Sachin Parashar, TNN | Oct 23,
2012, 12.46AM IST
NEW DELHI: The ongoing one-upmanship
between the Sri Lankan government and TNA, which represents a vast majority of
Tamil population in the island nation, has taken a dangerous turn with many
within the government, including President Mahinda Rajapaksa's brother and
defence secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa, demanding that the 13th amendment to the
Constitution, a product of the Rajiv Gandhi-Jayewardene 1987 accord, be
repealed altogether.
Though the 13th amendment, which
guarantees devolution of power to the provinces and comprises several other
major concession to the Tamils, has often been pejoratively referred to as an
"imported solution", rarely has it been subjected to such attack by parties
within the ruling coalition. Indian officials here said they were
"surprised" by the development, but added they would respond at the
right moment. Sources confirmed that Gotabhaya will be visiting India this
week, and that the issue will be taken up with him.
Gotabhaya's call for abolition of the
13th amendment is said to be in response to the "post-war strategy"
of the TNA. India has repeatedly, and successfully, sought a reiteration from
Lanka of its commitment to the 13th amendment, saying it was imperative for
reconciliation after the war ended in 2009. Despite raising doubts about the
agenda of TNA, described by India as a credible body, President Rajapaksa had
told TOI earlier this year that his government remained committed to 13th
amendment. A joint statement issued by the two countries last year had said
that "a devolution package, building upon the 13th amendment, would create
conditions for genuine reconciliation".
Indian officials underlined how Lanka
made the same commitment in the 2008 Universal Periodic Review (UPR), which
looks at the human rights record of all UN member states every four years.
Interestingly, Lanka's record will be reviewed again by the UPR in early next
month with India being one of the three countries that will carry it out.
"This is not just a commitment made to India but to international
agencies," said an official.
The reconciliation talks, which started
after the war, collapsed in January with President Rajapaksa insisting that the
process could be taken forward only through a Parliament Select Committee
(PSC). The TNA has refused to join the PSC.
While ties have suffered because of
India's vote at the UN Human Rights Council against Sri Lanka, PM Manmohan
Singh did try to save the situation when he met Rajapaksa last month and
assured him of New Delhi's support at international fora in future. In the
talks, though, India also conveyed to Lanka that it looked upon TNA as a
credible entity with which talks must be resumed. The relations now threaten to
hit an all-time low with the talk about scrapping the 13th amendment
altogether.