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Our children are under threat

Monday, 9 July 2012 - 8:20 AM SL Time


Not too long after the historic defeat of the LTTE, President Mahinda Rajapaksa made a claims He said `parapuraka aadambara thaaththa mamai` (I am the proud father of an entire generation).

The claim was not based on an opinion poll. And yet, both resonated well with the general public, considering the context. He had, after all, presided over and given political direction to secure what was thought to be impossible to obtain. And again, as is usually the case, as time went by, the claims and especially the second, were lampooned. Political fortunes are never constant there are ups and downs, missteps and slips.
But if the President was metaphorically at least `father`, then citizen is child, and no citizen is as much `child` as children themselves. The defeat of terrorism reinstated the right of child to be child. It also effectively removed doubt, fear and foreboding from the minds of parents. They were assured that their children would be safe from exploding devices planted by terrorists. They could rest easy knowing that their children would not be abducted and forced into combat operations by terrorists. That was then, i.e. in the heady days following victory.

And today`s is a story of different vulnerabilities producing yet again doubt, fear and foreboding. Child rape. The Ministry of Child Development has received a whopping 21,507 complaints regarding child abuse, of which 2,323 were found to be true. Typically, though, most abuse incidents go unreported because the perpetrators happen to be close relatives or figures of authority. Children, out of fear and also due to threat of retribution, tend to remain silent and submit to the horror again and again.

The President cannot look after all children. Parents need to be vigilant. Teachers need to educate. The media has a role to play. It is our collective future we are talking about here. If we do nothing, we will produce a generation where a significant number would carry psychological scars which could have unimaginable consequences not just for the victims but society in general.

Where are the laws? Where is the enforcement? Why is it that we use rape incidents as top stories on the front page of newspapers, push arrests into Page 3 and shove convictions into the made-for-forgetting small print of Page 12? In other words, it`s our baby, our collective child who is under threat here.

Parents and children should know what can happen, how to identify potential risks and take preventive measures. The perpetrators must be punished. An online poll carried out by www.nation.lk threw up some numbers that indicate the extent of public anger. Eighty percent demanded death penalty for those found guilty of rape which 20% suggested `Life imprisonment with the possibility of parole and psychological treatment`. The ethics of capital punishment is another debate, but what this shows is that rape stands with the most violent of crimes.


Disturbing too is the fact that several rape cases, including child-rape, have implicated elected representatives. How did these people secure nominations to run for office?` Clearly the screening system is either faulty or the screeners incompetent or else similarly guilty or else the system turns saints into rapists. Not all, of course, but `some` and even `one` is one too many. Tragically, these very scoundrels graduate from being members of local government authorities to provincial councilors and parliamentarians.

Power gives license to do wrong in situations where independent law enforcing processes are absent. This is why the Government and in particular the President needs to work towards correcting the institutional flaws that make for such abuse. It is not enough, in other words, to educate the public.
It is a sad indictment on our political culture when we look at a politician`s face and are forced to see a rapist`s signature on it simply because prevention is better than cure.

The President cannot be proud. None of us can be proud. The President has openly expressed displeasure about the operations of politicians, especially in Tangalle. He can begin by weeding out the monsters from nomination lists. He must, sooner rather than later, admit that the law is full of holes and work with the Parliament to plug those holes. Our children, their childhood and their future are all falling through these. It is hurting like hell.


Source(s)
Nation, MS

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samadi
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LK Information  9 Jul 2012 01:22:05 GMT  Report for Abuse  
Power gives license to do wrong in situations where independent law enforcing processes are absent. This is why the Government and in particular the President needs to work towards correcting the institutional flaws that make for such abuse. It is not enough, in other words, to educate the public.
It is a sad indictment on our political culture when we look at a politician's face and are forced to see a rapist's signature on it simply because prevention is better than cure.
AnuD
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LK Information  9 Jul 2012 01:24:42 GMT  Report for Abuse  
He can begin by weeding out the monsters from nomination lists. He must, sooner rather than later, admit that the law is full of holes and work with the Parliament to plug those holes.


IT is at every level, Cabinet ministers, parliamentary politicians, provincial, municipal council and bureaucrats.

IT is a mess.
MaKaSo
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LK Information  9 Jul 2012 02:44:59 GMT  Report for Abuse  
Now read this...who is making this mess??

The Ceylon Teachers Service Union has called upon the general public to join it in urging the government to defeat a move to offer the rank of colonel to school principals.

In a media release signed by General Secretary of the CTSU Mahinda Jayasinghe, the union says that the government is preparing the ground to militarise the local school system by converting school principals into Colonels of the National Cadet Corps, coming under the purview of the Ministry of Defence.

'We condemn this move to militarise the schools. This would result in producing children being trained to follow orders from top without questioning them,' Jayasinghe says in the release.Interviews had been held on July 04 and 05 at the National Cadet Corps headquarters in Kirulapone for principals and educational directors to select the first batch of colonels under the proposed scheme. Those selected would be directed to undergo one week s training and on completion of it they would be commissioned in the rank of colonel of the NCC which has the powers of same rank in the Sri Lanka Army.

Jayasinghe says the main reason given for the government decision to promote principals and educational directors to the colonel rank is the deterioration of discipline in the school system. It is true that discipline within the school system has hit the rock bottom, but there are several reasons this situation, the teachers union says, condemning the government s alleged move and requesting parents and the general public to exhort the government to abandon its plan to militarise the school system.

Damed
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LK Information  9 Jul 2012 05:25:41 GMT  Report for Abuse  
Adambara Taththata Kade Giya Set eka mokada Ambareeannneeee....!

Duminda Romero Silva ta duwa denawada Vanda Namaskara Karaganda...!
Damed
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LK Information  9 Jul 2012 05:26:49 GMT  Report for Abuse  
Samadi who said Karuna is special...hak hak

Sinhala Women given at a pace to this Terrorists....

deepan thoge amm@th Karunata.
elephanthouse
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LK Information  9 Jul 2012 06:47:40 GMT  Report for Abuse  
Samadi
Thanks for your interesting article.
Children are the most precious thing we have and yet, not everything is done to protect them. It's a shared responsibility at every level of our society.
Roshan2007
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LK Information  9 Jul 2012 06:51:27 GMT  Report for Abuse  
The President has openly expressed displeasure about the operations of politicians, especially in Tangalle. He can begin by weeding out the monsters from nomination lists.

this will make thing even worse. it makes us to be dependent further on presidential powers which the is one of main issues for the country's problems.

what should happen police and judiciary become independent and instill law and order without political or presidential interferences.
samadi
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LK Information  9 Jul 2012 07:34:00 GMT  Report for Abuse  
Booruwa damed,

get the hell outta here..!!

Ali,

yap, parents should be more vigilant of their children these days!
and we need to cull all the rapists..
elephanthouse
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LK Information  9 Jul 2012 08:33:54 GMT  Report for Abuse  
Roshan
Good point. It's not MR's job to run after these guys, but it is his job to make sure police and judiciary function again the way they are supposed to.
dumindak
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LK Information  9 Jul 2012 09:39:33 GMT  Report for Abuse  
Ane apoi, Deshapreminta giya kalak..

Allapu aththatha naha, paya gahapu aththath naha..
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