The influential Sinhala Buddist priest, Rev
Walpola Rahula Thero in a statement reminiscent of
the then Sinhala Opposition leader
J.R.Jayawardene's call 35 years ago in 1957,
appealed in January 1992 to the ''entire Sinhala
race to rise against the implementation of the
Thondaman proposals.''. In the meantime a statement
issued by the Monitoring and Action Committee on
Buddha Sasana and Buddhist Affairs said:
''The country should realise the dangers that
are fraught in Mr. Thondaman's proposals to merge
the North and the East into a single provincial
council and handover the control of ports and
harbours to that council, empower such provincial
council to negotiate foreign aid, recruit Tiger
member to the security forces and the Police and
make decisions pertaining to land administration.
In particular the proposal to recruit Tiger
members to the security forces and the Police is
a dangerous attempt to legitimize the status of
the Tigers. ... we consider Mr. Thondaman's
proposals as treacherous and leading to further
aggravation of the crisis.
As stated in the manifesto of the United
National Party the Government has pledged before
the people that it will not merge the Northern
and the Eastern provinces. Whether Mr. Thondaman
should continue as a member of the cabinet while
flouting the stated polices of the Government is
the question that is before the people.
... The Monitoring and Action Council on
Buddha Sasana and Buddhist Affairs whilst
strongly condemning the Thondaman proposals wish
to emphasize that the Maha Sangha and the people
need to be alert and vigilant as regards the
catastrophe that would befall the country from
these proposals."
Signed On behalf of the Supreme Council - ; On
behalf of the Action Council Weligama Nanaratna
Nayake Thera, Bellanvila Wimalaratana Thera,
Maduluvave Sobitha Thera, Mapalagama Somis-sara
Thera, Diviyagaha Yasassi Thera, Omalpe Sobitha
Thera and Akuratiye Nanda Thera. Gamini
Jayasuriya, (President, Maha Bodhi Society), Eric
Amarasinghe, P.C., (President, Young Men's
Bud-dhist Association), Olcott Gunasekera,
(President Dharmavijaya Foundation), Chandra de
Soysa, (President, All Ceylon Buddhist Women's
Con-gress), J.H Karunaratne, (Vice President, Sri
Lanka Temperance Association), G. Ranatunga,
(President, Asian Buddhist Conference), Prof.
M.B. Ariyapala, (President, All Ceylon Buddhist
Con-gress), W.D.V. Mahatantila, (President,
Buddhist Theosophical Society), Rani Karunaratna,
(President, World Buddhist Women's Congress) and
M.A. Silva, (Vice President, Sasana Sevaka
Society).
Ven. Madihe Pannaseeha Mahanayaka Thera in a
statement in the Sri Lanka Sunday Times on 29
December 1991 gives proof, if indeed proof was
needed, that Sinhala
Buddhist chauvinism is very much alive and
kicking. Its intransigence finds expression with
the same belligerence as in 1957, when the then
Sinhala Opposition Leader, Mr.J.R.Jayawardene
declared in response to the
Bandaranaike-Chelvanayagam Pact, which had
sought to establish a Regional Council in the
Northeast:
'' Minister Thondaman's proposals, although
claimed to have emanated from his own bat, seem
to coincide with the very demands of the LTTE.
They are formulated on the basis of a
"Traditional Tamil homeland" and
self-determination for Tamils.
'Traditional Tamil homeland' would best be
introduced to the world as an amusing bit of
fiction ... Let interested parties keep that
concept to themselves. They are nothing short of
an embodiment of Eelam, though the word Eelam has
been tactically avoided. They also go far beyond
what had been allowed even in India for Tamil
Nadu.
Anyone who has any love for this country and
puts the interest of this country beyond his own
and his own narrow racial group, has accepted
that any devolution of power should guarantee the
unity, sovereignty and territorial integrity of
Sri Lanka. These, in other words, are not
negotiable. Mr Thondaman's proposals go against
these. A few illustrations would prove this.
In one breath, he says the defence and the
security of the country should be the preserve of
the central Government. In the same breath, he
says all ports, harbours and air ports within the
provinces should be under the jurisdiction of the
respective provinces. If Trincomalee,
Kankesanthurai, Talaimannar and Palaly are handed
over to the North and Eastern provinces, how can
the Central Government ensure the defence,
security and sovereignty of the country?
Even with these harbours and air ports in the
control, of the Central Government, so much
smuggling of arms has been going on. Their
hand-ing over to the North and Eastern provinces
would only legalize them and help the LTTE to
build up powerful armed forces which no Central
Govern-ment forces could contain. Will not the
LTTE declare Eelam immediately after they have
built their own invincible armed forces. Can the
LTTE be trusted at any cost in view of their past
records?
After declaring Eelam, will they keep
quiet? Will they not push their boundaries south
until they envelop the hill country? The
Government armed forces would not be able to
resist them, once the two thirds of the coast of
this country with all harbours and ports there,
are given on a platter to them.
Mr Thondaman's proposals will sow the seeds of
a permanent war between the Sinhalese in the
South and the Tamils in the North and East until
the Sinhalese are completely subjugated and
reduced to the position of a minority in the
whole of Sri Lanka. Should the Sri Lankan
President allow this, even at the sacrifice of
his own presidentship?
Allowing the subject of foreign aid to the
Provincial Councils of the North and East will
also inter-fere with the territorial integrity
and sovereignty of the country. No Provincial
Council should be allowed to negotiate with
foreign countries direct. If this is allowed, as
Minister Thondaman suggests, what is there to
prevent the LTTE negotiating even arms deals with
the foreign arms suppliers?
If two thirds of Sri Lanka's coast comes under
the North and East, how can the central
government enforce its immigration laws? Men,
materials and arms can come freely into the North
and East without any control of the Central
Government.
Of the 18 per cent of the Tamils of this
country, half (9%) live outside the North and
Eastern Provinces. How can one speak about a
Tamil homeland then? What is the justification
for handing over North and Eastern Provinces
constituting 30 per cent of the land and two
thirds of the sea coast to the Tamils?
There is also no justification whatsoever for
merging Eastern Province with the North. The
ethnic composition of the Eastern province is
very different from that of the Northern
Province. In the Eastern Province, Moors comprise
1/3 and Sinhal-ese 1/4 of the total population.
The Tamils comprise only 2/5. The Tamils in this
Province are a minority. Then why merge it with
the North? Is it not to make the Sinhalese and
Moors come under the dominance of Tamils of the
North and to carve out a "homeland" for
Tamils?
It is true that with the coming into power of
the "people's" government of the SLFP in 1956,
many of the privileges enjoyed by our Tamil
brethren eroded. This has been interpreted as
"discrimination" against them. Anybody, who had
spoken and who now speaks for the rights of the
majority community and against allowing any more
privileges to the minority not available to the
majority, are dumped as communalists and Sinhala
chauvinists. No one should be carried away and
frightened by these slogans....
What is the justification to allow the
North and East provincial councils any
concessions, privileges, powers and functions
which the government cannot give to other
provincial councils? If that is done, are we not
accepting that the North and East are homelands
of a separate ethnic group? ..
Mr Thondaman's proposals are.. a complete
surrender to the LTTE of the unity, territorial
integrity and sovereignty of Sri Lanka and an
attempt to reduce the majority community of this
country to a minority and should be outright
rejected with the contempt it deserves."