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The efforts in Tamil Nadu should be
directed towards easing the humanitarian
crisis in Sri Lanka and not bailing out the
LTTE, says India’s mass circulation national
newspaper The Hindu in an editorial today
(29).
“Indeed, the politics of some of the Tamil
chauvinist fringe groups was directed
towards collapsing the Tamil question in Sri
Lanka into a pro-LTTE campaign, diverting
the widespread sympathy in the State for the
Sri Lankan Tamil population caught in the
ethnic conflict to the cause of the
terrorist organization, which in itself has
only minimal support,” the Editorial adds.
The Editorial:
Ending the humanitarian crisis
In seeking to address the humanitarian
crisis in Sri Lanka without in any way
easing the situation on the ground for the
beleaguered terrorist organization, the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, Tamil Nadu
Chief Minister M. Karunanidhi and External
Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee found a
practical way out of the political crisis
arising from the decision of the Dravida
Munnetra Kazhagam MPs to resign their
membership of Parliament. With the two
countries reaching an agre ement on ensuring
the protection of Indian fishermen entering
Sri Lankan waters, and Sri Lanka promising
to guard against civilian casualties in the
war against the LTTE, Mr. Karunanidhi quite
rightly shifted the focus from the issue of
forcing a ceasefire in the war between the
Sri Lankan armed forces and the LTTE to
extending humanitarian aid to the Tamil
civilian population affected by the
conflict. That humanitarian aid was the
right and proper response was quite clear to
all except the most chauvinistic of the
LTTE’s supporters in Tamil Nadu. Indeed, the
politics of some of the Tamil chauvinist
fringe groups was directed towards
collapsing the Tamil question in Sri Lanka
into a pro-LTTE campaign, diverting the
widespread sympathy in the State for the Sri
Lankan Tamil population caught in the ethnic
conflict to the cause of the terrorist
organisation, which in itself has only
minimal support.
Some of the political parties such as the
Marumalarchi Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam, the
Pattali Makkal Katchi, and the Communist
Party of India have allowed the
mainstreaming of the fringe agenda of
equating the difficulties posed by the
current Sri Lankan military offensive for
the LTTE with the sufferings of the
civilians. In any case, the Sri Lankan
government’s proposal to create a
“humanitarian corridor” to enable civilians
trapped in the conflict zones to leave
should address some of the concerns voiced
by political parties in Tamil Nadu. Sri
Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa has, in
his interview with N. Ram published in The
Hindu today, reiterated his commitment to
avoiding harm to civilians and to ending
their suffering in a short time. He has
welcomed the offer of relief material from
India and particularly from Tamil Nadu, and
said his government will facilitate delivery
and cooperate with the Government of India
in addressing the humanitarian issue. With
Mr. Karunanidhi leading the mobilisation of
resources in the cause of the civilian Tamil
population, the efforts in Tamil Nadu should
be directed towards easing the humanitarian
crisis and not bailing out the LTTE. After
all, as Mr. Mukherjee pointed out, India
could not have restored a ceasefire that it
had neither put in place nor broken.
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