15.4.2008
By AJIT JAIN IN TORONTO The
new Sri Lankan Consul General in Toronto, Bandula Jayasekara,
is taking on a new beat for himself; all his life, he has
been a professional journalist. He was the managing Editor
of the Colombo Post, editor-in-chief of Ceylon Daily News,
a television and radio presenter and also guest writer for
the South Asia Intelligence Review, More recently, Jayasekara
was director, international and English media, to the Sri
Lankan President.
Toronto
is not an easy place for a first diplomatic posting. There
are all kinds of warring Sri Lankan groups in the city.
There have been in the past several tragic incidents, gang
wars, killing of Sri Lankan Tamils. And despite the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam having been outlawed by the Canadian
government, some people do continue to raise funds for political
activities back home.
Jayasekara
acknowledged his posting is very significant because I have
been given a mandate by the President to unify the people.
Because we are all Sri Lankans - Tamils, Sinhalese, Muslims,
Burghers. I am here to bring people together, irrespective
of where they come from, as they are Sri Lankans first.
"I
think," he continued, "my being a former journalist
also helps to reach out. I am very clear all Tamils are
not LTTE. They are wonderful and moderates, and unfortunately
we know only a few people create problems."
He
preferred to Indians who, "wherever in the world they
go, they will always say 'I am from India.' Similarly, we
have to go as Sri Lankans, which I have said I will always
do."
Jayasekara
lamented the assassination of Sri Lanka's Minister of Highways
and road Development Jeyaraj Fernadopulle April 6 "when
he went to flag off a race in connection with the Sinhala
Tamil new year. He was a Tamil and a catholic, a minister
who built bridges between all communities and he was a close
friend of the Sri Lankan President [Mahinda Rajapaksa]."
Canada
has condemned the attack, in which former Olympic marathoner
KA Karunaratne was also killed.
Jayasekara
said the ceasefire with the LTTE - during which former Sri
Lankan foreign minister Lakshman Kadiragamar was killed
by the outfit - "was flawed from the beginning; [it]
was just a peace of paper."
At
a recent meeting as part of the ceasefire agreement, Jayasekara
said, "the LTTE delegation went to Oslo and refused
to come to the table. Another time they did that in Geneva.
The government delegation was always ready.
"When
the ceasefire started," he continued, "it was
not accepted by everyone. Then President Chandrika Kumaratunga
was not even given a copy by then Prime Minister Ranil Wickramasinghe.
There's no ceasefire now. I have been part of the media
delegation which went for recent peace talks and I saw what
was happening. There have been 7,000 violations [of the
ceasefire by the LTTE]."
The
newly minted diplomat believes Sri Lanka "is no more
a Tamil and Sinhalese problem."
Jayasekara
did not hesitate to concede that there are "the extremists
on both sides" as the Sinhalese too "We have to
work together."
He
recently attended an event where, despite opposition from
LTTE supporters, many Tamils attended, "where World
cup winning cricket captain Arjuna Ranatunga was to be the
chief guest; but he couldn't make it."
Jayasekara
called Canada "a friend of Sri Lanka" and said
the country "can play a very positive role. We have
to thank Canada - this month it will be two years since
Canada banned LTTE as a terrorist organization."
When
asked about Sri Lanka's relations with India, Jayasekara
responded: "India is a good friend of Sri Lanka. India
has always stood by us."
"We
are not fighting Tamils," the consul general emphasized.
"We are fighting terrorism. There may always be some
fringe groups. But the two countries get along very well.
We work very closely."
Jayasekara
claimed LTTE chief "Prabhakaran and the LTTE don't
have more than 5 percent following in the country: that
too because people are scared of him."
He
recalled a story about former Jaffna mayor Sarojini Yogeswaran,
who Jayasekara had interviewed. "It was a live television
interview and she told me before the interview:" 'Son,
don't ask me certain questions that I can't answer.'
"Within
one week [of that interview] she was assassinated,"
Jayasekara added.
He
referred to recent elections in east Sri Lanka "after
several years" where the LTTE used to have total sway.
"We will soon have provincial council elections [there],"
he said.
He
conceded that "some mistakes were undoubtedly made,"
but underlined that "now it is a different situation." |