India’s Bilateral Agreements and
Centre-State Relations – A Perspective from
Tamil Nadu
Guest Column By V. Suryanarayan
The Constitution of
India, which came into operation on January
26, 1950 introduced a federal form of
government, but the extent of federalism,
both in theory and practice, was diluted in
order to make the Central Government
extremely powerful. When the founding
fathers were discussing the provisions of
the Constitution, a matter of great concern
for them was the preservation and promotion
of the unity and territorial integrity of
the country. The question of incorporation
of nearly 600 princely states into India,
the problems relating to the accession of
Jammu and Kashmir and the volatile situation
in the northeast tilted the debate in favour
of a strong centre. In fact, the
Constitution of India does not use the term
“federal” it refers to India as a “Union of
States”. Dr. BR Ambedkar, the Father of the
Indian Constitution, has stated that the use
of the term “Union” was deliberate. The
Drafting Committee was crystal clear that
although India was to be a functioning
federation, the federation was not the
consequence of an agreement among the
constituent units. None of the constituent
units was sovereign like the thirteen
American colonies after the Declaration of
Independence or the Swiss Cantons before
they decided to enter into a federal
compact. Equally important the component
units had no freedom to secede from the
federation. As a well known scholar has
pointed out, in normal times, India would
function as a federation, but it can be and
has been, in exceptional circumstance,
transformed into highly centralised State.
According to the
Constitution of India, Foreign Affairs and
the powers to make treaties vest within the
exclusive jurisdiction of the Central
Government. What is more, Article 253 of the
Constitution empowers parliament to make any
law for India for implementing any treaty,
even on subjects reserved exclusively for
State Legislature. In theory and practice,
the state governments do not have any role
in this significant area of Indian political
system. However, it is essential to keep in
mind the reality of Indian geography and how
it influences bilateral and multilateral
relations. India has land boundaries with
Pakistan, China, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh
and Myanmar and maritime boundaries with
Pakistan, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Thailand,
Indonesia, Sri Lanka and Maldives. And, what
is more, India’s neighbourhood policy has
its immediate fallout on contiguous Indian
States. Thus the vagaries of India-Pakistan
relations have their immediate fallout on
Punjab, Jammu and Kashmir, Rajasthan and
Punjab; the twists and turns in India-Nepal
relations affect Bihar, Uttar Pradesh Sikkim
and Uttarakhand; the tranquility in the
long Sino-Indian boundary is vital from the
point of view of stability of Arunachal
Pradesh, Sikkim, Uttarakhand, Himachal
Pradesh and Jammu and Kashmir (including
Pakistan Occupied Kashmir); India-Bhutan
relations will affect Sikkim, Assam,
Arunachal Pradesh and West Bengal;
India-Myanmar relations impinge on the
polity and economy of Mizoram, Manipur,
Nagaland and Arunachal Pradesh;
India-Bangladesh relations will have their
fallout on West Bengal, Meghalaya, Tripua
and Mizoram. The fate of thousands of
Malayalees working in West Asia is a matter
of great concern for the people and
Government of Kerala and the State of Tamil
Nadu has a vital stake in the political
stability of Sri Lanka and also better
relations with Myanmar, Malaysia, Singapore
and Indonesia.
It is also essential to
keep in mind the basic transformation that
has taken place in the Indian political
system. During the era of one-party
dominance, 1947-1977, when the Indian
National Congress was in power in the Centre
and in most of the States, the Central
Government could afford to ignore the
feelings and sensibilities of the regional
actors in the name of “good neighbourly
relations”. After 1977, the reality is that
the party, which rules in the Centre, cannot
remain in power without the support of
regional parties. The regional parties wield
considerable influence in the formulation
and implementation of domestic and foreign
policies. In that process, one may argue,
the regional parties have also become
“national”. Coalition governments have
become the order of the day. Unlike the
early years of independence, when the
dominant opinion was in favour of a strong
centre, today the opinion is veering round
to the point of view that strong states and
strong centre are not mutually
contradictory. A successful co-operative
federalism implies greater co-operation and
consultation among the various constituent
units of the Indian political system.
In this essay, I have
tried to focus on two important issues,
which were of vital concern to the
Governments and people of Tamil Nadu, where
the Central Government ignored the wishes of
the State and entered into bilateral
agreements with Sri Lanka. The first is the
Sirimavo-Shastri Pact of 1964 and the
subsequent Sirimavo-Indira Gandhi Pact of
1974, by which New Delhi agreed to confer
Indian citizenship on thousands of people of
Indian origin in the Island and decided to
repatriate them back to India as Indian
citizens. The second relates to the
India-Sri Lanka Maritime Boundary Agreements
of 1974 and 1976, which ceded the Island of
Kachchatheevu to Sri Lanka and also
sacrificed the traditional fishing rights
enjoyed by the Indian fishermen in the Palk
Bay region. These agreements have left a
trail of bitterness in the State of Tamil
Nadu and sections of people in the State
have begun to feel that the interests of
Tamil Nadu are not safe in the powers that
be that determine foreign policy from
“distant” New Delhi.
The ideal situation
that we should strive to create is for the
affected Indian States to make benign inputs
into the making of India’s neighbourhood
policy. This pre-supposes the functioning of
vibrant and dynamic research departments in
various Universities and research
institutions outside the University system
with the avowed objective of analyzing
various problems in depth and sensitise the
general public and the policy planners about
various policy options. How can the State
Governments be involved in the decision
making process? Should the representatives
of the State be included in the decision
making process? Should bilateral treaties be
ratified by the concerned State
Legislatures? Should Rajya Sabha be
reconstituted so that it becomes an
institution like the American Senate which
has the powers to ratify international
treaties? It may be recalled that the
establishment of the League of Nations after
the First World War was based on President
Wilson’s fourteen points. But the United
States itself could not become a member of
the League of Nations because the Senate did
not ratify the proposal. Similarly the
Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, in the
formulation of which the US State Department
played an important, role could not be
adhered to because the US Senate did not
ratify it. Should India set up an
organization like the Committee on Foreign
Relations in the United States which plays a
dynamic role in US Foreign policy? The
Committee on Foreign Relations is a Standing
Committee of the US Senate. It is the
leading body for foreign policy legislation
and debate. It is generally responsible for
overseeing (not administering) and funding
foreign aid programmes as well as funding,
arms sales and training for national allies.
The Committee also undertakes hearing on
important policy matters in which experts
from diverse fields from different parts of
the world participate. The Committee has
debated, considered and reported on
important treaties and legislations. All
diplomatic nominations take place after the
approval of the Foreign Relations Committee.
It is also interesting to note that the
federal units in Yugoslavia, before its
disintegration, had their own departments of
foreign affairs and these departments could
formulate foreign policies towards
contiguous states, but these should be in
conformity with the principles and
practices of national foreign policy.
However, it should be pointed out that
Yugoslavia could continue to exist as a
united country because of the towering
personality of President Tito. Though
federal in theory, it was highly centralized
in practice and after Tito’s demise, the
contradictions, which were lying dormant,
came out into the open and the country soon
disintegrated. We can learn from the
experience of other countries, while
establishing our own unique system. I hope
the deliberations in this Seminar will
trigger a healthy debate on this issue and
related matters.
SIRIMAVO-SHATRI
PACT, 1964 AND SIRIMAVO-INDIRA GANDHI PACT
1974
According to the
bilateral agreement in October 1964 between
the Governments of India and Sri Lanka,
popularly known as the Sirimavo-Shatri Pact,
India agreed to confer citizenship on 5.25
lakh persons, with their natural increase,
over a period of fifteen years. The
agreement was followed by another in 1974,
as a result of which India was to receive
another 75,000 persons of Indian origin,
within a period of two years, after those
under the first agreement had been
repatriated. The entire process was expected
to be completed by October 1981. Sri Lanka
agreed, in turn, to absorb 3, 00, 000
persons and their natural increase under the
first agreement and another 75,000 persons
under the second as its nationals, at the
ratio of four Sri Lankan nationals for every
seven repatriated to India.
These two agreements
sealed the fate of the overwhelming majority
of the people of Indian origin in Sri Lanka.
They are popularly known as the Indian
Tamils. Unlike the Sinhalese and the Sri
Lankan Tamils, who are indigenous to the
island, the Indian Tamils are the
descendants of those Indians who went to
Ceylon under the protective umbrella of the
British in the 19th and 20th
centuries. They were taken to the island to
provide the much needed labour for the
development of the tea plantations and also
construct public works like railways, roads
and the harbour. They formed the bulk of
labour which turned the malaria infested
forests of Sri Lanka into smiling
plantations of tea, which sustained the Sri
Lankan economy up to modern times. The
British government which ruled Ceylon and
the Sinhalese leaders, who collaborated with
the British, actively encouraged the
recruitment of labour from Madras
Presidency.
Though in the
beginning, the Indian labourers were merely
“birds of passage” gradually they began to
take roots and became permanent settlers in
the island. In 1928, the Donoughmore
Commissioners estimated that 40 to 50 per
cent of the Indian labourers were
permanently settled in the island. In 1939,
the Jackson Report estimated the permanent
settlers to be around 60 per cent. The
Soulbury Report, 1947 estimated that the
degree of permanent settlement was in the
region of 80 per cent
As long as the British
ruled, the Indian Tamils had the same legal
status as the Sinhalese and the Sri Lankan
Tamils, for all were British subjects. As
Jawaharlal Nehru wrote in 1948, “One of the
conditions for emigration to other countries
to which the Government of India have always
attached utmost importance… has been that an
emigrant labourer shall be given facilities
to settle in the country… on equal terms
with the members of the indigenous
population”. Colombo did not subscribe to
this point of view. According to WT
Jayasinghe, former Defence and Foreign
Secretary to Sri Lanka, the Indian settlers
were Indian nationals. In his book, The
Indo-Ceylon Talks: The Politics of Immigrant
Labour, Jayasinghe has written “The fact of
their Indian nationality was never in
question”. Colombo wanted to absorb only a
small fraction of the Indian population as
Sri Lankan citizens. From this perspective
they argued that it is necessary to
prescribe rigid tests for proving the
permanent, abiding interest of the Indian
community. Herein lies the seeds of the
“absorbable minimum” put forward by
successive Sri Lankan Governments. Girija
Shankar Bajpai summed up the apparent
discrimination: “The Indian who has worked
in Ceylon is to be thrown back to India as a
squeezed lemon”.
Despite the
restrictions on franchise, in the 1947
elections held under the Soulbury
Constitution, the Indian workers elected six
representatives of the Ceylon Indian
Congress (CIC); where no CIC candidates were
fielded, they voted for the Marxist
candidates and tilted the balance in Marxist
favour in about nine seats. The leftward
swing of the plantation voters made the
conservative United National Party (UNP)
leadership determined to debar the vast
majority of Indian Tamils from Ceylonese
citizenship after independence. If the
government could restrict citizenship and,
therefore, the franchise of the Indians, a
large number of Marxist candidates could be
eliminated and the UNP could win the Kandyan
seats very easily.
The Ceylon Citizenship
Act of 1948 and the Indian and Pakistani
Residents Act, 1949 not only disfranchised
the Indian community, but these acts also
made them stateless. When applications were
invited, nearly 8, 25,000 applied for
Ceylonese citizenship, which was clear
evidence that the overwhelming majority of
Indians wanted to permanently stay in
Ceylon. But the Government granted
citizenship to only 1, 34,618 applicants.
All others were characterised as
“stateless”. It must also be pointed out
that the provisions of the Citizenship Act
were complicated and cumbersome and
naturally the plantation workers were not
able to produce certificates to the
satisfaction of the Ceylonese authorities.
The Indian Tamils were thus ostracized from
the political mainstream of the country.
Speaking on the Ceylon Citizenship Act,
Pieter Kuneman said in Parliament that even
Dudley Senanayake would not be able to
comply with the clauses because according to
his own admission, he could not trace his
father’s birth certificate.
If the Acts were
discriminatory, their implementation was
even more tardy and inflexible. By the end
of 1953, only 65,714 applications of the
total 2, 37,034 had been fully investigated
and of this number only 7.687 applications,
involving 26,360 persons had been allowed.
By the end of 1954, a total of 9,672
applications, involving 33,012 persons had
been allowed, and by the end of 1955, a
total of 37,948 persons covered by 10,875
applications had been registered as
Ceylonese citizens.
From the very
beginning, it was Colombo’s implicit
assumption that those who failed to qualify
for Ceylonese citizenship were
unquestionably Indian nationals and that New
Delhi should regard them as such. On the
contrary, as far as New Delhi was concerned,
its policy was to discourage Indians
Overseas from applying for Indian
citizenship. In the protracted negotiations
that took place between New Delhi and the
successive Prime Ministers in Ceylon – DS
Senanayake, Dudley Senanayake, John
Kotelawala and SWRD Bandaranaike –
Jawaharlal Nehru emphatically maintained
that except for those who voluntarily opted
for Indian citizenship, the Indian
immigrants in the island were the
responsibility of Sri Lanka. Both C
Rajagopalachari and Kamaraj Nadar, Chief
Ministers of Tamil Nadu, supported Nehru’s
principled stand. The era of statelessness
continued and the problem appeared to be
interminable.
Following Nehru’s
demise in 1964, the time tested and
principled policy enumerated above was
derailed and sidetracked by Prime Minister
Lal Bahadur Shastri, Minister for Foreign
Affairs Swaran Singh and the Commonwealth
Secretary CS Jha. During this period, New
Delhi was eager to come out of the
“diplomatic isolation in South Asia”
following the Sino-Indian conflict in
October-November 1962. Lal Bahadur Shastri
wanted fresh efforts to be made to put
Indian-Sri lanka relations on a sound
footing. Officials in the Sri Lanka Division
of the Ministry of External Affairs, who
subscribed to the Nehruvian principles on
the question of stateless people in Ceylon,
were either transferred or sidelined. New
Delhi’s desire to solve the problem on the
basis of “give and take” (which meant more
conceding than demanding) becomes evident if
one reads CS Jha’s reminiscences, From
Bandung to Tashkent: Glimpses of India’s
Foreign Policy.
The astute politician
that Sirimavo Bandaranaike was, she made the
best out of the changed situation. Ably
assisted by Shirlie Amarasinghe, the Sri
Lankan Government clinched the issue in
October 1964. The Sri Lankan team pleaded
with Prime Minister Shastri and CS Jha that
if India could accept 10 million refugees
from Pakistan, less than a million from
Pakistan would not be a burden. The Indian
side had a team, which because of the brief
given to them, “was like a set of fishermen
who should keep the boat from sinking, but
leave it to God to get them to the shore
across”. The most pathetic member of the
Indian team was Ramiah, a Cabinet Minister
from Tamil Nadu. According to informed
sources, throughout the discussions, Ramiah
did not utter a single word on behalf of the
Tamil plantation workers, who wanted to
remain in Sri Lanka and become Sri Lankan
citizens. Finally these unfortunate people
were converted into a merchandise to be
divided between the two countries in the
name of good neighbourly relations.
As the negotiations
progressed, it was apparent that the Sri
Lankan team was racing towards the winning
post. The number to be accepted by New Delhi
as Indian citizens began to increase. As P.
Ramaswamy, the well known columnist based in
New Delhi, has written, the Ceylon
delegation “was chuckling at the rate of
progress”. 5, 25,000 was not far from 9,
75,000 and Mrs. Bandaranike was convinced
that Colombo could win hands down. Then an
unexpected development took place. Ramaswamy
informed Kamaraj Nadar, the Congress
President, that Lal Bahadur Shastri was
“going to bring back into the country all
those whom Ceylon Government wanted to be
repatriated”. Kamaraj Nadar knew the
complexities of the problem and, what is
more, the unwillingness of the plantation
workers to come to India and start a new
life. Kamaraj Nadar presented his views
forcefully to Lal Bahadur Shatri. On the
last day of the negotiations, Prime Minister
Shastri told a surprised Sri Lankan
delegation, “thus far and no further” in a
take it or leave it tone. But Since Mrs.
Bandaranaike had already won the battle by
achieving more than what she had hoped for,
the negotiations came to an end with India
agreeing to confer citizenship on 5,25,000
people of Indian origin, plus their natural
increase, and Ceylon agreeing to confer
citizenship on 300,000, plus their natural
increase on the basis of 7.4. The fate of
the balance 1, 50,000 was decided in 1974,
with India and Sri Lanka agreeing to confer
citizenship on 75,000 people with their
natural increase.
Few significant
features of the Sirimavo-Shastri Pact must
be underlined. In his conversation with me,
S, Thondaman, the undisputed leader of the
Indian Tamils in the island, remarked that
the Sri Lankan Government did not permit him
to come to India to meet the Indian leaders
to explain his point of view. What is more,
his plea to the Indian High Commission that
it should use its good offices to arrange
his visit to New Delhi also fell on deaf
ears. It is the tragedy of India-Sri Lanka
relations that this agreement, which had a
bearing on the lives of thousands of people
of Indian origin, was finalized by the two
governments without taking into
consideration the feelings and wishes of the
people concerned. All trade unions in the
plantation areas, rivals among themselves,
were unanimous in their opposition to the
Pact. The Ceylon Workers Congress, the most
representative organization of the
plantation workers, vehemently opposed the
Pact. The continuing trauma suffered by the
people made the CWC revise its stand later
and co-operate with the Government in its
implementation.
The Sirimavo-Shastri
Pact was also a bad precedent as far as
India’s policy towards Indians Overseas is
concerned. If you can take a substantial
number from Sri Lanka back as Indian
citizens, why not from South Africa,
Malaysia, Fiji and Mauritius?
What was the fallout of
the Sirimavo-Shastri Pact on centre-state
relations in India? Bhaktavatsalam was the
Chief Minister of Madras Presidency and he
deputed Ramiah, his colleague in the
Cabinet, to be a member of the Indian team.
And, as mentioned earlier, Ramiah was a
silent spectator throughout the
negotiations. But outside the ruling circles
in the State, there was strong opposition to
the Pact. C. Rajagopalachari, the leaders of
the Communist Party of India, and the
Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam expressed their
strong resentment and opposition to the
Pact. VK Krishna Menon, the ideologue of
Jawaharlal Nehru, out of power by then, was
also critical of the Sirimavo - Shastri
Pact. C. Rajagopalachari, the elder
statesman, echoed the feelings of the vast
majority of the Tamils in India when he
stated, “Why should nearly a million
children and grand children born in Ceylon
to parents who toiled and sweated for Ceylon
and who had gone there from South India and
settled down in the plantations be
disentitled to be citizens of Ceylon? Why
should a single child born in Ceylon and
desiring to be in Ceylon, and be a working
citizen thereof, be turned out to wander as
homeless refugees in India?”
INDIA-SRI LANKA
MARITIME BOUNDARY AGREEMENTS, 1974 AND 1976
The second
illustration, where the Government of India
was insensitive to the interests of the
State of Tamil Nadu took place in 1974 and
1976, when the India-Sri Lanka maritime
boundary agreements were concluded. The
agreements resulted in the ceding of the
island of Kachchatheevu, which was a part of
the Zamindari of the Raja of Ramnad, to Sri
Lanka and also sacrificed the traditional
fishing rights of the Indian fishermen in
the Palk Bay region. But since fishermen are
no respecters of maritime boundaries and
since they move wherever there is fish, the
Indian fishermen used to move into Sri
Lankan waters and in that process get
killed, injured, their boats get destroyed
and the fish dumped into the sea. The rich
fishing grounds on the Sri Lankan side of
the Palk Bay have become a bone of
contention among the fishermen of the two
countries and the Sri Lankan Navy. If a
satisfactory solution is not arrived at
amicably and quickly it may bring about
tensions between the two countries and
between the Central Government and the State
Government.
While researching on
the subject, I had to face lot of problems.
All documents relating to Kachchatheevu and
the ownership claims of the Raja of Ramand
had been taken away to New Delhi and kept
under the stonewalls of official secrecy.
The 30 year old restriction on the use of
official records is over, but these
important documents are yet to be made
available for reference to scholars. The
materials I have used are mainly secondary
and they are scattered in various places in
Tamil Nadu and in New Delhi. I had the good
fortune to discuss the problems with number
of political leaders from Tamil Nadu, senior
officials in the Government of India, Sri
Lankan and Indian diplomats and senior
officials of the Government of India. They
were able to provide important information
on the subject. Can the research scholars
seek access to the all important official
files through the Right to Information Act?
Kachchatheevu is a
small barren island in the Palk bay, with
not even a drop of drinking water.
Historically the island was important,
because it was leased out for pearl
fisheries. It was also used by the Indian
fishermen to dry their nets. There is a
Church, dedicated to St. Anthony, who is
considered to be the guardian angel of the
fishermen. The Church was constructed by one
Seenikuppan Padayachi, a fisherman from
Thakachi Madam. What makes the island
extremely important is the fact that the
surrounding seas are extremely rich in
prawns and the prawns have a good export
market. The surrounding waters were also
the traditional fishing grounds of the
Indian fishermen for several centuries.
My argument that the
island of Kachchatheevu belonged to India is
based on the evidence of the Zamindari
rights that the Raja of Ramnad exercised
over the island. Though the official records
have been taken away to New Delhi, there is
irrefutable secondary evidence to
substantiate these Zamindari rights. New
Delhi did not dispute the Zamindari rights,
but it was not sure that Zamindari rights
conferred ownership. This argument is
fallacious and has dangerous implications.
It threatens the very unity of India. On the
eve of independence, large parts of India
were under the Zamindari system. In the nine
provinces of British India, the Zamindari
system covered 57 per cent of the area, the
Ryotwari system covered 37 per cent and the
Mahalwari sytem 5 per cent. In Madras
Presidency 27 per cent of the land holdings
were under the Zamindari system. It is in
this context that the Zamindari rights of
the Raja of Ramnad over the Island of
Kachchatheevu have to be viewed. According
to the Gazetteer of Ramnathapuram, published
by the Government of Tamil Nadu, the survey
number of Kachchatheevu was 1250. What is
more, the Raja used to enter into several
lease agreements with various parties for
the exploitation of marine resources in and
around Kachchatheevu. And when the Zamindari
was abolished in 1948, Kachchatheevu
naturally became a part of the Madras
Presidency. As Madhu Limaye, the Socialist
leader, mentioned in the Parliament, the
island was part of the Ramnad Zamindari
system and when Ramnad was merged with the
Madras Presidency, it became part of the
Ramnathapuram district.
Another significant
point needs mention. In the protracted
negotiations that took place between India
and Sri Lanka on the issue New Delhi did not
maintain that the island belonged to India,
it maintained that it was a disputed
territory. The reason for this line of
argument is that if Indian territory were to
be ceded to Sri Lanka, it required a
constitutional amendment and its
ratification by the state legislatures. But
if it were a disputed territory it could be
transferred to Sri Lanka when the maritime
boundaries were delimited. Another point
deserves emphasis. In the delimitation of
maritime boundaries, the general principle
followed is the principle of equi-distance.
And if the principle of equi-distance was
applied in the Palk Bay, the island would
have fallen on the Indian side. Dr. SP
Jagota, the Director in the Legal and
Treaties Division, Government of India has
pointed out, “The boundary line between
India and Sri Lanka followed the median
line, except as adjusted in the Palk Bay in
relations to the settlement on the question
of the island of Kachchativu”.
It must also be
mentioned that the Government of Tamil Nadu
was completely kept out of the negotiations
which took place between India and Sri Lanka
on the delimitation of the maritime
boundary. But before the agreement was
finally signed, Kewal Singh, Secretary to
the Ministry of External Affairs, came to
Madras, met Chief Minister Karunanidhi and a
few of his colleagues and explained the
background to the signing of the Agreement.
According to informed sources, Indira Gandhi
requested Chief Minister Karunanidhi to
appreciate New Delhi’s position and support
her stance. Karunanidhi was not happy with
New Delhi’s position; however, he did not
want to confront the Centre on this issue.
According to perceptive observers of the
Tamil Nadu political scene, it is very
likely that Chief Minister Karunanidhi, in
turn, hoped to get Indira Gandhi’s critical
support in his efforts to consolidate his
power in Tamil Nadu, which had come under
increasing threat from the AIADMK and its
charismatic leader MG Ramachandran. If the
State Government had resorted to legal
remedies in the Supreme Court against the
Centre on the ceding of Kachchatheevu to Sri
Lanka, or if it had insisted on a reference
by the President to the Supreme Court on the
ownership claims of the Raja of Ramnad, it
is likely that India-Sri Lanka relations
might have taken a different turn. It may be
recalled that the great Congress statesman,
Dr BC Roy, the Chief Minister of West
Bengal, approached the Supreme Court when
the Central Government wanted to transfer
Beru Bari to East Pakistan and got it
stalled. In the Kachchatheevu case, legal
luminaries like MC Setalvad had upheld
India’s ownership claims. What is more, a
few senior officials in the Ministry of
External Affairs also subscribed to the same
view. But Prime Minister Indira Gandhi
unfortunately over ruled them.
The most decisive
factor in the ceding of Kachchatheevu to Sri
Lanka was the personal friendship between
Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and Prime
Minister Sirimavo Bandaranaike. The decision
was political and it was done to boost the
sagging political morale of the Sri Lankan
Prime Minister and her political party.
Since Sri Lanka, under Mrs Sirimavo
Bandaranaike shared the larger foreign
policy concerns of India, it was essential
to assist Colombo in stabilizing and
consolidating its regime. Kachchatheevu
becoming a part of Sri Lanka would enhance
the credibility of the government in Sri
Lanka and the personal popularity of the
Prime Minister. It would also blunt the
arguments of the leftist elements in the
island, for whom issues such as
Kachchatheevu were symbolic of India’s
hegemonistic designs towards its
neighbours.
The personal equation
between the two Prime Ministers, which, as
pointed out earlier, was the critical factor
in the ceding of Kachchatheevu comes out in
sharp focus in the following quotation from
the book, Ethnicity versus Nationalism, The
devolution Discourse in Sri Lanka, written
by Prof. Partha Ghosh: “Kachchatheevu was
the most typical case of a personal equation
playing the role of diplomacy. When the
negotiations had virtually failed, and the
Indian official delegation was pressurizing
Indira Gandhi not to give up India’s claim
on the islet, Sirimavo Bandaranaike made a
personal appeal to Indira Gandhi to come to
her rescue, as it would otherwise spell
political disaster for her. Indira Gandhi
appreciated Mrs. Sirimavo Bandaranaike’s
predicament and manipulated the situation in
such a way that it became a fait accompli
even before the Indian delegation could
react. Sirimavo Bandaraniake remembered this
gesture as late as 1990 with immense
gratitude”.
Having failed to keep
Kachchatheevu with India, Chief Minister
Karunanidhi’s objective was to ensure the
continuance of the traditional fishing
rights of the Indian fishermen in and around
Kachchatheevu. Accompanied by S Madhavan,
then Law Minister in the State Government,
Chief Minister Karunanidhi went to New Delhi
and had detailed discussions with Swaran
Singh. Article 5 of the India-Sri Lanka
Maritime Boundary Agreement provides for the
continuation of these fishing rights. It
must be highlighted that Article 5 does not
specifically refer to the fishing rights. It
says, “Indian fishermen and pilgrims will
enjoy access to visit Kachchatheevu as
hitherto” During the debate that took place
in the Lok Sabha, Swaran Singh clarified
that “although Sri Lanka’s claim to
sovereignty over Kachchatheevu has been
recognized, the traditional rights of
fishermen and pilgrims to visit the island
remain unaffected”. It must, however, be
pointed out that the senior officials of the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Sri Lanka did
not concur with this line of reasoning. They
explained to me that Article 5 did not
confer any fishing rights, but only the
right to dry the fishing nets and the right
of pilgrims to visit Kachchatheevu without
visa for religious purposes. There is a
fallacy in this line of argument. Drying of
nets pre-supposes that the nets become wet
and this could happen only if the nets had
been used for fishing in and around
Kachchatheevu.
The desire to maintain
friendly relations with Sri Lanka, even at
the cost of the livelihood of Tamil Nadu
fishermen, becomes further evident if one
analyses the provisions of the India-Sri
Lanka Maritime Agreement of 1976, which
delimited the maritime boundaries in the
Gulf of Mannar and in the Bay of Bengal.
There was an Exchange of Letters between
Kewal Singh, Foreign Secretary to the
Government of India and WT Jayasinghe,
Secretary to the Ministry of Defence and
Foreign Affairs, Government of Sri Lanka.
The Exchange of Letters, dated 23 March
1976, was held by the Minister of External
Affairs YB Chavan to also “constitute an
agreement between the two countries”.
Paragraph I of the Exchange of Letters
reads: “The fishing vessels and fishermen of
India shall not engage in fishing in the
historic waters, the territorial sea and the
exclusive economic zone of Sri Lanka nor
shall the fishing vessels and fishermen of
Sri Lanka engage in fishing in the historic
waters, the territorial sea and the
exclusive economic zone of India, without
the express permission of Sri Lanka or
India, as the case may be”.
If Paragraph I quoted
above, categorical in nature, is applicable
to all sectors of India- Sri Lanka maritime
boundary, including the Palk Strait, what
happened to the fishermen’s rights
guaranteed under Article 5 of the 1974
Agreement? What happened to the assurance
given by Swaran Singh in Parliament about
traditional fishing rights of Indian
fishermen? Unfortunately no satisfactory
answer has come so far from the Government
of India in this matter. The Tamil Nadu
fishermen should have resorted to legal
remedies, but there was no legal pandit to
advise them on these maters. Moreover, India
was under emergency rule at that time and it
had taken a heavy toll of the rights of
democratic dissent and protest. The
prevailing atmosphere could be gauged from
the fact that YB Chavan’s statement in
Parliament was not followed by any debate.
Even in Tamil Nadu, which had to bear the
brunt of the adverse effects of these
agreements, there was not much open
resentment. What is apparent is the fact
that the astute Sri Lankan diplomats played
their cards very well and by introducing
Paragraph I in the 1976 Agreement they made
it crystal clear that the Indian fishermen
had no fishing rights in and around
Kachchatheevu. As Shri Madhavan, the former
Law Minister in the Tamil Nadu Government,
explained to the author, the 1976 agreement
sounded the death knell of Indian
fishermen’s rights.
CONCLUSION
The two illustrations
given above substantiate the following
points: 1) In the name of good neighbourly
relations, the Government of India has
sacrificed the interests and views of the
federal units. 2) India has not yet evolved
a mechanism by which the federal units could
make benign inputs into the making of
India’s neighbourhood policy. In the
negotiations which took place preceding the
Sirimavo-Shastri Pact, a member of the Tamil
Nadu cabinet was included in the Indian
team, but he did not carry out his
responsibilities as the representative of
his government or of the political party of
which he was a member. In the case of the
maritime boundary agreements, the Chief
Minister of the State was formally informed
about the provisions, after an informal
agreement was reached with Colombo; but the
views of the State were not sought on the
subject nor was any representative of the
State included in the Indian team. 3) The
political exigencies of the time and the
desire to seek the Congress Party’s support
in order to remain in power made Chief
Minister Karunanidhi not to resort to legal
remedies to protect the interests of the
State. 4) The University Departments
specializing in international relations and
non-governmental organizations involved in
the study of diplomacy should sensitise the
intelligentsia about the pros and cons of
international treaties. 5) In the first part
of the essay, I have cited the examples of
the United States and former Yugoslavia as
to how they strike a balance between the
interests of the federal government and the
federal units in the pursuit of foreign
policy. In depth studies are the need of the
hour and we must formulate practical
suggestions to solve this conundrum, so that
Indian federalism will be an example of how
to live together even as we maintain our
diversity in a democratic set up.
(Prof. Suryanarayan, former Director and
Senior Professor, Centre for South and
Southeast Asian Studies, University of
Madras, is currently Senior Research Fellow
in the Center for Asia Studies, Chennai.
This paper was presented in the National
Seminar on International Treaties,
Federalism and Indian Constitution organized
by the Institute of Parliamentary Affairs,
Government of Kerala in Malabar Christian
College, Kozhikode on February 4-5, 2010.
This paper is partly based on author’s
earlier writings on the subject)