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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, November 26, 2016
Hefty fines and laws alone cannot ensure a just society - Dinesh Weerakkody

One
political leader whose stock has gone up by leaps and bounds in the
last few months has been Anura Kumara Dissanayake’s, the JVP Leader, a
local university graduate and a former Cabinet Minister of Agriculture,
Livestock, Land and Irrigation.
Dissanayake is an ardent campaigner against the executive presidential
system of Sri Lanka and has acquired a reputation for his stand on
social justice. He recently demanded to know why the State officials
tasked with providing luxury vehicles to 58 MPs supporting the
Government should not be accused of fraud.
Making a special statement in Parliament JVP Leader Dissanayake said:
“The entire project of providing luxury cars to 58 MPs backing the
Government costs over Rs. 2,430 million to the public purse.”
He went on to say: “Procurement notices were published before the
Cabinet approved the project. The Procurement Committee and the
Technical Evaluation Committee have rejected the bidders who indicated
their willingness to supply cars. Yet the process is in progress and
these vehicles have been leased at a monthly rental of Rs. 700,000 each.
The cost per one km would be around Rs. 250. Each vehicle leased out
for 60 months would cost around Rs. 42 million more than its market
value. For the fleet of 58 vehicles the Government will have to pay Rs.
2,436 million. Though the Government pays that amount, it would not own
the vehicles.”
The JVP Leader further said that each of those MPs was currently paid
Rs. 200,000 monthly transport allowance. He demanded to know why they
were given cars at the expense of the taxpayers. “Those MPs had already
obtained their duty free vehicle permits,” he pointed out.
Dissanayake demanded to know the date on which the decision to give 58
MPs new cars was taken, the details of the procurement process and
whether the Government could justify provision of luxury cars to MPs who
had been paid a Rs. 200,000 transport allowance and also given a duty
free vehicle permit.
Justification
The Finance Minister, a professionally-qualified accountant by training
who knows the difference between an operating and a financial lease,
explained that the Government would get Rs. 25 million as import duty
for each of the 58 vehicles to be given to 58 MPs. Further he said that
the Government would also get tax, in addition to the saving of some
amount of funds through this exercise.
The Minister said that a private company under operational lease would
import the vehicles and that therefore it would be possible to save a
considerable amount of money. The repair expenditure will have to be
borne by the same company. Therefore the Government does not have to
spend much for the vehicles, Minister Karunanayake said.
“There have been instances where bills are being produced by the users
of State vehicles to get funds reimbursed continuously for repairs, etc.
But an operational lease will prevent such instances in future.”
The Finance Minister also said that it was decided by the Cabinet on a
Cabinet paper presented by Parliamentary Reforms and Mass Media Minister
to pay a transport allowance of Rs. 200,000 to the MPs monthly in the
interim, as the tender process of ordering new vehicles took time.
The real issue
However, the answer the public would like to have is why the Government
is giving luxury cars to MPs when they have already been given a
duty-free permit to buy a top-end SUV and also a fuel allowance at a
time when the public has been burdened with heavy taxes and fines.
Then on the question of road fines, initially, it was only proposed as a
Budget proposal, the Government wanted to increase the minimum fine for
road traffic offenses to Rs. 2,500. It was challenged even before the
Budget debate entered its final stage due to objections from those such
as private bus operators who even warned of strike action.
Afterwards, the Government decided to do away with the proposed increase
on the minimum fine. Instead, it proposed to introduce a fine as large
as Rs. 25,000 for seven major offences that included drunken driving,
speeding, driving without a license, overtaking from the left, etc.
Heavy penalisation for offenses like drunken driving with a proper
process and driving without a license or insurance is not opposed. But
the question remains why a driver earning Rs. 25,000 or Rs. 30,000 a
month overtaking from the left during rush hours is subjected to such a
big fine.
Against this backdrop, the Government will come under pressure to
reconsider the proposal. The Rs. 25,000 for speeding would also need to
be implemented with caution, given that the driver will be at the mercy
of law enforcement.
The Government should from now on make a huge effort to rope in all the
professionals in private practice and businessman who deal mostly in
cash into the tax net without continuing to squeeze out the existing
taxpayers.
Public expectation
The Government should avoid falling into the Hillary Clinton trap, which
epitomised the dorky arrogance and smugness of the professional elite.
Instead like Trump who was able to stir up the spirit of the working
class by understanding their resentment, they too need to treat the
working-class with respect and assist them do things that are within
their reach. We can no longer advise young men with university education
to take pink-collar jobs.
In a world dominated by social media, the political discourse on values
based conduct in politics has reached a crisis level in all democracies
fake, real and quasi. Today, laws, high taxes and fines alone cannot
ensure a just society. Promises and estate-appointed commissions alone
cannot deliver us from the cycle of greed that makes it routine for
politicians in power to abuse public resources.
In the final analysis, people gave a mandate to this Government to weed
out corruption and to penalise those involved in such wrongs. Therefore
what the public needs is good governance in word and deed, because that
is a sine-qua non for achieving economic development and inclusive
growth in the country.

