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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Back to 500BC.
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, January 5, 2014
Election year
Editorial-January 4, 2014,
Citing Wikepedia, Philips says 23 countries and the European Parliament
will go to the polls this year. Sri Lanka is not on the list because
this country does not schedule its elections either by statute or the
constitution. While neither parliament nor the president can go beyond
the stipulated time limit, they can choose to go early to the polls if
the president perceives an advantage. He also can (as he does) proclaim
that the country has been blessed with a surfeit of democracy with the
rulers choosing to go to the country earlier than they need to. The
president is granted near unlimited flexibility for timing elections and
we even had the sorry spectacle of an attempt by one incumbent to
explore whether, having called a premature election for his own
purposes, to add on the unexpired portion of his first term to his
second! We owe the late Dr. W. Dahanayaka a debt of gratitude for giving
us a single day general election instead of the three-day exercise we
had previously. The then ruling UNP took advantage of this to fix their
safe seats for polling on the first day, the not-so-safe for the second
and the dicey seats for the last day. The object of this strategy was
the perception of vasi paththata hoiya or hurrah for the winning side.
But even that went awry in 1956 when S.W.R.D. Bandaranaike’s MEP killed
the giants on Day 1!
Rulers anywhere, and not only in this country, are least averse to
taking advantage of factors in their favour in timing or running for
election. So tax money is spent in doling out handouts to the electorate
regardless of whether the economy can afford them or not. The people,
of course, and not the politicians pay for such benefits which the
vote-seekers flourish as though they came out of their own pockets.
Unfortunately there are foolish voters who take such bait. We have time
and again urged in this space that the Provincial Councils are a huge
white elephant costing the country resources it cannot afford and not
giving the people benefits commensurate with costs. They only serve the
political class, providing them with ladders to climb into Parliament.
Recent elections have also seen the proliferation of the unfortunate
habit of incumbent politicians using the PCs as vehicles to induct their
progeny and close family members into the lucrative `business’ that has
served them well. The profession that kinsfolk will not be given the
party ticket was quickly forgotten and the last crop of PC elections saw
the family trees sprouting many new branches. Given the Rajapaksa
family’s formidable presence within the commanding heights of the
government and the extended family’s presence in its upper levels, the
president’s ability to prevent lesser politicians from claiming similar
benefits was irretrievably eroded. So the ganders have been served a
generous helping of the goose’s sauce!
Elections don’t come cheap and what we’ll have this year will cost the
people plenty. That is not restricted to the tax money funding the
logistics of holding elections alone. A lot of other mainly black money
will be poured into political war chests and uselessly splurged on
campaign propaganda including cutouts, posters and rallies that often
include crowd-pulling musical shows. Despite recent events revealing the
nexus between politicians and various Mafias including, despicably, the
drug cartels, the caravan happily rolls along. Big money does not fund
elections for altruistic reasons. Contributors regard such expenditure
as investments from which rich dividends can be earned via political
patronage liberally bestowed by the winners. When President J.R.
Jayewardene used his five sixths majority of 1977 to foist an executive
presidential system of government on the country, that constitution at
least had the redeeming feature of a two-term limit on the presidency.
It is fairly well known that JRJ was flirting with the idea of amending
that provision but that had to be abandoned in the face of the two
raging insurrections then blazing in both the north and the south of the
country. Ironically, defectors from JRJ’s UNP enabled President Mahinda
Rajapaksa to abolish the term limit and also scuttle the 17th Amendment
that held the promise of at least a modicum of good governance for the
country.
Whether the opposition UNP which remains in tatters can at least now
regain a vestige of unity to fight the PC elections already on the cards
as well as other contests that are likely to follow remains an open
question. Mr. Karu Jayasuriya who heads the new Leadership Council
commands widespread respect within the party and among the Buddhist
clergy as a man of integrity and good faith. He’s been reaching out to
UNP dissidents although he has not succeeded in persuading Mr. Sajith
Premadasa and Ms. Talatha Athukorale to take their places in the
council. There is inevitable speculation about a candidate with the
ability to mount a credible challenge to President Mahinda Rajapaksa but
no prospect has yet been identified. General Sarath Fonseka was the
rabbit the common opposition pulled out of their top hat last time
round. Despite his formidable credentials he couldn’t pull it off and
had to serve time in jail for his trouble. Mahinda Rajapaksa is a
consummate politician and a strategist par excellence. Outwitting him
will be no easy task.
