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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Sri
Lanka
Public meeting in Australia condemns LTTE arrest of Sri Lankan
socialists
By our reporter
9 September 1998
A meeting of workers, young people, housewives and pensioners
organised by the Socialist Equality Party (Australia) in the Melbourne
working class suburb of Dandenong voted unanimously on September
7 to condemn the arrest of three Tamil socialists by the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), and to demand their immediate and
unconditional release.
Thirungnana Sambandan and Kasinathan Naguleshwaran were arrested
on July 26 in the LTTE-controlled Kilinochchi district in northern
Sri Lanka while putting up posters. A week later Rajendran Sudarshan
was arrested at his home. All three are members of the Socialist
Equality Party, the Sri Lankan section of the International Committee
of the Fourth International.
Sue Phillips, the SEP Senate candidate for Victoria, who chaired
the meeting, said the LTTE had refused to make any public comment
on the whereabouts or health of the three socialists. The LTTE's
silence and its record of using violence against its political
opponents were cause for grave concern about the safety and lives
of the arrested SEP members.
She said the meeting was part of an international campaign
being waged by the International Committee for their release.
Hundreds of letters and faxes had been sent from around the world
to the LTTE's offices in London. Demonstrations and meetings had
been held in the Indian city of Madras and in Sri Lanka. In Melbourne,
scores of teachers, students and workers had signed petitions.
Peter Symonds, a member of the World Socialist Web Site
editorial board, told the meeting the LTTE's arrest of the SEP
members was a fundamental attack on democratic rights. The LTTE
official in charge of the Kilinochchi district, Theepan, had told
relatives of Sambandan and Naguleshwaran he had ordered the arrests
because the SEP's politics had become an obstacle to the LTTE's
activities.
Symonds explained that two irreconcilably opposed perspectives
were at stake. The political objective of the LTTE was the establishment
of a separate capitalist statelet in the north and east of Sri
Lanka. Its program did not serve the interests of the Tamil masses
but those of a tiny petty bourgeois layer offering their services
to international investors to exploit the cheap labour of the
Tamil working class.
Like other bourgeois nationalist organisations such as the
ANC in South Africa and the PLO in the Middle East, the LTTE had
increasingly abandoned any defence of the rights of the Tamil
people and resorted to the most repressive means against its political
opponents.
Symonds said the SEP had been targetted because its internationalist
perspective was in direct opposition to the nationalism of the
LTTE. "The SEP seeks as part of the International Committee
to unify the Sinhalese and Tamil workers with their class brothers
and sisters throughout the Indian sub-continent and internationally
to abolish the capitalist system, which is the real source of
their oppression."
The speaker detailed the historical roots of the brutal war
waged against the Tamil population by the Sri Lankan government.
From the outset, the SEP and its predecessor, the Revolutionary
Communist League, had consistently opposed the war. The SEP had
a long record of championing the rights of Tamils, not only in
the north and east, but in the capital Colombo and in the tea
plantations.
Moreover, the SEP had been the only party to oppose the Peoples
Alliance government of Prime Minister Chandrika Kumaratunga, which
had not only resumed the war but mounted serious attacks on workers
and youth in the south of the country as well.
The speaker emphasised the need to continue and intensify the
campaign for the release of Sambandan, Naguleshwaran and Rajendran,
as the latest information indicated that the LTTE was now extending
its political repression to other SEP members in the area.
In the course of the discussion, a Sri Lankan member of the
audience said the war had been instigated by outside interests
in the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu, who had funded and
provided arms to the LTTE. Prior to that, he said, there had been
no problems between Tamils and Sinhalese.
Symonds explained the origins of the conflict in Sri Lanka.
Right from the granting of formal independence in 1948, the Sri
Lankan ruling class resorted to racialism, like the British colonialists,
to divide the working class and consolidate their rule. One of
the first acts of the Sri Lankan government was introduce a citizenship
act that disenfranchised thousands of Tamil tea estate workers.
In the 1950s, the Sri Lankan Freedom Party (SLFP) based itself
openly on Sinhalese chauvinism, calling for Sinhala to be made
the sole official language and for the repatriation of Tamil estate
workers.
To the degree that these policies had been opposed by the former
Trotskyist party--the Lanka Sama Samaja Party (LSSP)--there had
been a class unity between Tamil and Sinhalese workers. But in
1964, the LSSP betrayed the principles of socialist internationalism
by joining the SLFP government of Prime Minister Bandaranaike
and assisted in suppressing a widespread movement of the working
class. This betrayal was to have profound consequences for the
working class in Sri Lanka and throughout the region.
He said the LTTE was able to gain influence among Tamils who
no longer saw a unified working class movement as a means for
defending themselves against the increasingly ferocious attacks
on their democratic rights. The LSSP was a part of the SLFP government
which in the early 1970s amended the constitution to make Sinhala
the official language and Buddhism the state religion. The war
that erupted after the 1983 anti-Tamil pogrom in Colombo emerged
as a result of the racialist perspective of successive Sri Lankan
governments and the betrayal of the LSSP.
After the meeting, Derrick Solomons, a former Sri Lankan railway
worker, commented: "The whole purpose of your organisation
is honourable. You are fighting contrary to the ideas of the LTTE,
which is fighting for separation. What you are doing shows you
are united in getting international recognition for the release
of people who have been taken innocently. They are not criminals,
why should they be taken by the LTTE or the government? You are
fighting for a legitimate cause."
Opatha Pereira, also originally from Sri Lanka, explained why
he voted for the resolution. "It's a good cause. People should
support it. The LTTE wants to set up a capitalist regime--they
are not for the ordinary person. Your organisation wants to bring
about a situation where everybody is equal, without the class
system."
See Also:
LTTE arrests two more Tamil socialists
Labor and civil rights organizations must demand halt to repression
of SEP
[9 September 1998]
LTTE hunting down socialists
Redouble efforts to secure release of SEP members
[2 September 1998]
WSWS editorial board chairman
demands release of Sri Lankan socialists
[8 August 1998]
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