NPP is ready to take over govt’s responsibility – Anura Kumara

Leader of the National People’s Power (NPP) Anura Kumara Dissanayake has called on the government to resign without allowing the country to further deteriorate.

Addressing a demonstration organised by the NPP in Colombo today (31), the MP claimed that his party is ready to take on the responsibility of governing the country.

The protest march was organized by the NPP in Colombo today urging the government to stop the alleged looting of the Employees’ Provident Fund (EPF).

However, the Fort Magistrate’s court had issued an order restricting the movement of the protesters holding demonstrations near 18 locations including the Presidential Secretariat, President’s House and the Ministry of Finance.

As such, the National People’s Power held their protest in front of the Fort Railway Station, which was attended by senior members of the NPP including its leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake.

“Do we have to wait until the government loots the funds deducted from our salaries? We should not allow that to happen”, the NPP’s leader said.

Commenting further, Dissanayake questioned what the government has done with loans obtained under the guise of construction projects, while accusing that they have completed the projects by utilizing 25% of those funds, while looting the remaining 75%.

“That is why this country has been bankrupted. After bankrupting the country, they are attempting to loot the EPF and ETF of the people”, he alleged.

“How much further should we be patient? The working people must take lead against these actions.”

“My request to the government is simple. Please leave now without further deteriorating this country. The National People’s Power is ready to take the responsibility of leading this country along with the people”, Dissanayake said.

Sri Lanka continues to militarise the state, despite the Rajapaksas’ fall – himalmag.com

Ayoung man from the North, arrested and detained several times for many years under the draconian Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) and finally discharged from all cases, continues to receive visits from military intelligence officials, who coerce him to work as an informant for them. A mother of a disappeared person attending the 18 May memorial in Mullaitivu for those killed at the end of Sri Lanka’s civil war receives non-stop phone calls from an officer of the Criminal Investigation Department, who wants to know whether she is attending the event. A politician holding a meeting in Jaffna on the destruction of a Hindu temple and construction of a Buddhist temple in its place engages in an altercation with police intelligence officers who surveil the meeting, refuse to show identification to prove they are police, and then run away. The politician and members of his party are arrested for obstructing the police officers from performing their duty. While all these incidents happened in 2023, such occurrences are not new. The octopus-like security apparatus that grew during Mahinda Rajapaksa’s tenure as president of Sri Lanka, and the resultant surveillance and attempts to curtail the rights of local populations in extra-legal ways, has been part of the reality of the people living in the conflict-affected North and East of Sri Lanka since the end of the war in 2009.

Gotabaya Rajapaksa, Mahinda’s brother and a former army officer, who was also the secretary of the ministry of defence at the end of the war, led the post-war militarisation drive in these regions. It appeared to have three aims. One was to reward the military for defeating the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) by giving it increased space and resources, as well as power to influence governance. The second was, through the dispensation of patronage, to ensure military loyalty and military protection for the Rajapaksas. And, finally, the aim was also to curtail civil activism, political activity and dissent, particularly in the North and East.

Since the end of the armed conflict the military’s role has extended into policy-making and drafting law.

For a long time, the rest of the country ignored militarisation since it impacted mainly the North and East, and the largely Tamil population concentrated in these areas. Moreover, since the country was in the grips of nationalist euphoria after the military’s victory over the LTTE, militarisation went unnoticed among the Sinhalese community or was viewed as benign. The successful militarisation of the North and East emboldened the government and the security sector to attempt to mainstream the same tactics of repression in the Sinhala-dominated South, by embedding the military in state structures and legalising militarisation through laws such as the Bureau of Rehabilitation Act and the Anti-Terrorism Act, thereby making it a de-jure rather than just a de-facto reality. This is but the natural evolution of the process of militarisation the Rajapaksas set in motion following the end of the war.

Setting their sights

Militarisation is the common thread that connects many repressive initiatives of the state, in particular the different wars it has claimed to fight, due to which it claims it has the authority to restrict human rights. For instance, successive presidents, as well as the commander of the army and the secretary of the ministry of defence, have consistently equated the “fight against drugs” with the “fight against terrorism”, and drug eradication is often discussed as an issue of national security. After winning the war against terror, in Sri Lanka’s case against the LTTE, which the government has used as a badge of honour to deflect any criticism of its actions, that goal has now been replaced by the “war against drugs”. This is illustrated by a statement from Shavendra Silva, a former commander of the army and chief of defence staff, who has said, “The security forces, which eradicated terrorism in the country 10 years ago, have been given a new task – to combat drug trafficking. We have given instructions to all Security Forces commanders … to take speedy measures to nab drug smugglers.”

Militarisation was also one of the tools the Rajapaksas used to change social values and public perceptions of what is acceptable in a democracy.

Likewise, the treatment of persons with drug dependence is equated with the rehabilitation of former LTTE combatants. For instance, when discussing the role of the Bureau for Commissioner General of Rehabilitation in a 2020 report, the secretary of the ministry of prison reform and prisoner rehabilitation stated:

On the back of successful rehabilitation process of misguided combatants, the task of rehabilitating drug addicts and reintegrating them into society as productive citizens has been assigned to the Bureau of the Commissioner General of rehabilitation as drug addiction has become a burning social issue.

Militarisation was also one of the tools the Rajapaksas used to change social values and public perceptions of what is acceptable in a democracy. By normalising military involvement in civilian activities – ranging from civil administration to running large agricultural farms and a chain of hotels – they popularised an authoritarian and militarised form of governance.

As the military was provided increasing de-facto authority in civil governance, its view of its own role began to change and extend beyond its mandated role in a democracy. The commander of the security forces in the North stated in 2009 that they “will be engaged in a new role of developing the region”, illustrating the military’s understanding of its expanded role in post-war Sri Lanka. Since then, this perception of the military’s expanded brief has only grown. Even the Yahapalana (Good Governance) government under Maithripala Sirisena, which temporarily unseated the Rajapaksas from power, did little to demilitarise or at a minimum divest from the businesses run by the military. With Gotabaya, who drove militarisation during Mahinda’s tenure, being elected president in 2019, the military took centre stage again. This is demonstrated by a statement by Kamal Gunaratne, a retired general and currently the secretary of the ministry of defence, at a ceremony at the Sri Lanka Military Academy in 2020, where he said that “the military is also expected to engage in the nation-building campaign in keeping with the President’s vision ‘Vistas of Prosperity and Splendour’ in the drive towards a brighter and prosperous future.”

Constructing a web of repressive laws

Since the end of the armed conflict the military’s role has extended into policy-making and drafting law. For instance, in 2013, the army compiled a report regarding the recommendations of the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission, a body created by Mahinda Rajapaksa ostensibly as a truth-and-reconciliation exercise after the war. The report emphasised the need for monitoring the activities of non-profit organisations due to security concerns. It clarified that “bona fide organisations” would face no limitations on their operations, but suggested that all international organisations, international non-governmental organisations and local non-governmental organisations should face screening and oversight by the defence ministry to prevent any potential threats to national security.

Even during the relatively progressive Yahapalanaya regime, the military was part of the process of drafting the proposed Counter Terrorism Act. Its involvement was reflected in the contents of the draft law, which empowered the military to engage in policing activities and restricted and undermined constitutionally protected rights. The Anti-Terrorism Bill the current government under Ranil Wickremesinghe presented in March 2023, the contents of which are largely identical to that of the Counter Terrorism Bill is yet another attempt to legalise and legitimise the role of the military in the sphere of civil governance.

The government’s proposed new laws are insidious and dangerous as they can be used in conjunction to detain a person, or at the very least to trap them within the legal process for even several years, all without evidence.

The government’s proposed new laws are insidious and dangerous as they can be used in conjunction to detain a person, or at the very least to trap them within the legal process for even several years, all without evidence. For example, the Bureau of Rehabilitation Act can be used with the proposed anti-terrorism law to send a person to “rehabilitation” at the discretion of the attorney-general. The Anti-Terrorism Bill empowers the attorney-general to suspend and defer instituting criminal proceedings, or in instances where criminal proceedings have begun to withdraw the indictment, on certain conditions if the offence has not caused death or grievous bodily injury, nor endangered the state and people of Sri Lanka. One of these conditions is the accused persons “voluntarily” participating in a rehabilitation programme. Since the Bureau of Rehabilitation Act contains a section that says “any other person as may be identified by law as a person who requires rehabilitation” can be sent for rehabilitation, it can be used to send people arrested under the proposed Anti-Terrorism Act to rehabilitation programmes.

In the past, when the state did not have enough evidence to indict a person under the PTA, it compelled them to undergo rehabilitation by making them believe they could be indicted or would spend many years in detention. During this process, the persons had no access to the evidence against them and no knowledge of whether there were grounds for charges to be filed. These persons, who often had no legal representation and no legal knowledge, typically agreed to “voluntary” rehabilitation due to fear that the state could indefinitely detain them. Although the Anti-Terrorism Bill requires the attorney-general to apply to the High Court and obtain its sanction for the conditions imposed, the role of the judge is limited. The judge only has to notify the person of the conditions imposed, give the person a hearing and “obtain” the person’s “consent” for rehabilitation. The judge does not have the authority to decide whether there is evidence to institute criminal proceedings against the person or if such conditions should be imposed at all.

From “rehabilitation” to repression

The Bureau of Rehabilitation Act is the latest in a continuum of repressive laws enacted by successive (mainly Rajapaksa-led) governments that target specific communities by demonising and portraying them as deviant and in need of being “rehabilitated”.

The evolution of the Bureau of Rehabilitation Act can be traced to the end of the civil war, when nearly 12,000 persons were sent to “rehabilitation” as they were alleged to be former LTTE combatants. In reality, most were not combatants according to the definition of a combatant under international humanitarian law. The “rehabilitees” were persons who were employed in the offices and other structures of the LTTE, which dispensed services in LTTE-controlled areas and were often the only employment options available. Most such persons did not take part in hostilities, and many that did were forcibly recruited during the last stages of the war. Among these were persons who were recruited only a few days before the end of the war.

The intent of these rehabilitation programmes appears to be to disempower and control certain populations. This intent continues to drive lawmaking in Sri Lanka and has continued to surface in dealing with many populations, including persons with drug dependency and even protesters.

The Bureau of Rehabilitation Bill as earlier proposed was an attempt by the government to formalise and legalise the military’s involvement in the rehabilitation process. Following a Supreme Court determination, the government did not ultimately include in it several provisions empowering the military to engage in rehabilitation. Yet there remain provisions that allow the secretary to the ministry of defence to be involved in the rehabilitation process. For instance, the secretary of the defence ministry has been included in the council of the Bureau, and the secretary’s power extends to recommending the person the minister – assigned the subject of the Bureau of Rehabilitation – appoints as the commissioner-general of rehabilitation.

The bill grants the power to any member of the armed forces or coast guard to search any person, vehicle, vessel, train, or any premises or land without any prior authorisation, warrant or oversight, which can lead to the abuse of power.

Following its failure to empower the armed forces in the Bureau of Rehabilitation Act, the government has included similar powers in the proposed Anti-Terrorism Bill gazetted in March 2023. As per this bill, the armed forces have the power to arrest a person if they have “reasonable grounds to believe (a person) has committed an offence”, and they do not have to hand over the arrested person to the police immediately or even as soon as possible but are given 24 hours to do so. Moreover, the bill grants the power to any member of the armed forces or coast guard to search any person, vehicle, vessel, train, or any premises or land without any prior authorisation, warrant or oversight, which can lead to the abuse of power. Similarly, it allows members of the armed forces to take any document or article into custody.

The bill’s definition of terrorism is broad and could potentially be used to criminalise acts of civic activism. The proposed law usurps the power of the judiciary and allows for a long period of administrative detention, with judges reduced to rubber stamps without the power to decide whether a person should be detained. Instead, the power lies in the hands of deputy inspector generals of police, of which there are 50 at present. The proposed law also undermines the powers of the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka by establishing a parallel institution (an Independent Review Panel) to receive and inquire into complaints of alleged violations of fundamental rights during the implementation of the proposed law.

The powers of the already all-powerful president are expanded by this bill, which allows the president to proscribe organisations on the recommendation of the inspector general of police or the government, so long as the president “has reasonable grounds to believe” the organisation is engaged in an act amounting to an offence under the proposed law or is acting in “an unlawful manner prejudicial to the national security of Sri Lanka.” Proscription would impose prohibitions on recruiting members or conducting meetings and programmes. It is to be issued for one year and can be extended by a year, ad infinitum. There is no transparent process or objective criteria stipulated for such proscription, nor for evidence to be presented to justify such a step, at least for the renewal of proscription. Additionally, the president is granted the power to declare any place a “prohibited place” on the recommendation of the inspector general of police or any of the commanders of the three branches of the armed forces. There are no checks on this power and no time limit on the period for which a place can continue to be declared prohibited.

There is no transparent process or objective criteria stipulated for such proscription, nor for evidence to be presented to justify such a step, at least for the renewal of proscription.

After Aragalaya

The Aragalaya, or struggle, that forced Gotabaya’s resignation as president in 2022, saw a violent state response to mass protests centred mostly in the country’s South, with the government employing the military in the manner it has long used in the North and East. Armoured personnel carriers were seen on the streets of Colombo, and the military used violence, surveillance and harassment against peaceful protesters, much as it routinely does against activists, journalists and many other groups deemed to be threats by the government, such as the families of the disappeared in war-torn regions. It was then that the Sinhala public in the South began to question the military’s role in the civil sphere, and the term “militarisation” began seeping into public discourse in the South. However, the resulting discussions were limited to the military’s bloated budget and did not extend to the militarisation of the North and East, which was accomplished through the establishment of numerous military camps after the end of the war, the on-going occupation and acquisition of private lands by the military to further expand its camps, the surveillance and harassment of civil society and increased military involvement in the civic sphere.

These issues are clearly viewed as controversial and people fear they will be subject to state scrutiny and possibly reprisals if they speak publicly about them. The expansion of the discourse on militarisation in the South and among populations earlier unaware or unconcerned about the issue can be viewed as progress – but these groups’ reluctance to address aspects of militarisation that target and impact mainly the Tamil population shows that the military’s actions in relation to the North and East remain the elephant in the room that the South does not want to address.

AMBIKA SATKUNANATHAN
Ambika Satkunanathan is a human-rights advocate. During her tenure as the commissioner at the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka, between 2015 and 2020, she led the first ever national study of prisons undertaken by the commission.

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Sri Lanka inflation to temporarily fall below single digits: monetary report

Sri Lanka’s inflation will temporarily fall below single digits, the central bank said in the maiden monetary policy report issued under its flexible inflation targeting regime.

“According to the present baseline forecast, headline inflation is projected to temporarily dip below mid-single-digit level, and subsequently stabilise around the targeted level in the medium term,” the central bank said in the monetary policy report.

“The projected path for headline inflation indicates a further declining trend, contributed by tight monetary and fiscal policy actions undertaken thus far.”

From September 2022 to July 2023, the central bank has created only 0.47 percent inflation, according to the Colombo Consumer Price Index.

A fan chart projection, which is a probability function shows a high probability of inflation almost touching zero in the very near term.

Sri Lanka’s central bank has allowed market rates to prevail up to now, but is now threatening to bring down interest rates by administrative remit.

In the run up the sovereign default, the agency to boost growth, the imposed deposit controls and printed tens of billions of rupees to target a call money rate and also longer-term bond yields, and in 2018 also used dollar swaps to inject money, mis-target rates and depreciate the rupee, critics have shown.

When a reserve collecting central bank prints money to mis-target rates and boost output, the resulting external instability and loss of confidence, requires very high interest rates to fix, which then results in bad loans and a growth slowdown.

In the second quarter of 2023, economy may still contract, compared to last year, the central bank said.

A recovery may be seen after that.

If Tamil issue not resolved, North East will be annexed as a part of India – Selvam MP warns

Selvam Adhikalanathan, president of the Tamil Eelam Liberation organization (TELO), said that if no solution is found for the Tamils, they should demand that the North-East should be annexed as a part of India.

Selvam Adikalanathan, Member of Parliament of Vanni District, said that only through this, the sovereignty of Tamils can be protected.

He also alleged that the Sinhala leaders were acting only to drink the blood of the Tamils.

He mentioned that the government leaders are not thinking about making the country strong, but thinking about how to paralyze the Tamils.

Despite our many differences, we must unite for our people, He also requested that the different groups of the Tamil diaspora should also be united in this unity.

Selvam Adhikalanathan said that the Tamil Eelam Liberation Organization will do the work of uniting everyone without talking about nationalism.

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Tamil National Heroes Day

40th anniversary of Welikada prison massacre commemorated

The 40th anniversary of the Welikada prison massacre was commemorated at Valvettithurai, Jaffna. The massacre which resulted in the murder of 53 political prisoners was instigated during the Black July pogrom by prison officials.

The memorial was held under the leadership of Tamil MP M K Sivajilingam.

Among the victims were:

Selvarajah Yogachandran alias Kuttimani(TELO), Nadarajah Thangavelu alias Thangadurai(TELO), Nadesathasan(TELO), Jegan Alias Sivarasa(TELO), Dhevan, Sivan Anpalagan(TELO), A. Balasubramaniam, Surash Kumar, Arunthavarajah, Thanapalasingham, Arafat, Anpalagan Sunduran, P. Mahendran, Ramalingam Balachandran, K. Thillainathan, K. Thavarajasingham, S. Subramaniam, Mylvaganam Sinnaiah, G. Mylvaganam, Ch. Sivanantharajah, T. Kandiah, S. Sathiyaseelan, Kathiravelpillai, Easvaranathan, K. Nagarajah, Gunapalan Ganeshalingam, S. Kularajasekaram, K. Krishnakumar, K. Uthaya Kumar, R. Yoganathan, S. Sivakumar, A. Uthayakumar, A. Rajan, G. Amirthalingam, S. Balachandran, V. Chandrakumar, Yogachandran Killi, Sittampalam Chandrakulam and Master Navaratnam Sivapatham.

On the 25th July 1983 Nadarajah Thangavelu alias Thangadurai, Sellarasa “Kuttimani” Yogachandiran, leader of the Tamil Eelam Liberation Organisation (TELO) and Ganeshanathan Jeganathan, a political writer, had their eyes gouged out in mockery before being killed by Sinhalese inmates at the high security Welikada prison in Colombo. A total of 37 Tamil prisoners were murdered the same day, and 18 more were killed two days later.

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Indian Navy’s indigenously built Khukri-class Missile Corvette Khanjar to be in Trincomalee from July 29 to 31

The Commanding Officer of the Indian Naval Ship, Commander NVS Phani Kumar will be calling on Commander Eastern Naval Area. Further, various professional interactions will be conducted on VBSS, Gunnery and Missile Operations. A reception is planned to be hosted onboard for senior officials from Military and Civil administration. Before departure a Maritime Partnership Exercise with Sri Lanka Navy Ship off Trincomalee is planned on 31 July.

In order to further people-to-people connect and familiarize the people with Indian Navy and its capabilities, the ship will be open for a visit by school children. In addition, public will have the opportunity to visit the ship on 30 July 2023 at Trincomalee Port. The ship will also carry out a Yoga Session, Beach Cleaning and Special School in Trincomalee.

The visit of the Indian Naval Ship Khanjar, a Khukri-Class Corvette, is also significant in view of the potential for cooperation between India and Sri Lanka for augmenting capabilities of Sri Lanka Navy for efficiently addressing shared challenges for maritime security in the region.

It may be recalled that Indian Naval Submarine Vagir had earlier visited Colombo from 19-22 Jun 2023 for celebrating the International Day of Yoga (IDY-2023). Visits by Indian Navy vessels to Sri Lanka further strengthen the camaraderie and interoperability between the Navies of the two neighbours, in keeping with India’s SAGAR (Security and Growth for All in the Region) doctrine and ‘Neighbourhood First’ policy.

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The never ending talks on ethnic issues By M.S.M Ayub

The All-Party Conference (APC) held on Wednesday (26) was the second one to be called so and convened by President Ranil Wickremesinghe with a professed view of finding a lasting solution to the ethnic problem in the country. It must be recalled that he convened another “All Party Conference” on December 13 last year for the same purpose.

Interestingly, Wednesday’s conference was not another session of the conference held in December. Although the December conference resulted in several follow-up meetings between the President and the north-based Tamil political parties, they ended with Tamil parties expressing disappointment over the government’s failure to keep its promises made during the December 13 meeting.

Another interesting factor is that both the “All-Party” conferences did not happen to be “all-party conferences” in their essence, as one or more influential political parties had boycotted them. The National People’s Power (NPP) led by the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) did not attend Wednesday’s meeting, claiming that the government was going to hoodwink the country and divert people’s attention from the economic crisis by convening this conference.

President Wickremesinghe met several Tamil political parties on the day before his two-day visit to India which commenced on July 20 and informed them that he was prepared to implement the 13th Amendment to the Constitution without granting Police powers to the Provincial Councils.

That was a stand-alone meeting and it is got nothing to do with the so-called APCs held on December 13 and last Wednesday. Neither did the President announce at that meeting that he would call an APC after his India visit.

Hence, one has to conclude that Wednesday’s “APC” has been decided during or after that visit, owing to the mood of the Indian leaders over the President’s announcement that the Police powers would not be granted to Provincial Councils.

Going by this history of talks leaders of the government and the Tamil community seem to hold talks for another two or three decades or eternally on the subject
This argument is being vindicated by the fact that Wednesday’s meeting was announced to the media first by Foreign Minister Ali Sabry and not by the President or Prime Minister Dinesh Gunawardena, who handles the subject of provincial councils.

Police and Land Powers that are not being enjoyed by the Provincial Councils since the institution of those councils in 1988 have in fact been devolved (granted) to them from the beginning.

However, they can enjoy those powers only when the President formulates the relevant mechanisms for it which are provided for by the 13th Amendment. That is, the President has to create Provincial Police Divisions under Deputy Inspectors General of Police (DIGs), in order to implement police powers in full while a land commission has to be appointed in respect of land powers.

None of the Presidents including J.R. Jayewardene during whose tenure these powers among others were devolved to Provincial Councils formulated those mechanisms.

Chandrika Kumaratunga who demanded these mechanisms be created when she was the Chief Minister of the Western Province in 1994 too did not think it fit to do so when she assumed Presidency in the same year.

Despite the merits and demerits of provincial councils enjoying Police Powers, President Wickremesinghe’s statement that Police Powers would not be awarded to the Provincial Councils was a clear U-turn from his earlier stance.

He, during the budget debate in December last year, stated that a solution to the ethnic problem would be found before the 75th Independent Day which fell on February 4, this year. Then the Tamil parties threw a challenge to him to implement the 13th Amendment in full and hold the provincial council elections before January 31 which he accepted.

The Tamil parties demand that the 13A be implemented fully before finding a lasting solution to the ethnic problem and the President’s positive response to it indicates both parties’ agreement that the solution so suggested is something beyond the 13A.

The Tamil parties demand that the 13A be implemented fully before finding a lasting solution to the ethnic problem and the President’s positive response to it indicates both parties’ agreement that the solution so suggested is something beyond the 13A
Also by acknowledging the full implementation of 13A, the President takes the responsibility to empower provincial councils to enjoy all powers devolved to them including police and land powers.

Then, addressing a gathering on this year’s National Thai Pongal Day (January 15) ceremonies in Jaffna Wickremesinghe said that 13A would be implemented within the next two years.

Subsequently, again he changed his plan by claiming that he would agree with the Tamil parties on the solution to the ethnic problem, during his speech at the May Day rally of his party, the United National Party (UNP).

Since these mind changes had not divorced Police Powers from the Provincial Councils, his announcement about 13A sans Police Powers on the day before his India visit would have been a bombshell for the Tamil parties.

The irony of Wednesday’s ‘All Party Conference’ is that it was held against the backdrop of hundreds of discussions the government held with the Tamil Parties, Tamil armed groups, especially with the LTTE and with Indian leaders as well as deliberations within all party conferences and Parliamentary Select Committees (PSC) since the 1950s for the same purpose.

Several important pacts and accords were also agreed upon during some of these meetings.

After the failed Bandaranaike – Chelvanayagam pact of 1957 and Dudley – Chelvanayagam pact of 1965, President J.R. Jayewardene convened a round Table conference in 1984 amidst growing hostilities between the armed forces and the Tamil armed groups.

When it failed Indian government arranged a meeting between the representatives of the government and Tamil parties as well as armed groups in the Bhutanese Capital Thimphu in 1985 which also collapsed with its second round. Jayewardene convened another all-party meeting famously called the “Political Party Conference” (PPC) in 1986.

Against this backdrop, India imposed the Indo-Lanka Accord of 1987 on Sri Lanka, after several rounds of negotiations with the Sri Lankan government and the Tamil groups which resulted in the creation of provincial councils. When the LTTE reneged on the accord the other Tamil groups except for the EPDP also attempted to find new solutions.

Hence, President Ranasinghe Premadasa initiated talks with the LTTE and convened another All-Party Conference in 1989 where the representatives of the LTTE also participated in. Opposition parties boycotted the conference after the first meeting of it, as the agenda had only a speech by the President. Everything collapsed when the LTTE resumed fighting in June 1990.

President Chandrika Kumaratunga again started talks with the LTTE in 1994 which also failed in July 1995, when the LTTE resumed their Eelam war. And a Parliamentary Select Committee was also appointed in 1997 to find a solution to the national question. After about 60 meetings it ended without a final report being produced. Kumaratunga presented a new draft Constitution as well in 2000, focusing on the solution to the ethnic problem. Ranil Wickremesinghe as Prime Minister initiated talks with the LTTE with international mediation in September 2002 and both sides agreed upon a federal mechanism in December.

President Mahinda Rajapaksa in 2006 appointed an All-Party Representative Committee (APRC) the interim report of which was presented in 2008 was never published.

The Yahapalana Government in its turn presented a report through a Constitutional Assembly and it was rejected by Sinhalese nationalist parties as well as some influential Tamil parties.

The Prime Minister of that government, Ranil Wickremesinghe, now holding meetings for the same purpose. Going by this history of talks leaders of the government and the Tamil community seem to hold talks for another two or three decades or eternally on the subject.

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Visiting Japanese Foreign Minister meets with President Ranil Wickremesinghe

Japanese Foreign Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi, who is in Sri Lanka on two-day official visit, paid a courtesy call on President Ranil Wickremesinghe on Saturday morning (29).

Later, he also held bilateral discussions with Sri Lankan Foreign Minister Ali Sabry.

Minister Yoshimasa is scheduled to meet with Prime Minister Dinesh Gunawardena this evening.

The Japanese Foreign Minister and his delegation were welcomed by State Minister of Foreign affairs Tharaka Balasuriya, at the Bandaranaike International Airport on Friday night (28).

India bolsters military and economic ties with the US and Europe amidst China’s aggression in Indo-Pacific

Asian security experts argue that China’s aggressive behavior and ambitions in the Indo-Pacific region have led India to strengthen its military and economic ties with the United States and Europe. China’s actions, such as testing India’s borders and threatening Taiwan’s democracy, have significantly influenced India’s strategic calculations, according to experts who spoke at a recent online event hosted by the Brookings Institution.

Garima Mohan, a senior fellow at the German Marshall Fund’s Indo-Pacific program, identifies China as India’s “consequential challenge.” Previously, Indian governments considered the United States as a “spoiler,” but now, according to Tanyi Madan, Director of the India Project at the Project on International Order and Strategy, India views the US as an “enabler.”

While India remains committed to retaining strategic autonomy, it is open to forming alliances and partnerships with other countries, says C. Rajua Mohan, a senior fellow at the Asia Society Policy Institute in New Delhi. India shares major power ambitions with the US and desires a multi-polar Asia rather than one dominated by a single nation.

China’s bullying and threats have set a new tone for India’s relations with the United States and Europe, creating a template for cooperation. Both India and the US have mutual interests in establishing a better order in trade, development, and security within the Indo-Pacific region.

The “Quad,” an informal alliance between India, the United States, Japan, and Australia, exemplifies India’s efforts to collaborate with like-minded countries on critical issues. However, a recent meeting between the Quad leaders had to be canceled as President Joe Biden returned to the US to address discussions on raising the American debt ceiling.

India faces questions about how fast and far it should partner with the US, especially considering its historical relationship with Russia. Russia remains India’s primary military weapons supplier, while France comes in second.

The growing partnership between China and Russia, labeled as a “no limits” partnership, poses a challenge for India. This alliance has progressed further with new economic agreements signed between the two countries, supporting Russia amidst sanctions following its invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

The deepening relationship between China and Russia creates a fault line for India, as historically, India has maintained a diversified portfolio of security, trade, and economic relations with both countries since gaining independence from the United Kingdom in 1948, says Tanyi Madan.

According to Madan, there is significant convergence between India, the U.S., and France on trade, technology, and innovation. However, differences arise regarding the direction of New Delhi’s internal development and concerns over India’s relative silence on the war in Ukraine. Raja Mohan attributes these differences to India’s long-standing policy of non-interference by other nations in its internal affairs, a stance followed since 1948.

India’s economic outreach to Europe has been ongoing for years, and the European Union’s recognition of India as an important nation in 2018 has strengthened the ties further. This increased engagement has led to serious discussions about Taiwan as a security issue posed by China in Europe.

Raja Mohan also points out that India, being the largest nation in terms of population, has the potential to become the world’s third-largest economy in the near future.

As India and the United States grow closer, Madan emphasizes the need for both governments to be transparent about the importance of the relationship and explain it to their citizens instead of hiding its significance.

In the Indo-Pacific region, Prime Minister Narendra Modi has warned of confrontation amid Chinese aggression and coercive actions. During his address to the U.S. Congress, he highlighted the importance of India-US defence ties and growing partnership. He emphasized a shared vision of a free, open, and inclusive Indo-Pacific based on international law, without domination, and anchored in ASEAN centrality. The focus is on allowing all nations, regardless of size, to make their choices freely and fearlessly, promoting progress and prosperity without strategic leverage. The vision aims to build a cooperative region of peace and prosperity through regional institutions and collaboration with partners from within and beyond the region. India’s defence cooperation with the United States has evolved from being strangers at the turn of the century to becoming one of its most important defence partners today.

The Indian Ocean is undeniably one of the most strategically significant seas worldwide. Alfred Mahan, a highly influential strategic thinker from the United States, famously proclaimed that “Whoever controls the Indian Ocean will dominate Asia, and the destiny of the world will be decided on its waters.”

The importance of the Indian Ocean lies in its connection to five continents: Africa, Antarctica, Asia, Oceania, and Europe. Numerous crucial Sea Lines of Communication (SLOCs) traverse through this ocean, facilitating the movement of warships during historical conflicts like the Japanese-Russian War of 1905 and World War II. Additionally, these SLOCs play a vital role in enabling the navigation of commercial vessels carrying daily-use appliances and essential energy resources.

India holds a strategically advantageous position in the Indian Ocean Region (IOR) as it lies between crucial bottlenecks. To the west, the Straits of Hormuz and Bab-El-Mandeb are vital for oil product and merchandise trade. To the south, the “8-degree channel” between the Lakshadweep and Maldives archipelagos serves as a bottleneck for SLOCs connecting Europe, Africa, the Middle East, and Asia. Lastly, to the east, India controls the Western gateway into the Malacca Strait, which is the primary connection point between the Indian and Pacific oceans.

The significance of India’s control over the Malacca Strait becomes apparent in the context of potential US-China confrontation. In the event of an unlikely invasion of Taiwan, the Malacca Strait would be one of the first regions to witness heightened tensions. This puts India’s foreign policy at a crossroads, particularly represented by the Andaman and Nicobar islands. These islands pose a dilemma for India: whether it should enter the conflict between China and the United States and, if so, which side it should support. India’s strategic location in the IOR, along with its control of the Malacca Strait, grants it the potential to shape the geopolitical landscape of the region.

New Delhi appears neutral between the US and China but is pragmatic in choosing sides. Understanding the strategic importance of islands in the Indian Ocean is crucial. Trade, energy supplies, and force projection play significant roles for both countries.

India’s Andaman and Nicobar archipelagos act as a barrier between the Andaman Sea and the Indian Ocean. They control access to the Malacca Strait’s western entrance. The islands have historical importance and form the basis of India’s maritime strategy.

India perceives China as a threat due to border disputes and challenges to India’s influence in the region. India and the US have mutual interests and do not have territorial conflicts.

Strategically, the islands serve as an outpost for India and its allies, enhance deterrence capabilities, and provide a springboard for expanding India’s influence towards Southeast Asia.

Despite the strategic importance of the islands, India’s Navy faces budgetary constraints and border disputes, hindering its maritime capabilities.

India aims to transform its navy into a blue water force but must invest in the fleet and logistical infrastructure. India’s potential influence in the region is significant, as emphasized by Mahan’s words.

Tamil Nadu Chief Minister and Sri Lankan Minister discuss fishermen issue

Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M.K Stalin and Sri Lankan Minister Jeevan Thondaman discussed the India-Sri Lanka fishermen issue at a meeting in Chennai today.

Thondaman called on the Chief Minister and spoke about the wellbeing of Indian-origin Tamils in Sri Lanka as well as the fishermen issue.

A number of Indian fishermen have been arrested in recent days for poaching in Sri Lankan waters.

On the fishermen issue, it was noted that a solution should be reached in a manner that ensures fishermen from both countries are not affected, Minister Thondaman’s office said.

The Minister had also assured that the issue will be discussed by the Sri Lankan Cabinet.

The assistance offered by Tamil Nadu for Sri Lanka during the economic crisis was also appreciated.

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