India and Sri Lanka
Big brother is watching you

Oct 23rd 2008 | COLOMBO
>From *The Economist* print edition
Renewed Indian interest in their country worries many Sri Lankans

FROM shanty houses to parliament, Sri Lankans are transfixed by one topic:
India's impact on the government's war with the rebel Liberation Tigers of
Tamil Eelam. This follows protests in the Tamil-majority Indian state of
Tamil Nadu, where there has always been sympathy for fellow Tamils in Sri
Lanka. Tamil Nadu's ruling party, the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK), is
part of the coalition government in Delhi, led by Manmohan Singh. Nineteen
DMK lawmakers have threatened to resign if the government does not persuade
Sri Lanka to declare a truce by October 29th. The DMK accuses Sri Lanka of a
"genocide" of Tamil civilians trapped in the rebel areas of the Wanni, where
fierce fighting is causing daily casualties on both sides.

The pressure from an important coalition partner has forced Mr Singh's
government to act. In a phone conversation on October 18th Mr Singh urged
Sri Lanka's president, Mahinda Rajapaksa, to start a process towards a
negotiated political settlement. This sort of thing makes Sri Lankans
nervous. They recall 1987, four years into the civil war, when an Indian
peacekeeping force was sent to Sri Lanka. It was much resented by many
members of the island's Sinhalese majority, and had disastrous consequences.
The Tigers, who assassinated Rajiv Gandhi, a former Indian prime minister,
in 1991, are banned in India. But as representatives of a minority seen as
suffering discrimination, they still enjoy some support in Tamil Nadu.
Another direct intervention in Sri Lanka is not on the cards. But India is
the regional superpower and hard to ignore.

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Sri Lankans are now even more preoccupied with India's role than with the
fighting in the north. Sri Lankan soldiers are battling torrential downpours
as well as the Tigers, outnumbered but resilient. The army is closing in on
the Tigers' stronghold of Kilinochchi—which it has said it will capture by
the end of the year.

India has dominated headlines in Sri Lanka's press. Influential Buddhist
monks have urged it to keep out of Sri Lankan affairs. Questions have been
raised in parliament. In response to the frenzy, President Rajapaksa
summoned media bosses on October 21st to tell them that India had not asked
his government to halt the war. The Rajapaksa government attributes the
furore in Tamil Nadu to coalition politics and electioneering, ahead of the
general election due in India by next May.

A senior presidential aide admits to concerns about the "rumblings" in Tamil
Nadu. But he insists the Indian government understands Sri Lanka's fight
against "terrorism" and will be satisfied so long as Sri Lanka "doesn't
discriminate against the Tamils and gives them food and humanitarian
assistance." That, however, may be underestimating the concern felt in India
and elsewhere: not just at the humanitarian crisis in the Wanni, but also at
the apparent lack in the Sri Lankan government of any will to pursue a
political settlement acceptable to most of its Tamil minority.

-- 
James Michael

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