A SRI LANKAN PERSPECTIVE
Editorial from The
Sunday Times, Columbo
September 16
WAR ON TERRORISM
Though the
simplest definition of terrorism ought to be "one who uses terror against
another,`` that basic definition doesn`t come anywhere near capturing the
essential meaning of terrorism in the world today.
Terrorist
acts leave not just physical debris, but also in their wake, they leave more
questions than can be answered. Can terror be used against terrorists? Are there
governments that sponsor terrorists? If so, are they terrorist states?
Osama
bin Laden, whose name seems to have become household worldwide, was first
trained by the Central Intelligence Agency of the United States, to fight the
Soviet Union. So were Mujahideen freedom fighters who were marginalised by the
more radical Taleban which has now trained its guns anything and anyone anti
fundamental Islamic.
The
parallels are striking and are eerie in this part of the world too. India, one
of our closest and oldest friendly nations, trained and funded a separatist
movement in Sri Lanka which has now became a hydra-headed monster that is
intractable even to India itself. The effects of India`s creation of a
separatist movement here still prevail.
In
the magazine section of this newspaper ( the Plus) our Features staff
interviewed a cross section of persons on the subject of the attacks on
America, and the emerging consensus of those interviewed was that "the
Americans will now know the pain this nation and her people have gone through
all these years.``
The
quite bald fact that is writ very large, and which emerges from the events of
last week, is that the United States, the European Union and the Commonwealth
did not consider global terrorism an international priority on the UN agenda.
As the United States refers back to the primeval instinct of revenge, and its
cowboys are all rearing to go, the refrain of European leaders is that
"those who harbour terrorists are also guilty of murder themselves.`` The question
that is most pertinent in this atmosphere of radical aggression, is whether
these countries ought not to examine their own past record in combating
international terror.
There
will undoubtedly be the condolences and the commiseration at the deaths, and the
acts of destruction resulting from the attacks on New York and Washington last
week. But, it is almost as if we have been here before. The US jumped the
"global terrorism`` bandwagon after the Oklahoma bombing, and there was
the Lyon declaration, which went into the limbo of forgotten things until now,
and this attack.
The
sheer scale and magnitude of the World Trade Centre attack is so mind-boggling
that the US is no doubt reeling from it. But yet, all this talk of a collective
war on terrorism may just be to punish the real or imagined perpetrators of
terrorism against western nations. We in the drought ridden power cut facing
Third World facing insurance surcharges and travel advisories will have to tend
for ourselves.
In other words, it is