Rajapakse claims victory against the Tamil Tigers
"THIS BATTLE has reached its bitter end… We have
decided to silence our guns". The dramatic announcement on the website
of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), on Sunday 17 May, seemed
to indicate that the 27-year civil war in Sri Lanka had ended. The LTTE
has suffered a crushing defeat. Once it controlled roughly one third of
the territory of the island, including more than half of its coastline.
With the help of significant defections, such as
that of its eastern commander, Karuna, and with huge backing from China,
as well as India, the Rajapakse government has been able to pursue this
war ruthlessly, ignoring mass protests in London, Canada and elsewhere,
as well as hypocritical bleating from governments abroad.
Before the beginning of this year, the death toll
was over 70,000. Since the final, bloody offensive of the Sri Lankan
army began at the beginning of this year, there are estimates of between
7,000 and 20,000 more dead – mostly civilians trapped in the conflict
zone, many injured and left to die where they lay. For more than a week,
no medical or food aid could reach them. Doctors in the ‘no-fire’ zone
were forced to abandon the only makeshift hospital as it was shelled by
the army, which had declared weeks before that it was stopping the use
of heavy artillery!
Confident of victory, even before confirmation of
the death of LTTE leader, Velupillai Prabhakaran, Sri Lankan president,
Mahinda Rajapakse, announced an end to the war. For him, this meant the
achievement of his avowed aim, at the time of his election in 2005, of
establishing a unitary nation with no autonomy for the minority Tamil
population in the north and east.
For Tamils throughout the island, the celebratory
firecrackers set off in the streets on government orders appeared to
seal their fate as an oppressed, subject nation under a triumphant
Sinhala chauvinist regime. For the hundreds of thousands displaced by
the months of fighting, many now held prisoner in up to 40 government
camps (55,000 of them children), the future holds only hunger, disease,
death, homelessness, poverty and unimaginable misery.
The BBC and other analysts refer to the brutal
manner in which the government has pursued its military victory as
radicalising a new generation of Tamils, both on the island and in the
diaspora, who feel humiliated and angry. Mangala Samaweera, former
member of Rajapakse’s Sri Lanka Freedom Party, and foreign minister in
his government, says: "The carnage… has fostered calls among formerly
moderate Tamils for a separate state. I fear hundreds of Prabhakarans
have been created". Robert Templar of the International Crisis Group
warns: "It’s easy to imagine one of the newly energised generation
stepping in to fill the void".
Whether the Tiger leader was killed by the Sri
Lankan army or took his own life, along with other fighters in the last
bit of jungle they controlled, his death marks only the end of the
present phase of the national conflict in Sri Lanka. Rejoicing Sinhalese
workers, like the driver, WSC Bandula, quoted in The Times (London, 18
May), will be sorely disappointed. "We can look forward to better lives,
better security, a better economy", he believes.
Unfortunately, the highly indebted capitalist
government of Rajapakse cannot assure lasting peace, let alone
prosperity for the workers and poor people of Sri Lanka – Sinhalese as
well as Tamil. The huge task of saving the lives and rebuilding the
homes and livelihoods of the people of the north will require far more
than the $1.9 billion loan being sought from the IMF and at present
blocked by the Obama administration.
The Tamil people must have the chance to choose
freely and fairly their own representatives and to decide how they want
the majority Tamil areas to be run. The United Socialist Party (CWI, Sri
Lanka) has always defended these rights and those of minorities – Muslim
and Sinhala – within those areas. It advocates socialist policies of
public ownership and control of land and industry by workers and poor
people, as the only way to overcome the massive national and economic
problems that burden the struggling working population today. That also
means campaigning to remove the present ruling clique by united trade
union and political struggle.
The rights of Sinhalese as well as Tamils have been
trampled on by the Rajapakse regime in the name of the war against
terror. Sooner or later this near-dictatorship will be exposed for what
it is.
Elizabeth Clarke