123student.com


  Categories
 American History
 Arts & Music
 Biographies
 Black History
 Creative Writing
 Economics
 English
 Environment
 Film
 Geography
 History
 Law
 Literature
 Miscellaneous
 Politics
 Religion
 Science & Technology
 Shakespeare
 Social Issues
 Sports
 World History

Free Essays > Geography > The Legitimacy Of The Armed Struggle Of The Tamil People

The Legitimacy Of The Armed Struggle Of The Tamil People

Below is free essays on The Legitimacy Of The Armed Struggle Of The Tamil People by 123Student, your one-stop source for free essays, free college term papers, and free term papers. Look for more free essays and free term papers using the search box above.

Word Count: 8017
Page Count: 33

The Legitimacy Of The Armed Struggle Of The Tamil People



The legitimacy of the armed struggle of the Tamil people





                        Democracy may mean acceding to the rule of the majority,

                        but democracy also means governments by discussion and

                        persuasion. It is the belief that the minority of today may

                        become the majority of tomorrow that ensures the stability

                        of a functioning democracy. The practice of democracy in

                        Sri Lanka within the confines of a unitary state served to

                        perpetuate the oppressive rule of a permanent Sinhala

                        majority.



                        It was a permanent Sinhala majority, which through a series of

                        legislative and administrative acts, ranging from

                        disenfranchisement, and standardisation of University admissions,

                        to discriminatory language and employment policies, and state

                        sponsored colonisation of the homelands of the Tamil people,

                        sough to establish its hegemony over people of Tamil Eelam.



                        These legislative and administrative acts were reinforced from

                        time to time with physical attacks on the Tamil people with intent

                        to terrorise and intimidate them into submission. It was a course

                        of conduct which led eventually to rise of Tamil militancy in the

                        mid 1970s with, initially, sporadic acts of violence. The militancy

                        was met with wide ranging retaliatory attacks on increasingly

                        large sections of the Tamil people with intent, once again to

                        subjugate them. In the late 1970s large numbers of Tamil youths

                        were detained without trial and tortured under emergency

                        regulations and later under the Prevention of Terrorism Act

                        which has been described by the International Commission of

                        Jurists as a 'blot on the statute book of any civilised country'. In

                        1980s and thereafter, there were random killings of Tamils by

                        the state security forces and Tamil hostages were taken by the

                        state when 'suspects' were not found.



                        The preamble to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights

                        reads:



                             "Whereas it is essential if man is not compelled as a

                             last resort to rebellion against tyranny and

                             oppression, that human rights should be protected

                             by the rule of law."



                        The rise of the armed struggle of the Tamil people constituted the

                        Tamil rebellion against a continuing Sinhala oppression over a

                        period of several decades. The gross consistent and continuing

                        violations of the human rights of the Tamil people have been well

                        documented by innumerable reports of human rights

                        organisations as well as of independent observers of the Sri

                        Lankan scene.



                        Walter Schwarz commented in the Minority Rights Group

                        Report on Tamils of Sri Lanka, 1983



                             "...The makings of an embattled freedom movement

                             now seem assembled: martyrs, prisoners and a

                             pitiful mass of refugees. Talk of 'Biafra' which had

                             sounded misplaced in 1975, seemed less unreal a

                             few years later... As this report goes to press in

                             September 1983, the general outlook for human

                             rights in Sri Lanka is not promising. The present

                             conflict has transcended the special consideration

                             of minority rights and has reached the point where

                             the basic human rights of the Tamil community - the

                             rights to life and property, freedom of speech and

                             self expression and freedom from arbitrary arrest

                             have in fact and in law been subject to gross and

                             continued violations. The two communities are

                             mow polarised and continued repression coupled

                             with economic stagnation can only produce

                             stronger demands from the embattled minority,

                             which unless there is a change in direction by the

                             central government, will result in a stronger

                             Sinhalese backlash and the possibility of outright

                             civil war".



                        David Selbourne remarked in July 1984:



                             "The crimes committed by the Sri Lankan state

                             against the Tamil minority - against its physical

                             security, citizenship rights, and political

                             representation -are of growing gravity.. Report

                             after report by impartial bodies - By Amnesty

                             International, By the International Commission of

                             jurists, By parliamentary delegates from the West

                             by journalists and scholars - have set out clearly the

                             scale of growing degeneration of the political and

                             physical well being of the Tamil minority in Sri

                             Lanka... Their cause represents the very essence of

                             the cause of human rights and justice; and to deny

                             it, debases and reduces us all".



                        A Working Group chaired by Goran Backstrand, of the Swedish

                        Red Cross at the Second Consultation on Ethnic Violence,

                        Development and Human Rights, Netherlands, in February 1985

                        concluded:



                             "There was a general consensus that within Sri

                             Lanka today, the Tamils do not have the protection

                             of the rule of law, that the Sri Lankan government

                             presents itself as a democracy in crisis, and that

                             neither the government, nor its friends abroad,

                             appreciate the serious inroads on democracy which

                             have been made by the legislative, administrative,

                             and military measures which are being taken. The

                             extreme measures which are currently being

                             adopted by the government inevitably provoke

                             extreme reactions from the other side... The normal

                             life of the (Tamil) population of the North has been

                             seriously affected. People either have great

                             difficulty or find it completely impossible to continue

                             with their employment and there is a severe

                             shortage of food and basic necessities Many Tamils

                             are daily fleeing across the Palk Straits to Southern

                             India. The continuing colonisation of Tamil areas

                             with Sinhalese settlers is exacerbating the

                             situation... and the country is on the brink of civil

                             war."



                        Senator A.L.Missen, Chairman, Australian Parliamentary Group

                        of Amnesty International, expressed his growing concern in

                        March 1986:



                             "Some 6000 Tamils have been killed altogether in

                             the last few years... These events are not

                             accidental. It can be seen that they are the result of

                             a deliberate policy on the part of the Sri Lankan

                             government... Democracy in Sri Lanka does not

                             exist in any real sense. The democracy of Sri Lanka

                             has been described in the following terms, terms

                             which are a fair and accurate description: 'The

                             reluctance to hold general elections, the muzzling of

                             the opposition press, the continued reliance on

                             extraordinary powers unknown to a free

                             democracy, arbitrary detention without access to

                             lawyers or relations, torture of detainees on a

                             systematic basi..



...s , the intimidation of the judiciary by

                             the executive, the disenfranchisement of the

                             opposition, an executive President who holds

                             undated letters of resignation from members of the

                             legislature, an elected President who publicly

                             declares his lack of care for the lives or opinion of a

                             section of his electorate, and the continued

                             subjugation of the Tamil people by a permanent

                             Sinhala majority, within the confines of an unitary

                             constitutional frame, constitute the reality of

                             'democracy', Sri Lankan style."



                        The reports speak for themselves and that which emerges is a

                        chilling pattern of a forty year genocide attack on the Tamil

                        people intended to subjugate them within an unitary Sinhala

                        Buddhist state.



                        Karen Parker of the Non Governmental Human Rights

                        Organisation, International Educational Development put it

                        succinctly at the 42nd Sessions of UN Sub Commission on the

                        Protection of Minorities.



                             "The Universal Declaration of Human Rights states

                             that all persons, including members of minority

                             groups, have the right to the full realisation of their

                             human rights and to an international order in which

                             their rights can be realised.



                             The Sri Lanka situation has shown that for the past

                             forty years, the Sinhala controlled government has

                             been unwilling and unable to promote and protect

                             the human rights of the Tamil population, and the

                             Tamil population has accordingly lost all confidence

                             in any present or future willingness or ability of the

                             Sinhala majority to do so. Are people in this

                             situation required to settle for less than their full

                             rights. Can the international community impose on a

                             people a forced marriage they no longer want and

                             in which they can clearly demonstrate they have

                             been Abused?... We consider that in the case of Sri

                             Lanka, 40 years is clearly enough for any group to

                             wait for their human rights."



                        The inhabitants of the Northeast of the island of Sri Lanka

                        constitute a 'people' and are thereby entitled to the right of self

                        determination. Since it has been recognised that the exercise of

                        this right is not designed to dominate others but rather to escape

                        domination by others, the international community, through the

                        General Assembly Resolutions on Friendly Relations Among

                        States (Resolution 2625) and on Definition of Aggression (act 7)

                        and 1977 Additional Protocol I to the Geneva convention of

                        1949 (Act 1 C4), declared that as a last resort armed struggle

                        can be used as a method of exercising the right of self

                        determination. The Sri Lankan governments use of force in

                        denying the Tamil's right to self determination is in violation of

                        Articles 1 (2), 1 (3), 2 (4) and 56 of the United Nations Charter.



                        The Tamil people have been subjected to brutal and crude

                        personal psychological and institutional violence by the Sri Lanka

                        government and its agencies. The Sri Lanka Government has

                        built up a massive 70,000 member armed force constituted

                        exclusively of Sinhalese and allocated immense funds for its

                        support. The Tamils have resorted to arms to defend themselves

                        and the war being waged by the Liberation Tigers is a defensive

                        war. Unlike the measures adopted by the Sri Lankan

                        government, this struggle is not aimed at domination; instead it

                        serves to protect the sovereign identity of the Tamil people.



                        The armed struggle of the Tamil people is both just and lawful

                        because the rule of law for the Tamil people had ceased to exist;

                        because the Government of Sri Lanka had become a racist

                        government; and because the oppressed people of that racist

                        government were compelled to resort to arms to defend

                        themselves against that oppression.



                        Based on reason and international law and coupled with the

                        absence of any internal or external machinery to realise the Tamil

                        right to self determination, the Tamils resistance evolved from

                        peaceful agitation to armed struggle. As Professor Reisman of

                        the Yale Law School states, "insistence on non violence and

                        deference to all established in a ... system with many injustices

                        can be tantamount to confirmation and reinforcement of these

                        injustices. In some circumstances violence may be the last

                        appeal.. of a group.. for some measure of human dignity.



                        The international community's recognition of a "People's" right to

                        defend themselves and to use force to secure their legitimate

                        political objectives is reinforced by the contemporary political

                        discourse. The formation of armed forces by the Ukraine,

                        Moldavia; Georgia and Armenia and the European Community's

                        Peace plan for Yugoslavia's current crisis are all proof of the

                        above mentioned proposition.



                        The legitimacy of the armed conflict of the people of Tamil Eelam

                        was afforded open international recognition when the combatants

                        in the armed conflict, participated in talks with a specially

                        appointed Minister of the government of Sri Lanka at meetings

                        convened by the Indian Government at Thimphu in 1985. It was

                        a legitimacy which was reinforced in February 1987, by the

                        United Nations Commission on Human Right when it adopted a

                        resolution on Sri Lanka in which the armed conflict was

                        discussed in terms of humanitarian law. Again, it was a legitimacy

                        which the Indo Sri Lankan Agreement signed by the Prime

                        Minister of India and the President of Sri Lanka in July 1987,

                        recognised when it described the Tamil militant movement as

                        'combatants' in an armed conflict. Finally, in 1989/90, the

                        Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam engaged in direct talks with the

                        government of Sri Lanka and were accorded recognition as

                        combatants.



                        The statement made on behalf of the joint Front of Tamil

                        Liberation Organisations at the Thimphu Talks in 1985 serves to

                        underline the just and lawful nature of the struggle of the Tamil

                        people:



                             "We are a liberation movement which was

                             compelled to resort to the force of arms because all

                             force of reason had failed to convince the

                             successive Sri Lankan government in the past.

                             Further under conditions of national oppression and

                             the intensification of state terrorism and genocide

                             against our people, the demand for a separate state

                             become the only logical expression of the

                             oppressed Tamil people. Our armed struggle is the

                             manifestation of that logical expression."



                        The future of that lawful armed struggle clearly falls to be

                        determined in the context of the security of the Tamil people and

                        their right to self determination and these are matters for

                        resolution across a negotiating table, not in vacuum.

© 2006 123Student. All Rights Reserved. 123Student is your one-stop source for free essays, free college term papers, and free term papers. Part of the Free Essay Network.

Related Keywords: Tamil, Sri, people, Lanka, rights, government, armed, human, Lankan, struggle, right, democracy, state, Sinhala, Tamils, free essays, free term papers, free college term papers

Back to Top




Sponsored by:
Digital Term Papers
Mid Term Papers
Student Papers
Term Papers
Free Essays
Moopuna Term Papers

Free Essays
This entire site protected by copyright. Copyright © 1998-2006 123Student, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Part of the Free Essay Network.