A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, April 21, 2013
The Idiotic Gene
“Despotic
governments…..all follow the same logic”. Umberto Eco (The Prague
Cemetery)
Economic punches and developmental disappointments
might have bruised and battered Mahinda
Rajapaksa’s once enormous popularity among Sinhala masses. Yet a
considerable part of it still endures. There is nothing outlandish about this;
despotic leaders are usually popular, for a while, before the devastating costs
of their rule become manifest. Vellupillai
Pirapaharan was popular in his time. So was Adolf Hitler, until the
Americans’ daylight carpet-bombing of German cities and the Red Army’s arrival
on the borders of the Thousand Year Reich compelled ordinary Germans to realise
the inevitability of a defeat on a Götterdämmerung scale.
The Siblings would
know the importance of keeping that faith alive. They would also know that
economic outrages, such as the electricity rates hike, can cause serious
fissures in that belief.
The
Rajapaksa development strategy is an amalgam of economic neo-liberalism and
state capitalism. Their stirring populist rhetoric serves to cover a gamut of
policies which are iniquitous, viscerally. The Siblings follow a
tax-borrow-and-spend approach, with crucial differences. Their taxing is of the
indirect variety, targeting essential goods and services; therefore a
disproportionate share of the tax-burden falls not on the rich but on those
clinging to the bottom half of the income-totem pole. When it comes to spending
on popular needs, the Siblings are deficit hawks. But they spend, limitlessly,
on megalomaniacal projects with nary a benefit to the economy at large, or to
the people in general.
Mihin
Air, which never made a profit in its entire existence, is an excellent symbol
of the counter-developmental effects of Rajapaksa development. So is the highway
craze. The Southern Highway is costing the nation an annual loss of Rs. 5.5
billion; according to Prof. Amal
Kumarage of the Transport and Logistics Management Department of the
Moratuwa University, “The annual revenue collected from vehicles using the
Expressway is approximately Rs 1 billion, whereas the maintenance and debt
service cost is around Rs 6.5 billion” (Ceylon Today – 29.3.2013). That Rs.5.5
billion could have been used to improve feeder roads, rural roads and public
transportation. But the Rajapaksas are as unconcerned about popular needs as
they are blasé about economic logic. All they care about is their power and
their glory.
Mattala
Madness
Mattala
Mahinda Rajapaksa Airport is a metaphor, not just for Rajapaksa
development but also for Rajapaksa Rule.
The
Mattala Airport was built not to fulfil a national, regional or developmental
need but to satiate a Rajapaksa desire. In Rajapaksa Sri Lanka, the premier
international airport cannot be named after a bygone ruler (especially since his
retired-daughter remains a bit of a headache). Since the name of the Katunayake
airport cannot be changed from Bandaranaike to Rajapaksa without creating some
unfavourable flutters in the SLFP, the obvious way out is to build a new airport
and name it after the new rulers. The long term Rajapaksa plans might include
turning Hambantota into Lanka’s administrative capital (after changing its name
to Sri Rajapaksa Pura). The plan to shift the National Lotteries Board to
Hambantota might be the beginning of a generalised transfer of state
institutions to the new epicentre.
A
new capital would need a new airport.
Passengers
and airlines are not exactly flocking to Mattala. But birds are. Mattale airport
is close to the time immemorial flight-paths of migratory birds. Then there are
peacocks – the symbol of God Kataragma/Skanda, and sacred alike to Sinhala-Buddhists and
Tamil-Hindus; plus elephants and other wild animals.
Already
two airlines have had close encounters of the avian kind. If the word gets
around, not even the most outrageous concessions would succeed in attracting
international airlines to Mattala.
Thus
the launching of a new ‘humanitarian operation’, to turn Mattala into a
bird-and-animal-free-zone. It includes plans to closedown waterholes and destroy
feeding-grounds in the area which have sustained the bird and animal populations
for millennia.
The
animals, crazed by hunger and thirst, will venture into human settlements. The
human-elephant conflict (which has caused so many human and elephant deaths and
is threatening to wipe out the already dwindling elephant population) will
intensify and become a human-animal conflict. Sinhala farmers, struggling with
innumerable problems – including that of severe water shortage – will be
confronted with a new menace.
Ordinary
humans and ordinary animals would suffer and die in increasing numbers so that
the Rajapaksas can embark from and disembark in an airport named after
them.
There
is nothing pro-people about Rajapaksa economic policies. On the contrary they
can be best summarised as counter-Robin Hood; they take from the poor/middle
classes and give to the rich. Consequently Rajapaksas economics will enrich the
rich, pauperise the poor and cause the middle classes to become mired in debt
(including credit-card debt) to maintain their living standards. This trend is
indicated by the fact that Sri Lanka’s HDI for 2012, when discounted for
inequality, falls from 0.715 to 0.607; this loss of 15.1 is due to ‘inequality
in the distribution of the dimension indices”, according to the UNDP. (It cannot
be accidental that the poverty/inequality figures for Sri Lanka are
unavailable).
The
recent electricity hike which imposes punitive increases on low-end and
mid-level uses while shielding high-end consumersi should suffice to prove to
the Sinhala masses that Rajapaksa economics cannot bring about the richer
tomorrow of their dreams.
If
the Rajapaksas are to retain their Sinhala base, they must prevent the Sinhala
masses from focusing on economics and drawing logical conclusions. So long as
the Siblings can retain their Sinhala base, they need not to use generalised
violence to win elections or generalised repression to maintain order. And so
long as the Rajapaksas can manage with targeted violence and repression, they
can keep some parts of the democratic façade intact.
That
is where the minority-bogey in general and the Muslim-bogey in particular become
indispensable.
The old myth of rich Tamils preying on poor Sinhalese, of Tamil students from privileged homes hogging the universities and professions while Sinhala students from underprivileged homes languish in unemployment has been recast to suit the new Muslim bogey. Today it is the ‘wily Muslim’ standing in the way of Sinhala prosperity; the ‘fecund Muslim’ conspiring to occupy Sinhala lands and monopolise Sinhala resources; the ‘violent Muslim’ readying to turn the Sinhalese into a cowering minority.
The old myth of rich Tamils preying on poor Sinhalese, of Tamil students from privileged homes hogging the universities and professions while Sinhala students from underprivileged homes languish in unemployment has been recast to suit the new Muslim bogey. Today it is the ‘wily Muslim’ standing in the way of Sinhala prosperity; the ‘fecund Muslim’ conspiring to occupy Sinhala lands and monopolise Sinhala resources; the ‘violent Muslim’ readying to turn the Sinhalese into a cowering minority.
Creating
minority-bogies is a standard despotic ruse. Its purpose is to create a target
into which the just Sinhala anger at the growing economic predicament can be
displaced; to make the Sinhalese masses forget the real authors of their
suffering and focus their hatred on the Muslim
scapegoat.
Are
we inane enough to fall for that lie, again? Is our national trajectory to be
determined forever by an Idiotic Gene?


