Sri Lankan monk calls for support
for Buddhist Sinhalese govt.
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| Buddhist monks and supporters at the Buddhist monks convention in Kandy |
The leader of Sri Lanka’s most powerful Buddhist nationalist
group, held a rally in Kandy on July 7, calling on the country’s Buddhist
temples to help win votes for candidates from the Sinhala Buddhist majority in
the upcoming elections.
By Robin Gomes
Hundreds of hardline Buddhist monks rallied in Sri Lanka on
Sunday, pressing for the democratic control of the parliament to protect the
nation’s majority Sinhalese community.
Police lined the streets of the highland city of Kandy in
central Sri Lanka and the army was on standby, as the Buddhist monks gathered
for their first big assembly since the Easter Sunday suicide bomb attacks by
Islamist militants on churches and luxury hotels in April.
Galagoda Aththe Gnanasara, the influential chief of the Bodu
Bala Sena (BBS), the country’s most powerful Buddhist nationalist group,
addressed hundreds of monks and followers at Bogambara Stadium, calling on Sri
Lanka's 10,000 Buddhist temples to help win votes for candidates from the
Sinhala Buddhist majority in the upcoming presidential elections.
"We the clergies should aim to create a Sinhala
government. We will create a parliament that will be accountable for the
country, a parliament that will protect the Sinhalese," Gnanasara told the
monks’ convention.
He pointed out that politicians should leave the fight
against Islamist extremism to the monks, who can talk to Muslims without
engaging in extremism.
“It's our responsibility because this is a Sinhalese country,”
Gnanasara said adding, “We are the historical owners of this country."
Muslims, who make up 10 percent of the largely Buddhist
country, have become fearful of a backlash, especially in recent weeks, in
apparent reprisal for the April bombings that killed more than 250 people.
Several worried Muslim traders shut their establishments on
Sunday in Kandy, for fear of violence. The ancient capital that houses
that relic of the tooth of Buddha in a temple, was rocked by violence last
year.
Sri Lanka has had a history of ethnic and religious violence
and was torn for decades by a civil war between separatists from the mostly
Hindu Tamil minority and the Sinhala Buddhist-dominated government. The war
ended in 2009.
Sri Lanka’s presidential polls are set for November or
December in which President Maithripala Sirisena, former defence secretary
Gotabaya Rajapaksa, and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe are seen as
possible candidates.

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