| End game in Sri Lanka |
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| Tuesday, 27 January 2009 | |
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For the secessionist organisation, the last 30 months have been one unbroken series of miscalculations and military debacles. The Sri Lankan armed forces have been on a roll ever since they tasted success in the Mavil Aru operation — provoked by a severely weakened LTTE’s foolish act of shutting the sluice gates and denying water to more than 30,000 civilians — in the Eastern Province. The real surprise has come in the Northern Province where, beginning in March 2007, the Sri Lankan army, air force, and navy have simply decimated the Tigers. The army’s offensive has come on several fronts. It currently involves five offensive divisions and three task forces rapidly closing in on the top LTTE leaders and fighting cadres who have nowhere to escape. What residual fighting capability the organisation retains in the guerrilla mode and through urban terrorism remains to be seen. But there is little doubt that, politically speaking, the game is up for Mr. Prabakaran and his organisation — which is banned or designated as terrorist in about 30 countries, including India, the United States, the United Kingdom, and in the latest instance Sri Lanka. It is certainly too late for any bailout package, if that was ever on anybody’s practical agenda. The immediate priority must be ensuring the safety of Tamil civilians, officially reckoned to be in the range of 100,000 to 200,000, who the LTTE evidently has no compunction in using as a human shield. That is the most sensitive humanitarian challenge before the Sri Lankan government. Assuming it will be met successfully so that the offensive military operations, including the final mopping up, can end in a few weeks, President Mahinda Rajapaksa — whose political stock in Sri Lanka’s South can be expected to be sky-high — must ensure that there is no triumphalism. Most important, he must seize the moment to build a national consensus on an enduring political solution based on substantial devolution of power to the Tamils within a united Sri Lanka. Courtesy:thehindu.com |
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| Last Updated ( Friday, 14 August 2009 ) |
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