25 May 2021 12:10 am Views - 9109
When questioned the AG’s coordinating officer Nishara Jayaratne said that AG’s department did not wish to comment regarding the issue, adding that a statement had been published regarding the removal of the plaque. She did not want to comment further on the issue.
Tamil Progressive Alliance Leader and Opposition parliamentarian Mano Ganesan stated in a tweet, the Chinese are “violating language law”. He said the failure to include the Tamil words was a violation of the official language act. He raised the question as to who really was responsible for this. He tweeted, “ It appears Chinese learn to ignore Tamil from our government since GoSL’s usage of Official Language Tamil is no better.” He said, “China is not our enemy. Respect us. We respect you. The Chinese Ambassador in Colombo should keep in mind that Classical Tamil came to China in the 5th century, taught the arts and was loved by the Chinese people.”
Commenting on the issue, State Minister of National Heritage, Performing Arts and Rural Arts Promotion, Vidura Wickramanayka said that omitting Tamil in the plaque violated the official language policy in Sri Lanka. “As a country we should not allow these type of things to happen. We talk about co-existence. An inquiry in this regard has to be carried out. This language policy should apply alike throughout the country. But there are instances in the North and the East where Official language policy is ignored omitting Sinhala in some the areas. We need to rectify this when talking about language policy in relation to co-existence. We sometimes find plaques written only in Tamil,” he said.
In response to a journalist who questioned the Chinese Embassy in Sri Lanka, the embassy responded, “It’s an internal E-Library in the AG’s Department, funded by the Government and People of China. Chinese language is displayed as a kind gesture towards China, which is highly appreciated.”
“This is unacceptable that this has happened. This indicates a certain mindset where it comes naturally to some government officials and to private sector to forget that Tamil is an official language,” said Human Rights Activist Ruki Fernando.
He said It was commendable that the AG’s Department had acknowledged it and had taken steps to change it. “That is a positive aspect. It is not something we see often. The fact that it happened is problematic and it is important to check why this is happening. This has happened long before Chinese language has also started appearing on our boards,” he said.
According to media reports, this was the second instance of the Chinese mission responding to tweets flagging Mandarin text in sign boards. Last week, Batticaloa Parliamentarian from Tamil National Alliance (TNA) Shanakiyan Rasamanickam shared on Twitter an image of a sign board of the ‘Central Park’ coming up at the China-backed Colombo Port City, with text in Sinhala, English and Mandarin, and said: “Tamil text is missing, that’s alright! Soon Sinhala will be missing too. Hope Sri Lankans wake up at least then.”
The Embassy said in a tweet on the same day: “We noticed an interim sign in a JV building site not abiding by trilingual rules. Request raised. We respect all three official languages in Sri Lanka, and urge China companies to follow,” sharing images of other Chinese-built structures that also included Tamil text in their name boards.
Responding, Rasamanickam said “the cat is really out of the bag.
The Chinese government decides what goes on name boards in SL. This really indicates how little control the SL Govt. has over the situation,” he tweeted. The MP also vehemently opposed the recently passed law governing the Port City and said the country had become Chi-Lanka”.