BY IGGY KIM
On September 5, Sri Lanka's government lifted its four-year ban on the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). This followed a clash over the
issue between the United National Front (UNF) government and President
Chandrika Kumaratunge, who is a member of the opposition People's Alliance,
which had threatened to scupper the peace negotiations.
The lifting of the ban is a crucial step for the commencement of peace
talks in Thailand on September 16.
On September 1, Kumaratunge asserted her opposition to an unconditional
lifting of the ban. Further, she agreed to an interim administration for
the north-east Tamil areas only after agreement with the Tigers was reached
on core issues.
On September 2, a leader of Kumaratunge's Sri Lankan Freedom Party and
a People's Alliance MP, A.H.M. Fowzie, publicly opposed Kumaratunge's stance
and expressed support for the lifting of the ban before talks begin. Fowzie
also looks likely to support a UNF amendment to the constitution to curb
the president's powers. The president currently has the power to dissolve
parliament.
In response, Kumaratunge mobilised the Sinhala-chauvinist Buddhist clergy.
On September 2, the newly formed National Conference of Buddhist Monks
staged a rally at the Bandaranaike International Conference Hall, named
after Kumaratunge's father. They denounced the peace-broking country, Norway,
and urged Kumaratunge to “save the nation” from “breakup” and to take over
the defence portfolio from the UNF. Hundreds of monks then marched to meet
with Kumaratunge at her home.
However, both the government's timely lifting of the ban and the dissent
in the People's Alliance reflect the preference within Sri Lanka's ruling
class for a negotiated settlement and the growing isolation of those who
opt for a military solution to the conflict.
From Green Left Weekly, September 11, 2002.
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