|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Sri
Lanka
Sri Lankan governments peace committee on
point of collapse
By K. Ratnayake
1 September 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
The All Party Representative Committee (APRC) initiated by
Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapakse last year to work out a
constitutional plan to end the countrys long-running civil
war has all but collapsed. Far from being a surprise, the committees
failure simply confirms that the governments agenda was
not a negotiated peace, but the renewal of war against the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).
Rajapakse adjourned the APRC indefinitely on August 14. His
own Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP), together with the Sinhala
extremist partiesthe Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU), Mahajana
Eksath Peramuna (MEP) and Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP)opposed
the issuing of any final report. The JHU and MEP are partners
of the ruling coalition, while JVP supports the government in
parliament without being part of the cabinet.
The JHU and JVP denounced the APRCs chairman Tissa Vitharana
for preparing to issue a majority report, representing
the views of the other parties on the committee, in favour of
a federal constitution involving a devolution of powers to the
provinces. Sinhala chauvinist groups regard such a proposalthe
basis of all peace talks over the past two decadesas anathema.
At a press conference on August 19, JHU leader Champika Ranawaka
condemned Vitharana as a conspirator supporting the
LTTE. Today, we have gained a military victory in the East.
Plans are in place to push northwards ... There is a conspiracy
to reverse the military victories. We wonder whether Professor
Vitarana is playing a part in this conspiracy, he declared.
Ranawakas remarks make the governments agenda explicit.
Having launched a series of offensives to seized LTTE territory
in the East in open breach of the 2002 ceasefire agreement, the
military is now preparing to attack LTTE positions in the North.
The aim is to crush the LTTE and any opposition from the countrys
Tamil minority in order to maintain the dominance of a Sinhala-Buddhist
state. As far as the JHU is concerned, any talk of compromise
is treasonous.
Rajapakse established the APRC in May 2006 amid preparations
to go on the military offensive. All parliamentary parties, including
the opposition United National Party (UNP), sent their representatives,
except the pro-LTTE Tamil National Alliance (TNA). The committees
purpose was never to establish the basis for peace talks, but
to blunt public opposition to the return to war.
The APRC was also a convenient device for deflecting international
criticism. Rajapakse could claim to be preparing for negotiations,
even as he ordered the security forces to attack. For the sponsors
of the so-called international peace process, the committee provided
a pretext for turning a blind eye to the governments tearing
up of the 2002 ceasefire. The US, the EU, Japan and Norway could
pretend that Rajapakse was seeking a political solution to the
war.
The Colombo media hailed the APRC as a step toward peace despite
growing signs that the military and its paramilitary allies were
already engaged in a covert war to weaken the LTTE and goad it
into retaliation. In late July 2006, the military launched its
first open offensive in the East in the Mavilaru area. The government
seized upon the closure of the Mavilaru sluice gate, claiming
that the army operation was a purely humanitarian
one to provide irrigation water to farmers downstream. In its
subsequent offensives, the military dispensed with such pretexts.
As a result, the APRC was stillborn from the outset. The JVP
and JHU, which had both backed Rajapakses election in November
2005, were hostile to any concessions to the LTTE or the countrys
Tamil minority. The JVP pulled out of the APRC last December,
declaring that it opposed any arrangement for federalism
that devolved power to the North and East, where the majority
of Tamils live.
The SLFPs own proposals, presented to the APRC in May,
also opposed any federal arrangement. The document insisted on
retaining the unitary character of a Sinhala-Buddhist
state and proposed the scrapping of the current provincial council
system in favour of devolution on a far more limited scale at
the district level. The plan effectively tore up not only the
tentative proposals made in peace talks in 2002-03, but the provincial
council arrangements put in place in 1987 under the Indo-Lanka
Accord. By destroying any room for compromise, the document was
in effect a declaration of war.
The APRC nevertheless continued to drag on, holding more than
40 rounds of meetings since it was formed. A phony debate
has continued, with the SLFP, alongside the JHU and MEP, opposing
attempts by other parties to replace unitary state
with a compromise term and to retain provincial councils.
The so-called majority includes a number of parties that are
part of the ruling coalition, in particular the leftist Lanka
Sama Samaja Party (LSSP) and the Stalinist Communist Party (CP).
For these parties, the APRC has served as a useful political camouflage,
enabling them to claim to be for peace while serving
in a government that is aggressively prosecuting war. The opposition
UNP joined the APRC last year, but quit on August 17, complaining
that the government had failed to produce a final report.
In comments to the Island on April 15, APRC chairman
Vitharana, who is also an LSSP parliamentarian, blurted out the
committees real purpose. In an appeal to the Sinhala extremist
parties, he declared: I would like to emphasise that the
best way to defeat the LTTE is to isolate them by winning the
Tamil people to the side of the government through the APRC proposals.
In other words, the APRC was part of the governments propaganda
effort to win the war.
Even after its adjournment on August 19, differences over the
APRC have only deepened. At a press conference on August 22, JVP
propaganda secretary Wimal Weerawansa warned that if the SLFP
agreed to federal-type devolution, it would be the most
irreparable mistake the government ever made. SLFP spokesman
Jeyaraj Fernandopulle responded the following day by saying the
government adhered to the unitary state, but was agreeable
to any solution based on devolution of power to the maximum within
a unitary state.
This political formula is a rather thinly disguised attempt
to keep the APRC alive by placating the JVP, but at the same time
continuing discussions with other parties about the type of devolution.
Rajapakse also assigned Prime Minister Ratnasiri Wickramanayake
to hold talks with all party leaders to maintain the pretense
that the APRC discussions were continuing. This delicate balancing
act is not simply aimed at retaining the APRC as window dressing
but at shoring up the unstable ruling coalition.
Rajapakses alliance not only includes the JHU and MEP,
but also Tamil and Muslim-based parties whose social base is hostile
to the governments renewed war. These include the Sri Lanka
Muslim Congress (SLMC), the National Unity Alliance (NUA) and
the Up-country Peoples Front (UPF). The Ceylon Workers Congress
(CWC) was part of the government, but recently quit and joined
the opposition. The left partiesthe LSSP and
CPform the linchpin in maintaining the charade that the
APRC is preparing a peace plan to end the war.
The virtual collapse of the APRC is one more sign of the extreme
tensions in the ruling coalition amid growing popular opposition
to the war, the governments assault on democratic rights
and the continuing decline of living standards.
See Also:
Military administration imposed
in eastern Sri Lanka
[10 August 2007]
Sri Lankan government celebrates
"victory" after army seizes the East
[23 July 2007]
War economy weighs heavily
on Sri Lankan workers
[20 July 2007]
Sri Lankan military intensifies
offensive in the East
[12 July 2007]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |