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Lanka
Sri Lankan government plans sham local elections in eastern
Batticaloa
By Sarath Kumara
22 February 2008
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The Sri Lankan government has scheduled local council elections
for March 10 in the Batticaloa district in the war-ravaged eastern
province. The planned polls have nothing to do with resuming civilian
control. They are a PR exercise to dress up the military occupation
of the area with a democratic façade. Last year, the Sri
Lankan army captured areas in Batticaloa district which were previously
held by the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).
In Sri Lanka, local councils are elected every six years. They
have minimal powers, under the direction of the central government
and provincial councils. While President Mahinda Rajapakse held
local council elections in early 2006 in other areas, he postponed
them in the north and east, using the draconian Emergency Powers
Act. The flimsy pretext was that the security situation
in these regions was poor because they were under LTTE control.
Rajapakse came to power in November 2005 with the support of
extremist communal parties such as the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna
(JVP) and Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU). Unable to address any of
the myriad social problems and facing a wave of militant struggles
by workers and farmers, Rajapakses ruling coalitionlike
previous governmentsresorted to anti-Tamil communalism to
divert growing political tensions. In July 2006, in violation
of a 2002 ceasefire agreement with the LTTE, he launched military
offensives in the east and then the north, plunging the country
back into war.
During the military campaign in the east, at least 4,000 people
were killed and more than 200,000 displaced, many of them innocent
Tamil civilians. Some 30,000 Tamils and Muslims are still in refugee
camps, while many others are staying with relatives. An extensive
military-police network has been established to control the population,
with Colombo announcing 42 new police stations and several army
camps.
Rajapakse has called local elections now to deflect public
criticism over his governments human rights abuses in the
east and in an attempt to show the major powers, especially India,
that the Sri Lankan government is winning the war. The same consideration
lies behind the presidents recent proposal to hold provincial
council elections in the east. He wants to demonstrate that there
is political stability, in order to attract foreign
investment into the newly established Free Trade Zones in the
east.
Government-backed paramilitary thugs
According to Sir Lankas Election Commissioner (EC) there
are about 270,471 eligible voters in the district. The EC has
promised that even people in refugee camps will have facilities
to cast their votes. Six parties recognised by the EC and 22 local
independent groups are contesting seats in nine local
authorities. Batticaloa district, like other districts in the
east, has an ethnically mixed populationTamils, Muslims
and Sinhala.
Human rights groups have pointed to a notorious paramilitary
group, the Tamil Makkal Viduthalai Pulihal (Tamil Peoples Liberation
Tigers or TMVP), for its role in terrorising residents. Although
the government has registered the TMVP as a political party,
it is actually a group of pro-government armed thugs.
The elections will be dominated by a coalition headed by the
ruling Sri Lankan Freedom Party (SLFP)-led United Peoples Freedom
Alliance (UPFA). Partner in this coalition in the east is the
TMVP. The Eelam Peoples Democratic Party (EPDP), which is a member
of Rajapakses ruling coalition, is contesting the election
separately. This organisation also has a paramilitary wing. The
other party contesting the election is Sri Lankan Muslim Congress
(SLMC).
The alliance between the UPFA and TMVP reveals the completely
anti-democratic character of the elections. Unlike other political
parties, the TMVP had no problem obtaining immediate registration
by the ECwith the governments help. Rajapakse is well
aware that under conditions of war, the masses in the east cannot
be won over through an election without the voters
being intimidated.
It is widely recognised that the TMVP is being used for this
purpose. SLMC general secretary and MP, Hasan Ali, declared that
he had never heard of a ruling party signing a pact with a
paramilitary group carrying arms. He asked how the government
could ensure a free and fair poll under these circumstances.
The TMVP was first set up by Karuna or V. Muralitharan, a former
LTTE military leader in the Amparai-Batticaloa district, who broke
away from the LTTE in 2004. Representing a layer of the Tamil
elite seeking to make a deal with Colombo, he wanted a separate
administrative district for the eastern province. Both the former
UNP government and the current administration of Rajapakse backed
this group in order to weaken the LTTE. While Karuna was ultimately
discredited, the TMVPs new leader, Pillayan or S. Chandrakanthan,
continues as a stooge of the Sri Lankan military.
The international Sri Lankan Monitoring Mission (SLMM), which
oversaw the truce with the LTTE until the government formally
abrogated it in January, as well as other UN and human right groups,
have reported that the TMVP has been carrying arms without any
objections from the military or police. They have accused the
TVMP of killing political opponents as well as carrying out abductions,
ransom-taking and forcible recruiting.
TMVP spokesman Azad Maulana arrogantly told the Daily Mirror
that unless other political parties such as the EPDP were
disarmed, there was no reason for the group to give up its weapons.
His comment only underlined the fact that successive Sri Lankan
governments have used Tamil paramilitary thugs as mercenary forces
to intimidate the masses and attack the LTTE. The EPDP, for example,
has been operating in the north for more than a decade.
The main opposition United National Party (UNP) has refused
to participate in the elections. UNP general secretary Tissa Attanayake
declared there was no climate for free and fair elections.
Far from opposing the war against the Tamil minority, the UNP
was responsible for starting it in 1983. Its primary consideration
in withdrawing from the elections is that it has little chance
of success, given the partnership between the UPA government and
the paramilitary parties.
The pro-LTTE Tamil National Alliance (TNA) has also refused
to stand. Its leader R. Sampanthan declared: [T]he show
is run by armed thugs. He added: [W]e cant push
our supporters to deaths door. Last month the TNA
unsuccessfully sought a Supreme Court writ to halt the elections.
In its court petition, the party pointed to the abduction of
relatives of three of its MPs, allegedly by the TMVP. The TMVP
had warned these MPs not to vote against the governments
budget, and one day after the budget was passed, on December 15,
the relatives were released. Nevertheless, the court has refused
to halt the elections, instead advising the TNA to file cases
on any polling day violence.
Competition between the various pro-Colombo armed gangs has
made the situation in the east even less stable. Initially, the
EPDP tried to align with the TMVP for the election, but the latter
refused the offer. The EPDP has since formed an alliance with
other paramilitary groups, such as the PLOTE (Peoples Liberation
Organisation of Tamil Eelam) and the EPRLF (Eelam Peoples Revolutionary
Liberation Front).
The EPDP has accused the TMVP of attacking one of its supporters,
T. Balendran, on February 6 at Arayampathi in the Batticaloa district.
EPDP coordinator K Arumailingam blamed Batticaloa police for doing
nothing about the complaint. The conflicts among these Tamil groups
demonstrate the utterly bankrupt character of these organisations,
which represent sections of the Tamil elite seeking to collaborate
with Colombo in policing the Tamil masses.
The Rajapakse governments alliance with the TMVP in the
east is aimed at strengthening Colombos grip over the region.
But its repressive methods will not be limited to the east or
the north. Sooner or later, a similar regime will be extended
throughout Sri Lanka in order to suppress mounting opposition
to the war and to declining living standards.
See Also:
Sri Lankan government proposes phony
solution to communal conflict
[15 February 2008]
Communalism and militarism on display
at Sri Lanka's independence day celebrations
[9 February 2008]
Sri Lankan independence: 60 years of
communalism, social decay and war
[4 February 2008]
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