Everything smells smoky in Dharga Town, Aluthgama, the morning after.
Dozens
of Special Task Force personnel stand guard on the edges of the Muslim
settlement, separated from the Sinhalese village by a few metres. On
doorsteps and street corners, people huddle in little groups, speaking
in whispers and shooting wary looks at outsiders flocking to the village
at dawn, many of them lugging camera equipment.
Life at a standstill in Dharga Town
With the curfew imposed on Sunday night still in effect, life is at a
standstill. But in the eerie early morning calm, tension wrought by last
night’s mayhem hangs heavily in the air. The charred and still
smouldering ruins of a motorbike shop mark the entrance to Dharga Town,
where the worst of the sectarian violence that erupted on the streets
had unfolded the previous night.
“He came here yesterday, that monk – and he said there would be no more
Dharga Town,” says N. Yusuf, standing on the one street that cuts
straight through the town. He insists the Government should never have
allowed the Bodu Bala Sena rally to go ahead in the area, after a
traffic accident had made clashes appear imminent only last Thursday.
But arrive the monks did, together with a crowd of some 7,000 people,
according to Dharga Town residents. Hate speech and fear mongering
flowed freely from their stage in Aluthgama, on Sunday afternoon. With
Muslim youth congregating in street corners in anticipation of trouble,
the stage was set for the bloody night of rioting that was to follow.
The first clashes erupted when rally attendees decided to march through
the most populous Muslim areas, shouting anti-Muslim slogans and vowing
to protect the Sinhala Buddhist nation. To curb the unrest, Police moved
swiftly to impose curfew in the division and urge people to stay
indoors. But smaller crowds were regrouping, moving separately through
different streets of Aluthgama.
“Police told us to stay inside, but the crowds were moving about
freely outside. The curfew didn’t seem to apply to them, just like the
tear gas,” complained M. Farina, a Dharga Town resident.
Criticism of the STF and Police personnel
The women are vocal in their criticism of the STF and Police personnel,
that they claim did little to stop the rampaging mobs. “I watched, they
were standing right there, watching the bakery being attacked,” says
Farina. Everyone had failed them, she says, Muslim politicians, the
Police units sent in to ‘protect’ Muslim towns and villages.
“We got fed up yesterday. We are leaving it to God now,” she says in
disgust. “At this rate, it won’t be long before a Muslim Prabhakaran is
born.”
Shops and homes in Dharga Town and on the Welipane Road in Aluthgama
town, many of them owned by Muslims were torched and vandalised in the
violence that continued throughout the night. In Malawana, in Dharga
Town, the Masjidun Noor was vandalised, its windows shattered, holy
books burnt and entire sections of the building in ruins.
“Only animals attack places of worship, of whatever religion,” spits
Mohammed Najid, as he recalls the mosques that have been attacked
overnight.
Welipitiya clashes
In Welipitiya, where residents said three Muslims had died, face-to-face
clashes had ensued between the Sinhalese and Muslim groups. Mobs
shouting anti-Muslim slogans and hurling petrol bombs and stones
advanced on a stretch of the village where the men were standing guard
outside the Welipitiya Mosque.
“All the women in our village went into the mosque for shelter. We felt
we had to fight to protect the women and the mosque if necessary,” said
Mohammed Rizkan, who lost his brother-in-law in the Welipitiya clash.
The Muslim residents claim for three hours, all attempts to reach the
Police and STF had failed, as the violence continued. Fresh blood,
remnants of petrol bombs, broken slippers and debris litter the road
that Police have cordoned off as a crime scene by morning because of the
fatalities.
Three men – 30-year-old Mohammed Shiraz, a labourer, 40-year-old
Mohammed Sahuran, a local shop owner, and 41-year-old Mohammed Imran, a
terrazzo and tile layer – succumbed to their injuries, which residents
say were inflicted by gunshot wounds.
Imran’s brother, Mohammed Rilwan, says his younger sibling – a father of
two – had forged in front of the crowd to protect the women taking
shelter inside the Welipitiya Mosque. “He was shot in his stomach and
head. It was the Police who took him to hospital in their jeep,” says
Rilwan.
“They fought us face-to-face for two hours. The Police didn’t show up
until after people were dead,” said M. Hussein, a Muslim man involved in
the fighting on Sunday night.
At least seven people were injured in the fighting.
Police teams finally showed up at 1 a.m. to transport the dead and
injured, Hussein explained. Seven people had been injured in his village
alone. Nearly 10 hours later, Muslim residents in Welipitiya are still
criticising the Police, several of whom are now stationed in the village
to maintain order.
The Police
With clashes erupting all over Aluthgama and an adjoining town, the
manpower on Sunday night was inadequate, according to Police personnel
stationed in the area.
“There were incidents taking place simultaneously in different places.
We were assaulted by the Buddhist mobs when we attempted to travel
towards Muslim settlements – they said we were only interested in
protecting the Muslims,” says one senior Police official in Welipitiya,
who declined to be named because he was not authorised to make
statements to the press. “Here in the Muslim village, we are being
accused of failing to show up on time,” the Police officer complains.
Someone else’s agenda
In the mostly Sinhalese section of the Welipitiya village, residents
express sorrow at the situation that has befallen their neighbours.
Here, on the other side of the crime scene cordon, both Muslim and
Sinhalese owned houses have been damaged by marauding mobs. “We have no
grouse with the people on that side of the village. They are our
friends. We know them. We didn’t recognise the people who fought last
night, they were not from here,” explains L. Lasantha.
Didn’t think violence would ensue: IGPThe Police did not have fears of clashes breaking out as a result of a rally staged by the Bodu Bala Sena in Aluthgama yesterday as they received an assurance everything will be peaceful.Inspector General of Police (IGP) N.K. Illangakoon told reporters in Kalutara yesterday that the Police had received complaints raising fears of violence breaking out if the BBS rally was allowed to go ahead. However, he said after speaking to the organisers of the rally and Muslims in the area, the Police was certain the rally would end peacefully and so there was no need to obtain a court order against the rally. “We were assured that this was going to be purely a religious event and that everything will be calm and peaceful,” he said. The IGP insisted that Police action after clashes broke out had ensured the situation did not escalate further and he also added that eight suspects had been arrested and some were later released on bail. Illangakoon said that the Criminal Investigations Division (CID), Colombo Crimes Division (CCD) and area police were involved in the investigations into the violence. The IGP meanwhile also denied reports that some monks were being held hostage or were killed by a mob in the Aluthgama area. He also insisted that live gunfire shots were not fired by the Police to disperse the mob during the violence. (Colombo Gazette) |
He says sorrowfully that he knew the people who died in the battles
on Sunday night. “This was someone else’s agenda. Our property has been
damaged and we have suffered losses. But they were not from among us,”
Lasantha says.
Houses and offices aflame
The same story is echoed down Milton Road, in Dharga Town where several
Muslim owned houses and business establishments were set alight. An
apparel factory is still smouldering, plumes of smoke spiralling into
the air and ash flying in the wind. The flames have engulfed several
vehicles in the compound, all of them now in ruin.
Across the road, the building that once served as the Wee Tots
Montessori, now only a residence, has also been attacked. A garage and
fridge repair shop along the narrow street have also been gutted by
fire.
Muslim and Sinhalese neighbours, seated on plastic chairs in confab on
the road, shake their heads about the previous night’s violence. In the
absence of a Police presence down the road, they have become an ad hoc
neighbourhood watch, led by Police Sergeant and resident, Hubert Silva.
“The mob came three times. Twice we beat them back. The third time the
crowd was much bigger. And Muslim people gathered nearby angered them by
pelting stones. Then there was no stopping them,” recounts Silva.
He says there were no faces in the crowd he was able to recognise.
Silva begged the mob not to torch the apparel factory, which he said was
owned by a ‘good man.’ “I told them the owner employs 10 Sinhalese
girls, they would all lose their jobs if the place was destroyed,” he
said, adding that the crowds simply told him to get lost.
The Police officer assures that there have been no tensions between the
Sinhalese and Muslim communities living down Milton Road, a fact
corroborated by his Muslim neighbours, now victimised by the looting and
torching.
“We go to their festivals. We share food. We never had problems here,” says Dayasena, also a resident of Milton Road.
The crowd seemed to be made up of hooligans, says Silva, none of them
willing to listen to reason. “If there had been two people here in
uniform, we could have put up greater resistance. But we were beaten
back and we were also afraid,” he says.
Morning calm shattered
By 2 p.m. on Monday, the morning calm had been shattered, as crowds
armed with poles and other implements gathered once more at the entrance
to Dharga Town and close to the Welipane exit off the Southern
Expressway. These groups were preventing media personnel from getting
into the area, even holding one newspaper journalist hostage for a few
minutes.
1,200 Police personnel including 400 from the Special Task Force had been deployed in the town on Sunday to maintain order.
Police Spokesman Ajith Rohana claimed yesterday that the situation was
being contained, and confirmed that the Army had been deployed in the
area to maintain order. The curfew that had been imposed on Sunday
evening was never lifted and remained in effect throughout the night on
Monday, he said.
No arrests have been made so far, despite the widespread rioting and arson attacks, the Police Spokesman said.
However, fresh clashes were reported from the area late Monday. Angry
crowds of Buddhists prevented an Opposition Parliamentarian convoy from
crossing into the town, because of Muslim legislators in their midst,
UNP MP Harsha De Silva said.
Pervasive sense of hopelessness
Across Aluthgama, there is a pervasive sense of hopelessness – even
among the security forces personnel who explain that they had no choice
but to beat back mobs when things got particularly unruly. “There is no
one to blame but the Buddhist monks. They led the villagers, they should
have known better,” say STF personnel stationed at the entrance to
Dharga Town in the early hours of Monday.
Much of the morning-after discussion revolves around the question of
human rights. This is familiar conversation in the aftermath of tragedy
and violation, in besieged towns like Aluthgama and Weliweriya. But for a
people whose lives are built on trade, ultimately it comes down to a
matter of economics. “They attacked our shops, hitting our stomachs.
They finished the Muslims in this area,” an emotional Farina says the
morning after violence.She says she watched the special Police observe
passively while the Buddhist mob attacked shops and homes.Hubert Silva,
the Policeman in Dharga Town, does not believe the violence had anything
to do with patriotism or religion.
“These people were not doing this for love of country or religion. They were hooligans; they were doing this for fun.”
Pix by Lasantha Kumara