Sri Lanka after the tsunami – opportunities and tensions


FOLLOWING THE tsunami in Sri Lanka, more than 40,000 people have lost their
lives and there are about 800,000 refugees.
Senan, a CWI member from Jaffna
living in London, comments on the situation, especially in the north and east.
Senan includes comments from phone conversations with Siritunga Jayasuriya,
secretary of the United Socialist Party (USP – CWI in Sri Lanka).

IN SRI Lanka, people have reacted far quicker to the tsunami disaster than
their government. Unexpectedly, it has provided an opportunity for the Tamil
and Sinhalese masses to work together and to realise that co-existence is
possible and to experience it. Unfortunately, the authorities are not using
this opportunity to forge unity on the divided island, but the opposite.

The USP has condemned the way the government is treating the disaster
victims and calls for the aid operation to be under the control of elected
committees of workers and poor people, and without any discrimination on the
basis of nationality, religion or caste.

People from the south of the island have been more than willing to take aid
to the north, including to areas controlled by the separatist Liberation Tamil
Tigers of Eelam (LTTE). But big tensions have developed between the
government, the Sri Lankan army and the Tamils of the North and East.

The ‘Tigers’

The ‘Tigers’ have blamed the government for not sending sufficient aid and
are appealing to the international community to give aid to them directly.

While the mass of people north and south were struggling to feed themselves
and find shelter, the minister of Public Security, Law and Order and Buddhist
affairs, Ratnasiri Wickremanayake, made the openly chauvinist comment:
"Although most temples in those districts were devastated by tidal waves,
Buddha statues in temples were unharmed". He claimed this was proof that
non-Buddhist religions like Hinduism and Islam were evil!

This is how the initial genuine attempts made by the Sinhala and Tamil
masses to work together are being undermined by racist, communal politicians
like him in the south.

The LTTE has reported that several lorries sent by TRO (the Tamil
Rehabilitation Organisation of the LTTE) to the eastern district of
Trincomalee were hijacked by the Sinhala chauvinist JVP (People’s Liberation
Front).

The situation got even worse when the government decided to ban UN
secretary general, Kofi Annan, from visiting affected areas in the North-East.
Annan told the government that he was on a humanitarian and not a political
visit. However he was refused permission to travel.

Propaganda machine

Immediately after the disaster the government’s official propaganda machine
went into full swing. The pro-government Sinhala media in the South
immediately spread rumours that the LTTE leader, Pirabakaran and its
intelligence chief, Pottu Amman, had died when the tsunami struck.

They also claimed that one of the refugee camps in the north was set on
fire by LTTE members. The LTTE claims that a group of Sri Lankan soldiers did
it when the refugees refused their aid offer. Instead of easing the tension
between the communities all the government is doing is further fuelling the
divisions.

Military opportunism

THE CHANDRIKA government is systematically using the army to sabotage the
aid operation. Poor people from the north will undoubtedly be suspicious of
aid from the military. The 20-year-old civil war created a disaster nothing
short of the one they are facing now, with more than 60,000 people losing
their lives.

Many of those were through the bombing and shelling conducted by the Sri
Lankan forces. The historical role of the Sri Lankan military in the north
makes them the last choice to lead any kind of aid work. However, the Sri
Lankan government made it their first choice.

India and the US have also given military support to the government. The
Sri Lankan government has more than welcomed Indian military support
regardless of the sensitivities amongst the Tamil-speaking population. The
poor masses of the north have not forgotten the destruction and tyranny the
Indian forces brought with them on their last visit to the country on a
so-called ‘peace-keeping’ mission.

If the US military advances towards the east of the country where the Sri
Lankan army bases are, then the LTTE will see this as a flagrant provocation.

India has its own imperialist interests in the region. So, of course, does
the US government. The US seized the opportunity to get into Sri Lanka, with
an eye on Trincomalee as a naval base for its military operations. If the US
gives help now, then obviously they will expect big favours in return.

The harbour of Trincomalee is one of the most desirable harbours for any
navy. Control of this area is understandably one of the focal points of the
peace process discussions between the Sri Lankan government and the LTTE.

The foreign military presence will only destabilise this region of the Sri
Lankan island and sabotage the peace process.

Fishing communities worst hit

IT IS the fishing communities of Sri Lanka that are the most affected by
the tsunami, but they are also the most discriminated against.

Those affected by the disaster were predominantly poor and working class.
Their life depends on the sea. Unlike in countries in the West, people live
near the sea for the sole purpose of fishing. But the Sri Lankan president,
Kumaratunga, has banned the construction of new houses near the sea. If so,
the government must provide the fishermen with access to the sea, to do their
work, or they will have to rebuild their small cottages near the sea.

Not only the houses destroyed by the sea should be replaced, but also the
fishing equipment should be supplied free for them. The government’s provision
of private loans is not acceptable.

In the north, the fishing community is considered to be low caste and they
run the risk of being discriminated against by the dominant upper caste. The
upper caste occupies most of the leading government posts and have most of the
leading business interests in the north, and contribute substantially to the
LTTE’s finances. The LTTE has the responsibility to ensure that all aid is
distributed without discrimination.

In the devastated East, the majority in some communities of Tamil-speaking
people are Muslims. The USP has members in that area, many now displaced and
living in camps. They will be fighting against any manifestations of
discrimination with regard to aid and for democratically-elected committees to
be making all the decisions on relief.

Destruction and reconstruction

IN THE South, the Ampara and Galle Districts were completely devastated.
Thousands of houses were destroyed. Siritunga reported that bridges, roads,
and railway tracks were gone. More than 12 hospitals have been completely
destroyed and 25 partially destroyed. 59 schools were completely destroyed and
110 schools partly destroyed. (The LTTE claims that in the north more than 200
schools have been destroyed.)

Given the scale of the destruction, the reconstruction task is enormous.
The Sri Lankan government estimates it would cost them more than $1 billion in
the first year alone. In this situation there are always cases of
misappropriation of money meant for relieving the suffering of ordinary
working and poor people by corrupt bureaucrats.

The Sri Lankan government itself is not keen on reconstruction in rural
areas; they have not done any major construction work in rural areas for
decades. There are reports that the Sri Lankan share market is already
benefiting from the disaster.

Under the cover of a polite humanitarian appearance the capitalist class is
already making profit from the tsunami business. Meanwhile prices of essential
goods and fuel have rocketed.

USP programme

THE USP has a long history of fighting for the rights of the working class
and the poor masses in Sri Lanka and for the rights of the Tamil-speaking
people, up to and including an independent homeland (if that is what they
desire), while defending basic rights for minorities within it.

The USP is calling for maximum unity to overcome any national conflicts. We
are calling for the working class to unite against the government’s divisive
tactics.

A real attempt at relief has not yet started. USP secretary Sritunga
Jayasuriya reported that there is the possibility of riots breaking out in
refugee camps. There have been signs of this in the north’s refugee camps.

Workers’ councils elected by the workers and poor people should distribute
the aid. Committees of displaced people, together with local trade unions and
political parties, should run the camps and centres. There should not be any
discrimination based on race, religion or caste. Displaced people should not
be treated like beggars.

There should be no money made by the banks or private companies out of this
disaster. Special arrangements should be made to ensure that people who had
small shops or workplaces will be compensated and assisted to restart their
lives.

Fishing equipment such as boats and nets should be given free to those
whose livelihoods have been destroyed by the tsunami, along with interest-free
loans to re-start their lives.

The government of Sri Lanka is already spending too much money on war
efforts. All war resources should be allocated for reconstruction.

Cancel debts

The USP is also calling for US forces to leave, and there should no foreign
military bases established to serve the interests of the imperialists. All
attempts to militarise the situation and control the aid and welfare centres
by the army should stop.

All foreign debts should immediately be cancelled. The IMF and the World
Bank should pay back for reconstruction the massive sums which they have
stolen from the Sri Lankan working class through high interest payments and
highly exploitative profit-making methods.

If there had been an earthquake warning system in Sri Lanka, the train that
was lifted off the rails by the tsunami with two thousand people on it would
not even have left Colombo station. All those lives were lost unnecessarily.

It has been successive, criminally irresponsible capitalist governments in
Sri Lanka who have failed to install the proper warning systems. The USP is
demanding that all necessary tsunami and natural disaster warning systems
should be installed immediately.

The USP is intending to conduct a poster campaign on all the major demands
against the government and for democratic control over the disaster
programmes. This is going to be a very tough but very necessary campaign.


Sri Lanka appeal

Socialist Party members can assist our section in Sri Lanka by donating to
Campaign Sri Lanka.

On 14 January a container of clothes, tents and medical supplies will be
sent to Sri Lanka where comrades of the USP will again set out from Colombo to
each of the worst-hit areas, taking supplies for the most needy.

We are asking Socialist Party members to give a donation to the Sri Lanka
appeal fund to help our members and to enable them to produce political
material as soon as possible.

Please donate via the CWI website or use the account detailed below. There
is also an appeal sheet attached for collecting from supporters, the public,
trade union branches etc.

Donations can be made:

Online at www.socialistworld.net

Add the words Campaign Sri Lanka to the comment box. An appeal sheet can
also be downloaded from the website.

Directly to: Campaign Sri Lanka, Lloyds TSB, Leytonstone branch. Account
number 0023293, Sort code 30-95-03

By cheque to Campaign Sri Lanka, c/o Committee for a Workers’
International,

PO Box 3688,

London, Britain, E11 1YE

Tel: ++ 44 20 8988 8760,

Fax: ++ 44 20 8988 8793

Messages of support can be sent directly to the USP in Sri Lanka:

[email protected] and should be copied to
[email protected] (in case e-mail is
not working)


Indian Ocean disaster exposes capitalist society

THE TSUNAMI disaster has exposed the depth of poverty and exploitation in
‘Third World’ countries. Young people in particular are moved not only to give
assistance, but to do something to change the world.

Every week 150,000 people die in Africa from preventable illnesses
associated with shortages of food, clean water, sanitation. This is equivalent
to the death toll of the Indian Ocean tsunami every seven or eight days.

Millions of people around the Indian Ocean have been deprived by the
tsunami of what little they had. But under the capitalist profit system,
billions are being robbed daily of the right to a decent life. None other than
the chairman of the World Bank described how the ‘tsunami’ of new quota
arrangements is set to slaughter over 300,000 jobs, mostly female garment
workers in Sri Lanka.

Donations and aid

THE GENEROSITY of millions of people around the world has been staggering.
By contrast, the word "stingy" has been widely accepted as the best way to
describe the top politicians, governments and multinational companies in
relation to appeals for help.

What hypocrisy on the part of retail chains like New Look who donate the
first two hours of trading on 8 January to the disaster fund and continue to
buy fashion clothing made by predominantly women garment workers in the free
trade zones of Sri Lanka and other Asian countries.

Stung by both the scale of the disaster and the massive public response,
governments have now entered a "Dutch auction" as to who can give the most.
But even the US government’s upped total of $350 million is still, as the
writer George Monbiot has underlined, the equivalent of only one-and-a-half
days’ spending in Iraq.

Internationally, a total nearing $8 billion has been pledged. But
scepticism abounds as to whether governments and companies will actually hand
over even half of what they have pledged.

Regional ambitions

THE US administration has decided to use the Indian Ocean disaster to gain
power and prestige in the region itself. The 9/11 attacks saw a stepping up of
the US presence in the Pacific region (and central Asia) under the guise of
the ‘war against terrorism’. Now, US marines and warships are arriving in Sri
Lanka and elsewhere in the Indian Ocean, under the cloak of humanitarian aid.

Bush has undoubtedly decided to take advantage of the situation and conduct
a charm offensive in the wake of the disaster to gain prestige and to step up
the US military presence in the Indian Ocean region. He came out for the
immediate installation of an early warning system in the region, which had
been rejected as unnecessary by both Asian and US governments before 26
December.

Bush has switched tack, also under pressure, to soften relations with the
United Nations rather than go ahead with a restricted ‘Core Group’. He has
sent Colin Powell, on his last mission before stepping down as Secretary of
State, briefly to Thailand and Sri Lanka and, most importantly, to Indonesia.

As he arrived in Jakarta, capital of the world’s most populous Islamic
country, he declared that Muslims there, along with the rest of the world,
had: "An opportunity to see American generosity, American values in
action…And I hope as a result of our efforts … that value system of ours
will be reinforced." The US relief work, he added, should also: "Dry up pools
of dissatisfaction which might give rise to terrorist activity!"

This is utopian. Apart from the recent brief ceasefire, the Indonesian
government – a thinly disguised military regime – has been at war with the
whole Acehan people, not just the guerrilla force of GAM, killing them and
suppressing their rights on a mass scale. Fighting has resumed in some areas
and in a few weeks, when the media leaves the area, the emergency will be
re-imposed and reporters excluded.

India

IN ITS opposition to aid from foreign forces and in sending its own troops
and, under cover of aid, to Sri Lanka, the Maldives and Indonesia, the Indian
capitalist class is also pursuing its own regional ambitions, aiming to rival
China and Japan in the whole of Asia.

None of the underlying daily economic disasters befalling these peoples of
the Indian Ocean region of the world or of Africa – a continent struggling for
survival – is going to be solved on a capitalist basis.

The ruling capitalist classes fear the exposure of the real state of
affairs in their world. They fear the assertion by oppressed nations of their
right to independence and will continue to oppose it. They fear the anger of
the youth and the renaissance of the workers’ movement that can struggle for
an end to their system of exploitation and poverty.

Global warming, the result of industrial production under capitalism, means
that the planet and its population are moving rapidly towards disaster.

Class society and capitalism are overwhelmingly responsible for the
precarious existence of the whole world’s population. The tsunami disaster
must be seen as a brutal wake-up call to all those who want to change the
world. Get involved in the struggle for a socialist society and a truly
internationalist global society.


Extracts from CWI statement.

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