Monday, January 27, 2020

THE TRUTH SHALL SET US FREE


What the TRNUC means for our nation

It is simply the most important event for our country at this moment, with a profound significance for our future.

The TRNUC (Truth, Reconciliation and National Unity Commission) is reaching back into our past and and setting the record straight about what happened in our country. Since it began work last year, the TRNUC has heard from victims, witnesses and perpetrators in relation to the coup d’etat of 1977 and its aftermath and consequences.

The TRNUC is not an easy undertaking. Confronting a painful past is not a smooth and pleasant journey, and many have said that it should have been left alone. But this would never have done.

In the past few months we have heard many harrowing tales, among them the stories of the people depicted in our photos here, Brian Victor in relation to the deaths of Sonny Elizabeth and Michael Hoffman, and the family of Marjorie Baker in respect of her murder.


In doing its work, the TRNUC is giving the victims of past injustices a voice which they have long been denied and some solace that at last they have been relieved of the burden of keeping their pain to themselves. This service to the victims is the first and foremost consideration because it fulfills a vital need for justice. No matter what the difficulties, the cause of truth and justice comes first.

In documenting the events of the past and gving our nation the opportunity to reflect on them, the TRNUC is delivering a vital lesson in how to govern. Simply everyone involved in or with the poitical process, which means every citizen, must learn from it. The lesson is that power is only right when it is legitimate and used within the law to serve people equally. It is not to be exercised for its own sake or for personal ends.

The revelations of the TRNUC mean that the history of our country for the past five decades has been made safe – it will not to prone to falsification and distortion.

We also believe that the truth will permit reconciliation and national unity. This has started but much lies ahead. Not everything is sure and certain because the outcome of the work of the commission, its actions and recommendations, are yet to be known. What will it take to deliver full justice? What kind of reparations will be possible? What will happen to the perpetrators?  

There are many doubts and uncertainties but there is no way forward except the truth.

 Source: Seychelles Weekly