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Sri Lankan Press Criticizes Demonisation of Pakistan

Omar1984

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Fraternity amidst distress

There were many positives that emerged from Tuesday's Lahore horror chief of which is the strident outcry by the civilised world on the need to stamp out international terrorism. Obviously this unprecedented attack on a national sports team have spurred such a response which is bound to snowball in the coming days which world leaders would be hard pressed to ignore.

Especially in the wake of a genuine fear that this attack would set the tone for similar attacks on sports contingents which hitherto were spared by terror outfits in their deadly missions.

No doubt many lessons would have been learnt by this attack pertaining to security, particularly the fact that terrorists no longer pick and chose their targets in their anarchial projects, which would make countries more wary and on their guard when hosting international sporting events.

For that matter all international events such as summits and multi-lateral forums would see unprecedented security in the host country putting the world on heightened awareness for terrorists attacks. If these lessons are learnt and counter measures taken and more important a concerted efforts made collectively to rid the world of the terrorist menace, then some consolation could be extracted from the horrendous events of Tuesday.

What also emerged out of the attack was a spirit of fraternity and shared sentiment at the unprecedented happening. Today we carry in our opposite page several letters by Pakistani nationals expressing genuine regret and commiseration with our cricketers on their harrowing ordeal. Such outpouring of sentiment no doubt can only be reserved for sportsmen that gave vent to this fraternal feeling. All Sri Lankans no doubt would accept these sentiments in the right spirit even amidst the pain over the ordeal endured by their cricketing heroes.

Full credit is due to Mahela and his boys for standing tall amidst the chaos and taking things as they would, on the half volley. All Lankans are proud of their conduct. They never once blamed their hosts for their predicament but had only words of praise and appreciation for the prompt attention received amidst the tumult. The overwhelming emotions of Pakistani fans may certainly have sprung out of gratitude towards the Lankan players who took the challenge to tour their country which had been a no go zone for sporting events.

The gallant Lankans no doubt repaid their debt by making the tour as a mark of gratitude to the earlier visit made by Pakistan(and India) when we were similarly ostracised by international teams. It is this type of camaraderie that go a long way in cementing ties with our regional neighbours much more effectively than a political summit could achieve.

There were also eeri parallels making Tuesday's incident more significant in many ways. Five Pakistani policemen were killed trying to protect our cricketers during the Lahore attack. One recalls the LTTE suicide attack carried out in Colombo targeting the convoy of the Pakistani High Commissioner to Sri Lanka Basheer Wali Mohammed. Five Sri Lankans Commandos died in this attack in August 2006. The Pakistani Government while condemning the attack paid tribute to the soldiers who sacrificed their lives and specially condoled with the bereaved families.

The Government no doubt would take cognizance of this fact and respond in kind to the families of the slain Pakistani policemen. Special tribute is also due to the driver of the coach transporting the team who drove the vehicle into the Gaddafi stadium amid continuing gun fire which act saved the lives of our cricketers. This fact has been attributed to by the Lankan cricketers.

Sri Lanka as a country which had borne the brunt of terrorism for over three decades could certainly empathise with the plight of Pakistan. The country should be given all support and assistance to emerge out of this situation. It is in this light that one should condemn the many TV spotlights attempting to demonise Pakistan. Sri Lanka too was one time a victim of this ostracisation by countries, which affected our country's economy and damaged its good name.

Those baying for Pakistan's blood should instead strive to help that country out of its present predicament. These elements who are using Tuesday's attack to drive knife into an already battered and bruised nation should take a leaf out Sri Lanka which has conducted itself with equanimity towards a friendly neighbour despite being at the receiving end of a dastardly terror attack on its soil.

Such name calling certainly would not auger well for regional cooperation that is often the by word at international summits. Besides this can only antagonise Pakistan and place road blocks in the campaign to defeat terrorism. As for the Lankan cricketers they have to regroup and banish the incident as a bad dream. The world has to move on and harbouring fears and misgivings can only induce negativity. The nightmare experience no doubt is bound to haunt many of our players. The sooner they shake off the effect the better it would be for Sri Lanka's cricket and the country as a whole.

Editorial | Online edition of Daily News - Lakehouse Newspapers

Thank you Sri Lankan friends. Long Live Pakistan and Sri Lanka friendship.
 
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Don’t make Pakistan’s enemies happy

There are some pundits in this country waxing eloquent on the unfortunate incident in Lahore on Tuesday. They demand to know why our cricketers were sent to Pakistan, which they say is not a safe place––as if Sri Lanka were! Yes, Pakistan is experiencing some problems and it may not be the ideal place for us to play cricket at this moment. Some cricket playing nations refused to send their players there in view of security threats.

It is natural that a country in crisis seeks to repair its international image by preventing the cancellation of mega sports events which attract global media attention. There had been no previous attacks on or threats to cricketers in cricket crazy Pakistan, and as such the organisers of the match series at issue were confident that everything would go as planned, though some countries refused to play there for security reasons.

Sri Lanka has firsthand experience of such rebuff and knows how hurtful it is to be questioned on her ability to provide security to visiting VIPs. Sri Lanka, it may be recalled, took umbrage as India chose to dip its toe and called for special security arrangements to protect Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, when he attended last year’s SAARC conference in Colombo. Sri Lanka has also organised many events aimed at repairing its image as a safe tourist and investment destination with the assistance of her friends.

In 1996, as we said in these columns yesterday, several cricket playing nations did not want to play in Sri Lanka in view of terrorist threats. Their decision smacked of a calculated move to project this country as a very dangerous place and isolate it internationally. But, Pakistan and India came here and demonstrated to the world that the situation was not so bad as it was made out to be. A friend in need, it is said, is a friend indeed.

So, it was Sri Lanka's turn to stand by her all-weather friend, Pakistan, when she was invited to play cricket on the latter's soil. And she did. Unfortunately, the least expected happened and now everybody is wise after the event.

It is being claimed in some quarters that the Sri Lankan team had not been provided with adequate security. What is 'adequate security'? No security is adequate where terrorism is concerned. In a world where the Pentagon has come under a terror attack and well protected world leaders have perished at the hands of terrorists, there is always an element of risk in any kind of security arrangement.

In the late 1980s, in this country Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi had a close shave when a naval rating assaulted him with a rifle butt at a guard of honour. We have lost a President, many military leaders including a Navy commander and a lot of political leaders in terrorist attacks. The present Army Commander was targeted by a suicide bomber inside the Army Headquarters!

Therefore, can we afford to complain about security arrangements in other countries?

Most of all, when its High Commissioner to Sri Lanka Bashir Wali Mohammed came under a terrorist attack in Colombo in 2007, Pakistan did not fault Sri Lanka. Instead, it gave an assurance that nothing would affect Pakistan-Sri Lanka relations. That is how friends should handle difficult situations!

Nothing is so certain as the unexpected, where VIP security is concerned. Even if there had been a security blanket in Lahore on Tuesday, terrorists would still have struck. They are so fiendishly motivated and fanatically determined to cause bloodletting. There is hardly anything that a bunch of indoctrinated lunatics with a death wish is not capable of. Hence, the need for the world to unite and make a collective effort to eliminate global terrorism root and branch.

Our cricketers are precious to us and we heaved a sigh of relief when they escaped death and returned home safely. Now that the boys are back, we must put the unfortunate Lahore episode behind us. And the bankrupt political windbags in this country must stop making funny noises and embarrassing a friendly nation still reeling from Tuesday's terror strike.

It is thanks to friends like Pakistan that Sri Lanka remains undivided. But for Pakistan's unstinted support for Sri Lanka's war on terror, perhaps there would have been no country for Mahela and others to represent in international cricket. Several were the occasions when Pakistan was so generous as to part with even the ammunition stocks reserved for its use to ensure that Sri Lanka's war would go on.

When the LTTE launched its much hyped Unceasing Wave in 1999, destroyed many military camps with the help of its newly acquired MBRLs in the North and reached the outskirts of Jaffna, where tens of thousands of troops were trapped, it was Pakistan which answered Sri Lanka's desperate call for military assistance.

A team of army officers was rushed to Pakistan immediately and given a hurried training to handle MBRLs. And the much needed big guns were airlifted to Jaffna within days to put the brakes on the LTTE onslaught. Thus, Sri Lanka, which had been even considering a large scale troop evacuation from Jaffna, managed to avoid disaster.

No sooner had the Sri Lankan team been attacked than a sinister campaign was launched to discredit Pakistan, if some cynical remarks by certain regional and international TV stations were any indication. Let no contribution be made to that deplorable move.

Sri Lanka can rest assured that Pakistan will investigate the incident thoroughly and do its damnedest to bring the terrorists concerned to book. So, there is no need for pundits amongst us to tell Pakistan what to do.

That is the best way they can show their gratitude, if any, to a friendly nation in crisis struggling to avoid an adverse propaganda onslaught.

The Island-Editorial
 
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^ The two articles above are from Sri Lankan news.

Thank you Sri Lanka for being by our side.
Long Live Sri Lanka and Pakistan friendship.
 
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Sri Lankan press criticizes demonisation of Pakistan

Written by Pakistan News :: Pakistan Daily

Friday, 06 March 2009 01:42

Sri Lankan papers have slammed the tendency in some quarters to use the 3/3 terrorist outrage against Sri Lankan cricketers in Lahore, to demonise Pakistan and make it an international outcaste.
‘One should condemn the many TV spotlights attempting to demonise Pakistan. Sri Lanka too was at one time a victim of this ostracisation by countries, which affected our economy and damaged its good name,’ said an edit in the state-owned Daily News on Thursday.

Though no particular country or region was mentioned by the Sri Lankan papers, it was clear that the reference was to India and to some extent the West, which slammed Pakistan for turning a blind eye to the scourge of terrorism and nurturing it for use against its neighbors.

‘Those baying for Pakistan’s blood should instead strive to help that country out of its present predicament. These elements who are using Tuesday’s attack to drive a knife into an already battered and bruised nation should take a leaf out of Sri Lanka,which has conducted itself with equanimity towards a friendly neighbor despite being at the receiving end of a dastardly terror attack on its soil,’ Daily News which is Sri Lanka’s largest selling English language daily said..

‘Such name calling certainly would not augur well for regional cooperation that is often the by-word at international summits. Besides, this can only antagonise Pakistan and place road blocks in the campaign to defeat terrorism,’ it added.

‘No sooner had the Sri Lankan team been attacked that a sinister campaign was launched to discredit Pakistan, if some cynical remarks by certain regional and international TV stations were any indication. Let no contribution be made to that deplorable move,’ said an editorial in the independent English language daily The Island on Thursday.

The best that Sri Lankans could do for a friendly but struggling country like Pakistan was to ‘avoid an adverse propaganda war,’ the paper said.

Defending the Sri Lankan government’s decision to send the team to Pakistan when other countries like Australia and India had withdrawn, The Island said that Sri Lanka too had been boycotted earlier. An issue had been made of poor security in the island as a result of the war against Tamil Tiger terrorism. But Sri Lanka had gone ahead and organised several international events. In 1996, when many cricketing nations boycotted Sri Lanka, Pakistan and India had sent their teams to show the world that the situation in the island was not as bad as it was made out to be, the paper recalled.

‘So it was Sri Lanka’s turn to stand by her all-weather friend, Pakistan, when she was invited to play cricket on the latter’s soil. And she did. Unfortunately, the least expected happened and now everybody is wise after the event,’ The Island noted.

Recalling Pakistan’s role in helping Colombo maintain the territorial integrity of Sri Lanka in the face of Tamil Tiger separatism, the paper said that but for Pakistan’s support for Sri Lanka’s war on terror, perhaps there would have been no country for Mahela Jayawardene and others to represent in international cricket. It was because Pakistan had rushed Multi-Barrel Rocket Launchers that the Sri Lankan army was able to break the siege of Jaffna by the LTTE in 2002, the paper said.

Sri Lankan press criticizes demonisation of Pakistan | Pakistan Daily
 
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A few Pakistanis are bent to prove it otherwise, thanks God we have friends like Srilanka who understand what Pakistan is going through and how certain players are hell bent with the help of inside to destabilize Pakistan and give it a bad name.
 
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