Buddhist extremists giving minorities a hard time in Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka suffers from growing sectarian incitement, mainly orchestrated by Buddhist extremists.
These extremists lobby for excluding
minorities in the country, including Hindus and Muslims, who collectively male
up a fifth of the population.
The Bodu Bala Sena is led by an
extremist Buddhist clergyman, Galagoda Athjananasara, who is notorious for his
violent rhetoric and is responsible for numerous racist crimes against religious
minorities.
He was also arrested several times,
including in 2017, when the Police Organized Crimes Prevention Division accused
him of attacking a police officer after several weeks of chases.
Athjananasara was then released on
bail and then arrested again on other charges and sentenced to six years in
prison.
He was, however, released on May 23,
2019, after receiving a presidential pardon due to pressure from the Buddhist
movement.
Athjananasara was convicted of
inciting religious hatred among the community.
He is also known to have close ties
to the extremist Buddhist monk in Myanmar, Ashinwerathu, who sparked a wave of
ethnic cleansing that displaced hundreds of thousands of Rohingya and killed
thousands of them.
Videos spread on the Internet showing
the amount of violations practiced by the extremist cleric.
In one of them, he is filmed
storming a police station and assaulting officers.
The restraint shown by the officers against
this monk demonstrated his power and influence, thanks to his strong following
on the streets.
Athjananasara heads a working group
whose goal is to draft a law under the name 'One Country, One Law'.
The legislation has raised the
concerns of religious minorities who fear that their personal status laws will
change based on pressures from this extremist organization.
The Bodu Bala Sina organization led
sectarian attacks on mosques, homes and shops.
These attacks left a large number of
people dead.
The organization also organizes
popular campaigns to prevent the wearing of Islamic clothes and prevent the
slaughter of cattle and sheep.
It calls for the adoption of
cremation, instead of the burial of people.
Although the government
allowed the burial of the bodies of members of the Muslim minority after an
intervention from Pakistan, Sri Lankan Prime Minister, Mahinda
Rajapaksa, retracted this matter after the wrath of Buddhist
militants, led by the Bodu Bala Sina organization.