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WSWS : News
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: Sri
Lanka
Tamil separatist leader confirms readiness for deal with Sri
Lankan regime
By our correspondents
17 April 2002
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At a press conference in northern Sri Lanka last week, Velupillai
Prabhakaran, leader of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE),
signalled his willingness to fall into line with the demands of
the US and other major powers for negotiations to end the countrys
long-running civil war.
Prabhakaran explained to around 300 Sri Lankan and foreign
journalists: There has been a lot of misunderstanding about
the LTTE. We would like to explain through the international media
that the LTTE is committed to peace and a negotiated settlement.
To underscore the point, he appeared for his first press conference
in 12 years in a light blue safari suit instead of his usual battle
fatigues. Emphasising the unity of the LTTE leadership, he was
flanked by the LTTEs chief negotiator, Anton Balasingham,
just returned from exile in Britain, and the leader of the LTTEs
political wing, Tamil Chelvam.
Central to the negotiations is the insistence by the major
powers that the LTTE abandon its long-held demand for a separate
Tamil state in the north and east of the island. The issue has
the potential to open up divisions in the LTTE. Having promoted
a separate Tamil Eelam as the only means of ending the oppression
of the Tamil minority, the LTTE will be sitting down at a negotiating
table in Thailand in June on the tacit understanding that independence
is off the agenda.
The LTTE leaders are obviously sensitive to the political difficulties
involved. Asked whether the LTTE would renounce an
independent state, Prabhakaran hedged around the issue, saying:
Conditions have not arisen to abandon an independent statehood.
The struggle for Eelam is a demand of the Tamil people.
At the same time, however, he declared in unmistakable terms that
he would drop the demand if a place could be found for the LTTE
within Colombos proposals for limited autonomy.
Asked what he meant by self-determination, Prabhakaran
stated: If autonomy and self government is given to our
people, then also we can say that internal self-determination
is to some extent met. But if the Sri Lankan government rejects
our demands for autonomy and self-government and continues with
repression, then as a last resort we would opt for secession...
So self-determination entails autonomy and self-government. In
an extreme case, in the last resort, it means secession.
With an eye to the impact in its own ranks, the LTTE attempted
to disguise the message by referring to Prabhakaran as the
President and PM of Tamil Eelam and reaffirming the guerrilla
leaders declaration that his troops should shoot him if
he ever gave up the demand for Eelam. In Colombo, however, these
rather theatrical gestures were well understood and Prabhakarans
remarks were greeted approvingly.
Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe praised Prabhakarans
comments as indicating several points towards a political
solution. The US embassy in Colombo issued a statement welcomed
the LTTEs commitment to peace and a negotiated settlement.
And the Norwegian Deputy Foreign Minister arrived in Sri Lanka
to prepare the agenda for the Thailand talks.
While Prabhakaran claims to speak in the name of the Tamil
people, the LTTEs program never represented the interests
of the oppressed masses. In opposition to a socialist perspective,
the demand for a separate Tamil state was advanced in the early
1970s under conditions of intensifying anti-Tamil discrimination,
which was enshrined in a new constitution. The LTTE leaders opposed
a class solution based on the unification of Sinhala and Tamil
workers and called instead for an independent Eelama proposal
that represented the ambitions of the Tamil bourgeoisie for their
own capitalist statelet.
Concerned at its destabilising impact on the Indian subcontinent,
the US and other major powers have firmly ruled out a separate
Eelam. As a result, the LTTE is prepared to negotiate a power-sharing
arrangement within the framework of a unified Sri Lankan state
with the parties that have been responsible for carrying out systematic
anti-Tamil discrimination and prosecuting the 19-year civil war.
Prabhakaran denied that the LTTE had been under pressure from
the US after September 11. He went out of his way to ingratiate
himself to the US and other major powers. In response to questions
from WSWS journalists, he avoided any criticisms of US policy
and remarked: We cannot condemn Colombos growing collaboration
with the USA or the prevailing international configuration of
states. He repeated the LTTEs support for Bushs
war against terrorismthat is, for US military
aggression in Afghanistanand made an obsequious appeal to
Washington for the LTTE not to be categorised as a terrorist organisation.
Prabhakaran signalled his approval of the governments
proposal for a two-year interim administration in the north and
eastan arrangement the LTTE is hoping to dominate. He expressed
his confidence in Prime Minister Wickremesinghe, saying his
hands must be strengthened to allow for a full political
settlement after two years. Wickremesinghe has come under criticism
from President Chandrika Kumaratunga, her opposition Peoples Alliance
(PA) and Sinhala extremist organisations opposed to any negotiated
settlement with the LTTE.
The exact terms of any agreement on internal self-determination
are yet to be decided. But several of Prabhakarans remarks
make clear that it will not be in the interests of the majority
of ordinary working peopleTamil or Sinhalese. Rather it
will be an arrangement between the two ruling elites for the joint
exploitation of the working class, with the LTTE playing the role
of policeman among the Tamil masses.
When questioned about the LTTEs program if it were to
rule in an interim administration, Balasingham insisted it would
follow an open economic policy. This was a clear message
to international finance capital that the LTTE, like Colombo,
would meet the dictates of the IMF and international investors
for pro-market policies.
Nearly two decades of war have had devastating consequences,
particularly in the war zones in the north and east. Over 60,000
people have been killed and many more have been injured or displaced.
Much of the areas roads, housing and infrastructure have
been damaged or destroyed. The only inducement to investors to
risk their capital in such conditions will be a low-cost, disciplined
workforce, something the LTTE leaders are pledging to provide,
in collaboration with Colombo.
In that context, the LTTEs refusal to guarantee basic
democratic rights to political opponents is particularly sinister.
When WSWS journalists asked whether an LTTE administration would
permit other political organisations to function, Balasingham
at first agreed, then qualified his remarks, saying only Tamil
organisations would be allowed. When pressed on the LTTEs
attitude to working class organisations, he said they would be
permitted but insisted that the LTTE would retain a veto. He attempted
to justify the present lack of democratic rights in LTTE-controlled
areas by claiming that a liberation struggle precluded
such rights.
The LTTEs oft-repeated claim to be the sole representative
of the Tamil people is inherently anti-democratic. Prabhakaran
noted with satisfaction that most of the established Tamil bourgeois
parties have accepted the LTTEs claimeffectively writing
themselves out of political existence. But while the LTTE may
have the backing of the Tamil elite, it will not be able to satisfy
the needs and aspirations of the Tamil masses for basic democratic
rights and decent living standards. Its anti-democratic measures
are aimed at intimidating any opposition to its policies.
Moreover, the plans for internal self-determination
set the stage for further communal tensions, conflict and violence.
The north and east of Sri Lanka also include sizeable communities
of Sinhalese and Muslims. Prabhakaran has formally apologised
for the brutal expulsion of thousands of Muslims from Jaffna in
the early 1990s and has met with leaders of the Sri Lankan Muslim
Congress. But there have been reports of LTTE harassment of Muslims
in the east of the island and claims that LTTE leader Karikalan
has ruled out granting Muslims the right to hold land. Though
as yet unconfirmed, these incidents point to the dangers to the
working class of any agreement based on communalism.
A remark by Balasingham underscores the dangers. One journalist
questioned the wisdom of relying on Norwegian diplomacy given
the outcome of the Oslo agreement in the Middle East. Balasingham
contemptuously dismissed the comparison declaring, We know
that the Palestinian problem has fallen into difficulties. But
our problem is entirely different.
While there are obvious differences between Sri Lanka and the
Middle East, there are also more similarities than the LTTE leadership
would care to admit. Prabhakaran is on the same road as Arafatplacing
the future of the Tamil people in the hands of the major powers
that have created a disaster in the Middle East.
See Also:
LTTE's chief negotiator returns to a
political minefield in Sri Lanka
[8 April 2002]
High-level US delegation issues
veiled threat to Sri Lankan separatists
[28 March 2002]
Sri Lankan government and LTTE
sign a tentative ceasefire agreement
[27 February 2002]
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