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WSWS : News
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: Sri
Lanka
Sri Lankan presidents call for peace talks fuels tensions
in government ranks
By K. Ratnayake
4 May 2004
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Sri Lankan President Chandrika Kumaratunga took the first tentative
steps towards reviving stalled peace talks with the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Ealam (LTTE) last week by formally inviting the
Norwegian government to resume its mediating role. After months
of bitter attacks on the so-called peace process, Kumaratungas
decision marks an abrupt about face that has the potential to
open up deep divisions in the ruling United Peoples Freedom
Alliance (UPFA).
Prior to the countrys April 2 election, the president
and her allies repeatedly denounced the previous United National
Front (UNF) government for undermining national security in its
talks with the LTTE and criticised Norway for its alleged pro-LTTE
bias. Now the new UPFA government is under pressure from big business
and the major powers, particularly the US, to maintain the existing
ceasefire and to reopen talks.
Shortly after Kumaratunga appointed the minority UPFA government,
US Secretary of State Colin Powell phoned the president on April
9 and stressed the need for peace talks. He also spoke to Foreign
Minister Lakshman Kadirgamar who is due to visit Washington on
May 12.
US Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage sent a message
to the new Sri Lankan Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapakse declaring
that the US would be discussing the peace process with Norway
and other donor countries. At stake is $US4.5 billion in financial
assistance pledged at the Tokyo donors conference last April
as an incentive to reach a peace deal.
Responding to Kumaratungas appeal last week, Norways
Prime Minister Kjell Magne Bondevik signalled his governments
willingness to restart mediation. A delegation led by Norwegian
Deputy Foreign Minister Vidar Helgessen and special envoy Erik
Solheim arrived in Sri Lanka on Saturday and met with the president
and Foreign Minister Kadirgamar on Sunday.
Helgessen described the discussions as extensive and
constructive but indicated that it might be some time
before any return to the negotiating table. While Kumaratunga
has called for talks with the LTTE, the basis for any negotiations
is far from clear.
After meeting with Solheim on Monday, LTTE political chief
S.P. Thamil Chelvan declared the willingness of his organisation
to negotiate. He insisted, however, that the LTTE would not accept
any new conditions for the resumption of talks and restated the
LTTEs previous demands.
Formal peace negotiations first began in September 2002 after
the UNF won the 2001 election and signed a ceasefire with the
LTTE in February 2002. The talks broke down, however, in April
2003, after the LTTE suspended its involvement. The LTTE had made
a number of concessions, including renouncing its demand for a
separate Tamil state, but had received little in return. Washington
refused to remove the LTTE from its list of terrorist
organisations and prevented an LTTE delegation from participating
in talks in the US.
At the same time, while paying lipservice to the need for peace,
Kumaratunga mounted an increasingly strident campaign against
the talks. The president became the rallying point for Sinhala
extremist elements, including Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP)
as well as the Sihala Urumaya (SU) and its associated organisation
of Buddhist monks, the Jathika Sanga Sammelanaya (JSS). Using
her powers as commander-in-chief, she and the military top brass
engaged in a series of provocative actions designed to undermine
the talksincluding, on the eve of the final round, the sinking
of an LTTE ship in controversial circumstances.
After the breakdown of negotiations, the political offensive
against the UNF continued. The JVP and SU denounced Wickremesinghe
for betraying the country to the LTTE and demanded the expulsion
of the Norwegian-led peace monitorsthe Sri Lanka Monitoring
Mission (SLMM)for their alleged bias. Under pressure from
these layers, Kumaratunga last October called on Norway to recall
SLMM chief General Tryggve Tellefsen, declaring his impartiality
was in serious doubt and he was not fit to hold
the post.
The anti-UNF campaign reached a fever pitch in late October
after the LTTE released its plan for an Interim Self Governing
Authority (ISGA) as the basis for restarting negotiations. The
JVP, SU and sections of Kumaratungas own Sri Lanka Freedom
Party (SLFP) denounced the proposal as a plan to split the country.
Just days later, on November 4, the president seized control of
three key ministries and moved to impose a state of emergencyonly
pulling back after behind-the-scenes pressure from Washington
and New Delhi. After drawn out and fruitless talks with Wickremesinghe,
Kumaratunga sacked the government on February 7, setting the stage
for the April 2 election.
Divisions emerge
Kumaratunga now rests on the UPFAa coalition between
the SLFP, the JVP and several minor partiesthat reflects
this opposition to the peace process. Moreover, as
the new government lacks a parliamentary majority, it relies on
the conditional support of the Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU)a
party formed by the SU and JSS just prior to the poll. As a result,
the presidents about face on the peace talks will inevitably
provoke opposition from her allies and within the SLFP.
The JHU has already criticised Kumaratungas call for
Norways involvement. JHU parliamentary leader Aturaliye
Ratana Thera pointed out yesterday that the president had used
claims of Norwegian bias as one of the reasons for her seizure
of the defence ministry last November. The JHU issued a statement
over the weekend, warning it would support the government
only if the president discontinues peace talks and rejects
ISGA proposals.
The JVP has also objected. Its propaganda secretary Wimal Weerawansa
told the Sunday Island that his party did not believe a
solution to end the war could be achieved through the Norwegians.
The JVP agreed to Norways involvement to some extent,
but only provided Sri Lankas sovereignty as well as
national security was not endangered. Weerawansa repeated
the JVPs call for India to become involved.
The JVP has not opposed outright the restarting of peace talks,
but sharp differences exist with the SLFP on the basis for negotiations.
The coalition agreement between the JVP and SLFP outlines two
contradictory positions. While the SLFP proposes a limited devolution
of power at the provincial level to the wartorn North and East,
the JVP rejects devolution and proposes an even more restrictive
decentralisation that would provide no concessions to the LTTE.
The peace moves also threaten to alienate sections of the military
top brass on whom Kumaratunga has relied heavily over the past
year. Like the JHU and JVP, layers of the armed forces are also
critical of the Norwegian-led ceasefire monitors. Last week the
Island cited an army officer who accused the SLMM of doing
nothing about the LTTEs alleged ceasefire violations.
The killing of seven LTTE cadre near the eastern city of Batticaloa
last week has raised the possibility that elements of the military
may be provoking conflict to undermine the talks. The armed forces
and the Colombo media pinned the blame for the Batticaloa attack
on fighters loyal to the rebel LTTE leader Karuna. But the LTTE
leadership claimed to have evidence of the armys complicity
in the murders and has formally called for an SLMM inquiry.
Tensions within the ruling alliance and in the military are
certain to sharpen as Kumaratunga proceeds with the so-called
peace process. She dispatched Foreign Minister Kadirgamar to New
Delhi last week to encourage the Indian government to play a more
active role in negotiations. Her aim in enlisting Indian support
was to put greater pressure on the LTTE and to appease her Sinhala
chauvinist allies. New Delhi is hostile to the granting of any
significant concessions to the LTTE, fearing it would encourage
separatist movements in India, particularly in the southern state
of Tamil Nadu.
While in New Delhi, Kadirgamar indicated to the Island
that the government was prepared to accept the LTTEs claim
to be the sole representative of the Tamil peoplea key LTTE
condition for talks. The remarks immediately provoked public criticism
from the JHU leaders who demanded to know if Kumaratunga agreed
with Kadirgamar. The comments will undoubtedly further fuel disagreements
in the ranks of the UPFA, which repeatedly berated the previous
UNF government for accepting the LTTEs conditions.
The conflicts underscore once again the basic dilemma confronting
the Sri Lankan ruling class. Economically the war has become a
barrier to the plans of big business in Colombo to transform the
island into a cheap labour haven. Politically, however, the so-called
peace process cuts directly across the anti-Tamil chauvinism on
which the ruling elites have centrally relied for decades and
which was responsible for the war in the first place.
See Also:
New Sri Lankan parliament
descends into chaos
[24 April 2004]
Sri Lankan election produces
a hung parliament and further political instability
[5 April 2004]
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