Sri lanka: ‘Black July’: Forgotten, forgettable?

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N Sathiya Moorthy,  28July 2018

Thirty-five years after the event, the nation is still going through the ‘ritual’ of remembering, if not observing the ‘Black July’ anti-Tamil pogrom of 1983. Rather, the Tamils ‘observe’ it and the rest of the nation is ‘observing’ what the Tamils are doing, or not doing, if only to make comparisons with the past, and draw pro-LTTE or ‘slow-LTTE’ parallels – and by default.

If the younger generation of non-Tamils do not even recall such a sad and sordid episode ever happened, they are not to blame. Even those that were witness to the end-game of ‘Eelam War IV’ and the attendant celebrations outside of the Tamil areas, at times outside Tamil homes in non-Tamil majority areas, including capital Colombo until the Government and the armed forces intervened, they do not know where it all began.

The LTTE was a terror outfit, which it was, and all Tamils are ‘suspects’, or that’s what they had grown up, learning. Less said about their connecting it all back to ‘Black July’, leave alone the seedling in the ‘Sinhala Only’ law of the mid-Fifties, the better.

It is not without reason. Those that were/are Tamil victims either talk politics nearer home, or are in faraway lands, perceived to be ‘political refugees’ but mostly ending up as ‘economic refugees’. That is as far as whoever had not perished in the decades of war, including  militant/terrorist LTTE cadres and all those they too killed, from among fellow-Tamils, militants and others.

That is the irony of the present-day Tamil situation. Even the twice-a-year annual memorials for the Tamil victims of those events have become as ritualistic as it could become. Granting that ‘Black July’ occurred decades ago, the same cannot be said about what the Tamils mourned as the ‘Mullivaikkal massacre’, in May 2009.

If anything, there is a larger mass of records and evidence to the ‘Black July’ massacre. Yet, no action was initiated against the culprits, nor has there been any demand for the same, after a point. The Darussman Report and all Tamil-initiated probes notwithstanding, the actual number of lives lost at Mullivaikkal, and the number of non-combatants among them, is yet to be ascertained with a certain degree of accuracy, but there has been a hue and cry for ‘justice’ for the victims.

Hollowness of the demand

The irony of the Tamil situation – and the hollowness of the demand, if it has to be acknowledged to be what it was/is – was visible all through. Nowhere else was/is it evident from the Tamils not having any problem voting the war-time army chief and present-day Minister, Field Marshal Sarath Fonseka in the presidential poll that followed only months after the war’s end.

The Tamils were and still are opposed to the political leadership of war-time President Mahinda Rajapaksa. When they want ‘justice’ for the war’s victims, who then are they referring to? Is it the political leadership of the time or the administrative head of the Defence Ministry, in Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa, or the men in uniform – or, all of them put together? Therein is the irony of the present-day Tamil situation, which makes their demand less genuine and even less palatable.

Illogical Tamil logic…

If they were/are serious about it, the Tamils should have put the Rajapaksas and the Fonsekas together, even if not in the reverse order. They should have demanded ‘justice’ against them all. If it was politics of the ‘anti-Sinhala’ majoritarian variety, they could and should be demanding ‘justice’ for the Tamil victims of ‘Black July’, when their present-day UNP friends were in power as a party, if not as individuals. Even now, it may not be too late.

The question then arises, why and how the ‘Sinhala perpetrators’ of the ‘anti-Tamil pogroms’ of 1983 and 2009 were/are to be delineated and blamed ‘exclusively’, now? The illogical ‘Tamil logic’ just does not gel. Looking back, they should be able to acknowledge that they were guided and led to their conclusions on ‘war-crimes’ and ‘accountability issues’, not by their conscience alone, but by their western backers, who had other agendas for and in Sri Lanka – or, so would it seem.

If the question was that they could not press their demand for ‘justice’ for ‘Black July’ victims owing to the prevailing political situation of the times and also the ‘Cold War’ era complexities in the international arena, they could still flag the issues even now. Some of the survivors may even be able to identify the on-ground perpetrators of such violence, who may have grown old but may still be walking the streets of Sri Lanka in flesh and blood, their heads held high, and at times, holding high offices.

The UNP was in power at the time, and unlike what some foreigners wanted to conclude, it was the UNP men, including incumbent Ministers like Cyril Mathew – and not the JVP — were at the helm of all that happened, and did not happen. By broad-basing their political demands as ‘more powers’ all the time, they have made it all amorphous. The new generation Tamils may not even know what ‘Sinhala Only’ was all about, if at all they know such a thing exists.

That way, the Tamils seem to have pushed former President Chandrika Bandaranaike-Kumaratunga (CBK), out of their vision, holding all the bows and arrows exclusively in the direction of Mahinda R. It is another matter that the Tamils (too) voted overwhelmingly in her maiden presidential outing.

Provoking the forces

That was also when the LTTE found out that they had been left out of finding a political solution to what was yet to be designated as ‘the national problem’. In the elections afterwards, they controlled whether or how the Tamils should vote – with the power of the gun, that is.

In between, you had the LTTE finding terrorist ways to provoke the armed forces, and hence the CBK leadership, to retaliate on the ground. Once it all began, the Tamils began hating CBK, too – only because the LTTE had to hate her and the LTTE asked or directed them to ‘hate her’.

Yet, today, the Tamils have no problem either with the UNP rulers, perpetrators and participants in ‘Black July’ massacre. In Elections-2010 and even more in Elections-2015, CBK became their political guide of sorts, if not master. In this background their singling out the Rajapaksas, leaving out the UNP, CBK and Fonseka, among others, sound hollow, to say the least – or, so it seems.

Political, politicised

If the Tamils are serious about ‘war-crimes probe’, maybe they should begin with proving the apolitical nature of their demand. It is not too late even now to do that. Then, they should be able to agree to a national probe, rather than an international affair, which seems studded with justification of every kind from every side – but not justice for their victims.

What the Tamils should then seek to ensure is to make such a probe as much independent and transparent as it can be under the circumstances. They may have missed out an opportunity to avoid blaming the nation’s judiciary, as used to be the wont on other occasions, when a fellow-Tamil in Justice K S Sripavan was the Chief Justice.

This is not to cast aspersions on the integrity of other Justices and Chief Justices, but only to point out that the Tamils may have had ‘their own Judge’ whose judgment of men and matter they could trust even more. The incumbent Government also seemed to have missed the argument and opportunity, when they were leading the international community and the TNA friends alike, along the garden path, at UNHRC and in the nation’s Parliament. They could have done whatever they intended doing (if serious and sincere) when Justice Sripavan was in office.

If today, the Sri Lankan State as an institution, notwithstanding who is in power or who is not, seems lacking in will and willingness to act on the Tamil demand for justice for their ‘war victims’, it owes mostly to the absence of ‘fairness’ in the demand, including transparency, sincerity and universal application of the demand. The Tamils seem wanting to target only the lower-rung officers and soldiers, who in fitness of things, were only ‘obeying the orders from the top’, even granting that the charges were/are prima facie true. This being the case, naturally, Sri Lankan State decisions, too, will be political and politicised.

There is also the accompanying Sri Lankan State suspicion that the Tamil polity in the nation has been taking orders from ‘outside’ the country – from nations that have their own vested interests. The latter is seen as using the TGTE kind of ‘enemies of Sri Lanka’ on the one hand. They are also seen as allowing the TGTE to use them, as well. The reference of course is to the TNA leadership and/or rebels, including Northern PC Chief Minister, Justice C V Wigneswaran.

Today, when the chips are down, the Tamil polity is seen as getting increasingly divided nearer home, and consolidated more and more than any time in the post-LTTE past, overseas, under the ‘separatist’ TGTE. Playing the same game in the reverse and independent of whoever is in power in Colombo, Establishment Sri Lanka would be tempted to wait out the Tamil polity until it collapses completely nearer home, and the TGTE kind of ‘pro-LTTE face’ alone stands out in the global crowd, for them to turn the tables, as was the case with the LTTE in the end.

The TGTE has marked ‘Black July’ observances this year with a TV news channel, accessible by all Sri Lankan Tamils across the world. If the Government feels nervous over the development, it is not without reason. After all, the LTTE was known as much for its propaganda success stories as for its military prowess and greater intelligence and street-smartness, the latter when it came to suicide-bombers of the kind employed in the assassinations of Premadasa, Kadirgamar and even more, Rajiv Gandhi. Minus the ‘military’ tactics and ‘terror attacks’, the TGTE, for instance,  has nothing to fear, and all the time to wait for its turn, this generation and the coming ones!

http://colombogazette.com/2018/07/28/black-july-forgotten-forgettable/

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N Sathiya Moorthy is Senior Fellow and Director, ORF Chennai A double-graduate in Physics and Law, and with a journalism background, N. Sathiya Moorthy is at present Senior Fellow & Director of the Chennai Chapter of the Observer Research Foundation. Starting his journalism career in the Indian Express – now, the New Indian Express – at Thiruvananthapuram as a Staff Reporter in the late Seventies, Sathiya Moorthy worked as a Subeditor at the newspaper’s then sole publication centre in Kerala at Kochi. Sathiya Moorthy later worked in the Times of Deccan, Bangalore, and the Indian Express, Ahmedabad. Later, he worked as a Senior/Chief Sub at The Hindu, Chennai, and as News Editor, The Sunday Mail (Chennai edition). He has thus worked for most major English language national newspapers in the country, particularly with the advent of Tamil Nadu as the key decision maker in national politics demanding that all newspaper had a reporter in Chennai that they could not afford to have full-time. This period also saw Sathiya Moorthy working as Editor of Aside magazine, Chennai, and as Chief News Editor, Raj TV. In the new media of the day, he was contributing news-breaks and analyses to Rediff.com since its inception. Later, he worked as the Editorial Consultant/Chief News Editor of the trilingual Sri Lankan television group MTV, Shakti TV and Sirasa. Since 2002, Sathiya Moorthy has been the Honorary/full-time Director of the Chennai Chapter of the Observer Research Foundation. In the course of his job and out of personal interest, he has been studying India’s southern, Indian Ocean neighbours, namely Maldives and Sri Lanka, as well as the South Asian Association of Regional Cooperation (SAARC). He regularly writes on these subjects in traditional and web journals. He has also authored/edited books on Sri Lanka, and contributed chapters on India’s two immediate southern neighbours. His book on Maldives is waiting to happen. As part of his continuing efforts to update his knowledge and gain greater insights into the politics and the society in these two countries in particular, Sathiya Moorthy visits them frequently. Among other analytical work, he has been writing a weekly column for over 10 years in the Colombo-based Daily Mirror, first, and The Sunday Leader, since, for nearly 10 years, focusing mainly on Sri Lankan politics and internal dynamics, and at times on bilateral and multilateral relations of that nation. Expertise • Indian Politics, Elections, Public Affairs • Maldives • Sri Lanka • South Asia • Journalism and Mass Media Current Position(s) • Senior Fellow and Director, ORF Chennai Education • BGL, Madras University • BSc, Madurai University

4 COMMENTS

  1. I doubt whether the writer has complete information about Eelam Tamils’ struggle for freedom and independence and LTTE was a product of Sinhala Buddhist state terrorism. LTTE came into existence with the support of former Indian progressive leaders including Indra Gandhi and MGR.
    As the writer brand LTTE, were Indian leaders supported, trained and armed a terrorist organization? It is the Tamils who supported their freedom struggle as so called democracy is a total failure due to state terrorism, denial of rule of law and Justice, state forces are used by Sinhala Hardcore politicians to commit genocide against Tamils. Many feel now India has a Hindu /Hindi fascist regime in power and the leader was accused of war crimes.

    Indian federation to a total failure with ganga rapes, lawlessness, no good governance, corruption in every sector, lack of Justice, hate crimes, extreme poverty and illiteracy in another evidence of failure of governance. Failing and corrupt India is meddling with its neighbours and Dravidian Tamils do not want India’s meddling in their affairs.

    World knows that governments are committing war crimes, crimes against humanity, genocide, denial of rule of law and R2P on the name of democracy and also with the culture of impunity. IPKF committed mass atrocities against Tamils during their so called peace keeping mission.

    It is a joke that the writer advocates for an internal war crimes probe while successive Sri Lankan governments unleash terror against Tamils over 70 Years with culture of impunity and denied rule of law and Justice. Is the writer an agent of the Sri Lankan regime trying to cover up genocide or Indian collaboration to genocide? Tamils are ready to support freedom struggles from barbaric, inhuman and fascist Indian federation. Time will tell the power and struggle of Dravidian Tamils for peace, independence, freedom, Justice from Sinhala Buddhist and Indian Federation fascist regimes!

  2. Under your new definition and interpretation, "what is terrorism" and branding LTTE as a terrorist outfit, then Subash Chandra Bose, Bagath Singh, Vallabhbhai Patel (Sardar Patel), Nelson Mandela all are terrorists.

    Are you practicing double standards policy?

  3. The writer is trying to say that Tamils will forget and forgive the BLACK JULY HOLOCAUST – Tamils were burnt alive; Houses and establishments looted and set on fire. The state sponsored porgrom is watched by the police and military while the massacre is going on.
    Black July 1983: The Genocide of Tamils in Sri Lanka
    http://tuckmagazine.com/2018/07/25/black-july-1983-genocide-tamils-sri-lanka/

    Government Sponsored, Institutionalized Systematic Pogroms Against the Tamils in Sri Lanka
    https://www.academia.edu/36663347/Government_sponsored.docx
    https://www.academia.edu/28419303/Hindu_Tamils_Genocide_in_Sri_Lanka_https_hinduexistence.org_tamil-hindu-genocide-in-sri-lanka_Hindu_Tamils_killing_fields_in_Sri_Lanka-of-hindu-tamils-in-a-fatal-sinhala-slaughter-_house-in-sri-lanka-2

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