Llewellyn
King
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January 7, 2008
Tamil Tigers Establish
Legitimacy in Sri Lanka’s War Without End
From the time that Ceylon, now known as Sri Lanka, passed into British
control in 1815, it was the place where British civil servants longed to
be posted. The oblong island off the southeast coast of India had
everything that a colonial administrator wanted – a settled population,
a huge tolerance of religions, a prosperous plantation economy and a
great relationship between the British and the Sinhalese.
To
this day, Sri Lankans speak well of the British colonial experience.
They point out that only one life was lost in the 133 years of British
rule – an Englishman who was executed by the colonial government for
conduct unbecoming.
The word that characterized Ceylon was peace. Its tropical climate was
ameliorated by sea breezes. And in a relatively small geographic area,
there was a feast of topography. Deserts, forests, mountains and plains
added to the island's charm.
Alas, Sri Lanka's days of peace and plenty came to an end in the 1970s.
That is when the ethnic Tamils in the north and the east began demanding
their own homeland, and launched an undeclared civil war that has raged
since then, costing tens of thousands of lives. The Sri Lankan
government will tell you that Tamil atrocities, complete with the use of
suicide bombings against civilians, rank with the worst on earth. The
Tamils will tell you that the Sri Lankan military is as brutal as was
the French military in Algeria.
Last week a ceasefire, brokered by Norway in 2002, was formally
abandoned by the government in Colombo. In abandoning the ceasefire, the
government was simply recognizing that it had never held, despite the
peace-keeping efforts of the Norwegians.
The Sri Lankan conflict may be the first insurgency where the Internet
has played an important role. Although the Tamils are proscribed as a
terrorist organization by most nations, there are Tamil communities
scattered around the world and these are accused of fanning the
insurgency, arming, equipping and masterminding it through the Internet.
Sri Lankan officials told me that they are particularly distressed by
the role played by Tamil supporters in faraway Canada and New Zealand.
But fundraising takes place globally, and the money is channeled into
the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu, just 19 miles off the coast of
Sri Lanka.
While ethnic Tamils in India support the insurgents, known as the Tamil
Tigers, the Indian government has been more ambivalent. In 1987, India
sent troops to the northern areas of Sri Lanka to mediate the Tigers
dispute with the Sri Lankan government. The Tigers rejected the Indian
effort and turned their hostility to the troops, who withdrew in 1990 in
something close to defeat. The following year, a Tiger assassinated
Indian prime minister Rajiv Gandhi for his betrayal of their cause.
The territorial claims of the Tigers preclude any logical settlement,
according to the Sri Lankan government. The Tigers are laying claim to
the entire northern part of the island, the East coast and part of the
West coast. The Tamils are in the majority only in the north.
The Tamils are Hindus, but the majority of Sri Lankans are Buddhists.
Significantly, the civil war is a political and ethnic war, not a
religious one. Like the Kurds, the Tamils are an ancient people who have
never really enjoyed a recognized homeland – even Tamil Nadu has mostly
been part of India.
Stephen Cohen, a South Asia expert at The Brookings Institution, says
there is no hope for peace in Sri Lanka. He believes the barbarous civil
war will drag on for decades. In fact, he told me that he knew of no
conflict as hopeless as the one in Sri Lanka.
But at least in their northern stronghold, the Tamils have won. There,
the Sri Lankan government is forced to operate through Tamil agents – a
de facto recognition of Tamil autonomy. Like Hizbollah in Lebanon, the
Tigers have established legitimacy. The dilemma for the United States is
recognizing that a group we have labeled as “terrorist” has become the
legitimate expression of a people's aspiration.
© 2008 North Star
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