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, September 18, 2018
On Shifting Sands in Sri Lanka

The dangerous disconnect between politico-social liberalism and politico-economic democracy seems to be informing many of the government’s economic policies. Sans popular support, democracy cannot survive.
“Without
liberty, the understanding would be to no purpose, and without
understanding, liberty (if it could be) would signify nothing.” ~ Locke (An Essay Concerning Human Understanding)
( September 16, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) The
Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) doesn’t always get it right. In May
2018, it predicted that Nawaz Sharif’s party, PML-N, will win Pakistani
elections scheduled for July. That was wrong. In April 2016, it
predicted that Hakainde Hichilema will win Zambian elections scheduled
for August. Wrong again.
According to the EIU, the SLPP win most parliamentary seats and form a
government while an associate or relative of Mahinda Rajapaksa will win
the presidential election. A reasonable prediction given how badly the
Sirisena-Wickremesinghe government is failing.
More than 600,000 Lankans in 11 districts are severely affected by the
drought. One wouldn’t think so, listening to President Sirisena’s
cashew-diatribe or watching Premier Wickremesinghe’s antics, from Gam
Peraliya to turning the Temple Trees into a wedding destination for a
brief hour of ignominy. This is not good-governance, not even by the
most generous stretch of the term. This is stupid-governance,
characterised by ineffective policies and clownish acts.
The dangerous disconnect between politico-social liberalism and
politico-economic democracy seems to be informing many of the
government’s economic policies. Sans popular
support, democracy cannot survive. To gain and maintain that popular
support, democracy must be able to satisfy “the relatively modest
expectations of everyday life.”[i] Austerity
measures work politically only if they are perceived to be shouldered
by all. When a disproportionate share of the burden of budget cuts and
tax increases are imposed on those at the bottom of the income totem
pole, austerity can undermine governments and destabilise political
systems.
“The Sri Lankan government should undertake an assessment of the human
rights impact of both its economic reform policies and infrastructure
projects.”[ii] Juan
Pablo Bohoslavsky, the Independent UN Expert on the Effects of Foreign
Debt on Human Rights, opined after his recent visit to Sri Lanka. He
also talked about the need to maintain social spending and implement
progressive taxation. Excellent advice, if only the government has the
brains to understand.
In this month alone, the price of flour and all flour-based products
went up; the government increased the price of fuel, again, and
announced an increase in train fares, two measures which will further
burden the already overburdened segments of the populace, including the
drought-stricken. There is not even an acknowledgement about the
economic pain of the people. The President, the PM, the Finance Minister
and the ministers sound tone-deaf whenever they speak, as if they
inhabit a different plane of existence.
Into this breach, the Rajapaksas will step in.
Racial and religious fears find fertile grounds in high prices and
emptying pockets. The Rajapaksas will exacerbate this discontent with
fake news and extremist rhetoric, direct it and ride it to power,
proving the September forecast of the Economist Intelligence Unit right.
Who will wear the crown?
Thomas Paine said, “It is the pride of the kings which throws mankind into confusion.”[iii] In our times, it is often the idiocy of democrats which enables kings to re-emerge and throw mankind into confusion.
A curious statement by the Director of the government’s Information
Department indicates the irrational landscape on which next elections
will be waged. The statement debunked a piece of fake news being
disseminated over the internet – that 250 Indian families have been
settled in the Nedunkerni village.[iv]
Sri Lanka has no real immigrant problem, the way the West has. Yet an
issue is being manufactured out of this non-existent problem, adding new
layers to old Sinhala-Buddhist insecurities. What we are witnessing is
the deliberate irrationalisation of the political discourse, and,
through that, the electoral landscape. When fake news is used to
generate fear, and that fear is used to sow confusion in public spaces,
the door is opened for politics of salvation, and for that mythical
strong leader who can deliver us from evil aliens.
The leader as exorcist and saviour – a role tailor-made by the Rajapaksas for the Rajapaksas.
“My son [Namal Rajapaksa] can’t be a presidential candidate since they
have now raised the minimum age to 35 years, instead of 30, so he can’t
be considered in 2019,” Mahinda Rajapaksa told The Hindu. “My brother is
certainly a contender.” Had the 19th amendment
not included that clause, Mahinda Rajapaksa would have anointed his
eldest son as the SLPP’s presidential candidate. Given the monumental
stupidity of the Sirisena-Wickremesinghe administration, Namal Rajapaska
could have become the next executive president in Sri Lanka.
A sobering thought, that.
According to Manthri.com,
a website monitoring the performance of Lankan parliamentarians, Namal
Rajapaksa is not among the top 10, 50 or even 100. He is ranked 146 out
of 225[v], which places him firmly in the category of non-performers. He did no better in the theatre of street politics. The Janabala Meheyuma –
and its inevitable failure – is symbolic of a young man who tries to
stride like a colossus in shoes way too big for his dainty feet. During
his years in the political limelight, the eldest Rajapaksa scion has
said or done nothing to demonstrate even a minimal capacity to hold a
position of power with responsibility. Yet, according to his father, age
is the only factor which renders young Namal unsuited to presidency.
That is how politics of hereditary rule works.
Whether the 19th Amendment
can save Lankan democracy – or not – remains to be seen. But it has
saved Sri Lanka from the burlesque rule of a Baby Doc. A Namal Rajapaksa
presidency would have degenerated into a deadly farce within weeks.
That tragicomic future of a president swaggering about, on paternal
stilts, need not be feared, at least not till 2025.
The Rajapaksas remain today what they always were, a Family Inc. There
might be others in the SLPP more suited to the position of presidential
candidate than a Rajapaksa offspring or sibling, but like in any
monarchy, they are disqualified by the fact of birth. Whatever the
Rajapaksas occupy, be it a political party or a country, it becomes
their fief, a wholly family-owned entity which can be ruled only by a
born-and-bred member of the family. However hard the non-Rajapaksa
leaders of the SLPP labour, they will always be debarred from the
summits by a feudal-ceiling.
Had the Sirisena-Wickremesinghe government stayed halfway loyal to its
mandate, the Rajapaksa spectacle would have been nothing more than a
source of amusement. Safe in a democratic Sri Lanka, it would have been
possible to laugh at the shenanigans of fathers, sons, brothers, uncles
and nephews, our very own political reality show. But the government has
lost all sense of direction; it has no political, economic or moral
compass. Abandoning one’s own mantle and trying to steal the opponent’s
mantle doesn’t work, as the disastrous performance of the Swedish Social
Democrats demonstrates.
“These are unsettled times for democratic politics,” Chantal Mouffe wrote commenting on Sweden[vi].
In countries like ours, where when bedrock institutions are absent or
weak, times are dangerous. If the Rajapaksas return to power – and they
have an excellent chance of doing so – Sri Lanka will cease to be a
democracy, again, this time probably for a long time.
The Exorcist-Saviour
The DA Rajapaksa museum case is indicative of how dictatorial rule works
in reality. The Rajapaksas, in pursuance of their dynastic project,
created a museum for their parents in Hambantota.[vii] It
would have been non-controversial, commendable even, had they used
their own money or raised funds via the Rajapaksa Foundation. Instead
public funds were used for the purpose to the tune of more than Rs. 80
million.[viii] A
part of this money was repaid by the Rajapaksa Foundation, but only
after the family lost power. There is 40 million more due.
That is how ‘efficient dictators’ work in practice.
The myth of the efficient dictator is just that – a myth, deliberately
created by actual or would-be dictators. It seems to have originated in
Italy, with Mussolini’s promise to turn the Italian Railway into the
best in Europe. He didn’t. But in an audioscape where counter-voices
were criminalised and banned, any lie could flourish and even become
embedded in the collective memory as ‘facts’.
The ‘Strong Leader’ myth really flew with the birth of Asian Tigers. The
main reason for the miraculous development achieved by East Asia’s NICs
(Newly Industrialising Countries) was geo-politics. Sans the
Cold War, the Chinese Revolution and the Korean War, the Tigers might
have been just ordinary cats. The West needed economic successes to
counter the gathering ‘Communist’ influence in East Asia. A version of
Marshall Plan was implemented, especially in South Korea and Taiwan.
“Taiwan became a key post on the West’s defence perimeter… Over the
1950’s economic aid equalled about 6% of GNP and nearly 40% of gross
investment.”[ix] American aid financed more than 80% of South Korean imports in the 1950’s.[x]
Americans, so hostile to land reform in the rest of the world,
championed sweeping land reforms in South Korea and Taiwan, which did
much to settle the ‘peasant question’ and combat rural poverty. The NICs
could become industrialised in such a short time because a super power
was willing to provide them with investments and markets. Thanks to
American generosity, the NICs could undertake developmental measures
without imposing politically destabilising burdens on the masses.
That was how Chiang Kai-shek became transformed from a failure in China to a spectacular success in Taiwan.
Most of Asia, Africa and Southern America lived under civilian or
military dictators until the 1990’s; none of them reached the
developmental heights achieved by the NICs. That in itself should
suffice to debunk the mythical nexus between dictatorship and
development. But in the politically motivated populist retelling of the
Asian-Tiger story, these facts are ignored; sole focus is on tough
rulers and obedient people. If you want to become the next Tiger, get
yourself a good dictator, the aspirant dictators (and their supporters)
tell populaces tired by the ineptitude of democratic governments.
This is essentially what Ashok Pathirage of the Softlogic fame did at a
forum organised by the International Chamber of Commerce in Sri Lanka
(and names Fireside Chats, in imitation of former American President
Franklin Roosevelt’s series of radio shows.) “We need a strong
leadership; what we need is a little bit of a dictator.”[xi] Mr.
Pathirage did not say who he had in mind to play the role of a ‘little
bit of a dictator’. There was no need. Mr. Pathirage, like Vendaruwe
Upali Thero, is obviously waiting for the return of the Rajapaksas in
general and a Gotabhaya Presidency in particular. It is instructive to
remember that the Hitler analogy was birthed not by the critics of
Gotabhaya Rajapaksa, but by one of his most fervent admirers.
The love affair between dictators and crony capitalists is both old and
universal. Dictators have their favourite capitalists. Such favoured
ones can grow, at the expense not just of the general public but also of
the rest of entrepreneurs, especially the less/non-connected ones. Like
in every other sphere, in the economy too, dictators will enact
policies which are good for themselves and their entrepreneurial
cronies. They will implement those policies with little regard to public
sentiment or rules and regulations.
Adolf Hitler mesmerised the land of Goethe and Beethoven to the mouth of
abyss and beyond. Fortunately for Sri Lanka, Gotabhaya Rajapaksa lacks
such powers of mesmerisation. He cannot win the presidency without the
charisma of Brother Mahinda and the organisational capacity of Brother
Basil. Like in any family-centric organisation, the various
kin-rivalries will plague the SLPP for a while. The comedic failure of
Namal Rajapaksa’s bird-brained attempt to capture governmental power by
bringing busloads of supporters to Colombo was a result of just such a
rivalry. But in the end, the family is likely to unite, offering some
brother as the exorcist-saviour of the nation. Driven to insanity by the
Sirisena-Wickremesinghe administration’s misrule, the voters would
trample to the ground the not inconsiderable democratic achievements of
the last three years, and rush to embrace the ‘good dictator’.
[i] Eric Hobsbawm – Revolutionaries
[ii]https://www.thehindu.com/news/international/assess-human-rights-impact-of-reform/article24928414.ece
[iii] Common Sense
[iv] http://colombogazette.com/2018/09/11/sri-lanka-denies-reports-it-settled-250-indian-families-in-a-village/
[v]http://www.manthri.lk/en/blog/posts/parliamentary-activity-of-mps-most-discussed-in-social-media-this-week–6
[vi] https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/sep/10/populists-rise-progressives-radical-right
[viii] https://www.colombotelegraph.com/index.php/da-rajapaksa-foundation-owes-slrdc-rs-47-million-for-rajapaksa-memorial/
[ix] Models
of Development: A Comparative Study of Economic Growth in South Korea
and Taiwan. Edited byL Lawrence Lau and Lawrence Kilen
[x] Two Koreas, One Future? – edited by John Sullivan and Robert Foss
[xi] Top Business Tycoons Frustrated with Government Policy Inconsistencies – Financial Times – 31.8.2018

