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
(Full Story)
Search This Blog
Back to 500BC.
==========================
Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, January 22, 2018
Sri Lanka: The Government has failed us — Do we fail ourselves?
Mahinda Rajapaksa impeached the CJ who didn’t give the decision he wanted. Maithripala Sirisena accepted the Supreme Court’s ruling with as much good grace as possible. The difference between the two reactions is neither technical nor negligible.
by Tisaranee Gunasekara
“The travails of the mountains lie behind us.
Before us lie the travails of the plains.”
– Brecht (Observation)
Before us lie the travails of the plains.”
– Brecht (Observation)
( January 21, 2018, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) Does
a president’s responsibility to protect the nation empower him to
impose travel restrictions on specific countries? In a case dubbed as ‘a
major examination of presidential powers,’[i] the
US Supreme Court is to consider the matter and give a ruling by June.
If that ruling goes against Donald Trump, he will inundate the
twitterscape with pre-dawn ravings. But there is no doubt he will abide
by the ruling. He will not try to impeach the chief justice or threaten
the judges in any way. He would probably love to, but he won’t because
he can’t.
That is how democracy works: good laws, strong institutions and political leaders who abide by the limits, however unwillingly.
Sri Lanka experienced such a moment last week when Maithripala Sirisena
sought a Supreme Court ruling on the duration of his presidential term.
There was no doubt he wanted an extra year. The Supreme Court ruled that
his presidential term, as per the 19th Amendment,
is five years. How President Sirisena reacted to that ruling privately
we have no idea. But in public he did nothing. He accepted the ruling
and moved on.
Former President Mahinda Rajapaksa found the entire saga rip-roaring
funny. At a LG election rally for the newly formed Sri Lanka Peoples
Party (SLPP), Mr. Rajapaksas (who also happens to be an ex-officio
patron of the SLFP) defined the Supreme Court ruling as retribution for a
sin Mr. Sirisena committed in this birth (Ditta dhamma vedaneeya kamma)[ii].
Whether the sin he alluded to was the sin of defeating him electorally
or the sin of restoring Lankan democracy is unclear. In Mr. Rajapaksa’s
book both deeds would be equally sinful, both meriting the direst
punishment.
The upcoming local government election should have been about local
issues and about electing the best representatives to manage local
affairs. It could have been that had the election been held on time. But
the Sirisena-Wickremesinghe administration, against all sense, kept on
pushing back the election on various pretexts, until the Elections
Commission decided to use some of the powers vested in it by the 19th Amendment.
As a result of that unintelligent procrastination, the election is
being held at the worst possible time for the government. That
unfortunate timing and Mahinda Rajapaksa’s ‘Will to Power’ had turned
the election into a de facto referendum on the government.
The UNP, rather than Mahinda Rajapaksa’s SLPP, is likely to come first
in the LG poll. The SLPP will take votes away not from the UNP but from
the SLFP. If Ranil Wickremesinghe did save the Rajapaksa family from
prosecution, he would have done so on the calculation of becoming the
main politico-electoral beneficiary of a Rajapaksa-led decapitation of
the SLFP. His gamble will work if the SLFP emerges a strong second and
the SLPP is reduced to the third place. This outcome is highly unlikely,
thanks to a series of factors, starting with high prices of rice and
other consumer essentials, the Bond scam and the non-prosecution of the
Rajapaksas.
A more likely outcome is a diminished victory for the UNP (in terms of
total votes) with the SLPP nipping at its heels. If the SLPP emerges a
strong second and the SLFP is reduced to the third place, the
Sirisena-Wickremesinghe administration will careen into a crisis from
which it may never recover. Both Maithripala Sirisena and Ranil
Wickremesinghe will be losers in such a situation. As pressure builds up
on President Sirisena to reunify the SLFP and the SLPP and make Mahinda
Rajapaksa the prime minister, Mr. Wickremesinghe might find himself out
of a job first, perhaps a fitting retribution for saving the Rajapaksas
from justice.
The LG poll will also be a test of Mahinda Rajapaksa’s claim that the
country is waiting to return him to power. An absolute majority of
Lankans voted for the Sirisena-Wickremesinghe administration in 2015
because they believed in the promise of a vastly better future.
Disillusioned by the government’s tendency to go back on its pledges,
some of those voters may want a return to the past. That is the nature
of democracy. But before the past is repeated, it makes sense to
remember it, not the way the Rajapaksas render it, but the way it
actually was.
19th Amendment and 18th Amendment; Bond Scam and MiG Deal
The 18th Amendment,
which scrapped presidential term-limits while enhancing presidential
powers, was rammed through the cabinet, the judiciary and the parliament
in just ten days. Mahinda Rajapaksa had no popular mandate to enact the
amendment. During presidential and parliamentary elections of 2010, he
promised to abolish the executive presidency, not make it even stronger
than it was. The 18th Amendment
was in direct violation of that pledge. Copies of the Amendment were
not released to the public until it was a done deal. The Amendment was
railroaded through the cabinet on August 30th2010, approved by the Supreme Court on September 7th and passed in parliament on September 8th.
The Supreme Court led by Chief Justice Shirani Bandaranayake approved
the amendment in just 24 hours. By that time the judiciary, like the
parliament, had become subservient to the President and his family. CJ
Bandaranayake had headed the benches that rejected Gen. Fonseka’s
petition for bail, gave a free passage to the Expropriations Bill and
rejected petitions against Leadership Training for university students
in army camps. In a classified cable (revealed by Wikileaks), the US
Ambassador claimed that Dr. Bandaranayake was a ‘Rajapaksa loyalist.’
Being a ‘Rajapaksa loyalist’ meant doing the Rajapaksa bidding not most
of the time, but all the time, even where it was manifestly
anti-constitutional. When the CJ made the cardinal error of not giving a
free pass to the Divineguma Bill – tailor-made to enhance Basil
Rajapaksa’s powers – she was hounded of her job through an illegal
impeachment. When the Appeal Court tried to intervene in the process,
using its constitutionally granted authority, President Rajapaksa openly
threatened the judges, reminding them that “all powers regarding leave
matters pertaining to Supreme Court judges and their foreign visits etc.
and the approval thereof will now by default be vested with him as the
Executive.”[iii]
Mahinda Rajapaksa impeached the CJ who didn’t give the decision he
wanted. Maithripala Sirisena accepted the Supreme Court’s ruling with as
much good grace as possible. The difference between the two reactions
is neither technical nor negligible.
Ranil Wickremesinghe wanted to sweep the bond scam under a carpet of
amnesia. He tried to make it happen. He failed. There is a considerable
chance that the alleged culprits would be brought before the courts and
tried for their crimes. That is another difference between then and now.
Corruption is alive and well, but it cannot be hidden; and occasionally
it might even be punished. Impunity has not been done away with
completely, but it is no longer a fact of life.
This week, Colombo magistrate Lanka Jayaratne gave an order to freeze
some assets belonging to Udayanga Weeratunga, allegedly the prime-mover
in the controversial MiG deal, together with his first cousin Gotabhaya
Rajapaksa. When details of that deal were revealed by the Sunday Times
and the Sunday Leader in late 2006 and 2007, parliamentarians Mangala
Samaraweera and Sripathy Sooriyarachchi made a complaint to the Bribery
Commission. No investigation was ever carried out. Instead Gotabhaya
Rajapaksa filed action against the Sunday Leader, thereby preventing the
story from being covered.[iv]
Lasantha Wickremetunga was murdered, the Sunday Leader was bought by a
Rajapaksa confidant and the paper rendered Gotabhaya Rajapaksa an abject
apology. But Mr. Rajapaksa did not withdraw the case, and he gave his
evidence on May 22, 2014. His cross-examination by the counsel for
defence (and TNA parliamentarian) MA Sumanthiren started on May 27th2014.
When Ravi Karunanayake and Ranil Wickremesinghe appeared before the Bond
Commission, hundreds of media personnel gathered outside shouting
questions. When Gotabhaya Rajapaksa was cross examined, no media
personnel gathered outside the court premises. The only ones who tried
to get in were the BBC correspondents. Two senior cops barred their way
and informed them, “Nobody in their right minds would come here. No other media had come to cover this because they know the consequences.”[v] And
not a word appeared in the media bout Mr. Sumanthiran’s questions and
Mr. Rajapaksa’s answers. The media kept mum, because ‘they knew the
consequences,’ all too well.
The Sirisena-Wickremesinghe administration is corrupt, incompetent and
clueless, but the return of Rajapaksa Rule would mean the return of a
time when impunity was the norm and even a rugby referee couldn’t give a
decision displeasing to rugby-playing Rajapaksa sons without risking
bodily harm. Maithripala Sirisena is a weak and a brittle president, but
Gotabhaya Rajapaksa would be an infinitely worse one, a dictatorial
racist, a deadly cross between Benito Mussolini and Donald Trump. Ranil
Wickremesinghe has turned himself into non/anti-Mr. Clean with his
indefensible defence of the two Arjunas, but with Mahinda Rajapaksa as
Prime Minister we will have more (not less) corruption and absolutely no
space even to complain about it.
Flawed Democracy = Flawed but Democratic
Sri Lanka is facing the prospect of retrogressing to the Rajapaksa past
because Maithripala Sirisena and Ranil Wickremesinghe betrayed the trust
of the 6.2 million Lankans.
If Ranil Wickremesinghe handled the bond scam differently, he could have been confident of not just winning the LG polls, but also doing so massively.
Last week, Mr. Sirisena sprang into outraged action when Minister
Mangala Samaraweera issued a gazette cancelling a law banning women from
buying or selling alcohol. Had he displayed one half of that speed and
single-mindedness in dealing with the issue of rice and coconut prices
or the drought (which has victimised 2 million Lankans) or the still
ongoing fertiliser shortage, his SLFP would have been vying with the UNP
for the first place instead of facing the ignominy of becoming a poor
third. But for almost three years he ignored the economic plight of a
majority of Lankan people. He did not place the welfare of ordinary
Lankans over the super-profits of the rice-miller mafia (which allegedly
includes his brother). Had he acted fast and determinedly to prevent
the skyrocketing of rice prices, the cost-of-living problem would not
have become the political millstone it is today. By failing to do so, he
disappointed and alienated SLFP’s core-voters – the rural/suburban poor
and middle classes – turning them into easy pickings for the
Rajapaksas.
If Ranil Wickremesinghe handled the bond scam differently, he could have
been confident of not just winning the LG polls, but also doing so
massively. His laughable attempts to deny the existence of any
wrongdoing, his unwillingness to remove Ravi Karunanayake from deputy
leadership even after the Monarch Penthouse scandal came to light and
his unconditional defence of Arjuna Mahendran had disgusted and
alienated key components of the UNP’s core support base – the urban
middle and upper-middle classes and the business community.
The Sirisena-Wickremesinghe administration has lost not just its moral
compass but also its basic commonsense. The positives it has achieved
are few in comparison to the multitude of forgotten and broken promises.
But those few positives mark the difference between a country that is
the private fiefdom of a single family and a country which is a flawed
democracy. Corruption continues to be rife, but the bond scam report
gives hope that at least some of the corrupt will be punished.
Incompetence is monumental, but there is space to criticise it without
fear. The promise to come up with a political solution to the ethnic
problem has been forgotten, but there is far less official racism. What
is needed is to protect and build on these achievements. The bad must be
acknowledged as bad. But it makes no sense to replace the bad with the
worse.
Maithripala Sirisena and Ranil Wickremesinghe had failed us. The
question is, do we fail ourselves too, and allow the infinitely worse
past to return to our common detriment?
[i] https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/courts_law/supreme-court-to-rule-on-trumps-powers-to-ban-foreign-travelers/2018/01/19/9e6e1242-fc90-11e7-8f66-2df0b94bb98a_story.html?utm_term=.ef739a30f80b
[ii] http://www.dailymirror.lk/article/What-happened-to-me-happened-to-Maithri-as-well-MR-144000.html
[iii] Daily News – 8.1.2013


