| Armed struggle for self-determination
With the formation of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in
1972 by its present leader, Mr.Velupillai Pirabakaran, the mode of the
Tamil political struggle underwent a radical change. For the first time
in the political history of the Tamils an armed guerrilla movement
emerged to fight for the political rights of the Tamil nation and to
confront the state's violence with armed resistance. With the birth and
growth of the Tamil Tigers, the armed struggle became effectively
institutionalized as the political struggle of the Tamil people.
The LTTE's armed struggle is based on a clearly defined political programme. This
political project aims at securing the right to self-determination of
the Tamil people. The right to self determination is the cardinal
principle upon which the Tamil struggle for political independence is
based. The LTTE is committed to the position that the Tamils constitute
themselves as a people or a nation and have a homeland, the historically
constituted habitation of the Tamils, a well defined contiguous
territory embracing the Northern and Eastern Provinces. Since the Tamils
have a homeland, a distinct language and culture, a unique economic life
and a lengthy history extending to over three thousand years, they
possess all the characteristics of a nation or a people. As a people
they have the inalienable right to self determination. This right
entailed the freedom of a people to determine their own political
status. The LTTE holds the view that the Tamil people had invoked the
right to self-determination at the 1977 general elections and opted to
fight for political independence and statehood. The national liberation
project of the LTTE is based on the people's mandate for
self-determination.
The LTTE's objective in fighting for political
independence of the Tamil nation is not an arbitrary decision on the
part of the organization but rather the expression and articulation of
the collective will and aspiration of the Tamil people. Decades of alien
domination and oppression prompted the Tamil people to exercise their
right to self-determination through a democratic process. This right to
self-determination is a basic universal human right, recognized by the
international community. The International Covenants of the UN Charter
enunciates the principle of self determination in the following term;
'All people have the right to self-determination. By the virtue of that
right they freely determine their political status and freely pursue
their economic, social and cultural development'. In the general
elections of 1977 which assumed the character of a referendum on the
question of self-determination, the Tamil nation chose to determine
their political status by seceding and establishing its sovereignty in
its homeland. The Tamil parliamentary political party, the T.U.L.F,
which obtained a clear mandate from the people and pledged to fight for
the creation of an independent state 'either by peaceful means or by
direct action or struggle' betrayed the cause of the Tamils. But the
LTTE, endorsing the national aspiration and the will of the Tamil people,
is determined to carry on the struggle for self-determination .
Sri Lanka has consistently denied the right to self determination of the Tamils
and refused to recognize the Tamils as a people. Reducing the Tamils to
the category of a minority group and promoting the concepts of
multi-ethnicity and pluralism, it has out rightly rejected the Tamil
claim of nationhood and homeland. By constitutional amendment, Sri Lanka
has prohibited the Tamil demand for self-determination as unlawful.
Furthermore, it has unleashed a fully-fledged war against the Tamils to
suppress their struggle for political independence. It has condemned and
accused the LTTE of communalism, separatism and terrorism for engaging
in an armed struggle to assert the right of the Tamils to freely choose
their political destiny.
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