Arundhati Roy goes berserk for Prabhakaran

Tamilnet laps it up like timely manna from heaven

(March 30, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) Tamilnet seizes an Arundhati Roy feature and makes many miles out of it to deliver her view, to say the least, attacking from a blind corner at targets that are imagined. Arundhati Roy’s partiality to Velupillai Prabhakaran is well known even, one might say some kind of admiration which is hard to accept based on the horrendous ruthless track of the Tiger leader.

While we present Roy’s feature that appeared in the Times of India, we are publishing a comment on it by Chithra Karunakaran of the Ethical Democracy as Lived Practice. Reference: http://EthicalDemocracy.blogspot.com

Sunday, March 29, 2009
The Ethical Self, the Sovereign State & the Public Sphere

There are perils in the construction of the Ethical Self. Arundhati Roy is a case in point. In her careful but subjectively selective defense of various causes, she occasionally develops a blind spot while navigating the public sphere of South Asian or other regional civil society claims validations.

This gives me pause. It shows the construction of the ethical self in the public sphere of civil society is fraught with peril and is by definition, a field of ethical trial and error (see Roy article below, Times of India copyright). WE in civil society are ALL vulnerable in our self-construction as ethical actors in the public sphere of the sovereign state. That is why DEMOCRACY is ALWAYS a work in progress, a work in progress and that ethical work of participation, vigilance, and self correction is never done.

My comment in response to Arundhati Roy's analysis of the humanitarian crisis in Sri Lanka:

Is Arundhati Roy reporting from Velupillai Prabhakaran bunker? Does this piece account for the entangled history of the Buddhists, Tamils, Muslims, Christians Burgers, Marxists, and other splinter groups in Sri Lanka, formerly Ceylon?

Did a female LTTE cadre blow up India's Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi in Chennai? Going back in time, Was SWRD Bandarnaike, free Ceylon's first Prime Minister who converted to Buddhism from Anglican Christianity, assassinated by a Buddhist monk? Were his wife, Prime Minister Sirimavo Bandarnaike and his daughter Prime Minister Chandrika Kumaratunga and her husband Vijaya Kumaratunga also targeted by earlier affiliates of what is know known as the LTTE, in assassination attempts and killed or grievously injured? Were scores of ethnic Buddhist political leaders as well as TAMIL political moderates injured or killed in assassination attempts by the LTTE cadres over the part 50 years?

Roy is on the wrong side of history on this one.

Prabhakaran and the LTTE have been sowing the killing fields in Sri Lanka for the past several DECADES, not just days. The LTTE perfected suicide bombing; ethnic cleansing of Buddhists; capture and deployment of TAMIL child soldiers; TAMIL civilians, especially women as human shields, and other crimes against humanity. The LTTE sowed the wind and reaped the whirlwind of Sri Lankan govt. action.


Without a doubt there is a grave humanitarian crisis in that beautiful part of our South Asia region, where social justice once prevailed, and Sri Lanka once ranked high on the UN's HDI index. But the LTTE (roughly equivalent to LeT) is responsible for these earlier crimes as well as the current escalation. I was in Colombo traveling with my young sons, days after the LTTE bombed the airport, several years ago.

It looked and smelled like the bathtub where the World Trade Center Towers once stood. That's terror for you and Roy cannot justify writing about it from her safe haven in New Delhi! I also live part of the year in Chennai and the Tamil political leaders in the DMK and the PMK have milked the LTTE sob story of Govt. retaliation for all it's worth. (I don't mean the innocent Tamil civilians who are the main sufferers from LTTE terror, and now state-sponsored terror by the Sri Lankan military).

Chitra Karunakaran

Arundhati Roy: "Colossal humanitarian tragedy"

Arundhati Roy once commented: "I know of very few people outside of Prabhakaran’s followers who want such a state to come into being. This is partly because Prabhakaran is an old-fashioned totalitarian leader and partly because a tiny, Tamil-majority statelet on a small island doesn’t feel like a rousing cause."

[TamilNet, Monday, 30 March 2009, 00:52 GMT] Pointing an accusing finger at the Indian Government for silence on the unfolding tragedy in Sri Lanka, Arundhati Roy, writer and activist, in an article appearing in Times of India says, "while the killing continues, while tens of thousands of people are being barricaded into concentration camps, while more than 200,000 face starvation, and a genocide waits to happen, there is dead silence from this great country [India]. It’s a colossal humanitarian tragedy. The world must step in. Now. Before it’s too late."

Full text of Roy's Times of India article follows:

The silent horror of the war in Sri Lanka

Arundhati Roy

The horror that is unfolding in Sri Lanka becomes possible because of the silence that surrounds it. There is almost no reporting in the mainstream Indian media — or indeed in the international press — about what is happening there. Why this should be so is a matter of serious concern.

From the little information that is filtering through it looks as though the Sri Lankan government is using the propaganda of the ‘war on terror’ as a fig leaf to dismantle any semblance of democracy in the country, and commit unspeakable crimes against the Tamil people. Working on the principle that every Tamil is a terrorist unless he or she can prove otherwise, civilian areas, hospitals and shelters are being bombed and turned into a war zone. Reliable estimates put the number of civilians trapped at over 200,000. The Sri Lankan Army is advancing, armed with tanks and aircraft.

Meanwhile, there are official reports that several ‘‘welfare villages’’ have been established to house displaced Tamils in Vavuniya and Mannar districts. According to a report in The Daily Telegraph (Feb 14, 2009), these villages ‘‘will be compulsory holding centres for all civilians fleeing the fighting’’. Is this a euphemism for concentration camps? The former foreign minister of Sri Lanka, Mangala Samaraveera, told The Daily Telegraph: ‘‘A few months ago the government started registering all Tamils in Colombo on the grounds that they could be a security threat, but this could be exploited for other purposes like the Nazis in the 1930s. They’re basically going to label the whole civilian Tamil population as potential terrorists.’’

Given its stated objective of ‘‘wiping out’’ the LTTE, this malevolent collapse of civilians and ‘‘terrorists’’ does seem to signal that the government of Sri Lanka is on the verge of committing what could end up being genocide. According to a UN estimate several thousand people have already been killed. Thousands more are critically wounded. The few eyewitness reports that have come out are descriptions of a nightmare from hell. What we are witnessing, or should we say, what is happening in Sri Lanka and is being so effectively hidden from public scrutiny, is a brazen, openly racist war. The impunity with which the Sri Lankan government is being able to commit these crimes actually unveils the deeply ingrained racist prejudice, which is precisely what led to the marginalization and alienation of the Tamils of Sri Lanka in the first place. That racism has a long history, of social ostracisation, economic blockades, pogroms and torture. The brutal nature of the decades-long civil war, which started as a peaceful, non-violent protest, has its roots in this.

Why the silence? In another interview Mangala Samaraveera says, ‘‘A free media is virtually non-existent in Sri Lanka today.’’

Samaraveera goes on to talk about death squads and ‘white van abductions’, which have made society ‘‘freeze with fear’’. Voices of dissent, including those of several journalists, have been abducted and assassinated. The International Federation of Journalists accuses the government of Sri Lanka of using a combination of anti-terrorism laws, disappearances and assassinations to silence journalists.

There are disturbing but unconfirmed reports that the Indian government is lending material and logistical support to the Sri Lankan government in these crimes against humanity. If this is true, it is outrageous. What of the governments of other countries? Pakistan? China? What are they doing to help, or harm the situation?

In Tamil Nadu the war in Sri Lanka has fuelled passions that have led to more than 10 people immolating themselves. The public anger and anguish, much of it genuine, some of it obviously cynical political manipulation, has become an election issue.


It is extraordinary that this concern has not travelled to the rest of India. Why is there silence here? There are no ‘white van abductions’ — at least not on this issue. Given the scale of what is happening in Sri Lanka, the silence is inexcusable. More so because of the Indian government’s long history of irresponsible dabbling in the conflict, first taking one side and then the other. Several of us including myself, who should have spoken out much earlier, have not done so, simply because of a lack of information about the war. So while the killing continues, while tens of thousands of people are being barricaded into concentration camps, while more than 200,000 face starvation, and genocide waits to happen, there is dead silence from this great country. It’s a colossal humanitarian tragedy. The world must step in. Now. Before it’s too late.
ENDs
-Sri Lanka Guardian
Unknown said...

While I have always admired Arundathi Roy as a committed sociologist/journalist/activist. I beg to defer with her one-sided point of view on the subject
of the ltte.
Arundathi sees only gloom & doom and writes dramatically of 'genocide 'etc, ably assisted by UNP's Mangala Samaraweera ! Dear Arundathi, it might have been gloom & doom not only for Sri Lanka but also for India, had the ltte succeeded in forming a fully armed Eelam with thousands, nay, millions of Hindu Dalits (Untouchables)Tamis asl slaves (from Tamil Nadu) to labour for the new Dravidan Empire to come.
What we in Lanka have to contend with today is Tamil Nadu's Dalit problem, in stage 2 of its development in Sri Lanka. There are no Dalits in Sri Lanka.
Please let us handle this problem our own way in Lanka, in showing kindness & compassion to a traumatised Tamil civilian population caught in a situation not of their making.

India ought to handle her own Dalit problems in a similar manner as Lanka is doing. However, we do understand that the Dalit problem is Caste based, and tied to the Hindu religion which
makes it intractable. The Dalit slave system has lasted some 3,000 yrs in India. We do not expect that it will be eradicated overnight. There are some 5 Million Tamil Dalits in Tamil Nadu,
and altogether some 165 Million Dalis in the whole of India. Dalits convert to other religions to escape entrenched & intractable discrimination. In India, Dalits have converted to Buddhism, Catholicism & Islam to escape being Dalits, and they continue to do so to this date. Few people in Lanka like to acknowledge India's Dalit problem.

Be patient with Lanka, Arundathi ! We have done pretty well, considering the odds against us. India & Lanka can win together in this issue as well as on other pressing problems. Please do not hinder; please help Lanka look after its IDPs.

Unknown said...

There is a correction to be made :

Please read " ......millions of HINDU Dalits (Untouchables)Tamis asl slaves (from Tamil Nadu) to labour for the new Dravidan Empire to come",
as ".... millions of CASTELESS Dalits (Untouchables) Tamils as slaves (from Tamil Nadu) to labour for the new Dravidan Empire to come".

Bruno said...

Arundathi Roy's hero Prabha (the most ruthless terrorist known in this decade) is hiding behind helpless childeren/old people shamelessly wearing cynide capsule around the neck in vanni.If Prabha is what she thought, he should have already taken the capsule without killing these poor people who wants to escape his terror. What a pathetic hero Roy had! She never gives up supporting this pathetic killer because she has a soft corner and charmed her when she interviewd him sometime back. Her knowledge about Sri Lanka is exposed as she is quoting the most unpopular politician in SL at present (Samaraweera) at her defence.