The Peace Secretariat profoundly regrets the murder of Ms Maheswary
Velautham during a visit to Jaffna to see her sick mother. Given the
plethora of deaths this country suffers from, the Secretariat has not been
accustomed to issuing statements of sympathy and sorrow for individual
cases. We regret the lives of known and unknown, of civilian and military,
and even the lives of our fellow citizens who have been conscripted or
deluded into fighting intransigently for a terrorist movement. Soldiers or
ministers, rebels or the over hundred civilians who fell prey to suicide
bombs and other instruments of terror in the south in the last four
months, they are all Sri Lankans and it did not seem to make sense to
bewail them individually.
Maheswary is one such individual, martyred to terrorist intransigence,
but the day and the manner of her death are symbolic of the uphill
struggle Sri Lanka faces if we are to restore the pluralist democracy that
we need. It occurred just after the election of a Provincial Council that
should be able to fulfil the diverse demands of development in the East,
whilst maintaining the unity of the country. It occurred shortly after the
appointment of a Task Force for the North, that would be able to promote
the needs and aspirations of the people there who have suffered for too
long from totalitarianism and terror, during which specific measures for
development fell by the wayside. These are positive steps, but they will
be subject all the way to spoilers, the spoilers who cannot take electoral
defeat, even though they deprived the country of elections for a decade in
the eighties and thus nurtured terrorism in North and South, and the
spoilers who, springing from that bitter birth, believe that a fight to
the death is the only option open to them.
Maheswary's murder occurred too on the day when Sri Lanka was subject to
the Universal Periodic Review with regard to Human Rights, for which the
country had put itself forward in terms of its membership of the Human
Rights Council. Ironically, it brought home to those worried about
continuing violence in Sri Lanka the root cause of all this violence, the
terrorism that victimizes everybody, but most obviously the vulnerable.
Thus she was killed when she went up in haste to see her sick mother,
leaving aside the security given to her because she believed that, amongst
her own relations, she would not be in danger. We recall now what happened
to Mr Kadirgamar, who did not allow the homes of his neighbours to be
searched, in the belief that they were like him and could be relied upon.
The Sri Lankan delegation had explained that it accepted that there had
been a period in which human rights were in grave danger, but it pointed
out that the situation had improved over the last year, as statistics made
clear, with regard to disappearances and deaths, and in particular those
of journalists, which had been highlighted in questions. It was noted that
2006 had seen much internecine warfare, given the brutal manner in which
the LTTE had treated former militants after ensuring that they were
disarmed under the 2002 Ceasefire Agreement. The Peace Secretariat had
noted that these groups had no redress at all, since under the CFA
complaints to the Sri Lanka Monitoring Mission had to be forwarded by only
the government and the LTTE, and unfortunately in those days the
government thought that Tamils were not its responsibility. More recently
the Secretariat had appointed Tamil monitors to Vavuniya and Trincomalee
and Amparai, areas in which the 2002 government had abandoned all Tamils
to the LTTE.
It is in such a context that the government has had an uphill struggle to
ensure the reintegration of moderate Tamils into the political process. It
has taken an enormous amount of courage for such moderate Tamils to resume
active participation in democracy and discussion, through the All Party
Representative Committee, through elections, through involvement in
executive action, in the Cabinet and now through the Task Force for the
North. The courage of those who have taken this path against all odds,
those in the TULF, the EPDP, PLOTE, the EPRLF-P, the TMVP and other
groups, and so many individuals, must never be forgotten. The commitment
of the government, that such moderate Tamils, groups and individuals, must
never be abandoned again remains absolute, and it is the least that can be
done for the brave lady of whom we are now bereft.
At a personal level, the Secretariat worked closely with Maheswary
Velautham, as she is currently the nominee of the EPDP to the APRC. She
was the legal adviser to the Hon Douglas Devananda, Leader of the EPDP,
and was a lawyer and forceful Human Rights Activist. As the only woman
member of the APRC, she was more than capable of holding her own in
discussion, and was a strong, vibrant and enthusiastic participant at its
deliberations.
She was deeply committed to a political resolution of the conflict and to
a united Sri Lanka where all ethnic and religious communities would live
together in peace and dignity. In a sense she was a true reflection of a
multi cultural Sri Lanka, speaking all three languages - Tamil, Sinhala
and English - and moving easily with people from all communities and
districts.
Passionate in seeking to meet the aspirations of the people in the North
and the East whom her party represented, within a context of democratic
pluralism, she could speak poignantly and forcefully in Sinhalese too. She
spoke eloquently for unity in diversity and for the full implementation of
the 13th Amendment, in a speech she made at a press conference the APRC
gave following the presentation of its first report on the implementation
of the 13th amendment to the President on 23 January 2008.
In addition to her deep and vibrant political and social commitment, Ms
Velautham was closely involved in meditation and spiritualism and often
said that this was an effective way to reach an understanding of one's
self as well as others. It was also she thought a pathway to love and
peace for all humanity. She was an admirable example of an accomplished,
humane, articulate, courageous and professional Sri Lankan woman.
Two weeks ago, asked to be part of the Sri Lankan delegation to the
Commonwealth Youth Ministers Conference, she spoke passionately on an area
in which she felt the expansion of opportunities was essential. Her
vibrancy and sense of humour and camaraderie at that conference
exemplified her thorough commitment to service through sympathetic
involvement. She will be sorely missed, yet another of the brave Tamil
moderates who are the principal targets of terrorist totalitarianism. We
can only hope that the democratic pluralism for which she stood up so
fatefully will go from strength to strength, nurtured by such unswerving
commitment. |