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"Referendum On Eelam Is Our Right And Responsibility"

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  • "Referendum On Eelam Is Our Right And Responsibility"

    "REFERENDUM ON EELAM IS OUR RIGHT AND RESPONSIBILITY"

    TamilNet
    29.01.10 04:42

    "Diaspora Tamils live in established liberal democratic states with
    freedom of the press and where the rule of law is invariably observed.

    This weekend's referendum in Britain provides us with a chance to
    prove that the demand for Tamil Eelam is, as it always was, the
    well reasoned conclusion of rational, free-thinking, independent
    individuals. By endorsing an independent statehood, we demonstrate our
    commitment to our people in the island and make clear and that there
    can be no peace or reconciliation without a just solution, without
    freedom and equality for the Tamil nation; and that it is stability,
    not chaos we seek in our homeland," comments Sivakami Rajamanoharan,
    member of the TYO-UK (Tamil Youth Organisation - United Kingdom),
    on the forthcoming referendum in UK.

    Full text of Ms Rajamanoharan's statement, issued on behalf of TYO-UK,
    follows:

    After three decades of futile efforts to negotiate with Sinhala
    leaders an end to the relentlessly deepening state discrimination, the
    venerated Tamil leader, SJV Chelvanayagam, turned the 1977 election
    into a referendum on an independent state. When the Tamil people
    overwhelmingly backed the demand for Tamil Eelam, many believed our
    collective wish was seen to be now beyond doubt.

    Yet our democratic voice was first ignored, then violently stifled.

    Another three decades and over a hundred thousand lives later, the
    Tamil nation is once again uniting to reaffirm our commitment to
    political independence. This time however our nation's voice is being
    heard clearly around the world. A global chorus of referendums that
    started in Norway and gained momentum in France and Canada, is now
    upon the UK.

    Whatever our party-political, religious or other beliefs, the central
    question of our people's right to govern themselves unites us all as
    Tamils. Nonetheless, after the horrific experiences of the past year,
    some doubt the use of voting. Amid our undiminished outrage there is
    also fatigue and cynicism.

    Allow me to explain why voting 'yes' this weekend for our nation's
    independence is both an opportunity and the duty of every British
    Tamil.

    The world is watching Last year we huddled together in shock as the
    Sri Lankan state slaughtered tens of thousands of our fellow Tamils
    - people it claimed were its own citizens. Those who knew earlier
    little of the racially motivated atrocities against our nation were
    galvanised into urgent action. As our surviving brothers and sisters
    were hemmed into squalid camps, we in the diaspora, who until very
    recently stood on the sidelines of our nation's struggle for survival,
    seized the baton.

    Tragedy can bring out the best in us. Equally it can open the door
    for disillusionment, despair and apathy. There are no judgments to
    be made, however. Given how far we seemed to have fallen last year,
    few could honestly say that during the darkest moments of the bleakest
    days they did not experience the paralysis of helplessness.

    "We protested and yet the world watched as they were killed," is a
    widely-held sentiment. True, the mass street protests did not save our
    people and no sane person would attempt to argue otherwise. However
    they did focus the eyes of the world on Sri Lanka as never before. The
    genocidal logic of Sinhala power became acknowledged worldwide for
    the first time.

    Even now, several months after we packed up our tents and placards,
    the international community is insisting on investigating war crimes -
    despite Sri Lanka's increasingly desperate attempts to fend them off.

    It is not only about the slaughtered, but the living too. For the
    latter, penned in militarised camps and subject to abuse or resettled
    around army cantonments, having the world standing over Sri Lanka's
    shoulder is key to their security and survival.

    Ignored and violently silenced The TULF's 1977 electoral victory made
    clear the Tamil consensus that Eelam is the only solution to Sinhala
    oppression. Our unwavering support appears self-evident to us.

    However, the international community, having long seen Sri Lanka as
    a flawed but still viable liberal democracy, did not believe this is
    what Tamils really want. Many Western liberals dismissed Tamils who
    sought Eelam as extremists and insisted that the majority of Tamils
    would settle for autonomy or federalism. They were also convinced
    that once the LTTE was defeated, democratic Sri Lanka would quickly
    address our grievances. Why wouldn't it?

    In 2004 the Tamil National Alliance won an outstanding electoral
    victory in the Tamil homeland after pledging their support to
    the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) who were fighting for
    independence. Even this clear consensus was explained away as the
    result of LTTE domination (that Tamils' endorsement of Eelam pre-dates
    the birth of the LTTE has always been conveniently forgotten).

    Even we the Diaspora, oceans away from the jurisdiction of Vanni,
    are said to have succumbed to the power of the Tiger. However freely
    we waved our Eelam flags, shouting for independence, our democratic
    voice has consistently been ignored and our free speech usurped.

    In the meantime, Sinhala bigotry was tolerated and endorsed. Even
    earlier this week, the US ambassador expressed her hopes for a free and
    fair Presidential election and a unified Sri Lanka. Just one look at
    the shattered and subjugated Tamil people in the Northeast makes clear
    the impossibility of a 'free and fair' election. That the vision of a
    unified country turns on incarcerated and brutalised victims choosing
    between a hit man and his contractor is nothing short of macabre.

    The Diaspora's responsibility Nonetheless, the sheer brutality of Sri
    Lanka's onslaught last year against the hapless Tamil population,
    and the tenacity of the Diaspora's protests, has begun to shift
    international perceptions. That Sri Lanka holds elections but is no
    liberal democracy is now starkly clear. A rethink is underway.

    However, there is still a long way to go. Some in the international
    community feel that after thirty years of conflict most Tamils want
    nothing of Eelam and simply yearn for peace and to be left alone. This
    infantalises and belittles our people. Actually, the situation in Sri
    Lanka has made our demand for independence only more relevant while
    the decades of attempted genocide have only served to strengthen
    Tamil resolve. The coming years will make this clear.

    Nonetheless, the fact is that the first democratic mandate for Eelam
    is now over thirty years old; a long time in modern politics. It is
    argued to have lost its relevance. We may be steadfast, but a fresh
    mandate is necessary.

    But, the Sinhala state has made it impossible for Tamils to freely
    express their wishes in Sri Lanka; the sixth amendment makes making a
    demand for Eelam illegal on pain of savage punishment. As the scattered
    and traumatized Tamils of our homeland are forced into silence,
    we in the Diaspora are left with a solemn responsibility today.

    In the wake of last year's mass mobilizations around the world, the
    international community accepts that the Tamil Diaspora must play a
    key role in the island's future. The world is paying attention to
    Sri Lanka's crisis and we must take the opportunity to state our
    case clearly.

    We live in established liberal democratic states with freedom of
    the press and where the rule of law is invariably observed. This
    weekend's referendum provides a chance to prove that the demand for
    Eelam is, as it always was, the well reasoned conclusion of rational,
    free-thinking, independent individuals.

    By endorsing an independent Eelam, we demonstrate our commitment
    to our people in the island and make clear and that there can be no
    peace or reconciliation without a just solution, without freedom and
    equality for the Tamil nation; and that it is stability, not chaos
    we seek in our homeland.

    Not all of those who voted in the first Eelam referendum will be able
    to make their voices heard again. Illness, age and thirty years of
    brutal conflict have claimed many lives. This weekend's referendum
    provides a democratic platform through which the next generation can
    make clear the popular will of the Tamils and thereby continue our
    just and legitimate struggle.

    Unavoidable Politics Many young British Tamils, as do their non-Tamil
    peers, profess an aversion to the morally questionable arena of
    politics. 'I am not into politics; I believe in human rights' some
    say. But politics and human rights are inextricably linked. To try
    and improve human rights whilst turning a blind eye to the politics
    driving abuses and repression is not only futile but foolish.

    Across the world and through out history, the most serious of human
    rights violations have always been the result of state machinery
    harnessed to racist, fascist or authoritarian ideologies. In Sri
    Lanka democracy means the tyranny of the Sinhala majority over the
    Tamil minority. The long history of state abuses and impunity there
    is testament to this racialised logic. Sri Lanka's problems cannot
    be fixed by tinkering with human rights mechanisms or monitoring.

    For others, it is not human rights, but humanitarianism that drives
    them. When the 2004 tsunami struck, many in the Diaspora quickly
    rallied to the stunned survivors in the homeland. Whilst even the
    most brutal of regimes are incapable of invoking a natural disaster,
    but ethnic discrimination can have a devastating impact on subsequent
    recovery. Sri Lanka did just that: international aid agencies protested
    the government's excluding the shattered Northeast and concentration
    on the Sinhala South. Despite this and state blockade, through the
    untiring efforts of Tamil organisations and activists, the stricken
    Tamil areas recovered to a great extent.

    Moreover, it is how Sri Lanka waged war against the Eelam demand
    that has kept most of the island's Tamils in humanitarian crisis
    for a quarter of a century. Where does politics end and humanitarian
    catastrophe begin when a government decides to indiscriminately bomb
    its own civilian population? What use is aid when all international
    agencies are expelled but the incarcerated civilians are cited in
    state demands for 'rehabilitation' funds?

    Any financial aid going to Sri Lanka, from donors or the Diaspora,
    for 'development' or 'rehabilitation' will, in the absence of Tamil
    self-rule, do nothing for the Tamil people, it will only benefit the
    Sinhala state.

    The core problem Some ardent optimists argue that six decades of
    systematic discrimination in education, employment, language and
    culture, culminating in last year's state-executed slaughter can be
    forgotten with time; that there can be 'reconciliation'.

    But the fundamental problem in Sri Lanka is the hierarchy of Sinhalese
    above Tamils which has over six decades become embedded in every
    aspect of life in Sri Lanka: governance, law, institutions, politics
    and security, both individual and group.

    This hierarchy is rooted in an ideology by which Sinhalese are
    the rightful owners of the island and Tamils their inferior (the
    'Mahavamsa'). Last summer's mass killings have their genesis in
    state-sponsored or abetted riots and pogroms against Tamils in
    the early fifties. This is why we argue Sri Lanka is a genocide
    in progress.

    As Israel was for the only sure protection for the Jewish people and
    Kosovo for the Albanians, the only guaranteed protection for Tamils
    in an independent Tamil Eelam: the future goodwill of today's mass
    murderers is a brittle basis for our people's security.

    However far you see yourself from politics if you dream of an end to
    the persecution of Tamils in Sri Lanka, you are dreaming of Eelam.

    We all belong Most of us in the second generation were raised here
    in Britain because our parents fled intolerable persecution in our
    homeland.

    Britain will always be our safe haven but Tamil Eelam is our origin.

    That is why we are comfortably both British and Tamil. We are
    well-versed in our Ps and Qs, but being Tamil is an equally inherent
    part of who we are. Our Tamilness is not only expressed through
    language, clothes, food and etiquette, which can be acquired or indeed
    forgotten, but through shared ancestry.

    It is important to remember that those who suffer genocide never
    choose their own identity, rather it is chosen for them by their
    oppressor. Throughout the gruesome history of genocide, Jews,
    Armenians, Tamils and others have been singled out on the basis of
    physical appearance or ancestry. This is why Israel, for example,
    created the 'Law of Return', allowing those of Jewish descent to seek
    safety in Israel from persecution any where in the world, regardless
    of their country of birth, citizenship or place of residence. All
    Jews are equal.

    Similarly, regardless of where we were born or raised or to which
    citizenry our passports say we belong, in the face of genocide, all
    Tamils are equal. British Tamils therefore have a rightful place in
    the Tamil struggle, alongside Tamils in the homeland.

    Moreover, the Tamil Eelam nation is a political community. They may
    contribute, but language or even ancestry is not a prerequisite to
    belong. This is why non-Tamil spouses of Tamils are also eligible to
    vote in this weekend's referendum. A nation is a group of people who
    share the same political values and beliefs, thus creating their own
    political identity.

    All this talk of national identity makes some uneasy. There is an
    unspoken fear that to engage in the Tamil 'national' project is to
    participate in exclusivist politics. Seeking an independent Tamil
    Eelam appears at odds with the increasing globalisation. Instead of
    unity, we are voting to divide a state into two. Moreover, the notion
    of dividing it along ethnic lines lies uncomfortably alongside the
    idea of tolerance. It raises fears of racism or even fascism.

    There are two sides to nationalism, however. One is fuelled by a racist
    belief in one's superiority; whilst the other, ignited by oppression,
    is fuelled by the need to resist genocide. Unabated persecution means
    that Tamil Eelam is our only guaranteed protection against a state
    that is obsessed with Sinhala supremacy. Yet the Tamil nation is not
    against the existence of a Sinhala nation or people. A referendum on
    Eelam is not a vote against tolerance or liberal values, but a vote
    for freedom, equality and self-governance.

    In country after country the Diaspora is coming forward to stand by
    the island's Tamils in their hour of need. Tamils of Britain, this
    weekend it is our turn.
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