by Sam Rajappa
Hello Friends
Sam Rajappa is a veteraqn Indian journalist with
vast insight and knowledge about the happenings in the Indian corridors
of power.
After having worked for a number of Indian and Foreign media
institutions he served as director of the Statesman print journalism
school after retiring from active journalism.
In a recent article appearing in “The Statesman” Sam has made a very
bold revelation about how and why New Delhi “Allowed” Colombo to go
ahead and decimate the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam(LTTE) without
having a political settlement finalised beforehand.
This had been the cardinal principle on which India’s south block
had fashioned its policy vis a vis Sri Lanka for quite a while. Yet in a
blatant departure from that stance India went ahead and provided
“silent” sanction and support to Sri Lanka in its bid to defeat and
destroy the LTTE without having ensured a political settlement being
finalised.
This action amounting to putting the proverbial cart before the horse
is perceived as the cause for India’s current predicament in getting
Colombo to agree to a political settlement. Having been “allowed” to
decimate the LTTE in full the triumphant Rajapaksa does not see any
urgent need to evolve a viable political settlement as requested by
India and the so called International community.
Why did India go against its long standing policy and subscribe to
action that has altered the power equation in the Island in particular
and the region in general?
It has for long been whispered in knowledgeable circles that the
Rajiv Gandhi family had imposed its will upon the Indian establishment
at a critical juncture and insisted that the LTTE be finished off
regardless of whether a feasible political settlement had been
finalised. It was said that Rajiv’s widow Sonia Gandhi had been
vengefully adamant that Velupillai Prabhakaran and Pottu Amman be
eliminated in order to avenge the murder of her husband.
Despite the claim that in India policy is fashioned by the
bureaucrats and not politicians it soon became an “open” secret that it
was the will of Sonia Gandhi that determined Indian policy in the final
stages of the war against the LTTE.
In a sense the Mullivaaikkal debacle was an Italian vendetta where
the assassination at Sreeperumbhudoor was perceived as being the reason
for the carnage on the sands of Karaithuraipattru AGA division.
This was why India prevented international intervention in the war
and also extended support to Colombo in warding off attempts by the
International community to reprimand. This also explains India’s low key
response to the UN advisory panel report and the channel 4 documentary.
Now veteran scribe Sam Rajappa has given coherent form to these
“whispers” by writing boldly in “Statesman” about the run up to the
final stages of the war. He has also related how the well-meaning
efforts to bring about a political solution by a section of Indian civil
society was thwarted by the establishment and consequentially how the
war was accelerated
Sam Rajappas revelations about this “untold story” if proven true are
a damning indictment of Sonia Gandhi and relevant Indian policy makers!
It would demonstrate that the personal motives of Sonia Gandhi and
not the national interests of India dictated Indian policy towards Sri
Lanka. It would also mean that India has the “blood” of Mullivaaikkaal
on its “hands”.
I am reproducing the “Statesman” article by Sam Rajappa in full here under a new heading for the benefit of readers.
So here it is friends! – DBS Jeyaraj
Sonia Gandhi wanted Colombo to decimate LTTE without finalising a Political Solution
by Sam Rajappa
THE Sri Lankan High Commissioner to India, Prasad
Kariyawasam, now in Colombo for consultations, has sought an appointment
with the Tamil Nadu Chief Minister, Jayalalitha, in Chennai to extend
to her a personal invitation from President Mahinda Rajapaksa to visit
Sri Lanka. In its attempt to pamper Rajapaksa to serve the agenda of
Congress president Sonia Gandhi, India had betrayed the cause of Sri
Lankan Tamils who have been struggling for equal rights with the
majority Sinhalese.
While the DMK, an important constituent of the UPA, remained passive
content with amassing wealth, even as India extended military, material
and moral support to Sri Lanka in its war on its Tamil citizens in the
crucial 2008-2009 period, the AIADMK, voted to power in the Assembly
election held in April, and its leader Jayalalitha, have chosen a
proactive role in rescuing fellow Tamils across the Palk Bay who have
been progressively reduced from second class citizenship they enjoyed
since independence in 1948 to serfs of the Sinhalese.
David Miliband and Bernard Kouchner, former foreign ministers of
Britain and France respectively, after a recent visit to Sri Lanka,
wrote: “Tamil life is treated as fourth or fifth class citizens. If
foreign policy is about anything, it should be about stopping this kind
of inhumanity.”
South Block remaining a silent spectator, Chennai has wrested the
initiative and Rajapaksa is worried. When the Tamil Nadu Assembly passed
a resolution seeking retrieval of Kachchatheevu, a part of
Ramanathapuram district which Indira Gandhi illegally ceded to Sri Lanka
in 1974, and urged the Centre to call upon the UN to investigate war
crimes against Rajapaksa, Colombo dismissed the whole thing as the
rantings of a Chief Minister who has no locus standi on foreign affairs.
Even our own external affairs ministry which gave scant regard to
public sentiments in Tamil Nadu while gifting Kachchtheevu to Sri Lanka
or while fishermen from the State were being shot dead like wanton flies
by the Lankan navy seems to have undergone a sea change after
Jayalalitha’s assumption of office in Fort St. George. Foreign secretary
Nirupama Rao told a group of Sri Lankan journalists visiting New Delhi
last week “the Indian government can no longer remain insensitive to the
sentiments expressed by the Tamil Nadu government, the politicians and
the people of Tamil Nadu about the issues affecting the Tamils in Sri
Lanka.”
The screening of Channel 4’s “Killing fields of Sri Lanka” by a
national television channel for three consecutive days last week showing
naked Tamil prisoners shot in the head, dead bodies of women who had
been raped and dumped on a truck, the immediate aftermath of shells
landing on a hospital in a ‘no fire zone’ and the atrocities committed
by the Sri Lankan armed forces in the final moments of the brutal civil
war have left the people nauseated and shell-shocked.
The authenticity of the footage has been confirmed by a forensic
pathologist, forensic video analyst, firearms evidence expert and a
forensic video expert of international repute. Channel 4’s senior news
executive Dorothy Byrne had cautioned viewers not to watch the programme
saying “it is horrific, the images will remain in your mind may be for
years.” The 53-minute footage is being dubbed in Tamil to be screened by
Jaya TV owned by Jayalalitha in the next few days. Already Tamil Nadu
is on the boil for India’s contribution to the genocide Sri Lanka.
There is an untold story about how New Delhi became instrumental in
the brutality brought out in the Channel 4 documentary. India was hoping
for the victory of Ranil Wickremasinghe of the UNP with whom our then
High Commissioner in Colombo, Nirupama Rao, had established a close
relationship, in the 2005 presidential election. Rajapaksa of the SLFP, a
known hawk, won by the narrowest of margins, as President. Had it not
been the boycott of the election by the Tamils in response to a call
given by the LTTE, Wickremasinghe would have won easily. Rajapaksa
wanted to outlive his image of a hawk and establish rapport with the
Indian political leadership but New Delhi repeatedly rebuffed him.
This made him realise the importance of involving civil society in
Tamil Nadu to resolve the intractable ethnic problem in his country.
His emissaries were scouting for a group in Tamil Nadu who could act as a
bridge between the two countries. After much persuasion by Colombo, a
small four-member group comprising MG Devasahayam, a former IAS officer
and close associate of Jayaprakash Narayan and Mother Teresa as
convenor, SP Ambrose, retired IAS officer who was home secretary of
Tamil Nadu and Secretary to Government of India, a senior journalist
working for a national daily, and a military veteran well versed in Sri
Lankan affairs was formed and held its preliminary meeting in Chennai on
10 May 2007, with Sunimal Fernando, adviser to President Rajapaksa,
participating. It was unanimously agreed that a military victory for one
side without a political strategy to address the grievances of the
Tamil community was unlikely to produce a lasting solution to the ethnic
crisis.
The group had its first meeting with President Rajapaksa and his team
comprising Lalith Weeratunga, secretary to the President, assistant
secretary Waruna Sri Dhanapala and adviser Fernando in Colombo on 17
July 2007. Throughout the two-hour discussions, Rajapaksa gave the
impression that he was not unduly worried about international criticism
of his regime but was greatly concerned about Indian opinion. He fully
endorsed the group’s opinion expressed by Devasahayam that the solution
to the crisis should emerge from within Sri Lanka and refined through
international opinion, particularly from India.
After the two-day meetings with the Tamil Nadu group, Rajapaksa said
at a public function “we ought to be sensitive and responsive to the
genuine grievances of the people in the North-East,” traditional
homeland of the Sri Lankan Tamils.
To cut a long story short, the Tamil Nadu civil society group had a
series of meetings with Rajapaksa’s team of officials and ministers in
Sri Lanka and Chennai to carry forward the progress made so far and
agreed upon many steps to resolve the conflict. A crucial conference was
held with President Rajapaksa in Colombo on 25 March 2008, followed by a
series of meetings with DEW Gunasekara, Sri Lankan Minister for
Constitutional Affairs and National Integration, Raja Collure, chairman
of official language commission, and others for evolving a political
solution and confidence-building measures. An action agenda was set.
The Indian High Commission in Colombo got wind of the Tamil Nadu
group’s activities and the Deputy High Commissioner, A Manickam, sought
an appointment with Devasahayam. It was fixed at 5 p.m. at the hotel he
was staying which was next door to Manickam’s office.
Manickam never kept his appointment but the High Commission later
reprimanded the Sri Lankan presidential team for holding peace talks
with ‘unauthorised’ persons. The civil society initiative was conveyed
to Sonia Gandhi by a Congress member of the Lok Sabha from Tamil Nadu
who was trying to sell the idea of panchayat raj system to Rajapaksa to
resolve the ethnic crisis.
Unaware of these developments in New Delhi, Devasahayam wrote to TKA
Nair, one of his former colleagues who was occupying the post of
principal secretary to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, on 1 April 2008,
recalling the Indian defence ministry’s annual report to Parliament
which said: “We strongly believe that there is no military solution.
What is required is a settlement of the political, constitutional and
other issues within the framework of a united Sri Lanka which addresses
the concerns of all communities, especially that of the ethnic
minority.”
Devasahayam outlined the progress made by the Tamil Nadu group and
the action agenda that had been set. The letter regretted that
government of India, while providing Sri Lanka with weapons systems and
training facilities, remained indifferent to activating any peaceful
negotiated settlement. It requested the government to support the
initiative taken by the Tamil Nadu group to end the long-festering
humanitarian crisis. The letter remains unanswered to this day.
It was after this group’s successful initiative that India changed
track and gave the green signal to the Sri Lankan government to go all
out to decimate the LTTE without insisting on a political solution to
resolve the ethnic crisis. According to sources in Colombo, Sonia Gandhi
wanted LTTE leader Velupillai Pirapaharan and its intelligence chief
Pottu Amman decapitated and pledged all military support to Sri Lanka to
achieve her goal.
The then national security adviser MK Narayanan, foreign secretary
Shivshankar Menon and the clique controlling the Prime Minister’s Office
put Sonia Gandhi’s interest above national interest and actively
assisted the brutal Sri Lankan genocide that could be seen in the
Channel 4 documentary thus creating the quagmire Sri Lanka finds itself
in. This is evident from the fact that while the whole world is seething
at what they saw in the documentary, the government of India is
deafeningly silent.
There is every possibility of Rajapaksa and company being hauled up
before the International Court of Justice at The Hague to stand trial
for war crimes and genocide. In the event, New Delhi cannot escape
responsibility for this horrendous brutality. The bell is tolling.
source:http://dbsjeyaraj.com/dbsj/archives/2565


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