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President Mahinda Rajapaksa and his Government have
taken a significant step forward in their project of
finding a political solution to Sri Lanka's ethnic
conflict by going in for Provincial Council
elections in the Eastern Province in May, the Hindu
said in an editorial yesterday(March 31).
Fighting for survival in the
one-and-a-half northern districts under its control
against a relentless onslaught by the Sri Lankan
armed forces, the LTTE seems paranoid over the fact
that the elections to the nine Batticaloa district
local bodies were free from untoward incidents and
irregularities, it added.
"There can be no military solution to Sri Lanka's principal
national question but without effective military
operations against the Tigers, the political process
could not have made the progress it has in the East"
the newspaper said.
Full text of the editorial follows:
President Mahinda Rajapaksa and his government have
taken a significant step forward in their project of
finding a political solution to Sri Lanka's ethnic
conflict by going in for Provincial Council
elections in the Eastern Province in May. This will
be the first democratic exercise of its kind in
nearly two decades. The ground was prepared by the
peaceful conduct of local body elections in March in
Batticaloa district. In briefings to diplomats and
journalists, Foreign Minister Rohitha Bogollagama
characterised these local body elections as a first
step, proceeding from the proposals of the All Party
Representative Committee (APRC), in "a continuing
process for greater devolution of power, with the
objective of achieving a final and durable political
settlement."
The devolution exercise was within the framework of
fully implementing, for the benefit of "the areas it
was most intended to serve," the 13th Amendment that
was enacted in 1987 following the Indo-Sri Lanka
Agreement. Predictably, this move has both incensed
and unnerved the militarily beleaguered Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam and the parties of the Tamil
National Alliance (TNA) that dance to its Pol Potist
tune. Fighting for survival in the one-and-a-half
northern districts under its control against a
relentless onslaught by the Sri Lankan armed forces,
the LTTE seems paranoid over the fact that the
elections to the nine Batticaloa district local
bodies were free from untoward incidents and
irregularities; that the breakaway Karuna group, the
Tamil Makkal Viduthalai Puligal (TMVP), now led by
Pillian, won eight of these local bodies; and that
the government, having thoroughly exposed the LTTE's
pretence to be the sole representative of the Tamils
of the North-East, has unveiled a credible idea of
the shape of things to come in the region of
conflict.
What is also clear is that the LTTE is training its
propaganda guns at India once again. First, it
issued an unusually sharp statement against official
Indian policy for allegedly encouraging "the
military approach of the Sinhala state" and for its
"anti-Tamil" moves, in particular the recent hosting
of a visit by Army chief Lt. Gen. G.S.C. Fonseka,
whose itinerary included a trip to Jammu & Kashmir.
Secondly, the Tigers have tasked some key TNA
Members of Parliament to lobby pro-LTTE political
leaders in Tamil Nadu to make a noise against the
conduct of Provincial Council elections in the
eastern province. Ironically, this stand is based on
the argument that such an exercise in the East, as
distinct from the North-East, would violate the
provisions of the 1987 India-Sri Lanka Agreement.
Nobody of political consequence in Sri Lanka other
than the LTTE regards the 'merger' of the North and
East as a live issue for the conceivable future. The
2004 Karuna revolt, and the military support given
to the breakaway group by successive Sri Lankan
governments, put paid to the political claim of an
indivisible Tamil homeland comprising the Eastern
and Northern provinces. In October 2006, the Supreme
Court of Sri Lanka dealt a constitutional blow when
it ruled the temporary merger of the two provinces,
which came as part of the Indo-Lanka Agreement, to
be null and void. Although the judgment was on
technical grounds, it is instructive to remember
that the main contention of the petitioners was that
the fundamental rights of citizens in the Eastern
province stood violated by the absence of an elected
Provincial Council.
Through this successful first step, the government
has proved a point: V. Prabakaran's Tigers have
indeed been tamed in the East. The TMVP's triumph
may have come in a one-horse race, following the
decision of the TNA as well as the United National
Party and the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna not to
contest.
For the Provincial Council election, which will
cover the three districts of Batticaloa,
Trincomallee, and Amparai, the government's hand has
been strengthened by the sound decision of all the
mainstream political parties, including the UNP and
JVP, to contest. India has endorsed the APRC
recommendations, including elections to the Eastern
Provincial Council, as a "welcome first step" and
the LTTE's strategem of getting the TNA to lobby
pro-LTTE fringe political groups in Tamil Nadu to
pressure New Delhi to prevail on Colombo to halt the
May Provincial Council contest is unlikely to cut
any ice.
The third step envisaged by the Sri Lankan
government is the establishment of an interim set-up
in the North, as recommended by the APRC. In
practical terms, this will mean the presidential
appointment of a Governor for the North, to be
assisted subsequently by an advisory council. The
ground realities in the North and East are quite
different. The LTTE, although militarily weakened
and demoralised, must still be reckoned a
resourceful fighting force in the mainland North.
The Army is the main distributor of basic
necessities in a substantial part of the province
and a lot of hard work and time will be needed
before normality can be restored here. There can be
no military solution to Sri Lanka's principal
national question but without effective military
operations against the Tigers, the political process
could not have made the progress it has in the East.
The LTTE has no faith in any devolution of power
solution within one Sri Lanka; it stands committed
to Tamil Eelam through armed struggle and has shot
down even constitutional proposals that mooted some
kind of federal solution. But there is no excuse for
the political constituents of the TNA, in the
company of chauvinist elements in Tamil Nadu, to
come in the way of democratic arrangements that
should bring relief and representation to the
hard-pressed people in the region. There should be
no question of India falling again for LTTE
strategems and tactics.
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