A landowner from another locality in Batticaloa told TamilNet that he was adviced by the SL police not to remove the Buddha statue and the Bo tree planed by the SL military.
Buddha statue left behind by SL military at private lands in Mayilampaa-ve'li in Batticaloa
Without establishing a political right that protects the landowners, they are reluctant to remove such structures, political observers in Batticaloa said.
In the meantime, extremist Sinhala monk based in Batticaloa has been trying to revive the Buddha structures left behind by the SL military, they said.
Although the SL Constitution attempts to project all religions as having equal status, the constitutional provision of ‘foremost place’ and various other arrangements such as the SL police having a special division to protect the Buddhism under the guidance of SL Ministry of Buddha Sasana, have made it a crime if anyone attempts to peacefully dismantle even a Buddha statue in the occupied country of Eezham Tamils
Article 9 (chapter II) of the current Sri Lankan constitution promulgated in 1978 says "The Republic of Sri Lanka shall give to Buddhism the foremost place and accordingly it shall be the duty of the State to protect and foster the Buddha Sasana.."
Eezham Tamils say that this Article constitutes a particular obstacle in negotiating any degree of regional autonomy with the genocidal State of Sri Lanka because it is an 'entrenched' section of the constitution. Article 9 can be amended or repealed only with the support of two thirds of all the members of the SL Parliament and only if such amendment or repeal is thereafter approved by the people in an island-wide referendum.
The proposals for new constitution are also not going to change this reality and federalism is not possible under the genocidal configuration of the Sri Lankan system. The fundamental genocidal character will continue to exist despite cosmetic reforms.