The Foreign Ministry made an unnecessary hash of things with its
initial statement, and then its attempt at clarifying things during
last week's whistle-stop visit to the country by the United Nations
Secretary General Kofi Annan. An Annan visit had its precursor some
years ago when the UN SG wanted to make a scheduled visit to Sri
Lanka and the rebel LTTE lobby was quick on the draw inviting him to
meet their leader V. Prabhakaran. Those plans were shot down by
Colombo and Dr. Annan himself cancelled the visit for different
reasons. This time, it was an unscheduled visit in that it was the
tsunami disaster that brought him to our shores after the ASEAN
tsunami summit in Indonesia. Again the LTTE lobby was quick to
react, sending an invitation neatly worded to visit "Tamil areas" of
Sri Lanka that have been ravaged by the tsunami. The invitation was
also addressed to the UN Resident Representative in Colombo rather
than the Colombo government.
No doubt, the UN Resident Representative in Sri Lanka would have
liked a feather in his cap had he been able to get his boss to visit
the LTTE areas. His predecessor also bent backwards to please the
LTTE, giving the organisation all the oxygen and respectability it
craved for.
But should the Foreign Ministry, or the government have "blocked"
the UN Secretary General from visiting the 'Tamil areas', a
euphemism the LTTE was using for "LTTE-held areas"? Of course, it
should have. The reason being that the visit of such a high-profile
international civil servant has more than 'humanitarian concerns'
involved. Any student of diplomacy would have known that. This is
not to say that Dr. Annan should not have visited Mullaitivu if he
was to be accompanied by Sri Lankan government officials, nor to say
that UN agencies, their workers and volunteers should not be allowed
into LTTE-held areas. They should certainly be given all assistance
to go into areas of distress especially in a calamity of this
nature.
The fact of the matter is that the LTTE has been playing games
with the relief aid but hardly anyone has chided it for putting at
risk the lives of the people it holds hostage in the Mullaitivu
district, which received a body blow from the tsunami. So why did
the Foreign Ministry feel shy about having to say that they did not
'block' the UN SG's visit? The UN Resident Representative's request
for Dr. Annan to visit to 'Tamil areas' alias 'LTTE areas' was an
unreasonable one. Our London correspondent and senior diplomatic
commentator details the Colombo government's conflicting stance on
the issue, when President Chandrika Kumaratunga told CNN this week
that she had "no second-thoughts" in asking Dr. Annan not to visit
LTTE-held areas, a tacit acknowledgement that her government had
indeed "blocked" the UN SG from going there.
The Colombo Government had reason to believe - amidst the swirling
rumours of the LTTE supremo's purported death in the tsunami - that
he was to make a grand appearance to shake Dr. Annan's hand if he
did eventually set foot on LTTE-held territory. The UN Office has
yet to clarify that this was not on the agenda. Such a statement
would have allayed some apprehensions at least, and the LTTE chief
would not have chanced a snub.
On the other hand, what if Dr. Annan had met with him? The track
record of the UN chief in such matters is also worth scrutiny. Our
columnist at the UN headquarters in New York, another senior
diplomatic commentator, tells us that Dr. Annan has never met any
rebel leader, not in Northern Ireland, Chechnya, Afghanistan or Iraq
or even in Columbia or Kashmir. On the other hand he has met with
rebel leaders in the Western Sahara and in pre-independent East
Timor where there has been some UN role like peace-keeping troops.
So, where do the 'LTTE-controlled' areas in Sri Lanka fit in under
this criteria?
The Italian government has already justified giving direct aid to
the LTTE areas. UN agency chiefs have meanwhile made it a practice
to visit the Tiger den and sup with the rebels while engaging their
officers in these areas. UN and other aid agency workers get a kick
out of having visited rebel areas without understanding the
repercussions thereof. They are all out there on 'humanitarian
missions' working with the LTTE.
The words of EPDP Minister Douglas Devananda quoted by our
Political Editor some months ago where he reiterates that the LTTE
is working towards an East Timor situation - creating a virtual
State environment by gaining international recognition, including
that of the UN prior to Independence should ring in the ears of
those who have been carried away by the belief that the government
ought to have allowed the UN chief to visit the Tigers' lair |