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Lanka
An uneasy cease fire in Sri Lanka
By K. Ratnayake
23 May 2002
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An indefinite cease fire between government forces and the
separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) has been in
place in Sri Lanka since February, as a prelude to peace negotiations
in Thailand next month. But the arrangements, which are being
supervised by a monitoring mission involving delegates from Norway
and other Scandinavian countries, are far from secure.
While professing support for the peace process,
the Sri Lankan government of Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe
is under pressure from Sinhala extremist groups that are opposed
to any negotiated settlement with the LTTE. Both of the major
partiesWickeremesinghes United National Party (UNP)
and the opposition Sri Lankan Freedom Party (SLFP) of President
Chandrika Kumaratungaare responsible for prosecuting the
19-year war and are thoroughly steeped in Sinhala chauvinism.
In a meeting with the top Buddhist priests in Kandy in late
April, Wickremesinghe pledged that his government would not accept
the LTTEs demand for a homeland. At a press
conference last month, LTTE leader Prabhakaran all but dropped
the demand for a separate Tamil state in the north and east of
the island and indicated that internal self determination
may be acceptable. However, to Sinhala extremists, including many
in the Buddhist hierarchy, any talk of even limited autonomy for
the countrys Tamil minority is tantamount to treason.
Bent on appeasing these layers, Wickremesinghe told a ceremony
of Buddhist monks held on May 11 that any interim administration
in the north and east would only be set up with the approval of
the people and the parliament. By people
he was, of course, referring to his audiencepromising the
Buddhist prelates a virtual veto over any agreement with the LTTE.
It is not even clear that the talks in Thailand will take place.
The LTTE has insisted as a basic prerequisite for negotiations
that the government lift the existing ban on its organisation.
While there has been considerable behind-the-scenes discussion
on the issue, the Wickremesinghe government has yet to announce
any decision. If it is not recognised as a legal organisation,
the LTTE could still pull out of the talks.
The SLFP, Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) and Buddhist hierarchy
have all opposed the LTTEs deproscription. The SLFP wrote
to the prime minister in early May calling for satisfactory
progress in talks before any lifting of the ban. The opposition
party also insisted that an interim administration should only
be established as part of a final agreement. The JVP has called
for the LTTE to be disarmed before the ban is ended. JVP leaders
have called for a halt to Norways involvement and accused
Wickremesinghe of having a secret agreement with the LTTE to divide
the country. Other groups such as Sihala Urumaya (SU) are opposed
to any peace talks and demand that the LTTE be crushed militarily.
In late April, the JVP organised a rally of about 4,000 people,
including Buddhist monks, under the chauvinist slogan: Do
not allow the division of the motherland. Since then the
JVP has held joint demonstrations with a section of the SLFP and
other racist groups against the peace moves. In early May, around
1,000 Buddhist monks held a rally in Colombo and attempted to
march to the prime ministers residence to hand over a petition.
None of these demonstrations have been large, however. Most
people want an end to the 19-year war that has cost at least 60,000
lives and left many more maimed or homeless. Having won the national
election last year by promising to bring peace, Wickremesinghe
is engaged in a precarious balancing act. The most powerful sections
of big business as well as the major powers have been pushing
for an end to the war, which has become a major obstacle to investment.
At the same time, however, the prime minister cannot afford to
offend the Buddhist hierarchy and Sinhala extremists, and so is
wary about making any significant concessions to the LTTE.
Wickremesinghe is preparing to leave for Europe to meet UK
prime minister Tony Blair, European Union president Romano Prodi
and other leaders and enlist their support in putting pressure
on the LTTE to further modify its demands, particularly for a
lifting of the ban. At this stage, the LTTE has not modified its
position. The Tamil Guardian, considered to be the LTTEs
unofficial mouthpiece, lamented in its May 15 issue that the government
had not taken measures to deproscribe the organisation.
Military provocations
The cease fire is also threatened by actions of the military.
The most serious incident occurred on May 1, when the Sri Lankan
navy attached a number of vessels off the east coast of the island.
The Sri Lankan military claimed the boats were smuggling arms
for the LTTE and made a formal complaint to the monitoring mission
(SLMM) set up by Norway. The LTTE denied the allegation, accusing
the military of attacking fishing boats.
Our reporters visited the Batticaloa district and spoke to
survivorslocal fishermenwho explained that they had
been attacked suddenly. At least two fishermen were killed. The
monitoring missions acting chief, Hagrup Haukland, issued
a statement last week declaring that one of the trawlers had been
carrying illegal arms. But he absolved both the Sri Lankan military
and the LTTE, leaving open the possibility that an unnamed third
party had been smuggling arms.
Wickremesinghe boasts that the cease fire has enabled the free
movement of people in the north and east. But the monitoring mission
has received a growing number of reports of harassment and intimidation
by the Sri Lankan armed forces. On the night of April 29, two
people at Nilaveli were injured in a navy ambush. One was a 43-year-old
mother, Marimuttu Pechchimuttu, and the other a 13-year-old student,
Subashini. About 15,000 people stopped work on May 4 and held
a public rally in the eastern town of Muttur to protest this and
other incidents.
There is a long list of similar events. On May 13, Sri Lanka
navy gunboats surrounded fishing boats near the eastern port of
Trincomalee and assaulted 35 fishermen. At Ampara, the Special
Task Force demolished a garment factory, supposedly in order to
extend its defence lines.
The military has refused to allow the LTTE to conduct political
activities on the island of Kyats, north of the Jaffna peninsula,
and has maintained roadblocks and security checks. In Jaffna town,
local people have complained that the security forces are building
new bunkers in several areas. The army has refused to vacate 16
schools that were previously taken over and used as military camps.
Sections of the military, including the high command, have
been bitterly opposed to any negotiated end to the war. For the
majority of soldiers, many of whom were unemployed rural youth,
the conflict has been a disaster. Others, however, have profited
from an enhanced career or an association with businesses dependent
on military contracts. Layers of the armed forces and state bureaucracy
are deeply imbued with Sinhala chauvinism and have close connections
to Sinhala extremist groups and the Buddhist hierarchy.
Under such circumstances, there is a wide scope for the military
to engage in harassment, intimidation and outright provocation
as a means to disrupt or even sabotage the cease fire. The top
brass has insisted on maintaining the armed forces in a state
of readiness. The LTTE has complained of military aerial reconnaissance
over areas under its control in the northern Wanni region. The
government has announced plans to recruit 5,000 new soldiers to
bolster the armys numbers.
Talks between the Wickremesinghe government and the LTTE are
due to take place in Thailand within weeks. No date has yet been
set, however, and it is far from certain that negotiations will
begin at all.
See Also:
Tamil separatist leader confirms
readiness for deal with Sri Lankan regime
[17 April 2002]
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