_Fourteenth Lal Bahadur Shastri Memorial Lecture _ 
(http://www.newdelhi.mission.gov.lk/index.php/india-sri-lanka-relations/388-62nd-independence-day-mes
sage-of-hon-prime-minister-) 
 
 
Forging a Radical Centre : A Response to Extremism and Intolerance” 
14th Lal Bahadur  Shastri Memorial  Lecture

 
Delivered by 
Hon. Mangala Samaraweera 
Minister of Foreign Affairs of Sri Lanka 
18th January 2007, New Delhi 
The Hon. Mangala Samaraweera, Minister of Foreign  affairs of Sri Lanka, 
delivered the fourteenth Lal Bahadur Shastri Memorial  Lecture on 'Forging a 
Radical Center: A Response to Extremism and  Intolerance'   on 18th January 
2007 at the National Museum Auditorium,  New Delhi.  Mr. Anil K Shastri, 
Trustee, Lal Bahadur Shastri National  Memorial Trust chaired the event.  Hon. 
A.H.M. Fowzie was also present at  the lecture.  The text of the lecture is 
as follows: 
Distinguished Guests 
Ladies & Gentlemen 
It is indeed a privilege to be invited to  deliver this year’s Lal Bahadur 
Shastri Memorial Lecture. I wish to thank Mr.  Anil Shastri and the Lal 
Bahadur Shastri National Memorial Trust for giving me  this opportunity. 
Today’s 
theme is, “Forging a Radical Centre: A Response to  Extremism and 
Intolerance” because I believe it aptly reflects the philosophy of  the late 
Prime 
Minister Shastri and is very relevant in today’s socio-political  climate. 
When researching the life of Lal Bahadur Shastri,  what I found remarkable 
was the resoluteness and the strength of his convictions  in his political 
vision despite his simplicity which almost bordered on  invisibility. Like 
Mahatma Gandhi, whose fearless stance on non-violence  revolutionized the 
thinking of the early twentieth century, Lal Bahadur Shastri  too was committed 
to the path of Ahimsa and non-violence. However, unlike the  Mahatma, 
Shastriji was a practicing politician and what I find remarkable was  his 
continued commitment to the Gandhian principles, even in the turbulent and  
expedient world of ‘real politick.’ 
Lal Bahadur Shastri’s simplicity was not a  weakness or lack of vision. 
Rather, it was an, integral element of his unique,  moderate, centrist style of 
governance that sprang from Shastri’s personality,  resoluteness and the 
courage of his convictions. He was indeed a ‘Radical  Centrist’ by example, 
vehemently and vigorously committed to ahimsa, tolerance  and moderation. 
Hence, the topic of today’s lecture. 
The achievements of Lal Bahadur Shastri and his  fellow leaders in the 
Indian independence struggle are all the more remarkable  because they formed 
their political philosophy at a time when the world was  being torn between 
the competing ideologies of fascism and communism. In an era  where 
revolutions, regional wars and armed conflicts was the norm, the Indian  
independence 
struggle’s adoption of the Gandhian approach of non-violent civil  
disobedience and democracy as the means to achieve freedom was indeed a radical 
 
affirmation of centrist values. 
With regard to my own country, an important  milestone in Indo-Sri Lanka 
relations was the successful negotiation and  conclusion of the Sirima-Shastri 
Pact signed by Prime Ministers Lal Bahadur  Shastri and Madame Sirimavo 
Bandaranaike. This was an important step in  addressing the issue of stateless 
persons of Indian origin that had been an  irritant in Indo-Sri Lanka 
bilateral relations. Even today, the Sirima-Shastri  pact has significant 
symbolism. It reflects the statesmanship of our leaders as  well as the 
moderation 
and resilience that always underlies Indo-Sri Lanka  relations. It is also an 
example of the spirit of flexibility and mutual  accommodation needed when 
dealing with difficult bi-lateral issues. 
It was just a few years ago, after the end of the  cold war and the fall of 
the Berlin Wall in the late eighties, that there was  new hope that the 
world would be freed from destructively clashing ideologies.  However, in the 
early years of the twenty first century, it is apparent that  there continues 
to exist sharp divides of political visions and economic  approaches. On 
the one hand, we are experiencing a largely intolerant  reaffirmation of 
ethnic, nationalistic and religious fundamentalism. On the  other hand, the 
idea 
of the state commanding the sectors of the economy as well  as the blind 
belief in the virtues of the free market, have proven to be greatly  misplaced. 
I believe today, the global challenge is to forge a centrist  alternative 
that is radically committed to resolving the ill consequences of  those 
failed and negative extremes. In doing so, Shastriji’s philosophy and  lifework 
remains as a beacon of light. 
Ladies & Gentlemen, I personally am not  against globalization.  But we do 
have to be cognizant of certain well  founded reservations. In 1998, Dr. 
Mahathir Mohamad, at the 7th International Conference on the  Future of Asia, 
in his inimitable style posed the question, “So what is there  beyond 
globalism and globalization? There could be total oppression of the weak  by 
the 
strong as capitalism runs riot. Or, there could be a world democracy  where 
the resources of the world are combined with human ingenuity to create the  
greatest human civilization ever.” 
There are many who claim that in every country  across the world, 
globalization, spurred by the rise of international  corporations, has made the 
poor 
poorer while the rich have gotten richer.  According to Nobel Laureate 
Joseph Stiglitz, during the last ten years, the  world’s total income has 
increased by an average of 2.5% per year.  Yet the  number of poor has 
increased by 
100 million. The top 1% of the world earns as  much as the bottom 57%. This 
disparity keeps increasing. It would be difficult,  and indeed imprudent, 
to delink this growing chasm from civil unrest, which we  see happening 
across the globe on a daily basis. 
Arundhati Roy, one of the most outspoken and  outstanding commentators 
today noted that civil unrest does not only mean  marches, demonstrations and 
protests against globalization. Unfortunately, it  also means a desperate 
downward spiral into crime and chaos and all kinds of  despair and 
disillusionment. As we know from history and from events unraveling  before our 
eyes, 
these gradually become a fertile breeding ground for terrible  things – 
cultural nationalism, religious bigotry, fascism, and of course  terrorism. 
Hence, 
the growth of intolerance and extremism that we face  today. 
As extremists from every part of the political  spectrum – the evangelical 
right, the revolutionary left, fundamentalist zealots  and separatist 
megalomaniacs monopolize the global media which thrives on  sensationalism, 
many 
may wonder if moderation and tolerance are becoming bygone  values of a 
distant and more civilized era. The loud and violent sounds of  extremism make 
better news than the democratic pronouncements of the silent  majority. The 
tyranny of the ‘few’ as opposed to the silence of the ‘majority’  is perhaps 
the biggest challenge many of our democracies have to face today. 
Ladies & Gentlemen, this is why a ‘radical  centre’ is needed to stop this 
slide towards open ended polarization and  extremism. A vigorous 
reiteration of liberal values is the need of the hour. The  ‘Centre’ should be 
home 
to a radical commitment to liberalism. The need is for a  new political 
culture based on reviving the value systems drawn from Lord  Buddha’s middle 
path 
to Gandhi’s path of non-violence, from Nehru to Martin  Luther King, from 
Nelson Mandela to Bill Clinton; the liberal centre must strike  back. 
Moderates all over, like brothers in arms must unite and stand up for a  
liberal 
ideology. 
As I see it, the root causes of extremism are  either economic, religious 
or socio-political in nature. Economic stereotypes  have been thrust upon the 
developing countries under the guise of globalization.  Many of the 
developed countries have reached the post-modern state of capitalism  after 
several 
centuries of economic evolution and costly trials and errors, both  in 
terms of human and social development. However, in many developing countries  
like ours, this form of capitalism is being thrust upon us without the slow  
learning curve the developed countries enjoyed in their evolution. This is 
why  it is important that each country must evolve its own form of market 
economics  if it is to get the most cost effective results. 
As envisioned by Aristotle in his treatise  ‘Politics’ in 350 B.C., the “
middling element,” was the substance that bridged  the chasm between the rich 
and the poor. It is more relevant to us than ever  before in this first 
decade of the 21st century. The middling element that  Aristotle wrote about 
was what Lal Bahadur Shastri practiced. In his case, it  included the 
strengthening of agriculture and the upliftment of the rural  poor. 
Neo-liberalism which has brought much confusion  and confrontation in 
developing countries must be replaced by a renewal of the  principles of 
consensual democracy that looks beyond the adversarial politics of  the left 
and the 
right. As Anthony Giddens states in his book ‘The Third Way’,  “a society 
where the market has free play may create large economic  inequalities.” And 
in doing so, it has been proven in many countries that a  pro-poor, 
pro-growth approach to economics is a more successful model in meeting  the 
demands 
of a developing nation. In fact, both the Indian and Sri Lankan  
electorates endorsed such policies in the general elections held in the two  
countries 
in 2004. Since then, India has averaged a growth rate between 8% - 9%  
while Sri Lanka, despite its continuing struggle against terrorism recorded a  
growth rate of 7.5% in 2006. 
The American Declaration of Independence in many  ways is an example of 
classic liberalism as it views life, liberty and the  pursuit of happiness as 
the key objective of a Government. Such a philosophical  stance of course 
implies that politicians must essentially concern themselves in  providing the 
means necessary for each individual’s vision of happiness. 
However, in countries like ours, where there  still is a large 
underprivileged class, such facilitation should be combined  with provisions 
for the 
State to look after the weak and the poor with an  effective social safety net. 
This is necessary in order to ensure that the free  market does not become ‘
gravitational fall’ for those unable to survive the test  of the fittest. 
In some instances, ignorance or the lack of  knowledge about issues make 
people take extreme hard line positions.  When  I was the Minister of 
Telecommunications in Sri Lanka, a strategic decision was  taken in 1994 to 
convert 
the state owned telephone corporation into a  partnership with the private 
sector. There was strong opposition to this move by  almost all the trade 
unions. When analyzing the reasons for this opposition, it  was obvious that 
the primary reason was lack of knowledge about the proposed  changes. Most of 
the employees did not understand what the changes meant and  were opposed to 
it, primarily based on hearsay and misinformation provided by  parties with 
a paucity of knowledge, and a bounty of vested interests. 
In order to dispel the myths about the evils of  this partnership as 
preached by some union leaders, we made a decision to send a  direct mailing to 
every employee, their spouses and to every other  stakeholder.  The mailing 
explained the benefits of public/private  partnership and helped stakeholders 
properly understand the issues. All  employees were made shareholders of the 
new company.  Thereafter the  process went through smoothly and the telecom 
sector in Sri Lanka emerged to  become one of the most successful 
enterprises in our country where consumers,  investors and stakeholders have 
benefited greatly. Tele-density in Sri Lanka  which was 0.7 in 1994 has now 
reached 
19.2.  The telecom partnerships are  now the two top companies in the 
Colombo Stock Exchange in terms of market  capitalization and profitability. 
This 
to me is a clear example of how the power  of reason can win over the 
politics of economic extremism. 
Ladies & Gentlemen, our contemporary world is  distorted by covert and 
overt hatred. Modern crusaders of intolerance, like  their predecessors from 
the 
middle ages, are wreaking havoc and destruction in  different parts of the 
world. Extremists that deliberately misinterpret  religious teachings and 
values have begun to spread their gospel of fear and  intolerance to many 
corners of the world. 
Adding fuel to this fire are various non-state  entities, who under the 
pretext of bringing development to the poor and the  underprivileged are 
engaged, in the process of converting the most vulnerable  segments of society 
with financial and economic enticements. Exploiting poverty  and ignorance, 
these new missionaries have become front organizations for  induced mass scale 
conversions. 
However, when responding to this threat, no  Government in a modern, 
democratic society can try to counter this challenge by  imposing 
anti-conversion 
legislation which will only serve to fuel further  tensions. Those who 
engage in mass conversions should also understand that  freedom to pursue ones 
religious beliefs, no matter how different they may be,  is a fundamental 
right of all human beings. The state must remain aloof from  interfering in the 
right of personal beliefs and must follow a policy of  secularism, as India, 
to her credit, has done very successfully since  independence. 
With the rise of crime and corruption levels,  which in many cases is the 
direct result of growing economic disparity, even  ordinary people may see 
extreme measures as the only solution to society’s ills.  Citizens, being made 
helpless and frustrated by ever increasing levels of crime  and violence 
ask for the return of capital punishment. Many politicians, wishing  to be 
seen in tune with populist sentiment, do not dare state that capital  
punishment is not the answer to crime and violence. Sri Lanka has had a virtual 
 
moratorium on capital punishment for decades. 
There has been no evidence that indicates that  capital punishment reduces 
crime or violence in any country. Rather, successful  investigation and fair 
and swift judicial process, remains the most effective  deterrent. 
Countries where the rule of law and independence of the judiciary and  the 
police 
are not firmly established are open to manipulation of the law by  those in 
power. The weak and the ordinary go to the gallows while the powerful  and 
well connected go scot-free. 
It is in the face of such feelings of  helplessness, that even good, decent 
and honest people begin to believe that  extremism and intolerance might 
provide solutions to their problems. The recent  execution of Saddam Hussein 
can be taken as an example. Regardless of the cruel  and despotic nature of 
his rule, the question remains whether his execution will  ultimately 
contribute to the healing process the people of Iraq so desperately  require. 
As 
Mahatma Gandhi said, “An eye for an eye will only make the world go  blind,” 
The biggest challenge of our post-modern world is  the scourge of 
terrorism. Those who have had to face the sorrows of terrorism in  any part of 
the 
world must join hands in defeating this menace. Like poverty,  terrorism 
anywhere is a threat to humanity everywhere. It must be fought  vigorously and 
fearlessly. That it should be defeated if democracies are to  survive, is 
beyond question. However, the debatable question is, how does one  defeat 
terrorism? 
Sometimes, Governments grappling with the scourge  of terrorism respond to 
terrorist atrocities with equal amounts of brutality and  violence.  They 
seem to forget that democratically elected Governments must  be above reproach 
at all times. Elected leaders do not have the option of  resorting to 
terror tactics even when fighting some of the deadliest terrorists  in the 
world. 
In fact, as Mr. Jaswant Singh wrote in his latest book, ‘A Call to  Honor’
, “the vital imperative of remaining ‘civilized’ is to avoid at all costs,  
the trap of becoming ‘terrorists’ to fight the terrorist. Our fight 
against  terrorists must not convert us into a clone of their methods: 
unseeing, 
uncaring  and totally unmindful of our civilizational and human norms.” 
Despite the challenge of having to battle one of  the most ruthless terror 
machines in the world for three decades, Sri Lanka is  constantly aware of 
the obligations to respect the rule of law and the need to  address the 
grievances of the affected minorities. That is why we remain  committed to a 
negotiated settlement to our ethnic question. 
Despite having to respond to a brutal war, thrust  upon us by an 
intransigent and murderous terrorist group, the solution is in how  we gently 
nudge, 
or entice if you will, these extreme elements to move towards  moderation and 
democratic methods without compromising our own integrity. The  need today 
is how to find a durable and lasting peace without a craven surrender  to a 
terrorist group. 
There are those who think that the middle path is  a philosophy of weakness 
and impotence. It may be seen as a recipe from bleeding  heart liberals 
trying to find excuses for a situation where anything goes and  where the rule 
of law doesn’t exist. The Radical Centre as envisaged must not  shy away 
from reasserting society’s belief in the rule of law.  
The middle path of the radical centre must be  based on the courage of 
convictions based on the principals of decency, freedom  and the rule of law. 
It 
must be a philosophy based on bringing the  socio-economic extremists 
fearlessly and vigorously into a radically committed  centre where the rule of 
law shall prevail. In doing so, it should engage civil  society as its ally. 
At the same time, the radical centre must ready, whenever  the need arises, 
to reassert society’s belief in the rule of law with armed  strength to 
protect the sovereignty of the nation. 
Yet another personal example of how the rule of  law played an important 
role in implementing a centrist vision occurred in 2001  when I was the 
Minister of Urban Development and Housing. I took a policy  decision to clean 
up 
all the illegal and unauthorized structures which were not  only an eyesore 
but a hazard to commuters in the centre of our capital city,  Colombo. 
Hundreds, if not thousands of unauthorized businesses and some illegal  dens of 
vice had sprouted making the sidewalks almost non-existent. Our policy  was to 
remove every one of these illegal structures without any favoritism. 
However, despite the illegality of the  structures, this proposal was met 
with much opposition, even from my own  parliamentary colleagues. Many of 
them accused me that I was going ahead with it  only because my constituents 
were not affected by it. At this juncture, I went  back to my own electorate, 
far to the South of Colombo, and made sure that all  unauthorized and 
illegal structures were removed in my hometown of Matara.  Many of these 
structures belonged to people who had supported me in the  general election. 
Having 
completed that, my Ministry officials returned to  Colombo and were able to 
remove the structures without much opposition.  Subsequently, all bona fide 
businesses that were torn down were offered  alternative locations while the 
slum dwellers were provided with alternate  housing. The lesson to be drawn 
is that the rule of law, when applied to all  fairly, can be a potent tool 
in development and progress. 
I am of the opinion that the only way to resolve  the conflict situation in 
Sri Lanka, or for that matter any of the myriad of  other similar 
situations around the world, to a sustainable peace, is by  developing the 
concept 
and practice of a “Radical Centre”. This would entail the  creation of a 
centrist middle way where dissenting voices and opinions from  every part of 
the 
political spectrum would have a place within a democratic  framework 
through the decentralization of governance and the devolution of power  to all 
stakeholders. It would be a place where the years of deep mistrust would  lose 
their sting within a non-violent, democratic system where pluralism and  
secularism flourishes. The radical centre should be a place where the 
intolerant  find that those they hate are in fact, quite similar to themselves 
and 
have the  same dreams and aspirations as well as fears and concerns. 
In conclusion, Ladies & Gentlemen, I would  re-emphasize my firm belief 
that a return to centrist values is the only  possible path to ensure the 
survival of democracy whose credentials are tested  today by the forces of 
anarchy and extremism. If we continue in our present path  where even good 
people 
in desperation begin to feel that the only answer to  extremism is more 
extremism, democracy as we know it today may surely be doomed  to be confined 
to 
the pages of history as yet another tried, tested and failed  political 
system. 
Despite its shortcomings, the world has yet to  come up with a political 
system which can successfully replace democracy  accompanied by the 
non-violent resolution of disputes. That is why many of us in  this room, will 
in just 
a few days from now, be enthusiastically reaffirming the  resurgence of a 
worldwide mood in favor of the Gandhian approach to conflict  resolution when 
we participate in the forthcoming commemoration of hundred years  of the 
launching of the Satyagraha movement. Democracy, therefore, must be  protected 
at all costs. The more powerful democracies must come to the help of  the 
less privileged democracies in their struggle against extremism. While  
nurturing and encouraging new democracies, it is equally important to help  
existing, long established democracies to survive. 
While right thinking Governments across the world  must unite to protect 
democracy, the right thinking people of the world must  also break their 
silence; the tyranny of the few can only be defeated if the  silent majority 
wakes up from their somnambulist stupor to say enough is enough.  The slogan of 
our times should be ‘Moderates of the World Unite!’
 
Keeping in  mind the humanitarian and livelihood dimensions of the 
fishermen issue, India  and Sri Lanka have agreed to put in place practical 
arrangements to deal with  bonafide Indian and Sri Lankan fishermen crossing 
the 
International Maritime  Boundary Line (IMBL). This was agreed to during the 
visit to New Delhi on 26th  October 2008 of Honourable Basil Rajapaksa, Member 
of Parliament and Senior  Adviser to the President of Sri Lanka. 
As part of  these practical arrangements, following the designation by the 
Government of Sri  Lanka of sensitive areas along the Sri Lankan coastline 
and their intimation to  the Government of India, Indian fishing vessels will 
not venture into these  identified sensitive areas. Further, there will be 
no firing on Indian fishing  vessels.

It was agreed that Indian fishing vessels would carry valid  
registration/permit and the fishermen would have on person valid identity cards 
 issued by 
the Government of Tamil Nadu.

India and Sri Lanka have agreed  to continue with their discussions, 
initiated in 2005, on the proposed  Memorandum of Understanding on development 
and 
cooperation in the field of  fisheries.

New Delhi
26th October,  2008

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