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Details of LTTE Draft Proposals
D.B.S. Jeyaraj - Sri Lanka Sunday Leader, 26 October 2003
Important details of the set of counter proposals formulated by
the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in response to the discussion
document presented by the Sri Lankan government on the interim administrative
council to be set up for the North Eastern Province are now beginning to emerge
despite the secrecy maintained by the LTTE so far.
Although the final document is yet to be finalised, the penultimate draft now in
limited circulation provides some insight into the Tiger political strategy and
its goals and objectives. Despite the chances of the current document being
amended before the final version is presented to Norway, there are reasonable
grounds to believe that drastic transformation is unlikely.
Fundamentally, the LTTE seeks to present a power sharing model with maximum
powers for the north eastern unit under the nomenclature of an interim
administrative set up. The Tigers want an interim administration with wide
powers to prevail for at least six years.
Ushering in normalcy
During this time rehabilitation, reconstruction and development work aimed at
ushering in normalcy to the north east will be undertaken by the interim
administrative assembly that would have both members and ministers commensurate
to the ethnic ratio of the north east.
While the interim administration is in force negotiations will be on with the
government and other interested parties to draft a new constitution for Sri
Lanka that would afford power sharing at the centre and regions.
A referendum will be held at the end of six years to see whether the people of
the country endorse the new constitution. If the referendum rejects the new
constitution supported wholeheartedly by the Tamils, then the Tigers will
exercise their right of self-determination and seek a political alternative
outside the present constitution. This in essence comprises the Tiger political
strategy as envisaged in the current draft document.
The LTTE wishes to enter into a comprehensive agreement with the government as
represented by both the Executive President as well as the Prime Minister to set
up the interim administration for the North Eastern Province of Sri Lanka.
The agreement will have an elaborate preamble outlining the reasons for the
setting up of such a council. Certain provisions of the preamble will have
annexures in support .
One such clause will be related to the root causes of the conflict. This will
charge the various Sinhala dominated governments of the past with acts of
omission and commission against the Tamil speaking people with a view to impose
majoritarian hegemonism.
Line of argument
It would be pointed out that the cumulative effect of this historical oppression
led to the Tamils obtaining a mandate for Tamil Eelam at the general elections
of 1977 held democratically. This would be followed by vivid references to the
brutal war unleashed on the Tamil people by various governments to suppress the
legitimate aspirations of the Tamil people.
This line of argument entails accusations of a deliberate scorched earth policy
practised against Tamil villages in the east and the north and also the ethnic
cleansing of the Manalaaru region, also known as Weli Oya.
The preamble will also spotlight the massive scale of death, destruction and
displacement in the Tamil regions and pinpoint the deterioration in health,
education, agriculture, fisheries, industry, transport and consequent
unemployment and poverty.
All these contentions regarding the historical causes of the conflict, the
legitimacy of the 1977 Tamil Eelam mandate, brutality of the war along with
ethnic cleansing and scorched earth policy, the scale of destruction and
displacement, the deteriorating economy and service sector, etc., will be
supported by detailed documentary annexures.
Comprehensive plan
This preamble will ultimately emphasise that immediate and radical measures are
necessary to remedy the situation in the north east. A comprehensive plan of
massive proportions is needed for rehabilitation, resettlement, reconstruction
and development of basic infrastructure and the service sectors.
It is also very necessary to infuse a sense of hope and optimism into the
beleaguered Tamil people, restore their confidence in governance and decrease
their feelings of alienation. This requires the setting up of an immediate and
innovative structure to plan, execute, supervise and coordinate these tasks of
great magnitude.
Given the fractured state of the Sinhala polity where no party is capable of
obtaining a two third majority necessary for meaningful constitutional change
and the protracted nature of constitutional reform, it would be unrealistic to
expect an expedited political settlement that could set up governing mechanisms
to oversee rehabilitation and development. A special mechanism therefore is
urgently needed.
The Tigers then invoke the doctrine of necessity and advocate the setting up of
an interim administrative assembly that would take over the virtual
administration of the north east for a period of six years and focus on
rehabilitative and developmental functions.
Before the setting up of the interim administrative assembly to govern the north
east for the interim period of six years, there would be a defined pre-interim
period of about six to 12 months.
During this period the progress of the current ceasefire will be reviewed. A
special review committee comprising local and foreign nationals will be set up.
This committee will analyse the situation and ensure that the two year old
ceasefire provisions are implemented in full.
Shortcomings must be addressed
From an LTTE viewpoint, the ceasefire has not been implemented properly and a
vast number of Tamil and Muslim people are unable to enjoy the full benefits of
the current peace. The LTTE therefore expects these shortcomings to be addressed
before the setting up of an interim administration.
Some of the areas needing remedy are the withdrawal of security forces from
residential areas, schools, places of worship and public buildings. There is
also the need to remove the ban on fishing totally. Also much of the areas
coming under high security zones have to be reduced in size.
The LTTE is amenable to the armed forces retaining their presence in the north
east in select locations. They will have to restrain their current function of
civilian administration in the north east. If they wish to continue exercising
those functions, then the armed forces will have to take orders from the civil
administration.
The proposed interim authority will tentatively have 100 representatives. These
members will be citizens of good standing representing all regions, areas,
ethnicities, religions and social groups. In order to maintain the gender
balance, at least 25% will be women.
Fifty persons per province will represent the Northern and Eastern Provinces
respectively on the interim authority. There will be quotas to ensure that all
areas, sectors and groups are represented in each province. All members will be
appointed, but those with a background of elected office in the past will be
given priority.
The eastern component will reflect the ethnic composition of the province
according to the 1981 census. Likewise the north will reflect the same ratio of
the 1981 census.
It is estimated that 21 Tamils, 17 Muslims and 12 Sinhalese will represent the
east while 46 Tamils , three Muslims and one Sinhalese will represent the north.
This means 67 Tamils, 20 Muslims and 13 Sinhalese on the interim assembly. One
fifth of the Tamils from the districts other than Jaffna will be of recent
Indian origin.
An executive council comprising 20 or one-fifth of the representative body will
be appointed as a ministerial board. The executive too will function in practice
as two entities concentrating on the north and east separately.
The east will have four Sri Lankan Tamils, one Indian Tamil, three Muslims and
two Sinhalese on the executive body. The north will have six Sri Lankan Tamils,
two Indian Tamils, one Muslim and one Sinhalese on the executive body.
Executive body
Overall, the body of 20 will have 10 Sri Lankan Tamils, three Indian Tamils,
four Muslims and three Sinhalese. At least four will be women. At least seven of
the representative body and two of the executive are expected to be from the
Christian community.
There will be a chairperson each for both the representative and executive
bodies. In addition two deputy chairmen each will be elected to both the
representative body and executive. They will belong to ethnicities and religions
different to that of the heads in both.
The proposed interim authority seeks all powers allocated to the provincial
council through the 13th Amendment to the Constitution. Furthermore the
authority also desires the doing away of the concurrent list of powers as
recommended by the Mangala Moonesinghe Committee and full allocation of such
functions to the interim authority.
Since land is vital to resettlement of displaced people, the interim authority
wants full powers over land alienation too. Likewise, it wants financial powers
enabling it to raise loans, grants, etc., from external agencies and also
promote investment and projects with foreign collaboration.
Another area the LTTE wants to be under the interim authority is law and order.
The LTTE wants to harmonise the functions of its own police force and judiciary
with the rest of the country. How these details are to be worked out is not
clear, but some control over provincial policing is desired.
An evaluative and complaints commission will be set up to assess the progress of
the interim authority as well as entertain complaints of misgovernance,
discrimination, corruption, abuse and misuse of powers. This will comprise of
local and foreign nationals.
While the interim administrative authority discharges its functions for six
years, parallel efforts will be undertaken to formulate and enact a new
constitution. There is general consensus in the country that a fresh
constitution is imperative. Furthermore the existing one was ushered in without
Tamil participation in constitution making and consent. Also some of the
entrenched clauses in the present constitution like the unitary character of the
state forbids any meaningful power sharing.
Radical restructuring
The LTTE on behalf of the Tamil people wants a radical restructuring of the Sri
Lankan state. A constitutional commission consisting of all ethnicities,
religions and different shades of opinion should be set up to review the present
set up and draft a new constitution.
Tamil participation however will be conditional on the government agreeing to
certain core principles beforehand. These include the recognition of the Tamil
people as a distinct nationality, the recognition of the Northern and Eastern
Provinces as the historic homeland of the Tamil and Muslim people, the right
of internal self determination for the Tamils of the north east, official
bilingualism allowing full parity of status for the Sinhala, secularism as state
policy while ensuring freedom of worship and equality of all religions, the need
for equitable sharing of resources and the elimination of unequal development
between regions, and the necessity for affirmative measures aimed at redressing
the imbalance between ethnic communities in employment, education, etc.
Once these basic principles are recognised and incorporated as an entrenched
part of the constitution in the making, the 'Tamil side' will participate
wholeheartedly in constitution making.
It will adhere to the Oslo Accord to explore federalism to the maximum and seek
far reaching powers for the north eastern region. This could amount to
asymmetrical power sharing. At the same time the Tigers also want equitable
power sharing at the centre according to ethnic ratio.
While asymmetrical power sharing prevails in the north east the LTTE will also
ensure that the numerical minorities in the north east will be given full rights
and privileges. This includes specific guarantees of power sharing, cultural
autonomy, community policing and enhanced powers to local authorities. The LTTE
expects the same rights to be given to the minorities of the Southern Province
too.
Setting up of commissions
Apparently the LTTE is also not averse to commissions being set up to revise
provincial boundaries according to current realities if necessary. It would also
like a commission to be appointed to review the national flag and anthem and
suggest alternatives illustrating the diversity of the Sri Lankan nation as
opposed to the hegemonism of a numerically dominant entity.
Given the tendency to separate, it is very likely that the LTTE will like a
constitutional arrangement of a confederal nature. While the unity and
territorial integrity of the country is ensured, a system of shared sovereignty
is expected to come into force. An associated structure guaranteeing full
separation of powers while forbidding secession is desired. The Sri Lankan state
according to the Tigers has to be reinvented and restructured.
Once the new constitution is adopted and presented in parliament, the LTTE wants
a referendum on it. In any case a new constitution will necessitate a
referendum. If the referendum endorses an islandwide approval of the new
constitution, a new beginning in the history of our nation will dawn.
The hitch of course is the possible rejection of the new constitution by the
preponderantly Sinhala south. In that case, the LTTE is very likely to exercise
its right of external self determination and seek secession. It may hold a
referendum for the north east and legitimise this secession. Of course all this
can be thwarted if the country at large endorses an equitable new constitution.
Another important feature is that the LTTE does not intend decommissioning arms
or dissolving its armed units until a new constitution is promulgated. It also
wants specific codes of conduct for its armed units on land and sea along with
those of the official armed forces during the interim period.
The activities of both combatant sectors are to be managed and restricted. The
government is expected to relocate some personnel away from the north east and
reduce its installations. After a final settlement is achieved the Tigers
envisage a reduction of arms and manpower in commensurate to identical reduction
by Colombo.
Armed divisions
It also hopes in a post-constitutional settlement for new armed divisions to be
raised in accordance with the ethnic ratio and also for integrated cooperation
between existing forces.
The LTTE also wants the government to officially declare the LTTE as the sole
representative of the Tamils as a prerequisite to any interim set up or
constitutional discussions.
While the current draft envisages such far reaching proposals it is a moot point
as to whether the final version will be incorporating all these provisions.
Given the prevailing global realities where the USA and India are expecting the
LTTE to be realistic and reasonable, the Tigers may very well whittle down some
clauses.
The LTTE could also present a condensed, sanitised version now and reserve the
rest for a later occasion. The Tigers could also submit a maximal position now
and be more flexible when direct talks occur.
Whatever the recommendations and suggestions of legal and constitutional
experts, it is Velupillai Pirapaharan who ultimately calls the shots in the
LTTE. The fate of this penultimate draft seeking a restructured yet united Sri
Lanka depends on the Tiger numero uno