Tuesday, March 12

பஷீர் சேகுதாவூத் அமெரிக்க தூதுவருடன் பரிமாறிய விடயங்கள் விக்கிலீக்ஸில்


ஜனாதிபதி மஹிந்த ராஜபக்ஷவை தோற்கடிக்கும் வகையில் தமது கட்சி அமைத்துள்ள வியூகங்கள் தொடர்பில் 2009 ஆம் ஆண்டு இலங்கைக்கான அமெரிக்க தூதுவருடன் முஸ்லிம் காங்கிரஸ் தவிசாளர் பஷீர் சேகுதாவூத்  நடத்திய கலந்துரையாடல் தொடர்பான தகவல்களை விக்கிலீக்ஸ் வெளியிட்டுள்ளது.
நிறைவேற்று அதிகாரத்தை ஒழிக்கும் வகையிலும் மஹிந்த ராஜபக்ஷவை தோற்கடிக்கும் வகையிலும் ஐக்கிய தேசியக் கட்சி மற்றும் சிறுபான்மைக் கட்சிகளை இணைத்த கூட்டணி ஒன்றை அமைப்பதற்கு தாம் முன்னெடுக்கும் முžற்சிகள் தொடர்பில் பஷீர் சேகுதாவூத் தன்னிடம் கருத்துக்களைப் பகிர்ந்து கொண்டதாக அப்போதைய இலங்கைக்கான அமெரிக்க தூதுவர் பற்றீசியா பூட்டனிஸ்  பரிமாறிய கேபிள்களை விக்கிலீக்ஸ் வெளியிட்டுள்ளது.
அடுத்து வரும் ஜனாதிபதித் தேர்தலில் புலம்பெயர்ந்த  தமிழ் சமூகம் முக்கிய பங்கினை வகிக்கவுள்ளது. நவம்பரில் லண்டனில் 12 மற்றும் 13ஆம் திகதிகளில் நடைபெறவுள்ள புலம்பெயர் தமிழர்களின் மாநாட்டில் இலங்கையின் 20 சிறுபான்மை தலைவர்கள் கலந்து கொள்ளவுள்ளனர். பிள்ளையான் ,ஹக்கீம் ,சம்பந்தன், மனோ கணேசன் ஆகியோர் இதில் கலந்து கொள்வார்கள் என எதிர்பார்க்கப்படுகிறது எனவும் பஷீர் சேகுதாவூத் குறிப்பிட்டதாக அமெரிக்க தூதுவர் தனது தகவல் பரிமாற்றத்தில் குறிப்பிட்டுள்ளார்.
விக்கிலீக்ஸ் வெளியிட்ட தகவல்கள் வருமாறு:

VZCZCXRO1167
OO RUEHAG RUEHROV RUEHSL RUEHSR
DE RUEHLM #1019/01 3101237
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
O 061237Z NOV 09
FM AMEMBASSY COLOMBO
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 0738
INFO RUCNMEM/EU MEMBER STATES COLLECTIVE PRIORITY
RUEHKA/AMEMBASSY DHAKA PRIORITY 2024
RUEHIL/AMEMBASSY ISLAMABAD PRIORITY 9060
RUEHKT/AMEMBASSY KATHMANDU PRIORITY 7298
RUEHLO/AMEMBASSY LONDON PRIORITY 5207
RUEHNE/AMEMBASSY NEW DELHI PRIORITY 3453
RUEHNY/AMEMBASSY OSLO PRIORITY 5159
RUEHOT/AMEMBASSY OTTAWA PRIORITY 0032
RUEHSM/AMEMBASSY STOCKHOLM PRIORITY 0694
RUEHKO/AMEMBASSY TOKYO PRIORITY 4270
RUEHCG/AMCONSUL CHENNAI PRIORITY 9623
RUEHBI/AMCONSUL MUMBAI PRIORITY 6917
RUEHON/AMCONSUL TORONTO PRIORITY 0006
RHEFDIA/DIA WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
RUEHGV/USMISSION GENEVA PRIORITY 3817
RHHMUNA/HQ USPACOM HONOLULU HI PRIORITY
RUEHBS/USEU BRUSSELS PRIORITY
RHEHAAA/NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
RUEKJCS/SECDEF WASHDC PRIORITY
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 03 COLOMBO 001019 

SIPDIS 

DEPARTMENT FOR SCA/INSB 

E.O. 12958: DECL: 11/07/2019
TAGS: PGOV PREL PREF PHUM PTER EAID MOPS CE
SUBJECT: MUSLIM CONGRESS LEADER ON ELECTIONS, FONSEKA, AND
TAMILS 

COLOMBO 00001019  001.2 OF 003 

Classified By: DEPUTY CHIEF OF MISSION VALERIE C. FOWLER.  REASONS: 1.4
 (B, D) 

¶1. (C) SUMMARY: In a meeting with PolOff, Chairman of Sri
Lanka Muslim Council (SLMC) and Eastern Provincial opposition
leader Basheer Segudawood spoke of his party's strategy to
defeat President Rajapaksa at the upcoming elections.  The
strategy included forming a broad coalition with the UNP and
other smaller minority parties and abolishing the Executive
Presidency.  In order to win, the coalition would need the
support of Tamil diaspora representatives, both in working
with local Tamils and with the Tamil diaspora community
abroad.  Segudawood noted the Tamil diaspora was hosting a
conference in London November 12-13 to discuss the
post-Prabhakaran future of Tamils.  Many of the minority
leaders were invited and were planning to attend.  According
to the SLMC leader a broad coalition of opposition
politicians was planning to join the newly formed United
National Front (UNF) for the election.  Segudawood expressed
tentative support for General Fonseka as a possible candidate
of the coalition.  END SUMMARY. 

UNP-led Grand Coalition
----------------------- 

¶2. (C) The SLMC Chairman discussed the signing of the MOU
creating the United National Front by the United National
Party (UNP), SLMC, Mangala Samaraweera's Sri Lanka Freedom
Party Mahajana (SLFP-M), and Mano Ganeshan's Western People
Front (WPF), as well as 19 other organizations and political
parties.  Segudawood pointed out that minority parties such
as the Tamil National Alliance (TNA), People Liberation
Organization of Thamileelam (PlOTE), Tamil United Liberation
Front (TULF), WPF, SLMC and the Upcountry People's Front were
now willing to work together with this grand coalition.  One
of the pledges of the coalition, developed in part to bring
these parties to common ground, would be to abolish the
Executive Presidency and return the country to a
parliamentary system of government.  UNP and SLFP (M) had
already made public statements on the issue.  While the SLMC
had been publicly silent on its support for the coalition,
Segudawood stressed that the SLMC would back the coalition to
defeat the president.  The chairman underscored UNP leader
Ranil Wickremesinghe's popularity with minorities but echoed
the sentiment, expressed privately by many political
observers in Colombo, of Wickremesinghe not being the ideal
candidate to beat the president.  Segudawood said he was
disappointed at some of the public actions, press releases,
and agendas of individual opposition and minority parties,
which he believed had been counterproductive to building an
anti-Rajapaksa coalition, and stressed the need for one voice
amongst the parties allied against the president. 

General Fonseka: Coalition Leader?
---------------------------------- 

¶3. (C) The SLMC chairman indicated there had been back
channel talks by opposition party operatives with Fonseka
about his role as a possible coalition leader.  He remarked
that while Fonseka's Sinhalese nationalistic ideology might
be similar to that of the Rajapaksas, Fonseka came from a
family that was born-and-bred UNP and would be the only one
capable of beating the current government.  For Fonseka to be
a viable candidate in the eyes of the minority and
opposition, however, he first would have to sign an agreement
to abolish the Executive Presidency within 90 days of the
elections.  Fonseka had yet to make a decision on whether he
would run, or with which party or group of parties he might
ally himself.  According to Segudawood, Fonseka would want
two issues clarified before considering the coalition offer: 

COLOMBO 00001019  002.2 OF 003 

his future after the Presidency was dissolved, and concerns
for his personal security, implying that the Rajapaksas might
stop at nothing to prevent him running against them.
Segudawood pointed out that UNP leader Ranil Wickramsinghe
personally promised Fonseka that the people would protect
him.  Janatha Vimukhti Peramuna (JVP) was also putting forth
a bill to Parliament that guaranteed former commanders and
senior officers, personal security.
Tamil Future in the Hands of the Diaspora
----------------------------------------- 

¶4.  (C) Segudawood claimed the Tamil Diaspora would be a key
player in the upcoming elections.  He noted that the Tamil
Diaspora was hosting a conference on November 12-13 in
London, which 20 Sri Lankan-based minority leaders were
planning to attend.  Among the possible attendees were
Sivanesthurai Chandrakanthan a.k.a. Pilliyan (TMVP), Rauff
Hakeem (SLMC), Sampanthan (TNA), and Mano Ganesan (TNA).
(NOTE: Embassy is seeking a meeting with TNA leader
Sampanthan before he travels to London.  END NOTE.)  The
chairman described the diaspora as being divided into three
to four groups but that it generally fell in two categories
similar to the Tamil community in Sri Lanka: those who
supported the LTTE and those who opposed it.  Segudawood
believed the challenge for the coalition lay in bringing the
Tamil diaspora, the resident Tamil community, and the other
minority leaders together to win the elections.  The
influence of the Tamil diaspora would have a critical impact
in this regard. 

Presidential Election Strategy
------------------------------ 

¶5. (C) Segudawood discussed a strategy he believed might pull
votes from the president's United People's Freedom Alliance
(UPFA).  He hinted that perhaps two or more UPFA officials
were already prepared to switch allegiance to the new
coalition.  According to Segudawood, there were UPFA members
who were very displeased with the Rajapaksa regime and ready
to pull the plug on it.  If the opposition were able to win
over at least two UPFA members, Segudawood believed others
would be willing to do the same.  The SLMC chairman remarked
that the people were tired of hearing the president's
propaganda of "winning the war" as his chief political
accomplishment and centerpiece for the upcoming elections.
Given the current government's unpopularity with the Muslims
and Tamils, in order for the president to win, Segudawood
claimed that the president needed at least 75 percent of
Sinhalese votes.  He hoped with Fonseka as the coalition
candidate, the coalition could cut substantially into the
president's Sinhalese base.  At the same time, he claimed the
Tamil and Muslim minorities together comprised 1.5 million
votes and noted that the coalition's success depended on them.
BUTENIS

No comments:

Post a Comment