Peace
Takes a Back Seat as Talks Deadlocked
Amantha Perera
KILINOCHCHI, Sri Lanka, Sep 24 (IPS) - There are slim hopes
that the Sri Lankan government and rebel Tamil Tigers would
restart peace talks soon after four people including a top
renegade Tiger fighter were shot dead in growing factional
fighting in the country.
The killings on Thursday came days after Norwegian special
envoy Erik Solheim expressed his own frustrations at the on-the-ground
reality between the two sides.
''Even if Jesus Christ or Buddha came they will not be able
to do this easily,'' Solheim told reporters last weekend soon
after meeting the Tigers' political head S. P. Tamilselvan
at the rebels' Peace Secretariat in this northern Sri Lankan
city.
Solheim said that the Norwegians did not expect any breakthrough
in the near future. ''Some people think that the Norwegian
facilitators are some kind of demi-gods or magicians. I can
tell you it will not happen. It will not be finished in one
visit,'' he said.
About 64,000 people have died in the war in Sri Lanka. Fighting
has been on hold since Norway brokered a truce in February
2002, but many are worried that the current crisis could put
the ceasefire under strain.
In April 2002, the Tamil Tigers pulled out claiming they
were being sidelined. Later they wanted to discuss proposals
for an interim government in the north --which the government
of former Prime Minister Ranil Wickramasinghe was unwilling
to do. And neither has the proposal received a concrete response
from the present government.
On Thursday, the main unit of the Tamil Tigers ambushed and
killed a rebel known as Reggie and two of his close aides
in rebel-held eastern Sri Lanka, the 'Tamilnet' website said.
According to police, suspected Tiger gunmen also killed a
rival political activist in the capital Colombo.
Reggie was the deputy and brother of breakaway Tiger leader
V. Muralitharan, better known as Karuna.
The Tigers accuse Karuna of siding with the Sri Lankan army
and waging what they call a proxy war against them. But the
government and the army have strenuously denied any involvement
with the rebel defector.
In the meantime, Norwegian envoy Solheim met with President
Chandrika Kumaratunga in an attempt to shift attention from
the deadlock to gains achieved from the 2002 ceasefire.
''Everyone should appreciate the enormous benefit of this
no war-no peace situation. If war had been here, maybe 10,000
or 20,000 people would have been killed,'' he said.
The benefits have undoubtedly been immense. At the Kilinochchi
Central College the student population has increased more
than hundred percent since the ceasefire -- from 662 in 2001
to 1,585 this year.
''Children are now eager to come to school,'' the college's
principal P. Muttaiah told IPS.
Banks operating in Tiger held areas are also doing good business.
''Since the ceasefire the customer base has grown by a large
number,'' said Vivekanandan Jananadan, the Kilinochchi branch
manger of the Tiger controlled Bank of Tamileelam.
The branch serves more than 10,000 customers. Three banks
under the Sri Lankan government, too, operate in the town
and boast of a similar customer base. One of them, the National
Savings Bank has an allocation of 170,000 U.S. dollars for
loans to businesses.
At the Kilinochchi vegetable market, vendors said that business
has never been this stable before.
''Business is good here, we don't have big problems. It will
be good if it stays this way,'' K. G. Hemalatha told IPS.
She and her husband are the only Sinhalese doing business
in Kilinochchi's main market. This northern city is predominately
Tamil, though Sinhalese make up about 70 percent of the island's
19.2 million population.
Most of vendors at Kilinochchi market said that despite transport
costs and taxes levied by the Tigers, business was stable
as supplies were getting there without disruptions. ”We
have no plans of leaving this place if things remain this
way,” said Hemalatha's husband, Raju.
While the talks might be deadlocked, development work, however,
is continuing in this northern city. A new water tower is
being built right next to the one destroyed during the war.
The A9 highway that links the northern Jaffna Peninsula with
the rest of the country is paved and well maintained, a far
cry from the pothole ridden dirt track that was open to the
public in 2002 just after the ceasefire.
But fears of a resumption of hostilities still persist among
Kilinochchi residents.
''No body is going to live forever, not even (Velupillai)
Prabhakaran (Tamil Tiger leader) or the president,'' said
Shamnugam Sivasa, a coconut seller.
''While this struggle is for land, the sons of innocent men
and women are dying,'' he lamented.
Until the ceasefire was declared, the Tigers had been fighting
for a separate state for Tamils in Sri Lanka's north and east.
They argued that theTamils have been discriminated against
by successive majority Sinhalese governments.
But, as peace talks progressed, the Tigers dropped their
demand for independence and said they would settle for regional
autonomy - a major concession.
A resumption of hostilities would roll back whatever that
has been achieved during the almost three years of peace.
''If war breaks out all this would be lost,'' Kilinochchi
Central College principal Muttaiah said.
In areas under its control, the Tigers definitely have the
support to revert to armed hostilities.
''You have to understand that even if we don't agree with
all the policies of the Tamil Tigers, they are fighting for
us. We have to be given what was denied to us in the past,''
said P Kandasamy, a retired civil servant.
Tamil Tiger political chief Tamilselvan, himself, stopped
short of giving an all out guarantee on peace last week.
Remarking that the peace process has reached a crisis situation,
he told IPS, ”We are adopting patience and the Tamil
people are adopting patience, but of course there is a time
limit.''
''We will not stipulate on time frames, we will only say
that the people are the judges. At the time when the people
lose their patience, the act of the Tigers will become inevitable”.
(END/2004) |