Sunday,
24 November 2013 | R Hariharan | in Agenda | The Pioneer
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh cancelled his Sri
Lanka visit for the Commonwealth summit that concluded last week due to
political pressure from Tamil parties. Is it a serious diplomatic error on the
part of the UPA Government? Should regional parties decide India’s foreign
policy? How will it impact the India-Sri Lanka ties?
Why did
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh choose to stay away from the Commonwealth Heads
of Government Meeting (CHOGM) that concluded last week in Colombo? Was it a
gesture to save the political fortunes of the Congress in Tamil Nadu after a
vigorous campaign against CHOGM was whipped up? Was it an attempt to register
India’s solidarity with international protests against Sri Lanka’s alleged war
crimes and human rights violations during the Eelam War? Or, was it to show his
unhappiness at President Mahinda Rajapaksa not keeping up his promises to
implement the 13th Amendment in full and resume the political process with
Tamils? There are no answers, only deafening silence.
None of
these reasons seem to have figured in the Prime Minister’s letter informing
Rajapaksa of his decision to stay away from CHOGM. It would be unfair to hold
the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) responsible for the CHOGM mess; the MEA
was clear that India should attend the meeting. In fact, External Affairs
Minister Salman Khurshid’s vocal support for attending CHOGM drew protests from
fringe elements in Tamil Nadu. So not attending the meeting was clearly a
decision of the Prime Minister, regardless of the speculation on how it came
about.
However,
CHOGM is not the issue. It is perhaps the most inconsequential grouping, a colonial
club where Britain can reminisce on how the sun set on the empire without
feeling guilty about it. Only 27 heads of governments of 53 member-countries
chose to attend the Colombo meeting. This is not unusual; but still it provides
an opportunity to build leadership relations through informal meetings and
exchange views on critical issues.
There are
two reasons why Indian participation in CHOGM became such a serious political
issue. One is because Sri Lanka is hosting it. Internationally, there is a campaign
going on against Sri Lanka ever since allegations of war crimes and human
rights violations started piling up after the Eelam War ended in 2009. Tamil
population had been the victims and many feel the international community must
ensure justice is done to them. This has kindled a lot of sympathy in many
countries, including Australia, Britain and Canada, where sizeable Sri Lanka
Tamil diaspora lives, as well as in Tamil Nadu. Rajapaksa’s aim in hosting the
meeting was to refurbish his bruised international image. Chairing the
international body would also boost his national image, besides providing an
opportunity to showcase Sri Lanka’s rehabilitation and reconstruction efforts
in the war-torn areas. It was for these reasons that his detractors had been
against holding the Commonwealth meeting in Sri Lanka.
The other
reason is the Sri Lankan Tamil issue has become a foil in the turf war between
Tamil Nadu Chief Minister J Jayalalithaa and the aging DMK leader M
Karunanidhi. Almost all political parties in Tamil Nadu, including the Congress
and the BJP, started asking New Delhi to bring Sri Lanka to book ever since war
crimes allegations started surfacing at the end of Eelam War in 2009. The
series of Channel 4 videos depicting gruesome scenes of atrocity added fuel to
the fire.
But well before all this, it was Jayalalithaa who resurrected the Sri
Lankan Tamil issue from political margins and used it to rally support for the
ADMK in the 2009 Lok Sabha elections and later to rout the DMK in the Assembly elections.
In the process, she has marshalled the frustration of Tamils at India’s seeming
ineffectiveness to take Sri Lanka to task for its insensitivity to the plight
of Sri Lankan Tamils and its refusal to investigate alleged war crimes. The
Chief Minister had been to channelising these sentiments into protests against
Sri Lanka and the Centre in a sustained campaign.
Karunanidhi,
as a coalition partner of the UPA, had influenced India’s Sri Lanka policy
during the crucial days of Eelam war. As Tamil Nadu’s protests against the
Centre gathered momentum, the ageing leader has been desperately trying to
distance himself from his past role in Centre’s Sri Lanka policy. He has been
finding it difficult to manage it ever since Jayalalithaa took the lead to trigger
protests and initiate a series of resolutions against Sri Lanka in the State
Assembly.
Obviously,
the Tamil Nadu resolutions on Sri Lanka trespass into the Centre’s domain. But
to be pragmatic, they need to be contexualised in the political fisticuff going
on in the State as well as in the growing ability of regional satraps to decide
the fate of coalitions at the Centre. Neither of these influences can be wished
away.
Can the
nation afford to allow its foreign policy to be subjected to regional pressures
when there are larger strategic security and trade interests at stake? Of
course not; but the Tamil issue has been considered an important component of
India’s Sri Lanka policy. The signing of the India-Sri Lanka Agreement in 1987
and India’s military intervention in the island nation between 1987 and 1990
illustrate how the Tamil issue has become interwoven in the India-Sri Lanka
strategic security calculus. So, the Sri Lanka Tamil issue, which has local
impact, has come to impinge upon India’s relations with Sri Lanka. The Centre
cannot allow its Sri Lanka policy decisions to be subjected to vagaries of the
State’s prescription. It is the responsibility of a national leadership. And in
handling the CHOGM question this seems to have been ignored.
The problem
is more with the national decision-making process than with political
management. There are wheels within wheels that seem to operate New Delhi’s
policy-making process on almost all national issues. Many of them do not
operate solely in national interest. And coalition compulsion is only one of
them. The national leadership has to strategise ways of handling it in States
like Tamil Nadu and West Bengal which have sibling interests in neighbouring
countries.
However,
where national interest dictates, the Central leadership has a responsibility
to assert itself. It has to demonstrate it is in control of its policies. Of
course, this has to be done while reassuring the people how it proposes to
address the concerns of the State. Unfortunately, the Prime Minister seems to
have a serious problem in asserting his role. This is further compounded by his
inability to articulate the policy through a transparent and interactive
process. He should regularly meet the Press, and visit States to explain policy
decisions. But unfortunately, this has not been his style. This is applicable
not only to Manmohan Singh but also the entire political leadership. As a
result, the present decision-making process is regarded as hesitant and
ponderous, exuding uncertainty.
Even the
inadequate and opaque articulation of the national leadership’s decision is
usually belated. It is dished out after prolonged public agitation in terse
messages lacking courage of conviction. Witnessing Tamil Nadu’ growing concern
for the plight of war-affected Sri Lankan Tamils for four years, it is
surprising that the Prime Minister has not visited the State to tell people how
he plans to attend their concerns.
British
Prime Minister David Cameron has demonstrated how to make the best use of a
difficult decision. He chose to attend CHOGM in the face of opposition. But by
speaking and writing at length on what he proposes to do in Sri Lanka, he
turned the decision to his advantage. After going to Colombo and during his
meeting with President Rajapaksa, he did not shy away from explaining Britain’s
concerns and how constructively it can contribute to ease the situation.
The Chinese angle
The
India-Sri Lanka relationship is also being tested due to the ever-increasing
Chinese presence in Colombo. China has shown keen interest in expanding its
strategic base in Sri Lanka, obviously to protect its growing interests in the
Indian Ocean region as well as to gain a foothold close to India’s peninsular
south.
Of
course, China has been having cordial relationship with Sri Lanka for long. But
Beijing established itself more firmly by meeting Colombo’s wartime
requirements for armaments and military equipment after Delhi “let down” its
southern neighbour due to domestic compulsions. China is reported to have
provided $1.8 billion worth of arms to Sri Lanka. China’s Poly Technologies is
estimated to have supplied $37.6 million worth of ammunition and ordnance for
the army and navy in 2007. More importantly, China provides diplomatic support
for Sri Lanka at the United Nations. China has now become a member of the UN
Human Rights Council (UNHRC) and it could be useful when Sri Lanka is again
hauled up in March 2014 on implementation of the earlier UNHRC resolution
seeking Sri Lanka’s accountability for alleged human rights aberrations.
President
Rajapaksa has visited China six times since coming to power in 2005. After the
Eelam War ended, there had been steady increase in exchanges between the two
countries at governmental, military and political levels. During Rajapaksa’s
meeting with President Xi Jinping in May 2013, the two countries agreed to
upgrade their relations to a “strategic and cooperative partnership”.
According
to media reports, under the “new consensus, the two countries will maintain
high-level exchanges, enhance political communication, and support each other’s
efforts in safeguarding national independence, sovereignty and territorial
integrity”. Clearly, China is going all out to build a well rounded strategic
relationship with Sri Lanka.
As per
the 2012 report of Sri Lanka’s Ministry of Finance and Planning, China has
emerged as the largest development aid provider to Sri Lanka last year with a
commitment of $1.05 billion, while India came second with over $700 million
aid. The total assistance extended by China between 1971 and 2012 was $5.05
billion of which $4.76 billion, representing around 94 per cent, was extended
during the last eight-years from 2005 to 2012. As against this, India extended
a total assistance of $1.45 billion between 2007 and 2012. Out of this amount,
$1.12 billion was loan and 326 million was grant.
Chinese
companies are involved in a number of infrastructure, communications and port
development projects of strategic importance. These include the Hambantota port
project and the Mattala Rajapaksa International Airport near Hambantota
(completed in March 2013). China has helped make the Colombo Port complex one
of the biggest in the world by increasing its container terminal capacity to
2.4 million TEU (20-foot equivalent units). Of strategic interest are China’s
deals to build telecommunication and information technology networks in Sri
Lanka. Chinese satellite will be providing communication support to Sri Lanka.
And China’s Beidou GPS navigation system will shortly become operational in the
island nation.
Sri Lanka
is negotiating with China to finalise a FTA (free trade area). The Deputy
International Trade Representative of the Commerce Ministry of China, Yu
Jianhua, who visited Sri Lanka last month, expected “the preparatory process of
the FTA to be completed by December this year”. In his view, the FTA was not
only for trade “but something beyond, to institutionalise our strategic
cooperation partnership as mandated by the leaders of both countries”.
Sri Lanka
had been tempting Chinese investors, saying its existing FTA with India could
facilitate them to export goods to India on liberal terms. And when Sri
Lanka-China FTA is signed, we can expect China to take full advantage of it to
flood Indian markets. Are we ready to face these forays from China on strategic
and trade fronts?
The
absence of the Indian Prime Minister at CHOGM is likely to add to Sri Lanka’s
cup of bitterness after India voted in favour of the US resolution at the UNHRC
meeting in March 2012 and again a year later. And when the issue comes up once
more at the UNHRC in March 2014, India will be in the thrall of parliamentary
elections. So, we can expect an action replay of the CHOGM ‘crisis’ all over
again. That could make India’s engagement with Sri Lanka even more brittle. How
does the Government propose to protect India’s national interests in such an
environment is the moot question.
The writer is a retired MI officer associated with
the Chennai Centre for China Studies. He served as the Head of Intelligence of
the Indian Peace Keeping Force in Sri Lanka 1987-90.
Courtesy: The Pioneer, 24November
2013 URL: http://www.dailypioneer.com/sunday-edition/agenda/cover-story/losing-game-in-sri-lanka.html
1 comment:
Dear Sir
I have read your columns with much interest over the years. while I see the impartial stance you have in Sri Lankan affairs, I hope people like you can help our countries to be friends rather than playing each other in political chess board.
For example: I would really like you to examine the story of "Tamils Getting their rights" from a objective perspective. In Sri Lanka, each Tamil citizen has the same rights as any other citizen. Its not to say there are social inequalities and conflicts. Its much similar to what a Tamil would face in a Delhi or how northern Indians are perceived in Chennai. I personally want Sri Lanka to be multi ethnic. I want more Sinhala people to build houses in Jaffna. I want more Tamil people in my home town (which I believe almost none at the moment).
Also, I want Sri Lanka and India to be friends : Not as in we are friends to keep china away, but to be friends and work together. working in the middle east, studied in UK I have seen how both our countries (in-fact all of our region) getting treated by western societies, I would want us to work together to build a strong culture.
These are not just about having cultural shows at each other capitals. But about things like developing our local medicine. For example: we gave away our traditional medicine and imported western medicine, now westerners talk about holistic medicine (which is the foundation of Ayurveda) and I am sure we will be importing holistic medicine concept from west and pay for patents that was developed based on our traditional knowledge.
Instead of such we should work together to create our own identity, technology and systems. Together we can be a net exporter of such. So instead of importing everything from west and contributing to some of those oppressive self righteous nations, we can be a net exporter that help to foster our traditional systems, values etc.
Such can be done only by us corporation and working together. One of the critical issue that I see of hindering this is India's ever continuing concept of how we could be the "Power of South Asia" More you try to think about that less powerful you will be. But If India started thinking, how we could build South Asia together, India will be a bigger power and all of us will benefit from the same.
I know you are a defence analyst, and its your job to think about how we can be more powerful.
I dream of a day, that India could bring in a UN resolution to investigate the war crimes in Middle east and Sri Lanka could support the Indian Resolution and help defend the term "Use power if necessary" in the resolutions.
Post a Comment