'Terrorism does not pay'- Mangala Samaraweera tells Spiegel

Mangala Samaraweera
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With new parties entering into the conflict, the Tamil Tigers
unwilling to negotiate and the European Union's decision to list the Sri
Lankan separatist fighters as a terrorist group, prospects are worse
than ever for a peaceful resolution to the long-simmering war on the
southasian island nation. In an exclusive interview with SPIEGEL, Sri
Lankan Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera discusses the latest
developments.
He welcomes the European Union's decision to place the separatist
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) on its list of international
terrorist organisation and reaffirms his government's commitment to
peace talks and a 2002 ceasefire. Samaraweera also concedes that LTTE
isn't the only separatist force today and that newer armed players have
created a third front in the conflict, further complicating efforts to
stake out a peace agreement. Since the separatist war in the north and
northeastern part of Sri Lanka, more than 65,000 people have been
killed.
Since talks broke down in February, 650 people have been killed in
the worst rush of violence since 2002.
SPIEGEL: Peace talks between the Sri Lankan government and the
separatist LTTE, mediated by Norway since 2002, remain stalled. Violence
is the order of the day in the island-state and Scandinavia monitors
warn that the ceasefire agreement has deteriorated to the point that
it's little more than a "piece of paper." Even as the world continues to
urge LTTE to return to peace talks, the EU last week listed LTTE as a
terrorist organisation. Was Brussels off in its timing?
Samaraweera: Not at all. LTTE is already proscribed in the United
States, Britain, India and Australia - the EU should have done it
earlier. LTTE has been escalating violence even before the EU ban, so we
see the listing as a 'negative incentive' for the LTTE to lay down their
guns and start talking again. (LTTE's) lifeline - the worldwide largest
expatriate Tamil diaspora of Europe - has been cut off. Curtailing their
funds will lead to a reduction of their violent activities and show them
that terrorism does not pay.
SPIEGEL:For more than two decades, Europe sheltered Tamil refugees in
the name of human rights. In doing so, however, the EU also turned a
blind eye to money transfers made by the Tamils living here to the
militant LTTE back home. But now, in the name of the international war
on terror, the EU has declared LTTE to be a terrorist organisation.
That completes the international isolation of the Tamil Tigers, and
observers say they can only return to war. Indeed, the Tigers are now
demanding the departure of all EU-members participating in the
Scandinavian monitoring mission, which would leave only the Norwegians
and Finns.
Samaraweera: There is no magic wand to wish away LTTE terror.
Their funding may not totally dry up, but the EU ban will certainly
make things more difficult. But at least there won't be an open European
checkbook now. We have to realize the sad truth: members of the LTTE do
not want a negotiated settlement for the Tamil people at all, they are
fighting only for their own survival.
SPIEGEL:But like Colombo, the Tigers did come to the negotiating
table in 2002 and both sides did adhere to the Ceasefire Agreement (CFA)
for four long years, give or take the many undeniable violations on
either side. Why would the LTTE have come so far if they weren't
serious?
Samaraweera: After two decades of civil war during which more than
65,000 people were killed, the CFA certainly reduced the violence. But
most importantly, it gave the LTTE the cloak of political respectability
which they yearned for but had lacked for years.
But that's precisely why the CFA is at the center of our problems
today. The LTTE is now claiming all kinds of things like air and sea
rights, which the CFA did not envisage for it at all.
SPIEGEL:Both sides signed the CFA. In the interim, there is a large
and strong breakaway faction under former Tiger commander Karuna that
now controls eastern Sri Lanka. Its battle against LTTE has opened up a
third front in the conflict.
LTTE claims, and Scandinavian monitors have confirmed, that your army
not only provides protection for Karuna's faction, but that it also
serves as your own paramilitaries.
Samaraweera: This talk of paramilitaries is a smoke screen. When
Karuna broke away from LTTE, both the Norwegian mediators and the Tigers
told us not to interfere in what was the latter's "internal problem."
I guess they thought they could deal with him as with all dissenters
and bump him off. Now they find he's too powerful - and they want us to
disarm him. To us, Karuna is a part of LTTE, he's no different.
He has not renounced violence either, so Karuna is very much a
terrorist, too.
SPIEGEL:Then why is he not on your most wanted list? How has it been
possible for him to survive for so long, without the help and connivance
of the Sri Lankan government and army?
Samaraweera: He is, just as much as LTTE chief Velupillai Prabhakaran
has been for 35 years. Still, we're talking to Prabhakaran, aren't we?
Even so, we could talk to Karuna as well, provided he is willing to lay
down his arms.
SPIEGEL:But it's not just Karuna. Anti-LTTE armed factions of some
Tamil political parties in your parliament in Colombo are reportedly
also on the rampage. Many of these armed fighters earlier trained under
LTTE. Yet, you blame almost all CFA violations and terror attacks on
LTTE.
Samaraweera: Our intelligence tells us that most new armed groups
slugging it out with the LTTE are dissidents of the Tigers themselves.
Frankly, we still don't know conclusively who killed my predecessor,
Lakshman Kadirgamar, last year. In February when we last met with LTTE
for talks, they gave us a list of "paramilitary" camps.
Most were located in areas under LTTE control, where it is very
difficult for our government to carry out investigations.
The ones allegedly in "our" areas turned out to be regional offices
of two Tamil parliamentary parties - the Eeelam People's Democratic
Party (EPDP) and the Eeelam People's Revolutionary Liberation Front (EPRLF).
SPIEGEL:Both parties sit with you in Parliament in Colombo. Did you
confront them with the LTTE report of their alleged armed factions?
Samaraweera: Certainly. But what do we have on hand to prove they
were behind any of the recent spate of violence since February - which
continues every day, even as we speak? For instance, one of our top army
generals was seriously injured by a female suicide bomber. Who else but
the LTTE would use them?
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