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Lanka
Sri Lankan government pulls out of 2002 ceasefire agreement
By Wije Dias
9 January 2008
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After waging an undeclared civil war for two years, the Sri
Lankan government gave notice on January 2 that it would pull
out of the 2002 ceasefire agreement with the Liberation Tigers
of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). The decision sets the stage for a further
escalation of fighting aimed at destroying the LTTE militarily
and effectively ends any prospect of peace talks and a negotiated
resolution to the 25-year conflict.
The government informed the Norwegian embassy in Colombo of
its decision last week. Norway has been the facilitator of the
peace process and led the Sri Lankan Monitoring Mission (SLMM),
which oversaw the ceasefire and is now packing up in preparation
for leaving the country. The ceasefire agreement formally ends
on January 16, after the required 14-day advance notice runs out.
Fighting has already intensified in northern Sri Lanka. Over
the past five days, the military claims to have killed 94 LTTE
fighters and lost four soldiers in the districts of Vavuniya,
Mannar and Jaffna. One of the dead was said to be the LTTEs
intelligence chief Shanmuganathan Ravishankar, also known as Colonel
Charles. Yesterday, Sri Lankas minister of nation building,
D.M. Dassanayake, was killed in a bomb blast that struck his car
near the capital of Colombo and was probably carried out by the
LTTE.
According to the Sri Lankan media, Prime Minister Ratnasiri
Wickremanayake made the proposal to annul the ceasefire at a cabinet
meeting on January 2. Apart from a reference by Wickremanayake
to a bomb blast on the same day, which he immediately blamed on
the LTTE, President Mahinda Rajapakse and his government have
offered no substantive explanation for the decision. Government
spokesman Anura Priyadarshana Yapa simply claimed that the ceasefire
was not practical any more.
Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapakse, who is the presidents
brother, bluntly blamed the LTTE for the breakdown of the ceasefire,
telling the Sunday Observer on December 30 that the truce
existed only on paper and was a joke. By the time
his brother became president, the defence secretary said, the
CFA was violated 3,000 times and everybody knows that what the
LTTE did and they never resorted to peace. What they did was they
took advantage of strengthening their military and fire power
during the ceasefire period.
In reality, the governments decision to tear up the ceasefire
is its response to mounting social and political tensions, which
have been compounded by its resort to war over the past two years.
Confronted with growing protests and industrial action over deteriorating
living standards, President Rajapakse has intensified the conflict
against the LTTE and whipped up anti-Tamil sentiment in order
to divide working people along communal lines and justify the
resort to repressive police-state measures.
The immediate impetus for abrogating the ceasefire was an acute
political crisis surrounding Rajapakses latest budget, which
increased defence spending to 167 billion rupeesthree times
what it had been three years before. The government had faced
the prospect of defeat in the final vote on December 14 as members
of its own fragile coalition threatened to defect under the pressure
of widespread opposition to the imposition of further economic
burdens to pay for the war.
The Sri Lanka Muslim Congress crossed over to the opposition
a few days before the budget vote. Members of Rajapakses
own Sri Lanka Freedom Party were reportedly preparing to jump
ship, as indicated by the resignation of Anura Bandaranaike, the
son of the SLFPs founding leader. At the same time, the
Sinhala extremist Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP), which supports
the government without being part of the ruling coalition, indicated
that it would also vote against the budget to shore up its support
among the rural poor.
At the last minute, however, the JVP abstained on the vote
and allowed the budget to pass after talks with another of the
presidents brothersBasil Rajapakse. While the content
of that discussion was never made public, the JVP, which was critical
of the government not launching all out war to destroy the LTTE,
had made a series of four demands. All of them related to escalating
the war, rather than ameliorating the impact of the budget. The
two most significantthe abrogation of the ceasefire and
the expulsion of the SLMMhave now been carried out. Like
other Sinhala chauvinist groups, the JVP has been bitterly critical
of Norway and the SLMM for its alleged pro-LTTE bias.
A protracted process
The collapse of the truce underscores the inability of any
section of the political establishment to end its reactionary
war. The ceasefire was signed in February 2002 by the United National
Party (UNP)-led coalition of Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe
after the military suffered major defeats at the hands of the
LTTE in 2000 and the economy experienced negative growth in 2001
for the first time in the countrys history. In the wake
of the September 11 attacks, sections of the ruling elite saw
the Bush administrations war on terrorism as
an ideal opportunity to force the terrorist LTTE to
the negotiating table on favourable terms. In quick succession,
the SLFP-led government collapsed, the UNP and its allies won
the general election and the ceasefire was signed as the prelude
to peace talks.
The push for a power sharing deal with the LTTE was never motivated
by concerns for the impact of the conflict on ordinary working
people. Rather the UNP, which had been responsible for launching
the war in 1983, represented sections of the corporate elite who
then viewed it as an obstacle to attracting foreign investment
and integrating the island in the burgeoning economic development
in South AsiaIndia in particular. From the outset, however,
the peace talks came into conflict with the political methods
of rule on which the Sri Lankan bourgeoisie has rested since independencethe
resort to anti-Tamil chauvinism. The UNP soon came under fire
from the President Chandrika Kumaratunga from the SLFP, the military
hierarchy and the JVP for allegedly capitulating to the LTTE in
negotiations, undermining national security and dividing
the nation.
Rajapakse narrowly defeated Wickremesinghe in the November
2005 presidential election by relying on the JVP and another Sinhala
extremist partythe Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU). His election
manifesto, entitled Mahinda Chinthanaya (Mahinda Ideology), incorporated
a number of the JVPs demands, including a review of the
ceasefire agreement and a bolstering of the military. While claiming
to be a man of peace, Rajapakses provocative program was
clearly the preparation for a renewed war against the LTTE.
His government continued to nominally adhere to the ceasefire
in order to retain the backing of the major powers overseeing
the so-called peace process. Rajapakse was also concerned that
a precipitous return to war would provoke popular opposition.
At the same time, the military was let off the leash and provocations
began almost immediately. On Christmas Eve 2005, prominent pro-LTTE
parliamentarian Joseph Pararajasingham was shot dead while attending
midnight mass in the eastern town of Batticaloa. In January 2006,
five Tamil youth in Trincomalee celebrating their success in the
university entrance exam were murdered in cold blood. In both
cases, the circumstances strongly suggested involvement of the
military and allied Tamil paramilitary groups.
Efforts by the co-chairs of the peace processthe US,
European Union, Japan and Norwayto resurrect peace talks
quickly floundered. A round of negotiations in Geneva in February
2006 almost collapsed when the LTTE threatened to walk out in
response to the governments demand for a rewriting of the
ceasefire. Two months later talks in Oslo to review the observance
of the ceasefire failed to even get off the ground after the government
effectively sabotaged the meeting by not including a single cabinet
minister in its delegation. At the same time, the military continued
its covert war of provocation aimed at weakening the LTTE, intimidating
the Tamil population and goading the LTTE into responding.
Rajapakse was emboldened by the tacit support of the major
powers, particularly Washington, which turned a blind eye to the
Sri Lankan militarys activities, while demanding concessions
from the LTTE. Under pressure from the Bush administration, the
European Union formally branded the LTTE as a terrorist
organisation in May 2006, undermining its substantial political
and financial base among the Tamil diaspora in Europe.
In late July, the military launched its first open offensive
to seize LTTE-held territory in the eastern Mavilaru area. The
government seized on a protest by the LTTE, which had shut an
irrigation sluice gate over the failure of the government to proceed
with a project funded by the Asian Development Bank to provide
clean drinking water to local inhabitants. Rajapakse declared
that military action was needed to prevent a humanitarian
disaster for Sinhala farmers whose crops were threatened
downstream, but rebuffed the SLMMs efforts to mediate an
end to the standoff. In launching its attacks, the military even
endangered the lives of SLMM monitors who had reached a deal with
the LTTE and were on the spot to open the sluice gate.
The Mavilaru operation was the first of a series of offensives
in the East, seizing the areas of Sampur, Vaharai and finally,
last July, the remaining LTTE stronghold of Thoppigala. On July
19, the government held a grotesque victory celebration proclaiming
the liberation of the East. For the population, however, the liberation
has only brought death and misery. Since July 2006, more than
5,000 people have been killed and over 250,000 men, women and
children have been displaced from their homes and forced to live
in squalid refugee camps. The governments real agenda was
underscored by its rapid proclamation of a new Free Trade Zone
in the East set in a High Security Zone to attract investors.
For the past six months, the military has concentrated on the
LTTEs remaining northern strongholds without making any
substantial inroads. In the East, the armed forces faced an LTTE
that had been debilitated by a major split in its ranks led by
V. Muralitharan, also known as Karuna. Despite government denials,
the Karuna group has operated closely with the security forces
in attacking the LTTE and is widely believed to have been involved
in many of the abductions and murders that have taken place in
the East over the past two years.
End of the peace process
The end of the ceasefire agreement effectively marks the collapse
of the so-called international peace process. Significantly there
have been no calls or moves to date either in Sri Lanka or from
any of the co-sponsors for a return to the peace table.
The opposition UNP, which signed the ceasefire in 2002, has
fallen in behind Rajapakses renewed war. Following the governments
line, UNP national organiser S.B. Dissanayake declared that the
ground reality had rendered the ceasefire meaningless
but did not call for a halt to the fighting. He defended the decision
to sign the truce not from the standpoint that it held out the
hope of peace, but rather that it had weakened the LTTE politically
and militarily. There are advantages which we gained through
the peace talks such as the LTTE accepting federalism
instead of their previous stand for a separate state. Besides,
Karuna broke ranks with Tigers during the ceasefire, Dissanayake
declared.
The LTTE has so far issued no official statement on the governments
withdrawal from the ceasefire. From the outset, its perspective
had been the creation of a capitalist statelet in the North and
East of the island with the backing of one or more of the major
powers. It accepted the ceasefire in 2002 and formally abandoned
its longstanding demand for Tamil Eelam at the first
round of talks in 2002. The LTTEs chief negotiator Anton
Balasingham promised to work with the Colombo government to create
a Tiger economythat is, to fully support the
agenda of free market restructuringin return for the creation
of provincial government in the North and East with considerable
autonomy. Since the collapse of talks, the LTTE has been reduced
to pleading with the international community to haul
the government back to the peace table.
The most telling sign that the peace process has disintegrated
is the lack of any concerted effort by the international
community to end the fighting. The office of UN Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon issued a pathetic statement declaring that he regretted
the governments decision and was deeply worried
that the withdrawal from the ceasefire came amid intensifying
violence. The governments of Japan, Britain, Canada and India
all issued statements but failed to criticise, let alone condemn,
the Sri Lankan government or call for a renewed peace drive.
US State Department spokesman Sean McCormack simply stated
that the US was troubled by a decision that would
make it more difficult to achieve a lasting, peaceful solution
to Sri Lankas conflict. This muted and hypocritical
response is of a piece with the US record over the past six years.
The Bush administration backed the peace talks in 2002-03, not
because it was concerned about the plight of the Sri Lankan people,
but to end a war that was a destabilising influence in South Asia,
including India, where American economic and strategic interests
have greatly expanded. When it failed to strong-arm the LTTE into
a deal on Colombos terms, Washington quietly backed the
Rajapakse governments renewal of war and has assisted it
militarily.
All the major powers, above all the US, are responsible for
the return to a war that is bringing escalating death and destruction
to the Sri Lankan population.
See Also:
Tamil opposition MP assassinated in Sri
Lankan capital
[7 January 2008]
Sri Lankan president marks tsunami anniversary
by beating the war drums
[2 January 2008]
Sri Lankan tsunami victims speak out
[2 January 2008]
Two years after the
Asian tsunami: Sri Lankan survivors face civil war and squalor
[30 December 2006]
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