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21.10.2008
Walter Jayawardhana
India's
influential Economic Times said that Tamil Nadu's Chief
Minister Muthuvel Karunanidhi's resignation drama intended
for utilizing New Delhi's regional super power status to
save the badly beleaguered , cornered and trapped LTTE chief
Prabhakaran, which it said was an election gimmick, would
backfire on the seasoned politician.
Describing
Karunanidhi's very serious compromising position The Economic
Times said in its current issue (October 21) that, "The
DMK's difficulty in taking any dire step stems from insufficient
numbers in the 234-member Tamil Nadu assembly. To survive
in power, the DMK with 96 MLAs needs the Congress support.
It cannot afford to call a mid-term assembly polls on the
Sri Lankan issue. "Karunanidhi's state government in
Tamil Nadu survives with the help of the support of the
Tamil Nadu's Congress Party which is headed by the Sonia
Gandhi. The Economic Times said this compromising position
has already tempered the position of Karunanidhi in relation
to the Man Mohan Singh government in contrast to the earlier
statement he had done and the Sri Lankan issue is not a
strong enough reason to fight a mid term election in the
state since as a political issue it has relatively lost
its popularity in the midst of other issues like the power
cuts the state is experiencing right now.
The
following is the text of the item published in the Economic
Times:
"
The DMK has painted itself into a corner on the Sri Lankan
issue. Having set the Centre a October 29 deadline to ensure
a cease-fire between Sri Lankan armed forces and LTTE in
that country, DMK could now experience a major crisis of
credibility.
"Though
it has threatened to get its MPs resign from Parliament
over the Sri Lankan issue if the Centre does not sufficiently
influence the situation in the neighbourhood by end-October,
ground realities make this next to impossible. Mr Karunanidhi
is already showing signs of tempering his position. He has
welcomed a statement made by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh
where he called for a peaceful political settlement to the
crisis in the island nation.
"The
DMK's difficulty in taking any dire step stems from insufficient
numbers in the 234-member Tamil Nadu assembly. To survive
in power, the DMK with 96 MLAs needs the Congress support.
It cannot afford to call a mid-term assembly polls on the
Sri Lankan issue.
"Many
political watchers are describing DMK's whipping up of the
Sri Lankan issue as a diversionary tactic in view of the
massive power cuts in the state. Many parts of Tamil Nadu,
with the exception of Chennai, are experiencing eight hours
power cut a day or more. Also, the Sri Lankan issue, which
is brought up by Tamil parties regularly before elections,
has a limited popular appeal as evidenced by the fact that
these very parties forget it until the next round of polls.
"The
Centre, for its part, is making all the right noises about
concern for the welfare of ethnic Tamils in Sri Lanka, who
according to DMK and other Tamil parties are innocent victims
of the attacks on LTTE. However, India's hands are tied
on the question of any real intervention in Sri Lankan affairs.
"Sri
Lanka has shown no signs of discontinuing with its current
offensive against LTTE or reducing the intensity of the
attacks. The statement made by Sri Lankan defence secretary
Gotabhaya Rajapaksa to a TV channel that the LTTE is on
the verge of defeat and therefore it is getting Indian politicians
to pressure the Sri Lankan government to intervene, might
complicate matters further for the Congress-led Centre.
"DMK's
move to get its MPs from both Houses of Parliament (15 Lok
Sabha and 4 Rajya Sabha) to hand over symbolic resignation
letters to party chief M Karunanidhi looks set to fizzle
out. When this happens, the Opposition ADMK will claim that
it was justified in dubbing the resignation episode a fraud.
ADMK chief Ms Jayalalithaa had dared chief minister Karunanidhi
to step down and asked him to get all his MLAs to resign
if he is really concerned about the condition of ethnic
Tamils in Sri Lanka.
"Interestingly,
it is only DMK which has stuck its neck out to meet the
resolution of an all-party meeting in Chennai which had
said all 40 Lok Sabha MPs, from Tamil Nadu and Puducherry,
would resign if India did not intervene to ensure cease-fire
in Sri Lanka. The Congress, which also backed the resolution
of the all-party meeting, clearly distanced itself from
the resignation threat.
"We
follow whatever is decided by the Indian National Congress.
So far we have not offered our resignations," Congress
spokesperson and Rajya Sabha MP Jayanti Natarajan said on
Monday. PMK too has not taken any further steps on the resignation
threat. As things stand, DMK stands to lose face on the
Sri Lankan episode in the run-up to the coming Lok Sabha
polls.
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