TS Denies boycott accusation <http://www.tamilsolidarity.org/?p=854>
*Published:* January 23, 2010
[image: TS Denies boycott accusation]

When the Sri Lankan government representative spoke during the European
Parliament commission hearing on the GSP+ he accused Tamil Solidarity (TS)
of calling for a boycott of the presidential elections.

The Sri Lankan government is aiming to dismiss TS’s work as
counterproductive and merely as a ‘Diaspora view’ with nothing to do with
the ‘reality on the ground’. To hint that Tamil Solidarity opposes
democratic measures, the government representative threw in another lie,
accusing TS of calling for a boycott in the presidential election.

But TS countered the Sri Lankan government representative’s argument and
explained that the ordinary working masses in Sri Lanka will gain nothing
from voting for either Fonseka or Rajapakse. However, TS is not against
people voting for a sane voice like that of Siritunga Jayasuriya, the
candidate of the United Socialist Party (USP).

The TS campaign takes the question of the election seriously. Its steering
committee met on Friday 18 December 2009 particularly to discuss our
position in the election. We then consulted active members and published the
following report on 7 January 2010. Please see the statement->What does the
election in Sri Lanka mean for the Tamil-speaking
masses?<http://www.tamilsolidarity.org/?p=771>

Siritunga Jayasuriya’s record of defending the rights of the oppressed
masses and the USP’s long-standing and principled position of standing for
the right to self determination of the Tamil-speaking minority is very well
known. However, to give a taste of what he stands for we republish here an
interview conducted by Meena Kandasamy with her permission. Meena is a
well-known Indian-born poet, fiction writer and translator and a supporter
of TS.

Pic: Cartoon issued by USP (United Socialist Party)

http://www.lankasocialist.com/cartoon.html

*An Interview With Siritunga Jayasuriya*

By Meena Kandasamy

04 March, 2009
Countercurrents.org

Siritunga Jayasuriya, a trade unionist and leader of the United Socialist
Party is best-known for being a high-profile Sinhala dissenter against the
war on the Tamils in Sri Lanka. A fierce critic of the current regime and an
ex-Presidential candidate, Jayasuriya has survived several attempts on his
life. His unwavering voice of dissent cannot be silenced wherever he is.
During a recent visit to India, he spoke to Meena Kandasamy about the
situation in the war-torn island and bravely answered questions on India’s
role in the war.



*Meena Kandasamy* : You were telling me about your friend Deshapriya who had
to flee Sri Lanka because he happens to be a mediaperson with his own
individual and independent opinion. Right now, a lot of coverage especially
in the Tamil Nadu press is about how Sinhalese journalists have been forced
to flee their country just because they are dissenters. What is your take on
that?

*Siritunga Jayasuriya* : You see that is a very good point to start, because
not many journalists started their discussion in that angle. Now, many
people think Sinhala people live okay, and that the problems lie with the
Tamils. I think that is not the correct picture. Of course, Tamils are the
worst-hit victims, but at the same time, the Sinhala people are also
victimized. The first victim of war is democracy, followed by rights of all
the people. For example in the last few years, particularly in the last few
months many independent trade union sections like health, the railways, the
teachers, came out with their own demands. The government immediately
started a vicious campaign through the media and accused union leaders of
being supporters of the LTTE. Then the members of the unions, their families
asked, “Your leaders are supporters of the LTTE, is that so?” So they had to
resign from their unions.

Journalists, who come out with their own opinion, who bring out the inside
stories of the battlefields, what is happening within the army, what are the
grievances of the army, how many soldiers are being killed and what is their
problem—when journalists comes out with such things, the threats come to
them. Within the last two years, excluding Taraki Sivaram (who was killed
three years ago), nine journalists have been killed, 29 key journalists have
been beaten up, more than 20 journalists are behind bars without proper
charges, and three main media institutions, printing presses and TV stations
like MTV, Sirasa TV have been banned. So now, there is no room for people to
say what they believe or see in Sri Lanka. There is no room for the people
to come out with their struggles, everything has been suppressed showing the
war’s victory. After the killing of Lasantha Wickramatunga on 8 January
2009—I was one of the main organizers of his funeral and I played a key
role—we have come together because we know that this war is not going to end
after defeating the LTTE, but instead the guns are going to turn against the
Sinhala people as well. The people who are going to criticize the
government, those who are going to put forth different viewpoints are going
to be suppressed. This is the situation there. That is why, now, in spite of
all the political differences all the major political parties in Sri Lanka,
together with social, civil and human rights organizations, including
intellectuals and lawyers have come together to form a platform which we
call the Platform for Freedom . This aims at freedom for whole Sri Lanka,
including the South where we live. We seek the right to live, the right to
freedom of expression and an end to war.

*Meena Kandasamy* : I read that you were beaten up by a 300-strong crowd of
thugs when you contested the Presidential elections. . .

*Siritunga Jayasuriya* : Yes, that happened towards the beginning of this
Government. I contested the last presidential election and I came third. We
are a very small party, please don’t think that we are a very big force. I
don’t want to create any wrong picture. Many people demanded me to come, to
take up the leadership. So we entered the fray. We knew this war was going
to take place, so we thought it was better to come forward than to simply
agitate against the war. So we held a big meeting in Colombo and I was
supposed to chair that meeting. A hour before the meeting was scheduled to
start, a group of thugs in vehicles openly invaded the stage and smashed
everything. The Labour Minister in the Sri Lankan Government Mervin Silva
led the group openly. The meeting was about to begin when I saw a group of
people coming. So, I started running and I narrowly escaped. Some people
were coming behind me to almost catch me by the collar. I managed to board
some vehicle and get out to some other place. This is only one incident.

*Meena Kandasamy* : Mervin Silva was also responsible for beating up other
journalists.

Siritunga Jayasuriya : Mervin Selva is a well-known person for assaulting
journalists. He led the attack on the government owned Roopavahini radio
station and beat some of the senior journalists. He assaulted them inside
their government office. But, the workers gave him a good treatment after
that. In a live programme that lasted four hours they kept him hostage. Even
the police couldn’t take him back. Even very recently, he has assaulted many
TV journalists. He was dragged to court, where he finally apologized and
even paid the fine for damaging somebody’s camera.

*Meena Kandasamy* : I heard that only those media persons who are within Sri
Lanka, but even those who have left the country are afraid to comment about
what is going on there. They are afraid that their families, their relatives
and their close friends will be threatened and put to hardship. Why do you
think the freedom of the Press is being curtailed in such a big manner?

*Siritunga Jayasuriya* : I would like to explain a little bit of the
background for the present situation. In Sri Lanka, as in India and other
countries, extreme nationalist forces were there. There was a lot of it
going on: campaigning, this and that. It was not a major matter. Because of
the capitalist power politics, Chandrika Bandaranaika (who came to power in
1994 with a programme to find a solution and a political answer to the
problem) lost strength in the Parliament and she dissolved it prematurely.
The Government headed by Ranil Wickremesinghe’s United National Party was
the counter-capitalist party in Sri Lanka. I have nothing to do with that
party, but I have to say the truth. They won is 2002 and they went ahead
with the Ceasefire Agreement (CFA). A lot of people felt that the CFA was
okay, that the country was going on the path of peace. Everyone agreed that
there was a lot of mutual understanding between the North and the South, our
people who were living in other countries decided to come back. Many
politicians believed that if this peace process was going to achieve its
end, then it would be the end of existence for their political parties. That
might be the reason why in 2004, Chandrika prematurely dissolved the
Parliament. Not only that, she invited extreme Sinhala nationalist communal
elements like the JVP (Janata Vimukti Perana) in order to capture power.
These extreme Sinhala nationalist parties also shared power. In 2005, when
the Presidential elections came as Chandrika’s period was over, Chandrika
selected Mahinda Rajapakse as the Presidential candidate. We understood
fully well that Mahinda Rajapakse’s programme was purely based on Sinhala
nationalism. Ranil was coming out with a more neo-liberal programme which
was pro-Western. So, we had no other choice except to contest the election
even though we are a very small party. We didn’t have any money, we didn’t
have any strength, we didn’t have any forces behind us. And I would like to
mention here that when the official election result was declared, in front
of the diplomatic community and the international media like the BBC and
CNN, I expressed my views about Mahinda Rajapaksa. I said, “Well, the
election is over, Mr.Mahinda Rajapaksa has won. But, I will have to say
something more. For the first time in Sri Lankan history, the President has
been elected only from the Sinhala voters. So we have a President now who is
the Sinhala president. Earlier, even though we have had only Sinhala
Presidents they have got some votes from the Tamil people as well. I told
him to his face, “I think your election campaign has been conducted
undermining the aspirations of the Tamil-speaking people. But as President
you have to look at everyone’s problems. If you are going to conduct the
war, then all the citizens (and not only the Tamils) will have to pay the
price.”

*Meena Kandasamy* : Only within Sri Lanka we observe that some of the
radical left parties have taken on a major chauvinistic and extreme
nationalist position. How do you reconcile to this, being a leftist party?

*Siritunga Jayasuriya* : The original base of the JVP was Communism. One of
their main motives was to work against Indian expansionism. They said that
the unemployment problem was because of the Tamil plantation workers who had
come from India. They were not this bad at that moment. They had some sort
of Marxism, some sort of Socialism. They had photos of Marx, Engels and
Lenin behind them. They are the biggest Red, but from the beginning, they
are not socialists. During an earlier period, in the 1980s, the JVP leader
Rohana Vijayaweera accepted self-determination to the Tamils. It was in one
of his minor publications. But the present generation leaders say that he is
misrepresented totally and that their leader never said anything like that.
That’s how they are. Right now they are centrists: mixed with the
socialists, but also mixed with the communalists.

*Meena Kandasamy*: You say that the JVP at some point of time has accepted
Tamil self-determination. What is your opinion of Tamil self-determination?

*Siritunga Jayasuriya* : Accepting Tamil self-determination is one of our
key demands to meet this problem. I don’t think that accepting
self-determination itself is the answer, but it is a first step, a meeting
point. Even in our election campaign, even in the local area elections a few
weeks back, we say (in spite of the great difficulties we face) that
accepting self-determination is the first step towards solving the ethnic
crisis.

*Meena Kandasamy*: You are a staunch opponent of Indian expansion. I have
been reading reports of how Sri Lanka is being written away to foreign
companies. Take Indian Oil for example. How do you react to this?

*Siritunga Jayasuriya* : This is another interesting question, and I will
link it even further. Some people are asking why the Indian Government is
supplying the arms? Why the Indian Government is sending military experts to
Sri Lanka? What is the reason? In one way, I think that India is also part
of this problem. Not only this government, but also all the past governments
are part of this problem. The Indian capitalist class of bourgeoisies and
the ruling class go together. They are more interested in the business and
political life than in the welfare of the Tamils. Already, the automobile
industry in Sri Lanka, is dominated by Ashok Leyland, Maruti, Bajaj who
control more than 50% of the industry. Likewise, the Indian Oil Corporation
carries out nearly 50% of the oil distribution in the island. Before the
war, Sri Lanka was popular for its tea: the Ceylon tea. I have to say that
unfortunately there is no more Ceylon tea. Tata owns most of the tea estates
in Sri Lanka. So, you now drink only Indian Tata Ceylon Tea. A month ago,
Airtel Mobiles has invaded Sri Lanka with an advertisement from Shah Rukh
Khan. “Hello Sri Lanka! What do you want? Free SIMs for all of you!” People
are queuing up to get the free SIM cards. These are just few examples, just
the agendas behind them are scary. At the same time, because of the pressure
from Tamil Nadu, these politicians have to put a bit of drama. Like Pranab
Mukherjee going there, like Kanimozhi’s giving a resignation to her father.
Forget about India. I think that even if Barack Obama is going to make a
statement next week, it is not going to make a big difference.

Right now, democracy is under threat. I am not defending the LTTE, I am not
defending their brutal methods. They have unnecessarily antagonized the
Sinhala people and our mouths have been shut because of them. Like killing
school children. I understand their tactic because the Sri Lanka army is
doing the same thing.

In India, the question is who will form government in Tamil Nadu. So
everybody wants to make a statement against another person’s statement and
nothing happens except the Tamils finally suffering in Sri Lanka. So, we
have to demand the Tamil Nadu politicians to come together on one platform.
I think all the working people: autodrivers, fishermen, farmers, school
children, everyone should come together. Unless we shake the system,
everyone will only continue to come forth with crocodile tears. They will
only come up with fresh statements, and everyone will be thinking, “Aha,
that is a very good statement. Something will happen.” Everybody believed
that 28 MPs would be pulled out of the Central Government and that the
Central Government will collapse. That did not happen. I think it was a
political drama. I am a politician, I am a political animal, but I think
when we are faced with such a final situation, we should forget our
political agenda. First of all we must look after the people, and we must
give them the chance to live. Only then does politics come.

*Meena Kandasamy*: Do you think the International Community is keeping away
from this problem solely because of India’s pro-war, pro-Colombo approach?
Doesn’t it look as if they are backing Rajapaksa and giving him as much time
as he wants?

*Siritunga Jayasuriya*: The Indian Government is helping Sri Lanka under the
name of the “War Against Terrorism.” Even though Bush has gone out of the
political scene, he has given a very good weapon to all the ruling class to
go against anybody, kill him and put the label: “He’s a terrorist.” At the
same time, I also feel that the LTTE over-estimated its strength. The LTTE
is facing not just the Sri Lanka Army. Some of the major international
powers are behind the Sri Lankan Government. China, India, Pakistan, Israel,
and even America to a certain extent. All these major powers are there, and
all the new weapons are being supplied to Sri Lanka. The LTTE is right now
in a defensive war. They would take more time and I don’t know how long. The
LTTE is also responsible for putting Rajapakse into power. They did not
allow the Tamil people to go and vote. Otherwise, there is no chance for
Rajapakse to come to power. I also have a feeling that the LTTE did not use
the peace process to get the authority from the Tamil people as a democratic
force. They should have opened dialogue with the people, even with the
dissenting forces and got the people’s mandate. I strongly feel that the
LTTE should have organized a referendum in that area. Then they can show
that they are the representatives and have the strength to address the
entire world. Similarly, they should have also entered politics in the
South, even in Colombo. They could have collected the trade unions and the
leftist forces and asked them how their struggle was being viewed. I think
the LTTE didn’t utilize the ceasefire period and they might have been
over-confident about their strength.

*Meena Kandasamy* : What would be your message to the politicians in Tamil
Nadu?

*Siritunga Jayasuriya* : My first immediate demand would be: the Indian
Government should first stop supplying arms. The Tamil Nadu politicians
should ask the Indian Government to come clean. The Indian Government’s
underhand dealings must be exposed.

The second thing is that in Sri Lanka, in every small village, there are
white flags after white flags. In Sinhala-Buddhist culture, that is a symbol
of a death, of mourning. People’s sons have been killed, women have lost
their husbands. Everybody is crying. That is a consequence of the war. I
know that there is nobody victorious in a war. War is a defeat. This is the
real meaning of war and I don’t know how many years we have to spend to
overcome this debacle.

We were living together for many many years. It is not a question of who
came first to Sri Lanka, and to whom the land belongs. I think it is a wrong
question. It is not as simple as Sri Lankan people giving something to the
Tamil people and the Tamils accepting it. We should sit together; they might
be small, the Sinhala people might be bigger. I would like to end my
interview with what Karl Marx said: After the environment, the most
important question in the world is the nation. Everybody is proud about
their own nationality. Someone might be small, someone might be bigger. But
the feeling of nationality can never be suppressed by any laws or any means.
We only have to find a reconciliation.

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