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Lanka
Sri Lankan government and LTTE agree to hold talks
By Sarath Kumara
30 January 2006
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After considerable international pressure, the Sri Lankan government
and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) last Wednesday
agreed to hold talks next month in Geneva for the first time since
April 2003.
The talks will focus on strengthening the ceasefire,
which was signed in February 2002 but has become a virtual dead
letter since the election of Mahinda Rajapakse as president last
November. More than 200 people, including military personnel,
LTTE members and civilians, have been killed in a series of ambushes,
bombings and assassinations over the past two months.
Norwegian mediator Erik Solheim and US under-secretary of state
Nicholas Burns were both in Sri Lanka last week to push for a
revival of peace talks. Even the venue had been a matter of sharp
disagreement, with the LTTE demanding negotiations in Oslo or
a European capital and Rajapakse insisting on Sri Lanka or another
Asian country.
Rajapakse narrowly won the November presidential poll with
the backing of the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) and Jathika
Hela Urumaya (JHU). In their electoral pacts with Rajapakse, both
parties insisted on a tough stance toward the LTTE, including
a renegotiation of the ceasefire to strengthen the militarys
position and replace Norway as mediator. The JHU and JVP have
repeatedly accused Norway, and Solheim in particular, of bias
in favour of the LTTE.
Any immediate agreement between the two sides is unlikely.
While it has agreed to end attacks on the Sri Lankan military,
the LTTE is opposed to any rewriting of the ceasefire agreement.
In late November, LTTE leader V. Prabhakaran called for the government
to propose a reasonable political framework to satisfy
the aspirations of the Tamil people, or face renewed war.
In comments to Reuters last week, Solheim was cautious about
the prospects. [P]atience was important in this process
and it still is. It will not be sorted out in a few months,
he declared. There was enthusiasm for peace, he said,
but possibly not real enthusiasm for the necessary compromises.
The big risk are spoilers who want to produce violence to
undermine this positive effort, he warned.
While neither side has claimed responsibility for the escalating
violence, both the LTTE and the Sri Lankan military, along with
associated militia groups, have been waging what amounts to an
undeclared war over the past two months. Sections of the military
hierarchy have been hostile to the ceasefire from the outset and
were involved in a series of provocations that contributed to
the breakdown of earlier talks in 2003.
US Under-Secretary Burns made no pretence of being even-handed.
He praised the Colombo government for its restraint,
while branding the LTTE as a reprehensible group that
was keeping the country on the edge of war. He declared
that the LTTE would bear the full responsibility for
any return to war. The LTTE, he said, had to choose between peace
and continuing with its repugnant policies of the past decade
and a half.
Earlier in the month, the US ambassador to Colombo, Jeffrey
Lunstead, warned the LTTE that it would pay a high price for any
return to war. He said the LTTE would face a more capable
and more determined army, strongly hinting that the US would
actively back the Sri Lankan armed forces in any conflict.
The US already spends $US500,000 annually on training the Sri
Lankan military under its IMET (International Military Education
and Training) program. According an Asia Times report last
week, the US has also been providing credit to the armed forces
worth $2.5 million in 2004, $496,000 in 2005 and $1 million this
year.
While it has backed the so-called peace process, the Bush administration
is obviously considering its options should a return to full-scale
war take place. For Washington, which for years ignored the protracted
civil war, the conflict is a threat to growing US economic and
strategic interests on the Indian subcontinent that has to be
endedthrough one means or another.
Political tensions
Rajapakse is relying on US backing to ensure that negotiations
will be favourable to Colombo. In an interview with the pro-LTTE
Tamil newspaper Sudar Oli published last Monday, he appealed
for the LTTE to agree to talks. Trust me. I wish to be sincere
to the Tamil people. Give me the opportunity to achieve peace.
Co-operate with me and let me prove to you that I am a realist,
he told the newspaper.
The president is facing conflicting pressures. The corporate
elite in Colombo wants an end to the war, which has become an
obstacle to obtaining foreign investment and integrating the island
into globalised production processes. Following news of the peace
talks, the Colombo stock market registered its highest-ever one-day
gain last Thursday of more than 7 percent. Ceylon Chamber of Commerce
Chairman Deva Rodrigo enthusiastically greeted the negotiations
as the best news I have had for quite some time.
At the same time, Rajapakse depends on the support of the JVP
and JHU to prop up his unstable minority government. JHU secretary
Champika Ranawaka immediately expressed his opposition to talks
being held in Geneva, declaring the venue will give the
LTTE the global stamp of authenticity. [T]he government
and the LTTE will be identified as equal partners and the talks
will not be seen as negotiations between a legitimate government
and a group of terrorists, he said.
Last Tuesday, just a day before the talks were announced, the
JHU-aligned Movement against Terrorism put up posters around Colombo
with Prabhakarans picture alongside that of bin Laden, urging
the US to act militarily against the LTTE. Yes Mr. Burns,
there is one answer to terrorism, it declared.
The JVP-led Patriotic National Movement (PNM) is continuing
its demonstrations to press the government to stop LTTE killings
and revise the ceasefire. Speaking to the BBC, JVP parliamentarian
Nandana Gunethilake insisted that any peace deal with the LTTE
be based on the unitary state structure. Rajapakse
had agreed to this demand as part of his electoral pact with the
JVP.
Rajapakse has little room to manoeuvre. In the coded language
of Sinhala chauvinism, support for the unitary state
signifies the maintenance of the political supremacy of the Sinhala
majority with Buddhism as the state religion. By backing negotiations
based on the unitary state, Rajapakse effectively rejected the
previously agreed basis for a solution to the wara federated
state that would allow significant autonomy to the Tamil minority
in the North and East of the island.
Rajapakse also faces opposition within the upper echelons of
the military, which is thoroughly imbued with Sinhala communalism.
Shortly after his election, the armed forces submitted a list
of proposals to the president for the revision of the ceasefire.
Army commander Lieutenant General Sarath Fonseka publicly declared
that the ceasefire had been written to suit the LTTE and that
there was no basis for peace talks at present.
Speaking at a college ceremony last Thursday, Fonseka said
the armed forces would achieve an honorable peace.
That can only mean the complete capitulation of the LTTE. His
comment is a not-too-subtle hint that the army might ignore or
work to undermine the talks in Geneva.
On the same day, the LTTEs political wing leader in Batticaloa,
Major Kapilan, was ambushed and killed by unknown assailants.
The LTTE blamed the military and associated paramilitary groups
and charged Colombo with playing a double game. The
military responded by accusing the LTTE of having fired rocket-propelled
grenades at a bunker near Batticaloa.
On Tuesday, the Trincomalee correspondent for Sudar Oli,
Subramaniyam Sugirdharajan, was shot dead. The previous day
he had written about the violent activities of paramilitary groups
associated with the Sri Lankan military. The killing prompted
Hagurp Haukland, head of the Sri Lankan Monitoring Mission, to
say: [T]his is madness. There are parties in this country
who want not anything but war.
Obviously concerned that the military may sabotage the Geneva
talks, Rajapakse convened an urgent top-level meeting of defence
and police chiefs on Thursday. According to a press statement,
the president directed the leaders of the security forces not
to allow any form of misdeeds that are likely to impede meaningful
and fruitful progress of the peace process.
The Situation Report in yesterdays Sunday
Times described the meeting in blunter terms. Rajapakse told
those present that their prime responsibility [was] to ensure
troops were not involved in any offensive action against the LTTE.
He said they should abide by the governments peace initiatives.
They were also warned to be conscious of sabotage attempts by
politically motivated elements and to take stern action against
them.
Rajapakse ordered Chief of Defence Staff Admiral Daya Sandagiri
and army commander Fonseka to fly to Batticaloa on Friday. According
to the Sunday Times, They spoke to troops about the
new peace initiative and the need to maintain the environment
without engaging in any provocative acts. In other words,
despite all of the militarys denials, that is precisely
what it has been engaged in over recent months.
Whether any agreement will be reached in Geneva, even if the
talks take place, is still an open question.
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