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The Unnoticed India-Sri Lanka Fishing War
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SINGAPORE (IDN) - A recent skirmish has
highlighted a widely unnoticed fishing war that has been going on for
two years in the Palk Straits, a stretch of sea about 30 km long, that
separates India’s Tamil Nadu state from Sri Lanka’s northern province
that was plagued by a civil war for over 30 years. The southern state of
Tamil Nadu is often at daggers drawn with the central government in New
Delhi.
The latest flare-up occurred on February
24, 2013 when Tamil Nadu politicians and media accused the Sri Lankan
Navy of attacking Indian fishermen in the area while the Sri Lankan Navy
and the media in Colombo claimed there was a mid-sea flare up between
Indian and Sri Lankan fishermen and when the Navy arrived it was already
settled.
Indian reports said quoting unnamed
Tamil Nadu fisheries officials that the Sri Lanka Navy men surrounded
the fishermen's boats beat them up and took the GPS equipment. They also
alleged that the Navy cut the fishing nets and threw their catch into
the sea.
This incident had occurred near
Katchatheevu Island which was acceded to Sri Lanka by the Indian
government in the 1970s when the then Indian Prime Minister Indira
Gandhi and the Sri Lankan counterpart Sirima Bandaranaike had a close
relationship. Tamil Nadu politicians have never accepted that decision
because they claim that it was made without consulting them.
Since the war between the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) and the Sri Lankan state ended in May 2009,
Tamil Nadu politicians, especially Selvi J Jayalalithaa after she
became Chief Minister in May 2011, has regularly attacked the Sri Lankan
government alleging human rights violations of the Tamils in Sri Lanka.
But the irony is that today the Tamil fishermen in Sri Lanka see the
Sri Lankan Navy as their allies in the battle against Indian fishermen
stealing their fish from Sri Lankan waters and Jayalalitha as their
enemy.
Nirupama Subramaniam, an Indian
journalist who was based in Colombo from 1996 to 2002 covering the
country for the Indian Express now writing as a columnist for the Hindu
says: "When Tamil Nadu politicians raise the pitch against the Sri
Lankan government’s perceived atrocities on the Tamils in that country,
they invoke popular sentiment in Tamil Nadu, saying Tamils here are hurt
and angry at the way their brethren across the Palk Straits are being
treated."
In the column republished in Colombo
Telegraph, she adds: "But that sympathy is nowhere evident on an issue
that truly hits the Sri Lankan Tamils where it matter – their
livelihoods. In fact, it is an issue on which Tamil Nadu actively works
against the interests of fellow Tamils across the Palk Straits."
A major livelihood
Fishing is a major livelihood of the
Tamils in the north of Sri Lanka and since the war ended in 2009, they
have been free to fish in Sri Lankan waters without any restrictions.
During the war period they were allowed to go only one km into the sea
because of regular skirmishes between the LTTE Sea Tigers and the Navy
and arms supply activities across the Palk Straits. Since the war ended,
the government has given them new boats and with improved road access
to other parts of the island, greener pastures have been opened up for
the Tamil fishermen in the north.
In November 2012, Sinnaiya Thavaratnam,
President of the Northern
Provinces Fisheries Alliance during an
interview with this correspondent referred to the Sri Lankan Navy as
"our navy" three times and he complained that the Sri Lankan government
was not giving enough support to the Navy to chase away Indian fishermen
from Sri Lankan waters because of political pressure from New Delhi.
"Indian fishermen are fishing in trawlers with big nets. So our catch is
badly affected," he complained.
"We need to stop Indian trawlers fishing
in our seas – once that happens it will take 3 to 4 years to restore
the fish resources for us to catch," he estimates. "Navy is trying to
protect our resources but the Sri Lanka government is not giving them
enough support," he lamented.
In September 2012, India's Hindu
newspaper said that records obtained from the Indian government
indicated that between January and June 2012, Indian trawlers crossing
into Sri Lanka numbered 20,662. Fishermen from Jaffna have been urging
their Navy to chase the Indians out and in one incident in February
2011, Sri Lankan Tamil fishermen resorted to direct action, rounding up
more than 100 Indian fishermen, and handed them over to their Navy.
In recent months, a number of similar
clashes have taken place, which Tamil Nadu politicians have described as
Navy harassment of Indian fishermen. According to the Hindu newspaper,
Jayalalitha has written some 12 letters to
Prime Minister Manmohan
Singh criticizing him for being soft on Sri Lanka.
Tamil Nadu fishermen allege the Sri
Lankan Navy beats them up, humiliates them, even foists smuggling cases
on them. In October Jayalaitha told the Indian Foreign Secretary Ranjan
Mathai during a meeting in Chenai that New Delhi should view the attacks
on Tamil Nadu fishermen by the Sri Lankan Navy "as an act of
provocation and aggression against India by Sri Lanka, similar to firing
across the borders by neighbours such as Pakistan and China," according
to a report by the Hindu.
On January 24, 2013, Sri Lankan
President Mahinda Rajapakse said that Sri Lanka will initiate a dialogue
with the Indian Government to resolve once and for all the issues
connected to illegal fishing and trespassing into each other’s
territorial waters by fishermen of both countries. He told the General
Fisheries Federation which represents all fisheries organisations of the
country that the government was determined to make the fisheries sector
one of major arms of the economy with maximum possible assistance to
fishermen from the government.
"It is heartening to see that a large
number of fishermen have come from the North and East. They were the
most affected at the hands of separatist terrorism," the President noted
in his speech. "The fisher families inherited an extremely cruel living
as many of their members were forcibly recruited by the Tigers and
subsequently killed. As a result, the fishing industry in the North-East
suffered a heavy blow with their production drastically depleted. But
today they have the opportunity of going out fishing without fear or
restrictions and they get plenty of government assistance."
On January 28 India's Minister of State
in Prime Minister’s office V Narayanasamy said India and Sri Lanka were
close to clinching an agreement on drawing a fishing boundary in the
Palk Strait that would put an end to recurring attacks on fishermen from
both sides. "The proposed agreement is in final stages. Both Indian and
Sri Lankan Governments have agreed to the boundary proposals," he told
reporters.
"One of the main livelihoods of people
in Northern Sri Lanka is fishing. As people have gone back to their
homes, this is what they have expected to do to earn a living – go out
in a boat and come back home with a decent catch," notes Nirupama
Subramaniam. "The Sri Lankan Navy is no longer the villain it was in the
war years. But Sri Lankan fishermen in the North find they have a new
enemy. It's the hundreds of boats that put out to sea from the Indian
side daily, sailing into Sri Lankan waters as if they belong there."
In effect she argues that if the Tamil
Nadu government is really interested in the welfare of the Tamils in Sri
Lanka it should help to resolve the problem rather than politically
escalating the situation. [IDN-InDepthNews – February 24, 2013]
By Kalinga Seneviratne | IDN-InDepth NewsAnalysis...
Source: www.news.lk
