Thimpu Talks -
July/August 1985
A Brief Note on the Thimpu Talks
David Selbourne, Ruskin College, Oxford
- from the Tamil Times, August 1985
It is evident that one of the most difficult points for
commentators to grasp - and large numbers of Tamils also - is that the
Sinhalese, as I have maintained since I first began to write on Sri Lanka, have
no intention whatever of reaching a 'negotiated' settlement with the Tamils.
So that not only was it a folly for Tamil representatives to take part in the
Bhutanese charade with the absurd and scoundrelly Hector Jayawardene in the
first instance; it is also humiliatingly wrong for Tamil spokesmen, now, to be
wringing their hands over the 'military solution' which Colombo allegedly
prefers to the path of a political settlement of the Tamil problem.
Such analysis is based on entirely false premises, (and entirely
understandable wishful thinking). For the bitter truth is that a military
solution - that is the random butchery of Tamil civilians, men, women, and
children - is the politics of Colombo; they have, and intend, no other. Of
course, the rationalist Tamil and non-Tamil alike, finds it hard to credit that
this could be so; we would not be human ourselves if we were unable and
unwilling to attribute human instinct and intentions even to our most
intransigent and pitiless enemy.
Yet, I state as an axiom, based on my knowledge of the parties - cheap
criminals and pariahs beyond the pale of morality - that the Sinhalese
politicians who presently misgovern what used to be Sri Lanka, do not intend,
cannot embark upon, and will not concede, any real measure of devolution to the
Tamils.
A hoax and pantomime
So that the first elementary steps to understanding the meaning of
Colombo's actions (and they are as crude as their authors) are to recognize that
even Sinhalese talk of negotiation, let alone its substance, is a hoax; that the
cycle, or circus, of inter-ministerial visits and jaunts between Delhi and
Colombo has throughout been a pantomime, comic if it were not so tragic; that
there is no real distinction to be made between the intentions of the melancholy
Jayawardene and the intentions of the mafioso Athulathmudali - with his bottle
of acid hidden among the many Tamil skeletons in his cupboard - or any of the
other third-rate crooks and liars who preside over the suicide of the island;
and that disenfranchising, terrorizing, disqualifying, looting, expelling, and
killing the Tamils are the governing purposes of Colombo's realpolitik.
There is no need to put any finer point upon it; indeed, in order to match
Tamil realpolitik to the demands of the moment requires that there be no
illusions about what the Tamils are facing. Liberal sentiment and the liberal
media, self-serving Congress acrobats in Delhi, the cynical Sinhalese working
towards their final solution, and Tamil 'leaders' dreaming of the presidency of
Eelam, will of course go on talking in solemn terms of negotiation, shuttle
diplomacy, devolution, Annexure C, the bona fides of the parties and the rest of
it. But the whole of it whatever its form, does not have the meanings which
normal expectation seeks to attribute to such activity.
What, then, you may ask, is real in the situation? Three things: - the
need of Colombo to fill its begging bowl (for alms and arms) at the servants'
back door of the Western mansion; - the need of Colombo's bankrupt politicians
to preserve their skins and their offices, and to keep their hands in the till
of the island's exchequer; and - above all, the insatiable urge to punish the
Tamils for their past and present 'misconduct.'
And if you can fit a 'negotiated settlement' of Tamil demands (for a
sufficient degree of self-determination to protect their own lives, liberties,
and properties) into such a context, you deserve an Olympic medal for the
gymnastic effort, or honorary membership of the Magician's Circle.
The truth is quite the other; but, unhappily, only those who are free of
humane illusions can know it. In such a terrible circumstances, the agony of the
Tamils, and the self-destruction of the Tamils will continue. |