History cannot agree with the rulers of the day. It is almost impossible to distort all the facts recorded at multiple locations over a period of time, by different actors, and in varying environments.
On April 1, Prime Minister Narendra Modi and External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar, followed by the entire BJP ecosystem, selectively pulled out two papers relating to Katchatheevu from 1961 and 1974 to claim that the uninhabited 285-acre island north of Dhanushkodi in Tamil Nadu was gifted away to Sri Lanka by an earlier Congress regime with the connivance of the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK), currently a Congress ally in the INDIA bloc. The Congress and the DMK countered these claims with other proof.
On April 1, the Prime Minister posted on the social media platform X: “Rhetoric aside, DMK has done NOTHING to safeguard Tamil Nadu’s interests.” Claiming to have unearthed new details, he said the Katchatheevu issue had unmasked the DMK’s double standards and harmed the interests of fisherfolk. At a press conference on the same day, Jaishankar held the Congress government responsible for the 1974 agreement and the 1976 expansion of that agreement.
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Most Noida-based television channels amplified the issue mostly along the line taken by the BJP, framing it as a BJP versus Congress issue, repeatedly asking why the Congress gave away the island to Sri Lanka. Chennai-based channels were more analytical and referred to history.
BJP’s planks and historical background
The BJP has used two main planks to make this an issue. First, that the Congress gratuitously gave away Indian territory to Sri Lanka and, second, that the DMK government in power at the time was hand in glove with the Congress and had, therefore, betrayed the interests of Tamil Nadu. The party extended this argument to claim that it was because of this that Indian fishermen were unable to fish in the waters off Katchatheevu.
An examination of historical records, however, shows that the island was always disputed territory, hence no Indian territory was given away. Also, the DMK appears to have fought against the move to the extent possible.
Parliamentary records show that on July 23, 1974, the then External Affairs Minister, Swaran Singh, made a statement on the floor of the House titled “Statement re agreement between India and Sri Lanka on boundary in historic waters between the two countries and related matters”.
Swaran Singh made a few points without disclosing what India gained in the process. He said that the issue had to be settled urgently, both governments had put forth claims and counterclaims, and the aim of an early settlement was to ensure that the issue was not internationalised. He also emphasised that the resolve to settle bilateral issues “without interference, on the basis of equality and goodwill”, was stated government policy.
On the need for urgency, he said: “The issue of deciding Indian and Sri Lanka claims to Kachchativu was closely connected with determining the boundary line between India and Sri Lanka in the waters of the Palk Bay. The entire question of the maritime boundary in the historic waters of the Palk Bay required urgently to be settled, keeping in view the claims of the two sides, historical evidence, legal practice and precedent, and in the broader context of our growing friendly relations with Sri Lanka.”
Claims and counterclaims
On the claims and counterclaims, he asserted: “During the long colonial period the question whether Kachchativu was part of India or part of Ceylon was frequently discussed, with the governments of the day putting forward claims and counterclaims. In recent years, both countries had agreed that there should be no unilateral action which would seek to change the undetermined status of Kachchativu, pending a final solution to be reached through amicable bilateral efforts.”
He cautioned against the possibility of internationalisation, stating that “when two sides have a good arguable case on a particular issue, and the problem cannot be resolved expeditiously through bilateral negotiations, there is invariably an attempt to seek outside intervention by appeal either to the International Court of Justice or to third party arbitration”.
Without expressly saying what exactly India had gained, Swaran Singh made a telling reference: “This question of Kachchativu… had necessarily to be dealt with as part of the broader question of the boundary in the Palk Bay so as to eliminate the possibility of any further disputes on similar matters in these historic waters.”
Records show that Atal Bihari Vajpayee, who later became Prime Minister but did not rake up the issue as Narendra Modi had done now, contended in 1974 that the agreement was unconstitutional. There are only two recorded exchanges in this debate and the most pertinent point Vajpayee makes is this: “Can they violate the Constitution?”
Most members from Tamil Nadu, cutting across party lines, were aghast over the agreement. Era Sezhiyan, who led the DMK walkout ahead of Swaran Singh’s statement, said: “I want to submit that we [the State of Tamil Nadu] should have been consulted and the House should have been taken into confidence before they [the Union Government] entered into this unholy agreement for surrender of territory by India.”
Sezhiyan described the agreement as a “disgraceful act” that was “unworthy of any government”.
Nanjil Manoharan, a politician who did stints in both the DMK and the AIADMK, went further, calling the agreement “anti-national and unpatriotic”. He said that through the “unholy agreement, the Sri Lankan Prime Minister has emerged as victor and the Prime Minister of India as a pathetic vanquished. It is an assault on the integrity of the country.”
The “little rock” comment made by Indira Gandhi about Katchatheevu, which is being used to target the Congress now, was picked up even at that point. G. Viswanathan of the DMK, while condemning the agreement in Parliament, asserted that neither was the State government consulted nor was Parliament informed.
He contended that the Tamil Nadu government had records about the island dating back to at least 150 years. “But what is the claim of Sri Lanka? Let the Minister tell the House. Sri Lanka has no claim…. They published a map in 1880, authorised by the government of Ceylon. Kachchativu is not part of it.”
The Forward Bloc representative too joined the walkout. M. Kalyanasundaram of the CPI demanded a discussion on the statement because “there are problems which we would like our government to take up with Sri Lanka and seek their solution”. In response to the repeated attacks from the DMK, Congress leader H.K.L. Bhagat said: “It appears to me that the DMK thinks that probably they can desperately cling on to this issue and survive in Tamil Nadu. The Jana Sangh at one time thought that they could survive by clinging on to Kutch, but they failed. The DMK is also bound to fail….”
Former Tamil Nadu Chief Minister and DMK leader M. Karunanidhi noted in the fourth volume of his autobiography, Nenjukku Needhi: “I had written to the Prime Minister on January 6, 1974, with many documents and proof that this agreement should not be signed. When the Prime Minister did not heed to his advice, the DMK organised public meetings across the State on July 14 to condemn the decision.”
Good times, bad times
Question for the BJP
While all this is history, the question that Tamil Nadu politicians raise today is this: Is India prepared to rescind the agreement?
“The BJP should openly state that the ceding of the island will be reconsidered,” said AIADMK general secretary and former Chief Minister Edappadi K. Palaniswami, in an election rally in Krishnagiri on April 3. “If the BJP is actually serious about this issue, it should file an affidavit in the Supreme Court,” he added.
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The BJP is yet to respond to this demand, but the only paper the BJP government has filed in the Supreme Court says otherwise. In 2015 (when Jaishankar was Foreign Secretary), in response to an RTI filed by a Madurai resident named Aladi Gurusamy, the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) said: “This did not involve either acquiring or ceding of territory belonging to India since the area in question had never been demarcated. Under the Agreements [of 1974 and 1976], the island of Katchatheevu lies on the Sri Lankan side of the India-Sri Lanka International Maritime Boundary Line.”
After this response, the MEA declined to share information on Katchatheevu. DMK spokesperson Constantine Ravindran said: “The Foreign Ministry has repeatedly declined to share information on Katchatheevu to anyone who demand it via RTI, claiming that the case was sub judice. How is it that merely because the BJP asks for it, the information is given?”
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