Tamil National Alliance (TNA) leader  Rajavarothiam Sampanthan declared here today that Sri Lanka’s Tamils are  prepared for a give-and-take with the Sinhalese to evolve a pragmatic solution  to the festering ethnic problem. 
 In an exclusive two-hour interview to the Sunday Island here  today, Sampanthan made it clear that his party is committed to finding "a  reasonable, workable and durable solution within the framework of a united Sri  Lanka."
  "The TNA is prepared to join the Parliamentary Select Committee  (PSC) process to find such a solution. But, unless I have a commitment from  President Mahinda Rajapaksa, I cannot go the PSC with a clear conscience. I am  not prepared to betray my people," the 80-year-old veteran leader proclaimed.
 
 (Sampanthan and six other TNA parliamentarians have been in the  Indian capital since Wednesday evening. On Thursday, they met Prime Minister Dr  Manmohan Singh, External Affairs Minister SM Krishna, Prime Minister’s National  Security Adviser Shiv Shankar Menon and Foreign Secretary Ranjan Mathai to put  forth their point of view on the stalled political process to evolve a solution  to the Tamil question in their country. (They called on Leader of the Opposition  in the Lok Sabha Sushma Swaraj, and met representatives from a dozen European  countries to brief them about the TNA’s stand on the peace process. Sri Lankan  High Commissioner to India Prasad Kariyawasam hosted a dinner in the TNA MPs’  honour on Friday night. They will return to Colombo on Sunday).
 
 Sampanthan, who has been elected to Parliament five times since  1977, pointed out: "For the PSC process to succeed in evolving a decent  devolution package, there must be a consensus on the contours of a political  solution among the major players in the island’s political life, namely: the  governing Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP), the main opposition United National  Party (UNP), and the TNA."
 
 He made it clear that the TNA is not opposed to the PSC process  per se. There have been seven rounds of talks between the Rajapaksa government  and the TNA since Parliament passed the PSC resolution late last year.
 
 The government delegation during these talks comprised only  leaders from the SLFP. Notes were exchanged on all the issues. There were  meaningful discussions on Mangala Moonesinghe’s proposals on devolution, the  proposals put forth during 1995-97 and 2000 by then President Chandrika  Kumaratunga, the ideas President Rajapaksa himself had put forth at the  inaugural meeting of the All Party Representative Conference (APRC) in 2006, and  those from the majority report of the multi-ethnic experts committee to assist  the APRC.
 
 On the basis of these confabulations, the TNA put forth a set of  proposals on which the government representatives and the TNA had agreed. The  TNA wanted the government delegation to commit to the proposals.
 
 But there was no response from the government side for five  months.
 
 On 2 September 2011, Sampanthan met the President on the  latter’s invitation. The President agreed to put on the table of the PSC the  "consensus proposals" or ideas on which both sides had agreed during their  deliberations, and requested the TNA leader to participate in the PSC process.
 
 At a subsequent meeting, the President asked Sampanthan to  nominate TNA representatives to the PSC so that it can begin its work. But the  TNA leader declined.
 
 He explained: "If we nominate our team, the President will call  a meeting of the PSC. The TNA will boycott such a meeting unless the government  agrees to put the "consensus proposals" on the table of the PSC. The government  will then proclaim to the world that the TNA is not cooperating.
 
 "That’s why I refused to nominate my team. But let me make it  clear that we are not opposed to the PSC process. Let the government do what its  representatives had agreed to during our talks: put the consensus proposals on  the PSC table."
 
 Sampanthan also pointed out that out of the 31 members on the  PSC, 19 will be from the government and 12 from the opposition, including maybe  four from the TNA.
 
 He added: "The PSC process may become infructuous if the  government team outvotes the opposition on the proposals. Which is why we want a  commitment from the President about the contours of a political solution before  we join the PSC process."
BY S VENKAT NARAYAN 
 IS
