தமிழ்த் தேசியம்

"To us all towns are one, all men our kin.
Life's good comes not from others' gift, nor ill
Man's pains and pains' relief are from within.
Thus have we seen in visions of the wise !."

- Tamil Poem in Purananuru, circa 500 B.C 

Home

 Whats New

Trans State Nation Tamil Eelam Beyond Tamil Nation Comments Search

Tamilnation > Struggle for Tamil Eelam > Conflict Resolution - Tamil Eelam - Sri Lanka > Norwegian Peace InitiativeGeneva Talks & After > A Private Letter to President Mahinda Rajapakse

 
A Private Letter to President Mahinda Rajapakse

R.Cholan, 18 February 2006

 "Look at the big picture. If the ‘New Sri Lanka’ and ‘Thamileelam’ stop fighting each other we both will be fairly big guys in the word scene.I realize that your constituents have a tendency to think of Sri Lanka as small. They learned to think this way from the Mahavamsa story of Duttu Gemunu lying curled-up on his bed. He couldn’t stretch out, he explained to his mother according to Mahavamsa, because “over there beyond the river are the Tamils; here on this side is the sea; how can I lie with outstretched limbs?” You see, they (and you too) need to get out of this way of thinking. Sri Lanka is not so small after all..."


Psst! Hey Presidente!

You made a bit of a ‘BOOBOO’ this week in your interview with the Reuters [13 February 2006] and I was quite embarrassed, you being the President of my old country and all that. You had said, “[Sri Lanka] is a small country, where you can’t have two states…”

You are an educated man (a lawyer, I am told) and I am surprised at your lack of knowledge on such matters. The fact is – Sri Lanka is not a small country as you claim. I have listed below data on 138 countries smaller in population than Sri Lanka, all full-fledged members of the United Nations. The total membership of the UN is only 191 countries. What I found most interesting in studying this list is that, when Sri Lanka gets split into ‘New Sri Lanka’ and ‘Thamileelam’, the New Sri Lanka will still be larger than 134 UN members nations (Thamileelam will be larger than 70 of them). Look at the big picture. If the ‘New Sri Lanka’ and ‘Thamileelam’ stop fighting each other we both will be fairly big guys in the world scene.

I realize that your constituents have a tendency to think of Sri Lanka as small. They learned to think this way from the Mahavamsa story of Duttu Gemunu lying curled-up on his bed. He couldn’t stretch out, he explained to his mother according to Mahavamsa, because “over there beyond the river are the Tamils; here on this side is the sea; how can I lie with outstretched limbs?” You see, they (and you too) need to get out of this way of thinking. Sri Lanka is not so small after all.

I am sending this to you so that you don’t make the same blunder again. Please give it to your advisors and speech-writers. Tell them that an anonymous friend of yours sent it to you so that they don’t give you bad advice in the future. Tell them to study it carefully, and maybe even post it on their bulletin-boards for future reference.

Keep this communication under the wraps please, and don’t tell anyone I sent this to you. My Tamil friends here will ‘kill me’ if they find out that I am helping you.

Respectfully submitted.

Sincerely,
R. Cholan
17 February 2006

UN Member States smaller than Sri Lanka (in order of Population)

 

Country

Date of Admission to UN

Area *

Population **

1

Tuvalu

(5 Sept. 2000)

26

11,636

2

Nauru

(14 Sept. 1999)

21

13,048

3

Palau

(15 Dec. 1994)

458

20,303

4

San Marino

(2 Mar. 1992)

61

28,880

5

Monaco

(28 May 1993)

2

31,987

6

Liechtenstein

(18 Sep. 1990)

160

33,717

7

Saint Kitts and Nevis

(23 Sep. 1983)

261

38,958

8

Marshall Islands

(17 Sep. 1991)

181

59,071

9

Antigua and Barbuda

(11 Nov. 1981)

443

68,722

10

Dominica

(18 Dec. 1978)

754

69,029

11

Andorra

(28 July 1993)

468

70,549

12

Seychelles

(21 Sep. 1976)

455

81,188

13

Grenada

(17 Sep. 1974)

344

89,502

14

Kiribati

(14 Sept. 1999)

811

103,092

15

Micronesia, Federated States of

(17 Sep. 1991)

702

108,105

16

Tonga

(14 Sep. 1999)

748

112,422

17

Saint Vincent & the Grenadines

(16 Sep. 1980)

389

117,534

18

Saint Lucia

(18 Sep. 1979)

616

166,312

19

Samoa

(15 Dec. 1976)

2,944

177,287

20

Sao Tome and Principe

(16 Sep. 1975)

1,001

187,410

21

Vanuatu

(15 Sep. 1981)

12,200

205,754

22

Barbados

(9 Dec. 1966)

431

279,254

23

Belize

(25 Sep. 1981)

22,966

279,457

24

Iceland

(19 Nov. 1946)

103,000

296,737

25

Bahamas, The

(18 Sep. 1973)

13,940

301,790

26

Maldives

(21 Sep. 1965)

300

349,106

27

Brunei

(21 Sep. 1984)

5,770

372,361

28

Malta

(1 Dec. 1964)

316

398,534

29

Cape Verde

(16 Sep. 1975)

4,033

418,224

30

Suriname

(4 Dec. 1975)

163,270

438,144

31

Luxembourg

(24 Oct. 1945)

2,586

468,571

32

Djibouti

(20 Sep. 1977)

23,000

476,703

33

Equatorial Guinea

(12 Nov. 1968)

28,051

535,881

34

Solomon Islands

(19 Sep. 1978)

28,450

538,032

35

Comoros

(12 Nov. 1975)

2,170

671,247

36

Bahrain

(21 Sep. 1971)

665

688,345

37

Guyana

(20 Sep. 1966)

214,970

765,283

38

Cyprus

(20 Sep. 1960)

9,250

780,133

39

Qatar

(21 Sep. 1971)

11,437

863,051

40

Fiji

(13 Oct. 1970)

18,270

893,354

41

East Timor

(27 Sep. 2002)

15,007

1,040,880

42

Trinidad and Tobago

(18 Sep. 1962)

5,128

1,088,644

43

Swaziland

(24 Sep. 1968)

17,363

1,173,900

44

Mauritius

(24 Apr. 1968)

2,040

1,230,602

45

Estonia

(17 Sep. 1991)

45,226

1,332,893

46

Gabon

(20 Sep. 1960)

267,667

1,389,201

47

Guinea-Bissau

(17 Sep. 1974)

36,120

1,416,027

48

Gambia, The

(21 Sep. 1965)

11,300

1,593,256

49

Botswana

(17 Oct. 1966)

600,370

1,640,115

50

Lesotho

(17 Oct. 1966)

30,355

1,867,035

51

Slovenia

(22 May 1992)

20,273

2,011,070

52

Namibia

(23 Apr. 1990)

825,418

2,030,692

53

Macedonia

(8 Apr. 1993)

25,333

2,045,262

54

Bhutan

(21 Sep. 1971)

47,000

2,232,291

55

Latvia

(17 Sep. 1991)

64,589

2,290,237

56

Kuwait

(14 May 1963)

17,820

2,335,648

57

United Arab Emirates

(9 Dec. 1971)

82,880

2,563,212

58

Jamaica

(18 Sep. 1962)

10,991

2,731,832

59

Mongolia

(27 Oct. 1961)

1,565,000

2,791,272

60

Congo, Rep. of the

(20 Sep. 1960)

342,000

2,958,448

61

Armenia

(2 Mar. 1992)

29,800

2,982,904

62

Oman

(7 Oct. 1971)

212,460

3,001,583

63

Panama

(13 Nov. 1945)

78,200

3,039,859

64

Mauritania

(27 Oct. 1961)

1,030,700

3,086,859

65

Liberia

(2 Nov. 1945)

111,370

3,288,198

66

Uruguay

(18 Dec. 1945)

176,220

3,415,920

67

Albania

(14 Dec. 1955)

28,748

3,563,112

68

Lithuania

(17 Sep. 1991)

65,200

3,596,617

69

Central African Republic

(20 Sep. 1960)

622,984

3,799,897

70

Lebanon

(17 Oct. 1966)

10,400

3,826,018

71

Ireland

(14 Dec. 1955)

70,280

4,015,676

72

Costa Rica

(2 Nov. 1945)

51,100

4,016,173

73

Bosnia and Herzegovina

(22 May 1992)

51,129

4,025,476