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Feb 10, 2010 (UCAN):
A group of Catholic and Anglican bishops in Sri
Lanka have urged politicians to stop politics-related
violence in the country so as to further lasting peace
and democracy.
“It is quite normal for people to side with a candidate
before and during a democratic election, but it is
unacceptable for them to be victims of reprisals once
the election is over,” Anglican Bishop Kumara
Illangasinghe of Kurunegala told UCA News.
More than 900 cases of violence, including five deaths,
were reported before the presidential election of Jan.
26. Over 300 cases of violence and one death were
reported following the election.
President Mahinda Rajapaksa has dissolved parliament to
make way for general elections likely to be held in
April.
Anticipating violence, a group of Catholic and Anglican
bishops issued a statement to media on Feb. 8.
They urged politicians to correct the trend of
election-related violence by setting “self-imposed codes
of conduct especially as we approach a general
election.” They pointed out that “reconciliation and
harmony should be the end result of an election,” but
unfortunately “we see violence.”
The bishop’s statement was signed by Catholic bishops
Thomas Savundaranayagam of Jaffna, Rayappu Joseph of
Mannar, Joseph Kingsley Swampillai of
Trincomalee-Batticaloa, Norbert Andradi of Anuradhapura,
and Anglican bishops Illangasinghe and Duleep de
Chickera of Colombo.
According to the bishops, people are scared about
continuing election-related violence across the country.
Rampaging armed mobs are on a witch-hunt for people who
openly side with or work for particular politicians,
they said.
In the presidential election that saw incumbent
President Rajapaksa elected back to office, violence
disturbed voting in the north, where Tamil people were
not provided with adequate transport to go to polling
stations, the bishops said in their statement.
Many of them had not been provided with voting cards,
they said.
Elsewhere, promotions, transfers, termination of
services and the resignations of some military, police
and public services personnel send worrying messages
about rewards and punishments for certain kinds of
political behavior, the bishops said.
The willful violation of electoral laws sadly
demonstrates that might is right, the bishops said.
Moreover, large amounts of money spent on campaigning
raises ethical questions of leadership qualities in a
country striving to eliminate poverty and bring about
justice, they added.
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