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A British attempt to rescue the Tigers: A response

by LankaLover <lanka_lover@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Mar 3, 2008 at 01:49 AM

A British attempt to rescue the Tigers:  A response
Part I
by G. H. Peiris

Another Westminster Intervention in the Sri Lankan Conflict

The versions of what transpired at the recent meeting between 
representatives of the House of Lords and the House of Commons and a 
delegation of the ‘British Tamil Forum’ (BTF) as re****ted in the press 
(including several websites that carry news on Sri Lanka), though varied 
in content and focus, could be summarised as follows:

The meeting was chaired by Lord Malloch-Brown, the Minister of State for 
Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs of the United Kingdom. Responding to 
the BTF submissions, Lord Malloch-Brown expressed concern on both the 
continuing prosecution by the Sri Lanka government of the war against 
the LTTE as well as what he perceived as excessive violation of human 
rights in Sri Lanka. While remaining non-committal on imprecations for 
imposing trade and travel sanctions and the curtailment of aid to Sri 
Lanka made by Suren Surendiran (a spokesmen for the BTF) and Gajan 
Ponnambalam (a Tamil National Alliance parliamentarian of Sri Lanka), 
Malloch-Brown reiterated his view that there could be no military 
solution to the "problem" (which problem his lord****p had in mind was 
not made clear), that there should be an all out effort by the 
international community to persuade the government to resume 
negotiations, and that Sri Lanka must seek a political solution 
involving devolution of power to the Tamil areas of the country. 
Further, he pledged sup****t to the demand being made by Louise Arbour 
and several other officers of the UN and by certain leaders of the EU 
for greater intervention of the world body in Sri Lanka for protection 
of human rights. A contrasting stance was adopted by Lord Naseby (former 
Conservative Party MP) who, according to Tamilnet, "…denounced the BTF 
and its views". Lord Malloch-Brown himself expressed reservations on the 
parallels which the BTF delegation had attempted to draw between Kosovo 
and Sri Lanka.

The statements attributed to Lord Malloch-Brown even in the re****ts 
carried by pro-LTTE publications cannot, in respect of their substance, 
be construed as representing a significant change in the stance of the 
British government vis-à-vis the Sri Lankan conflict. Examined 
individually, they are no more than repetitions of the same superficial 
and generalised observations that have been repeatedly made throughout 
the past few months by spokespersons of certain government and 
non-government ‘western powers’ including their Colombo-based 
representatives and lackeys. Likewise the vehemence discernible in the 
tone of what was allegedly said by his lord****p could be understood in 
the context of the fact that he is known to be exceptionally 
self-opinionated. For instance, a ‘Profile’ published by London’s 
prestigious Sunday Times (18 November 2007) stated: "Malloch-Brown’s 
worst enemy is his own big mouth. He lost little time after his 
appointment to brag of his reputation", and attributed to him the claim: 
"From Colin Powell to Condi Rice all the way through to Richard 
Holbrooke or Madeleine Albright, across that massive swathe of American 
foreign policy, I would bet you a drink that you would find that I am 
their favourite multi-nationalist Brit". Thus, one cannot rule out the 
possibility of his having performed true to form at the meeting with the 
BTF.

Will this vastly experienced, urbane, "multi-nationalist Brit" ever 
understand that devolution of power to the "Tamil areas" (presumably, 
the northern and eastern parts of Sri Lanka) cannot, by any stretch of 
imagination, bestow upon the Tamil community of the country greater 
powers of democratic governance than they exercise at present when more 
than half of that community live outside the north-east, and as long as 
"the most powerful terrorist outfit in the world" (so described by 
intelligence services of two major western powers) led by a ruthless 
megalomaniac whose record of heroics include the extermination of almost 
all political leaders of his own community continues to retain the 
capacity to enslave through terror and force of arms the remaining 
segment of that community and other inhabitants of that part of the 
country? Will Malloch-Brown and others of similar persuasion ever bother 
to study the Sri Lankan conflict adequately to appreciate the basic fact 
that it was not the government of Sri Lanka that abandoned the peace 
initiatives of 2002 and that what the government formally discarded in 
December 2007 was literally a non-existent ceasefire? When will these 
great champions of human rights appreciate that serious violations of 
human rights (killing of non-combatants, abductions, torture, 
conscription of children for war, ethnic cleansing) constitute nothing 
other than the essence of Tiger terror; that these occur almost entirely 
in parts of the country (north-east and Greater Colombo) where the 
democratically elected government constantly faces the challenge of 
terrorism; that, even in such areas, there has been a remarkable 
lowering of the incidence of human rights abuses where the security 
forces of the government has achieved success in vitiating that 
challenge; and, above all, that the primary objective of the 
government’s military offensives has all along been the restoration of 
democratic governance in Sri Lanka?

It is not possible in this brief response to the re****ts on the British 
legislators’ meeting with the BTF to embark upon a comprehensive 
discussion on the misunderstandings displayed by some among the former 
and the deliberate distortions engaged in by those of the latter. What 
could be done, however, is to recapitulate the vicissitudes of the Sri 
Lankan conflict witnessed since the inception of the presidential tenure 
of Mahinda Rajapaksa, and thus attempt to dispel the myth that it was 
his government that abandoned the so-called ‘peace efforts’ launched in 
early 2002 and opted for a military strategy of ending the conflict.

LTTE Challenge to the New President

At the time leading up to the presidential election of November 2005, 
candidate Mahinda Rajapaksa, while declaring commitment to a search for 
an ‘honourable peace’, pledged to protect the unitary nature of the Sri 
Lankan state. He maintained that the peace efforts must involve 
broad-based participation and not be confined to bilateral negotiations 
between the government and the LTTE, and rejected both the LTTE claim of 
being the sole representative of the Tamils of Sri Lanka, as well as the 
notion of an ‘exclusive Tamil homeland’ comprising the country's 
Northern and Eastern provinces. On prominent controversies of that time, 
Rajapaksa stood opposed to both the Norway-authored and LTTE-approved 
blueprint for an ‘Interim Self-Government Authority’ (ISGA) for the 
‘north-east’, as well as President Kumaratunga’s proposals for the 
establishment of a ‘Post-Tsunami Operations Management Structure’ 
(P-TOMS), on the grounds that their implementation would bestow official 
recognition and formal powers of government on the LTTE to the negation 
of the tenets of democracy. On the frequently violated terms of the 
government-LTTE ‘Memorandum of Understanding’ of February 2002, 
Rajapaksa stressed the need to re-negotiate the terms of that agreement. 
These commitments, while conforming to the policy stances that had been 
advocated all along by the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) and the 
Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU) — the two parties with which Rajapaksa had 
entered into electoral agreements at the commencement of his campaign 
for the presidency — deviated in many respects from those advocated by 
President Kumaratunga, the leader of his own party.

There is a widespread belief in Sri Lanka that the LTTE leader, 
Prabhakaran, contributed to Mahinda Rajapaksa’s victory at the 
presidential election by enforcing a boycott of the poll in the north 
and parts of the east. In the aftermath of the election, he began to 
test the resolve of the new president by articulating with intensifying 
vehemence the earlier LTTE demands for government intervention in 
disarming the rebel group led by Karuna, and for greater control over 
post-Tsunami rehabilitation and reconstruction in the north-east. The 
LTTE leader****p also persisted with its efforts at both extending its 
military control over parts of the Eastern Province as well as provoking 
the security forces into retaliatory acts of violence. Instigating 
communal clashes in areas of mixed ethnicity, which it believed was a 
distinct possibility under the new regime in which the JVP and the JHU 
stood in high profile, also became part and parcel of the Tiger strategy.

In these latter efforts the LTTE came perilously close to success 
through a sequence of events the origins of which could be traced back 
to the immediate aftermath of the 2002 Ceasefire Agreement when it 
established a network of military bases in the Sampur-Muttur area south 
of the Trincomalee Bay, from which it launched occasional attacks on 
military and civilian targets. After March 2004 these bases were also 
used for its anti-Karuna offensives. Thus, in accordance with the 
strategy adopted by the LTTE for its onslaught against the new regime, 
they escalated their levels of violence in the Trincomalee area both by 
frequent bomb attacks on security forces personnel as well as by killing 
Karuna group activists. These evoked counterattacks both by the armed 
forces of the government as well as by the Karuna group. The violence 
that ensued included a bomb explosion by the LTTE at a crowded market on 
April 12 at which the majority of victims were Sinhalese civilians and a 
three-day backlash of homicide, arson and looting in various parts of 
the town and its suburbs by Sinhalese mobs consisting mainly of the 
lumpen elements of the town and, allegedly, of military personnel in 
mufti which caused the death of 20 civilians — 11 Tamils, seven 
Sinhalese and two Muslims. Over this spell the LTTE also added to its 
score of homicide a further 16 personnel of the army and the police.

Meanwhile the LTTE extended its offensive to other parts of the country. 
In what constituted a major attack on the very heart of the country’s 
security establishment, a suicide bomber blew herself up within the 
precincts of the army headquarters in Colombo on 25 April 2006 in an 
attempt to assassinate (and causing near-fatal injury to) the Army 
Commander General Sarath Fonseka. A month later, a Tiger claymore-bomb 
attack in a remote poverty-stricken area of the North-Central Province 
resulted in the wholesale massacre of a bus-load of 64 villagers — many 
of them, women and children. Again, on 19 June, there was an abortive 
attempt at an attack on ****ps berthed in Colombo harbour which, had it 
succeeded, would have caused large-scale damage to the Sri Lankan 
economy. A week later, Lt. General Parami Kulatunga, the Deputy Chief of 
Staff of the army, was assassinated by a suicide bomber.

The intensification of Tiger belligerence in the early months of the new 
regime should be understood in the context of the remarkable success 
President Rajapaksa achieved in consolidating his grip over the politics 
of Sri Lanka’s ‘South’. Though elected to office with a wafer-thin 
majority, in the first few months of his presidential tenure he 
succeeded in a way that none of his predecessors had done in achieving a 
higher level of intra- and inter-party consensus for his approach to the 
secessionist threat. Within his own party he finessed Kumaratunga in a 
series of manoeuvres that ended in his own unanimous appointment as 
president of the PA. The message he repeatedly conveyed to the people 
was that he remains unswerving in his commitment to the ‘Mahinda 
Chintanaya’ (ideology) as proclaimed in his election manifesto. It 
appeared to carry sufficient weight to preserve (despite increasing 
stresses and strains) the alliance with the JVP and the JHU, and to 
attract into the ranks of the government the CWC (plantation Tamils) and 
the SLMC (Muslims, mainly of the ‘south-east’) both of which had 
sup****ted Wickremesinghe at the presidential election. Indeed, as 
matters stood up to about April 2006, within the political mainstreams, 
it was only from the United National Party (UNP) reeling from the 
effects of successive electoral defeats, and the Tamil National Alliance 
(TNA) the LTTE proxies in parliament, that the president faced 
perfunctory and petulant opposition which, of course, he could afford to 
ignore. Apart from this ‘internal’ consolidation, Rajapaksa appeared to 
be gaining increasing endorsement and sup****t from those of the 
‘international community’ proactive in Sri Lankan affairs, who at the 
time of the presidential election had left hardly any room to doubt that 
Ranil Wickremesinghe of the UNP was the man they preferred. On 10 April 
2006 the new Conservative Party government of Canada added the LTTE to 
its list of 38 outlawed terrorist organisations, and followed the ban 
with raids on the offices of the ‘World Tamil Movement’ (an LTTE ‘front’ 
outfit) in Montreal, Scarborough and Toronto. About a month later the 
European Union adopted a resolution recommending the conscription of the 
LTTE in its member countries. Meanwhile, in the United States, the FBI 
foiled a large-scale clandestine transaction of arms attempted on behalf 
of the LTTE, arresting and incarcerating several Tiger agents involved 
in the deal.

Tiger Offensive and Retaliatory Action

President Rajapaksa’s progress served as a constant reminder of the 
tactical blunder of the LTTE demigod Prabhakaran who, by preventing the 
voters of the north and parts of the east from participating at the 
presidential polls, is likely to have contributed to Rajapaksa’s 
victory. The LTTE strategy, it may be recalled, was based upon the 
premise that Wickremesinghe, hailed internationally as the ‘peace 
candidate’, if elected, would place in serious jeopardy the secessionist 
cause with his offer of federalism ("Who on earth asked for 
federalism?", as the LTTE theoretician Balasingham was to soon argue), 
and thus make it difficult to sustain its ‘liberation struggle’. Its 
expectation was that Rajapaksa, if elected, will jettison the existing 
ceasefire agreement and evict the "White Tigers" (Norwegians) from their 
role of facilitator of the peace efforts. This, the LTTE leader****p 
believed, would pave the way for a resumption of the military campaign 
in earnest, backed by vastly enhanced international sympathy and sup****t 
for their cause. All indications up to this time, however, were that 
President Rajapaksa’s performance would blast that hope. He and his 
allies remained conscious that nothing could be gained by negotiating 
with the Tigers. But they were equally aware that everything could be 
lost by anything less than a total commitment to the pursuit of peace 
through negotiation.

Part II tomorrow

-- 
For genuine Situation Re****t visit:
http://www.nationalsecurity.lk
http://www.defence.lk/
http://www.army.lk/index1.php
http://www.nmatnet.com/

http://www.sinhalaya.info/index-EN.php

Worth to look following to see how brutal Tamil Tiger Terrorists are

Child Soldiers of LTTE Tamil Tiger Terrorists in Sri Lanka
http://www.spur.asn.au/childwar.htm

Ethnic Cleansing in Sri Lanka
http://www.spur.asn.au/ethnic_cleansing_in_sri_lanka.htm

LTTE TAMIL TIGER ATROCITIES
http://www.spur.asn.au/ltteatrp.htm
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
A British attempt to rescue the Tigers: A response
LankaLover <lanka_love  2008-03-03 01:49:11 

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