ASIAOPINIONPOLITICS

Protest against police brutality in US, meets police brutality in Sri Lanka

By Kalani Kumarasinghe

On Tuesday afternoon (June 9) a small crowd began to gather opposite the United States Embassy in Colombo, Sri Lanka.  Holding placards which read slogans like “Racism is a deadly virus, the protestors donned face masks as per the latest health guidelines issued by the government.

They were members belonging to the Front-Line Socialist Party, (FSP) a breakaway political faction of the more popular Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna, responsible for a failed leftist movement and two insurrections in the island’s conflict-ridden history. They gathered at the capital’s Liberty Circus, despite Covid-19 regulations against mass gatherings in place, to protest against the murder of George Floyd, an unarmed black man killed in police custody in the US.

The protestors gathered in solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement against police brutality, as George Floyd protests have gone global this past week, with protests emerging in London, Berlin, Toronto and Milan. While most of these protests have been peaceful, in Sri Lanka, a protest against police brutality was met with police brutality.

With the easing of an 85-day-lockdown in Sri Lanka, the country returned to somewhat normal operations this past week, with strict guidelines against gatherings of more than 100 persons.  Pubudu Jayagoda, Politburo member of the FSP said globally, leftist and progressive communities were gathering against racism and police brutality in the United States. “The Front-Line Socialist Party had called for a similar protest today in Colombo, in solidarity with the protestors in the US,” Jayagoda said. “However, before the protest even began, our members were attacked and arrested by the Police. This protest was publicised well before, it’s not something that we organized in secret. But the Kollupitiya Police Officer-in-Charge had sought a court order restricting the protest citing public health concerns,” he said.

The police crackdown on peaceful protestors soon attracted ire of the public as footage of protestors being manhandled by the police emerged on social media. One video even showed a young woman being tossed into a police vehicle, head first.

“We organised the protest in line with the government health guidelines. Our protestors stood one metre apart, wore face masks and sanitized themselves. It is the government which has been downplaying coronavirus health risks,” he said.  Jayagoda was referring to statements made by various members of the government, including the country’s Health Minister who assured that coronavirus was no hindrance in holding an imminent national election, even in the midst of a pandemic. Despite a raging virus taking hold of the island, President Gotabaya Rajapaksa on March 2 called a fresh parliamentary election, six months ahead of schedule.

The FSP group also held a similar protest opposite the Foreign Employment Bureau demanding repatriation for stranded Sri Lankan migrant workers, an integral component of the country’s economy. Jayagoda questioned as to why that protest was not a concern for public health.  “Across Europe, and even in country’s with rigid laws such as South Korea or Singapore, people are protesting in unity with the Black Lives Matter movement. This is what we attempted to do. But it appears that Gotabaya Rajapaksa is attempting to tell Donald Trump that his government won’t allow any uprising of this nature to take hold in Sri Lanka. It’s because most of these leaders have been residing in the US and wish to return there one day,” he alleged.

The US citizenship issue of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa came under scrutiny last year, in the months leading to the Presidential Election in November, as the Sri Lankan constitution does not allow dual citizens or non-citizens to hold public office. However, Rajapaksa’s name has appeared in the latest Quarterly Publication of the United States Federal Register of Individuals Who Have Chosen to Expatriate.

Meanwhile the US Embassy in Sri Lanka said that it did not request the demonstration opposite the embassy to be blocked, adding that the protest has been denied by the police due to COVID-19 restrictions in Sri Lanka. US Ambassador Alaina Teplitz tweeted “Rights to peaceful assembly and free speech are cornerstones of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights – rights the US supports even when difficult for us. Today’s proposed demonstration in front of our Embassy was denied by Sri Lankan Police due to COVID-19 restrictions on gatherings.”

The Embassy issuing a statement said that the US supports rights of Sri Lankans and all people to peaceful protest which is consistent with their shared democratic traditions. “We are aware that Colombo Fort Magistrate’s Court issued an order blocking a demonstration near the US Embassy scheduled for today. As always, we appreciate the efforts undertaken by the Government of Sri Lanka and local law enforcement to keep diplomatic personnel and facilities in the country safe and their continued efforts to curb the spread of COVID-19 by requiring masks, limiting the size of public gatherings and other measures,” it said.

One rule, different applications

The arrest comes days after President Rajapaksa issued an extraordinary gazette appointing a Presidential Task Force whose primary functions would be to “Build a Secure Country, Disciplined, Virtuous and Lawful Society.” The gazette although vague in language, recognized that national security was a key factor in determining the country’s future, while indicating that drug eradication will be a key focus of the task force. The gazette also allows for several government entities headed by military associates to act on their discretion, in matters deemed to endanger rule of law in the country.

At least 53 individuals were arrested by the Police in Colombo on Tuesday on charges of taking part in a protest and violating coronavirus regulations. However, law enforcement chose to look the other way, just a week before, when hundreds of mourners gathered in the hill country to pay their respects to the remains of an acclaimed minority union leader, late Minister Arumugam Thondaman.  Politicians, including Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa were seen defying social-distancing practices, when the late leader’s body was brought to the Parliament, and was seen embracing the former Minister’s son.

Health authorities feared a second wave as crowds defied a district-wide coronavirus curfew and social distancing rules, attending the funeral in the last week of May. The Director-General of Health Services Dr Anil Jasinghe was meanwhile threatened via telephone, by a supporter of the late Minister, for making statements against the organising of crowds at the funeral. While the late Minister’s body was placed in several locations for public to pay respect, Sri Lanka’s active social media population was quick to point out that social-distancing rules and coronavirus regulations only apply to the general public and not powerful political figures.

Kalani Kumarasinghe is a print and broadcast journalist based in Colombo, Sri Lanka. She covers a wide range of topics including health, social issues as well as sustainability and climate issues. Trained in specialised reporting on child rights by the Thomson Reuters Foundation, Kalani is also Sri Lanka’s 2019 fellow for the Asian Journalism Fellowship hosted by the Institute of Policy Studies, National University of Singapore. She is also involved in media training at the Sri Lanka College of Journalism, while being involved in newspaper-in-education projects building communication skills of children in disadvantaged communities, often travelling to remote parts of Sri Lanka. 

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