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WSWS : News
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: Sri
Lanka
LTTE joins government strikebreaking against Sri Lankan health
workers
By Nanda Wickramasinghe
30 September 2003
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The fact that the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam
(LTTE) is backing the Sri Lankan governments attempts to
crush an island-wide strike by health workers speaks volumes about
its class character and the real purpose of its peace talks with
Colombo.
Some 80,000 workers began an indefinite strike on September
17, directly challenging the ruling United National Fronts
(UNF) attempts to implement IMF demands for budget cutbacks and
privatisation. Faced with rising prices and desperately low wages,
the vast majority of health workers have backed the campaign for
substantial pay increases.
The UNF government has refused to make any concessions and
denounced the strikers, blaming them for endangering patients
lives. In a fragrant breach of Sri Lankan law, it has sent members
of the armed forces into the hospitals to take over the duties
of the striking workers. The Health Ministry has sacked 1,600
casual workers and recruited hundreds of scabs to replace them.
At the same time, the police have been used to harass, intimidate
and even detain strikers.
The LTTE has decided not to defend the workers, but to openly
back the government. On September 23, its leaders in the Northern
Province city of Jaffna convened a meeting at the Jaffna base
hospitala major state-run facilityand told workers
they should end their strike on humanitarian grounds.
The LTTEs argument dovetails exactly with that of the government
and the Colombo media, serving to cover up the fact that full
responsibility for the undermining of the public health system,
and the resultant threats to patients, lies with the government
and its policies.
The Jaffna hospital workers engaged in a heated exchange with
the LTTE officials, demanding to know why they had decided to
oppose the strike, yet had supported earlier industrial action
by doctors. In the end, the workers defied the LTTEs warnings
that the military would be sent into the hospital, and resolved
to remain on strike.
According to media reports, similar incidents have taken place
in other areas. Jaffna regional leader Illanpirai reportedly ordered
a return to work at the towns main teaching hospital, warning
that LTTE cadres would replace the strikers. In Vavuniya, LTTE
leader Amirthab told the press that 20 LTTE members had been sent
to the local hospital to compel strikers to go back. The same
orders were apparently issued in eastern Batticaloa, where workers
again defied the LTTE in at least one major hospital.
Leaders of the Health Services Trade Union Alliance (HSTUSA)
have confirmed these reports, which have not been denied by the
LTTE. Wickramabahu Karunaratne, leader of the opportunist Nava
Sama Samaja Party (NSSP), attempted to justify the LTTEs
actions when he told the BBC that the organisation was simply
seeking to preempt the dispatch of Sri Lankan troops to the hospitals.
But his claim fell flat when the LTTE failed to issue any denunciation
of the government once the military had entered the hospitals.
The LTTEs response to the strike demonstrates that it
serves the interests, not of the Tamil workers and oppressed masses
as it has always claimed, but of the bourgeoisie. Confronted with
a significant movement of the working class, involving Tamil,
Sinhala and Muslim workers fighting to defend their basic rights
and common interests, the LTTE has chosen to support the Colombo
regime.
For two decades, the LTTE waged a war for a separate statelet
of Tamil Eelam in the north and east of the island, insisting
that only in this way could the democratic rights of the Tamil
minority be defended. Its real agenda, however, was to establish
a base for the Tamil bourgeoisie to develop its own relations
with imperialism and to exploit the working class. This was proven
beyond a shadow of doubt when, having agreed to enter peace talks
with Colombo aimed at winning a share of power, the LTTE immediately
abandoned its demands for a separate state.
Chief LTTE negotiator Anton Balasingham signalled his organisations
orientation at the outset of the negotiations when he pointedly
backed the governments perspective for Sri Lanka to become
a successful Tiger economy. This was nothing less
than an open endorsement for Colombos efforts to implement
the IMFs economic restructuring program.
The dominant sections of Sri Lankan business have been insisting
on an end to the war to encourage foreign investment, to press
ahead with the IMF agenda and to coordinate efforts to deal with
opposition from an increasingly restive working class. The LTTE
wants to carve out a niche for itself as the policeman for these
policies among the countrys Tamil minority. This is the
real meaning of its support for the governments strikebreaking.
With the peace negotiations stalled, the LTTE is using the current
situation to send an unmistakable message to big business and
the major powers: that it will function as Colombos dependable
and trustworthy ally.
Any illusions that the LTTE will balk at lining up with, or
directly implementing, violent reprisals against the working class
should be immediately dispelled. In the course of the civil war,
in order to foment communal sentiment, it sought to blame Sinhalese
workers, villagers and the poor for the crimes of the Colombo
government, deliberately targeting them for attack. In 1996, the
LTTE bombed the Central Bank building in Colombo, killing 100
innocent bank employees and wounding more than 1,400.
A year ago, LTTE officials on the northern island of Kayts
issued death threats against members of the Socialist Equality
Party after the local fishermens union, which the SEP had
been instrumental in establishing, refused to hand over funds
to build an LTTE office. The threats were followed by an unprovoked
knife attack on SEP member Nagaraja Kodeeswaran, along with notices
appealing for all people to wipe out them and their partys
work.
The SEP warned that the LTTEs actions were aimed, not
just at its own members, but at suppressing any struggle by Tamil
workers for their own independent class interests. The attack
on the SEP was a sharp indication of the role the LTTE was preparing
to play under a power-sharing arrangement with Colombo. These
warnings have been strikingly confirmed in the LTTEs attacks
on the health workers strike.
The health strike itself has revealed the fundamental, organic
strivings of Sri Lankan workersTamil, Sinhala and Muslimto
unify their struggles across racial, language and religious lines.
In opposition to all forms of communal politics, the working
class must turn to a genuinely progressive solution to the political,
economic and social crisis. This necessitates joining and building
the Socialist Equality Partythe only party that has consistently
opposed the war, demanding the immediate and unconditional withdrawal
of Sri Lankan troops from the north and east, while at the same
time rejecting the LTTEs call for a separate Tamil Eelam.
The SEP fights for the unity of all Sri Lankan workers with their
counterparts throughout the Indian subcontinent and internationally,
through the formation of a United Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka
and Eelam.
See Also:
Military sent into hospitals
Striking Sri Lankan health workers defy intimidation
[27 September 2003]
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