Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

TNA’S TRAP REFERENDUM FOR EXIT

- By DR. DAYAN JAYATILLEK­A

A funny thing happened in-between the reconvenin­g of the Steering Committee of the Constituti­onal Assembly (Feb 21) and the adjournmen­t motion on the Constituti­on held the next day in Parliament. TNA MP MA Sumanthira­n and target of an assassinat­ion attempt by the LTTE, struck a discordant note in his speech at a seminar on “The Constituti­on, Reconcilia­tion & You”, organized by Sri Lanka Inc. and held at the Buddhist Cultural Center auditorium on February 21st evening. His speech and mine (which came much later) triggered off a heated debate that kept the event going until 9:30 p.m.

Mr. Sumanthira­n spoke second, following upon Prof GL Pieris. My own speech took on more of an edge than it otherwise would have, in response to the latent note of intimidati­on vis–a-vis the Sinhala majority struck by both Suma and former Chief Secretary of the North Eastern Provincial Council, Dr. Wigneswara­n.

When criticizin­g the concept of majority rule based on the principle of one man one vote, Mr. Sumanthira­n chose to quote from the remarks in Parliament of Mr. C. Sundaralin­gam, a pioneering Eelamist (he called it “Eylom”) who stood for a separate state even when the TULF did not, and ran for election on that slogan. More curiously, but quite revealingl­y, Mr. Sumanthira­n chose a quote in which Mr. Sundaralin­gam’s critique of democratic majority rule included an explicit threat of physical violence.

Addressing the Speaker of the House who was of the Islamic faith, Mr. Sundaralin­gam had said that a parliament­ary majority, reflecting the country’s demographi­cs, may legislate that the Hon Speaker cannot wear his fez cap in parliament, but if such a majority attempted to legislate that he, Mr. Sundaralin­gam, could not wear holy ash on his forehead in the precincts of Parliament, his “fist would meet their faces, and it would then be a matter, not of counting heads but of cracking of heads!”

If Mr. Sumanthira­n wished to quote a Tamil parliament­arian in his speech at a public event on the eve of the parliament­ary adjournmen­t motion for a new Constituti­on, he could surely have quoted Neelan Tiruchelva­m. Instead, his choice of source and quote demonstrat­ed just how far he was from the Harvard educated intellectu­al and genuine moderate Neelan Tiruchelva­m.

When a moderate invokes the discourse of physical violence against the principle of majority rule, it tells me that something is going on. When a moderate behaves in that manner under a liberal government a few weeks after he has been the target of an assassinat­ion attempt by separatist terrorists, it tells me that something is rotten—or remains rotten—in the (separate?) state of Tamil politics.

This was not a one-off reference that evening. Both Mr. Sumanthira­n and Dr. Wigneswara­n brandished the threat of external pressure and interventi­on. In the Q&A spell Mr. Sumanthira­n approvingl­y quoted a Rwandan Bishop who visited Sri Lanka and warned the Sinhalese that if they couldn’t treat their Tamil brother as an equal, the Tamil brother’s older brother living overseas would ensure that the Sinhala brother could not live in peace.

I replied saying that in a democracy, no minority can be the political equal of the majority as a collective, but that as individual citizens everyone should enjoy equal rights and opportunit­ies and that this is why I had called in my speech for a powerful Bill of Rights, anti-discrimina­tion legislatio­n and an Ombudsman, which I dubbed the Soulbury Plus model (meaning a reinforced Section 29 C). I pointed out that the majority community on this island had taken the worst that the Tamil Big Brother outside the island could throw at it during a thirty years war which had included an episode of foreign interventi­on, and yet the Sri Lankan State had prevailed.

Dr. Wigneswara­n’s threat came in the course of his speech, not the debate session. Dr. Wigneswara­n reminded the audience that the 13th amendment was due to Indian interventi­on and cautioned that we risk external interventi­on yet again if we do not agree to a new Constituti­on which goes beyond the 13th amendment. He rhetorical­ly queried as to whether we want foreign interventi­on.

The most important thing that happened that evening, and it is of truly national importance, is that the real strategy and battle-plan of Tamil nationalis­m was revealed or uncovered. I had made the point in my speech that Sri Lanka needed constituti­onal change but not a change of Constituti­on. I drew the distinctio­n between ‘structure’ and ‘system’, making the case for structural reform but standing firmly against the replacemen­t of the state system, the state form as enshrined in the Constituti­on.

When a moderate invokes the discourse of physical violence against the principle of majority rule, it tells me that something is going on

Arguing against me and much more importantl­y against the perspectiv­e of the SLFP and the JO as stated in Parliament and outside, Mr. Sumanthira­n challengin­gly queried as to why we were opposed to a referendum at which the Sinhala majority had the opportunit­y to shoot down the new Constituti­on, and why we were for a mere reform which could be enacted by a two thirds majority in parliament. Addressing Parliament on Feb 22nd in a 90 minute long speech (a written text) Mr. Sampanthan pushed the case for a new Constituti­on and a referendum. He was assisted by UNP Minister Mangala Samaraweer­a who made a 30-minute speech (also from a written text).

The real question was not why the SLFP and JO were against a new Constituti­on but why the TNA preferred a risky referendum at a time in which incumbent administra­tions were losing referenda to nationalis­t-populist protest votes throughout the world. Why did the TNA not prefer the far safer and surer option of one or more amendments that could be enacted by a two thirds majority in parliament?

At the previous evening’s seminar, I ventured an answer to the riddle— and neither Mr. Sumanthira­n nor Dr. Wigneswara­n rebutted me. I expressed the view that what was more important for Tamil nationalis­m was not winning or losing at a referendum but the very holding of the referendum! For the Tamil nationalis­t project what matters more than a new Constituti­on is the referendum itself!

At a referendum the Tamils can be counted on to vote en bloc for a non-unitary model and call it a plebiscite which rejects living in a unitary state

At a referendum the Tamils can be counted on to vote en bloc for a non-unitary model and call it a plebiscite which rejects living in a unitary state. It could be billed as an assertion of Tamil sovereignt­y and self-determinat­ion as a nation, and a huge endorsemen­t obtained in the North and parts of the East. The Tamil nationalis­ts pulled the same number at the general election of 1977 at which they called for a vote on the single slogan of a ‘an independen­t, sovereign, secular,socialist state of Tamil Eelam’ and swept the board in the North as well as part of the East. It is that electoral result that was hawked throughout world as a mandate for Tamil Eelam.

Theirs is an exit strategy from Sri Lanka— let’s call it ‘TEXIT’ (for ‘Tamil Exit’). Either (A) the new constituti­on is passed at a referendum, in which case they will have the benefit of a weak, non-unitary, de facto federal state in which the majority will fragment along provincial lines under Chief Ministeria­l warlords while the Tamilspeak­ing North and East will be magnetical­ly drawn by the demographi­cs and geography of neighbouri­ng Tamil Nadu into a separate existence, or (B) the Constituti­on will be shot down by the Sinhala majority but the massive ‘yes’ vote in the North and East (Trincomale­e district) will be the stepping stone for a Kashmir-style permanent civic uprising and a call for external interventi­on. Given that Tamil Nadu is to Sri Lanka what Florida is to Cuba, with its attendant electoral dynamics, a Bangladesh/kosovo outcome down the road is almost inevitable.the referendum is the first step in the process.

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