London MPs again on rampage
Prof. Rajiva Wijesinha, Secretary General, Secretariat for
Coordinating the Peace Process

British Parliament
|
With my adoration of things British, I had always thought of British
Parliamentarians as splendid creatures. And I suppose they are, in a
way, in that the latest set of effusions puts any exaggerations our
Parliamentarians can manage in the shade.
Of course the poor creatures are suffering from that well known
disease of Parliamentarians, the need to hang on to one’s seat, and some
British Labour MPs have a heightened form of this, given the proximity
of the next election and the current state of Labour in the polls. But
even so, the hysterical exaggerations they have engaged in recently
deserve our deepest admiration, and perhaps emulation, if Sri
Jayewardenepura is ever to match up to Westminster. And since it seems
that some releases from the Peace Secretariat have contributed to the
mania, I suppose we can also take some credit for these latest examples
of the bludgeoning that has replaced the cut and thrust of an earlier
age.
We begin with Siobhain McDonagh, from Mitchum and Morden, in South
London.
She declares that ‘Every day 150,000 people are being shelled in the
Sri Lankan government’s designated no-fire zone, and tens of thousands
more are trapped in a thin strip of land - just 13 square miles - where
the battles are taking place.’
The woman is obviously completely crackers, since the thin strip of
land was in fact the no-fire zone, and by the date she spoke most
commentators had agreed that 150,000 was a maximum for those still under
Tiger control.
And Siobhain naturally made no mention of the fact that civilians
were trapped because the Tigers had trapped them - but such niceties are
beyond an Irish colleen full of emotion.
Before she could finish, up jumped a Liberal Democrat from
neighbouring Carshalton and Wallington, to mark his sympathy. Siobhain
concurs and takes the opportunity to say how much she admires Tamils for
bringing the problems in Sri Lanka to her attention.
At her back she doubtless hears the voice of Mr Iddaikader,
threatening some of her colleagues with losing their seats if British
Tamils change their votes, but of course she would not dream of
mentioning that. One characteristic of MPs anxious for votes is that
they always find good reasons for the positions they take to win votes.
It is not possible to be a successful politician without this capacity
for self deception.
Education
Siobhain, obviously not intending to, then wins several brownie
points with her Tamil constituents by mentioning how committed they are
to education, and to elitist education too, which she simperingly notes
causes her ideological problems. Andrew George, who has actually been to
Sri Lanka, then intervenes to make the sensible point that the problem
requires a political situation, gently pointing out that he is perhaps
exceptional in not having many Tamils in his Cornish constituency.
Siobhain rises to the bait magnificently, and says of course she is
involved because of her constituents.
Simon Hughes, another Liberal Democrat from London, is not quite so
transparent, and says that he has got involved not because of his Tamil
constituents, but because he has seen the problem coming for a long
time.
Obviously not aware of what happened in the eighties, to drive so
many of his constituents safe into his arms, he says the situation in
Sri Lanka has got worse and worse for Tamils. Siobhain agrees, and asks
that the British government call for Sri Lanka to be suspended from the
Commonwealth. And then she goes on the rampage again, talks of genocide,
and cluster bombs, and a thousand amputees who are desperate to be
evacuated ‘but the Red Cross cannot get to them’. No one has told her
that, over the last few weeks, the Red Cross has evacuated about 3500
patients, and more bystanders, the latter obviously being carried in the
absence of more people requiring medical treatment. If they are there,
and not allowed out, it is because the LTTE will not allow them out,
being in control of the area which Siobhain had so dramatically
described.
Siobhain perhaps does not know, and if she did she would never
mention it, that the Red Cross functions on ships supplied by the Sri
Lankan government.
Crocodile tears
Then, to add to the cluster bombs and even phosphorous weapons,
Siobhain talks of the civilians being `pummelled by artillery fire’. She
then quotes the UN High Commissioner’s concern for civilians trapped in
the Safe Zone, and conveniently omits that lady’s plea to the LTTE to
allow them to leave.
Significantly, Siobhain at no point in her diatribe asks the LTTE to
release the people over whom she instead sheds copious crocodile tears
at the expense only of the Sri Lankan government.
This is the cue for Andrew Pelling, he who was accused of beating not
one wife but two, to weigh in. He represents an electorate in Croydon,
near Siobhain’s, and is now an independent after the Conservative Party
sacked him after his last little brush with the law. Since then he
turned bulimic, but is now evidently hale and hearty enough to toss
Siobhain a compliment for her hard work on this issue, which she
promptly returns to him. Such mutual adulation seems thick, but if they
keep on saying such things and popping up in turn, surely they will all
win even more adulation from the voters they are trying to impress.
It must be granted though that Siobhain does cite an old UNHCR report
which has some criticism of the Tigers, but she scrupulously fails to
endorse this. Significantly, much of what UNHCR says there is no longer
applicable, but its criticism of LTTE recruitment still stands, even
though Siobhain does not seem to think this important.
Then comes a Liberal Democrat from another London suburb, who seems
not to have strayed very far from that suburb, for he worries about the
extreme cold at night that those under tarpaulins suffer, on the Sri
Lankan coast.
He then talks about bunkers to withstand the bombs of the Sri Lankan
army, something he has never heard of previously in an ‘intended
encampment’, which allows Siobhain to talk of the videos of these
bunkers taken ‘by very brave people in the area’. Interestingly, the MPs
later complain of the propaganda of the Sri Lankan government, never for
a moment wondering whether the material presented to them might also be
propaganda of sorts.
Siobhain then quotes Amnesty International as though it were an
undisputed authority, and harks back to its cluster bomb caper regarding
the Puthukkudiyirippu hospital to make allegations of war crimes. Her
Liberal neighbour then breaks in to mention a war crimes tribunal,
trusting that the Sri Lankan High Commission will not ‘misinterpret what
Members are saying’.
Siobhain seizes the opportunity to claim that many Members ‘have been
abused and insulted by the Sri Lankan High Commission in the UK’. As an
example of this she claims that ‘it recently suggested that my
honourable friend Mr Dismore has a drug problem’.
Andrew Dismore it seems shares this delusion, and evidently sought to
‘sue the Sri Lankan government for libel’ but found he could not because
of ‘sovereign immunity’.
This is another example of delusion, since the reference must be to
the Peace Secretariat release that suggested he was overdosing ‘on
imagination’. Similarly Mr Pelling claimed to a Croydon newspaper that
he was thinking of legal action against the Peace Secretariat, but we
have since heard nothing of that grandiose claim. One somehow gets the
impression that these preposterous creatures are touchy enough to run to
a lawyer - who swiftly enough disabuses them - when they think their
rather tawdry honour has been questioned, but meanwhile think it
perfectly all right to make claims about genocide and war crimes and
such serious life threatening matters. Ridiculously, Andrew then asks
the government to ‘bring pressure to bear on the Sri Lankan High
Commission to make sure that it stops these attacks on Members when we
are simply doing our job’, i.e. trying desperately to hold their seats,
and hitting out at the Sri Lankan government and forces in order to do
this.
Ignorance
Siobhain then returns to the fray, with her call for Sri Lanka to be
suspended from the Commonwealth, and goes on to say that there is an
‘opening for a truce’ because ‘the political leader of the Tigers has
called for a ceasefire and said that the Tigers would negotiate ‘without
pre-conditions’.
Obviously ignorant of the previous history of ceasefires, and the
Tiger refusal to negotiate for years, she demands that, ‘If Sri Lanka
does not take this opportunity, it will need to be forced to the
negotiating table through diplomatic means’.
The poor woman obviously does not understand English, if she thinks
such force possible, but more depressing is the fact that she never
thought, over the last five years, to even ask the Tigers to negotiate.
She also, like a good Labour MP, thinks the powers of the British
government infinite, since she says that they should ‘simply state that
Sri Lanka should be suspended from the Commonwealth and the process of
suspension should commence’.
Siobhain then declares that hardly anyone is interested in Sri Lanka
except British MPs. She believes most outlets print ‘public relations
material for the government there’, obviously having read nothing of the
critiques of the Sri Lankan government and forces that have formed the
staple of most British reporting on the country in recent weeks.
She makes an exception of Marie Colvin, who she claims lost an eye
when she was attacked by Sri Lankan government forces, and now evidently
spends her time talking to the LTTE and attacking Sri Lanka, if
Siobhain’s account of her recent activities is to be believed.
She then complains about an article in the Times as evidence for her
generalization, and declares that Sri Lanka has ‘done a brilliant PR job
around the world’, which is news to most of us, and most readers of at
least British newspapers.
Clueless
Andrew George then makes the salient point that negotiations should
include all Tamils. Siobhain blithely agrees, but shows no awareness
that the Tigers had opposed this tooth and nail for several years, and
indeed killed other Tamils who had a different view.
She also claims, giving Mr Nadesan an even more exalted rank which
indicates she is completely clueless about how the Tigers work, that the
Tigers would abide by a referendum, information to which she seems privy
even though it was not in the article. Whether she is privy to why the
Tigers avoided elections in the past is doubtful.
A junior Minister from West London is then sarcastic about Sri Lankan
government propaganda, but Siobhain misses the point and bewails the
fact that most MPs are not interested in her campaign to have Sri Lanka
suspended from the Commonwealth, an attitude for which, myopic as she
is, she blames the propaganda put out by the High Commission.
Joan Ryan, she who initiated the last debate on the subject, then
raises an objection about Sri Lanka’s position on a Commonwealth
committee, but Siobhain misses that point too, and instead, in noting
that she and Joan had worked together on this matter, makes clear why
she was the wrong person to initiate this debate.
With a naivete that would be charming, were it not so readily placed
at the service of terror, she declares, ‘During the 11 years I have been
in the House, I have never spoken in a debate on an international issue.
I am not somebody who would ever regard themselves as a House of
Commons person. I find the environment quite pompous, and I think that
people speak for too long - just as I am currently doing.’ One can only
hope, despite this desperate attempt to hold onto her votes - as the
last sentence of her speech again suggests - that the voters will put
her out of her misery and release her from the Commons at the next
election.
Siobhain’s speech was followed by that of a Conservative called Lee
Scott, who was far less emotional, but also seemed to think that the
propaganda of the High Commission had succeeded in suppressing the
issue, and it was only the British House of Commons that would save the
day for the concerns of their constituents.
Sadly, though he did not make wild allegations, he too believes that
‘Everyone is calling for a ceasefire’, which suggests he knows little
about the history of the conflict and about the position of countries
more closely concerned with this particular terrorist threat than
Britain.
Joan Ryan then comes back into the fray and asserts that it was the
British who first called for a ceasefire.
Interestingly, the Deputy British High Commissioner insisted that it
was not a ceasefire the British wanted, but a cessation of firing to let
the trapped civilians out, but I pointed out to him that, that was not
what was said publicly. Now I have no objection to British leaders
playing to a gallery, but they should not do so at the expense of a
friendly government.
Keeping Joan Ryan happy may be important, but a principled approach
when dealing with terrorism is much more important, and I hope the High
Commission in Colombo will point out how much damage is done to what
should be very positive relations by such loose talk, which creatures
like Joan pounce on so avidly.
Joan then refers to a UN report which she grants was leaked. This is
another example of ambiguity that we need to be careful of. When the
existence of that report was first made known to us, we challenged the
figures, and the UN in Colombo agreed to withdraw the report. However,
we have since found the figures quoted widely all over the place.
The UN has not bothered however to check on who did the leaking, or
to publicly repudiate the false figures, based on extrapolations that we
were able to show were quite fanciful.
Meanwhile Joan actually claims that the figure is now conceded to
have been an underestimation, not the overestimation we proved it was.
Joan then adds her voice to that of Mr Nadesan, to ask for a
ceasefire, and says as though it were a great concession that the Tigers
are offering this without preconditions.
The woman must be mad, unless she is very evil indeed, not to
understand that it is through this type of ceasefire that the Tigers
were able on several occasions to rearm and renew their terrorist
activity. And then the woman goes on to ask that India join her in her
crusade, ignoring how much India suffered when they tried to deal with
the Tigers.
Obviously deciding that the Sri Lankan government will not fall for
her blandishments, Joan then goes on to the war crimes tune, with
allegations about cluster bombs and white phosphorous. She also ignores
the evidence of the recent ICRC evacuation of bystanders along with the
injured and, building on a BBC report that was shown to be false and was
repudiated by the ICRC, she engages in a graphic description of the aid
agencies able to operate having ‘to choose between the most severely
injured and the badly injured, and have to leave the badly injured lying
on the beach. That cannot by any stretch of the imagination be
considered humane treatment’.
Sadly, the only imagination being stretched is that of Joan Ryan, and
despite the elasticity of the stretching I hope she will not jump to the
conclusion that we think she is hallucinating.
Joan Ryan then talks about a Security Council resolution, and raises
the hoary chestnut that Russia might be responsible for preventing this.
Blame
Fascinatingly, she thinks that the claim of the mid-Western American
Prof Boyle, who has taken up Bruce Fein’s genocide baton, will provide
evidence for Russia to change its mind. Given the British position on
Iraq, and the fact that there was no majority anyway for an invasion of
Iraq at the time but there was an attempt to blame Russia and China
alone for opposing this, Joan Ryan at least should know better than to
talk such nonsense. But, after an intervention which indicated the
uselessness of her attempt to have Sri Lanka suspended from the
Commonwealth, Joan declares that ‘the UN seems to have been cowed’. One
wonders when the British, or at least a solid left wing MP from what
obviously is still thought to be the capital of the world, will learn
that the UN should not necessarily be assumed to be deficient if it will
not follow the will of the Head of the Commonwealth.
But Joan would do credit to Winston Churchill at his most
bulldoggish. She declares that Sri Lanka has just ‘attempted to reject a
special representative appointed by our Prime Minister’. She claims that
the reason given, that Sri Lanka was not consulted, is nonsense in that
Sri Lanka is not consulted about the Prime Minister’s other
appointments. Evidently the woman is not only hysterical, she is also
stupid, since obviously a special representative needs to be accepted if
he is to do any good.
More tellingly, even the British government claims that it did
consult, and it is conceivable that there was misunderstanding about
whether the appointment had been accepted or not. Joan, ignoring all
this, declares instead that the Sri Lankan government’s argument is
outrageous, ‘We have seen them do that and the UN needs to take steps’,
it now evidently in her book being the business of the UN to ensure that
Sri Lanka accepts poor Des Browne.
Joan then asserts, lying through her teeth, that the Sri Lankan
government ‘have accepted that there is no political solution’. That
sort of outrageous claim would lead one to suggest that she be asked to
wash her mouth out with soap and water, were she not a member of the
Mother of Parliaments. Certainly the rhetorical questions she then
indulges in suggest hysteria, as do her ‘four immediate goals’ -
suspension from the Commonwealth, a ceasefire, a UN monitoring mission
and a resumption of peace negotiations. In short, the woman obviously
sees herself as a nanny, wagging her finger while hoping anxiously that
the bosses, the UN and India, will keep her in employment.
Simon Hughes then engages in his usual confusing performance,
claiming to cite a message from the Bishop of Mannar which was ‘passing
on a message from a parish priest in Northern Sri Lanka who said that
the bishop requested me to communicate the message to you’, ie it is not
clear whether this is the Bishop’s message or that of an unknown
individual claiming to speak for the Bishop.
The message is also confusing because it talks of Tamils being
mutilated and thrown into camps, which must be a claim about the
government controlled areas, but then it seems the informant is in the
Tiger controlled area. Similarly, Simon’s quotations from the UNHCR,
which he grants is selective, also confuses the two areas. In short,
Simon is up to his usual game of deliberate obfuscation, though
thankfully he then goes on to worry about the Commonwealth and what he
sees as British governmental inadequacy in putting the case there.
Then we have Andrew Dismore, who at least noted that the LTTE was
holding people trapped. He then complains about being libelled,
suggesting that he too cannot understand English and thinks an overdose
of imagination refers to some exotic drug. He then goes on to criticize
the Conservative spokesman Dr Fox, evidently ignoring the possibility
that Dr Fox is as concerned about humanitarian issues, but is much more
consistent about the dangers of terrorism.
No idea
Andrew was interrupted by a Labour Minister who is also obviously
ignorant, because he has no idea about the political solution that was
shattered by the LTTE in 1987, and he talks of a recent political
solution, whereas the LTTE withdrew from negotiations. He also claims
that there was ‘a multi-party, multi-faith, multi-ethnic Government in
place and that it was the deeply regretted rise of Sinhala nationalism
that shattered that consensus’. It is that type of ignorance from a
government Minister (and gratuitous and meaningless insult) that makes
it so difficult to trust either the bona fides or the seriousness of the
British government.
Fortunately Dismore does not take that bait, and instead refers to
the need for a political solution, obviously unaware that, that is
precisely the government of Sri Lanka position too.
Andrew was followed by a Conservative, Stephen Hammond, from yet
another London suburb, who again was misled by the fraudulent BBC report
that the ICRC repudiated. He also talks about a mercy ship, obviously
unaware that this was arranged by the London head of the TRO, who has
now taken on another avatar, following the British discovery that the
TRO was a front for the Tigers.
Then, while he is quite right to talk about a political solution,
Stephen confuses this with a ceasefire, as the British following Tiger
imperatives tend to do, and declares that the British must impress on
Sri Lanka that the ceasefire ‘must include not only the LTTE, but all
sections of the Tamil community’.
The man obviously does not know that it is the Sri Lankan government
that has all along been pressing for inclusiveness, and that the LTTE
not only decimated other groups during the last ceasefire, but has
continued to insist that it is the sole representative of the Tamil
people. Once again, one realizes that a little learning is a very
dangerous thing, especially when accompanied by British pomposity.
This is strange, because the general assumption was that Britain had
in fact been behind the move, but perhaps a British MP who knows little
about Sri Lanka at least knows his own country better, and we need not
be quite so worried about the British approach. Joan Ryan, however,
seems to have disagreed with him, as part perhaps of her new found
adulation of the Prime Minister.
Finally, after some largely sensible remarks by a Conservative Shadow
Minister, Bill Rammell, the Minister of State at the Foreign and
Commonwealth Office, himself representing a London constituency,
responded.
Rammells’ comments were on the whole unexceptionable, though some of
the statistics he used were misleading, and he was ambiguous about some
of the allegations made against the government.
However he was unambiguous about the crimes of the LTTE, and seems
finally to be inclining to the position, the obvious unquestionable
position, that the civilians now in the safe zone would be out of danger
if the LTTE released them.
Benefit
That is as much as can be expected now from the British, but it is a
pity that a less equivocal approach was not attempted, so that Britain
could profitably exploit the enormous goodwill for that country that we
still cherish, despite the silly MPs who persist in lies for their own
benefit, and convince themselves withal that they are being altruistic.
It is no coincidence after all that those who are most desperate
about this matter come from London constituencies. But induction was
never something the British were very good at, and the House of Commons,
given political priorities, can be much less rational than most when
national interests are not at stake |