Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I appreciate the invitation to appear before you to discuss Sri Lanka.
I'm sure many of your witnesses have spoken to you about the large number of Sri Lankan citizens who are suffering and are in terrible danger as we speak, caught between the LTTE and government forces in the conflict zone in Mullaitivu.
Rather than speaking further about this and running the risk of repeating what others have said, I thought it might be of more use to the committee if I were to talk a bit about the longer-term challenges in Sri Lanka--on the reasonable assumption that the Tigers will soon be conclusively defeated on the battlefield--what might happen, what should happen after the conflict is over, and what useful role Canada might play in these circumstances.
Let me begin by briefly describing my experience with Sri Lanka and providing a bit of background for my thoughts on the future. I went to Sri Lanka in the spring of 2002, just a few months after the ceasefire agreement was signed between the then-UNP government of Sri Lanka and the LTTE. As the two parties began their peace talks, many people believed that turning Sri Lanka into a federation might contribute to the achievement of a stable and just peace by giving the Tamil community in the north a degree of self-determination within a united Sri Lanka.
I sit on the board of the Forum of Federations, an international network of federal countries founded by Canada in the late 1990s. Under its auspices, Bob Rae and I--Mr. Rae was not then in politics--went to Sri Lanka many times to offer support and advice to both the government and the Tigers, and to mount educational and training sessions for civil society groups.
We met regularly with G.L. Peiris, the government minister responsible for leading the talks, as well as with other government officials and party leaders, and with the Tiger leadership--Anton Balasingham, S.P. Thamilchelvan, V. Muralitharan, known by his nom de guerre, Colonel Karuna--in Killinochi and elsewhere.
Mr. Balasingham, suffering from ill health, died in December of 2006. Mr. Thamilchelvan was killed near Killinochi in a targeted government air raid in the autumn of 2007. And Colonel Karuna, the LTTE's top military commander in the east, split from the Tigers in 2004, fracturing their unity and greatly weakening the LTTE position and its clout. He is now Minister of National Integration and Reconciliation in the current government of Sri Lanka.
Mr. Rae and I attended four of the six rounds of peace talks, the last of which was held in Japan in 2003, and we continued with missions to Sri Lanka for some time after that. I've not been back to Sri Lanka for several years, but I follow events there closely.
Little progress was made during the peace process, and I believe the talks fizzled because neither side was prepared to make the painful compromises that would have been necessary to achieve a just settlement and to set the country on a new course.
The Tigers showed little disposition to accepting the realities of democratic government in a free society. They continued to smuggle arms, abduct civilians from military service, and murder political competitors and government officials. The government, for its part, seemed incapable of capitalizing on the opportunity it had created, of driving the negotiation process forward, of persuading the majority Sinhalese community that significant change was going to be a necessary but worthwhile price for a stable peace.
The current government, headed by President Mahinda Rajapaksa, has been skeptical of the peace process from day one and takes the view that military force is the only way of dealing with the LTTE and ending the conflict. Aided by the split between the LTTE and Colonel Karuna's faction in the east, plus the demise of several of the Tigers' top leadership, the government has been winning on the battlefield and is within an ace of conclusively defeating the Tigers.
Unquestionably, this is a considerable achievement after 25 years of civil war, but success brings its own challenges and concerns. The battlefield defeat of the LTTE may not put an end to the acts of terrorism that have blighted many parts of the island.
These may prove very difficult to suppress. On the evidence of the March 10 bomb blast at a mosque south of Colombo, which killed 14 people and wounded 46, the Tigers, even if they are in their death throes, have not lost their capacity to commit awful acts of terrorism.
What is more, the battlefield defeat of the LTTE may be regarded by many Sri Lankans, and possibly by the government, as the end of the road and a conclusion of the process rather than the start of a new and equally important process of national reconciliation. Having won the war, will the government be able and willing to make the peace? The prospects are far from promising. There is little in Sri Lanka's history, and not much in the composition and leadership of the current government, to encourage optimism. Several Sri Lankan governments in the past have been given an opportunity to bind up the wounds of division. None has show much determination or taste for it. The present government is heavily reliant on Sinhalese nationalist support. What lessons are the nationalists likely to draw from the pending historic victory? They have always believed that Sri Lanka is for the Sinhalese. Defeating the Tigers will just confirm it.
To be sure, President Rajapaksa has spoken of social justice and of the need to heal the wounds of war. In a speech on February 4 he declared that it is the task of the entire nation to extend to “the people of the north...the kindness, friendship and prosperity they deserve”. The president urges his fellow Sri Lankans to act “with the dignity of a citizen who equally loves the Sinhala, Tamil, Muslim, Burgher, Malay, and all others who make up our nation”, yet he is committed to the “unitary nature of the state”--and there's the rub. If the nation is composed of all these communities, why is there so little concrete expression of that fact in the affairs of state?
For a great many of the president's supporters, Sir Lanka is not a multicultural society but a single Sinhalese nation with several small minority groups. Government documents are typically issued only in Sinhalese. There are few Tamil-speaking officials. There are repeated reports of racial profiling by the predominantly Sinhalese police force. These realities will be damnably difficult to change because they emanate from a spiritual and ideological source. The rock of identity for a large proportion of Sri Lankan Sinhalese is the conviction that their society is unitary, not plural, and even 25 years of civil war seem not to have changed that. Indeed, for many of these Sri Lankans the battlefield victory will be a triumphant confirmation of that fact.
Appropriate action at war's end depends on a recognition of the justice of the claims, not of the LTTE but of the Tamil and Muslim minorities. After all, you have to acknowledge that something is broken before you can try to fix it. One might hope that the defeat of the LTTE would allow Sri Lanka to tackle its deep ethnic divisions and begin the hard task of delivering a measure of justice to its Tamil and Muslim minorities.
Alas, I fear that is unlikely to happen, in part because it would involve profound and extensive reform of the Sri Lankan political order and also because it would entail an assault on the cherished identity and self-perception of the majority.
In these circumstances, what might Canada do to support reconciliation and reconstruction in post-conflict Sri Lanka? The first thing I think is for Canada and Canadians to be realistic about their potential influence. The Sri Lankan government is suspicious of foreign intervention and generally believes I think that much of what the international community has tried to do has in fact been unhelpful to the government and its central goals. Therefore, the space for creative international involvement post-conflict may be more limited than one would like.
Clearly, the very large Sir Lankan diaspora community in Canada is a highly significant potential resource to assist in the reconstruction and development of the war-ravaged regions of the country, particularly in the north. It is hard to imagine that Sri Lankan Canadians, most of them Tamils, will have much interest in returning to Sri Lanka or investing in its development if the island remains dominated by a Sinhalese majority flushed with the sense of victory over the LTTE.
In the earlier round of talks, as I have said, there was a genuine interest in exploring the devolution of political power, including federal models as a way of accommodating Tamil aspirations for self-rule. It seems to me to be unlikely in the extreme that President Rajapaksa's government will have any interest in following this course of action. International policy support in aid of this goal, therefore, is likely to be unwanted.
In the light of this bleak analysis, what are we left with? Economic development is one thing, as well as assistance in repairing and improving the social and economic infrastructure that has been neglected or ravaged by war, especially in the north and the east of the country. That's desperately needed and is probably something the government would be glad to have help with.
Just as important, but more problematic in its reception, would be governance support. Sri Lanka would not win any prizes for good governance. Freedom House designates it as only partially free, and the country ranks 92nd in Transparency International's 2008 corruption perception index, below Serbia, Senegal, Panama, and Madagascar.
Better government would benefit all Sri Lankans, whether they be Sinhalese, Muslim, or Tamil. Assuming they were welcomed by the government, programs to help Sri Lanka move in this direction would be very worthwhile.
Finally, given that the significant decentralization of power is not in the cards, programs that help the Sri Lankan government and its citizens to accommodate and develop respect for the cultural, religious, and linguistic pluralism that is embedded in their society would make a real contribution to the post-conflict world Sri Lanka is about to enter.
In this area, clearly Canada has a lot to offer. The question here, as elsewhere, though, is whether Sri Lanka wants to buy what Canada has to sell. These are all good ideas, I think, but if there is no market for them in the concrete reality of post-civil-war Sri Lanka, it's difficult to imagine they will have much bite or impact.
I have to say I feel badly about offering this gloomy assessment of the situation in Sri Lanka, but that's the way I see it. I'd be delighted to be proven wrong, but I greatly fear that's not likely to occur.
Thank you very much.