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United States & the struggle for Tamil Eelam Sri Lanka Presidential Elections, 22 November 2005
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The United States condemns LTTE interference in the democratic
process. November 20, 2005
Colombo: While congratulating newly elected President
Mahinda Rajapaksa on his victory at Thursday's polls, the
United States has condemned the LTTE for intimidating voters
at the election. |
SL Military, not LTTE, is intimidatory presence - Thamilchelvan
[TamilNet, November 22, 2005]
Denying accusation they had intimidated Tamils into not
voting in last week�s Sri Lanka Presidential election, the
Liberation Tigers said the boycott by the Tamil people last
week was a reflection of prevailing Tamil sentiments towards
Sri Lankan leaders, based on their bitter experiences of the
past. The near total boycott by Tamil voters took place
despite the oppressive presence of thousands of Sri Lankan
troops and Army-backed paramilitaries in Jaffna and other
parts of the Northeast, the LTTE's Political Head, Mr. S. P.
Thamilchelvan, told TamilNet Tuesday. |
That the US State Department is pained with the result of the Sri Lanka Presidential election is understandable - "If only the Tamils had voted for the US favoured 'market reform' candidate, Ranil Wickremasinghe, the result would have been so different." Robert Burns wrote more than two hundred years ago -
Denied of the promised joy, it appears that grief and pain has led the US State Department to deny reason. The State Department would have its audience believe that in the Jaffna peninsula with the visible presence of around 40,000 Sri Lankan troops, (one for every ten resident Tamil) , the Tamils were somehow 'intimidated' by the LTTE to refrain from voting, so much that only 1% of the registered voters exercised their franchise. At the same time, for the State Department, the hundreds of thousands of Tamils at Pongu Thamizh gatherings in October and November 2005 were also somehow intimidated by the LTTE to participate and call for the removal of the Sri Lankan Sinhala army from the Tamil homeland. And the State Department would also deny the facts spoken to by Arthur Rhodes in Sri Lanka's Presidential Election: Why the Tamils did Not Vote and dismiss the view that he expressed two days before the election: "If the Tamil vote on Thursday's election is untraditionally low, analysts across the island will write for days of the LTTE's election boycott and its consequences on the outcome. If Rajapakse actually wins, the Tamil people will be cited as pawns in the great LTTE elections coupe of 2005.There is a danger, though, that the actual truth -- that at least some Tamils feel hopelessly apathetic toward their nation's political system -- will be summarily forgotten. Ironically, many of the Tamils who choose to abstain will do so because they are disenchanted with a system that has long ignored their voices." This ofcourse is not the first occasion that the State Department has denied reason. It denied reason some twenty years ago, when in the aftermath of the 1983 genocidal onslaught on the Tamil people, the State Department described Sri Lanka as 'open, working, multiparty democracy' where the 'Constitution guarantees the independence of the judiciary, and lawyers and judges are held in high esteem'. It denied reason more recently in supporting the one sided EU declaration of 26 September 2005. The story about the wolf and the lamb comes to mind. It is one of Aesop's fables. It is an old story. Many of us have read the story when we were young children - or perhaps had the story read to us.
"One day a Lamb went down to the brook to get a drink. A
Wolf saw him and wanted to quarrel with him so as to have a
good excuse for eating him up. While the Lamb was drinking,
he went and stood by the brook, a little farther up, and
cried out:� It seems that states also, when they have made up their minds to do wrong, are sure to find some sort of excuse for it. But, in the end, real politick goals will not be achieved by denying reason - and GNP is not necessarily a measure of wisdom. Vietnam and the Iraq quagmire are continuing reminders of these truths.And perhaps, R.Cholan was right to ask the international community: "What exactly do you want the Tamil people to do?" But, then again the Tamil people are not lambs - and they certainly have no wish to make the State Department look foolish. The Tamil people have sufficient wisdom to judge for themselves as to where lies truth - and act accordingly. They are, after all, a reasonable people. |