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Sri Lanka conflict beckons India to help

Both the Tamil Tigers and the Sri Lankan government are making overtures to their large neighbor to mediate.

(Page 2 of 2)



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India's deft diplomatic efforts in Nepal could serve as a model. The leader of Nepal's Maoist rebels, Prachanda, recently applauded India's role in encouraging his armed group to engage in peace talks with that country's political parties. The resulting deal allowed the two groups to join forces during street protests in April. India then interceded directly with King Gyanendra to relinquish power to end the standoff, ushering in a return to democracy in Nepal.

Sri Lanka is no Nepal

However, some analysts caution that India's Nepal success story could be hard to replicate in Sri Lanka. Delhi's official stance has been to support a negotiated political settlement based on devolution of power, acceptable to all sections of Sri Lankan society, in an undivided Sri Lanka. But India may find it difficult to achieve the necessary impartiality as a primary mediator.

"First, the proscription of the LTTE in India after its involvement in a suicide assassination of former Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi makes it legally impossible for India to participate in the peace talks," says Shylashri Shankar, a research fellow at the Centre for Policy Research in New Delhi.

"Second, even if this legal aspect is ironed out, sections within the Indian policy establishment are opposed to any negotiations with the LTTE on the ground that it is the root cause of strife, and cannot be part of any solution. They feel that India will burn itself again."

Some 3,500 refugees enter India

But other analysts say South Asian security challenges demand India's intervention – not just because its stature has grown on the world stage, but also because it has immediate repercussions on India's soil as well.

Recent violence in the island nation has claimed up to 700 lives and more than 60,000 people have been killed since the Tigers began their fight for an independent state in the 1970s.

As the crisis in Sri Lanka deepens, more than 3,500 Tamil refugees from Sri Lanka are streaming into the Indian state of Tamil Nadu, and the numbers are rising. Tamil Nadu is home to more than 60 million ethnic Tamils as well as political factions that express solidarity with Tamils in Sri Lanka. Several pro-LTTE demonstrations have already taken place in Tamil Nadu, demanding urgent Indian intervention.

"India can no longer afford to have a hands-off policy regarding its neighborhood," says C. Raja Mohan, the strategic affairs editor of The Indian Express, a national daily.

Other regional hot spots

Nepal and Sri Lanka aren't the only countries in the region demanding India's attention, Mr. Mohan says. Political violence is on the rise in Bangladesh, a nation that India helped to create through a military intervention in 1971. India will also have to weigh in carefully on the incipient debate surrounding a possible restoration of democracy next year in archrival Pakistan.

"In the past, India has tended to vacillate between unilateral intervention and a do-nothing policy," he says. "In the future, it must make its regional interventions smarter and more multilateral."

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