|
"Rajapaksa
could
reinvent
himself
once
again as
a
champion
of
pluralism
and
economic
liberalism.
With few
other
political
options,
that may
be Sri
Lanka’s
best
hope for
the
future.
There is
a hint
of it in
the
President's
dining
room.
Three
years
ago, he
co-opted
two
former
leaders
of the
LTTE,
who fed
intelligence
to the
army and
helped
bring
the
eastern
provinces
under
its
control.
They had
spent
their
whole
lives
fighting
for the
destruction
of the
Sri
Lankan
state
but are
now
ministers
in
Rajapaksa's
government,
states
the
latest
issue of
TIME
magazine
(July
18) in
an
interview
with
President
Mahinda
Rajapaksa.
“They
[former
LTTE
leaders]
stood in
the
buffet
line
with
everyone
else,
and then
quietly
sat down
to
discuss
the
afternoon's
committee
meetings
over
lunch.
The real
world
may be
less
civil
and much
more
complicated,
but at
this
table
there is
room.”
The
interview
by Jyoti
Thottam
titled
“Rajapaksa:
The Hard
Liner”
also
states:
"Rajapaksa's
political
biography
was
crucial
in
maintaining
support
for the
final
military
offensive
against
the
Tigers.
The LTTE
pioneered
suicide
bombings,
and a
generation
of Sri
Lankans
lived in
fear of
random
attacks
on buses
and
markets,
and
relentless
political
assassinations.
Four
Presidents
before
Rajapaksa
had
tried a
combination
of
military
action
and
negotiation
against
the
Tigers;
within a
year of
his
presidency,
he
abandoned
talks
and bet
everything
on
force."
“Who is
the man
who
tamed
the
Tigers?
Above
all, he
represents
Sri
Lanka's
Sinhalese
Buddhist
heartland
in the
rural
south.
His
sarong
and
tunic
are the
spotless
white of
a devout
Buddhist;
his
reddish
brown
scarf
the
color of
korakan,
a rough
grain
eaten as
the
staple
diet of
poor
farmers.
Everything
about
Rajapaksa
— his
big
laugh,
his
rough-and-ready
English,
his
bejeweled
fingers
and
ink-black
hair —
marks
him as
part of
the
rural
bourgeoisie,
not the
urban
élite
educated
abroad.
This is
more
than
just an
image.
He was
elected
to
Parliament
as its
youngest
member
in 1970
and
moved
slowly
up
through
the
ranks of
his
party
while
building
a base
of
support
in his
home
district
of
Hambantota,”
the
interview
adds.
Here are
excerpts
from the
TIME
interview:
Self-assured
Rajapaksa,
photographed
here in
the
presidential
compound,
makes no
apologies
for his
government's
methods
=
Photograph
for TIME
by Namas
Bhojani
Sri
Lankan
president
Mahinda
Rajapaksa
sits at
the head
of a
long
banquet
table,
presiding
over
what
looks
like a
hotel's
lunch
buffet.
The mood
is
informal
as
Cabinet
ministers,
their
clerks
and
assorted
relatives
and
friends
line up
patiently
to eat
in the
main
dining
room of
Rajapaksa's
official
compound.
Outside,
on the
streets
of
Colombo,
he is
the
all-conquering
hero. In
May,
Rajapaksa's
government
ended
Sri
Lanka's
26-year-long
civil
war
against
the
separatist
Liberation
Tigers
of Tamil
Eelam (LTTE),
and the
capital's
broad
avenues
are
dominated
by
enormous
banners
glorifying
him:
"You are
a divine
gift to
the
country.
May the
gods
bestow
their
blessings
on you."
But
here,
inside,
Rajapaksa
seems
more
like a
down-to-earth
family
patriarch,
nourished
as much
by the
red
rice,
jackfruit
curry
and
spicy
fried
fish as
by the
praise
and
demands
of the
supplicants
who
interrupt
him. At
one
point, a
young
couple
present
him with
a stack
of betel
leaves
to be
blessed.
He chats
casually
with
them;
they
show off
their
infant
son.
A
barrel-chested
rugby
fan,
Rajapaksa,
63, will
need
that
common
touch to
bring
Sri
Lanka to
a true
and
lasting
peace
between
the
island
nation's
Sinhalese
majority
(which
is
mostly
Buddhist)
and
Tamil
minority
(mostly
Hindu).
The
civil
war
began in
earnest
in July
1983,
after
nearly
3,000
Tamils
were
killed
in
several
days of
systematic
anti-Tamil
violence.
It was
the low
point of
what Sri
Lanka's
Tamils
felt had
been
decades
of
official
discrimination
and
military
repression
in
Tamil-majority
areas in
the
north
and
east.
The LTTE
took up
arms in
the name
of those
grievances,
raising
the call
for a
separate
Tamil
homeland
and
eventually
becoming
one of
the
world's
most
feared
terrorist
organizations.
Over the
years,
moderate
Tamil
political
leaders
worked
to reach
a
political
solution,
and
several
governments
in
Colombo
tried
talks
with the
LTTE,
but by
2006 a
shaky
cease-fire
had
fallen
apart.
The army
pushed
full-bore
to
finish
off the
Tigers,
particularly
its
charismatic
leader,
Velupillai
Prabhakaran,
and
Rajapaksa
would
not
brook
questioning,
by the
press or
his
opponents,
of his
government's
tactics.
But now
that the
fighting
is over,
Rajapaksa's
overwhelming
military
victory
could
prove
Pyrrhic
if he
fails to
give
equal
attention
to
reconciliation
Rajapaksa
faces
questions
about
human-rights
violations
over the
targeting
of
civilians
in the
final
offensive,
unexplained
disappearances
of
Tamils
and
controls
on the
media.
He must
revive
an
economy
that has
been
badly
strained
by
military
spending.
Most
importantly,
he will
have to
restore
to their
homes
and
livelihoods
some
300,000
Tamils
in the
north, a
major
chunk of
the
population
of that
region,
who fled
the
fighting
only to
be
detained
in
overcrowded
internment
camps.
Without
that
crucial
first
step
toward
peace,
Sri
Lanka's
alienated
Tamils
may
never
feel
truly
part of
the
nation.
"If that
does not
happen,
we are
in a
downward
spiral
in every
way,"
says
Vasudeva
Nanayakkara,
a Sri
Lankan
politician
who has
known
Rajapaksa
for more
than 40
years as
a friend
and
frequent
ally in
Parliament.
"The way
in which
the
state
treats
the
victims
of the
conflict
— that
will be
the
basis on
which
national
unity
will be
forged."
In a
rare
interview
with
TIME on
July 10,
Rajapaksa
made no
apologies
about
how he
prosecuted
his war
with the
Tigers.
"We
showed
that you
can
defeat
terrorism,"
he said.
The U.S.
and
Europe,
his
biggest
trading
partners,
publicly
criticized
his
apparent
disregard
for
human
rights,
but he
dismisses
the
West's
objections.
"Some
people
think we
are
still
colonies,"
he said.
"That
mentality
must
go."
Roots
of
Ambition
Who is
the man
who
tamed
the
Tigers?
Above
all, he
represents
Sri
Lanka's
Sinhalese
Buddhist
heartland
in the
rural
south.
His
sarong
and
tunic
are the
spotless
white of
a devout
Buddhist;
his
reddish
brown
scarf
the
color of
korakan,
a rough
grain
eaten as
the
staple
diet of
poor
farmers.
Everything
about
Rajapaksa
— his
big
laugh,
his
rough-and-ready
English,
his
bejeweled
fingers
and
ink-black
hair —
marks
him as
part of
the
rural
bourgeoisie,
not the
urban
élite
educated
abroad.
This is
more
than
just an
image.
He was
elected
to
Parliament
as its
youngest
member
in 1970
and
moved
slowly
up
through
the
ranks of
his
party
while
building
a base
of
support
in his
home
district
of
Hambantota.
One
minister
in his
government,
who has
known
him
since
his
early
days in
politics,
says his
desire
to be
President
was
obvious:
"He was
methodical."
Rajapaksa's
political
biography
was
crucial
in
maintaining
support
for the
final
military
offensive
against
the
Tigers.
The LTTE
pioneered
suicide
bombings,
and a
generation
of Sri
Lankans
lived in
fear of
random
attacks
on buses
and
markets,
and
relentless
political
assassinations.
Four
Presidents
before
Rajapaksa
had
tried a
combination
of
military
action
and
negotiation
against
the
Tigers;
within a
year of
his
presidency,
he
abandoned
talks
and bet
everything
on
force.
He
appealed
to
Sinhalese
nationalism
to
recruit
soldiers,
promising
them
good
salaries,
pensions
and
respect.
The cost
was
high. At
least
6,200
troops
were
killed
in the
last
three
years of
the war
— more
than the
total
U.S.
military
deaths
so far
in Iraq
and
Afghanistan.
Yet
Rajapaksa's
popularity
remains
undiminished.
In his
victory
speech
to the
nation
on June
3, he
spoke a
few
lines in
Tamil as
a
gesture
of
reconciliation,
but most
of the
oration
was
spent in
praise
of "our
armed
forces
who
astonished
the
world by
their
skill in
war." He
linked
their
effort
to the
nation's
heroic
past
defending
itself
against
invaders.
"The
lessons
we
learnt
from
those
great
battles
of the
past are
ingrained
in our
flesh,
blood
and
bones."
When
asked
about
the
future
of
Tamils
in Sri
Lanka,
Rajapaksa
says all
the
right
things:
that Sri
Lanka is
one
nation,
which
respects
all
peoples
and
faiths.
Yet the
strident
Sinhalese
nationalism,
in
Rajapaksa's
party
and in
his more
extreme
allies,
helped
mobilize
support
for the
war and
influenced
the way
it was
conducted.
The U.N.
issued
several
warnings
— which
Colombo
ignored
— about
civilian
casualties
as the
Sri
Lankan
army
closed
in on
the
Tigers,
and
estimates
Tamil
civilian
deaths
at
7,000.
Nearly
300,000
Tamils
from the
northern
war zone
—
including
45,000
children
— have
been
detained
in
internment
camps
beginning
in early
2008,
without
freedom
to
leave.
Weighing
Options
In the
face of
pressure,
Rajapaksa
has
hardened
his
position,
interpreting
criticism
as a
product
of
either
LTTE
propaganda
or
neocolonial
sermonizing.
He
rejects
the
U.N.'s
civilian-casualty
figures
and
insists
that
conditions
in the
camps
are
good.
But he
has
refused
— even
after
declaring
victory
— to
allow
the
press or
international
observers
to
verify
those
claims.
No
journalists
or U.N.
agencies
have
been
permitted
into the
former
war zone
(with
the
exception
of an
entourage
flying
over it
with
U.N.
Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon),
and
journalists
are
allowed
into the
camps
only on
government-sponsored
tours.
The U.N.
and
other
international
agencies
— "58 of
them!"
Rajapaksa
points
out — do
have
some
access
to the
camps,
but they
are not
permitted
to talk
to the
people
inside
to
monitor
their
conditions.
He
insists
that
restrictions
in the
camps
will be
loosened
eventually:
"This is
1 1/2
months,
my dear.
Just
give me
some
more
time."
Still,
Rajapaksa's
instincts
are
sharp,
and he
is well
aware
that
resettlement
from the
camps
will be
a big
issue in
provincial
elections
in
August
and the
next
presidential
election,
which
could be
held as
early as
November.
His
reasoning
for
keeping
northern
Tamils
in
detention
is
constantly
shifting.
At
various
points
in our
interview,
Rajapaksa
says he
is
waiting
until
the
screening
of LTTE
fighters
is
complete;
until
the
north
has
better
roads,
electricity
and
water
supply;
or until
the land
mines
are
cleared.
"As soon
as we do
that, we
will
send
them,"
he says.
But he
will not
commit
to a
timeline.
He says
he hopes
that 60%
would be
resettled
by the
time of
the
presidential
election.
"It's
not a
promise,
it's a
target,"
he says.
Rajapaksa
has been
similarly
noncommittal
about
Sri
Lanka's
economy,
particularly
in the
north,
which
has
suffered
not just
war but
two
decades
of
neglect.
Aside
from an
application
for an
IMF
loan,
Rajapaksa's
only
major
economic
initiatives
are a $1
billion
port in
his
hometown
in the
south
and a
$26
million
loan
scheme
for
small
businesses
in the
north,
both of
which,
critics
say, may
be
politically
popular
but are
unlikely
to make
an
economic
impact.
Difficult
to Read
That
lack of
conviction
has
angered
Rajapaksa's
opposition
and
deeply
troubles
Sri
Lanka's
peace
activists,
who
worry
that
Tamils
may face
even
worse
repression
and
hardship
than
they did
before
the war.
Their
original
concerns
— for
the
protection
of Tamil
language
and
culture
and
self-governance
in
Tamil-majority
areas —
are not
even on
the
agenda.
Advocates
for
press
freedom,
too, are
outraged
that
even
after
declaring
victory,
Rajapaksa
has not
lifted
the
restrictions
on the
press
imposed
as war
measures.
On July
12, the
government
banned a
popular
news
website
that had
run
stories
critical
of the
government
after
the
war's
end, and
it has
not yet
found
those
responsible
for the
murder
in
January
of a
prominent
Sri
Lankan
journalist
and
critic
of the
government,
Lasantha
Wickrematunge,
who was
also a
freelance
reporter
for
TIME.
But
those
who know
Rajapaksa
well say
that his
pragmatism
may, in
the end,
win out.
He never
took a
strong
position
on the
LTTE
until he
ran for
President,
and he
has
supported
privatization
as
President
despite
his long
history
as a
left-leaning
trade
unionist.
Most
surprisingly,
he was
once a
passionate
advocate
for
human
rights,
speaking
out
against
the
government
in the
late
1980s
during a
notorious
time of
disappearances
and
killings.
"Ideologically,
he is
not well
formed,"
says
Nanayakkara.
However
unlikely
it may
seem,
Rajapaksa
could
reinvent
himself
once
again as
a
champion
of
pluralism
and
economic
liberalism.
With few
other
political
options,
that may
be Sri
Lanka's
best
hope for
the
future.
There is
a hint
of it in
the
President's
dining
room.
Three
years
ago, he
co-opted
two
former
leaders
of the
LTTE,
who fed
intelligence
to the
army and
helped
bring
the
eastern
provinces
under
its
control.
They had
spent
their
whole
lives
fighting
for the
destruction
of the
Sri
Lankan
state
but are
now
ministers
in
Rajapaksa's
government.
They
stood in
the
buffet
line
with
everyone
else,
and then
quietly
sat down
to
discuss
the
afternoon's
committee
meetings
over
lunch.
The real
world
may be
less
civil
and much
more
complicated,
but at
this
table
there is
room for
everyone.
|