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Home > Struggle for Tamil Eelam > Sri Lanka's Broken Pacts & Evasive Proposals > Chandrika - LTTE Talks: 1994/95 > LTTE leader to Sri Lanka Deputy Defence Minister, 8 December 1994
LTTE leader to
Sri Lanka Deputy Defence Minister
8 December 1994
Col. Anuruddha Ratwaffe,
Minister for Irrigation and Power,
Deputy Minister for Defence,
Sri Lanka
Dear Col. Ratwatte,
I am pleased to receive your letter dated 7th December 1994.
Your letter explains in some detail the position of your government with regard to the
peace process and sets out certain specifications on the question of cessation of
hostilities and negotiations.
We do appreciate the manner in which your government faced and withstood the challenges
posed by racist elements to undermine the process of peace negotiations. In spite of the
malicious disinformation campaign launched against the LTTE, we are pleased to note that
the wider sections of the Sinhala people opted for peace and have given your Government an
overwhelming mandate to carry forward the process of negotiations and to seek a solution
to the ethnic conflict by peaceful means.
You will appreciate that from the outset the LTTE has been insisting that
the initial stages of the negotiations should be given primacy to the immediate and urgent
problems faced by our people. In the first round of talks, our delegation has specified
these issues, which are mostly creations resulting from the military approach advanced by
the previous regime. Though the government delegation pledged 'to alleviate the hardships
of daily life presently experienced by the people', no action has been taken so far to
redress the grievances of our people.
The urgent problems of our people cannot be reduced to 'some reconstruction and repair
works'. There are far more pressing problems which have to be resolved to create genuine
conditions of peace and normalisation of civilian life in the war torn areas.
Even though your government is fully aware of these urgent issues, and has absolute
authority to resolve these problems, there seems to be a reluctance to make any positive
moves in this direction. We can attribute this to the Government's unwillingness to act
contrary in anyway to the overall strategic interests and designs of the military. This
approach of giving primacy to military interests over and above the existential concerns
of a civilian population, I wish to point out, will pose serious obstacles when tackling
the immediate and urgent issues faced by the Tamil people. This is already evidenced by
the reluctance shown in lifting the economic embargo fully, in opening the Sangupitty
causeway, in lifting the ban on the fishing zone etc.
I do not wish to elaborate these issues, since these matters will be brought to the
negotiating table by our delegation when the second round of talks resumes in the near
future. I should emphasise that the day to day problems of our people are of paramount
importance and need urgent solutions and should be a prelude to discussions on basic
issues underlying the Tamil national conflict.
In your letter, you have called for clarifications on certain issues, some of which,
you will appreciate, have to be dealt with through direct dialogue. In our earlier
communications, we referred to ceased re to mean total cessation of armed hostilities.
Yet, you have explained cessation of hostilities as a process leading to ceased re or
rather, the former should be a prelude to the latter. Without entering into a conceptual
debate, we have decided to proceed on the basis of your distinction.
The LTTE agrees in principle to a cessation of hostilities. If the Government makes an
official declaration of a cessation of hostilities for an initial period of two weeks, as
you have proposed, the LTTE will reciprocate by observing the same. The modalities and
effective implementation of the cessation of hostilities should be discussed and agreed
upon at the negotiating table. We have always insisted that a condition of peace should be
a prelude to peace negotiations.
We are committed to peace and we fervently hope that the process of negotiations will lead
to a permanent peace and to the resolution of the ethnic conflict.
Thanking you. With kind Regards.
Yours Sincerely.
(V.Pirabaharan)
Leader Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam