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Lanka
Sri Lankan government and LTTE sign a tentative cease-fire
agreement
By Wije Dias
27 February 2002
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After weeks of frantic behind-the-scenes activity, the Sri
Lankan government signed a formal cease-fire arrangement with
the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) on February
22just two days before the deadline set by the Norwegian
facilitators. The deal sets the stage for negotiations over a
settlement to the protracted 19-year civil war that has claimed
the lives of more than 60,000 people.
Both the United National Party (UNP)-led government and the
LTTE have been under heavy pressure from the US and European powers,
which have backed the Norwegian moves, to end the conflict and
its potentially destabilising influence on the Indian subcontinent.
Sections of big business in Colombo also want an end to the war
and have been pushing the UNP to fulfill its promise to negotiate
with the LTTE made at last Decembers election.
The February 22 Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) simply formalises
a cease-fire that had already been unilaterally declared by both
sides and makes no mention of the basis for subsequent negotiations.
Further talks over the next three months will lay the basis for
formal negotiations for a political settlement.
The talks on the MoU were shrouded in secrecy. Even on the
day before the signing, the government denied in parliament that
an agreement had been finalised. The chief LTTE negotiator Anton
Balasingham strongly objected to media reports speculating on
the conditions in the agreement. The nervousness reflects fears
in both camps that sharp opposition will emerge to the deal.
Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe is well aware that attempts
by previous governments in Colombo have foundered on the opposition
of Sinhala chauvinists to any negotiations with the LTTE. Even
before the MoU was signed and its terms announced, the Buddhist
clergy and several political parties, the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna
(JVP) and Sihala Urumaya (SU), organised public protests against
any talks, specifically focusing on speculation that the government
would lift the ban on the LTTE imposed in 1998.
The cease-fire agreement is only the second signed since the
war began in 1983. The previous Peoples Alliance (PA) government,
which was elected in 1994 after promising to end the war, signed
a similar agreement in January 1995. But the talks quickly collapsed
and the PA regime led by President Chandrika Kumaratunga escalated
the war.
In 2000, under pressure from the major powers, Kumaratunga
attempted to pass constitutional changes that would have provided
limited autonomy to the provinces, including the war-torn North
and East. However, the devolution package, which was meant to
be the basis for talks with the LTTE, collapsed when the UNP,
responding to Sinhala extremist demonstrations, refused to provide
the necessary backing in parliament.
At the beginning of 2001, with the country near bankruptcy
and facing a severe balance of payments crisis, big business began
to agitate strongly for an end to the war. The IMF, in granting
a stand-by loan in March, instructed the government to cut defence
expenditure as a major pre-condition. However, attempts to implement
a cease-fire and begin talks with the LTTE failed when the government,
fearing the reaction of Sinhala chauvinist groups, refused to
legalise the LTTE.
Following the events of September 11, sections of the ruling
elite in Colombo viewed the Bush administrations global
war on terrorism as an ideal opportunity to extract concessions
from the LTTE to end the conflict in Sri Lanka. With the backing
of big business, the UNP and its allies defeated the PA. Once
in power, Wickremesinghe immediately invited Norway to resume
its role of facilitator for peace talks.
In his first policy statement on January 22, the prime minister
outlined the logic of his move to parliament: This [international]
opinion has intensified since the September 11 attack on New York.
The LTTE is under pressure to give up terrorism and the armed
struggle for a political solution as a result.
LTTE concessions
Clearly under pressure, the LTTE leadership has made a number
of concessions in signing the MoU. Most significantly it has all
but formally dropped its demand for a separate Tamil state in
the North and East of the island. Wickremesinghe has ruled out
in advance any discussion of a separate state, which has no support
from any of the major powers.
The MoU tacitly accepts the legitimacy of the Sri Lankan state.
After outlining procedures for ending military action and demarcating
areas of control, the document adds: The Sri Lankan armed
forces shall continue to perform their legitimate task of safeguarding
the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Sri Lanka.
In a strong indication that the LTTE will bend even further,
deputy leader Karikalan said on Tuesday that the organisation
may give up the idea of a separate homeland if the government
could provide a political solution that would ensure the rights
of the Tamil people
The LTTE also dropped its insistence that the governments
ban on it be lifted as a precondition for any formal cease-fire
arrangement. Just five days before the deal was signed, LTTE negotiator
Balasingham reiterated that the organisation wished to be treated
as an equal partner and that its legitimacy
as the sole representative of the Tamil people was important.
While Wickremesinghe refused to lift the ban, there was clearly
a deal done to give the LTTE a degree of legitimacy and to undercut
rival Tamil organisations. Its unarmed members will be allowed
freedom of movement in government-controlled areas
in the North and East to carry out political workbut only
step by step. Fifty cadres will be allowed entry a month after
the signing of the cease-fire comes into effect, and an unrestricted
number two months later.
The agreement also calls for the disarming of Tamil paramilitary
groups such as those associated with the EPRLF, PLOTE, EROS, TELO
and EPDP. These groups, which once claimed to fight for a separate
Tamil state, have become adjuncts to the Sri Lankan military.
Supplied with arms and money, they have operated alongside the
security forces against the LTTE and suppressed broader anti-government
opposition among Tamils. In recognition of their services, the
government is to offer individual militia members a place in the
army in areas outside the North and East.
Through the MoU, the LTTE has secured a certain status for
itself in any talks that are held. But the class orientation of
the organisation, which represents the interests of sections of
the Tamil bourgeoisie, is indicated by its failure to establish
basic democratic rights as part of the cease-fire arrangement.
In areas under its control, the LTTE will not allow other parties
to engage in political activities.
The LTTE has not insisted on the immediate lifting of harsh
restrictions imposed on Tamil fishermen by the Sri Lankan military
to cut arms smuggling. Fishermen, many of whom have been reduced
to abject poverty, have been demanding unrestricted access to
fishing grounds. The LTTE, which has covertly supported their
protests in the past, has agreed to the restrictions remaining
in force for three months.
The notorious Prevention of Terrorism Act, under which thousands
of Tamils have been detained without trial for months and years,
often on trumped-up charges of being LTTE suspects,
will not be abrogated. The Sri Lankan government has only agreed
that such operations shall not take place after the
MoU is signed. Tamil political prisoners will not be released.
Both sides have several hundred prisoners captured in combat
but they are not treated as prisoners of war. Their status will
not change under the MoU, although they may receive visits by
family members.
The reaction to the MoU
The US, Britain, Japan and other major powers immediately welcomed
the MoU. US Secretary of State Colin Powell sent a congratulatory
message to the Sri Lankan foreign minister saying: The US
is 100 percent with Sri Lanka and ready to render any assistance
in the peace process.
Big business, which is desperate for an end to the war to boost
the countrys economic prospects and foreign investment,
also responded positively. Share prices in Colombo rose on Tuesday
with the All Share Index rising 1.1 percent and the Milanka blue
chip index gaining 1.3 percent on the previous day.
At the same time, the overwhelming majority of working people,
who have borne the hardships of the war, are also in support of
a negotiated settlement. For the past decade, voters have put
into office the party that has promised to find a way to end the
conflict. A recent opinion poll published by the Social Research
Unit Center for Policy Alternatives found that 80.7 percent of
respondents expressed confidence in peace talks.
But having begun the war as a means of dividing the working
class on religious and ethnic lines, the ruling class has created
bases of support for its continuation among those with vested
interestswar profiteers, sections of the military top brass
and state bureaucracy, the Buddhist hierarchy and Sinhala extremists
groups such as the JVP and SU. Previous attempts to secure a peace
deal have failed because this constituency exerts a powerful influence
inside both of the major traditional partiesthe UNP and
the Sri Lankan Freedom Party (SLFP), the major component of the
Peoples Alliance.
PA leader Kumaratunga, who retains the powers of the Sri Lankan
presidency, has placed a question mark over the MoU. She expressed
surprise and concern at not being informed of the
terms of the agreement prior to its signing. Her statement gave
cautious and conditional support to the agreement, indicating
she had expressed concern to the prime minister about certain
specific clauses and aspects.
On Tuesday, Kumaratunga convened a meeting of PA leaders and
their allies, including the JVP and EPDP, to discuss their attitude
to the agreement. Divisions have already appeared in their ranks.
The Lanka Sama Samaja Party (LSSP) supported the cease-fire and
pointedly issued a statement saying that it sees no reason
for any party to commence a campaign of panic or fear mongering.
The LSSPs comments are directed at its allies, including
elements within the SLFP who are keen to whip up chauvinist opposition
to the deal as a means of boosting support in local elections
due in March. The EPDP is bitterly opposed to the agreement as
it will mean the loss of the arms and moneyreportedly in
the vicinity of 7 million rupees ($US75,000) a monththat
it received for its militia under the PA government.
The JVP has denounced the MoU as an agreement of surrender
and claimed that the government has accepted the LTTEs demand
for a separate Tamil state. Seeking to win sections of the PA
to its side, the JVP has reiterated Kumaratungas concerns
about not being informed. In the late 1980s, the JVP waged a vicious
campaign against the Indo-Lankan Accord, which brought an Indian
peace-keeping force into the North and East of the country to
impose its terms on the Tamil minority. The JVP branded the accord
a betrayal of the motherland and gunned down workers
and political opponents who refused to support its protests.
Prime Minister Wickremesinghe is also concerned about possible
opposition from the defence establishment. Significantly he chose
to travel to the northern city of Vavuniya to sign the agreement
and to address troops at the main army camp. To appease the military
top brass, Wickremesinghe insisted that defence expenditure would
not be immediately cut. He also told soldiers that they were not
going to lose their jobs as a result of the cease-fire.
Although the guns on the battlefront are silent, for the time
being at least, none of the underlying issues have been addressed,
let alone resolved. Throughout the election campaign and the subsequent
months, Wickremesinghe has studiously avoided spelling out any
proposals for a political settlement to end the war, beyond saying
that he will not discuss a separate Tamil state. No doubt he has
in mind Kumaratungas experience in 2000. She spelled out
her devolution package in detail, only to find that she faced
opposition, not just from the JVP and SU but from the UNP and
within her own coalition.
But having engineered a cease-fire, Wickremesinghe will now
be compelled to start to outline the basis for an end to the war.
In all likelihood it will be similar to Kumaratungas devolution
package. After all, the UNP had agreed to support the PAs
constitutional changes in 2000, before Wickremesinghe, who was
opposition leader at the time, bowed to the chorus of chauvinist
opposition and reneged. Now he faces Kumaratungas political
problemhow to negotiate an end to the war to satisfy big
business and the major powers while keeping the Sinhala extremists,
including those within his own party, at bay.
Kumaratungas constitutional package was not aimed at
ending the systematic discrimination and oppression of the Tamil
minority that has been part and parcel of Colombo politics since
independence in 1948 and ultimately led to the war. Rather it
was a power-sharing arrangement between the Sinhala, Tamil and
Muslim elites, which further entrenched ethnic and religious divisions,
sowing the seeds for future conflict. Wickremesinghes peace
formula will be no different in its essentials.
See Also:
New Sri Lankan government calls
for peace talks with the LTTE
[3 January 2002]
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