SCOPP
recaps failures of successive peace processes
The
Government is repeatedly told that this country will never
achieve peace without talking to the LTTE. Yet the record
shows that the LTTE is not interested. Its habit of pretending
to engage in negotiations in order to destroy moderate Tamil
forces and build up its own weaponry cannot be permitted to
happen again. Talks with the LTTE are not going to bring peace
while that organisation believes that it can achieve its demands
through the use of violence and terror. It is to remind people
of this that the Peace Secretariat has prepared the following
summary.
The Thimpu talks
Discussions with the LTTE began with what are termed the Thimpu
talks in 1985. The LTTE and other militant groups attended
along with the TULF - the main Tamil political party, elected
to Parliament in 1977 but no longer there having vacated their
seats after the Sixth Amendment to the Constitution was passed
in 1983. In any case, following the anti-Tamil riots of 1983,
influence amongst Tamils had passed from the TULF to militant
groups, which all attended at Thimpu.
Both sides claimed the intransigence of the other led to the
breakdown of the talks. However, to quote Kethesh Loganathan,
who represented one of the militant groups at the time, The
Tamil organisations took the position that the burden of presenting
a broadly acceptable formula lay with Colombo. The Tamil delegation,
instead, subjected the Sri Lankan government delegation to
a series of lectures on what constitutes the ethnic
question and as to why the burden lay with Colombo to come
out with a solution worthy of our consideration.
Even more significantly, the LTTE used this period to strengthen
itself at the expense of the other Tamil groups. They decimated
the EPRLF and eliminated Sri Sabaratnam, the leader of TELO,
and by the time the talks broke down had emerged as by far
the most powerful of the groups.
The Indo-Lanka Agreement and with President Premadasa
Following the Indo-Lanka Accord of 1987, the other Tamil militant
groups entered the political process, but the LTTE, after
initial acquiescence, broke with the Indians and precipitated
a fierce conflict with the Indian Peace Keeping Force. Unfortunately,
for various reasons the new Sri Lankan government of President
Premadasa, elected in 1988, was not positive about the Indian
presence, and entered into informal negotiations with the
LTTE.
The main purpose of this, from the LTTE side, seems again
to have been weakening of other Tamil groups. The chief victims
this time were the leaders of the TULF, which had done very
well in the parliamentary election of 1989. The former Leader
of the Opposition, A Amirthalingam, was killed along with
the MP for Jaffna. The Deputy Leader was injured and was never
able to play an active role in politics again. In addition,
the TULF was rebuilding its leadership in the East, but the
most prominent of its MPs there, Sam Tambimuttu, was also
killed.
The LTTE continued on what seemed good terms with the Government
until the IPKF was withdrawn and the Northeastern Provincial
Council dissolved, its Chief Minister (Varatharaja Perumal
of the EPRLF) having fled to India. However it claimed that
negotiations were not going well, and suddenly it withdrew,
in the process killing over 600 policemen in the East who
had dropped their defences because of what they thought was
a truce.
Negotiations with President Kumaratunga
Chandrika Kumaratunga won the Parliamentary election of 1994
on a manifesto of peace negotiations, and promptly as Prime
Minister dismantled some of the security apparatus. During
the Presidential election that followed, her opponent Gamini
Dissanayake of the UNP was killed by a suicide bomber during
an election rally.
Talks continued until mid-1995, though again the LTTE claimed
that they were not going well. Though a formal agreement had
been signed requiring notice of any abrogation of the truce,
very sudden notice was followed by an attack on naval vessels
in Trincomalee harbour.
Negotiations with Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe
The Ceasefire Agreement signed in February 2002 should have
had two consequences. The first was a cessation of hostilities.
This was not the interpretation of the LTTE, which used the
Government adherence to the CFA to build up its own strength,
with massive importation of weapons, as clearly found also
by the Scandinavian Sri Lanka Monitoring Mission. In fact,
over five years, the SLMM found the LTTE guilty of 3,830 violations,
whereas the Government was found guilty of just 350 violations.
The second purpose of the CFA was negotiations, but after
six rounds of talks, in a period of just over a year, the
LTTE withdrew from negotiations in April 2003. It should be
noted that, even if the LTTE genuinely felt that both Presidents
Premadasa and Kumaratunga were not serious in negotiation,
the same could scarcely be said of Prime Minister Wickremesinghe,
who was widely believed - and certainly so by the Sri Lankan
electorate when it voted largely on this issue in April 2004
- to be bending over backwards to appease the LTTE. To quote
former LTTE military commander Col Karuna, as to why the LTTE
leadership reneged on what seemed the most promising development
during the talks, LTTE delegate leader Anton Balasingham,
without consulting Prabhakaran, had issued a statement stating
that they were willing to consider a federal system. When
he discussed this with Prabhakaran, he rejected the idea of
federalism. He wanted the talks dragged for at least five
years till the LTTE obtained enough arms to strengthen itself
further.
The LTTE took advantage of the CFA once again to attack its
Tamil opponents, namely former militant groups such as the
EPDP, PLOTE and the Perumal wing of the EPRLF. The TULF was
now very much under LTTE control, its last independent leader
Neelan Tiruchelvam having been killed by the LTTE in 1999.
In 2005, the LTTE killed Lakshman Kadirgamar, President Kumaratungas
Foreign Minister.
By then, the Government was again under President Kumaratunga,
who had taken over the Defence Ministry from Prime Minister
Wickremesinghes nominee, following a Supreme Court ruling
that the President had to be responsible for defence. Attempts
at compromise between the two leaders failed, so an election
was held in April 2004, and this was decisively won by the
Presidents party.
The LTTE refused to return to formal negotiations, but they
did engage in informal discussions following the December
2004 tsunami regarding a mechanism to deal with aid. The structure
that was agreed was deemed unconstitutional by the Supreme
Court but, before any further negotiations could take place,
a Presidential election was held, at the end of 2005.
Negotiations with President Rajapaksa
Though the LTTE seemed to have contributed to President Rajapaksas
victory in the poll by forbidding citizens in the areas under
its control to vote, soon after his inauguration they launched
a series of attacks against the forces, which led the SLMM
to question as to whether the Ceasefire still existed. However,
they finally agreed to return to negotiations, having insisted
that these take place in Europe. The first negotiations took
place in Geneva in February 2006, and seemed to set a positive
start, but the LTTE refused to attend the next round which
had been scheduled for April. Instead, a suicide bomber tried
to kill the army commander, who narrowly escaped.
The LTTE finally agreed to return to negotiations in Oslo
in June but, having been flown there, they refused to appear.
Though various reasons have been adduced, one that is not
generally known is that the Norwegian Ambassador had made
clear to them that the issue of child soldiers could not be
ruled out of the agenda.
In August 2006, perhaps assuming that their military build
up was now satisfactory, the LTTE launched two massive attacks,
in the East and the North respectively. Had either of these
succeeded, the capacity of the forces to maintain control
of large areas which the Government had held in 2002 would
have been doubtful. However the Government repulsed the attacks,
and then decided that the right of self-defence included in
the CFA entailed the right to ensure that such sudden assaults
could not take place again.
Thus began the process of clearing the East of the LTTE, the
East having been largely under Government control in 2002,
although the LTTE had succeeded in increasing its influence
in the area over the CFA period. Despite these ongoing hostilities,
however, the LTTE agreed to return to negotiations in Geneva
in October 2006.
However, after what seemed a positive first day, the LTTE
withdrew on the second, following what one diplomat described
as the famous call from Kilinochchi, the LTTE Headquarters.
Throughout 2007, the Government sought a resumption of talks,
but was told by the Norwegian Ambassador, who visited Kilinochchi
in August, that the LTTE was not willing.
Attempts at informal talks, through calls from the Governments
Peace Secretariat to the LTTE Peace Secretariat, and through
messages sent via the SLMM, were also repulsed. By then, the
SLMM was down to a shadow of its former self, and unable to
issue rulings, since the LTTE had refused to allow monitors
from countries that were members of the European Union. It
had also fired on a vessel bearing SLMM monitors, which led
to the cessation of naval monitoring.
Abrogation of theCeasefire Agreement and political developments
since
In these circumstances, the Government pressed ahead with
negotiations with other parties, and in particular Tamil parties
committed to pluralism and democracy. The CFA was formally
abrogated in January 2008, which facilitated moving to interim
measures including the election of an Eastern Provincial Council.
Since following LTTE hostility to the Indo-Lanka Accord and
its provisions, there had been no Provincial administration
in the North or East, this was a historic opportunity for
the people in that area to elect their own administration.
Unlike in the first election, in 1988, when parties divided
on ethnic lines, both major national parties led coalitions
consisting of Tamils, Muslims and Sinhalese. The Government
coalition won, and a Tamil former combatant was appointed
Chief Minister.
Current operations to clear the North too of the LTTE are
proceeding apace, and success will be followed by Provincial
elections. Preceding these, as happened in the East, it is
hoped that Municipal and Local Government elections can be
held in areas in which normalcy has been restored. (Source:
Communications Division of the Secretariat for Coordinating
the Peace Process)
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