|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Sri
Lanka
Sri Lankan presidents peace mask starts
to slip off
By Wije Dias
21 June 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
During a visit to the Middle East late last month, Sri Lankan
President Mahinda Rajapakse defended his governments war
against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in an interview
with Al Jazeera that was notable for its crudeness, arrogance
and incoherence.
None of Sri Lankas countrys media, not even the
state-owned press, have reproduced the interview or commented
on its contents. The embarrassed silence reflects a deep unease
in the Colombo political and media establishment that the lies
being used to justify the countrys brutal civil war are
beginning to unravel. The abuse of democratic rights, including
murders and disappearances, by the security forces is so blatant
that the Rajapakse government is confronting growing criticism
internationally and at home.
Al Jazeeras 101 East presenter Teymoor Nabil
was certainly not a hostile interviewer. He began by blaming the
LTTE for restarting the war just weeks after Rajapakse was elected
in November 2005. Nabil then fed Rajapakse the question: Why
has the LTTE suddenly decided to start attacking again?
Quite comfortable, the president replied: They [LTTE] would
have thought it was a weakness of mine, that I could be defeated.
That was a good opportunity for them to establish a separate state.
Rajapakse continued to posture as a man of peace, but soon
found himself embroiled in one contradiction after another, even
in response to Nabils lame questioning. Asked about dialogue
between the government and the LTTE, the president declared: We
are always ready for talks. Always, even today. Even while the
fighting goes on, I am ready for talks.
The answer is an outright lie. Rajapakse has made clear that
he is unwilling to hold talks on the basis of the 2002 ceasefire
and the terms agreed in discussions in 2002-03. Under international
pressure, he reluctantly consented to talks at Geneva in February
2006, which all but collapsed when government negotiators demanded
a fundamental revision of the ceasefire agreement. A second round
at Oslo in April 2006 bogged down in wrangling over protocol and
did not even commence.
Asked about the ceasefire agreement, Rajapakse declared: The
[LTTE] does not honour that. We still honour that. We still do
not send our police, our army to that side. Again in the
light of the Sri Lankan armys current offensive operations
to seize LTTE territory in the North and East, the statement is
simply false. At another point in the interview, when bragging
about the militarys performance, he declared: We have
cleared the east from terrorism. Today, they [the LTTE] have been
limited to the Kilinochichi and Mullaitivu areas. We have weakened
them.
Tangled in his own lies, Rajapakse increasingly contradicted
himself. Until the terrorists are weakened, they will not
come for talks. As long as they think they are strong they will
try to break up the country, he said. Trying to clarify
the issue, Nabil asked: So what you are saying is that there
must first be military victory and then peace talks? But
no, that was not the case. I said that even today I am ready
to negotiate very clearly. My argument is that terrorism has to
be got rid of. We cannot kneel down to that. I am not prepared
to kneel down to their arms capability, Rajapakse replied.
At this stage, Nabil admitted his perplexity: I apologise,
I am not really following you. You say that terrorism must be
defeated but [you] dont want, you dont think that
a military victory is necessary? To which Rajapakse replied:
Absolutely, a victory is essential against terrorism. That
is a different story. But because we need to meet the aspirations
of the Tamil people, I am prepared to go for talks, with the terrorists.
Nabil was unable, or unwilling, to unravel the riddle, but
there is an explanation for these absurdities.
For all his claims to be a man of peace, Rajapakses
2005 campaign for the presidency foreshadowed an end to the 2002
ceasefire and a rapid return to war. He allied himself with Sinhala
extremist partiesthe Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) and
the Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU)on the basis of an agreement
that amounted to ultimatums to the LTTE. Rajapakse insisted that
he would revise the ceasefire agreement, dispense with Norway
as formal peace facilitator, and no longer recognise the LTTE
as the sole representative of the Tamil peopleeffectively
destroying the previous basis for peace talks.
Far from reacting aggressively, LTTE leader Velupillai Prabhakaran
in his annual Heroes Day speech, a week after the
2005 election, made an urgent appeal for negotiations, saying:
The new government should come forward soon with a reasonable
political framework that will satisfy the political aspirations
of the Tamil people. Rajapakse responded by unleashing the
security forces in a dirty covert war of murder and provocation
aimed at weakening the LTTE and goading it into retaliating.
Just six weeks after Rajapakses election, Joseph Pararajasingham,
a parliamentarian for the pro-LTTE Tamil National Alliance (TNA),
was gunned down on Christmas Eve while attending a church mass.
While the government cynically blamed the LTTE, it was evident
that the assassination was the work of either the military or
an allied Tamil paramilitary. A week later, five students, celebrating
their success at the university entrance exam, were killed in
execution style in Trincomalee, in all likelihood by police special
task force commandos.
In July, after months of provocations and LTTE retaliations,
Rajapakse ordered the army onto the offensive. The pretext was
a humanitarian disaster caused by the LTTEs
closing of the Mavilaru irrigation sluice gatea protest
aimed at pressuring the government to fulfill a promise to install
a water purification project in the area. The government was not
interested in resolving the issue peacefullySri Lanka Monitoring
Mission (SLMM) personnel attempting to negotiate an end to the
impasse came under firebut ordered a full-scale offensive
in open breach of the 2002 ceasefire.
Over the past 11 months, the Rajapakse has been waging an offensive
war. The military has not only repeatedly broken the 2002 ceasefire
and seized LTTE territory, but is terrorising the Tamil minority.
Hundreds of people, mainly Tamils, have been murdered or disappeared
in circumstances that can only be explained by the existence of
state-sanctioned death squads. More are being detained without
trial under draconian anti-terrorism laws. In all of this, Rajapakse
has had the tacit backing of the major powers, particularly the
Bush administration, which like Al Jazeeras Nabil, blame
the LTTE for the renewed war.
The glaring contradictions in Rajapakses replies stem
from the following. On the one hand, he has restarted a vicious
communal war and is aggressively seeking to destroy the LTTEs
military capability. His government is backed by the military
hierarchy, state bureaucracy and sections of business, whose interests
are bound up with maintaining the Sinhala supremacist character
of the Sri Lankan state. On the other hand, Rajapakse has to maintain
the pretence of being for peace, restraint and talks, in order
to deflect mounting criticism at home and abroad.
Nabil never asked the obvious question: on what basis would
the Sri Lankan president talk to the terrorists? In
2003, the LTTE abandoned its longstanding demand for a separate
state and sought a power-sharing arrangement in the form of an
autonomous North and East that would allow the mutual exploitation
of the working class by the Sinhala and Tamil elites. Rajapakse
has no intention of negotiating on this basis. Current proposals
for constitutional reform rule out provincial autonomy, which
has been the basis for all previous attempts to find a negotiated
end to the 24-year war, and allow only for a limited devolution
of powers at the district level. It is clear that the talks Rajapakse
has in mind are to discuss the terms of the LTTEs surrender.
The Sri Lankan president brushed aside Nabils timid questions
about the governments human rights abuses. Actually,
today I am not prepared to accept that there are human rights
violations as has been reported, he said. Pressed about
a Human Rights Watch report of more than 700 abductions, Rajapakse
contemptuously claimed that all the missing people had gone overseas
or joined the LTTE. Many of those people who are said to
have been abducted are in England, Germany, gone abroad,
he declared. Needless to say, no evidence was produced or cases
cited of abductees suddenly being found in Europe or anywhere
else.
Rajapakse was particularly sensitive to Nabils suggestion
that growing criticism of Sri Lankas human rights record
might lead to an international intervention. Standing on his high
horse, the president emphatically declared: Sri Lanka is
not a colony of England, America or any other country. Sri Lanka
is a sovereign state. So when they get involved it is important
that they do not interfere in the internal affairs of this country.
In other words, Rajapakse is quite content for the major powers
to back his communal war as long as they do not object to his
methods, or interfere. He made an exception for India, however,
which was held out as the great hope for peace. To offer
a solution to this problem [war] according to the present situation,
to help the Tamil people, Indias support is necessary. India
must work with this government. The president obviously
calculates on using the Indian government to put further pressure
on the LTTE.
Taken as a whole, Rajapakses interview reveals that the
mask of peace is starting to slip, exposing a communal warmonger
who is directly responsible for the terrible crimes being carried
out by the Sri Lankan security forces.
See Also:
Heavy fighting continues in the North
and East of Sri Lanka
[15 June 2007]
Two Sri Lankan Red Cross workers abducted
in central Colombo
[14 June 2007]
Sri Lanka: Hundreds of Tamils forcibly
expelled from Colombo
[12 June 2007]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |