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Three years since Aluthgama: Hopes for

peaceful coexistence remain more elusive than


ever

The BBS led public rally in the heart of the tension-ridden area in June 2014
resulted in the four deaths and the widespread destruction of Muslim property
while engendering fear and demanding subservience

By Ayesha Zuhair-Thursday, 15 June 2017

Exactly three years have lapsed since the Aluthgama riots, a seismic event in the
history of Sri Lankas troubled ethnic relations. On 15 and 16 June 2014, mobs, in
a well-organised manner, unleashed collective violence on Muslim-owned
businesses and homes in Aluthgama, Beruwala, Dharga Town, Welipenna and
Mathugama in the District of Kalutara, located along the islands south-western
coastal belt. The two days of rioting resulted in the loss of four lives, injured 80
persons, and caused extensive damage to property.

Apart from the tangible losses, the violence of June 2014 brought into full focus
the very real and devastating consequences of a coordinated program by divisive
forces to drive hatred, fear and suspicion into the minds of the Sinhala-Buddhist
population. A result of the anti-Muslim sentiment cultivated in the post-war
period, the rioting and looting in Aluthgama and its neighbouring towns marked
one of Sri Lankas darkest moments, severely impairing relations between the
countrys Buddhist and Muslim communities on the one hand, and between the
minorities and an indifferent then government on the other.

Based entirely on propaganda, this virulent anti-Muslim campaign conjured a


narrative in which the Muslim minority was falsely portrayed as representing
economic, cultural, demographic and political threats to the Sinhala-Buddhist
majority. By levelling unsubstantiated allegations of growing radicalisation, it
sought to demonise the vastly peaceful and well-integrated Muslims of Sri Lanka.

Aluthgama was the culmination of a hate campaign which began on 10


September 2011 with the demolition of a Muslim shrine in Anuradhapura,
believed to have been around 400 years old. As the monk-led mob attacked the
religious site, police personnel stood by watching idly. Eerily enough, the visuals
of the incident exposed the crux of the problem: the unwillingness of law
enforcement agencies to enforce the law, and arguably even their complicity in
the crimes, as violence targeting the countrys Muslim and Christian minorities
escalated sharply over the coming months.

In their treatment of the monks and their lay supporters as somehow above the
law, the police, possibly well-aware of the political patronage these discordant
groups enjoyed, thus emboldened them in their vigilante actions.

It was on 20 April 2012 that around 200 Sinhalese including Buddhist monks
staged a protest outside the Khairiya Jumma Masjid in Dambulla demanding the
removal of the illegally constructed mosque from a Buddhist sacred area.
Despite a formidable police presence, the protestors were able to disrupt the
traditional Friday Muslim prayers, and some among them broke into the mosque
and caused damage to Islamic religious texts and property.

The actions of an apparently fringe minority of Buddhist clergy and lay persons
are not representative of Buddhism with its emphasis on pacifism and non-
attachment just as much as actions of the anti-Islamic so-called Islamic State (IS)
are not representative of Islam.

Yet there has been no condemnation of the recent spate of hate crimes by
Buddhist spiritual leaders. There has been no vocal calls by them to return to the
Buddhist values of tolerance and non-aggression in the way Muslims the world
over are expected to condemn the atrocities committed allegedly in the name of
Islam and disassociate Islam from IS.

Deep-seated prejudices

against minorities

The silence of the Sinhala-Buddhist majority, notably the Maha Sangha, on the
growing hostilities, hate speech and anti-minority attacks in post-war Sri Lanka is
perhaps an indication that these extremist groups are capitalising on deep-seated
prejudices against the minorities the Muslims in particular of recent times.

The core assertion of the nationwide campaign to fuel and intensify ethnic
tension led by the Bodu Bala Sena (BBS) and supported by groups such as the
Sihala Ravaya and Ravana Balaya is that Buddhism is under threat and that
Muslims are now the primary threat must have sunk into the recesses of the
minds of a fairly significant proportion of Sinhala-Buddhist society. This is also
compounded by the Mahavamsa mind-set which regards Sri Lanka as a Sinhala-
Buddhist land where others may live so long as they accept the primacy of the
Sinhala-Buddhist race.

This line of thinking is captured in the threat uttered by BBS leader and General-
Secretary Galagoda Aththe Gnanasara Thera at the Aluthgama rally on 15 June
2014, the day prior to the eruption of the Aluthgama violence:

In this country we still have a Sinhala police; we still have a Sinhala army. After
today if a single Marakkalaya [derogatory term for Muslim] or some other paraya
[alien, outcast, also a derogatory term] touches a single Sinhalese.....it will be
their end.

Aluthgama attacks

Chauvinism thus gave rise to direct and violent attacks on Muslims that night and
the next day. The Aluthgama attacks appear to have been hurriedly planned by
the Buddhist extremist groups following the spread of a false rumour on 11 June,
just two days earlier that a Buddhist monk had been attacked by a Muslim near a
temple in the area. The fact was that a Muslim-owned trishaw parked
haphazardly on a narrow lane leading to the temple had obstructed a van
transporting a monk to the temple which had led to angry words being shouted
by the van driver at the missing driver who turned up to be assaulted by the van
driver.

It was a minor incident of two drivers hitting each other with neither being even
injured. Meanwhile the monk had alighted from the van and intervened to
prevent further incidents by which time neighbours had informed the police that
a monk was being attacked, which did not happen. The false report of a monk
being assaulted spread like wildfire leading to a sizeable crowd gathering outside
the police station which led to three Muslims being remanded.

It was two days later the BBS exploited the minor incident by a public hate speech
inciting violence against the Muslims of the area without intervening to settle the
issue or allowing the law to take its course. The BBS led public rally in the heart of
the tension-ridden area resulted in the four deaths and the widespread
destruction of Muslim property while engendering fear and demanding
subservience.

The mission to instil fear was a success until a key member of the Mahinda
Rajapaksa Government under which the violent attacks took place, in an
unprecedented development, decided to part ways on November 21st 2014.
Maithripala Sirisenas leadership to a joint opposition, many had hoped, would
kick-start Sri Lankas long-awaited transition to peace and stability.

From hope to fear

A historic agreement was signed on 1 December 2014, to field a common


candidate to defeat the incumbent at the January 2015 presidential election.
Thirty-six political parties and civic groups entered into a Memorandum of
Understanding (MoU) at the Viharamahadevi Open Air Theatre in a bid to restore
democracy, stability and good governance in Sri Lanka.

The MoU which was signed at a time Sri Lankans were desperate for change took
cognisance of the countrys predicament. It averred that a country once seen as a
model of democracy had degenerated into a place where its citizens were no
longer able to live in dignity and safety. Manifestations of this reality, the
agreement noted, was evident in:

The total breakdown of the rule of law,

The erosion of democratic institutions essential for governance,

An unprecedented widening of social disparities and social injustices,

A severe strain on co-existence among different ethnic and religious communities.


(http://www.dailymirror.lk/article/mou-signed-57787.html)

Taking into account the above, the agreement stressed the need to guarantee the
primacy of the rule of law, restore democracy on the foundation of good
governance, secure and advance fundamental rights and freedom, and to ensure
the human right to live in dignity. Just a little over two weeks later, on 19
December 2014, the Maithri Manifesto was released promising swift and
sweeping reforms.

When Sri Lankans went to the polls on 8 January 2015 to elect a new president,
they voted decisively in favour of change. Having endured violence, fear and
discrimination, the peaceful majority of diverse ethnicities gave a fresh mandate
to the Yahapalanaya coalition to live in a climate of freedom, dignity and
equality. The Muslim community, revolted by the manner in which extremist
groups were allowed to operate with impunity under the Rajapaksa Government,
voted en-bloc for the common candidate.

Renewed sense of fear

grips Muslims

Yet two-and-a-half years into the Yahapalanaya rule, a renewed sense of fear has
gripped the Muslims of Sri Lanka. Anti-minority activities have re-surfaced, with
Muslim properties, notably shops, being attacked almost on a daily basis.

Even as the innocent victims of the Aluthgama riots await justice three years on
with the new Government taking no action, a new form of low-intensity violence
dubbed A Shop a Day has created a climate of fear in place of the climate of
hope that prevailed during the early days of the Sirisena administration.
According to the Police, 16 major racially-motivated incidents targeting Muslims
have taken place across the island since April this year, while Muslims put the
number at 30 incidents.

Beyond the rhetoric of holding perpetrators accountable, no effective action has


been taken towards this end. There is a deep sense of scepticism even about the
recent arrests made as the firebrand monk Gnanasara Thera, the key instigator, is
still at large.

Rebuilding strained relations


The false belief that the problem lies in the extremist ideas being propagated
within Muslim society is deeply troubling. This notion makes it harder to mitigate
the rising inter-religious tensions and to build mutual trust between communities.
It is to the credit of the Muslims that they have remained peaceful and patient in
the face of continued provocation.

However, one cannot altogether dismiss the idea that an undercurrent of anti-
Muslim sentiment was always there, that the end of the war simply gave a
window for this to emerge. There are genuine concerns among the Sinhala-
Buddhist population about the survival of their religion and culture, an anxiety
that has been misdirected at minorities through false propaganda.

Writing on Myanmars Buddhist nationalist groups for the Asia Times (9 June),
Mathew J. Walton asserts: The current Government is hesitantly and
inconsistently taking steps to try to change the enabling environment that the
previous Government created for consequence-free anti-Muslim violence, but it
needs to sincerely engage with these complex feelings of Buddhist vulnerability
(without sanctioning violence or discrimination) if it hopes to facilitate
reconciliation and peace.

The same could be said of the current Sri Lankan context.

As Walton rightly points out, policy responses must find a way to engage with
groups interested in the protection of Buddhism while making it clear that
violence will not be tolerated. This is in the interest of all communities in Sri
Lanka.

Just as much as apprehending those behind the violence is imperative to end the
culture of impunity that currently prevails, it must be coupled with a proactive
approach in which Buddhism is assured of its primus-inter-pares status. Unless
such an approach is adopted, Sri Lanka might remain trapped in ethnic friction for
years to come.
Posted by Thavam

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