The Sri Lankan experience shows that it is this open and free
trusting society that has been used to destabilise Asia. It is through this
naïve mentality that colonialists were able infiltrate society and impose the
policy of Divide and Rule and rule Asia for two hundred years. It is this
openness that has been used very subtly to infiltrate Asian societies and
destroy the economy, religion, culture, and environment. It is this openness that has been used to
make Asians fight Asians, be it in Sri Lanka, Swat or Kashmir. Asia is a
pluralist society: multi-ethnic, multi-cultural, multi-religious, and is
susceptible to divide-and-rule. It is time Asia learnt from history and
resisted foreigners manipulating the weakness of her society. It needs internal
dialogue, not external infiltration, to achieve harmony within society. To
achieve that, Asia should ban NGOs and foreign missionaries.
India was a large country with an educated growing middle
class which was an economic threat to the west and destabilisation of India was
in its best interest.
They were
waiting for us," The case for Pan-Asia: A lesson
from Sri Lanka – one needs to understand that western policy has always
been western interests, which is economic hegemonism and exploitation. The
threat to this hegemonism was India at the time. Recently Indian government
representatives visited Colombo and offered Rs 500 crore to Sri Lanka without
any condition. The 20-member committee
appointed by Colombo to spend the money has 19 Sinhalese, one Muslim and no
Tamil. India must use the grants and aids as a leverage for the devolution of
power to Tamils. There are Tamil
politicians who are now part of the government and hold ministerial portfolios.
They have suggested to the government that a federal structure needs to be
evolved within a united Sri Lanka. The Tamil-speaking people should have a
substantial say in their own affairs like development, law and order and
irrigation. There are roofless homes
and abandoned street dogs. The Tamil areas in the north and eastern sides of
Sri Lanka are silent and serious. These areas are awaiting normalcy. More than
2,50,000 Tamil refugees live in the so-called rehabilitation camps without
proper food, water, sanitation and medication. The 26-year-old battlefield is
over. Still fear and scare exist. The Lankan government basking in the new
triumph of military victory will have to ensure that their lives do not end in
camps. The real work begins now. The
Government of Sri Lanka needs to work for building a democratic, prosperous,
tolerant and united Sri Lanka. Natural justice and reconciliation are required
on both sides. The government needs to reach out and refrain from giving in to
the temptation of further humiliating the Tamils. More importantly, the Tamil
community needs to be assured that it is not a second-class citizen of the
country. Colombo is expected to evolve
a political solution accepted to all parties. The international community,
especially India, must put pressure on the Lankan government to ensure that the
displaced people are helped in returning to normal life. The Rajapaksa
government has to be responsible for the present and the future of these
internally-displaced persons. Their treatment in the camps and then the process
of rehabilitation should be transparent.
There are Tamil politicians who are now part of the government and hold
ministerial portfolios. They have suggested to the government that a federal
structure needs to be evolved within a united Sri Lanka. The Tamil-speaking
people should have a substantial say in their own affairs like development, law
and order and irrigation. The community’s share in public service, police and
military should be increased. Bold actions are needed to share power and to
reassure a future with respect, dignity and equality. After Prabhakaran’s death, Tamil Tigers may
have extinct but the genuine grievances of the Tamil minority remain to be
addressed. This issue traces its roots way back to 1948 when the British
colonial government handed over the power to the Sinhalese majority at the time
of independence. Tamils suffered
abuses. They were discriminated in education and employment. Thus they were
side-lined by several governments, which sparked political violence in the
1970s and a full-scale war in 1983. Even though Tamils were suffocating and
suffering because of humiliation and ill-treatment, at the same time they did
not support LTTE wholeheartedly. It is clear to Tamils that with suicide
bombings, political assassinations, civilian shields against the army and
forcing innocent Tamils into military cadres, the LTTE cannot provide the
Tamils a credible solution. The Tamils
by and large want to live peacefully. Their presence in Sri Lanka dates back to
times immemorial. The majority of Tamil population are worshippers of Lord
Parameshwara. India and Sri Lanka have relationship from the time of the
Ramayana. The saints of Tamil Nadu described Kedarnath in the Himalayas and
Kedheechara in Sri Lanka as the symbols of cultural unity among Hindus. The
abode of Shiva in Kedarnath near Badrinath is the same as Kedheechara, which is
situated in the heart of Sri Lanka. Kandi and Kadirkama are famous for the
worship of Lord Kartikeya and Mariamman, for Goddess Durga. The people of Sri Lanka were converted to
Buddhism by Prince Mahendra, said to be the son of emperor Ashoka, who had gone
to the island as a Buddhist missionary. Even today people of Orissa and Bihar
have links with the Sinhala community, which constitutes 74 per cent of Sri
Lanka’s total population. The name Sinhala is said to have evolved from a
king’s name “Sinha” which is a Sanskrit word meaning “lion”. In the same way,
the people of Tamil Nadu just across the Palk strait have long-standing and
continuing links with Sri Lanka. Hence, India has to play an effective role to
stem the crisis in the island since the two nations are bonded together by
history, culture and geography. Unfortunately, Government of India has yet not
evolved any well-defined policy. India’s position towards Sri Lanka is not
consistent and transparent. A Tamil can be a Tamil but at the same time a loyal
Sri Lankan. Recently, the Indian
government representatives visited Colombo and offered Rs 500 crore to Sri
Lanka without any condition. The 20-member committee appointed by Colombo to
spend the money has 19 Sinhalese, one Muslim and no Tamil. India must use the
grants and aids as a leverage for the devolution of power to Tamils. United Nations accused Sri Lankan authorities
of blocking access to civilians who have fled from the camps for the displaced
people. The US has asked Colombo to heal the wounds of the Tamils by working
out a new power-sharing arrangement with the Tamils, Sinhalese and all other
Sri Lankans. There is a genuine need for devolution of power to the Tamils
within the united Sri Lanka.
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