Address by Hon Rohitha
Bogollagama, MP, Minister of Foreign Affairs, Sri Lanka on “A
people’s mandate for democracy over terrorism in the east of Sri Lanka” – Carlton
Club, London –
9 June 2008
Excellencies
Ladies and Gentlemen
I am delighted to be at the Carlton.
As an overseas member I come here regularly during my visits to London. It is always a
wonderful opportunity to meet up with my Tory friends on these occasions. My
links with the Conservative party dates back two decades when I did a brief
internship at its headquarters. Indeed I am very much aware that there are many
friends of Sri Lanka
among you. I cannot forget your generosity following the tsunami disaster in
2004 when you were generous enough to contribute as much as £27,000 for
livelihood support, reconstruction and rehabilitation. This outpouring of
assistance was a good testimony of our friendship. I believe Sri Lanka
shares some historic links with this club. If I remember correctly Viscount Soulbury who was a Governor General of the then Ceylon, was a
past chairman of this club.
I have to congratulate the Carlton
for finally taking the bold step to open its doors to the fairer sex. Ladies –
especially since Sri Lanka
is the country that produced the world’s first woman Prime Minister. In fact we
were the first British colony to allow women to vote. So we are with you and
fully support the change.
Friends, those of you who have known Sri Lanka
or Ceylon
as some of you are used to calling us, are I know always keen to have news
about our country. I sometimes tell friends here in cricketing parlance, that
we have made a good score and are still not out. I am
sure this captures the indominatable spirit of our
people despite numerous challenges. Incidentally this year marks 60 yrs of
independence, and don’t forget we were the first British colony to have
universal adult suffrage dating back to 1931. I am proud to say, that 60 yrs on, we have remained a functioning democracy and
successive governments have never wavered from democratic traditions.
Ladies and Gentlemen: the British opened up our economy to the world. You
taught us to grow tea, coffee, cinnamon and coconut and to export it. We became
famous thereafter for our Ceylon Tea. Today friends, we have further
diversified our exports. You will be aware that Marks & Spencer, Victoria’s
Secrets, Next and Tesco are displaying our products. Last month Sir Stewart
Rose was in Colombo
to open their first completely eco-friendly factory. Today the export sector is
the engine of our economic growth which I am sure you will be happy to hear. Sri Lanka has
graduated to the status of a middle income country and has sustained an annual
growth rate of 6-7%, this too amidst a conflict that I will allude to in a
moment.
Ladies and Gentlemen: conscious of the embarrassment this could cause you, I
have to remind that it was the British who introduced us to cricket. We have
now perfected the art and on some occasions, in fact many occasions, shown that
we can play it better!
However Ladies and Gentlemen, the story of Sri Lanka’s success has evolved with several grave and serious
challenges which were unforeseen at the time of our independence. We have been
confronted with the monster of terrorism but I do not need to elaborate. This very club as you all know was bombed by the IRA in
1990, at around this time of the evening when people were having their dinks
and dinner as we have been indulging this evening. Terrorists strike at the
most unexpected time and they hit innocent civilians who are unfortunate enough
to be there. Just before I left Colombo
a bomb exploded in a civilian bus during the morning traffic rush, 21 civilians
were killed instantly and many others injured, this was the fourth bombing in
ten days.
It is in this context that I would like to introduce the topic I have chosen to
speak to you about “a people’s mandate for democracy over terrorism in the East
of Sri Lanka”.
Ladies and Gentlemen, terrorists seek to destroy the very foundations of our
civilized way of life and our democratic traditions by attempting to win their
demands by unleashing terror instead of through the democratic process. I will endeavour to draw examples from recent developments in the
East of Sri Lanka to illustrate how the government’s initiatives have led to
democracy triumphing over terrorism.
There are those who claim that “one man’s terrorist is another man’s freedom
fighter”. I will tell you Ladies and Gentlemen with experience of our conflict
that this is a most dangerous claim because it assesses the validity of the
cause whereas terrorism is not a cause, it is an act. An act
of terror, of killing, suicide bombing, destruction. One can have a
perfectly valid cause or grievance, yet if one commits terrorist acts, it is
terrorism regardless of whatever cause or grievance there might be.
The government of President Mahinda Rajapaksa has fully recognized that our communities have
certain grievances which need to be redressed. It was for this purpose that he
set up an All Party Conference within a month of being elected to office.
Through this mechanism the government has sought to reach a consensus on
finding a political solution to these grievances particularly of the
minorities. The All Party Representative Committee (APRC) has made a series of
interim recommendations which the government has accepted in full and set about
implementing. Most notably the full implementation of the
13th amendment to the constitution which introduced wide devolution of power
from the centre to the provinces at the periphery through the provincial
councils system.
Ladies and Gentlemen: experts talk of corrigible and incorrigible terrorist
groups. The LTTE in Sri
Lanka has demonstrated that it is not
interested in peace, not interested in serious political negotiations but only
a perpetuation of terror and mayhem. I must remind you that President Rajapaksa no sooner than he was elected to office offered
to negotiate with the LTTE. I was part of the government team that met with the
LTTE representatives in Geneva on two occasions
and once in Oslo.
We asked them to discuss the core political issues that constitute the
perceived grievances of the community they allege to represent. However they
refused to do so and instead made demands for concessions on the ground that
would favour them militarily and strategically. When
we stood our position with the proviso that their strategic demands could be
looked at with time, they walked out. A previous government entered into a
Ceasefire Agreement (CFA) with the LTTE and expectedly they used this period to
re-group and smuggle in arms and more importantly violated the provisions
several thousand times, relegating it to a mere piece of paper. This was partly
because the Ceasefire Agreement itself was flawed from its very origin. It was
not linked to a process of decommissioning the LTTE and ensuring political
negotiations linked to a settlement.
Ladies and Gentlemen: the LTTE has in these 30 years of conflict killed more of
the very community they claim to represent with a view to silencing dissent.
They conscript children, introduced to the world the art of suicide bombing and
are part of a trans-national crime network which according to recent studies by
institutions like the IISS has commercial transactions with the al-Qaeda
network.
Ladies and Gentlemen: what does a government faced with this conundrum do? We
have to protect and safeguard our people from the perpetrators of terror whilst
at the same time not losing sight of the grievances and aspirations of our
people. We have been compelled to use our armed forces to target and take on
terrorist installations with precision avoiding civilian casualties. Our
government is fully aware that military victories never provide solutions but
they can provide the space for political and economic solutions to be found.
Confronted with ruthless terrorists we have realized that without military
power the result can be more bloodshed.
Let me give you an example of what has happened in the eastern province of Sri Lanka to illustrate my point. Our
armed forces carried out a military operation which cleared parts of the
eastern province
of Sri Lanka which had
been infiltrated by the LTTE. In these areas they had conscripted children,
unfairly taxed the people and unleashed untold violence and misery. The eastern
province of Sri Lanka is a very significant part of
the country due to its ethnic composition. The population in the province is
almost equally divided among the three major communities i.e
1/3rd Tamil, 1/3rd Muslim and 1/3rd Sinhalese. In the Batticaloa
district 70.8% are Tamil according to the last official census (1981) whilst in
the Ampara district 41.5% are Muslim. In the Trincomalee district 34.3% are Sinhalese. The LTTE had
committed horrendous massacres in Muslim & Sinhala villages, with the last
straw being the deprivation of water to the farmers and the inhabitants in that
area of the east. Their objective was to subjugate the other communities with
the barrel of the gun. Following targeted military action by our security
forces, today the eastern province has been completely cleared of the LTTE. As
a result, between March & May this year we have been able to hold local
government and provincial council elections in areas where there had been no
elections for over 14 years when they were under de-facto LTTE control.
One of the most significant aspects of this election Ladies & Gentlemen was
that a breakaway faction of the LTTE decided to renounce the path of violence,
register as a political party called the TMVP and contest the elections in
coalition with the UPFA, they secured the majority i.e
52.21% of the vote in the eastern province (obtaining 20 seats in the
provincial council). The significant aspect of this was that due to the
coalition arrangement, they campaigned for support among all the communities
and received a mandate from a cross-section of the people in the province drawn
from all communities. The main opposition party similarly contested in a
coalition and secured 42.38% (15 seats in the provincial council). Accordingly
the ethnic composition of the elected members of the council
are 7 Tamils, 8 Muslims and 5 Sinhalese. There was a voter turnout of
over 65.2%. These elections were monitored by local and foreign observers and
their conclusion was that the election was by and large free and fair.
Ladies and Gentlemen: Mr Sivanesathurai
Chandrakanthan who has now become the Chief Minister
of the eastern province of our country previously played an active role in the
LTTE. He and his members have renounced violence and entered the democratic
process. As leader of the party that secured the majority of the votes he was
appointed as Chief Minister. However he has agreed to work
together peacefully with all the communities including opposition groups that
comprise this province. This indeed is a huge victory for democracy over
terrorism but it is a very hard won victory and it must be sustained for the
betterment of the people.
You are all familiar with the peace process in Northern Ireland. It is a challenge
for those who have turned ‘their swords into ploughshares’, to get accustomed
to doing things through the democratic process, when they had been used to
achieving it through the barrel of the gun. But our patience and determination
to rid our country of the scourge of terrorism and restore democracy must be
correctly understood. It’s endorsement by the people at the elections is the
best indicator. We have now launched a massive development drive in the eastern
province. We are encouraging investors to go into the east because we have to
ensure a peace dividend to the long suffering people in these parts. We are
confident that the government’s ‘Re-awakening of the east’ programme
will truly result in a transformation, for the betterment of the people who
live in that province.
Ladies and Gentlemen: The government is equally determined to clear areas of
the northern province still in the clutches of the LTTE and to restore
democracy and bring about rapid economic development in these areas too.
Expectedly the LTTE has launched a two-pronged effort to stymie our efforts to
dislodge them. As I alluded to earlier in my address, the LTTE has launched a
vicious campaign of suicide bombings in Colombo
and its environs to bring pressure on the government to halt its military
operations against them. It has simultaneously used sections of its diaspora to
appeal to the international community in a campaign to discredit our
government. To cry foul over alleged human rights violations, when the LTTE is
the worst perpetrator of violence, killings, abductions
and so on, this could sometimes be an irritant, as ground realities seem to be
ignored. I must however emphasise at this point that
our government takes with utmost seriousness concerns about alleged human
rights violations which are attributed to it. We have well established
institutions to investigate these allegations and been extremely transparent in
allowing access to UN Special Rapporteurs and in our
reporting procedures to the Human Rights Council. We are signatories to all
major international human rights instruments and a chapter on human rights has
been incorporated into our constitution with justiceable
provisions. We take with utmost seriousness our obligations to respect the Rule
of law and those arrested under the provisions of the law have to be produced
before a court of law. We have maintained transparency in these matters but we
must not engage in textbook theories and be unrealistic. There needs to be
sensitivity to the ground situation and the international community must
understand the enormity of the challenge.
Ladies and Gentlemen: You may recall that at the height of the IRA insurgency
in Northern Ireland, the
then UK
government launched a massive border surveillance force,
terrorist activists were arrested, interrogated and detained. Tough emergency
laws were enacted including the setting up of the non-jury Diplock
courts. In December 1977 the European
Court on human rights ruled on the inhumane and
degrading treatment of terrorist suspects by the Police in Northern Ireland.
The point I am making here is that in rooting out terrorism for democracies
such as ours to be sustained and protected, there are consequences.
What do we do when faced with intransigent terrorists? As democracies we have a
responsibility to protect our people from the clutches of terrorists even if we
sometimes have to err within reason on the side of civil liberties. When
confronted with a serial killer the police first seek to stop the violence.
Attempting to find out the causes or circumstances that led to this person
taking up serial killing comes later.
Ladies and Gentlemen: I have placed before you some of the challenges that Sri Lanka faces
today in its determined effort to restore democracy and defeat terrorism. I
want to reiterate here as I have done in many other places in London where I have spoken in public, that
the government is fully and utterly committed to addressing the grievances of
all communities in our country through a political process. This process cannot
be concluded through artificial deadlines or at the pace of other’s wishes nor
according to textbook theories. The situation is extremely complexed.
Previous governments have introduced far reaching political solutions but they
ended up becoming a dead letter. Why? Because they failed to garner consensus,
and the architects of these solutions failed to listen and consult the majority
of our people. I do not need to tell you how democratic processes work. But I
can assure you that the government is not pursuing a military solution to
address the grievances of our people, but yes, it is using the military to root
out terrorism. As I stated at the very outset of this presentation, we should
not miss the wood for the trees. We should not confuse causes that communities
and groups represent with untempered terror tactics
and naked terrorism.
One last issue I would like to touch on briefly before I conclude Ladies & Gentlemen is on terrorist fundraising and
procurement abroad particularly in the UK. Recently some LTTE activists
were arrested by your authorities. According to reports they had been procuring
remote controlled devices, Toughnote Laptops, circuit
boards, powerful magnets used to attach mines to ships and various other items
here in the UK which were being used to detonate explosives and to activate
mines. Besides through various front organizations disguised as charities and
companies they collect funds largely through coercion but also through
commercial activities to fund their terrorist campaign in Sri Lanka. Many
of you present in this room are parliamentarians, important opinion makers in
this country. We appeal to you to do your utmost to help us by preventing the UK being used
as it is being done now to raise funds and to procure military goods to destabilize
our country and destroy our people. I know the LTTE has been proscribed here
and also in the EU but they mushroom through fronts even religious and
charitable organizations, and you need to help us deal
with this challenge. Sometimes your country is preoccupied with the challenge
from Al-Qaeda terrorism but as my President stated in his address to the UN
General Assembly last year “Terrorism anywhere is terrorism. There is nothing
good in terrorism”. I am sure you will agree with me on that.
Ladies and Gentlemen, in my brief remarks this evening I have endeavoured to point out our government’s unwavering
commitment to the democratic process and our efforts to bring those misguided
extremist forces back to the democratic process and create the environment for
them to redress their grievances. The mandate they have received from the
people is a victory for all of us – an endorsement of our strategy and an
acceptance of those who have disarmed and chosen the democratic option.
Ladies and Gentlemen: let me conclude my brief remarks by thanking your
Chairman Lord Cope, your Deputy Chairman Mr John East
and all of you for inviting me here. I know the Tories are making a massive
comeback into the political arena under the leadership of Mr
Cameron. This afternoon my President and I met with him and I thought that I
should not fail to make mention of this.
Ladies and Gentlemen: I would be delighted to answer any questions and continue
this discussion. Thank you once again Ladies and Gentlemen for giving me this
opportunity to sensitise you on the developments in Sri Lanka.