India’s
concerns in Sri Lanka: Update No. 199
By Col R. Hariharan
Leadership Challenge
When Sri Lanka President Mahinda
Rajapaksa visits New Delhi from June 8 to
June 11 he will be stronger than ever
before. The three things he achieved in his
first term of office – wiping out
Prabhakaran and his Tamil Tigers,
re-election for a second term with increased
margin of votes and an unprecedented victory
in parliamentary poll with 60% mandate from
the voters - give him the confidence to talk
from a position of strength to New Delhi.
Added to this Rajapaksa, in spite of his
deceptive simplicity, has cleverly turned
the Sinhala triumphalism in the wake of
victory in the Eelam War to eliminate
potential rivals. The popular hero of the
Eelam War General Sarath Fonseka is facing
court-martials. And the suave and articulate
UNP leader Ranil Wickremesinghe is locked in
a survival struggle to retain his position
as leader of the United National Party.
With Sri Lanka under his sway for next
seven years, New Delhi will be contending
the rejuvenated Mahinda Rajapaksa - the most
powerful head of state from Sri Lanka ever
to visit the Indian capital.
Is New Delhi ready for the rejuvenated
Rajapaksa? It should be because Prime
Minister Dr Manmohan Singh has his own
success story. He is stronger politically
after an enlarged mandate from the people
for his second term of office. The
destructive coalition partners and
opposition he faced in earlier term have
been cut down to size. The Congress-led
coalition’s economic management, despite
complaints of absence of transparency,
cronyism and corruption, has maintained the
country on the growth path. Dr Manmohan
Singh’s aspiration to take India-US
relationship is getting a further lease of
life. Of course this is largely due to the
US coming to terms with the limitations in
building a win-win relationship with China
ignoring India.
In spite of all this, New Delhi
continues to show a subsuming hesitancy in
handling Sri Lanka. If we look at the silent
support New Delhi had provided the President
ever since he was elected in 2005 and all
along thereafter, both sides appear to have
worked out a flexible model of
collaboration, co-ordination and at times
mutual condescension.
The collaboration came with India
providing Sri Lanka all facilities, short of
modern weapons, to improve the capability of
its armed forces. It provided real time
intelligence to control, curb, and destroy
the international logistic and support
system of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil
Eelam (LTTE). But Indian leadership could
not trumpet its support as it had to tread
the ground carefully at home as the ruling
Congress-led coalition was weak and depended
upon octogenarian leader Karunanidhi and the
Dravida Munnetra Kazagham (DMK) party in
Tamil Nadu.The shrewd Tamil Nadu chief
minister milked the Eelam issue to gain
maximum clout in New Delhi and divided the
sympathy votes for Eelam Tamils at home in
Chennai.
As the war is over logically India should
be expecting dividends from Rajapaksa for
its support. And the expectations are
probably on three major fronts: equity for
Tamil minority, closer economic bonds, and
greater strategic convergence between the
two nations with India remaining a favoured
partner in Sri Lanka’s strategic horizon.
President Rajapaksa’s style is to turn
compulsions into favours to be dispensed at
a time and situation of his choosing. So how
will India handle him?
International Discourses of Sri Lanka
As K. Venkatramanan of the Times of India
said in a recent seminar, the Eelam war and
its aftermath in Sri Lanka has thrown up a
few international discourses. India has to
show a sustaining interest in handling these
discourses to fulfil its responsibilities as
a nation. What are these discourses?
Human rights and humanitarian issues
How to deal with Sri Lanka (or any other
nation in a similar situation) that has
chosen to ignore international calls for
improving its accountability on human rights
as it feels it infringes its sovereignty.
The European Union and the UK will continue
to pressurise Sri Lanka on this count in the
coming months. What should be India’s
attitude on this moral issue cloaked in
politics? India cannot afford to be either
wholly idealistic or coldly real politick
when human rights skeletons are rattling in
its own counter terrorist operations. Can
India continue to depend only upon back room
diplomacy to prevail upon Sri Lanka to
produce results, particularly when it is
dealing with an ever more powerful Rajapaksa?
Increased profile of the U.S. and
China in Sri Lanka
In Sri Lanka’s war and its aftermath both
the U.S. and China asserted their roles with
greater visibility and gained a strong
foothold. India facilitated this by playing
a muted role due to self imposed restraints
due to internal political considerations.
After the war Sri Lanka is facing two major
problems in resolving which it needs
international help.
The first is the huge financial outlay
required to rebuild north and east, and to
speed up economic recovery to repair the
crippling effect of war. The second is the
growing pressure on Sri Lanka articulated by
the UN Secretary General Ban ki Moon and in
the UN human rights forums.
Though India can match either the U.S. or
China in meeting Sri Lanka’s economic needs,
only the U.S. and China, as UN Security
Council members with veto powers, can
influence the UN course of action against
Sri Lanka. This is going be crucial as the
international lobby against war crimes in
Sri Lanka is gathering more momentum. So
logically, President Rajapaksa will have to
accommodate the U.S. and China more in the
national strategic spectrum without treading
upon India’s toes. Will he do it is a more
difficult question than can he do it? And
what is going to be New Delhi’s strategy?
Tamil issue
During the war, many Sri Lankan Tamils
rightly or wrongly perceive India as the
villain that helped Rajapaksa bury the Eelam
dream. Of course, in their passionate
denouement they conveniently forget that
India had always been opposed to independent
Tamil Eelam. But this disenchantment of
India has not been countervailed by increase
in favourable Sinhalese attitude towards
India. Even half-hearted Indian efforts to
bring ethnic amity in Sri Lanka are still
looked upon by many of them with
suspicion. So unlike in the past, India has
a problem at hand in carrying its voice
heard in Sri Lanka in the midst of cacophony
of its detractors.
As the Tamil issue has an umbilical
connection with Tamils in India and the
Diaspora elsewhere its tugs and pulls go far
and wide. This should not be understood
merely in terms of electoral politics in
which it continues as a peripheral issue. It
has larger moral and social implications for
Tamil society and its sensitivities. It
should not be forgotten the Tamil society is
only recently overcoming the sense of
exclusivity and alienation that had bugged
it since early days of India’s independence.
A recent manifestation of this phenomenon
was seen in the strident calls that came
from Tamil movie industry for boycott of the
non political International Indian Film
Academy awards function in Colombo. Thus
India’s actions and their impact on Sri
Lanka continue to be relevant to Tamil
people everywhere regardless of their
attitude to India.
This sensitivity rules the minds of many
among Sri Lanka Tamil Diaspora still
recovering from the elimination of the Tamil
Tigers as a powerful entity. They are
smarting under the loss of face as many
Sinhalese are trumpeting their triumphalism.
And President Rajapaksa had shown no hurry
to address Tamil sensitivities on the issue
of autonomy, perhaps because there is no
Prabhakaran to threaten Sri Lanka’s unity.
He has largely chosen to ignore the need for
animation of the 13th amendment that is
serving only as a wall paper of the Tamil
issue. India had been promoting its full
implementation as a face saving device; but
Rajapaksa had so far shown a marked
reluctance even to save India’s face, let
alone tackle the Tamil issue head on. So
what is India’s strategy?
Economic discourse
For some years now India had been
building its economic relations with Sri
Lanka. By signing its first ever the Free
Trade Agreement (FTA) in 1998, India has
shown Sri Lanka has a preferred status in
its relations over other countries of South
Asia. It is not merely Sri Lanka’s
demonstrated capacity to remain with the
highest human development index and highest
GDP among South Asian countries that
triggered India’s economic foray. Sri
Lanka’s domination of the Indian Ocean also
has a part to play in its economic strategy.
In the last nine years since the FTA came
into play India-Sri Lanka trade has
increased by four times to US $ 2719 million
(2009). In fact, in the SAARC region Sri
Lanka is now India’s second largest trading
partner. The two countries set up a Joint
Study Group in April 2003 to enlarge the
scope and content of the FTA and work out a
Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement
(CEPA). After 13 rounds of negotiations the
CEPA has been given a final shape.
The CEPA when signed will take the mutual
trade between the two countries to higher
levels of cooperation and coordination. The
proposed agreement addresses four areas:
trade in goods; trade in services; economic
cooperation (in mutually agreed areas like
fisheries, energy, pharmaceuticals,
textiles, financial, infrastructure, tourism
etc) and investment issues. In real terms it
provides for seamless customs procedures,
consumer protection standards and
procedures.
There had been some delay in signing this
agreement due to opposition among sections
of local business community in Sri Lanka.
This is understandable as India is already a
dominant trading partner with large economic
clout. Both countries will have to convince
them of the advantages in signing the CEPA.
Of course, traditional India baiters among
political parties now using the CEPA bogey
will have to be tackled politically.
President Rajapaksa who is supportive of the
agreement will probably sign it at a time of
his choosing - a politically opportune
moment.
From India’s point of view signing of
CEPA is important as it signifies the growth
of relations between the two nations to a
higher level. It could also signal the
graduation of SAARC from a talk shop to a
forum of solid achievement as the CEPA would
set a precedence for other members to
enhance economic cooperation. Thus it will
have implications for the region and beyond.
So how India is going to push it through?
Talks in New Delhi
Considering the complex issues cooking in
India-Sri Lanka platter for sometime,
President Rajapaksa’s visit assumes
importance. However, according to media
reports emanating from New Delhi, out of the
11 agreements under negotiation, only five
have been finalised and are ready for
signing. The five agreements do not include
crunch issues. They relate to cooperation to
fight terrorism, transfer of sentenced
prisoners, mutual legal assistance in
criminal matters, cultural cooperation, and
Indian assistance for small development
projects in Sri Lanka. So apparently there
are not going to be any dramatic
breakthroughs except for the usual
diplomatic rhetoric. But President Rajapaksa
is a man full of surprises, as Prabhakaran
discovered to his detriment. So what is
going to come out of his visit? We will have
to wait and see.
(Col R
Hariharan, a retired Military Intelligence
specialist on South Asia, served with the
Indian Peace Keeping Force in Sri Lanka as
Head of Intelligence. He is associated with
the Chennai Centre for China Studies and the
South Asia Analysis Group. E-Mail: colhari@yahoo.com
Blog: www.colhariharan.org)