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TAMIL NATION LIBRARY: Eelam
- Sacrifice: War and Negotiation in Sri Lanka
 
A special edition on Sri Lanka, published in August 1998 is available both in print and
on the internet.(
http://www.c-r.org/accord/sri/index.shtml )
The contents include chapters on the Historical Context by Elizabeth
Nissan; Straining Consensus:
Government strategies for war and peace in Sri Lanka 1994-98 by Kumudini Samuel; Trying Times: Constitutional attempts
to resolve armed conflict in Sri Lanka by Rohan Edrisinha; Self-Determination: A Ceylon Tamil
perspective by Sachithanandam Sathananthan; Popular Buddhism, Politics and the Ethnic
Problem by Priyath Liyanage; Tamil
Identities and Aspirations by Alfred Jeyaratnam Wilson with A. Joseph Chandrakanthan.
From the Introduction by Jeremy Armon, Andy Carl & Liz Philipson, Conciliation
Resources, London:
"In the fifty years since independence, Sri Lanka has been riven by an
ethnic/ national conflict which degenerated into war in 1983. Fought between the
government and the forces of militant Tamil nationalism, spearheaded by the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), this war has undermined the livelihoods of millions of Sri
Lankans, especially in the Tamil-dominated north and east. It has also claimed in the
region of 50,000 lives. ...
In July 1998, government forces are in their fifteenth month of an operation to open a
road to Jaffna which was expected to take three months. The offensive has caused the
deaths of many LTTE cadres, but army casualties are also very heavy. While the government
says it is taking ground from the LTTE, the Tigers claim to have increased the number of
their cadres every year since the war started. They are now fighting a largely
conventional war against the Sri Lankan armed forces in the north, while also pursuing a
rural guerrilla war in the east and an intermittent bombing campaign in the south. Though
the LTTE may not be able to sustain the current conventional war over a long period, it
remains extremely well equipped to continue protracted guerrilla warfare throughout Sri
Lanka for some time to come.
It is unclear if and when the social and economic costs of the war might become
untenable for the government, nor is it obvious what forces might fill the political space
once the war for peace strategy runs its course. What is clear, however, is
that peace requires inclusive negotiations between the government and all representatives
of Tamil nationalism, and that a sustainable settlement will demand sacrifice and
compromise on all sides...."
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