Abstract:
Peace in any society is primarily a contractual peace, which becomes durable with the
social capital formation. The diminishing social capital generates the unrest and, thus
negotiations for peace starts for revitalizing the process of social capital formation. The
negotiation may take place, if the negotiating parties perceive the cost-effectiveness of
the negotiating process in their favour. However, unanticipated consequences occur in
the course of time before the final negotiation is reached. The parties, which are outside
the negotiating process, get involved when they perceive the implications and
consequences of the final outcome affect their interest and, thus they may get involved
as the negotiating process advances.
Negotiations for durable peace in the island-society have been initiated four times during
the last two decades of unrest and ethnic conflict. Several rounds of peace talks took
place every time but the efforts for negotiation could not succeed due to skepticism and
suspicions which gripped the negotiating parties as well as the parties/groups which are
not directly committed to negotiating the peace. The latest peace process was started
with the active role of the Norwegian facilitators and changing political dispensation in
the last parliamentary elections in 2001.
There is a Sri Lankan think tank, which perceives Norwegian facilitation as a colonial
intrusion, government’s policy as appeasement before the LTTE’s extremism. Such
parties though peripheral but become an actor outside the formal process and affect or
sometimes determine the whole process. Parties committed are the LTTE,the
Government of Sri Lanka and the Norwegian facilitators. The parties involved are the
political parties not directly committed to the peace process, non-LTTE Tamil groups,
Sinhalese groups, countries like India, international donors of financial support to Sri
Lanka, underworld and military establishment and so on. All such parties generate and
strengthen the skepticism and suspicion, which contribute to form a public opinion
against credibility of the peace process and thereby jeopardizing the whole peace
process. The cumulative effect of all is that the recent hold on of the peace process. The
assertions of the constitutional authority of the President, political power of the Prime
Minister and, presentation of the counter-proposal by the LTTE, have aggravated the
whole peace process. The parties committed for negotiating the peace are on tactical
withdrawal. The efforts are on for reconciliation at various levels to resume the peace
process but the situation is really complex and the final negotiation seems a distant goal.