President wants a solution from people
*Condition in our camps best any
country has
*No place for racism in post-conflict
Sri Lanka
N. Ram
President Mahinda Rajapaksa highlighted his determination to
re-settle “as soon as possible” the close to 300,000 Tamil civilians
displaced by the conflict with the LTTE.
In an interview with The Hindu in Colombo, he laid out his road map
of what needed to be put in place to ensure the safety and meet the
basic needs of those who are to be sent back to their villages.
He also sketched his vision of reconciliation and development, which
emphasised that in post-conflict Sri Lanka there was no place for
“racism” and anything that “creates a disturbance among our three
communities...Sinhala, Tamil, or Muslim.”
“I would say the condition in our camps is the best any country has,”
the President told me in a two-and-a-half-hour interview and
conversation over dinner at Temple Trees, on June 30. Basic needs,
including schooling for the children, were being met.
“We know there are shortcomings,” President Rajapaksa observed.
“Slowly, we have to overcome them. In some camps there are no problems.”
Revealing that he did not rely on “information only from officials” and
that he had sent “some people close to me to the camps,” he said his
reliable sources told him that the displaced Tamils were “satisfied with
the housing and shelter” but their real problem was the lack of “freedom
of movement.”
Since there were security concerns, the President reflected: “I don’t
know how to do that immediately.” De-mining had to be completed, and
certified by the United Nations, in a region where “every square
centimetre has been mined by the LTTE” and “if something happens, I am
responsible.”
He pointed out: “I can’t send them to a place without basic
facilities. Now we’re spending on electricity, on roads, on water. We
can’t send them back to a place where there are just jungles.”
On May 21, two days after the military operations against the LTTE
ended, President Rajapaksa announced a 180-day resettlement plan.
The participation on July 2 of 22 parties, including the Tamil
National Alliance, in the first meeting of the newly constituted All
Party Committee on Development and Reconciliation, and their assurances
of cooperation and support to the President in this ambitious project,
has strengthened the Government’s confidence and raised hope all round
that the rehabilitation process will be fast-tracked and implemented
smoothly.
Asked about the political solution - the “13th Amendment Plus” - he
had in mind, President Rajapaksa said “even tomorrow I can give that -
but I want to get that from the people.”
He insisted that all parties, and especially the Tamil National
Alliance representatives, should participate in the discussions on the
political solution. “I am waiting but it will be after my [re] election
[as President],” which, according to some political observers, may come
as early as November 2009.
Responding to further questions on a political solution to the ethnic
problem, President Rajapaksa said: “The people have given me the
mandate, so I’m going to use it. But I must get these people, [the TNA
representatives] to agree to this. They must also know that they can’t
get what they want. No way for federalism in this country. For
reconciliation to happen, there must be a mix [of ethnicities].”
President Rajapaksa reiterated his belief in “my theory...[that]
there are no minorities in Sri Lanka, there are only those who love the
country and those who don’t. They tried to twist that but I still
maintain that position.” |