Rajavarothiam Sampanthan says:
Yes, I said it. I
said that I was on the LTTE hit list before Mahinda Rajapaksa. In other words, the LTTE was gunning for me
before Prabhakaran decided that Mahinda Rajapaksa was a target as or more
legitimate that I was. I said, and I
quote, ‘I was never a spokesman, proxy or ally of the LTTE, that is completely
false and I reject it without any reservation whatsoever.’
There was something I didn’t say. In the Election Manifesto of the TNA in 2001,
it was stated, ‘We have consistently asserted that any attempt to draw a
distinction between the LTTE and the Tamil people was meaningless’. In other words, as the leader of that
political organization and as a Tamil I conceded that the LTTE was the
sole-representative of the Tamil people, that I sought to be their voice in
asking people to vote for me and indeed did just that after I was elected.
In 2004, in our manifesto, we ‘accepted the LTTE’s
leadership’ (i.e. Prabhakaran) as ‘the national leadership of the Tamil Eelam
Tamils’ and clearly accepted that the LTTE was in fact ‘the sole and authentic
representatives of the Tamil people’. I
agreed, with the rest of the TNA to ‘devote our full cooperation for the ideals
of the Liberation Tigers’ struggle with honesty and steadfastness’. I agreed,
moreover to ‘work side by side with the
LTTE for the political initiatives under their leadership’.
I confess therefore that I lied to the Daily Mirror (see my
interview with Hafeel Fariz). I confess that I am being cheeky and disingenuous
when I told him that ‘We do not ask for power over foreign affairs, we do not
want powers over defence, we do not want powers over fiscal policy in regard to
the country’s finance’ because the very term ‘Tamil Eelam Tamils’ implies a
separatist project. I would not take any
issue, therefore, with anyone who laughs at my constant interjection of the
word ‘unity’ when I talk about ‘solution’.
Susil Premajayantha says:
As the General Secretary of the United People’s Freedom
Alliance, I am ashamed. On Friday the
Chairman of the Yatiyantota PS was arrested by the Bribery Commission for
‘taking’. I am ashamed to say that this
is not the first time that a member of the UPFA has been caught taking
bribes. I am ashamed that members who
have been elected to pradeshiya sabhas, urban and municipal councils,
provincial councils and even parliament have been caught (on camera and
otherwise) engaging in all kinds of illegal and deplorable activities. There have been instances when those elected
on the UPFA ticket have assaulted rivals within the Alliance. I have promised
disciplinary action, but have deliberately made sure that deed will not follow
word.
It is principally my responsibility to screen applicants for
party nomination. I have failed. I will not pass the buck to others. Today, I acknowledge that the Alliance needs thugs and racketeers to
intimidate opponents, fatten the campaign fund and in these and other ways
throw their weight around. This is the real secret of success and although I
can blame the prevalent political culture for this, I will not, because we,
politicians, are the creators of the context.
In short, I was negligent in the screening and incompetent
in dealing with those who violated discipline. I can’t say they violated party
discipline, because turning a blind eye and even encouraging strong-arm tactics
and illegal activity is now part and parcel of party policy.
I ought to have resigned a long time ago. I ought to resign now. I will not.
I am ashamed, yes, but the benefits of office far outweigh the
shame.
2 comments:
*chuckles*
Do these politicians have any conscience ?
Whatever it may be in spite of all negative development, I do not hesitate to say it was President Mahinda Rajapaksa who saved this country from a grave disaster. But, it gives me goose pimples when I think of the 13th Amendment which gave a bridge for a place there was no river. Now that know-all J.R.is not there to reverse what he did. In Sri Lanka we have one People Divided by Two languages and Two Cultures.Tamil people are comfortable anywhere in the country and what is the need to make any new arrangements.What is required is equality. If the government is fair what else is needed. If the government is not fair, let us correct those. Do we have to run this country the way Indians want it. The whole country will endorse equal rights and not special rights.
Post a Comment