The island known to Tamils as Eelam (and
known under British rule as Ceylon and under
Sinhala rule as Sri Lanka) is about 25,000 square
miles in extent, situated about twenty miles from
the southern extremity of the Indian sub -
continent.
About one fifth of the island's population of 17
million, are Tamils and somewhat less than three
quarters are Sinhalese. The Tamils reside largely
in the north and the east and on the plantations in
the central hills, whilst the Sinhalese reside in
the south, west and in the centre as well. The area
of the Tamil homeland in the north-east is around
7,500 square miles. A large number of Tamils are
Hindus, some are Christians and the overwhelming
majority of the Sinhala people are Buddhists.
The Tamils are an ancient people. Their
history had its beginnings in the rich alluvial
plains near the southern extremity of peninsular
India which then included the land mass known as
the island of Sri Lanka today. The plant and animal
life (including the presence of elephants) in the
island evidence the earlier land connection with
the Indian sub continent. So too do satellite
photographs which show the submerged 'land bridge'
between Dhanuskodi in the south east of the
sub-continent and Mannar in the north west of the
island. It is estimated that it was during the
period 6000 B.C. to 3000 B.C. that the island
separated from the Indian sub continent - and that
too by a narrow strip of shallow water.
The Sinhala people trace their origins in
the island to the arrival of Prince Vijaya from
India, around 500 B.C. and the Mahavamsa, the
Sinhala chronicle of a later period (6th Century
A.D.) records that Prince Vijaya arrived on the
island on the same day that the Buddha attained
Enlightenment in India. Here, the words of the
Sinhala historian and Cambridge scholar, Paul
Peiris represent an influential and common sense
point of view:
`..it stands to reason that a country which
was only thirty miles from India and which would
have been seen by Indian fisherman every morning
as they sailed out to catch their fish, would
have been occupied as soon as the continent was
peopled by men who understood how to sail... Long
before the arrival of Prince Vijaya, there were
in Sri Lanka five recognised isvarams of Siva
which claimed and received the adoration of all
India. These were Tiruketeeswaram near
Mahatitha; Munneswaram dominating
Salawatte and the pearl fishery; Tondeswaram near Mantota;
Tirkoneswaram near the great
bay of Kottiyar and Nakuleswaram near
Kankesanturai. ' (Paul E. Pieris: Nagadipa
and Buddhist Remains in Jaffna : Journal of Royal
Asiatic Society, Ceylon Branch Vol.28)
The early political history of the people of
Eelam, in the centuries before the advent of the
European powers, is largely a chronicle of the rise
and fall of individual kingdoms. When the
Portuguese landed on the island in 1505 there was
not one but three kingdoms viz the Tamil Jaffna
Kingdom, the Sinhala Kotte Kingdom and the Sinhala
Kandyan Kingdom.
The Jaffna Kingdom was captured by the
Portuguese when the king of Jaffna was defeated in
1619. The Portuguese ruled the Jaffna Kingdom from
1619 to 1658. The Dutch who captured the Jaffna
Kingdom from the Portuguese ruled till 1795 and the
British till 1948.
Even when the island was ruled by the
Portuguese and the Dutch, the Tamil homeland in the
North and the East was administered as an entity
separate from the rest of the country. In 1833, the
British amalgamated the north and east with the
rest of the island for administrative
convenience.
"Two different nations, from a very ancient
period, have divided between them the possession
of the Island: the Sinhalese inhabiting the
interior in its Southern and western parts from
the river Wallouwe to Chilaw, and the Malabars
(Tamils) who possess the Northern and Eastern
Districts. These two nations differ entirely in
their religion, language and manners." (Sir
Hugh Cleghorn, British Colonial Secretary, June
1879)
Sinhala Buddhism & Sinhala
Majority Rule
With the departure of the British in 1948, the
re emergence of a separate Tamil national identity
was reinforced by the actions of a Sinhala majority
which regarded the island of Sri Lanka as
the exclusive home of Sinhala Buddhism and the
Tamil people as `outsiders' who were to be
subjugated and assimilated within the confines of
an unitary Sinhala Buddhist state.
"The history of Sri Lanka is the history of
the Sinhalese race... The Sinhalese people were
entrusted 2500 years ago, with a great and noble
charge, the preservation... of Buddhism..."
(The Revolt in the Temple, by D.C.
Vijayawardhana, 1953)
It was a belligerent Sinhala ethno nationalism which
sought to masquerade as a Sri Lanka civic
nation.
"...The time has come for the whole Sinhala
race which has existed for 2500 years, jealously
safeguarding their language and religion, to
fight without giving any quarter to save their
birthright... I will lead the campaign..."
(J.R.Jayawardene, Sinhala Opposition Leader
reported in Sri Lanka Tribune: 30th August
1957)
"I am not worried about the opinion of the
Tamil people... now we cannot think of them, not
about their lives or their opinion... the more
you put pressure in the north, the happier the
Sinhala people will be here... Really if I starve
the Tamils out, the Sinhala people will be
happy." (President J.R.Jayawardene, Daily
Telegraph, 11th July 1983)
Sri Lanka President Chandrika Kumaratunga,
speaking in July 1995, declared:
'The Sinhalese Buddhist majority should
merge with the Sinhala Christians, Tamil Hindus,
Tamil Christians, Muslims and others to form one
Lankan nation. This is the greatest task we are
facing today'
President Kumaratunga buttressed her 'assimilative' approach by recourse to
"history". She declared:
'Our ancestors succeeded in forging one
nation. Even those communities who retained their
separate identities lived with the Sinhala
Buddhist majority as one nation."
In claiming that her ancestors had succeeded in
forging one nation, President Kumaratunga followed
in the footsteps of ex President J.R.Jayawardene
who too claimed in 1983 that the country had been a
united nation for 2500 years. Here, the comments of
the International Commission of Jurists in 1983
remain relevant:
"... (the President's) statement that the
country had been united for 2,500 years flies in
the face of history. There was for some centuries
an independent Tamil kingdom and the chronicles
report frequent wars between Singhalese and Tamil
kings. Separate Singhalese and Tamil communities
existed on the island from the pre-colonial era
until the administrative unification of the
island by the British in 1833." (Supplement to Professor Virginia
Leary Report on a Mission to Sri Lanka 1981-83
published by the ICJ)
More recently, in July 2008, Sri
Lanka Army Commander Lt. General Sarath
Fonseka declared with disaarming frankness
-
The statements of Sinhala leaders reflect the
appeal that such statements have for the Sinhala
electorate.
"...In the Sinhala language, the words for
nation, race and people are practically
synonymous, and a multiethnic or multicommunal nation or
state is incomprehensible to the popular
mind. The emphasis
on Sri Lanka as the land of the Sinhala
Buddhists carried an emotional popular
appeal, compared with which the concept of a multiethnic polity was a
meaningless abstraction..." (Sinhala
Historian K. M. de Silva in Religion, Nationalism
and the State, USF Monographs in Religion and
Public Policy, No.1 (Tampa, FLA: University of
South Florida 1986) at p31 quoted by David Little
in Religion and Self Determination in Self
Determination - International Perspectives,
MacMillan Press, 1996)
When the Tamil people sought to resist these
oppressive legislative and administrative acts by
resort to Parliamentary agitation and non violent
protests, they were attacked physically,
some of them burnt alive, and their homes
destroyed and looted. The attacks in 1956, 1958, 1961 are illustrative of these Sinhala
attempts to terrorise and intimidate the Tamil
people into submission at a time when Tamil protest
was confined to entirely non violent forms of
agitation.
"One of the essential elements that
must be kept in mind in
understanding the Sri Lankan ethnic conflict is
that, since 1958 at least, every time Tamil
politicians negotiated some sort of power-sharing
deal with a Sinhalese government - regardless of
which party was in power - the opposition
Sinhalese party always claimed that the party in
power had negotiated away too much. In almost
every case - sometimes within days - the party in
power backed down on the agreement." -
(Professor Marshall Singer, at US
Congress Committee on International Relations
Subcommittee on Asia and the Pacific Hearing on
Sri Lanka November 14,1995)
In 1972, a new Constitution was proclaimed by
the Sinhala majority who constituted themselves a
Constituent Assembly, sat in premises outside
Parliament to reinforce the constitutional break
with the past, gave themselves an auththochnous
Constitution, which changed the name of the island
from Ceylon to the Sinhala, Sri Lanka, proclaimed
Buddhism as the state religion and removed even the meagre safeguards
against discrimination contained in the earlier
Constitution. The plea of the Tamil parliamentary
parties for a federal constitution was rejected
and the leader of the Tamil parliamentary group
resigned his seat in Parliament and sought a
mandate from the Tamil people for a separate state.
On winning the bye election, he declared:
"We have for the last 25 years made every
effort to secure our political rights on the
basis of equality with the Sinhalese in a united
Ceylon. It is a regrettable fact that successive
Sinhalese governments have used the power that
flows from independence to deny us our
fundamental rights and reduce us to the position
of a subject people... I wish to announce to my
people and to the country that I consider the
verdict at this election as a mandate that the
Tamil Eelam nation should exercise
the sovereignty already vested in the Tamil
people and become free. - Statement by S.J.V. Chelvanayagam
Q.C. M.P., leader of the Tamil United
Liberation Front, February 1975
It was a mandate which was later crystallised in
the Vaddukoddai Resolution of 1976,
and in the 1977 Election Manifesto of the
Tamil parliamentary parties and was overwhelmingly
endorsed by the Tamil people at the General
Election in July 1977. The response of the Sinhala
people to this parliamentary struggle was yet
another physical attack on Tamils to intimidate
them into submission.
"...International law is political.
There is no escape from contestation. Hard
lessons indeed for lawyers who wish to escape the
indeterminate nature of the political. For those
willing to endorse this the opportunities are
great. The focus then shifts to
interdisciplinarity and the horizontal networks
which function in practice in ways rendered
invisible by many standard accounts of law... We
must abandon the myth that with law we enter the
secure, stable and determinate. In reality we are
simply engaged in another discursive political
practice about how we should live.."
An armed resistance movement brings in its train
certain predictable consequences. Jean Paul Sartre's Statement 'On
Genocide' at the Second Session of the Bertrand
Russell International War Crimes Tribunal on
Vietnam, held in Denmark in November 1967 remains
valid today:
"...Against partisans backed by the entire
population, colonial armies are helpless. They
have only one way of escaping from the harassment
which demoralizes them .... This is to eliminate
the civilian population. As it is the unity of a
whole people that is containing the conventional
army, the only anti-guerrilla strategy which
will be effective is the destruction of that
people, in other words, the civilians, women and
children..."
"The impact of the communal violence on the
Tamils was shattering. More than 100,000 people
sought refuge in 27 temporary camps set up across
the country. The evidence points clearly to the
conclusion that the violence of the Sinhala
rioters on the Tamils amounted to acts of
genocide." (The
Review, International Commission of Jurists,
edited by Niall MacDermot, December
1983)
" Communal riots in which Tamils are killed,
maimed, robbed and rendered homeless are no
longer isolated episodes; they are beginning to
be become a pernicious habit." (Sri
Lanka - A Mounting Tragedy of Errors, Paul
Sieghart, Chairman, Executive Committee,
Justice, International Commission of
Jurists.1984)
In the East whole villages of Tamils were
attacked by the Army and by the so called Home
Guards. In the North aerial
bombardment and artillery shelling of Tamil
civilian population centres by the Sri Lanka armed
forces was undertaken on a systematic basis.
"Our organisations are
gravely concerned with the impunity with which
the Sri Lanka armed forces continue to
commit gross and inhumane violations of
human rights and humanitarian law...
In April this year , President
Chandrika Kumaratunga declared that it
may be necessary to launch an all out
attack in the Jaffna peninsula and that
this `would mean a lot of civilian
casualties' and the `place would be wiped
out'. .. .(Thereafter) the Sri Lanka armed forces
launched a genocidal onslaught on the
Tamil people in the Tamil homeland in the
North-East. ...The aerial bombardment of
(Tamil) civilian population centres and
places of worship
follow a pattern set
by the Sri Lanka armed forces over
the past several years..
During the past twelve years, the UN
Commission on Human Rights and the Sub
Commission have heard hundreds of
statements expressing grave concern
at the situation prevailing in the island
of Sri Lanka.
The record shows that it was the
oppressive actions of successive Sri
Lanka governments from as early as
1956 and in 1958, and again in 1961 and again with
increasing frequency from 1972 to 1977 and culminating in the
genocidal attacks of
1983 that resulted in the rise of the
lawful armed resistance of
the Tamil people.
We are constrained to condemn the
actions of the Sri Lanka government as
gross violations of human rights and
humanitarian law, intended to terrorise
and subjugate the Tamil people."
"...many peace agreements
are fragile and the 'peace' that they create is
usually the extension of war by more civilised
means... A peace agreement is often an
imperfect compromise based on the state of play
when the parties have reached a 'hurting
stalemate' or when the international community can no
longer stomach a continuation of the crisis. A
peace process, on the other hand, is not so
much what happens before an agreement is
reached, rather what happens after it... the
post conflict phase crucially defines the
relationship between former antagonists..."
- Walter Kemp, Organisation for Security
and Co-operation in Europe, reviewing 'After the Peace: resistance and
reconciliation' by Robert L.Rothstein,
1999
This ofcourse opens up the
question as to what it is that leads the so
called 'international community' to conclude
that it can no longer stomach a continuation of
the conflict. The 'international community' is
not without its own 'security' interests, whether
they be linked to the control of oil resources or
nuclear non proliferation or control of the currency in which world
trade is conducted - and these may not be
unrelated to that which the international
community can no longer countenance at any
particular time in relation to the conflict in
the island.
In the face of the sustained genocidal onslaught
on the people of Tamil Eelam by the Sinhala Sri
Lanka armed forces, on 17 May 2009, the armed
resistance movement of the Tamil people, the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam silenced their
guns.
"... The LTTE had for almost three decades
fought the Sri Lankan military and defended its
right to carry arms as a means of protecting the
Tamil people living in the island. Since the war
intensified in 2007, several thousand Tamil
civilians have died. The recent thrust by the
military into the Northern strong holds of the
Tamils have seen an escalation in the deaths and
has resulted in untold misery with people
succumbing to starvation and lack of medical
supplies....We need to do everything within our
means to stop this carnage....We have decided to
silence our guns... We have not forgotten that it
is for our people that we fight. In the face of
the current conditions, we will no longer permit
this battle to be used as a justification by the
forces of the Sinhala state to kill our people.
We willingly stand up with courage and silence
our guns... " We are silencing our guns -
LTTE, 17 May 2009
Tamil right to self
determination
Despite the genocidal onslaught launched on the
people of Tamil Eelam by successive Sinhala Sri
Lanka governments, many Tamils take the view that
today the Tamil Eelam nation exists - it exists
in their hearts and minds. It exists because it is
rooted in the direct personal feelings and the
material interests of large sections of the Tamil
people,
whether they be public servants deprived of
increments and promotions in consequence of the
Sinhala Only Act in 1956,
whether they be expatriate Tamil professionals
who had left Ceylon in the face of a growing
discrimination so that they may lead a life not
of luxury but of dignity,
whether they be those who continued to suffer
discrimination at their work place because they
had nowhere else to go,
whether they be those who said that 'enough
was enough' and who would not take it lying down
any more and who were ready to give their lives
in an armed struggle.
The Tamil population in the North and East of
the island are united by an ancient
heritage, a rich culture, and a distinct
language with a great literary tradition. They have
lived for many centuries within well defined
geographical boundaries which demarcate their
traditional homeland and the group identity of
the Tamil people has grown over the past several
centuries, hand in hand with the growth of their
homeland in the North and East of the island, where
they worked together, spoke to each other, founded
their families, educated their children, nurtured
their cultural traditions and also sought refuge,
from time to time, from physical attacks elsewhere
in the island.
Where a social group,
characterised by distinctive objective elements
such as a common language and a historic homeland,
acquires a subjective consciousness of oneness
through struggle and resistance to alien
domination, such a group clearly constitutes a
'people', and by any and every test of
international law and standards, the Tamils
constitute a `people' with the right to self determination.
But that is not to say that the Tamil Eelam
struggle is an expression of chauvinism. The people
of Tamil Eelam recognise that no nation is an
island. They do not deny the existence of the
Sinhala nation. It is Sri Lanka which has thus far
failed to face upto the challenge of recognising
the Tamils as a 'people' and associating with them
on that basis.
``It is the Sri Lanka government that has
failed to learn the lessons from the emergence of
the struggles for self determination in several
parts of the globe and the innovative structural changes that
have taken place.'' (Velupillai
Pirabaharan, Leader of Liberation Tigers of
Tamil Eelam, reported in Kalathil, February
1992)
"any meaningful attempt to resolve the
conflict should address its underlying causes and
recognise that the armed struggle of the Tamil
people for self determination, arose as a
response to decades of an ever widening and
deepening oppression by a permanent Sinhala
majority, within the confines of an unitary Sri
Lankan state'';
and further that
"there is an urgent need for the international
community to recognise that the Tamil population
in the North - East of the island of Sri Lanka
are a `people' with the right to freely choose
their political status.''
The error is to place 'totally
independent' and 'complete unitary state' at the
two ends of the continuum, with associations of
independent states, such
as the British Commonwealth and the European Union,
somewhere in between.
A figurative representation
more in accord with reality will be:
-
outside the box -
- the
box -
Commonwealth of Independent States European
Union
(Totally)
Independent
Federation
like
Canada
Federation
like US
Significant
Devolution
to Provincial
Councils
Regional
Development
Councils
Complete
Unitary
State
British
Commonwealth
of Nations
Confederation
like
Switzerland
Federation
like India
Modest
Devolution
to Provincial
Councils
Very moderate
Devolution
like UK
A meaningful
negotiating process will need to address the
question of working out a legal framework for two
free and independent states to co-exist - a legal
framework where they may pool their sovereignty in
certain agreed areas, so that they may co-exist in
peace.
A meaningful negotiating
process will need to telescope two stages -
independence and beyond independence. Yes, beyond
independence to inter dependence.
It is sometimes said that to accord
international recognition to separate national
formations will lead to instability in the world
order. The argument is not dissimilar to that which
was urged a hundred years ago against granting
universal franchise. It was said that to empower
every citizen with a vote was to threaten the
stability of existing state structures and the
ruling establishment. But the truth was that it was
the refusal to grant universal franchise which
threatened stability . Self determination is not a
de stabilising concept. Neither
is it a dirty word. Self determination and democracy go
hand in hand. If democracy means the rule of the
people, by the people, for the people, then the
principle of self determination secures that no one
people may rule another.
"...Let us accept the fact that states have
lifecycles similar to those of human beings who
created them. ..hardly any Member State of the
United Nations has existed within its present
borders for longer than five generations. The
attempt to freeze human evolution has in the past
been a futile undertaking and has
probably brought about more violence than if such
a process had been controlled peacefully...
Restrictions on self-determination threaten not only
democracy itself but the state which seeks its
legitimation in democracy...
Humanity is leaving the agrarian age which has
shaped societies and states for thousands of
years and is moving rapidly through the
industrial age to an age which is dominated by
services. The states have not even adapted to the
industrial society, not to speak to the service
society. The states still try to preserve the
relics of the agrarian age, gentleman farmers
with a strong lobby are protected by subsidies
paid by the consumer and the tax payer. To move
the state from the agrarian age to the service
age peacefully, humanity will have to break the
monopoly of the state on its territory and will
have to accept the democratic principle and with
it the right of self-determination. Many people
will reject those changes but do they prefer the
alternatives which are wars and
revolutions?.."
The struggle for Tamil Eelam is
about the democratic right of the people of Tamil
Eelam to govern themselves in their homeland -
nothing less and nothing more. The struggle for
Tamil Eelam is not about 'modest devolution' or
'significant devolution'. It is not about devolving
power from the higher to the lower. It is not about
devolution. Period. It is about freedom from
alien Sinhala rule. It is not about
securing benevolent Sinhala rule. It is about
securing a legal framework where two independent
and free states may associate with one another in
equality, in freedom and in peace.
Peter
Senge wrote some years
ago in 2004 -
"We
are unable to talk productively about complex
issues because we are unable to listen. ...
Listening requires opening ourselves. Our typical
patterns of listening in difficult situations are
tactical, not relational. We listen for what we
expect to hear. We sift through others' views for
what we can use to make our own points. We
measure success by how effective we have been in
gaining advantage for our favored positions. Even
when these motives are covered by a shield of
politeness, it is rare for people with something
at stake to truly to open their minds to discover
the limitations in their own ways of seeing and
acting.
Opening our minds ultimately means
opening our hearts. The heart has come to be
associated with muddled thinking and personal
weakness, hardly the attributes of effective
decision makers... (But) The path forward is
about becoming more human, not just more clever.
"
Here, it is helpful to
remind ourselves that the problem with war is
always with the victor, because he (or she) has
demonstrated that superior force pays - and, sooner
rather than later, there will be those who will
rise to show that they have learnt well the lesson
that was taught. However, the struggle for Tamil
Eelam is not about a search for historical first
causes - a search that will end in the stone age
and in a discussion about original sin. Nor is the
struggle for Tamil Eelam an invitation to engage in
the politics of the last atrocity - a pursuit which
leads to brave speeches, retaliation and more
atrocities.
The
path forward is not about being clever. We can all
be clever. But the path forward is to be become
more human.The conflict
in the island of Sri Lanka can be simply
stated.
The people of Tamil Eelam have
struggled for many decades for the establishment of an independent Tamil state
- a
struggle whose moral legitimacy may be difficult to
deny. On the other
hand Sri Lanka seeks to secure
its existing territorial boundaries. And in
this it has today the support of many existing
states in the world. Stated in
this way, the conflict may appear to be insoluble.
Something will have to give. Squaring the circle
may seem impossible.
The story
about the two professors Ury and Fisher
comes to mind. It is a story.
There were these two professors in a room. One
wanted the windows open and the other wanted
the windows closed. So there was this big dispute
about open - and close. Ury insisting that the
window be open and Fischer saying no, it must be
closed. The conflict went on for sometime and
Fisher eventually said let us sit and talk about
this. The response he got was
�What is there to be talked about
- I want the window open, you want it closed. So
what is there to talk about?' . And then Fisher
asks, 'Yes, OK - but why is it you want the
windows open?� So, behind your
stated position what is your interest?. And Ury
replied 'I want it open because I like the fresh
air and the breeze and so on.' Ury then asked
'Yes, but, then why do you want it closed?' Fisher
replied 'Because papers are flying around, I cannot
control it.'
And then the two of them
jointly started examining ways in which they could
get a win-win solution so that Ury could have the
fresh air and Fisher would not have his papers
flying about. They discussed the idea of
positioning the tables differently, then putting up
screens and so on and so forth. But the point of
the story was not so much about the end result
� it was about the fact that the
two parties to a conflict were able to jointly
engage in a dialogue and the synergy that was
created resulted in solutions which neither of them
may have thought of on their own.
In the case
of the conflict in Sri Lanka we may want to look
behind the stated positions of the LTTE and Sri
Lanka. We may want to look at the interests that
the Tamil people and the
Sinhala people want to
secure. I continue to believe that it is
possible to move towards a resolution of the
conflict on a
win-win basis.
I am
reminded of a statement by a UK foreign minister
some years ago that 'Sovereignty is not
virginity.' Independence? Yes. But all countries
in this world are dependent on one another. After
three hundred years of wars and two world wars, the
countries in Europe have moved towards an European
Union. There are different ways in which peoples may
associate with one another in equality and in
freedom � and here there is
every thing to talk about. And not much is gained
by straight jacketing the discussions on the basis
of known ideas and conceptual models.