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Tamil MPs Hand in Resignation Letters
CHENNAI — A group of Indian lawmakers, whose support is crucial to the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government, handed their resignation letters to their party chief on Friday over the conflict in Sri Lanka, officials said.

The 14 Members of Lower House (Lok Sabha) of Parliament, including six ministers of a regional party in southern Tamil Nadu state, wants India to ask Sri Lanka to call a ceasefire immediately. The MPs belong to Tamil Nadu’s Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) party of Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M. Karunanidhi. The MPs say they share the increasing concern of the mainly Tamil population on the island that Sri Lankan troops are wiping out Tamils there.
No word on their position of the LTTE setting off bombs to kill civilians, but we can guess ...
Sri Lanka has vowed to crush the Tamil Tigers (LTTE) militarily. It says its troops are 2 km from the rebel capital of Kilinochchi, a strategic and symbolic target. Troops stepped up the offensive against the LTTE rebels fighting for a separate homeland this year and the government says its forces have killed thousands of rebels since January.

The MPs’ resignation could force a vote of confidence in Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s government if the letters reach the speaker in India’s parliament. But opposition parties, which have described the move as a ‘farce’, and analysts said the threat may be more about making political noise for their local constituencies. “They are unlikely to carry out the threat and the government will not face a crisis,” C. Uday Bhaskar, a strategic analyst said.

Earlier this week, about 39 lawmakers, all allies of India’s ruling Congress party-led coalition met in the southern city of Chennai and gave the Indian government two weeks to intervene or face being brought down. The meeting was chaired by M. Karunanidhi, chief minister of Tamil Nadu state and leader of the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam party (DMK), a key ally of the Congress party. “We are not speaking for the LTTE, but for the orphaned Tamils,” Karunanidhi said on Friday. “I am not asking for armed intervention but only restoration of peace in Sri Lanka.”

India’s prime minister has urged Sri Lanka to solve the conflict politically but said it was not going to intervene. India sent peacekeepers to the island nation in 1987, only to withdraw them after losing more than 1,200 men in battle and facing allegations of human rights violations. “I am sure Mr Karunanidhi will understand that our prime minister has come out in support of innocent Tamils caught in the battle,” Veerappa Moily, a senior Congress party spokesman said in New Delhi. “This issue will be resolved.”
But not by Indian troops. India has a potential two-front war already with Pakistain and China, and doesn't need to tie down military resources on a third front, particularly one that they can't win.
Karunanidhi however, said that India could certainly intervene in Sri Lanka to alleviate the sufferings of Tamil minorities there - and cited the 1971 India-Pakistan war that led to the creation of Bangladesh to support his contention.
Hint, hint ...

Posted by: Steve White 2008-10-19
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=253033