Failure of Sinhalese to Share Powers with Tamil Citizens
by Esan Satkunarajah, May 14, 2007
The world must understand over 30 years of dire failures and refusals of the Sinhalese to share power and treat the Tamils as equal stakeholders of the country and continued second-class treatment brought the present violent armed struggle to this country.
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His Excellency Richard Boucher
Assistant Secretary for South and Central Asian Affairs
United States of America
Your Excellency:
Re: Dire Failure of the Sinhalese to share powers with fellow Tamil
citizens
Sri Lanka obtained independence in 1948, when the British handed
power to the majority Singhalese and left the Tamils' fates in the
hands of the Sinhalese. Since then all successive Sinhalese governments
have gradually and systematically reduced Tamils to second-class citizens in
their own country.
After independence in 1948, the new governments deprived the Tamils of
education, jobs, and housing, and Tamil plantation workers of the vote and
continued with the suppression of their voices with brutal force.
For a brief introduction on how the legitimate Tamil struggle evolved to
the present level after 50 long years of systematic denial of
minority rights by the majority Sinhalese, we would like to draw
your attentions to the following facts.
The "Sinhala Only Act of 1956" was introduced by the late
S.W.R.D. Bandaranayake, the first Pact signed between Tamils and Sinhalese, the 1957 Bandaranayake-Chelvanayagam Pact was abrogated due to a protest march by J.R.
Jeyawardana to the Buddhist shrine, the Dalada Maligawa. Then again in 1965, Dudley
Senanayake and S.J.V. Chelvanayagam signed a pact popularly known as
the D-C Pact, which was never implemented and was abrogated in 1969.
The new Constitution drafted and adopted in 1972 made things worse for
the minority Tamils by removing Section 29 of the constitution,
which existed to safeguard the minorities of Sri Lanka.
The Indo-Sri Lanka Agreement signed in 1987 came to a
natural end in the long, visionless Sri Lankan politics towards the
Tamil minorities. The legitimate struggle of Tamils in Sri Lanka
is exactly 50 years old, but the Sri Lankan government has now
manipulated the "Global War on Terror" to its own advantage and
is branding the legitimate struggle of Tamils as terrorism in the
International arena, while continuing with its dire human rights abuses
against them with no end in sight for the bloody and cruel sufferings
of Tamils.
The world must understand over 30 years of dire failures and refusals
of the Sinhalese to share power and treat the Tamils as equal
stakeholders of the country and continued second-class treatment
brought the present violent armed struggle to this country.
The world also must see for themselves the immense suffering and
hardships of Tamils in Sri Lanka at the hands of the Sinhalese and help
the Tamils to achieve a solution to their long, legitimate struggle by
allowing them to have peace with freedom, with the right to look after their own
affairs in their own homeland.
We thank you for your kind attention on this matter.
Yours truly,
Esan Satkunarajah
Association for Prevention of State Terrorism (APST)
Web: http://sunriseintheeast.googlepages.com/srilnaka-violator
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