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: Sri
Lanka
Colombo crisis poses dilemmas for Indian government
New Delhi offers to mediate in Sri Lanka
By Dianne Sturgess
12 May 2000
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After equivocating for several days, the Indian government
announced over the weekend that it was prepared to act as mediator
in the deepening military conflict in Sri Lanka as long as this
was agreed by both sidesthe Colombo government and the separatist
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). At the same time, however,
India has firmly turned down Sri Lankan requests for military
assistance in fighting the LTTE or help in evacuating its 35,000
to 40,000 troops from the north of the Jaffna peninsula in the
event of fresh military defeats.
Since April 22 the Sri Lankan army has suffered one military
debacle after anotherfirst the loss of the strategic Elephant
Pass military complex at the southern end of the Jaffna peninsula,
then a week later the fall of the Pallai army base. On Wednesday,
fierce fighting took place just three kilometres of the centre
of Jaffna townthe second largest city in Sri Lanka and home
to around half a million people. The Sri Lanka military are desperate
to retain control of Palali airport just to the north of Jaffnaits
only supply link to the south of the island.
The crisis in Sri Lanka puts India in a dilemma. The National
Democratic Alliance (NDA) government is under pressure to intervene.
If Jaffna falls it would greatly strengthen LTTE's claims for
a separate Tamil statelet in the north and east of Sri Lanka and
would encourage separatist sentiment in India itself, particularly
among the Tamil-speaking population of Tamil Nadu state. Moreover
to leave Sri Lanka to its own devices could allow other countries
to step in and undermine the ambitions of New Delhi to establish
India as the key regional powerbroker.
On the other hand, the NDA coalition led by the Hindu chauvinist
Bharatiya Janatha Party (BJP) faces opposition within its own
ranks to any overt intervention in Sri Lanka to forestall an LTTE
victory. Three Tamil Nadu-based partiesthe Dravida Munnethra
Kazagam (DMK), Marumalarchi Dravida Munnethra Kazagam (MDMK) and
Pattali Makkal Katchi (PMK)which are crucial to the survival
of the government, have all opposed support for Colombo to one
degree or another. Together these parties have 28 MPs in the Lok
Sabha or lower house of the Indian parliament. Other senior NDA
figures such as Defence Minister George Fernandes are publicly
identified as supporters of the LTTE.
Furthermore, the Indian ruling class as a whole is wary about
any direct military involvement in the Sri Lankan conflict after
the bitter experience of its last intervention. Under the Indo-Lanka
Accord signed in 1987, India dispatched troops to the north of
Sri Lanka to impose a settlement on the Tamil population but rapidly
came into conflict with the LTTE. During the subsequent fighting
the Indian army lost some 1,200 dead and 3,500 wounded before
being finally forced to withdraw in 1990 after relations with
the Sri Lankan government soured.
In an article in the Indian weekly Outlook, Lieutenant
General A.S. Kalkat, who commanded the Indian troops in 1987,
warned against any repeat. For the Indian government today,
whose constituent parties in the 1989 general election had their
manifestos opposing our involvement in Sri Lanka and called for
IPKF withdrawal, the [present] Lankan request is political
dynamite'. Military involvement is not an option," he wrote.
"In the event Sri Lanka's unable to manage the situation
and looks to the West for military intervention it would imply
having a foreign military presence in our backyard with its own
agenda. Our government has a difficult task aheadit's a
tightrope walk between its domestic, foreign and defence compulsions.
In a bid to defuse the political dynamite, at home
at least, Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee called all-party
meeting on Monday which was attended by representatives of all
the government allies and major opposition parties including the
Congress Party and the Stalinist Communist Party of India (CPI).
After the meeting, Minister for Parliamentary Affairs Pramod Mahajan
announced that a consensus had emerged: opposition to either Indian
military intervention or the breakup of Sri Lanka, and support
for a peaceful negotiated solution and full protection for the
island's Tamil minority.
According to reports in the Indian press, all present supported
the close monitoring of the situation to ensure there was
no third party intervention. Concerns were apparently expressed
that the Sri Lankan government had turned to Israel and India's
rival Pakistan for military assistance. Last week Sri Lanka reestablished
diplomatic relations with Israel in a bid to get rapid access
to military supplies.
But tensions emerged at the meeting between the BJP and its
Tamil Nadu allies. Questioned on the government's attitude to
the LTTE's demand for independence, Vajpayee categorically stated
that India was not for a separate Eelam, and that it favoured
a solution to the crisis within the framework of Sri Lanka's
unity and territorial integrity. The MDMK leader Y. Kopalaswamy,
also known as Vaiko, made clear that his party wanted the recognition
of Eelam and insisted we have a fundamental right to say
what we want without embarrassing the government, and this right
cannot be curtailed.
The conflicts were simmering prior to the meeting. DMK leader
Karunanidhi, who is also Tamil Nadu Chief Minister, had taken
offence that the Indian government did not consult him or the
three DMK cabinet ministers before taking the initial decision
in New Delhi to mediate. He stated in the Tamil Nadu state assembly
that the Sinhala armies, who were murdering the Tamils
in Jaffna, should not be helped in any way. The assembly meeting
was the scene of vituperative attacks on any attempt to mitigate
the consequences of the LTTE's victory.
Last Saturday Karunanidhi moderated his stance after a 90-minute
meeting with Vajpayee. Seri (OK), he said to the national
government's request to keep out of the conflict in Sri Lanka.
Our party will not tie the hands of the central government...
It is the centre's prerogative to take any approach in the interest
of the nation... we do not want to interfere with that.
The MDMK leader Kopalaswamy also toned down his position after
a meeting with NDA leaders. I am happy about the government
sending humanitarian aid to Jaffna, he said. Significantly
he appeared to have gained some assurances that India would do
nothing to assist the Sri Lankan military. All I can say
is that nothing that will go against the interests of the Lankan
Tamils will be done, he said.
The parties may have temporarily backed away from an open conflict
but the tensions remain and could easily flare again as the military
situation in northern Sri Lanka changes. On Wednesday, the PMK
leader S. Ramdoss urged the Indian government to lift the current
ban on the LTTE as a terrorist organisation, put in place after
assassination of former prime minister Rajiv Gandhi by an LTTE
suicide bomber in 1991.
The BJP is also likely to come under pressure from its allies
among various Hindu extremist organisations wanting it to back
the Hindu Tamils of the LTTE against Buddhist
Sinhalese in the south. On Tuesday, one such organisation Shiv
Sena, based in Maharastra, held a meeting in Bombay with MDMK
representatives after which its leader Bal Thackeray announced
that he had full support for the LTTE, which had been
fighting for a just cause.
International manoeuvring
As well as doing a domestic political balancing act, the BJP-led
government is also seeking to bolster India's position on the
subcontinent and in doing so has to thread its way through a maze
of the conflicting international interests. If New Delhi is to
play the role of mediator then it has to have the backing of the
major powers and ensure that it has no rivals.
Earlier in the year, Norway, acting at least with the tacit
support of the major European powers, launched its own attempt
to broker a peace deal between the Sri Lankan government and the
LTTE. Norwegian officials, including the country's foreign minister,
made two visits to Colombo for talks but failed to establish more
than a general agreement to begin the negotiating process.
Norway's special envoy Erik Solheim was due to arrive in New
Delhi yesterday for talks about Sri Lanka. The BJP government
has already indicated some displeasure over Norway's independent
initiative in Sri Lanka. Even before the visit, the Statesman
newspaper noted the chilly Indian response.
India is, however, cool to the initiative and Mr Solheim,
during his one-day stopover, may get to meet only external affairs
officials and not any senior politician or Cabinet minister...
The government's lukewarm response to Mr Solheim suggests that
India has decided not to accord too much importance to the Norwegian
initiative to discuss the Lankan situation. The External Affairs
Minister, Mr Jaswant Singh, has said last week that India did
not think Norway's role of facilitator had much chance of success
in the prevailing circumstances.
India's growing ties with the US were evident during the recent
Clinton visit to the Indian subcontinent when the US president
all but snubbed Pakistana former Cold War ally and India's
rival. Now the US appears to be turning to India, in preference
to Norway, to mediate between Colombo and the LTTE.
Jaswant Singh indicated to the all-party meeting on Monday
that the Clinton administration had informed New Delhi that the
US would support whatever India does. The Hindu
newspaper quoted the US official sources as saying: Washington
takes India's views on Sri Lanka very seriously and would not
want to do anything that might go against India's interests.
US undersecretary of state Thomas Pickering is due in India later
this month and may include Colombo on his itinerary.
India has also reportedly been engaged in a frenzy of behind-the-scenes
diplomatic moves designed to strengthen its position as the crisis
in Sri Lanka deepens. It has been contacted not only with the
US but also Britain, France and other EU members as well as Russia
and Israel. That the major powers are pushing for a negotiated
halt to the conflict is indicated by the statement of UN Secretary
General Kofi Annan this week expressing concern over the situation
in Sri Lanka and its humanitarian consequences.
Colombo has already indicated its willingness to accept India
as a mediator. On May 9, the Sri Lankan High Commissioner in New
Delhi, Mangala Moonesingha, welcomed the Indian offer to mediate:
India is a regional power and has a lot of clout ... the
entire Sri Lankan constituency would favour it. The sharp
military defeats have also produced a rapid about face in the
attitude of extreme Sinhala chauvinists to Indian intervention.
Colombo's Saffron BrigadeBuddhist monks clad
in saffron robeswho vociferously opposed the use of Indian
troops in 1987, are now making ardent public appeals to New Delhi
for military assistance to Sri Lanka.
The nature of India's intervention in Sri Lanka depends on
many factors, not least of which is the military situation on
the Jaffna peninsula. A military collapse of the Sri Lankan army
resulting in a disastrous loss of soldiers and equipment would
radically alter the whole political equation and compel all those
involved, including India, to make a major reassessment overnight.
The BJP government has committed itself only to humanitarian
assistance. But according to Indian Defence Minister Fernandes,
the country's armed forces have been prepared to meet any eventuality.
Media reports indicate that substantial supplies have been moved
to the Trivandrum in the southern state of Kerala. The Indian
Air Force's Southern Air Command has been put on the alert to
provide aid to Jaffna. Air Force helicopters and heavy transport
aircraft have also been moved south. Communication links have
been established with hot-line facilities to the Indian High Commission
in Colombo, military headquarters in New Delhi and the air command
in Trivandrum.
When and for what purpose these preparations will be set in
motion will have nothing to do with the plight of people on the
Jaffna peninsula. Extremely limited news reports describe tens
of thousands of people in the area already experiencing difficulties
getting adequate food and water. As was the case in the Balkans
last year, humanitarian concern can be used as the
pretext for both the major powers and their more minor allies
to prosecute their strategic and economic interests with cynical
disregard for the impact on the lives of ordinary working people.
See Also:
Fighting erupts again as Sri Lankan government
imposes censorship clampdown
[10 May 2000]
Following a string of military defeats
Sri Lankan government imposes severe new censorship and emergency
powers
[8 May 2000]
Sri Lanka
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