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What Now?
The
LTTE leadership, at least what is left of it and a few
hundred hardcore cadres, are surrounded by the army in
the “no-fire zone.” This has been the inevitable
scenario for some months now. Any plans Pirapaharan had
of pulling off a miracle and pushing the army back or
delaying the inevitable for long enough to ensure the
international community give him yet another breather,
is no longer an option.
With
anything between 70,000 to 150,000 people held hostage
by the LTTE, the question for the military and the
government is how to complete the stated mission of
annihilating the LTTE without creating a massive
humanitarian catastrophe. The success or failure of that
would have a decisive bearing on the future of this
country.
In the
last two years as the war raged, both the LTTE and the
government have lost a great deal of credibility with
the Western world commonly referred to as the
international community. If the ‘final victory’ comes at
the cost of even greater loss of credibility with the
Western world, the country would pay a huge long term
cost financially but more importantly socially. It took
years of diplomacy through the indefatigable work of
late Foreign Minister Lakshman Kadirgamar to erase the
tarnished image of the country after the 1983 riots and
a series of massacres allegedly by the army in the first
phase of the war. We do not need the label of a
‘pariah’ state again and it is best avoided if the
government handles the situation with finesse and
foresight.
Today
the LTTE has nothing to lose. Whatever
influence/sympathy the LTTE and its supporters in the
Tamil diaspora had in the West was lost many years ago.
The assassination of Kadirgamar and engineering the
defeat of the pro-negotiations candidate — Ranil
Wickremesinghe in the 2005 presidential election — took
care of that. The cynical way the LTTE is using ‘its
brethren’ as a human shield, firing and killing those
trying to escape and the forced recruitment of children
as young as 15 as cannon fodder has done immeasurable
damage to its image. Mass demonstrations organised by
the LTTE’s international network in the Western capitals
are not going to change that. No its long past that
phase.
So, it
is now a game for the government to lose rather than for
the LTTE to win.
The
only way the LTTE can have a respite is for the
government to mishandle the current humanitarian crisis.
President Rajapakse’s regime has many complaints against
the West, some of them genuine. Rajapakse was convinced
that the West especially the EU never accepted his
victory at the presidential elections and was continuing
to undermine his government and helping the UNP’s
efforts to topple it. He may have had some justification
for this belief.
The
government was also miffed to put it lightly that the EU
and the USA were threatening to cut off aid when the
government responded to the LTTE attacks and launched
Eelam War VI. It is
Japan
our biggest aid donor who stood firm and refused to play
ball with the rest of the Co-Chairs. The Co-Chairs
continuing to call for a ceasefire in the face of a
series of military victories and the strong criticism of
government excesses in the field of human rights was
proof as far as the President was concerned that the
real agenda of the West was to save the LTTE.
An
already paranoid government could not understand why the
EU and the USA kept on calling for a cease-fire even
when it was abundantly clear that Pirapaharan had no
interest what-so-ever in a negotiated settlement. Much
more than the others it was the EU which was guilty of
this.
That
is well into the past. The government now needs to look
to the future. There is a golden opportunity for the
government to win over the West and its many critics
within the international human rights organisations. It
is vital that the government handles the issue of how to
wipe out what is left of the LTTE without creating a
humanitarian catastrophe, with sophistication and
humaneness. In this endeavour whatever support, advice
or help that anybody can provide must be accepted.
Norwegian bashing has been a favourite pastime for many
in this country, especially for a major section of the
media. The fact of the matter is that it is only the
Norwegians who can still have a dialogue with the LTTE
leadership.
The
best resolution to the current situation is for the
civilians to be ‘rescued’ unharmed. For this to happen
the LTTE needs to see the inevitability of their
position. Pirapaharan has only one option. That is to
negotiate safe passage for him and a few other leaders
in exchange for releasing the civilians.
The
government in return will have to give a guarantee that
those LTTE cadres who surrender will be treated within
the laws of the country and the noncombatant support
staff rehabilitated. Although as of now it looks akin to
a mission impossible to persuade Pirapaharan to let go
of the human shield it is still worth a throw.
The
stark truth is that if the current situation is
mishandled resulting in a large scale loss of civilian
lives, Sri Lanka can win the war but lose the peace.
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