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: Sri
Lanka
Sri Lankan government negotiates with JVP ally on program
for all-out war
By K. Ratnayake
28 August 2006
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Amid open fighting between the military and the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) over the past month, Sri Lankan President
Mahinda Rajapakse has been actively negotiating for the Janatha
Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) to join his ruling coalition. While a
deal is yet to be struck, the fact that discussions are proceeding
is one more clear sign that the government is preparing for all-out
war against the LTTE and a savage assault on the democratic rights
and living standards of working people.
The JVP, which is based on a mixture of Sinhala chauvinism
and populist demagogy, supported Rajapakse during last Novembers
presidential election. The backing of its 39 parliamentarians
has been crucial for the survival of the United Peoples
Freedom Alliance (UPFA) government. The JVPs price for its
support was a more aggressive stance against the LTTEthe
revision of the 2002 ceasefire agreement, the bolstering of the
military and a distancing from the so-called international peace
process.
During the current discussions, the JVP has proposed a 20-point
common program with Rajapakses Sri Lankan Freedom
Party (SLFP) as the basis for joining the ruling coalition. The
common program amounts to the complete repudiation of the peace
process and an open declaration of war to destroy the LTTE
militarily. Key points include:
* The immediate scrapping of the 2002 ceasefire as soon as
the common program is signed. The JVP has been bitterly critical
of the truce since it was agreed for granting too many concessions
to the LTTE and has constantly sought to undermine it.
* The dismissal of Norway as the formal facilitator of the
peace process within a week of signing. The JVP has repeatedly
accused the Norwegian facilitators and the Scandinavian-led Sri
Lankan Monitoring Mission (SLMM), which currently oversees the
ceasefire, of LTTE bias.
* Immediate steps to impose government rule over areas that
are presently under LTTE control, if necessary through the deployment
of the armed forces.
* The de-merger of the north-east province into two separate
provinces, which were combined in 1987 under the Indo-Lanka Accordthe
first attempt at a negotiated peace deal. Following the 2002 ceasefire,
the LTTE renounced its demand for a separate statelet of Tamil
Eelam in return for negotiations on a significant devolution of
powers to the north-east province within a federated Sri Lanka.
The de-merger would effectively destroy the basis for further
peace negotiations.
The JVPs proposal for talks with the LTTE fails to address
any of the grievances of the countrys Tamil minority. It
simply denies that there has been any discrimination or that this
was the reason for the outbreak of war. JVP leader Somawansa Amarasinghe
told the press last month that there was not a communal problem,
only a terrorist problem. Its plan to solve administrative
problems among Tamils, Muslims and Sinhalese is for very
limited decentralisation up to the village levela proposal
that the JVP knows is completely unacceptable to the LTTE.
Rajapakse has since November been implementing significant
aspects of the JVPs program. For months, the army and its
allied paramilitaries waged a covert war in the North and East
aimed at undermining the LTTE and provoking retaliation. The government
has accused Norway and the SLMM monitors of bias and at talks
in Geneva in February called for the revision of the 2002 ceasefire,
leading to a virtual collapse of negotiations.
On July 26, the president ordered a major offensive to capture
the Mavilaru irrigation sluice gate in LTTE territory on the pretext
of providing water to farmers downstream. The operation in open
breach of the 2002 ceasefire agreement rapidly provoked fighting
in other parts of the East and North of the island. The military
seized the opportunity to launch air raids on key LTTE positions
and installations.
The JVP has collaborated closely in the war with the government
providing JVP parliamentary leader Wimal Weerawansa with helicopter
transport to tour the war zones in the North and East. He visited
several military camps and villages seeking to whip up support
for the war among troops and Sinhalese villagers.
Rajapakse has, however, been reluctant to openly embrace the
JVPs program. Talks on the JVP entering the government have
dragged out since early July. Last week the president responded
to the JVPs demands by saying that the government would
not be rushed to abrogate the ceasefire or dismiss
Norway as formal facilitator. As for the de-merger of the North
and East, he pointed out that the JVP had filed a case in the
Supreme Court over the issue and thus it is a matter for
the courts to decide.
Rajapakse wants to keep the JVP on side. The SLFP, which is
also mired in Sinhala chauvinism, is susceptible to criticism
that it is not taking a tough stance against the LTTE. At the
same time, the government is hesitant to openly declare war on
the LTTE. Rajapakse has continued to posture as a man of peace
in order to maintain the support both of the major powers and
within the country. Despite the lack of an antiwar movement, the
majority of the population is fearful of, and hostile to, the
return to a civil war that has already cost more than 65,000 lives
over the past two decades.
Social unrest
As well as its support for the war, Rajapakse also wants the
JVPs backing for the suppression of popular opposition to
the countrys social crisis. There is growing unrest among
workers, as well as the urban and rural poor, over the privatisation,
the loss of jobs and increasing prices. The rising costs of the
war will inevitably fall heavily on working people, raising the
prospect of a social eruption. The government is seeking to use
the JVPs influence, particularly among the rural poor, to
block such a movement.
The JVP, which had its origins in a guerrilla movement in the
1960s, still occasionally postures as socialist and
demagogically denounces imperialist interference.
The preamble to its 20-point program calls for a fight against
foreign enemies and their local collaborators. It
opposes the peace process because it gives the LTTE
equal status to the government and denounces Norway for dictating
terms to a sovereign country and treating it as a colony. While
condemning Norway, the JVP remains silent on the criminal activities
of US imperialism in Afghanistan and Iraq, as the Bush administration
is tacitly supporting the war against the LTTE.
The most significant aspect of JVPs program is its explicit
call for all social issues to be subordinated to the war against
the LTTE. It calls for industrial peace between employers
and employees in order to realise the aim of defeating terrorism.
JVP leaders have already opposed a number of strikes as part of
their chauvinist campaign to defend the motherland.
In an interview on August 20, JVP parliamentary leader Wimal
Weerawansa told Lakbima: Today the central issue of our
country is this terrorist question. Because of that a large number
of secondary problems have been concealed... We admit the people
are under severe burden because of the increasing cost of living
in the country ... However, surpassing all these problems, the
terrorist problem has come to the fore.
Appealing to big business, Weerawansa argued that the war would
not deter foreign investors. [I]f the global investors can
see that the government is working on a tough stand to implement
law and order that will also be one reason to encourage investors,
he declared.
The JVPs opposition to the strike action by workers is
part and parcel of its broader attacks on democratic rights. In
the name of defending the motherland, the JVP has supported tough
media censorship and has campaigned against anyone who criticises
or opposes the war as a traitor.
Rajapakse is seeking deals, not just with the JVP, but with
other political parties in order to shore up the shaky ruling
coalition. Last week the Ceylon Workers Congress and the Upcountry
Peoples Front, which are based among Tamil speaking plantation
workers, joined the government, giving it a parliamentary majority.
The president has made an appeal to the United National Party
(UNP), the largest opposition party, for a national unity government.
However, whether it finally joins the cabinet or not, the JVP
will continue to have a major hand in setting the governments
agenda, as it has done over the past ten months.
See Also:
WSWS speaks to families of soldiers killed
in Sri Lanka's war
[25 August 2006]
Despite president's denials, Sri Lankan
military continues offensive war
[23 August 2006]
War in Sri Lanka creates a flood of refugees
[21 August 2006]
Sri Lankan president demands media toes
the line on the war
[19 August 2006]
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