Sri Lanka: Tales which pictures don't tell
As was only to be expected under the circumstances, the Sri
Lankan Government has promptly dismissed the published pictures of LTTE leader
Prabhakaran's 12-year-old son Balachandran, before and after his killing in the
Northern war-zone in May 2009, as "lies, half-truths and speculation". India,
which has a stake in it all, has reacted cautiously. New Delhi could not vouch
for the authenticity of the pictures is how External Affairs Minister Salman
Khurshid has put it.
The published pictures form a part of the upcoming documentary,
"No War Zone: Killing Fields of Sri Lanka", to be shown in Geneva, timed to
coincide with the UNHRC session, due to discuss 'accountability issues' flowing
from 'Eelam War IV'. The latter is part of the US effort, flowing from the UNHRC
resolution, with India voting in favour, last March. The former is an effort at
forcing New Delhi's hand to vote in favour of the follow-up procedural
resolution that the US has proposed to bring before this year too.
The documentary seems intended to influence India. This has
become clear with the director of the BBC-Channel IV documentary, Cullum Macrae,
declaring that the "film will test India over its next move on the UNHRC
resolution against Sri Lanka". Media reports quoting the director have said,
"The new evidence in the film is certain to increase the pressure on the Indian
Government to not only support a resolution on Sri Lanka and accountability, but
also ensure that it is robustly worded, and that it outlines an effective plan
for international action to end the impunity in Sri Lanka."
If nothing else, such posturing raises the question if the
pictures, if not the film as a whole, is aimed at forcing New Delhi on a major
foreign policy concern with implications flowing from and into domestic
politics, particularly in relation to the South Indian State of Tamil Nadu. As
was only to be expected, political parties and organizations in the State have
reacted promptly the way they were expected to do, implying that efforts may
already be on to prompt the Tamil Nadu polity - and possibly, a section of the
society - to force New Delhi into taking decisions that are better left to the
policy-maker.
Controversial at best
The film, aired by BBC's Channel IV, seems to be a sequel to
what has become an annual series, whose releases are timed to trigger tough
positions on Sri Lanka at successive sessions of the UNHRC over the past couple
of years. The producers have said that the film will be shown in India too,
possibly through local television channels, as was the case with the earlier
parts. In particular, great efforts went into producing a Tamil version of the
same, which was shown in TV channels in the State, followed by television
talk-shows that are picking up momentum.
However, these pictures are as controversial at best as the
series that were shown earlier. On earlier occasions, the Channel IV fare put
out high figures of Tamil deaths, citing UN-commissioned reports, and used
pictures, as if to justify the voice-over. The Sri Lankan Government had
contested those figures, sticking to the early goal and claims of
'zero-casualty' but modified by individuals to a figure closer to the original
7,000 civilian deaths, as enumerated by the UN itself.
Much will remain to be known when the new film is shown, but the
media promo - if one could describe the news reports with static pictures of
Balachandran, before and after his bullet-wound death, have a different tale to
tell, or what they do not tell. Like the earlier version, it claims that the
young and healthy boy was shot dead by the Sri Lankan armed forces, at
point-blank range.
Forensic analysts, who studied the picture, have confirmed
'point-blank range', but the conclusion that it was the cruel handiwork of the
armed forces would still require independent confirmation. The possibility that
the LTTE supremo or his close aides did not want the little boy to fall into the
hands of the 'enemy', whose 'cruelty' they had talked about, has to be ruled out
through independent evidence before any conclusions of the kind could be drawn.
The latest picture also pre-supposes and pre-disposes for the
viewer that the Sri Lankan armed forces were the killers, and had shot the boy
dead in a bunker. That it was an army bunker, and not that of the LTTE, has also
to be proved. Another question to be answered is how the child shown in the
picture was sitting quietly in this place (forced as he may have been under a
soldier's gun, if the other assumption of the experts in the news report is to
be believed), and seems to be nibbling something from a packet in the other
hand, as if all was well all around him - or, at least was not all that shocking
and frightening, as it was supposed to be.
At best, the forensic report could vouchsafe for the
authenticity that the earlier picture of the dead boy, and the new ones showing
him in flesh and blood, were taken by the same camera and formed a part of the
series. Otherwise, the claims, based on the assumptions by the forensic expert,
that the child may have been witness to the armed forces' killing of LTTE
cadres, whose bodies were strewn along with that of Balachandran in earlier
films, too needs authentication of a different kind.
To the extent, the forensic expert, extensively quoted, has made
assumptions that are not supported by scientific data, the report cannot form
the basis for Governments across the world to base their decisions on it. Since
the film director has already indicated that one purpose of the film may have
been to force New Delhi's hand to vote and act in a particular way, New Delhi
has to be wary of efforts of the kind more than ever. Decision has to be based
on facts, not films!
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