“We must develop not only Colombo, but other districts too”
In a rare, wide-ranging interview, President
Rajapaksa talked with Time magazine’s Jyoti Thottam in Colombo last
week.
The following are the excerpts of his
interview with the Time magazine.
Prabhakaran had become practically a mythical figure in Sri Lanka.
What went through your mind when you heard he had been killed?
Thank the Lord. Thank the (Buddhist) Triple Gem. That was a gift.
How did he die?
We know that he was shot - that’s all. I was not interested in
finding out how he was shot, but whoever that was deserved some credit.
The most important thing is that he’s no more. I would have preferred to
bring him here and have a chat with him. I have never seen this man.
What would you have asked him?
Why he did all these mad things. (Laughs) What else can I ask him?
You came under fairly intense pressure from the US and European
governments to call a ceasefire during the final offensives against the
Tigers. You resisted that pressure, and yet these are some of your
biggest trading partners. Are you worried about jeopardizing those
relationships?
I don’t think they’re so petty-minded. They’re the people who
encouraged us to defeat terrorism. We followed what (George W.) Bush
said. We accomplished what he wanted: eliminate terrorism. They must
give credit to us. We fought their war. We showed that you can defeat
terrorism. Some foreign policy analysts saw the last stage of the war as
a test case for the idea that the international community has the
responsibility to protect civilians caught in a crossfire. It’s my
citizens. I am responsible for them. I have to protect them and get them
out. If I allow some foreign country to come and do that, they would
have killed most of the people. It is my soldiers who will protect my
citizens. They are my people, they are my voters.... The international
community must help the Government if a government is elected properly
by the people.
What if an elected government is acting against its own people?
Are you going to punish (all the) citizens for that or the man who is
responsible? Take me. Say that I violated all these human rights, killed
people, right? Do you punish me, Mahinda Rajapaksa, or the innocent
people of this country by sanctions, embargoes, travel advisories?
There are ways of punishing me if you want. There, now by saying
that, I will get punished. (Laughs).
Many people feel that the way you ended the war sets a dangerous
precedent - that the cost in terms of human rights, in terms of civilian
casualties, was too high?
I reject that totally. There was no violation of human rights. There
were no civilian casualties. If I did that, it wouldn’t have taken 2 1/2
years to finish this. I would have done this in a few hours. These are
all propaganda.
The U.N. stands by its number: 7,000 civilian casualties. Seven
thousand?
No way. In the eastern province, zero casualties. I won’t say there
are zero casualties in the north. The LTTE shot some of them when they
tried to escape.
There is so much that is not known. Would you be willing to have a
Truth and Reconciliation Commission?.
We must find out what has happened. The thing is, if you start
something, I don’t want to dig into the past.
Many people feel that’s exactly what Sri Lanka needs, to talk about
what happened in the past. There must be a way, that it must not be felt
that they will be punished again. Then you will have the north and the
south fighting each other again; you can’t have that again. I don’t want
to dig into the past and open up this wound.
Sometimes a wound needs airing to heal.
That is where the West is different from the East.
What is your priority now?
Over 300,000 people are in the IDP (internally-displaced persons,
camps. The whole area is mined. We must de-mine the whole area, give
basic facilities, water, electricity, roads, resettle them.
What is your time frame?
We have a 180-day program. That is our plan. In 180 days, we want to
settle most of these people.
What would you like to accomplish before the next presidential
election (which could be held as early as November)?
At least 50 percent must be released. I would say 60 percent.
Is that a promise?
It’s not a promise, It’s a target.
There is a sense of relief in the country now that the war is over,
but there is also some anxiety among Tamils over what happens next?
If you ask the IDPs, they’ll say. We want to go back to our villages.
If you ask politicians, they’ll say, we want this and that. But yes, we
need to give a political solution.
Do you believe in some kind of self-governance for the Tamils?
Don’t say Tamils. In this country, you can’t give separate areas on
an ethnic basis, you can’t have this. With the provinces, certainly
there must be powers, where local matters can be handled by them.
What if the people in the North want a model of governance that’s
somewhat different from the rest of the country?
That I will not allow. The whole country must have a system. You
can’t have one system for the North and one for the east.
There are already signs of development - new roads, new bridges - but
I’ve also heard some concern that the roads, for example, instead of
connecting Tamil-majority areas to one another, are connecting the East
to the South, making it easier for people from the south to do business
there, to move there.
Is there some kind of effort to change the demography of the
Tamil-majority areas?
No, but it’s happening in Colombo. The Eastern-province Muslims have
come here. The Tamils have come here. You ask them, Why are you coming
here? Can I stop them? No, If anybody wants to come and live in any part
of the island, it is the right of a man.
The port project at Hambantota - that’s massive new Chinese project.
It’s a Sri Lankan project?
China helped us. It’s commercial loan. Hambantota is my area, and it
had been neglected for so many year. It’s my duty, my obligation to
develop that area. We must develop not only Colombo, but other districts
too.
What do you think China’s strategic interest is in this port?
I asked for it. China didn’t propose it. It was not a Chinese
proposal. The proposal was from us: they gave money. If India said, Yes,
we’ll give you a port, I will gladly accept. If America says, We will
give a fully equipped airport - yes, why not? Unfortunately, they are
not offering to us.
Is China becoming more important than India as Sri Lanka’s ally?
I don’t see that. We are not thinking like that. India is our
neighbour, our relation, our friend - we have a special relationship.
For a small country like us, for development, you need money, you need
assistance. In this world, who can afford to give us money?
We can go to China. We can go to Russia or Brazil. Very few countries
can afford to give. Japan is helping us a lot. Our biggest development
partner is Japan. India is helping us.
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