http://www.dailypioneer.com/columnists/edit/winning-over-colombo-for-the-sake-of-tamils.html
Friday, 11 April 2014 | G Parthasarathy |
India did well to abstain from voting on a US-sponsored resolution of the United Nation Human Rights Council that asked for an international probe into the last days of the ethnic conflict in Sri Lanka
In April 1977, just after the Janata Party Government assumed office, eminent Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko arrived in Delhi, looking visibly nervous. Having backed Indira Gandhi’s Emergency, Gromyko expected a cold reception in South Block. His counterpart, Mr Atal Bihari Vajpayee smilingly put him at ease, saying that he had no hard feelings and asserted: “Indo-Soviet relations are strong and do not depend on the political fortunes of any individual or political party”. Happily, that type of statesmanship was retained amidst the heated rhetoric of the current election campaign. Both major national parties have not bickered about the approach to two major foreign policy issues.
As tensions escalated in Ukraine, the UPA Government took the position that while we would like issues to be resolved peacefully between the parties concerned, the legitimate interests of Russia cannot be overlooked. This was followed by the decision for India to abstain in a US-sponsored resolution in the UN Human Rights Council, that sought an international inquiry and involvement in the civilian casualties in the last days of the ethnic conflict in Sri Lanka. This was a sensitive issue, in which passions were being competitively inflamed by political parties in Tamil Nadu, some of whom are allied to the NDA. Despite the surcharged atmosphere in Tamil Nadu, the BJP did not oppose the Government’s action and, in fact, let it be known what it felt about India’s larger national interests.
The UNHRC resolution this year, unlike in the past, included the constitution of an open-ended international investigation into developments in a sovereign member state. This goes well beyond the current understanding and basic operative principles of the UNHRC. Moreover, unlike resolutions of the UN Security Council, resolutions of the UN Human Rights Council are not enforceable by international sanctions. Not surprisingly, this resolution did not secure the support of the majority of members on the council. Only 23 of the council’s 47 members supported the resolution, with the majority either abstaining or voting against. Apart from South Korea, every other member of India’s Asian and Indian Ocean neighbourhood either abstained or voted against the resolution. These included China, Indonesia, Japan, Kuwait, the Maldives, Pakistan, Philippines, South Africa and the United Arab Emirates. Despite their reputed global influence, the US and its allies could pick up support only from a few Latin American and African countries in the end.
The approach to the vote of the UNHRC revealed that both national parties felt that while India was committed to the safety, welfare and human dignity of members of the Tamil community in northern Sri Lanka, it should not allow itself to be totally isolated in Asia, on an issue concerning its immediate neighbourhood. Based on the support that it received from two permanent members of the Security Council (China and Russia) and the overwhelming majority of Asian and Indian Ocean littoral states, Sri Lanka will ignore the more intrusive aspects of recommendations of the UNHRC. Moreover, we would only open strategic space for China and Pakistan in the Indian Ocean, by totally alienating Sri Lanka. More importantly, it would become increasingly difficult for India to implement projects for the economic benefit of the northern Tamils, without the cooperation of the Sri Lankan Government.
New Delhi’s strategy has to be two-pronged. Politically, it has to work with world and regional powers to ensure that Sri Lanka fulfils its comment to credibly inquire into the entire range of human rights violations, in the last stages of the conflict, alluded to by its Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission. This has to be accompanied by a phased and early reduction in the presence of the army in its north and an end to interference by its Army, in civilian affairs. Joint patrolling of the maritime boundary has to be enhanced to ensure there is no inflow of weapons to the north. Essential powers required to be devolved to the Provincial Chief Minister, Justice Vigneswaran, have not been devolved, particularly on lands. Bureaucrats posted by Colombo have to be warned that they will face action if they continue to flout the directives of the Chief Minister. Economically, India’s already substantial aid programme will have to be continued vigorously.
India has allocated an estimated at $1.3 billion (`8,000 crore) — its largest ever development assistance programme — for the Tamils in Northern Sri Lanka. At the grassroots levels, 2,50,000 family packs comprising clothing, utensils and essential food packets have been distributed. Moreover, cement and other building materials have been given for war damaged houses and 95,000 packs of seeds and agricultural implements provided to those tilling the land. The projects being undertaken in include the construction of 50,000 homes and supply of materials for around 43,000 war-damaged residences. There have also been major projects for development of rail transportation, port infrastructure in Kankesanthurai, a 500MW Thermal Power Station in Sampur and upgrading of the Palaly Airport. The development of human resources have been facilitated by upgrading schools and vocational training centres, the construction of hospitals and the involvement in employment-generation projects in agriculture, fisheries, small industries and handicrafts.
Despite the stormy rhetoric, there has been virtually no worthwhile effort from the Government, civil society organisations, political parties, or business houses in Tamil Nadu to see how the State’s human and developmental resources could be offered and put to use for economically empowering people in northern Sri Lanka. Given its vast resources in fields like information technology and technical education, the State could make an immense contribution through collaborative interaction with people in Jaffna and elsewhere, to ensure that the North emerges as a technical and industrial hub of Sri Lanka. This would necessarily require a cooperative effort involving the Governments of India and Sri Lanka, together with the State Government in Chennai and the Provincial regime in Jaffna. This would be a far better approach, rather than joining the US and its European partners, who have contributed precious little to the welfare of Sri Lankan Tamils. They have merely resorted to moralistic posturing and sermonising.
I met representatives of the forgotten ‘Plantation/Indian’, or ‘Hill country’ Tamils in Colombo recently. They recalled how, under the leadership of GG Ponambalam, the northern Tamils colluded with the Sinhala leadership to disenfranchise them in 1949. After obtaining Sri Lankan citizenship by peaceful democratic means, they are now part of Sri Lanka’s mainstream. They are, however, saddened that they have been forgotten by New Delhi and ignored by the leadership and people in Tamil Nadu.
Friday, 11 April 2014 | G Parthasarathy |
India did well to abstain from voting on a US-sponsored resolution of the United Nation Human Rights Council that asked for an international probe into the last days of the ethnic conflict in Sri Lanka
In April 1977, just after the Janata Party Government assumed office, eminent Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko arrived in Delhi, looking visibly nervous. Having backed Indira Gandhi’s Emergency, Gromyko expected a cold reception in South Block. His counterpart, Mr Atal Bihari Vajpayee smilingly put him at ease, saying that he had no hard feelings and asserted: “Indo-Soviet relations are strong and do not depend on the political fortunes of any individual or political party”. Happily, that type of statesmanship was retained amidst the heated rhetoric of the current election campaign. Both major national parties have not bickered about the approach to two major foreign policy issues.
As tensions escalated in Ukraine, the UPA Government took the position that while we would like issues to be resolved peacefully between the parties concerned, the legitimate interests of Russia cannot be overlooked. This was followed by the decision for India to abstain in a US-sponsored resolution in the UN Human Rights Council, that sought an international inquiry and involvement in the civilian casualties in the last days of the ethnic conflict in Sri Lanka. This was a sensitive issue, in which passions were being competitively inflamed by political parties in Tamil Nadu, some of whom are allied to the NDA. Despite the surcharged atmosphere in Tamil Nadu, the BJP did not oppose the Government’s action and, in fact, let it be known what it felt about India’s larger national interests.
The UNHRC resolution this year, unlike in the past, included the constitution of an open-ended international investigation into developments in a sovereign member state. This goes well beyond the current understanding and basic operative principles of the UNHRC. Moreover, unlike resolutions of the UN Security Council, resolutions of the UN Human Rights Council are not enforceable by international sanctions. Not surprisingly, this resolution did not secure the support of the majority of members on the council. Only 23 of the council’s 47 members supported the resolution, with the majority either abstaining or voting against. Apart from South Korea, every other member of India’s Asian and Indian Ocean neighbourhood either abstained or voted against the resolution. These included China, Indonesia, Japan, Kuwait, the Maldives, Pakistan, Philippines, South Africa and the United Arab Emirates. Despite their reputed global influence, the US and its allies could pick up support only from a few Latin American and African countries in the end.
The approach to the vote of the UNHRC revealed that both national parties felt that while India was committed to the safety, welfare and human dignity of members of the Tamil community in northern Sri Lanka, it should not allow itself to be totally isolated in Asia, on an issue concerning its immediate neighbourhood. Based on the support that it received from two permanent members of the Security Council (China and Russia) and the overwhelming majority of Asian and Indian Ocean littoral states, Sri Lanka will ignore the more intrusive aspects of recommendations of the UNHRC. Moreover, we would only open strategic space for China and Pakistan in the Indian Ocean, by totally alienating Sri Lanka. More importantly, it would become increasingly difficult for India to implement projects for the economic benefit of the northern Tamils, without the cooperation of the Sri Lankan Government.
New Delhi’s strategy has to be two-pronged. Politically, it has to work with world and regional powers to ensure that Sri Lanka fulfils its comment to credibly inquire into the entire range of human rights violations, in the last stages of the conflict, alluded to by its Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission. This has to be accompanied by a phased and early reduction in the presence of the army in its north and an end to interference by its Army, in civilian affairs. Joint patrolling of the maritime boundary has to be enhanced to ensure there is no inflow of weapons to the north. Essential powers required to be devolved to the Provincial Chief Minister, Justice Vigneswaran, have not been devolved, particularly on lands. Bureaucrats posted by Colombo have to be warned that they will face action if they continue to flout the directives of the Chief Minister. Economically, India’s already substantial aid programme will have to be continued vigorously.
India has allocated an estimated at $1.3 billion (`8,000 crore) — its largest ever development assistance programme — for the Tamils in Northern Sri Lanka. At the grassroots levels, 2,50,000 family packs comprising clothing, utensils and essential food packets have been distributed. Moreover, cement and other building materials have been given for war damaged houses and 95,000 packs of seeds and agricultural implements provided to those tilling the land. The projects being undertaken in include the construction of 50,000 homes and supply of materials for around 43,000 war-damaged residences. There have also been major projects for development of rail transportation, port infrastructure in Kankesanthurai, a 500MW Thermal Power Station in Sampur and upgrading of the Palaly Airport. The development of human resources have been facilitated by upgrading schools and vocational training centres, the construction of hospitals and the involvement in employment-generation projects in agriculture, fisheries, small industries and handicrafts.
Despite the stormy rhetoric, there has been virtually no worthwhile effort from the Government, civil society organisations, political parties, or business houses in Tamil Nadu to see how the State’s human and developmental resources could be offered and put to use for economically empowering people in northern Sri Lanka. Given its vast resources in fields like information technology and technical education, the State could make an immense contribution through collaborative interaction with people in Jaffna and elsewhere, to ensure that the North emerges as a technical and industrial hub of Sri Lanka. This would necessarily require a cooperative effort involving the Governments of India and Sri Lanka, together with the State Government in Chennai and the Provincial regime in Jaffna. This would be a far better approach, rather than joining the US and its European partners, who have contributed precious little to the welfare of Sri Lankan Tamils. They have merely resorted to moralistic posturing and sermonising.
I met representatives of the forgotten ‘Plantation/Indian’, or ‘Hill country’ Tamils in Colombo recently. They recalled how, under the leadership of GG Ponambalam, the northern Tamils colluded with the Sinhala leadership to disenfranchise them in 1949. After obtaining Sri Lankan citizenship by peaceful democratic means, they are now part of Sri Lanka’s mainstream. They are, however, saddened that they have been forgotten by New Delhi and ignored by the leadership and people in Tamil Nadu.
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