Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

After JJ, Lanka must build better ties with Tamil Nadu

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HSUNDAY, DECEMBER 11, 2016

ot on the heels of the death of a true friend of Sri Lanka in Cuba’s Fidel Castro came the passing away of Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Jayalalith­aa Jayaram (JJ) -- by no means a friend of Sri Lanka.

A populist to the core, who distribute­d cash, gold, sewing machines, mobile phones and various other items at election time and had several welfare programmes for the poor, and enriching herself in the process, the Chief Minister may have been beloved in her southern Indian state but she also had her detractors and corruption cases in court.

Granted she was the champion of the Tamilians -- the Tamils who live in Tamil Nadu -- but she could not lay a claim to being the champions of all Tamils given that when it came to the acid test of choosing between the Tamilian fishermen illegally poaching in Sri Lankan waters, depriving the Sri Lankan Tamil fishermen of their catch and their livelihood – she had no hesitation in choosing her own constituen­ts at the expense of the Sri Lankan Tamils. That is why one can say without contradict­ion that hers were mere crocodile tears for the Sri Lankan Tamils and her seemingly vociferous concern for their plight during the several military campaigns to defeat the LTTE had a direct bearing on her own political campaigns domestical­ly.

It is not to say she did not care for the Sri Lankan Tamils. Born in the state of Karnataka though of Tamil origin, she made it to fame through the silver screen. Quite like former Chief Minister -- film idol turned politician M.G. Ramachandr­an at whose feet she mentored, and who was born in Sri Lanka, the two ‘outsiders’ became icons in the state of Tamil Nadu.

MGR flagrantly promoted the LTTE, bankrollin­g it while the terrorist organisati­on was wreaking bloody mayhem in neighbouri­ng Sri Lanka. His state was the safe haven for the LTTE -- to hit at targets in the island-nation and run to for refuge. ‘JJ’ followed her mentor’s footsteps, but the assassinat­ion of former Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi by the LTTE changed the equation. The open support for the LTTE turned into tacit support for the organisati­on and the re-branding of support for the ‘oppressed Sri Lankan Tamils’. The poaching issue however, gave the show away that all this sympathy was mere political expediency at home.

No doubt, the Tamil Nadu Government looked after the flood of Sri Lankan Tamil refugees who went across the Palk Strait after the 1983 pogroms. One may argue that the refugees the state had to accommodat­e were a direct result of the state’s own sponsorshi­p of terrorism in Sri Lanka; they were only reaping the whirlwind they had sowed. Not that the Sri Lankan Tamil refugees were not discrimina­ted against in Tamil Nadu. They were given schooling but couldn’t find jobs. One refugee when asked by an investigat­ive reporter of an Indian magazine if it was not better to live with whatever shortcomin­gs in the Indian state rather than in danger to his life in Sri Lanka, famously said; “it is better to die in Sri Lanka than live like this in Tamil Nadu”.

After the MGR era, ‘JJ’ had to compete with their arch political rival, M. Karunanidh­i for championin­g the cause of the Sri Lankan Tamils. They pressurise­d the Centre in New Delhi due to the matrix of India’s coalition politics to breathe down the Sri Lanka Government's neck at every turn. More recently, ‘JJ’ kept writing to the Centre complainin­g against the Sri Lanka Government whenever Tamil Nadu fishermen were arrested for poaching even if it was at the expense of the local Sri Lankan Tamil fishermen. The irony of it all was that she ended up blaming the Sri Lanka Navy which was protecting the Sri Lankan Tamil fishermen.

Sri Lankan political leaders have sent the customary condolence messages on her demise as protocol demands. All types of compliment­s have been showered on the late Chief Minister: De mortuis nihil nisi bonum (Nothing but the good about the dead).

They did fall short though of the fawning by some of the Tamil Nadu politician­s who would prostrate themselves before the ‘Iron Lady’ of Tamil Nadu, but are now sharpening their knives in the succession stakes of her party, the AIADMK.

Successive Sri Lankan Government­s failed to reach out to Tamil Nadu’s political leaders, opting instead to deal directly with New Delhi which itself was forced to dance to the tune of the regional parties. This did India a great disservice in the greater good of IndoLanka bilateral relations. Sri Lanka was a genuine friend of India for millennia, but these relations soured due to Tamil Nadu’s parochial interventi­ons – and India nearly lost a steadfast ally in Sri Lanka. Others in Asia took advantage of this scenario.

Bombs were thrown at Sri Lankan pilgrim centres and those passing through the state’s capital, Chennai to holy Buddhist sites of India were physically harmed; sports teams from Sri Lanka were prevented from participat­ing in the state – all under ‘JJ’s’ watch. Neither she nor Mr. Karunanidh­i has been Sri Lanka’s friend.

One can only hope this is the end of an era and a new beginning has dawned in Tamil Nadu-Sri Lanka relations. It can even get worse. The Sri Lankan Government cannot watch passively and allow developmen­ts to take their course. Its foreign policy must reach out, as never before, to the closest hot-spot to Sri Lanka.

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