A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, May 30, 2016
Core problem is Tamil Nadu – Solution is democracy

Izeth Hussain-May 27, 2016, 8:00 pm
I don’t think that it can be seriously contested that we don’t have a
purely indigenous Tamil ethnic problem. If not for the Tamil Nadu
factor, the rest of the world – including India – would simply regard
the Tamils as a defeated people who have to secure their legitimate
interests in the best way they can. The international community will
take note of them only if they are the victims of horrendous human
rights violations or for some other very special reasons. On the other
hand, the Tamils in Tamil Nadu have special reasons to empathize with
the Sri Lanka Tamils because of commonality of race, language, religion,
and culture. Consequently it makes sense to say that the core problem
is the Tamil Nadu factor.
It is important to bear in mind that Chennai and Delhi are not identical
because the latter can be expected to be far more flexible in
negotiations over the Tamil ethnic problem. Delhi will also have its own
priorities which could conduce to accommodativeness towards Sri Lanka’s
interests. I have noted earlier that India wants permanent membership
of the Security Council and obviously wants to emerge as more than a
regional power. Towards that end, it must show that it is not an
overbearing bully towards a small neighbour, not a power with a
neo-imperialist hegemonic drive. So there are sound reasons to believe
that Delhi would really want to help solve the Tamil ethnic problem in a
definitive enduring manner. But it cannot do so just by coming to terms
with Colombo, over-riding the wishes of Chennai.
So the core problem behind the so-called Tamil ethnic problem is the
Tamil Nadu factor. What is the solution? I believe that a solution can
be found only through democracy, not through devolution on which our
Tamils insist. I have already written more than one article arguing that
it is wrong to make a shibboleth of devolution, regarding it as the one
essential without which there can never be a solution of the ethnic
problem. Here I will emphasize just one point, the point of crucial
importance: many Sinhalese, probably the majority of them, have the
conviction that a wide measure of devolution – on which the Tamils
insist fanatically - will lead ineluctably to Eelam. There are strong
arguments against that presupposition, but the Sinhalese will never be
convinced by them. There are two things that we must bear in mind, one
of which is that none of us can be quite sure about what might transpire
in the future. The other is that we did come close to a final and
definitive break up. That was avoided by the closure of the Marvil Aru
anicut which compelled the then Government to go all out for a military
victory over the LTTE.
According to the argument that I have developed above the core behind
our Tamil ethnic problem is the Tamil Nadu factor, and the solution to
that problem has to be through democracy, not devolution. That argument
leads to certain questions about the New World Order that has been
shaping up for some time. It is a world in which there will be several
power centers replacing the US/Soviet duopoly and the US mono-polar
world that is supposed to prevail today. Several powers, including
India, will have the responsibility of keeping the world in order. But
the problem is that the New World Order can easily slide into the New
Imperialism. In a multi-polar world some regional powers will be seen as
having special responsibilities towards countries in an area around it –
in other words its "sphere of influence". We can come to witness
something like a transition, or rather retrogression, of the new world
order into a new imperialism that remarkably resembles the old
imperialism with its spheres of influence and balance of power and all
that. It might be true to say that the new world order is the new
imperialism is the old imperialism.
Now let us try to fit the Tamil ethnic problem into the international
context that I have outlined in the preceding paragraph. We have to try
to solve the problem through democracy because devolution – as I have
argued earlier – will almost certainly compound the problem and become a
force countervailing the advance towards a democratic solution. It has
to be a fully functioning democracy with adequate safeguards for the
legitimate interests of the minorities as in the West. Is there any
reason why we shouldn’t be able to attain that? We did have a fully
functioning democracy for most of the time from 1948 to 1977, and we are
well on the way to attaining it once again. We indisputably had fair
and equal treatment for the minorities from 1948 to 1956. India and
several other Afro-Asian countries are practicing democracy and are
giving reasonably fair and equal treatment to the minorities. A
noteworthy fact is that Tamil expatriates are quite content to live in
the democracies of the West and elsewhere without any devolution at all.
Why not here?
The answer to that question given by our Tamils is that they are not
just any minority but a national minority, which therefore has a right
of self-determination inclusive of a right to set up a separate state.
What satisfies them abroad will not satisfy them here. In Sri Lanka they
have to struggle for Eelam or as close an approximation to it as might
be possible. But they are unable to achieve anything like that on their
own, and the international community – as I have argued earlier – does
not recognize the right of self-determination outside the now defunct
colonial context. From where, then, do our Tamils get their power to
keep demanding much more than a democratic solution to their problem?
That power derives only from the fact that there are sixty million
Tamils in Tamil Nadu, and those sixty million have the power to make the
Government in Delhi heed the wishes of the Tamils. Let us be clear
about what is at issue here. It is not the right of the Tamils to fair
and equal treatment, which can be met through democracy as in the West.
What is at issue is Tamil power and nothing else.
I have consistently held, over the decades, that India has never been
imperialist towards Sri Lanka. It bungled badly over the ethnic problem
but that was well-intentioned bungling, behind which there was no
imperialist drive. My diplomatic interaction with many Indians over a
period of three and a half decades makes me believe that the alleged
vice-regal airs of Dixit were an aberration. But at present, in the
multi -polar world that is taking shape, it can well slide into
neo-imperialism without realizing it. Its backing for the absurd Tamil
insistence on a solution through wide measures of devolution can be seen
as amounting to neo-imperialist bullying of a small neighbour. The
option for Sri Lanka is very clear. It is to go all out for a fully
functioning democracy with safeguards for the minorities as in the West.
Alternatively, if the international community sees it as having an
obsessive racist drive to treat the minorities as inferior, no one can
be quite sure what might happen in the future. It could be a de facto or
even a de jure Eelam.
izethhussain@gmail.com
