Tigers must be demilitarised - Lankan Envoy
M.R. Narayan SWAMY
GENEVA: A negotiated end to Sri Lanka’s dragging conflict is still
possible but not before the Tigers are “verifiably demilitarised and
democratised,” says one of the most high-profile diplomats of that
country.
Dayan Jayatilleka also said in an interview that the conflict would
only end when Velupillai Prabhakaran, the elusive and feared leader of
the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), gets “demilitarised one way
or another”.
Jayatilleka, who enjoys a close rapport with President Mahinda
Rajapaksa, was asked if there was any room for a possible negotiated
settlement to end a war that has claimed over 70,000 lives since 1983
and still rages.
“Yes but not with the Tigers, and certainly not with Prabhakaran,”
the 51-year-old said over e-mail from Geneva, where he is Sri Lanka’s
Permanent Representative to the UN and other international organisations
based in Switzerland.
Referring in some detail to the 1991 assassination of former Indian
Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi by an LTTE suicide bomber, Jayatilleka said
of Prabhakaran: “With him there can be no peace.”
“A peaceful, negotiated settlement is possible only if it recognises
that any solution has to be within a single, united Sri Lanka, and the
Tigers are verifiably demilitarised and democratised.”
Jayatilleka is a political analyst and academic who served briefly as
a Minister in the Provincial Government in the northeast when Indian
troops were deployed there in 1987-90.
He was posted in Geneva in June 2007 as fighting escalated between
the military and the LTTE and Sri Lanka came under intense attack over
rampant human rights violations.
Asked how the war in Sri Lanka will end, Jayatilleka asserted: “It
will all end the way it all ended in Angola after decades of conflict
when (rebel leader) Jonas Savimbi was killed by the Angolan Armed
Forces.
“It will all end the way it did in Chechnya when the Russian Army got
Djokar Dudayev, defeated the Chechen separatist militia in fierce
combined arms warfare Angola and Chechnya are peaceful and prosperous
now.
“It cannot end while Prabhakaran has not been demilitarised one way
or another.”
Claiming that Sri Lanka’s “human rights record, our record of
civilian casualties, compares favourably with that of the West in
theatres where its Armed Forces” operate, he said the West’s use of
human rights as an instrument was “most disturbing”.
“The issue of Kosovo (and the de facto separate status of Iraqi
Kurdistan) reveal that the West is not averse to the splintering of
existing states and the carving out of new ones.”
Jayatilleka added: “The West does not seem to believe in a
brotherhood of legitimate states which are besieged by terrorism. For
the West, terrorism is a problem only if the anti-state movement in
question claims to be Islamic or Leftist.”
In contrast, most Asian countries back Sri Lanka on the issue of
human rights, he said, because “they are not possessed of colonial or
neo-colonial habits of centuries”, because they believe in
“non-interference in the internal affairs of others”, and also because
they “know what it is to experience the threat of secession and
terrorism”.
Jayatilleka accused the University Teachers for Human Rights-Jaffna (UTHR-J),
a respected rights group, of “becoming part of the West’s civil society
pets.
It has joined several other Tamil dissident groupings in showing
extreme distress at the thought of military defeat of the LTTE.
“These elements just do not want the Sri Lankan state to win They
must comprehend that Tiger fascism cannot be defeated by unarmed Tamil
expatriate dissidents.
It can only be defeated by the guns, men and women of the Sri Lankan
Armed Forces and their Tamil partners.”
IANS
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