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Sri Lanka's beleaguered Tamil community
deserved better from Tamil Nadu. As the West
gets hyper to know what it can do to end the
killings of innocent civilians in the
conflict and assist their flight from the
war zone, election-bound Tamil Nadu is
obsessed with street protests.
The Tamil Nadu leadership quietly oversaw a
quarter century of bloodshed without making
any meaningful contributions towards a
political settlement and for the ordinary
Tamil people's betterment.
A political class leading a state of 70
million Tamils, more than three times the
population of Sri Lanka, seems to be
crippled, unable to think beyond the mundane
denunciations and name calling,, states
the influential ManoramaOnline.com.
The report states that: "Not one leading
political leader in Tamil Nadu has gone to
Sri Lanka to understand the complexities of
the conflict rather than view everything
from the LTTE's narrow prism.
"Yet a few have quietly visited the LTTE
zone to meet Tamils. Imagine if a Pakistani
politician were to make a similar
clandestine trip to India and meet members
of, say, the Muslim community!'
The report adds: "The once formidable Tamil
Tigers, who for long enjoyed sanctuary in
Tamil Nadu, are now left with a just sandy
coastal strip in Mullaitivu district.
"Colombo has vowed to crush the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) and net, dead
or alive, its elusive leader Velupillai
Prabhakaran, who has had longstanding links
with many political players in Tamil Nadu.
"Beyond blaming the government of Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh and Congress
president Sonia Gandhi for the LTTE's
predicament, none of these players has done
anything to minimize the Tamil suffering.
"While New Delhi has set up a hospital to
treat the civilian wounded and ferried large
quantities of relief material, Tamil Nadu's
politicians have been busy giving emotive
speeches and threatening to break up Sri
Lanka.
"The latest has come from AIADMK leader
Jayalalitha who, after being opposed to the
LTTE for years, has now pledged to send the
Indian Army to Sri Lanka to do a Bangladesh
- if she gets to rule the country.
"When she was chief minister, Jayalalitha
had in December 2005 refused to meet Mahinda
Rajapaksa when he came to India on his first
visit abroad as Sri Lanka's newly elected
president.
"The last minute 'no' embarrassed the Indian
external affairs ministry, which scrambled
to arrange a face-saving trip for the
president to Kerala.
"That was when Prabhakaran called the shots
in Sri Lanka's northeast. It was also when
Rajapaksa was settling down and toying with
the idea of meeting some Tamil Nadu leaders,
including those rabidly pro-LTTE, to see if
they could contribute to peace in Sri Lanka.
"On a later occasion, the president publicly
urged Tamil Nadu's top political leaders to
visit Sri Lanka and persuade the LTTE to
give up violence.
"Not one leading political leader in Tamil
Nadu has gone to Sri Lanka to understand the
complexities of the conflict rather than
view everything from the LTTE's narrow
prism.
Yet a few have quietly visited the LTTE zone
to meet Tamils. Imagine if a Pakistani
politician were to make a similar
clandestine trip to India and meet members
of, say, the Muslim community!
Contrary to what many may think, no
political player from Tamil Nadu has had any
real influence over Prabhakaran with
probably one single exception -- P.
Nedumaran, the LTTE chief's oldest and most
loyal ally in India.
But it is doubtful if Prabhakaran would have
lent an ear even to Nedumaran if he had
urged him to drop the cause of Tamil Eelam.
Nedumaran has been a consistent supporter of
Prabhakaran since he first met the rebel way
back in the early 1980s and he is open about
it.
But at least the two main parties in Tamil
Nadu should have intervened when Tamils
began killing Tamils in Sri Lanka a long
time ago, resulting in fratricidal clashes
that ultimately weakened the LTTE.
Had they done it, it is possible the LTTE
may not have landed in the terrible mess it
is in today. Instead, the Tamil Nadu
leadership quietly oversaw a quarter century
of bloodshed without making any meaningful
contributions towards a political settlement
and for the ordinary Tamil people's
betterment.
Even in this dark hour, there is duplicity.
A politician who now threatens to create
Tamil Eelam earlier jailed another over a
pro-Eelam speech. A political party accusing
the Congress of betraying the Tamils was one
of its key allies for four and a half years.
And a political veteran lauds Prabhakaran
one day, backtracks the next day.
To the Tamil folk in Sri Lanka, will any of
this make any sense?
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