India & the Struggle for Tamil Eelam
Indian General
Raghavan(retd)
advises International Community on its Role Devyani
Rao
Sri Lanka Daily Mirror, 31 May 2006
[see also B. Raman on Implications of EU Ban on LTTE
]
Indian defense expert
General V. R. Raghavan (Retd.) maintains that
the international community should put pressure on the Sri Lankan
Government to be willing to make some internal changes to break the
current deadlock in the peace process. In an interview, Gen.
Raghavan explained that the
Ceasefire Agreement (CFA) has become an
end in itself for the Sri Lankan Government, and they have shown
little willingness towards accepting any of the demands of the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).
“The LTTE finds itself boxed in. The CFA came about because both
parties wanted a negotiated settlement but now the LTTE finds the
negotiations are not leading anywhere. The Government of Sri Lanka
(GOSL) frankly hasn’t shown any willingness to give any kind of
package to the LTTE ,either in terms of a Tamil province or division
of administration”, he said.
While the attacks continue in far away Trincomalee and Jaffna, the
CFA has allowed the island’s GDP, tourism, rice production,
agriculture etc. to grow and the ceasefire has ensured that there
are no assassinations, bomb blasts or military operations. The Sri
Lankan economy is no longer suffering because of the conflict and so
the Government appears to be content with allowing the status quo to
continue, the general pointed out. “For the Government, the CFA has become an end in itself, allowing
it to avoid conflict without actually making any concessions”, said
the general. “The LTTE finds that if they return to all-out violence they will be
declared terrorists by other countries, so all they can do is carry
on with their landmine attacks and bomb blasts. Hence the
assassination of Kadiragamar, which they say they didn’t do but
everybody, knows they did. The CFA has allowed the GOSL the best of
both worlds, which is why the LTTE wants it to breakdown”, he
argued, adding that it was for this reason also that the Tigers
refused to participate in the second round of negotiations until
Karuna’s troops are disarmed. In the midst of the
ongoing shadow war
and the desperate attempts of the co-chairs to get negotiations
between the Government and the LTTE back on track, the fundamental
problem is being overlooked according to Gen. Raghavan. “If the GOSL wants to retain the unity of the country they need to
hold elections with the LTTE participating. The LTTE wants to run
those elections. We know that they are fascists and thugs and 90% of
their government will be full of LTTE representatives, but that will
be the beginning of something better”, he insisted.
For the veteran
Indian defense expert, what is required in Sri Lanka is for the
Singhalese to agree amongst themselves to give more. “Sri Lanka is a
state which has lost control and the people are divided. Successive
Governments in Colombo have failed to reach a consensus among
themselves on how to go ahead with the peace process”, he affirmed.
“When I met Kadirgamar a month before he died”, recalled the
general, he said ‘Delhi is telling us to come together’- for
Rajapakse and Wickremesinghe to come together to solve the problem”
he added, reminding that Rajapakse won the election by joining the
JVP, which is an extremist Sinhalese group, saying he will not budge
from the unitary state concept. “We tell them (GOSL) behind the scenes to consider a federal option.
Now they say the Constitution doesn’t permit it. Then they should
change it. You want to have an absolute domination of the Sinhalese
polity and denial of Tamil equal rights…there can be no solution
that way” he insisted.Why does India think the GOSL should make
“concessions” to the LTTE when New Delhi itself has often repeated
that it does not negotiate with terrorists? Gen. Raghavan explained
that the problem in India, with the communist “naxalite” rebels for
instance, is somewhat different. “We have elected governments and
legitimate administrations in every state. Groups like ULFA (United
Liberation Front of Assam) are but dissidents demanding certain
things”. The General strongly feels if the government of Sri Lanka wants to
retain the unity of the country it has to create a structure whereby
the rights of the Tamil population are guaranteed. He stressed that,
irrespective of the portion of the territory under LTTE control,
there can be no lasting solution without the group being party to it
and despite the internal division created by Karuna, it still wields
enough power to influence negotiations.” We don’t run India by
saying if the Sikhs are 14% they have 14% rights. The Tamils are
being denied their rights as equal citizens”, he said, clarifying
that “India doesn’t say they should hand over power to Prabhakaran”
but reminded that even India negotiated with Prabhakaran because he
was in control of territory. “In India we have long ago recognized regional languages and it was
indeed, on the basis of ethnic, cultural and language differences
that the several states in India were formed post 1947. In Sri
Lanka, the Tamils have no such equal rights”, he pointed out On his
last visit to New Delhi, having held talks with the LTTE and the
GOSL in Colombo, the Japanese special envoy to Sri Lanka, Yashushi
Akashi, reiterated the importance of India’s intervention in the
peace process in the neighboring island. General Raghavan however
dismissed the assumption of a greater role by New Delhi, saying that
it is not in a position to do anything “until Sri Lanka allows it”.
The general explained that India’s intervention would have
far-reaching consequences for its own internal politics,
particularly in the south of the country. “The southern states have put India on the global map, thanks to the
IT sector, etc., and any coalition government would need to forge
alliances with the regional parties there” The general recalled that
“In 1986, India suggested that Colombo restore parties on the basis
of multi-ethnicity we even negotiated with Prabhakaran. If Sri Lanka
wants a government in Jaffna, the LTTE has to be allowed to take the
lead. At this stage, an intervention by India would create a
war-like situation where the Tamils from the neighboring island
would migrate to Indian Territory and this in turn would create
ruptures”. “The only part India can play is to offer a federal package and Sri
Lanka can and should amend its Constitution to facilitate this”, he
affirmed. “Money cannot buy Prabhakaran”, said the general with
conviction, having held one - on- one talks with the LTTE chief as
an official on behalf of New Delhi on a number of occasions prior to
India’s fighting the rebels. “Today, Prabhakaran finds that he is
the only bad guy. Terrorism doesn’t work, but he is making it work
by striking where it hurts- through attacks and ambushes on the Sri
Lankan troops”. “So what you have now is a military stalemate.
The Government is internationally in a better position and neither
side has any military option. There can be no win, no loss, no war,
no peace”, said the general, adding that while the LTTE finds itself
under the glare of the international community, the fact that the
economy and functioning of the country is relatively unaffected by
the conflict in the north and east, the GOSL will also not make any
significant overtures towards breaking the deadlock. |