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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, February 26, 2015
Sirisena visit opens new chapter in India-Lanka ties
Wednesday, 25 February 2015
India’s
relations with Sri Lanka, which had been marked by too many points of
friction in recent times, especially in the last phase of the UPA and
the Mahinda Rajapaksa regimes, seems to be on the upswing again. The high-level exchanges -- which would see Prime MinisterNarendra
Modi in Sri Lanka next week close on the heels of Sri Lanka’s new
President Maithripala Sirisena’s four-day visit to Delhi in February –
reflect the urge for a closer, warmer relationship on both sides.
This new chapter that has opened under the new leadership in both
countries holds out hope of better days for the bilateral relationship
if the challenges are faced squarely while seizing the opportunities
that would be mutually beneficial.
To begin with, the enthusiasm for a closer relationship is underscored
by Modi’s visit, which would be the first to the island republic by an
Indian Prime Minister since Rajiv Gandhi travelled to Colombo in 1987.
Significantly, the issues arising out the India-Sri Lanka Peace
Agreement that Rajiv Gandhi signed with the then President JR
Jayawardene remain unresolved to this day. Therein lies the foremost and
biggest challenge to both Sirisena and Modi, for without a
Tamil-Sinhala reconciliation and rehabilitation of the victims of the
prolonged civil war, neither of the leaders can move forward to other
items on the bilateral agenda.
It is perhaps in acknowledgement of this that the Government of India is
keen for Modi to travel to Jaffna in the Tamil-dominated north and
Trincomalee in the east of the island. A visit to Jaffna would be a
first by an Indian Prime Minister, and its significance cannot be
overstated. Such a visit would provide new impetus for reconciliation by
winning the confidence of Tamils on both sides of the Palk Straits and
stress that Colombo has no reservations about India’s show of support
for Sri Lankan Tamils in their own territory. It would be a boost for
Tamils, Tamil-Sinhala reconciliation and India-Sri Lanka relationship.
However, this is not without a catch.
The catch, if Modi goes to Jaffna, is that Colombo would capitalise on
it to blunt the campaign – mounted by Tamils in the Northern Province,
the Tamil diaspora and the Tamil parties in India -- for an
international investigation into the alleged war crimes. The US has
obliged Sri Lanka by ensuring that a damaging UN report on alleged war
crimes is not released now and that there is no resolution to censure
Colombo in the UN Human Rights Council. This means that, unlike during
the time of the UPA, Sirisena no longer needs India as an ally against
the “international community” in this matter. To that extent the
leverage enjoyed by Modi sarkar over the new government in Sri Lanka is
less.
Therefore, this is a visit that Delhi would have to carefully script by
plotting every step just as Sirisena had done by sending his foreign
minister to Delhi on a meticulous planning mission. And, it seems that
India might be doing likewise because External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj would be going on a preparatory mission.
With Sirisena enjoying an exemplary relationship, for now, with the US
and the West, Modi’s visit would be watched for whether he is able to
secure a commitment on implementation of the 13th Amendment to the Sri
Lankan Constitution and devolution of powers. The Tamil issue is the
biggest obstacle to a friction-free relationship. How Modi and Sirisena
seek to resolve the Tamil issue, what framework they agree upon and
their plan for the repatriation of Tamil refugees in India would decide
the direction, depth and warmth of bilateral ties.
The author is an independent political and foreign affairs commentator based in New Delhi