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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, June 5, 2018
Revival of national unity government is still possible

by Jehan Perera-June 4, 2018, 9:04 pm
President
Maithripala Sirisena’s speech at the commemoration event for the late
Ven Madulawave Sobitha Thero, was another indication that all was not
well within the unity government. The venerable monk was the person who
welded several disparate political parties and civic groups together to
challenge the might of the Rajapaksa government. The previous government
exemplified the Rule of Men and not the Rule of Law, which its own
Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission warned against. Its leaders
still show little or no remorse for the violations of law and human
rights in the past. The commemoration held in the venerable monk’s
honour was intended to be an occasion for remembering what he had stood
for and the promises that those who had worked with him made regarding
good governance and against corruption. Instead of which, President
Sirisena made it into an occasion to severely criticize the outcome of
that endeavor.
At the outset of his speech, at the commemoration event, President
Sirisena expressed his disappointment that he had not been invited to
the commemoration event. The President stated that he had not been
invited for the event or that such an invitation had reached him. The
initial assessment of the President’s speech was that he had been piqued
by being marginalized at the event. However, the President’s outburst
on the occasion of the commemoration event may not have been driven
solely by emotion. The fact that the Executive Committee of the SLFP
along with the SLFP Central Committee, and the All Island Working
Committee was set to meet four days later suggests that there was
another calculation underlying the President’s public stance.
At this crucial meeting of the SLFP at which office-bearers of the party
were elected, several of the key positions went to the breakaway group
of 16 SLFP parliamentarians who recently left the government and now sit
as an independent group in parliament. This group has pledged that
their intention is to reunify the SLFP which is currently split, albeit
unequally, into two factions, one of which is loyal to President
Sirisena while the other accords primacy to former president Mahinda
Rajapaksa. The local government election results of February 2018 showed
that the faction led by the former president is by far the dominant
faction.
MAIN OBSTACLE
The intention of the group of 16 is to strengthen the SLFP which has
fallen into third place behind the UNP and the newly formed SLPP that is
led by the former president. They are all members of the SLFP who have
accepted the leadership of President Sirisena. But they do not see a
future for themselves or for the SLFP if it continues to remain divided
with a section of the party loyal to the President and another to the
former president. This concern has become more urgent as the next set of
presidential and parliamentary elections are barely 16 months away.
Their stated goal is not to amalgamate the party under the banner of the
SLPP headed by the former president, but to reunite the SLFP which is
presently under the leadership of President Sirisena.
The President’s speech at the commemoration event made it clear that he
was on the side of the SLFP more than with the government which he
bitterly criticized. The implied message of his speech was that he is
prepared to leave the coalition with the UNP if he could reunify the
SLFP under his leadership. The President both criticized the policies
and practices of the government head heads and also referred to efforts
to undermine him politically from within the government. Given the
results of the local government elections in February 2018 in which the
newly formed SLPP headed by the former president fared better than both
the UNP and SLFP, reuniting the SLFP is a priority aspiration of
President Sirisena as well as the group of 16.
President Sirisena’s goal would be to lead a reunited SLFP and not be
the leader who led it to irreversible decline and marginalization from
its long history as one of the two main political parties which has
given the country’s politics a two-party character for over six decades.
However, the chief obstacle to this aspiration would be the former
president, and other leaders of the former government who now lead the
SLPP, who would not wish to yield the position that the SLPP has
obtained through their charisma and campaigning over the course of the
past three years. It is this contradiction that can prevent President
Sirisena from achieving his ambition with regard to the SLFP. It is also
the crucial factor that makes the continuation of the National Unity
Government still possible.
CONTINUATION POSSIBLE
The challenge for the UNP leadership is to negotiate an agreement with
President Sirisena which includes those parliamentarians of the SLFP who
continue to remain in the government. The best option for the country
to ensure the late Ven Maduluwave Sobitha’s vision of good governance
and non-corrupt government would be for President Sirisena and the UNP
leadership to come to a negotiated settlement regarding power sharing
between the two parties. Negotiations regarding power sharing are not
new to the country as they have been engaged in to seek a resolution of
the ethnic conflict in the past. A successful effort at reaching a power
sharing agreement between the UNP and SLFP could be an inspiration for
the power sharing that likewise needs to take place between the
government and ethnic minority parties.
The news media has reported that the President is engaging the country’s
two main political groupings, the UNP and the Joint Opposition at the
same time. He continues to keep his options open. Despite his concern
for his own political future, the value framework that the Ven
Maduluwave Sobitha set in 2015 continues to motivate the President and
needs to be protected. While the group of 16 are attempting to reunify
the SLFP another group of SLFP parliamentarians who have remained in the
government as ministers are reported to be engaging with UNP leaders to
discuss the formulation of a common development programme and matters
related to future elections, including the upcoming Provincial Council
elections which the President has pledged will be held this year.
President Sirisena’s May 8 speech to parliament set out many
accomplishments and plans of the National Unity Government that need to
be explained to the general population. The problem is that most of the
people in the country are either unaware of what the government has
accomplished in the past three years or are overlooking them because
they are not visible and material. Likewise the plans of the government
for economic development and national reconciliation have been made but
not yet explained to the people. The continuation of the National Unity
Government is important so that the gains made in terms of restoring the
rule of law and improving human rights are protected for the well-being
and future development of the country.
