accuses the Government and  the Army for war crimes.

No one can assert that there was no Zero civilian loss in Afghanistan, Iraq and Pakistan  through out the hunt for  Osama Bin Laden during the past 10 years.  Will the American State Department advise Ban Ki Moon to appoint a panel of investigators to look into any violation of human rights in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan  through intense bombardments  and drone attacks  in the hunt for  Osama bin Laden ?

We agree with the President Barrack Obama when he says , “And yet we know that the worst images are those that were unseen to the world. The empty seat at the dinner table. Children who were forced to grow up without their mother or their father. Parents who would never know the feeling of their child’s embrace. Nearly 3,000 citizens taken from us, leaving a gaping hole in our hearts. “

Yes that was 3000 citizens lost to a country and fathers mothers and children  lost to families.  We suffered these losses more frequently for 30 years  and in all it was more than 70 000 of our citizens, and fathers, mothers, children, and some time the only “bread earner” to the  families.   May be in the rescue operations and the elimination of terrorism some of our  citizens may have died  in that effort but those  civilians who also died in the hunt for Osama bin  Laden may be countless though they are from families poorer than those in America and whose loss are not felt by any one in far away America.

It was worst for us in Sri Lanka because it was not hunting and eliminating terrorists in a foreign land, but our soldiers had to rescue the innocent civilians (our own people) that were herded by the terrorists to be their human shield  and that was the most difficult task that fell on the shoulders of the poor soldiers to  avoid being killed , not kill civilians and kill the terrorists, what happens in such an effort only a soldiers in the midst of it would know.

That onerous task cannot be understood by Ban ki Moon or his advisory panel, Robert Blake, David Milliband, Hillary Clinton, Amnesty International, human rights activists , UK Channel 4 or numerous critics of Sri Lanka, it has to be one inside doing the difficult task of a soldier, who would know what it was like,  it could be  explained by this one sentence of the President Barrack Obama, “And yet we know that the worst images are those that were unseen to the world. “

It was the same with our President Mahinda Rajapakse when he  announced the death of the terrorists leader Prabhakaran, it marked the “ most significant achievement to date  in our nation’s effort to defeat  terrorism in Sri Lanka”.

As much as the President Barack Obama asserted to his people:

“As we do, we must also reaffirm that the United States is not — and never will be — at war with Islam. I’ve made clear, just as President Bush did shortly after 9/11, that our war is not against Islam. Bin Laden was not a Muslim leader; he was a mass murderer of Muslims. Indeed, al-Qaida has slaughtered scores of Muslims in many countries, including our own. So his demise should be welcomed by all who believe in peace and human dignity.”

our President Mahinda Rajapakse also said  very clearly that his Government and the Armed Forces were not and never will be at war with the Tamil people… that the war  was not against Tamils and that Prabhakatran was not a leader of the Tamil people, he was a mass murderer of his own people and the rest of the communities of Sri Lanka.  His demise  should be welcomed  by all who believe in peace and human dignity.

We appeal to the President Barrack Obama to understand,  that as he said ,  no country “……..will ever tolerate its security being threatened, nor stand idly by when its people have been killed. All countries  will be relentless in defense of its citizens and friends and allies.”  ,and request  his State Department, and other  countries sympathetic to terrorist front Organizations of the Sri Lanka Tamil Diaspora, and Ban Ki Moon of UN  to get off the “back “ of Sri Lanka  and stop threatening to take Sri Lanka before a war tribunal for the elimination of its terrorist under very difficult conditions,  and “ understand the cost of war.”