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Kilinochchi
has fallen: What next?
What
the Tamils have always feared seems to be taking place. The
voice against a political settlement is growing stronger.
The JVP has started the shouting. Its former comrades in the
National Freedom Front (NFF) have joined in. The Jathika Hela
Urumaya (JHU) is trying to beat them.
The attack is aimed at the All Party Representative Committee
(APRC) headed by the well-meaning gentleman Science and Technology
Minister Professor Tissa Vitarana. Abolish the APRC, the Patriotic
National Centre, a newly created affiliate of the JVP has
demanded. The JVP is not participating in the APRC deliberations.
The JHU had accused the USA of double dealing. Its ire against
the country was caused by US State Department Spokesman Gordon
Duguids call for peace dialogue between the government
and the Tamils. The JHU took offence because the US said:
We would also like to see that the Sri Lankan Government
and the Tamil opposition enter into a discussion that will
resolve the legitimate issues held by the Tamils.
The JHU statement also took a swipe at India too. Indias
crime was the statement that its Foreign Secretary Shiv Shankar
Menon issued about the need for a political solution. The
Indians are now talking only about the full implementation
of the 13th Amendment to the Constitution, which the then
democratic leadership, the Tamil United Liberation Front (TULF)
had rejected as insufficient.
Tamils are not upset about the JVPs call for the abolition
of the APRC. It had done nothing to benefit them. Its only
achievement was the recommendation for the full implementation
of the 13th Amendment. And that too had not been implemented
for over nine months.
The Eastern Provincial Council has grown impatient about its
non-implementation. The provincial council passed a resolution
calling for the implementation of the 13th Amendment. A frustrated
Chief Minister Pillaiyan appealed two weeks ago to the government
to implement the Amendment. Nothing has happened. And Eastern
Province Minister M.L.A.M. Hisbulla has repeatedly expressed
his frustration. He has said that he does not have powers
to appoint even a peon. He has also said that he does not
have the power to undertake any development work. The central
government does the work and informs the provincial council
about it. Hisbulla has repeatedly said that what is in force
today in terms of the 13th Amendment is just the shell of
what it was intended to be. The watering down began soon after
its enactment in 1987.
I covered all the meetings held at the ministerial and administrative
levels to work out the sharing of power between the centre
and the provinces. I witnessed the resistance the central
government officials put up to prevent the handing over of
their powers to the provinces. They came up with all kinds
of excuses to retain the powers with themselves. Former Northeast
Chief Minister S. Varatharaja Perumal experienced that difficulty.
He complained about it to Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi.
Now, Hisbulla is voicing that frustration.
The centre was resisting the devolution of powers from the
start. It happened in the case of Agrarian Services Bill and
the Transport Commission Bill, both being subjects devolved
to the provinces.
And during implementation, several rules were adopted to take
back the powers given earlier. It was evident in the important
areas of education, health and roads. It was done making use
of the faults in the drafting of the 13th Amendment. The law
states that national schools should be administered by the
central government and the others by the provincial councils.
But it does not spell out the criteria to classify a school
as a national school. That allows the Minister of Education
of the Central Government to declare a school a national school
and take it over. The central government has declared several
schools, especially in the Ampara District as national schools.
In the health sector, teaching hospitals belong to the central
government and it has taken over all the main hospitals by
declaring them teaching hospitals. The situation with roads
is similar. The 13th Amendment says that national highways
belong to the central government. There is no mechanism to
decide which roads should be declared national highways.
The central government retracted the powers to maintain of
most of the roads in the country by amending the Thoroughfares
Ordinance, which empowers the Minister in charge of highways
to declare a road or a class of roads as national highways.
The Minister has made use of that amendment to declare all
A Class roads and B Class roads as national highways. Thus,
most of the roads in the country are in the hands of the central
government. And India is talking about the full implementation
of the 13th Amendment!
We know land and Police powers are yet to be devolved. The
JHU has expressed opposition to the devolution of those powers.
In Mondays statement, it had expressed its opposition
to the devolution of land and Police powers to the provincial
councils. It has pointed out that India is experiencing trouble
because it devolved land and Police powers to the states.
The Tamils fear that the opposition to the devolution of power
and political talks will grow stronger with the further weakening
of the LTTE. But, the only welcome sign is that the UNP has
taken a stand supporting devolution of powers and a political
settlement. Are the Sinhalese people in a mood to listen to
that?
In Tamil Nadu there is anger against Delhi. How it will affect
the Indian policy is not clear. There are indications that
key officials handling Indias foreign policy will be
in trouble. The emotionally debated question is; why Indian
Foreign Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee did not keep his
promise to Tamil Nadu Chief Minister to visit Colombo.
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