Partisan politics on Lanka
Tamil Nadu parties are treading treacherous ground in an electoral
competition to shore up the LTTE in the name of humanitarian principles.
The minor parties set the pace in a desperate bid to whip up Dravida
chauvinism to garner votes.
The ruling DMK next clambered on the band wagon to prevent the AIADMK
from stealing a march over it, saying one thing one day and
reinterpreting it the next morning to mean the opposite. The Centre
allowed itself to be dragged into the charade for reasons of small
electoral gain for which the country may once again have to pay a heavy
price.
Foreign policy
The LTTE is a proscribed terrorist organisation in India and its
leader Prabhakaran is a wanted man for his crimes. In allowing itself to
be stampeded into pressuring Colombo, the Centre is in fact ceding the
conduct of foreign policy to a State Government. This cardinal error was
first committed in 1983 and cost the country dear.
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Tigers should not be allowed to use civilians as human
shields |
The LTTE took control of certain coastal districts, landing arms
there and training its cadre to cross the Palk Straits and wage war to
win Eelam. The gun culture was introduced into South India and the
country lost a Prime Minister to an LTTE suicide bomber.
The argument now made is that Colombo must accept a (long enough)
ceasefire to enable Tamil civilians trapped within the last sliver of
coast held by the LTTE near Mullaitivu to be repatriated to safety.
The UN, US and EU have been warning of an impending or ongoing
humanitarian crisis with an estimated 150,000 Tamil refugees holed up in
the No-Fire Zone.
They were clearly hostages being used as human shields, an old LTTE
tactic.
Some of them trying to flee Prabhakaran’s last, shrinking redoubt,
were fired upon by their so-called patrons to prevent the loss of this
human fence. But as soon as they could, over 100,000 desperate Tamils
streamed across to the adjacent safe zone and freedom.
Television images depicted an unending flow of terrified and
emaciated hostages literally running for their lives. A further
‘humanitarian ceasefire’ might have entailed many more thousands dying
in LTTE captivity.
When the West refers to a ‘humanitarian crisis’ in Sri Lanka, does
anybody know or care that two generations of Chagos Islanders have
cruelly suffered exile in distant lands in order that a US nuclear and
strategic bomber base may be established and continue to function in
Diego Garcia, despite a recent British High Court ruling. And what about
the huge collateral damage in Afghanistan and the tribal belt of
Pakistan from US-NATO bombing?
Nor does one hear calls for a ceasefire because of the humanitarian
crisis caused by Talibanisation of these areas.
The message is that the war must go on and that it was wrong for
Pakistan to negotiate a ceasefire with the Taliban in Swat.
Homeland
These monumental contradictions represent flagrant double standards
that seem to have become a conditioned reflex. My wars are all right -
howsoever far from my homeland and people - but your wars to defend your
own homeland and people are wrong. Bracketing the Sri Lanka Government
with the LTTE is a travesty.
Colombo was guilty of various serious omissions and commissions
earlier. But it has learnt through hard experience and is now on a path
that will hopefully lead to a just and honourable solution.
It is glib to repeat in all circumstances that there is no military
solution to complex and age-old political problems. Social and cultural
divides cannot be bridged or healed by war. But the LTTE soon became an
adventurous terrorist organisation, press-ganging women and children to
obliterate all moderate Tamil opinion and impose its will on all. It
wilfully scuttled the earlier peace process.
Now it is too late for it to call for a ceasefire when the end game
is in sight. Wars do sometimes solve problems and this is one occasion
when it might well do so. To go back to square one at this juncture
could be a most destructive alternative.
Humanitarian relief
Global and Indian diplomacy should now more properly turn to
encouraging and assisting Sri Lanka to win the peace rather than help
resuscitate the LTTE to regroup and wage yet another war. Massive
humanitarian relief is required and should be organised and the
internally displaced rehabilitated in their homes and restored their
livelihoods as soon as demining operations are completed.
Meanwhile Colombo must surely be held to its professed goal of a just
and honourable resolution for all sections of the population - Tamil,
Muslim and Sinhala - through federalisation, development, guaranteed
social and cultural rights, equal citizenship and participation at all
levels of governance.
The framework of a settlement was available as far back as 1987 and
with the 13th Amendment that endorsed federalism and subsequent
agreements that made it possible for provinces to unite in larger
regions through popular expressions of will.
These arrangements can be varied and improved upon through discussion
and in agreed stages. India has a wealth of experience regarding
different forms and degrees of devolution in the Northeast and J&K and
through Articles 371 A to I. Sri Lankan leaders could benefit from
looking at these provisions and how they have worked.
Those in Tamil Nadu who have blithely called on Delhi to ‘impose’ a
ceasefire on Colombo have acted most irresponsibly.
They do not seem to realise that they are justifying Pakistan’s
support for cross-border terrorism and proxy war in J&K and elsewhere in
India that we rightly denounce. That so-called ‘leaders’ should indulge
in this kind of errant behaviour cannot be too strongly deplored.
Coalition politics cannot be reduced to political blackmail.
There must also be an end to other forms of electoral gamesmanship.
The BJP should desist from bludgeoning the government at every turn on
its handling of terror.
Likewise, the Congress cannot go on traducing the BJP for the very
difficult and delicate choice it had to make over the Kandahar
hijacking, trading three leading hardcore terrorists for the lives of
166 innocent passengers and crew, one of whom had already been killed.
Would the UPA have acted differently in similar circumstances then or
now? Surely certain national issues should be kept above petty partisan
politics.
- Express Buzz India |