Interests, not values
Tamil Guardian editorial, January 18, 2006
A chorus of international voices have in the past few days decried the heightened
violence gripping Sri Lanka’s Northeast. Calls for restraint and new talks on
stabilising the fraying February 2002 ceasefire have come from key states and the
international monitors overseeing the truce, amongst others. Nevertheless, the
violence is continuing. There have been numerous attacks on Sri Lankan security
forces and the Liberation Tigers. Military reprisals against civilians, tacitly
encouraged by the government in Colombo, have also escalated. Dozens of people
have disappeared after being taken into military custody. An estimated four
thousand families have fled Jaffna for the LTTE-held Vanni. Thousands of people
in Trincomalee have also moved – or are being blocked by the military from
moving – into LTTE-controlled parts of the district. It is amid this climate
of fear and despair that Norwegian Special Envoy Erik Solheim will return to Sri
Lanka next week in yet another attempt to broker talks on the ceasefire. It
remains to be seen whether Sri Lanka will agree to hold talks in Oslo or continue
to prioritise its insistence that LTTE officials be excluded from Europe over
stopping the slide to war.
The Tamil community, now under widespread and sustained harassment by the
security forces, is as anxious for peace as any of the observers. But by peace
we mean a genuine return to normalcy – not just the doldrums that the
peace process was drifting in a few short weeks ago. In other words, we want
the long overdue implementation of the normalcy clauses of the February 2002
ceasefire: the disarming of the Army-backed paramilitaries, the withdrawal of
Sri Lankan security forces from our homes, schools, places of worship and other
public places, the lifting of the restrictions on fishing and farming, and so on.
This is not some radical new concept – the Tamil community has been asked
for this repeatedly for four years now, to no avail.
Amid the international community’s expressions of concern and disapproval,
one stands out in the Tamil perspective: that of US Ambassador to Sri Lanka, Mr.
Jeffrey Lunstead. Speaking to the American Chamber of Commerce in Sri Lanka last
week, Mr. Lunstead lambasted the LTTE. Amid what is a spiral of violence and counter
violence, he singled out the LTTE for blame. As thousands of Tamils fled military
reprisals he congratulated the Colombo government ‘for its restraint.’
Holding the LTTE responsible for the wider failures of the peace process, Mr.
Lunstead even blamed it for the lack of ‘investment and industry’
in the Northeast. We wonder whether the US has - even once in the past four years
- encouraged the members of Mr. Lunstead’s audience in the American Chamber
of Commerce to invest in the Tamil territories.We do know, however, that in all
that time, the LTTE has been striving to mobilise the Tamil Diaspora to this end.
We do not recall Mr. Lunstead protesting last year when the PTOMS joint mechanism
for sharing international aid with the Tamil areas was abrogated by the Colombo
government – though we do recall the US refusing to put funds through it
when it was finally signed.
The Tigers must, Mr. Lunstead said, repeating a standard US maxim, ‘renounce
terrorism in word and deed.’ Then, he suggested, probably less reassuringly
than he intended, there ‘might be’ a role for the LTTE - in Sri
Lanka’s development. But curiously enough, his government’s attitude
towards the Colombo government does not seem contingent on its behaviour. There
has been, for example, no mention of human rights of late - even
when ‘disappearances’ and assaults of civilians are reported from the
North. Or when five students were summarily executed in Trincomalee. Or when almost
a thousand Tamils were arrested enmasse in Colombo. Most importantly, amid widely
expressed fears of a renewed war, Mr. Lunstead last week assured the Sinhala nationalist
government of his government’s military support in the event of war.
The Tamils have repeatedly argued that international support for Sri Lanka’s
military emboldens the Sinhala nationalists and buttresses Colombo’s intransigence
in the peace process. Little wonder then that the JVP and JHU are this week again
urging a military solution to the Tamil question. The United States is one of the
four Co-Chairs overseeing the peace process. Mr. Lunstead’s comments have
thus not only damaged the Co-Chairs credibility as even-handed advocates of a
solution amongst Sri Lanka’s communities, but changed the dynamic between
the two protagonists at a crucial and sensitive time. As many amongst us are pointing
out, the Tamils are receiving a lesson in realpolitik: interests matter more rather
values. It remains to be seen whether Mr. Solheim’s visit will end Sri Lanka’s
slide towards the abyss. But in the meantime, the Tamils must brace for difficult times
ahead. Ambassador Lunstead has said the US ‘wants the cost of war to be high’
and, as the unreconstructed devastation across our homeland testifies, Sri Lanka will,
with US support, ensure that.
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