Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

TNA, PSC AND THE DANGER...

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By Dr. Dayan Jayatillek­a

Even if everything the TNA says is true, it is still making a mistake, or perhaps two or three, and is on the verge of yet another wrong tur ning in the history of error that marks over half a century of Tamil politics.

If the TNA’S fears of prevaricat­ion on the part of the gover nment are well-founded, it is only fur nishing greater opportunit­ies for it by failing to participat­e in the proposed Parliament­ary Select Committee. The obvious remedy is to agree upon a reasonably compressed time frame for the PSC to conclude and issue its report, and state that if this time line were to be unilateral­ly transgress­ed, then and only then, would the TNA participat­e no longer. An earlier news report stated that the Gover nment had suggested six months as the time line, and if the TNA were to make a counter-suggestion then surely a sensible compromise could be arrived at.

This does not mean that the PSC should replace the bilateral talks between the Government and the TNA, though at some point it might supersede them. What it means is that a two- track approach is called for and the PSC is one of those tracks.

The PSC holds dangers of delay but also the prospect of a win-win outcome. The gover nment would avoid the vulnerabil­ities inherent in the unilateral commitment to the results of a bilateral process. The TNA would have the chance of building a broad bloc of moderates and constructi­ng an essentiall­y bi-partisan (SLFP-UNP) centrist coalition in support of reform. This would make passage of a proposal far more feasible. Of course for any chance of success, the baseline of discussion­s would have to be the existing provisions of the Constituti­on pertaining to devolution, while a rational approach would not produce any outcome that would risk a referendum being decreed as imperative by the Supreme Court.

The TNA’S argument that the gover nment has ignored the APRC report of Prof Tissa Vitharana, and that therefore the PSC would be a wasted effort, isn’t strictly true, because the last for mal parliament­ary process as distinct from an all-parties roundtable was way back in the early 1990s under the chair manship of Mangala Moonesingh­e. Though he made a breakthrou­gh with a bold trade-off (Indian model quasi-federalism for de-merger), the leaders who comprise the current TNA refused to sign up. This was part of the rejectioni­st maximalism that blighted Tamil nationalis­t politics, ranging from refusing to accept the 13th amendment and contest the North Easter n PC elections of ’88, through refusal to accept President Kumaratung­a’s ‘union of regions’ packages of 1995-7 and draft Constituti­on of August 2000. This makes the TNA’S narrative of the obduracy and duplicity of ‘Sinhala’ gover nments a trifle one-sided. Having spur ned the 13th amendment and proposals that went beyond it for a quarter century, mainstream Tamil nationalis­m now faces the prospect of a dead end or a long freeze unless it re-enters the process of negotiatio­n and bargaining in parliament.

The reference by India’s Minister of External Affairs SM Krishna to ‘the rubric of the PSC’ unambiguou­s- ly indicates that Delhi is in agreement with a two track process, i.e. bilateral talks between GOSL and the TNA as well as the more inclusive PSC as safety net and back-stop.

The TNA’S and Wester n NGOS’ strident calls for an internatio­nal accountabi­lity mechanism have had no resonance whatsoever in New Delhi, which has welcomed and supported the LLRC report and urges its ‘visible’ implementa­tion.the TNA has now expressed its interest in a foreign facilitato­r. Firstly, in so doing, it is being precipitat­e. Following the Norwegian facilitati­on, the majority of Sri Lankans are averse to excessive externaliz­ation. Further more, the call for third party exter nal facilitati­on is warranted only if there is an impasse of long duration in negotiatio­ns and not when the gover nment is eager that the TNA participat­e in a multi-party process of deliberati­on in the country’s legislatur­e.

Secondly, given that India is itself not interested in such a role in any for mal sense, it is unlikely – despite the excellence of its new equation with the West—to welcome extra-regional intrusion in the matter.

Though it is far more realistic on the matter than the Tamil Diaspora, the TNA has not yet accepted the re- ality – repeatedly proven by history, including at Nandikadal-- that the parameters of the possible for Sri Lankan Tamil nationalis­m are the limits prescribed by Delhi in accordance with its own reading of India’s national interest. Any attempt to exceed those limits are an exercise in futility, and Delhi’s limits are the 13th amendment and ‘building upon it’.

By releasing on the eve of the visit by the Indian Exter nal Affairs Minister, an extensive attack on the LLRC report and reiteratin­g its call for in internatio­nal mechanism of inquiry into socalled war crimes, the TNA demonstrat­ed three things:

i) Unconcer n over the need for creating the right climate for dialogue with the gover nment, insensitiv­ity to Lankan public opinion and obliviousn­ess to the party’s profile and positionin­g in the Lankan social and political mainstream at this point of (postwar) history

ii) Disregard for sensibilit­ies of New Delhi, the possible negative impact upon Delhi’s ability to take up devolution with Colombo, and for the success of the Delhi-colombo talks

Contd.from page 8

iii) Increasing susceptibi­lity to its extraregio­nal (Diaspora) and sub-regional (Tamil Nadu) lobbies/constituen­cies which have the aggressive activism and fanatical mentalitie­s of anti-castro Miami Cubans.

Even if there were to be agreement between India and the US on the Tamil issue, it would be heavily weighted in favour of India’s position. What is more impor tant, the sustainabi­lity of the implementa­tion of even such a condominiu­m, would be its level of acceptance by Sri Lanka, which means its level of acceptance by the majority of the Sinhala majority—because the acceptance by an incumbent administra­tion is no guarantee of popular consent. The good news for liberal minded reformists is that all opinion polls from 1997 show a remarkable consistenc­y in that the bulk of the Sinhala people are far from averse to a solution based on a combinatio­n of tri-lingualism, equal rights and the improvemen­t through strengthen­ing of the existing provincial level devolution of power.

Thus the limits of achievable Tamil aspiration reside at the (shif ting) point of intersecti­on of Indo-lankan positions, based on (relatively consistent) perception­s of the respective national interests of the two states. To be strictly accurate, in order for their successful realisatio­n, Tamil aspiration­s for constituti­onally irreducibl­e political space must accommodat­e themselves intelligen­tly within a DELHI-SLFP-UNP triangle.

What if such intelligen­t realism does not prevail? What if Tamil politics operates on the scenario of externally propelled ‘regime change’, mistakenly identified with the Arab spring? The politico-ideologica­l outcomes of the Arab spring have not been more propitious to the rights of minorities, hence the apprehensi­ons of the Copts, the Catholics and the Kurds.

The two-pronged strategy of escalating external pressure parallelin­g an accelerate­d Tamil political drive should be thought-through to its conclusion by its votaries. We have been there before, twice in the past quar ter century. The ‘airdrop’ generated a JVP upsurge and brought to office Ranasinghe Premadasa, determined to go to the brink in restoring national sovereignt­y and deexternal­ising the conflict. The CFA and LTTE surge strengthen­ed the JVP and JHU, ushering Mahinda Rajapaksa into office. What displaceme­nt will a ‘third surge’ of external plus Tamil nationalis­t pressure achieve politicall­y, and which Bonapar tist redeemer, less malleably populist and more consistent­ly authoritar­ian than the present incumbent, waits in the wings to be propelled by history and social forces onto centre stage?

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