| 21th April 2003
Mr
Ranil Wickremesinghe
Prime Minister of Sri Lanka
Temple Trees
Colombo 03
Sri Lanka.
Dear Prime Minister,
In accordance with the decision of our leadership
I am advised to bring to your urgent attention the
deep displeasure and dismay felt by our organisation
on some critical issues relating to the on-going peace
process.
You are well aware that the Ceasefire Agreement that
has been in force for more than one year and the six
rounds of peace negotiations between the principal
parties has been successful, irrespective of the occurrence
of some violent incidents that endangered the peace
process. The stability of the ceasefire and the progress
of the peace talks, you will certainly appreciate,
are the positive outcome of the sincere and firm determination
of the parties to seek a permanent resolution to the
ethnic conflict through peaceful means. The cordial
inter-relationship, frank and open discussions and
the able and wise guidance of the facilitators fostered
trust and confidence between the negotiators and helped
to advance the talks on substantial levels. The negotiating
teams were able to form important sub-committees on
the basis of equal and joint partnership. During the
early negotiating sessions it was agreed that the
Government of Sri Lanka and the LTTE should work together
and approach the international community in partnership.
The Oslo Donor Conference held on 25 November 2002
turned out to be an ideal forum for such joint endeavour.
The LTTE has acted
sincerely and in good faith extending its full co-operation
to the government of Sri Lanka to seek international
assistance to restore normalcy and to rehabilitate
the war affected people of the northeast. The LTTE
to date has joined hands with the government and participated
in the preparation of joint appeals and programmes.
In spite of our goodwill and trust, your government
has opted to marginalize our organisation in approaching
the international community for economic assistance.
We refer to the exclusion of the LTTE from the crucial
international donor conference held in Washington
on 14 April 2003 in preparation for the major donor
conference to be held in Japan in June. We view the
exclusion of the LTTE, the principle partner to peace
and the authentic representatives of the Tamil people
from discussions on critical matters affecting the
economic and social welfare of the Tamil nation, as
a grave breach of good faith. Your government, as
well as our facilitator Norway, are fully aware of
the fact that the United States has legal constraints
to invite representatives of a proscribed organisation
to their country. In these circumstances an appropriate
venue could have been selected to facilitate the LTTE
to participate in this important preparatory aid conference.
But the failure on the part of your government to
do so gives cause for suspicion that this omission
was deliberate. The exclusion of the LTTE from this
conference has severely eroded the confidence of our
people in the peace process.
As you are aware, considerable optimism and hopes
were raised among the people when your government,
shortly after assuming power, entered into a ceasefire
agreement with our oganisation, bringing to an end
twenty years of savage and bloody conflict. Expectations
were further raised when both sides began direct negotiations
with Norwegian facilitation. In particular, there
was a justifiable expectation that the peace process
would address the urgent and immediate existential
problems facing the people of the north and east,
particularly the million people who are internally
displaced by the conflict and are languishing in welfare
centres and refugee camps.
As such, the Ceasefire Agreement included crucial
conditions of restoring normalcy which required the
vacation, by occupying Sri Lankan troops, of Tamil
homes, schools, places of worship and public buildings.
Despite the agreed timeframe for this evacuation of
troops, which has since passed, there has been no
change in the ground situation. We have repeatedly
raised the issue of continuing suffering of our people
at every round of talks with your government. Your
negotiators' repeated assurances that the resettlement
of the displaced people would be expedited have proven
futile. The negotiations have been successful in so
far as significant progress has been made in key areas,
such as the agreement to explore federalism on the
basis of the right to self-determination of our people.
But this progress has not been matched by any improvement
in the continuing hardships being faced by our people
as a result of your government's refusal to implement
the normalisation aspects of the Ceasefire Agreement
and subsequent agreements reached at the talks. As
a result, considerable disillusionment has set in
amongst the Tamil people, and in particular the displaced,
who have lost all hope the peace process will alleviate
their immense suffering.
Though there is peace
due to the silencing of the guns, normalcy has not
returned to Tamil areas. Tens of thousands of government
troops continue to occupy our towns, cities and residential
areas suffocating the freedom of mobility or our people.
Such a massive military occupation of Tamil lands,
particularly in Jaffna - a densely populated district
- during peace times denying the right of our displaced
people to return to their homes, is unfair and unjust.
Your government, in
international forums, continues to place poverty as
the common phenomenon affecting the entire country.
The Poverty Reduction Strategy forms the essence of
the document ëRegaining Sri Lanka' which defines
the macro-economic policy of your government. Though
poverty and poverty alleviation constitute the centrality
of the new economic vision of your government as exemplified
in ëRegaining Sri Lanka' the document fails to
examine the causality of the phenomenon of poverty,
the effects of ethnic war and the unique conditions
of devastation prevailing in the northeast.
In our view, the conditions of reality prevailing
in Tamil areas are qualitatively different from southern
Sri Lanka. The Tamils faced the brunt of the brutal
war. Twenty years of intense and incessant war has
caused irreparable destruction to the infrastructure
in the northeast. This colossal destruction augmented
by continued displacement of the people and their
inability to pursue their livelihoods due to military
restrictions and activities have caused untold misery
and extreme poverty among the people of the northeast.
Continued displacement has also depleted all forms
of savings of these people disabling them from regaining
their lives on their own. The war-affected people
need immediate help to regain their dignity. They
need restoration of essential services to re-establish
their lives. Reconstruction of infrastructures such
as roads, hospitals, schools and houses are essential
for them to return to normal life.
The poverty that is prevailing in southern Sri Lanka
is a self-inflicted phenomenon, caused by the disastrous
policies of the past governments (both the UNP and
the SLFP) in dealing with the Tamil national conflict.
In its fanatical drive to prosecute an unjust war
against the Tamil people, the Sinhala state wasted
all national wealth to a futile cause. The massive
borrowings to sustain an absurd policy of ëwar
for peace' by the former government caused huge international
indebtedness. The economic situation of the south
has been further worsened by the mismanagement of
state funds, bad governance and institutional corruption.
Therefore, the conditions prevailing in the south
are distinctly different from the northeast where
the scale and magnitude of the infra-structural destruction
is monumental and the poverty is acute. Ignoring this
distinctive reality, your government posits poverty
as a common phenomenon across the country and attempts
to seek a solution with a common approach. This approach
grossly under states the severity of the problems
faced by the people in the northeast.
The government's ëRegaining Sri Lanka' document
completely lacks any form of identified goals for
the northeast. Statistics presented for substantiating
the policy totally ignore the northeast and solely
concentrate on southern Sri Lanka. However, this has
been promoted as the national strategy to the international
community to seek aid. It is evident from this that
the government lacks any comprehensive strategy for
serious development of the northeast. The Poverty
Reduction Strategy fails to address the poverty of
the northeast as distinct from the rest. In seeking
international assistance your government disingenuously
speaks of reconstruction being needed in all areas,
thereby masking the total destruction of the infrastructure
of the northeast which has resulted from the militarist
policies of the past three decades.
As we pointed out above, the exclusion of the LTTE
from critical aid conference in Washington, the non-implementation
of the terms and conditions enunciated in the truce
document, the continuous suffering and hardship experienced
by hundreds of thousands of internally displaced Tamils,
the aggressive Sinhala military occupation of Tamil
cities and civilian settlements, the distortion and
marginalisation of the extreme conditions of poverty
and deprivation of the Tamils of the northeast in
the macro-economic policies and strategies of the
government have seriously undermined the confidence
of the Tamil people and the LTTE leadership in the
negotiating process. Under these circumstances the
LTTE leadership has decided to suspend its participation
in the negotiations for the time being. We will not
be attending the donor conference in Japan in June.
While we regret that we were compelled to make this
painful decision, we wish to reiterate our commitment
to seek a negotiated political solution to the ethnic
question. We also urge the Government of Sri Lanka
to restore confidence in the peace process amongst
the Tamil people by fully implementing, without further
delay, the normalisation aspects of the Ceasefire
Agreement and permit the immediate resettlement of
the internally displaced people of the northeast.
We also request the government to re-evaluate its
economic development strategy to reconstruct the Tamil
nation destroyed by war.
Thanking You,
With best wishes,
(Anton Balasingham)
Chief Negotiator
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam
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