AIADMK chief Jayalalithaa. Photo Courtesy: Flickr
AIADMK chief Jayalalithaa. Photo Courtesy: Flickr

TN leaders spar over ‘fast politics’

Mon-Mar 09, 2009

Chennai / Press Trust of India

Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M Karunanidhi on Monday charged AIADMK chief Jayalalithaa with going on a day's fast on Sri Lankan Tamils issue with an eye on the Lok Sabha polls.

"The opposition leader is making noises only because Lok Sabha polls are round the corner," Karunanidhi said.

Writing in DMK's mouthpiece Murasoli, he said that Jayalalithaa, who has levelled allegations against UPA and DMK governments on Lankan Tamils issue, had earlier herself said India had no right to interfere in the island nation's internal affairs.

"She had earlier ruled out Indian intervention in Sri Lanka on the plea that if it was done, it might lead to other countries interfering in our internal affairs, threatening the sovereignity," he said.

Karunanidhi criticised Jayalalithaa for collecting donations for Sri Lankan Tamils at the venue of her fast today while she had flayed his government for mobilising funds in the form of cheques.

Earier in the day, the AIADMK leader lashed out at the Congress-led UPA government at the Centre and ruling DMK in Tamil Nadu for not doing anything tangible to solve the Sri Lankan Tamils issue and warned them of the "consequences."

"The UPA and DMK have done nothing for the Sri Lankan Tamils. This will have an impact in the coming elections," she said, launching a day-long fast to express solidarity with the Sri Lankan Tamils.

"UPA Government failed miserably by not despatching immediate humanitarian aid. Why did not the Centre send relief material such as food, medicines and clothes? Centre, as well as the ruling DMK have no genuine concerns for the (Sri Lankan) Tamils," she said.

Describing the Congress and DMK's decision to continue their alliance as "borne out of absurd courage," Jayalalithaa, who had recently made a vain bid to woo Congress by urging it to leave the "DMK quicksand," said the people will give a "drubbing" to the alliance in the elections.

On the Lankan Tamils issue, she said "we recognise their struggle for self-determination and equality with their Sinhala brethren and demand for equality before law."

Supporting the demand of an autonomous Tamil homeland within an unified Sri Lanka, which, she said, alone could solve the issue, Jayalalithaa opposed the armed struggle by the LTTE.

"What we are opposed to is an armed struggle, which has lost its way, as a result of which thousands of innocent persons are being wantonly killed. We are distressed that former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi was brutally assassinated in Tamil Nadu as a fall-out of this armed struggle," Jayalalithaa told scores of party workers, mainly women, who participated in the fast.

Citing reports, Jayalalithaa accused New Delhi of "supplying arms and sophisticated equipment to the Sri Lankan army," besides imparting military training to Sri Lankan defence personnel.

"The claims made by Sri Lankan army about the death toll indicate that it is not just the LTTE militants who are being mowed down, but a substantial part of the hapless Tamil population as well. So, in essence, it is the Indian arms and ammunition which today are being used against the innocent Tamils of Sri Lanka," she said.

Jayalalithaa said though the fast, aimed at putting pressure on the Centre to use its good offices with Sri Lanka to declare an immediate ceasefire in the island nation, "would not bring relief to the "hunger-struck Tamils," it would, however, convey the "sentiments and anger of the people of Tamil Nadu against the State and Central governments."

Announcing that her party would collect funds for the Sri Lankan Tamils, she made the first personal contribution of Rs five lakh.
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