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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, February 2, 2015
Sri Lanka: A Democratic Revolution in the Making?

A time for gratitude
Two disasters were recently averted in Sri Lanka. The first would have
been the re-election of the corrupt and brutal Rajapaksa regime in the
presidential election of 8 January 2015. For this we must be grateful,
first and foremost, to democracy acitivists across the spectrum –
Sobitha Thera, trade unionists, students, teachers, women’s groups,
political parties, social activists, artists, lawyers, civil society
organisations (CSOs) and people’s movements (especially the Movement for
Social Justice), social media activists, and so on – who organised the
campaign for a common opposition candidate with such skill and courage
that it succeeded despite the huge amount of money and muscle-power
employed on the other side, and also to the Election Commissioner, who
managed to carry out a tolerably free and fair election against heavy
odds. Secondly, to Tamil voters, who overwhelmingly rejected the Tamil
nationalist plea to boycott the election on the grounds that restoring
democracy in Sri Lanka would offer nothing to Tamils (1). The Tamil
National Alliance (TNA) in particular has played a commendable role in
recent years, affirming their faith in democracy by opposing the
continuous slide into dictatorship under the Rajapaksa regime. For
Muslims to support the opposition should have been a no-brainer after
the state-sponsored pogroms against them by Buddhist thugs of the Bodhu
Bala Sena (BBS); that it took so long for their leaders to disentangle
themselves from the old regime is a sad comment on the corrupt politics
of patronage that prevailed. Hill-country Tamils, most of whom had
hitherto been in the clutches of plantation politicians like Thondaman
of the Ceylon Workers’ Congress which supported the Rajapaksa regime,
gave an overwhelming message that they can make intelligent decisions on
their own.
