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Rajapaksa should seize opportunity
Jonathan Steele
HISTORY is littered with the ruined reputations of national leaders who
thought they had won a great military victory only to squander it by
self-congratulation and stupidity. Whether Sri Lankan President Mahinda
Rajapaksa joins their number has yet to be seen, but the triumphant
speech he will shortly make to his fellow citizens will be an important
signal of the path he is choosing.
There has to be relief that the worst suffering of the quarter of a
million Tamils who were trapped on the island’s northern beaches is
over. Cowering under government artillery fire, and shot by Tamil Tiger
troops if they tried to flee, they have lived for four months in
infinitely worse conditions than the people of Gaza during Israel’s
invasion in December. Palestinians were at least in their own homes,
with supplies of food and water, however inadequate. The shelterless
masses huddled along the lagoons and sand banks of Sri Lanka’s
Mullaitivu coastline had nothing except panic, grief and the sight and
sound of the dying. The prolonged hell they have been through far
outweighs the sudden horror of the tsunami which swept over this same
coast four years ago.
The priority now is to ensure that the camps which the government has
set up for the surviving refugees are properly stocked with food and
medicine. Rajapaksa has described the last stages of the campaign as an
“unprecedented humanitarian operation.” As a euphemism for war his
phrase is hard to beat. But if he wants to ensure he is really “rescuing
hostages,” as his officials claim, he has to give them facilities that
respect their dignity.
If these are transit camps to help people recover while they trace
missing relatives and gather some strength after seeing their families
shattered, well and good. But if they become concentration camps, it is
another story. Government officials are already saying it will take a
long time for people to be “re-educated” after years of relentless Tiger
propaganda. The phrase is ominous. Why can’t refugees be allowed to go
back to the villages they fled when the army offensive began last year?
The Tiger leaders are dead and have no more sway over them. No one has
taken the Tamils’ land or settled in their areas, as often happens in
civil wars. Those who wish to go home should be permitted to do so at
once.
Senior officials recently told John Holmes, the UN’s emergency relief
coordinator, that they hope 80 percent of the displaced can leave the
camps by the end of this year. Foreign donor governments must hold
Rajapaksa to that pledge. They should also insist that the camps are
quickly transferred from military to civilian control with unfettered
access by UN humanitarian agencies and aid organizations like the
International Committee of the Red Cross and Médecins Sans Frontičres.
The Sri Lankan government is asking for international help. The donor
community should be tough in its response. India, in particular, has a
powerful role to play, now that the Congress party has strengthened its
mandate. Along with other foreign governments, it must make aid strictly
conditional on a clear vision from the government of its intentions
toward the island’s Tamils. Is it planning to send Sinhalese settlers
into the traditional Tamil homeland with the aim of “diluting the Tamil
threat”? Is it going to pepper the area with army camps and checkpoints,
like the occupied West Bank?
Above all, what political changes is the government prepared to make? It
is 22 years since the 13th amendment to Sri Lanka’s constitution
provided for power to be devolved to the provinces. The Tamil Tigers’
war gained popular support and lasted for so long in part because
Sinhalese-dominated governments in Colombo never implemented that
reform. Will it do so now? Rajapaksa’s recent record in the east is not
encouraging. Since defeating the Tigers there two years ago, the central
government has continued to take most decisions while failing to flood
the area with the development aid it needs. Worse still, it has allowed
two dissident Tiger commanders who split from the main organization and
joined the government side to carry on gang warfare. If the fruits of
peace in the east have been so meager, it will require a major shift of
culture in Colombo to improve on them now that the Tigers have lost
control of their heartland in the north.
A long succession of Colombo governments has failed to address the Tamil
minority’s legitimate complaints. To write the Tigers off as terrorists
or see the war against them as “just” distorts the facts. With the
Tigers’ defeat a fresh opportunity emerges. If Rajapaksa treats Tamils
as a conquered enemy, who have to be corralled in camps and whose land
has to be split up and occupied, he will sow the seeds for new militancy
in the generation to come.
—Arab News.
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