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News Feature: Why world is supporting Sri Lankan State Terror

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Sunday, 03 December 2006

ALL TAMILS GET TOGETHER & DO SOMETHING

For the custodians of the global economy US, EU and Japan, ensuring Sri Lanka's stability is a pressing priority. The urgency is fuelled by accelerating global trade. But the Tamil armed struggle violently disrupts this goal.

The Co-Chairs' statement of 21 November 2006 was an eyeopener for the Sri Lankan Tamil community.

The international community's position, attacking the LTTE and defending the Sri Lankan state, was bluntly set out by US Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs ,Nicolas Burns, with representatives of the other Co-Chairs - EU, Japan and Norway - standing shoulder to shoulder with the US.

Inevitably, as has been noted by Indian analysts amongst others, the Co-Chairs' strong support for the Sri Lankan government has lead to desperation and total disillusionment with the international community amongst the Tamils.

But if the Tamils are bitter, it is about time.

Mr Burns was nothing if not forthright last week. And if they want to understand the international community's perspective, the Tamils only need pay close attention to his words.

To begin with, for the international community, Sri Lanka is a unique collaborative project. Differences amongst international actors on other issues are set aside in pursuit of a common goal here.

Because that goal is one from which all international actors can benefit: to boost the global economy by turning Sri Lanka into a stable and secure commercial and economic hub.

Thus, from a geopolitical and geoeconomic perspective, the international community's key objective in Sri Lanka is stability.

Mr Burns was explicit: "the Sri Lankan government has a right to protect the stability and security in the country."

In short, Sri Lanka is an important site for the global economy. That doesn't mean Sri Lanka's own economy is important. Rather, it is what Sri Lanka can contribute to the global economy.

At a crucial location in the Indian Ocean (in the middle of important sea routes), Sri Lanka holds enormous promise for enhancing and enlarging commercial flows between Asia, the Middle East and the West.

If only it were stable.

Without guaranteed stability, Sri Lanka cannot benefit international trade in the long term (the point, again, is not whether Sri Lanka benefits from international trade, though that might be a bonus, expanding, as it does, the global market slightly).

In the short term, without stability and security the investment atmosphere in Sri Lanka cannot be conducive to the kinds of development needed to turn the island into a commercial hub for global trade.

Thus for the custodians of the global economy – US, EU and Japan, ensuring Sri Lanka's stability is a pressing priority. The urgency is fuelled by accelerating global trade.

But the Tamil armed struggle violently disrupts this stability.

Indeed, the very existence of the LTTE, an armed non-state actor running a de-facto state in a large piece of the island and fielding a large naval force, is deeply antithetical to the international vision for Sri Lanka.

The resurgence this year of the simmering violence (mistakenly thought to have been banished by the 2002 Ceasefire Agreement), has also disrupted the international community's hasty efforts also launched that year to resume Sri Lanka's delayed transformation into a commercial hub.

This is no conspiracy theory. The international community has been always been clear that this is their goal (though of course it is the potential benefit to Sri Lanka that is pointed out, not that to the global economy or the national economies of the major powers).

The frustration for the Co-Chairs is that the Tamils seem oblivious to all this.

In fact, the ignorant Tamils are vociferously demanding things that are antithetical to this goal: asking for recognition of their right to self-determination, for independence, for acceptance of their violence and for the LTTE.

In reality, Tamil protests of oppression by Sinhala-dominated state are largely irrelevant to the international community's calculations for Sri Lanka.

Asked about suggestions that some US officials sympathised with the Tamil demand for self-rule in their homeland, Mr. Burns replied: "we support the government. The government has a right to protect the [country's] territorial integrity and sovereignty. [It] has a right to protect the stability and security in the country."

Stability and security for Sri Lanka essentially means defeating and dismantling the LTTE. A political solution is a secondary issue.

This is also what stability and security mean for the international community: it is the LTTE's armed struggle which is the prime impediment to Project Sri Lanka.

The oppressive policies of the Sri Lankan state may be distasteful to the international community, but are not necessarily a problem. These are not likely to disrupt the island's investment atmosphere or disrupt Sri Lanka's transformation.

When Mr. Burns says "we hold the Tamil Tigers responsible for much of what has gone wrong in the country," he is thinking of Sri Lanka, the unrealised global commercial hub, not Sri Lanka, the Sinhala-chauvinist state.

In short, the two visions of Sri Lanka –the global trade hub and the Sinhala-Only land – are perfectly compatible.

This is why the Tamils have such a hard time getting their case heard. Indeed, the Tamils and their protests about discrimination are merely a nuisance to the international community.

Whilst we see the racial violence, the deaths of 90,000 civilians by state violence (including by blockade of food and medicine), and the systematic marginalisation of our people as central life-or-death issues, the international community sees these as unfortunate matters to be dealt with (non-violently) on the edges of the main business of facilitating global trade.

A quick overview of international engagement with Sri Lanka in the past three decades demonstrates the point.

In the late seventies it was clear that given its geographical location and strong, social indicators, that Sri Lanka had the potential to contribute to the global economy to an extent that Singapore has, possibly even more.

Sri Lanka's staunchly pro-West first President, J. R. Jayawardene, visualised Sri Lanka as a free trade hub to rival Singapore. And that was long before China and India mushroomed as drivers of the global economy.

Jayawardene's embrace of the IMF and World Bank drew in a flood of developmental funds that was proportionately greater than any other developing country, despite the mounting human rights violations, discrimination and repression

Even the state-sponsored anti-Tamil pogrom of 1983, a horrific catastrophe for the Tamils which caused international dismay, did not slow the inflow of foreign aid.

Since then, there has been consistent and ever-increasing support for the Sri Lankan military to wipe out the growing Tamil rebellion. This international support culminated in the endorsement of the ruthless 'war for peace' of the late nineties.

But the growth of the LTTE and its armed struggle has made Tamil outrage an unavoidable obstacle for the international community's efforts.

It was only when Sri Lanka's military failed to destroy the LTTE that the Norwegian-fronted international peace process was rolled out in 2000.

But even that initiative had containment and dismantling of the LTTE as its primary objective, not resolution of the conflict per se.

Tamil incredulity at international behaviour over the past four years stems from our confusion as to what the international community, led by the Co-Chairs, were focussed on.

Security for us meant protection from the Sinhala armed forces. Security for them meant no more LTTE attacks in the south.

Stability for us meant the return of normal life for our war-savaged community. Stability for them meant no return to violence by the LTTE.

Peace for us meant a lasting just solution. Peace for them meant the permanent disarming of the LTTE.

In short, it is Sri Lanka's economic potential that matters most to them, not its domestic treatment of the Tamils.

Even despite its civil war Sri Lanka's economy has expanded given its peerless position right in the middle of the expanding global trade flows.

In 2004, the Colombo port was the world's fourteenth largest port by volume for transhipment. There's also Galle and, of course, Trincomalee.

Last month Sri Lanka began expansion of a small airport in the south into a massive site capable of handling the world's largest commercial jets.

The Malacca straits adjacent to Singapore are the shortest sea route for oil tankers travelling between the Middle East and Asian markets. This route allows shipment of nearly 80% of the oil to China, Japan, and South Korea.

Sri Lanka is halfway between the Middle Eastern oil producers of Iraq, Iran, Saudi Arabia and the Malacca straits.

Even in security terms, Sri Lanka provides an excellent staging post for US or European military powers interested in Asia or Australasia (in the late nineties, fifty British warplanes once transited through Katunayake airbase enroute to exercises in South East Asia).

The United States' military has for several years been seeking bases across the world from which to project its awesome power, vital to protect global commercial lanes. Places like Sri Lanka are excellent sites.

But even without its potential as an ideal location for US/Western force projection abroad, a stable and secure Sri Lanka invaluable to the global economy and thus to its custodians.

Which explains the manifest lack of international interest in addressing the Sinhala-dominated nature of the Sri Lankan state. It explains the international eagerness to stabilise the state, irrespective of its acts against the Tamils.

In 1983, President Jayawardene infamously said before the July pogrom: "I am not worried about the opinion of the Tamil people. We cannot think of them. Not about their lives or of their opinion about us."

In the rush to realise Sri Lanka's commercial potential, this is also how the international community feels about the Tamils.

And it is the LTTE's violence, not international goodwill, that, by holding up Project Sri Lanka, keeps the Tamil issue on the international agenda.

Comments (10)add comment

Jay Jay said:

Remember the slogan, "If you are not with us, you are against us", before Iraq was invaded? Wonder how many of the world's nations who were bullied in to joining the invasion and contributed militarily or just supported the invasion are regretting the killing of thousands (some say 600,000+) of Iraqi's since the invasion? One wonders as to how Christian these countries are?

No, Weapons of Mass Destruction, simply Distortion of the facts and destruction of an ancient civilisation.

The world cried on 9/11, but the same world says that removal of Saddam Hussein justifies the 600,000 deaths in Iraq.
2006-12-03 20:38:16

Eashan said:

Do not worry, believe in the Almighty God, who will protect our innocent Tamils from the clutches of the world biggest terroist nations such as usa, pakistan and sri lanka.

As the Hindu Holy Script Baghavat Geeta says, whenever there is injustice, God will take the form of Human and protect the innocent people (both sinhalese and Tamils) from the attrocities of GoSL that doesn't have any long-term vision for its people.
2006-12-03 20:54:53

Neil Armstrong said:

The Tamil national question is on the international agenda for the wrong reasons. The Tamil national question should be on the international agenda to examine the pressing need for a separate and independent state to safeguard the rights and well being of Tamil people because the only alternative is extermination of the Tamil people and the ethnic cleansing of the Tamil homeland by the increasingly intransigent Sri Lankan government. The prime impediment to Project Sri Lanka is militarized Buddhist fundamentalism in Sri Lanka, not the LTTE�s armed struggle.

Surely peace and stability are consistent with the prosperity of the global economy. Hence the determined pursuit of a military solution with the full support of the United States is deeply antithetical to the prosperity of the global economy. The United States desperately needs to change its thesis fast to ensure their beliefs reflect reality and their objectives are genuinely peaceful.

How can the international community continue to pretend that the continued genocide of the Tamil people can possibly benefit the global economy? Isn�t it obvious that both the Sinhala and the Tamil populations would be even greater contributors to the global economy if peace existed? Genuine stability can only come from genuine peace which in turn comes when all reasonable aspirations are honourably met. Therefore, to meet these global economic objectives, the international community should hasten and expedite the independence, sovereignty and recognition of Tamil Eelam.

The Tamils have a fundamentally natural right to protect their own sovereignty and territorial integrity ââ?¬â?? the LTTE have been clearly commissioned by the Tamil people to safeguard the Tamil nationââ?¬â?¢s sovereignty and territorial integrity. Stability and security means dismantling the regime and support networks which orchestrate the ethnic cleansing of the Tamil population. This objective will not and can never be achieved by defeating and dismantling the LTTE.

The international community in general and the United States in particular need to abandon their militarized support of the failed and genocidal Sri Lankan state and instead begin adopting and implementing genuine conflict resolution strategies to deliver peace and stability to the region.
2006-12-04 00:34:02

Jan said:

It is really abstruse to understand where world stands is. International community has profound knowledge in the Tamils issues. It is not that they don�t have any ideas what is happening in Sri Lanka. But, instead of being neutral, they have given prominence to what ever SL Government says despite what LTTE says. They want stability in Sri Lanka in order to accomplish their economy and military wise tasks. Tamils� emancipation struggle barricades them from having stability in the island. Thus, International Community has made one clear choice, that is, either SL Government loses to LTTE or either LTTE gets defeated. But, the smart International Community knows that LTTE will never be defeated by SL Government. So, at the same time supporting the Sri Lankan state terror, it is showing a green signal to the LTTE to start the war and defeat Sri Lankan Government.

If they(International Community) say ââ?¬Å?Sri Lanka is doing state terror and please stop thatââ?¬?, then, we as Tamils will be pessimistic about our freedom and we will have lost our force towards our freedom struggle. So, let us take this (Ignorance) attitude of International Community positively and let us start our Eelam War 4 ââ?¬â?? regardless of what International Community says.

Don�t just think India, USA and Britain are the international community. These are demoniac nations. They will never understand the freedom struggle of Tamils. There are other nations that still have justice and demand the freedom of each ethnicity such as South Africa, Switzerland, France, Germany, Russia, Australia and etc.

We have to remember one fact that France officials never explicitly said that LTTE is a terrorist organization. Just recently Germany foreign ministry has condemned Sri Lanka over its humanitarian atrocities.

So let the International Community to do its work and as Tamils let us do our work- intense our freedom struggle and get our land.
2006-12-04 02:25:51

Ravi said:

God bless all!
2006-12-04 03:30:37

Gabriel said:

USA claims that they have influenced the countries to ban LTTE and classify them as terrorist. Now that the American court has ruled out that the proscription of LTTE as terrorist is illegal. So USA has used illegal means to influence other countries in favour of their friendly Lanka.

So why are the USA still trying to dictate to the Tamils knowing that LTTE represents the majority of Tamils in the island.
This is bullying of the highest order. Further USA says that GOSL actions are for the integrity of the country even at the expense of Tamil civilians. This is the same excuse as given by the Jews to crucify Jesus.

Do the international community confers with what GOSL is doing to the Tamils?
2006-12-04 09:54:18

Vasanthi said:

International players sure have their interest in SL. They care damn about Tamils. If they care, they wouldn't be keeping their mouth shut when there is embargo in North, and East, and Tamils suffering, or indiscriminate bombings of innocent civilians. It is we who have to fight for our rights. Our freedom will NEVER be given on a silver platter. It has to be won through the sacrifice of our blood.
2006-12-04 11:40:45

Maitree said:

The issue of self-determination is not limited to Tamils. It is ironic that the JVP grew out of the failure of successive governments to address the specific needs of Sinhalese in the deep south. Now that they're part of the government, they've changed their view and see no regional differences among Sinhalese.

There are those working for the right of self-determination for *all* Sri Lankans, Sinhala, Tamil, and Muslim, north, south, and east. But it's difficult when those in power (north south & east) don't want to give up or share that power. None of the leaders are committed to a functional democratic system. Why? Because it would dilute their power.

As to the US, they don't care about Sinhalese or Tamils. They care about appearances.
2006-12-04 17:07:52

Eashan said:

The west invested loads of money in Sri Lanka during the ceasefire time. Another reason is obviously the strategical importance of our capital Trinco. We made a big mistake by letting the foreign comapnies invest in SL. We shouldn't have allowed the economy to grow in SL, whilst Tamil people are butchered by the GoSL.
2006-12-04 20:13:19

A Well Wisher said:

The custodians of global economy - US, EU and Japan is concerned about the stability in Srilanka, their reason being, they are unable to make use of Srilanka (which can probably be a go in-between due to its gegraphical location) to promote the free flow of global trade. The instability in Srilanka stands in their way as a stumbling block.

Well, then why can't these countries apply pressure on the Srilankan government to produce a fair and just settlement for the Tamils and end the conflict. The so called custodians have seen the attrocities carried out by the Srilankan armed forces. There are numerous reports, video clips, laments and cries from the people affected, comments and interviews from International independent bodies, the red cross, the SLMM monitoring missions, peace brokers, etc, etc to verify the crimes committed by the GoSL - all these are immediately available on the net. The bodies who are reporting on the crimes committed by the Srilankan government are also sanctioned by the countries who are the so called custodians of global economy. Now India is openly condemning the crimes and have asked GoSL to put forward a comprehensive package for a just solution to cover all the aspirations of the Tamils. Does all these prove who the perpetraor is.

Instead of pressurizing the party who is causing the instability, why blame the party who is seeking for a just solution. Mr Burns says the government has the right to protect its stability. But, what do you do when the government itself is the guilty party who is causing the instability. Then again who are they protecting the country from. There is no external threat and the country is not engaged in a war with another country. The 50 year old conflict arose as a result of the Srilankan governments' denial of rights to one section of the people while giving all the privilages to their own people when both should have been treated as equals in all aspects. Who created the imbalance. The government dont deny this fact but still dont want to address the problem to seek a solution in the fairest terms. The comments especially comming from a high ranking officer in US, without analysing the background of facts, really stinks.

Everybody realizes the importance of global trade although, the great bulk of the benefits are enjoyed by the rich and the powerful countries or rather the powerful individuals, who reap billions of dollars from the flow of such trade. In any case, nobody denys global trade is not important.

It is a question of priorities. whether this should be achieved from denial of freedom for a section of the people - the Tamils, denial of their rights and suppressing the Tamils - in other words a total denial of justice to the Tamils.

It is a materialistic world.

2006-12-06 04:56:33

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