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 28, 2012
Sampanthan’s Party Still For Establish A Unitary Tamil State And A Unitary Muslim State
May 27, 2012
By Colombo Telegraph -
The
Ilankai Tamil Arasu Katchi (ITAK), the main constituent of the Tamil
National Alliance — the lone credible representative of Tamil people in
the Northern Province — has refused to revisit its constitution, which
seeks the establishment of a separate state, at its 14th national
convention in the Eastern headquarter town of Batticaloa, The Hindu reports.
The Sixth Amendment to the Sri Lankan Constitution, enacted in August
1983, prohibits political parties from having as one of their aims the
establishment of a separate state. A petition was filed recently in the
Supreme Court that sought the disqualification of the parties for
retaining the demand for a separate state in their party documents.
“No. There was no move to amend the ITAK constitution,” TNA leader and MP M.A. Sumanthiran told The Hindu over
phone. The ITAK has among its goals “establishing of a unitary Tamil
State and a unitary Muslim State and achieving political, economical and
cultural freedom of the Tamil speaking community”.
In short, TNA leader R. Sampanthan’s gesture in Jaffna on May 1 — that
of waving the Sri Lankan national flag for the first time, alongside
United National Party chief Ranil Wickramasinghe — did not translate
into his party endorsing his sentiment. But it reaffirmed its faith in
Mr. Sampanthan by electing him as its president, even as indecision is
steadily leading Tamil politics in Sri Lanka to the brink of
irrelevance. Maavai Senathirajah was elected party general secretary.
In resolutions passed at the Batticaloa meet, the ITAK demanded
devolution of powers to the North and the East, taking it as a single
unit. Asked if the ITAK had demanded re-merger of the Tamil majority
Northern and Eastern Provinces, Mr. Sumanthiran said this was not the
case. “North and East were considered a single unit,” he said,
amplifying the diplomatic semantics, which the TNA loves dearly, at
work.
The ITAK highlighted some of the crucial issues that dominate the
discourse in both the North and the East: it demanded that Sri Lanka
demilitarise both the provinces; that lands grabbed from Tamils be given
back to them; and a general amnesty for Tamils imprisoned for many
years without charges. The ITAK, and other constituents of the TNA, are
the only political parties that have constantly probed issues relating
to rehabilitation and resettlement of Tamils after the war and have
often been on collision course with the government and local
authorities. “If these demands are not granted, we will set a time and
date and launch a non-violent campaign, much like what Mahatma Gandhi
did,” said Mr. Sumanthiran.
CHANGE OF VENUE
The ITAK was forced to change its meeting venue at the last moment after
the earlier venue was suddenly and inexplicably engulfed by fire. One
source in Batticaloa claimed the place was fire-bombed. The meeting was
being held in an area that is at the heart of a turf war between two
former Tamil Tigers — the Eastern Province Chief Minister Sivanesathurai
Santhirakanthan (better known as Pillaiyan, who was once a child
soldier) and Deputy Minister Vinayagamoorthy Muralitharan (better known
as Col. Karuna Amman, who was former Eastern Commander of the Tamil
Tigers).
Pillaiyan’s party, the Tamil Makkal Viduthalai Puligal, was not in
favour of ITAK holding the convention in Batticaloa. Posters had
appeared in parts of Batticaloa against the convention.
The meeting did go ahead, and all elections were held as per the
constitution of ITAK. Among the prominent names, E. Saravanabhavan, MP,
who runs the Uthayan newspaper, was elected secretary (rehabilitation
and resettlement) and Sivagnanam Sreetharan, MP, was elected secretary
(propaganda). As expected, M.A. Sumanthiran MP, was elected secretary
(legal and foreign affairs).