India should be wary of Tamil extremism in Sri Lanka
As Prime Minister
Narendra Modi begins to build a relationship with Sri Lanka's new
leadership, the one thing he needs to be wary of is the extremist Tamil
position in the island nation warns M. R. Narayan Swamy
Modi made history by becoming the first Indian prime minister to
visit Sri Lanka after 1987 when Rajiv Gandhi went to Colombo to sign a
pact to end Tamil separatism, which eventually consumed his life in
1991.
Modi won many hearts by becoming the first Indian leader to visit
Jaffna, the Tamil heartland which is also the hub for the Northern
Provincial Council (NPC) headed by Chief Minister C.V. Wigneswaran.
This is where Modi came across an intransigent Wigneswaran. This is a
critical time for Sri Lanka, which is trying, not successfully though,
to overcome decades of ethnic strife that has split the island
dominantly between the Sinhalese, the majority community and the Tamils.
Close affair
The end of the military conflict in May 2009 led to boisterous
Sinhalese frenzy and a defeated Tamil psyche as the Liberation Tigers of
Tamil Eelam (LTTE) was crushed.
Further strains were introduced when Mahinda Rajapaksa, after losing
the presidential election in January this year, blamed the West and -
specifically - India for his defeat at the hands of Maithripala Sirisena.
The presidential election outcome was itself a close affair, showing
that Rajapaksa still has wide support in Sinhalese areas. Since then, he
has been attracting massive crowds at public meetings.
It was at such a sensitive juncture that the NPC, overseen by
Wigneswaran, passed a resolution in February, just before Sirisena
landed in India on his first trip abroad, accusing successive Sri Lankan
governments of committing 'genocide' against the Tamils.
It went on to say that Tamils have no hope for justice in any Sri
Lankan mechanism, whether conducted by the Rajapaksa or Sirisena or any
regime, and sought international intervention. Needless to say, the move
hugely embarrassed India.
It was also just what Rajapaksa needed to show his Sinhalese
constituency that Sirisena's election had emboldened extremist Tamils.
Demand
If this wan't enough, Wigneswaran, at the Jaffna meeting where he
received Modi, called for talks between the Sri Lankan and Indian
governments and the Northern and Eastern Provincial Councils to resolve
Tamil issues "in an innovative and creative manner".
This is akin to the Hurriyat seeking to involve India, Pakistan and
itself over Jammu and Kashmir. Wigneswaran's demand in Modi's presence
came shortly after the Indian prime minister had met leaders of the
Tamil National Alliance, the party to which the chief minister too
belongs, and called for patience.
It is surprising that Wigneswaran sought to bypass his own party by
demanding direct talks between his Provincial Council, Colombo and New
Delhi. Indeed, after the NPC resolution on 'genocide', friends of India
in Sri Lanka suggested that it would be best if Modi avoided a public
engagement involving Wigneswaran in Colombo or Jaffna.
Jigsaw
The argument was that Wigneswaran seemed to be acting at the behest
of the pro-LTTE Tamil Diaspora in the West and his words and actions
could only show Tamils as extremists - and fuel appropriate Sinhalese
backlash.
This is the last thing that India - and Modi - need now. As India
tries to help join the disjointed Sri Lanka jigsaw, which by itself is
no easy task, it has to be borne in mind that Tamil extremism is
essentially anti-Indian. It has always been so and will always be so.
India must be wary of being seen to be supportive of extremists - of
any kind in Sri Lanka. It is no surprise that Wigneswaran gets the
loudest cheers from Tamils in the West opposed to any reconciliation in
Sri Lanka.
- IANS
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