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				 "...Enough is enough. I have not reached my 96 
				years in this world with my eyes shut. I have seen enough of the 
				Senanayakes, Bandaranaikes, Ratwattes, Kotalawelas, 
				Jayawardenes, Wickramasinghes, Premadasas, Pereras and Silvas. 
				There is no denying that they are all genuine, sincere patriots, 
				every one of them - but Sinhalese, not Ceylonese..." 
 
			 Are 
			leaders of Sinhala community prepared to share state power with 
			Tamils? Mr. V. Navaratnam, the only surviving founder member of the 
			Federal Party that provided political leadership to Tamils for more 
			than three decades since it was formed in 1949, and described as the 
			brain behind FP, shared with TamilNet his views on Tamil National 
			struggle. The doyen of Tamil politics who negotiated with the father 
			of the incumbent President Chandrika Kumaratunge and other Sri Lanka 
			leaders for sharing state power within a federal framework for 
			almost three decades turns 96-years this month in Montreal, Canada. 
			He also inked the Bandaranaiyake Chelvanayagam pact. Navaratnam was Member of Parliament for Kayts in 
			Jaffna. Born in Karampon on 18th October 1910 in Jaffna and educated 
			in Ceylon Law College, he was an Attorney-at-Law for nearly 58 
			years. In 1956 he authored the book "Ceylon Faces Crisis," and in 
			1995 
			"The Fall And Rise Of The Tamil Nation," a book that provides a 
			historic and detailed understanding of early negotiations between 
			the Sinhala and Tamil leaders from a Tamil perpective. 
 Despite his age, Mr. Navaratnam, keeps himself current with the 
			political events in Sri Lanka from his residence in Montreal, 
			Quebec.
 
 TamilNet: As a co-founder of the Federal Party and as 
			participant in dialogues with Sinhala leaders for peaceful solution 
			in the 50s and 60's, could you share your views regarding those 
			negotiations?
 
				Navaratnam: Earliest agreement between 
				Tamils and Sinhalese dates back to 1919, when
				
				Ponnambalam Arunachalam [later Sir], a Cambridge educated 
				Tamil, founded the Ceylon National Congress and was elected its 
				first President. He led Ceylon's intelligentsia in its agitation 
				for political reforms under British rule. The Agreement of 1919, 
				between Ponnambalam Arunachalam on behalf of the Tamils, and 
				James Pieris and E.J. Samarawickrama K.C. on behalf of the 
				Sinhalese, provided for a Tamil seat for the Tamils of the 
				Western Province in the legislature. When it came up before the 
				Ceylon National Congress in 1922 for ratification before 
				forwarding it to Whitehall, a faction of the Sinhalese led by 
				H.J.C.Pereira opposed it arguing that it was an agreement 
				between individuals not binding on the Congress.
				
				Thus ended the 1919 pact. 
 The next agreement was the Sinhalese-Tamil Pact of 1925, known 
				as the "Mahendra Pact". A delegation of the Ceylon National 
				Congress led by its President C.E. Corea, accompanied by his 
				brother C.E. Victor S. Corea, George E. de Silva, M.P. 
				Jayatilake, T.B. Jayah, M.A. Arulanandam, P. de S. Kularatne, 
				R.S.S.Gunawardene and S. Muttiah entered into a pact with a 
				Tamil delegation in Jaffna at Waithilngam Duraiswamy's residence 
				named 'Mahendra'. The parties agreed that in any future 
				Constitution, the proportion of representation in the country's 
				legislature should be one for Tamils and two for Sinhalese.
 
 This agreement was placed before the general session of the 
				Congress in Kandy in 1925. Ratification was postponed for a 
				special session of the Congress. The next general session was 
				held in Galle in 1926 when C.E Victor S. Corea proposed 
				ratification of the 1:2 ratio agreement and pleaded not to 
				alienate Tamils by reneging. A dissident section of the Congress 
				led by Francis de Zoysa sabotaged it arguing that they were not 
				at a special session.
 
 Towards the end of the second world war in the early 40's when 
				the prospect of the liquidation of the British Empire was in the 
				air, S.W.R.D. Bandranaike campaigned for Sinhala as the only 
				official language of Ceylon. The then powerful UNP leader of the 
				Sinhalese, Don Stephan Senanayake (father of Dudley Senanayake) 
				reprimanded Bandaranaike and got Ceylon's legislature, then the 
				State Council, to adopt a Resolution declaring that both 
				Sinhalese and Tamil should be the official languages of the 
				Ceylon. Bandaranaike, however, bided his time, seceded from the 
				UNP, and founded the Sri Lanka Federal Party (SLFP). 
				Independence was granted under the 1948 Constitution. But, when 
				S.W.R.D. Bandaranaike became Prime Minister in 1956, his very 
				first Government business was to get an
				
				Official Language Act making Sinhala Only, passed in the 
				Parliament Chamber while outside the Parliament House hired 
				thugs and hoodlums had a field day, 
				thrashing and kicking Tamil Members of Parliament and their 
				supporters who were squatting on the Galle Face Green, in a non 
				violent, peaceful protest.
 
 This was a blatant repudiation of what was virtually a 
				Sinhalese-Tamil Pact vested with the authority of Legislative 
				Resolution.
 
 The most publicly noticed 
				reneging was that of the Bandaranaike-Chelvanayakam Pact (B-C 
				Pact) of 1957 because it was an agreement which generated 
				high hopes for a resolution of the Self-determination demand of 
				Tamils. One Sinhala leader, S.W.R.D. Bandaranaike of the SLFP, 
				was seen as conceding, while another Sinhala leader J. R. 
				Jeyawardene of the UNP, was sabotaging it.
 TamilNet: What made Mr. Bandaranaike concede?
 
				Navaratnam: It was the historic 
				Trincomalee Convention of the Federal party in August 1956. The 
				convention, consequent to passing of the Sinhala Only Act, 
				adopted a single Resolution giving an ultimatum to Colombo to 
				abolish the 1948 Unitary Constitution and replace it with a 
				Federal one within a year, providing for Tamil and Sinhalese 
				states as constituent units vested with autonomous and residuary 
				powers. The Federal Party threatened with continuous nonviolent 
				direct action if Colombo failed. In order to avoid direct 
				confrontation, Prime Minister S.W.R.D. Bandaranaike
				entered 
				into the B-C Pact providing for �Regional Councils� of a sort. 
				Even so, at the negotiating table there was opposition from a 
				Minister of his own Government. Philip Gunawardene, Minister of 
				Agriculture, and at that time an LSSP Marxist, refused to 
				concede any of the powers of his Ministry to the proposed Tamil 
				Regional Councils.
				
 Claiming that Bandaranaike had sold the Country to the Tamils by 
				this Pact, J. R. Jeyawardene resorted to protest with a marathon 
				march from Colombo to Kandy to rouse the extreme nationalist 
				feelings of the Sinhalese Buddhists. In February 1958, a crowd 
				of Buddhist monks in saffron robes sat on the lawn of the Primie 
				Minister's residence, refusing to leave unless the B-C Pact was 
				abrogated. Bandaranaike emerged from his door with the document 
				and tore up the B-C pact. Ceylon's career of crises was well and 
				truly under way.
 TamilNet: And your personal experience with the 
			then UNP leaders who followed? 
			 
				Navaratnam: It is now 40 years since that 
				illfated day in 1965 when some of us were seated in the hall of 
				the Turret Road residence in Colombo of Dr. M.V.P.Peiris, facing 
				Dudley Senanayake, Esmond Wickramasinghe (father of Ranil 
				Wickramasinghe) and J. R. Jeyawardene and negotiating what came 
				to be known as the 
				Dudley Senanayake-Chelvanayakam pact (DS-C Pact), under 
				which the Federal Party of the Tamils agreed to supply the 
				numbers in Parliament which Senanayke needed to become Prime 
				Minister and form a UNP government. Dudley Senanayake in turn 
				promised the Federal Party to grant self-determination to the 
				Tamils through District Councils. 
 Towards the closing stage of the meeting, I raised the question 
				of 
				state-aided Sinhala colonisation of the Tamil Northern and 
				Eastern Provinces 
				and asked whether the District Councils would be granted 
				exclusive control of Crown lands. Suddenly Dudley Senanayake 
				threw up his hands in the air and shouted: "Then where are my 
				people to go for land?" Silence fell in the room for a couple of 
				minutes, after which Esmond Wickremasinghe turned to me and 
				said, "Don't hold up the talks, Nava. I can suggest a formula 
				which will meet your concern." He took my sheet of paper on 
				which I was jotting down notes of the terms and wrote the clause 
				about priority being given to applications from the Tamil 
				provinces and only if there was dearth of sufficient numbers, 
				applications from other provinces would be considered. In the 
				end, this helped signing of the DS-C Pact, but not what Esmond 
				meant.
 
 Having thus taken over the reigns of government as Prime 
				Minister, and having tied the hands of the Federal Party, Dudley 
				Senanayake lost no time in rushing through Parliament, and 
				government administrative machinery, measures which were 
				uppermost in the minds of Sinhala nationalists.
 TamilNet: What measures? 
			 
				Navaratnam: Dudley Senanayake forcibly 
				uprooted 525,000 upcountry Tamils who had laboured on the 
				plantations for generations and shipped them to India, 
				ostensibly implementing the Sirima-Sastri pact which his SLFP 
				predecessor Srimavo Bandaranaike had entered into with an 
				obliging Indian Prime Minister. 
 Dudley Senanayake nationalized the Port of Trincomalee in the 
				Tamil country of the Eastern Province, which paved way for 
				Sinhala colonization and the creation of a new Parliamentary 
				constituency of Seruwela (assented to by Tiruchelvam and 
				Amirthalingam) providing a seat in Parliament for the Sinhala 
				settlers in the Eastern Province, thus driving a wedge between 
				the Tamils and Muslims.
 
 He dismissed three Government Servants, Pathmanathan, 
				Surendranathan and Kulamani from the Public Service for not 
				learning Sinhala, thus sending a message to all Tamils that his 
				Government meant business, in carrying out the Sinhala Only law 
				to the letter.
 
 But when it came to implementing his promise of District 
				Councils granting self-determination to the Tamils
				
				he reneged - true to the tradition of the Sinhala leaders. 
				He submitted a 
				White Paper in Parliament claiming to contain proposals for 
				District Councils. Upon scrutiny it was found that the 
				existing local government village committees had greater and 
				more meaningful powers than these District Councils.
 TamilNet: How did you react after witnessing 
			the failure of these agreements and pacts? 
			 
				Navaratnam: It was while addressing 
				during the debate in Parliament
				on the 
				White Paper that I made a call to the Tamil people never 
				again to enter into any agreements or pacts with Sinhala leaders 
				or governments and not ot expect the Sinhalese leaders to honour 
				their word. It is in the Hansard dated 11th June 1968. I 
				recounted in my speech the long history of the Sinahalese 
				chicanery on every single agreement or pact from the year 1919 
				to the last repudiation by Prime Minister Dudley Senanake in 
				1968. The hollowness of the proposals contained in the White 
				Paper dashed all Tamil hopes and made me call upon the Tamils to 
				work towards the establishment of a separate self-governing 
				Tamil State. Following that speech of mine in Parliament, Prime 
				Minister Dudley Senanayake withdrew the District Councils 
				proposals, the Federal Party Members of Parliament seceded from 
				the Government Parliamentary Group, and their Minister M. 
				Tiruchelvam left the Cabinet. 
 The failure of every 
				one of these long line of �Pacts� is always attributable to 
				the many divisions among the Sinhalese. When one party agrees to 
				condescend towards some solution on the Tamil problem , the 
				others will rise in unison to object and obstruct. They will 
				never compromise or agree on any decision when it comes to 
				solving the Tamil problem by consensus. It is not in the ethos 
				or in the political character of the Sinhala leaders and 
				governments to honour and abide by agreeements and pacts 
				conceding rights to the Tamils as a people.
 
 It is pertinent here to recall the history of
				
				1948 Unitary Constitution. When the Soulbury commission 
				submitted a draft constitution which contained
				
				Article 29(2) as a safeguard for the Tamils and other 
				minorites, and Britain insisted that all the communities of 
				Ceylon must unitedly accept the constitution, there was utter 
				confusion among the leaders. One important section of Tamil 
				leaders was for rejection of the Soulbury draft.
 D.S.Senanayake, S.W.R.D.Bandaranaike and other 
				leaders on the Sinhalese side, speaking in the State Council 
				debate in 1946, begged and pleaded with the Tamils to trust them 
				and join the Sinhalese in the acceptance of the British offer. 
				Even if they were not prepared to trust the Sinhalese, they 
				said, there was the Article 29(2) which would be a sure and 
				permanent safeguard for the protection of the Tamils and other 
				minorities for all time. Professor C. Suntharalingam trusted 
				Senanayake's assurances and voted with the Sinhalese on behalf 
				of the Tamils for the acceptance of the Soulbury draft. A series 
				of anti-Tamil policies and legislative Acts of Parliament by 
				both the UNP and SLFP governments under that Constitution 
				exposed the calculated deceit of the �trust us� mantra. 
 The culmination of Southern leaders' betrayal of trust came when 
				Colvin R. de Silva, the constitutions expert of the socialist 
				LSSP, spearheaded the drafting and setting up of
				
				Srimavo Bandaranaike's Republican Constitution of 1972 which
				
				repealed Article 29(2) and reduced Tamils to be eternally at 
				the mercy of the Sinhalese.
 
 The 1972 Constitution and all constitutions that followed are 
				illegal ones. They are in blatant violation of the Supreme Law 
				of the 1948 Constitution, along with Article 29 which was 
				supposed to contain the safeguards and which had been declared 
				by Her Majesty's Privy Council in England, to be unalterable and 
				to be with entrenched powers. Yet, this was replaced by a 
				totally illegal constitution
				
				which declared Ceylon a Republic, without Tamil mandate.
 
 When I left the Federal Party, I founded the Tamils' Self-Rule 
				Party to work for the attainment of a separate self-ruling 
				independent Tamil State in the Tamil homeland of North-East 
				Ceylon. This inspired and influenced the young school-going 
				student Velupillai Pirapaharan and his friends to start the 
				Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam movement for the achievement of 
				the separate State. Federalism became a dead-letter to the 
				Tamils, since then, consigned to the dust bin in history.
 
 Today the Tamils are not concerned or interested in whether 
				President Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga's country should be 
				a unitary state or a federal one, whether the Executive 
				Presidency system should continue or be abolished, what system 
				of government is best suited for her country.
 TamilNet: What do you think about the
			CeaseFire Agreement 
			between the Government of Sri Lanka and the Liberation Tigers and 
			the scuttled
			Joint Mechanism P-TOMS? 
			 
				Navaratnam: I have no means of knowing 
				what realisitic conditions existed in the country which 
				persuaded the LTTE to disregard all this history and enter into 
				yet another Pact called Ceasefire Agreement (CFA) in February 
				2002. Nor do I want to know what made the LTTE acquiesce with 
				President Chandrika Kumaratunga in P-TOMS. But, of course, I can 
				see the value of the CFA and P-TOMS for being a de facto 
				recognition by both the UNP and SLFP Governments of the Tamil 
				State in North-East Ceylon which is a reality on the ground. 
			 TamilNet: How do you view the forthcoming 
			Presidential election? 
			 
				Navaratnam: It is not the concern of the 
				Tamils whether Mahinda Rajapakse or Ranil Wickramasinghe will or 
				should win the Presidential election on November 17. All these 
				are matters which concern only South Ceylon. Let the Sinhalese 
				people sort it out and decide for themselves. It will be 
				inappropriate for the Tamils to use the Presidential election of 
				2005 as an occasion to demonstrate what they really are. 
 They are a 
				separate independant State centred in the Vanni with its own 
				Government, Police, a conventional Army and Defence Forces, a 
				separate economy, legal system, banking and administrative 
				machinery. Let the Tamils keep out of the election on November 
				17, and have nothing to do with events in South Ceylon. Enough 
				is enough. I have not reached my 96 years in this world with my 
				eyes shut. I have seen enough of the Senanayakes, Bandaranaikes, 
				Ratwattes, Kotalawelas, Jayawardenes, Wickramasinghes, 
				Premadasas, Pereras and Silvas. There is no denying that they 
				are all genuine, sincere patriots, every one of them - but 
				Sinhalese, not Ceylonese.
 
 There is no need for the coalition led by the Prime Minister, 
				Mahinda Rajapakse, to circulate the message that the 
				Presidential election applies only to the Sinhalese part of the 
				country, namely, the south of Ceylon.
 
 The South is only following what has been a regular Sinhalese 
				practice for over fifty years ever since the British pulled out 
				from Ceylon. It is like the SLFP-LSSP coalition led by Srimavo 
				Ratwatte Bandaranaike, the then Prime Minister, summoning a 
				so-called constituent assembly in 1972 consisting of members 
				elected by the Sinhalese electorates of South Ceylon only, and 
				deliberately drafting and enacting a brand new Constitution for 
				South Ceylon only.
 
 I have been crying hoarse for forty years urging the Tamils 
				never again to trust Sinhala governments or to enter into 
				agreements and pacts bartering away Tamil interests and rights. 
				They can never make any decision for the solution of the Tamil 
				problem by consensus.
 
 For all practical purposes, the citizens of Tamil North-East 
				Ceylon do not count at all. The Tamils come in only when their 
				help is needed by one or the other of the two major Sinhalese 
				political parties in their contest for the seat of power in 
				Colombo. In a tricky situation of uncertainty as to which way 
				the Sinhalese votes of South Ceylon may go, and knowing their 
				own people's, well known trait of "divunum paththatta hoyya" 
				(jump to the winning party), both the Sinhalese parties, the UNP 
				as welll as the SLFP, have always been in the habit of wooing 
				for Tamil votes promising the moon in return. Once their 
				objective is achieved with the help of the Tamil votes, and 
				having fulfilled none of the things promised to the Tamils in 
				return for their support, it has always been the parctice of 
				Colombo governments to kick the Tamils out and tell them to go 
				to hell. The forthcoming Presidential election on November 17th 
				is just another of such seasonal contests between the UNP and 
				SLFP.
 TamilNet: What is your reaction to
			
			recent stand taken by the European Union? 
			 
				Navaratnam: One is unable to think of the 
				real reason for this Declaration. The declared reason, namely 
				violence and terrorism, cannot be the real reason because 
				Britain, which holds EU's presidency, itself resorted to 
				violence and terrorism to shoot and kill the last Tamil king, 
				Pandara Vanniyan, from behind a hiding place, seize his kingdom 
				and amalgamate it through Captain Colebrook with the Sinhalese 
				South Ceylon. 
 It is more obvious that the EU (or, rather Britain) has taken 
				this action at the behest of the Sinhalese Colombo Government. 
				The EU cannot pretend not to know that showing bias in favour of 
				one negotiating partner and prejudice against the other 
				negotiating partner is not the way to advance Peace Process.
 
 The European Union (EU) countries of the Western World has now 
				thought it fit to insult the Tamils by making a public 
				derogatory Declaration about the LTTE. The EU is well aware that 
				in all Peace Process negotiations LTTE means the Tamils and 
				Tamils means the LTTE. For reasons best known to itself, the EU 
				declares that the Tamil representatives are no longer admissible 
				into its member states. Let the European Union's insult of the 
				Tamils during Britain's rotating Presidency be the last straw.
 
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