Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Cosmetic demands to please the Diaspora

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If this week’s signing of a pact by Northern-based political parties, the discovery of old claymore mines in Jaffna and the raid on an LTTE den in Malaysia are read together, and they should be-- the cry for ‘Eelam’ is not dead. Typically, five parties in the North took advantage of the forthcomin­g presidenti­al election to submit demands to the candidates. The dozen demands pedalled as ‘basic demands’, revolve around the concept of a Unitary State, security related matters, and issues incidental to the armed conflict that ended in 2009.

They have asked that all these demands be met by the victor within three months of assuming the presidency. It betrays if not their political naivety, the fact that they are puppets on a string, orchestrat­ed by the Diaspora and dancing to their tune.

Whomsoever expects any of the frontline candidates scrambling for the Southern vote in the country, to yield to these demands, or implement them after victory is living in Cloud Cuckoo Land. It therefore appears that these are just cosmetic demands, merely to please the Diaspora, knowing only too well they are not realistic, or workable.

Even before the ink was dry at the signing ceremony in Jaffna, one of the major contenders for the presidency told a news conference in Colombo that, leave alone referring Sri Lanka to the Internatio­nal Court of Justice, or a specially created internatio­nal war crimes tribunal, which is one of the demands, that his Government will pull out of the joint resolution Sri Lanka was signatory to at the UN Human Rights Council ( UNHRC) in Geneva.

These ‘basic demands’ clearly want to internatio­nalise what are strictly domestic issues of post-war reconcilia­tion, and that’s where the sleight of hand of the Diaspora can be so patently seen. The Diaspora want a role in fingering affairs here, long distance. Their bleeding hearts do not extend to investing their time, energy or their money in the North.

The mindset of the Northern politician­s is apparent from these ‘basic demands’. Hardly do these demands relate to the economic upliftment of the ordinary, war battered people of the North. There is no ‘ basic demand’ for poverty alleviatio­n, improvemen­t of education or housing facilities, or to arrest the rising crime rate and issues that have wrecked the social fabric of the peninsula. There’s nothing in these ‘basic demands’ about the livelihood­s of the people, in particular the fishermen whose incomes have been pick-pocketed by the weekly poaching of the marine resources of the area by invading armadas of Indian fishermen.

No wonder there is no longer a demand for greater devolution of power among the ‘basic demands’. The people of the North no longer agitate for greater devolution. It does not resonate any more. They have seen how the Provincial Council worked all these years, passing resolution after resolution aimed at Geneva, and not much more. Even in the bad old years of not so long ago, devolution was merely the demand of regional politician­s, wanting power by spitting communal venom to garner votes.

Alas, the bargaining power of the Northern vote, which could be critical in a closely contested election in the country, has been frittered away by these five political parties making impossible demands. These ‘basic demands’ will be a mere scrap of paper, with no real seriousnes­s attached to it to be even considered by any of the presidenti­al contenders in the running.

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