SRI LANKA: THE ISLE OF SERENDIPITY MEETS THE CHALLENGE
OF TERRORISM
Address by His Excellency Bernard Goonetilleke
- Ambassador of Sri Lanka in the United States of America
at the Sixth Annual Juneau World Affairs Council
Forum, Juneau, Alaska
10 May 2008
Ladies and Gentlemen,
American audiences in general tend to identify
Sri Lanka with two specific phenomena - the tsunami of December
2004 and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam or the LTTE, a terrorist
group also known as the ‘Tigers.’ The war with the
Tigers, in particular, has continued unabated for close upon thirty
years, and no one could be faulted for being horrified at the
violence, death and destruction unleashed upon Sri Lanka by the
Tigers. Some might even think that is all one can speak of Sri
Lanka. However, nothing could be further from the truth.
Let me briefly introduce Sri Lanka to you - it
is a teardrop-shaped island in the Indian Ocean, just above the
equator, separated from the Indian subcontinent by approximately
twenty-two miles of sea. Located amidst strategic sea routes,
Sri Lanka has had much exposure to the world, and, consequently,
was known by many names over the centuries, such as, Lanka, Sihale,
Sihaladiba, Seehalam, Eelam, Tambapanni, Taprobane, Serendib,
Ceilan and Ceylon. The British author Horace Walpole coined the
word serendipity in 1754, from one of the names used
for the island i.e. ‘Serendib’, which means, “making
wonderful discoveries by accident”, as many seafarers of
yore would have attested.
History and People
With a history that goes back to more than 2500
years, ancient Lanka exchanged diplomatic envoys with the Roman
court, during the reign of Emperor Augustus Caesar, around 45
A.D., according to the sixth book of Pliny’s Natural
History. It was around that time the Romans and the Chinese
met each other in the island, for trading, which for all practical
purposes was a thriving entrepot.
Sri Lanka has a multi-ethnic social fabric, comprising
Sinhalese (74.5%), Sri Lankan and Indian Tamils (11.9% and 4.6%
respectively), Moors (8.3%) and several other ethnic groups such
as Malays, Burghers etc. It is also a multi-religious country,
where Buddhists, Hindus, Muslims and Christians co-exist harmoniously
- so much so, that there are places of worship like Adam’s
Peak in the central highlands and Kataragama in the deep south,
where Sri Lankans of several religions meet in prayer.
Sri Lanka is one of the oldest and most vibrant
democracies in South Asia, having enjoyed universal adult franchise
since 1931, mere 14 years after the United States, with regular
elections, both parliamentary and presidential. Per capita income
of the country is slightly above $1600/- per annum. However, the
social indicators are quite impressive, and even surpass some
high-income countries. For instance, Sri Lanka’s literacy
rate is over 90%, and life expectancy at birth is 71.7 and 76.4
for males and females, respectively.
Being an island, Sri Lanka is surrounded by the
ocean and golden sandy beaches, and is known as “The Hawaii
of the East.” No larger than the state of West Virginia,
and being twice the size of the island of Hawaii, with 25,000
square miles in extent, Sri Lanka has a varied climate, topography
and soil, which has resulted in rich biodiversity. In fact, Sri
Lanka is known as one of the world’s biodiversity hotspots,
with many indigenous fauna and flora. Sri Lanka’s virgin
rain forest, the Sinharaja, was declared an International Man
and Biosphere Reserve by UNESCO in 1978, a National Wilderness
Area in 1988, and a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1989. Sri Lanka
is also a bird watcher’s paradise, with its 426 species
of migrant and resident birds, 26 of them endemic to Sri Lanka.
The island, with its diverse geographic and climatic conditions,
offers many opportunities to the adventure seeker, with deep-sea
diving, fishing, white water rafting, mountain trekking, hot air
ballooning, cave explorations, jungle camping etc.
With its long recorded history, Sri Lanka is
extremely rich in culture, and famed for its hydraulic civilization
and monuments that rival the pyramids of Egypt, built in brick
and constructed in the pre-Christian era. Some of the first irrigation
reservoirs that were constructed then still provide water for
irrigation of rice paddies and for domestic use, despite the passage
of more than two thousand years. The ruins of ancient capital
cities, like Anuradhapura and Polonnaruwa, reveal how well planned
the cities were, during ancient times. The Mahavamsa, the chronicle
of Sri Lanka, describes how King Pandukabhaya, who reigned in
the 4th century B.C., planned the city of Anuradhapura.
Nevertheless, Sri Lanka, with a population close
to 20 million, is a tiny speck on the world map. So, why should
the U.S. focus on Sri Lanka? The island’s strategic location
in the Indian Ocean was a powerful reason for interests of imperial
powers in Sri Lanka, during the colonial era. During seafaring
days, the island’s strategic location between the Cape of
Good Hope, the Suez Canal and the Malacca Straits, brought it
to the limelight. In fact, even before the ancient mariner Hippolus
discovered the monsoon winds as a means of navigation, Sri Lanka’s
ancient seaport of Mantota, also known as Mahatitta, near Mannar,
off the island’s western coast, had been an important entrepot.
Furthermore, Sri Lanka has one of the world’s
largest natural harbours, in Trincomalee, in the east, which proved
to be a considerable asset to the allies, during the Second World
War. The strategic importance of Sri Lanka continues in the post-colonial
era, with most of the gulf oil moving past Colombo, and through
the Malacca Straits, toward the Far East, and manufactured goods,
westward to markets in Europe. The Colombo Port is also a vital
centre due to its location at the tip of South India, and its
importance as a transhipment point for the Indian subcontinent.
Current issues and events of significance
to Sri Lanka
Compelling among the issues of importance to
Sri Lanka, are the challenges posed by terrorism, a scourge that
the international community faces today, with increasing severity.
As I said before, for over three decades, Sri Lanka has borne
the brunt of separatism in the guise of the Tigers, whose demand
for a separate state, encompasses two of the nine provinces of
the country situated in the north and the east, representing one
third of the landmass of the island. There is something intrinsically
wrong with this demand. In the first instance, the claim is based
on an erroneous minute left by a colonial secretary of Great Britain
in 1799, which has no historical or other valid basis. The demand
becomes all the more unsustainable in the present context, due
to the fact, that it is made supposedly on behalf of less than
12% of the population of Sri Lankan Tamils, the majority of who
lives outside the two provinces. Simply put, a demand for one
third of the total landmass of the island, the extent of which
is approximately 25,000 sq. miles, for approximately 12% of one
ethnic group, more than 50% of whose population lives elsewhere
in the country, is a case of bad math, which simply does not add
up. This demand inevitably leads us to think of other arrangements
to be made for those Sri Lankan Tamils living outside the north
and the east of the country, in addition to the 4.6% of the Indian
Tamil population, living in the central hills of the country.
To make a complicated situation more complex,
if the ethnic composition of the Eastern Province is separated
from that of the Northern Province, the Muslims and the Sinhalese
taken together, far exceed the percentage of the Tamils in the
Eastern Province. Therefore, it is hardly surprising that the
Muslims and the Sinhalese in the east are vehemently opposed to
a separate state under the hegemony of Tamils from the north,
and the Tamils in that province, for understandable reasons, will
rue the day they come under the brutal control of their twice-removed
cousins from the Northern Province.
Indeed, the brutality of the ‘Tigers’
is without parallel. Take for instance, the ‘Shining Path,’
which, in its heyday in the 1980s, was considered the most formidable
insurgent movement in South America, waging a bloody war against
the Peruvian state, causing some 70,000 deaths, until its leader
Abimael Guzman was captured in 1992. Yet, ironically, the atrocities
committed by the ‘Shining Path,’ pale in comparison
to those committed by the ‘Tigers, ’ and bear similarity
to those committed by the Pol Pot regime of Cambodia. In the course
of some 30 years, Tigers have used suicide bombings and other
modes of assassination to kill their opponents, be they Tamil
politicians or civilians, Government Cabinet members, such as
Foreign Minister Kadirgamar and Highway Minister Fernandopulle,
two fellow Tamils, - the latter was assassinated last month -
or even the Executive President of the country. They have also
carried out truck bombings and other modes of attack targeting
economic nerve centres of the island, such as the Central Bank,
oil refineries and oil storage points, airports, seaports, passenger
buses and trains, and even shopping complexes, at regular intervals,
where civilians congregate by the thousands. Even if one were
to agree that the ‘Tigers’’ political objective
is justifiable, which certainly is not, there cannot be any justification
for their resorting to acts of terrorism, targeting innocent civilians
and civilian infrastructure.
One could well ask, why people living half a
world away, like in the United States, or in Juneau, the capital
city of Alaska, be concerned about what has been described by
the media, as an “ethnic” conflict, in a far away
island in the Indian Ocean? To view Sri Lanka’s conflict
in such a manner is to oversimplify a complex situation. Living
in a global village as we do today, we are all too aware that
what happens on one side of the world, create waves not mere ripples
on the other side of the world. Take for example, 9/11. The plot
was hatched in one location in Asia, the operatives came from
several other continents, and the dastardly deed was carried out
in the city of New York. What is more, the ripple effects of the
attack on the Twin Towers were felt acutely in all parts of the
world, leading, practically, to a global economic meltdown.
This begs the question, “What has the world
done to address the situation in Sri Lanka?” Let me explain
frankly. As I said earlier, Sri Lanka had to face the brunt of
untrammelled terrorism by the Tigers, for approximately 30 years,
which killed nearly 70,000 of its citizens and severely challenged
the country’s economic development. During the early years
of the conflict, Sri Lanka’s plea for help, a lone cry in
the deep wilderness, was unheard by the world, until the ferocity
of terrorism reached the western hemisphere. Undoubtedly, 9/11
was the catalyst, opening the eyes of the western world to the
lethality of terrorism. However, in fairness to the United States,
I need to say that it was the second country in the world, after
India, which lost its former Prime Minister Gandhi to the Tiger
assassins, to designate them as a Foreign Terrorist Organization
or an FTO.
While the U.S. took that step in 1997, the UK
took several more years to consider the merits of listing the
‘Tigers,’ which they eventually did, in 2001. Canada
designated the LTTE as a FTO in April 2006 and the 27-member EU
followed suit in May 2006. In that sense, one can conclude that
the vast majority of the western democracies took decisive action
against a malignant terrorist organization that has the capacity
to destabilize, not only Sri Lanka, but also other countries in
the region.
The LTTE is not merely an evil entity; it is
the veritable hydra-headed beast of Greek mythology, with unbelievable
resilience and resourcefulness. One can cut off one head, only
to be confronted by another. To meet any eventuality, the LTTE
has in its armory, many front organizations, depending on the
location of the country. For example, in the U.S., the Tamil Rehabilitation
Organization or the TRO, over the years, siphoned off funds collected
for charity, to fill the LTTE war chest, until the U.S. Department
of Treasury proscribed it as an LTTE front organization, in November
2007. The World Tamil Coordinating Committee (WTCC) is another
LTTE front organization operating in the U.S. and many other countries
in the west. The U.S. leader of WTCC was arrested by the authorities
in New York in April 2007. With the banning of the LTTE in Canada
in April 2006, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police have been vigilant
about the World Tamil Movement (WTM), an LTTE front operating
in Canada. Substitute organizations wait in readiness to spring
into action, if one front organization is unlucky enough to appear
on the authorities’ radar screen. The case of the U.K. is
one such example. When the Charity Commissioner of the U.K. discovered
that the TRO funds were being siphoned off for purposes other
than charity, he introduced restrictions against the TRO. However,
that did not dissuade the Tigers. They promptly established another
charity, named ‘White Pigeon.” When that too came
under scrutiny in the U.K., the evermore resourceful Tigers launched
another charity. This time it was ITRO, the same poison in a new
bottle!
US action to curb terrorism in Sri Lanka
Of all the countries mentioned above, the role
played by the US is particularly noteworthy, for its consistency
and dogged determination to eradicate the influence of FTOs in
the U.S. As mentioned earlier, in November 2007, the U.S. Treasury
Department listed the TRO as an LTTE front organization, which
had functioned until then, as a charity organization, harvesting
rich dividends from unsuspecting US citizens. This action, resulting
from years of investigations into the activities of TRO, was not
an isolated incident. As also mentioned earlier, the FBI carried
out a sting operation in August 2006, netting in nearly a dozen
of Tiger agents in New York, who unsuccessfully attempted to buy
surface-to-air missiles and other military hardware, and to bribe
officers of the Department of State with a million dollar enticement,
to remove the FTO status of the Tigers. A similar operation carried
out once more by law enforcement authorities, resulted in the
arrests of several South-East Asians and a Sri Lankan in Baltimore,
Guam etc. Thereafter, in April 2007, the top Tiger operative in
New York, Karunakaran Kandasamy was arrested, and the complaint
filed before the US District Court in Brooklyn stated that Karunakaran
had “covertly operated within the United States, drawing
on America’s financial resources and technological advances
to further its war of terror in Sri Lanka and elsewhere.”
These actions, in perspective, indicate that, even though the
focus of the US has always been dominated and driven by operatives
of Al Qaeda and other Islamic terrorist outfits, non-Islamic foreign
terrorist organizations too have not escaped the scrutiny of the
US. Several months ago, in January 2008, the FBI described the
LTTE as being “among the most dangerous and deadly extremists
in the world,” more dangerous than al Qaeda or Hezbollah
or even Hamas, having invented the suicide vest and the suicide
jacket.
The US and Peace Negotiations in Sri
Lanka
Over the years, the U.S. has taken a keen interest
in Sri Lanka’s peace negotiations, and has consistently
backed efforts to end the conflict in Sri Lanka, now running into
almost three decades. In 2002 and 2003, since signing of the Ceasefire
Agreement, then Deputy Secretary of State, Richard Armitage, was
actively involved in trying to persuade the LTTE and the Sri Lankan
government, to resolve the conflict through negotiations. To further
this objective, the US actively participated in the meeting held
in Oslo, in November 2002, organized a mini conference of the
peace process in Washington DC in April 2003, and took a lead
role in the Sri Lanka Donor Conference in Tokyo, two months later.
U.S. support for a negotiated settlement in Sri
Lanka, continued into the second administration of President Bush,
with the former Under Secretary of State, Ambassador Nicholas
Burns, visiting Colombo in January 2006, with a strong message
of support, for the government and against LTTE terrorism. When
fighting resumed in early 2006, in the face of renewed provocative
and unabated acts of terrorism by the Tigers, additional high-level
visits by the U.S. administration to Sri Lanka, took place.
Human Rights situation and US concerns
Bilateral relations between the US and Sri Lanka
have been traditionally cordial, and economic relations are robust
as well. However, it is unfortunate that the resumption of the
armed conflict in 2006 has led to a noticeable level of disquiet
creeping into US-Sri Lanka bilateral relations.
As the fighting escalated amidst mounting allegations
of human rights violations, Sri Lanka’s traditional friends
have expressed concern, even though the government of Sri Lanka
continues to make serious attempts to address these concerns through
directives to the armed forces and the police, and through judicial
action and institutional arrangements to bring offenders to justice.
The government’s position is that if human rights violations
have indeed taken place, they are not a reflection of government
policy, but of unilateral action of individual members of the
armed forces and the police, who are liable to be brought to justice
where credible evidence is available.
To persuade the Sri Lanka government that such
alleged human rights violations need to be addressed seriously,
an amendment was introduced to the Department of State Appropriation
Bill for FY 2008, placing restrictions on defense co-operation
with Sri Lanka, under the “Foreign Military Financing Program”.
Meanwhile, the 2007 Country Report on Human Rights Practices in
Sri Lanka, released by the Department of State in March 2008,
has caused considerable concern in Sri Lanka as the government
felt that it had misrepresented the situation in the country.
It is widely accepted that in situations of war,
violations of human rights do take place. While such violations
cannot be totally eliminated, governments of such countries, particularly
democracies, are expected to be responsible for ensuring that
those who engage in such violations are brought to justice. This
is exactly what the government of Sri Lanka is doing, where credible
evidence is available to pursue legal action. Since concerns were
raised, the Embassy has shared information on arrests and indictments
against members of the armed forces and police, with specific
details containing names, offences committed, including details
of the court cases, with the US Congress, the administration,
as well as with concerned human rights organizations. However,
I have to admit that legal processes in Sri Lanka are painfully
slow, whether they are against human rights offenders, or pertaining
to other civil or criminal cases. Clearly, such laws delays are
not unique to Sri Lanka. For example, the judiciary in the U.K.
took over a decade to reach a verdict o the death of Princess
Diana. Moreover, shortcomings such as lack of facilities for DNA
testing hamper effective conduct of investigations. We have requested
international help to address those lacunas.
Terrorism Takes Toll on Democracy
Whether it is a superpower like the US, or a
small developing nation like Sri Lanka, when countries have to
confront sophisticated terrorist organizations, which have no
qualms in carrying out attacks, with deadly arsenals of weapons
freely available in the underworld arms market, they inevitably
come across situations other countries do not have to confront.
This situation also creates mutual dependence among threatened
countries in terms of pooling resources to fight a faceless enemy.
While countries such as the US face rare situations such as the
Oklahoma bombing and 9/11, Sri Lanka is compelled to face terrorist
attacks against its political leaders, civilian and economic centers
every now and then, as it happened when a senior Government Minister
was assassinated in a suicide attack in April, when he participated
in a public sports event. In that attack, 15 innocent civilians
were killed and over 90 were injured. Similarly, a bombing of
a civilian bus on April 26th, resulted in the deaths of 26, with
scores badly injured. Consequently, the capacity of vulnerable
states like Sri Lanka, to withstand continuous terrorist onslaughts
such as I mentioned, is limited. When nations are constantly compelled
to face this kind of situation continuously, for decades, as in
our case, the loss of lives and property, the constant fear of
terrorist attacks and self-imposed constraints, damage the social
fabric, and deeply affect intrinsic human values, draining out
the compassion and kindness inherent in all of us. We have to
remember that members of the armed forces and the police have
undergone indescribable trauma because of the long drawn out armed
conflict. This ground reality is not a justification for violation
of human rights by individual members of the armed forces or the
police, with impunity. However, if stronger nations do not come
to the assistance of weaker countries to fight terrorism, eventually,
it will take a toll on democracy and good governance of the affected
countries. This should not be allowed to happen.
In an era of instability, Sri Lanka has successfully
maintained a relatively stable political environment, despite
the long drawn out armed conflict. As one of South Asia’s
oldest democracies, Sri Lanka has consistently supported democracy,
and most importantly, the international struggle to contain terrorism.
Furthermore, Sri Lanka is a party to all the major United Nations
Conventions relating to terrorism as well as human rights. Sri
Lanka’s late Foreign Minister Lakshman Kadirgamar who was
assassinated by the Tigers, warned the international community,
long before 9/11, about the threat posed by terrorism to the democratic
way of life, not only in Sri Lanka, but across the globe, and
tried to unite the world with a common definition of “terrorism,’
which, unfortunately, remains unresolved, even today. The inability
to agree on a common definition is rooted in the cliché,
“One man’s terrorist is another’s freedom fighter.”
However, it must be emphasized that terrorism is not an option
even for freedom fighters.
There is yet another reason why terrorism continues
to thrive worldwide. I am reminded of Mr. Kadirgamar’s words
when he addressed an audience at the London Royal Institute of
International Affairs, on 15 April, 1998. I quote, “There
are, as I have discerned, two basic approaches to terrorism adopted
by states. The first is what I call “a Nelsonian approach”
- turning a blind eye! Many states which are not directly affected
by acts of terrorism on their own soil, but who are aware that
terrorist acts are committed on the territory of other states
- but where there are links between the terrorists concerned in
the other state and in your own state - adopt a policy of, “Well,
what’s happening is happening somewhere else, those people
are their terrorists, not our terrorists, thank heavens for that,
we will wait and see.” Unquote
As events have shown, there is no room for complacence,
and no time to dither. Dr. Martin Luther King often said, “Injustice
anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.” Similarly,
every nation in the world needs to wake up to the fact that terrorism
anywhere is a recipe for terrorism everywhere. The deliverance
of countries ravaged by terrorism, like Sri Lanka, depends upon
the global acceptance of this truism.
Thank you.
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