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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Back to 500BC.
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, September 18, 2018
Deciphering the Jana Bala Demo (JBD)
Not a flop (about 75,000), but it was fun and frolic not a political avowal

It was a damned good baila show(http://www.dailynews.lk/2018/09/06/local/161836/jo%E2%80%99s-janabalaya-turns-carnivale)
After a tamasha comes the time of reckoning and by this I mean not the
day of judgement, but as an accountant would reckon, the balance sheet –
the profit, the loss and the balance. First on the plus side, it was
big, not massive but not a flop either. The organisers promised 200,000
and ferried in about 75,000 – you think a bit more? Ok I won’t quarrel.
My estimate relies on aerial photos on the web and in the newspapers. If
I spent an hour dividing photos into 1cmx1cm counting squares I could
make a more accurate estimate, but who cares? The point is that though
only a third of the promise materialised it is comparable to Wembley
Stadium on Cup Final Day (90,000); not bad. Second on the plus side is
that the revellers had a good time. Like the Royal-Thomian of old, two
or three sakkili bands, folks dancing in the streets, merrymaking and
phoney slogan shouting. The organisers proved that they have access to
numbers and can induce the faithful with offers of transport and the
promise of a good time to visit the capital city and enjoy a day out.
Gastronomic delights, like rice and curry packets and in the case of the
men, tots of liverish if anti-social libations of the ‘old-stuff’ to
wash it all down with were on generous offer.
Is this damning with faint praises? No; not at all. Yahapalana cannot
repeat this feat on any comparable scale. It’s no secret that this is
all about girding up to the next election cycle. Then the all-important
question is ‘who do you despise less’. From the vantage of elections;
the planners displayed another upside. They had access to boodles of
cash and cash makes the electoral cow moo. February 10 showed that the
Sinhala-Buddhist electorate was fed up with incompetence in bringing
rogues to justice, Sirisena fifth-column inspired infighting, and two
years of economic stagnation. "You have had two years and bungled.
Enough is enough!" the electorate said. The query on every tongue was
did the Jana Bala Demonstration (JBD) affirm that this trend has gained
strength. I make no secret of my greater distaste for the despotic
Rajapaksa power centre than the incompetent Ranil-UNP outfit, but
believe me I am scientist enough to distinguish between what I like and
an objective assessment. For reasons I will now outline I doubt that the
‘Rajapaksa cause’ has consolidated its advantage or made visible
progress in the months since February.
It has been reported that Mahinda Rajapaksa declared during run up
preparations for JBD that his forces would converge on Colombo, make the
country ungovernable and had declared: "We will surround the capital,
camp in the city and stay put until this government is evicted." But
mass power to disrupt governance did not materialise, instead it was a
carnival of fun and frolic. Those who recall May Day rallies of yore, or
old enough to remember the August 1953 Hartal will recall how deadly
serious the mood, how thoroughly demonstrators grasped the matters in
conflict and above all the timbre of leadership – Hyperion to a Styr.
Simply put, JBD was not a gathering of conscious and motivated citizens
who understood the issues around which they had supposedly mobilised.
What were the supposed issues? Here is how Colombo Telegraph summarised
it: "The protest, organised by the Youth Wing of the Sri Lanka Podujana
Peramuna led by Namal Rajapaksa, agitated against the proposed
‘separatist constitution’, selling national assets, protecting the
accused in the Central Bank bond scam, exacting political revenge,
attacks on the Buddhist clergy, imprisonment of ‘war heroes’ and
imposition of new taxes. It drew crowds from all parts of the country".
OK there is one point here that has merit; the government is dragging
its feet over the bond scam. The reason is that the actual beneficiary
(via the said ‘accused’) is the current incumbent and then candidate in
the 2008 presidential tussle. It is also correct that value added tax
has gone up but it is too complicated to undertake an assessment of the
government’s failed economic strategy here. That will have to await a
fuller critique, best done after 2018 all-year economic data become
available. Watch this space!
Arranging
the
succession(https://newsin.asia/sri-lanka-can-be-a-communicating-point-between-india-and-pakistan-whenever-they-want-to-talk-says-namal-rajapaksa/)
Exacting "political revenge" is code for indicting, prosecuting and
imprisoning Rajapaksa era rogues and murderers; this is exactly what
this government has failed to do. And there is no reason to believe that
these impotent UNP leaders will at this late stage sprout scrota and
grow guts to drag villains off to court and lockup. What people should
be demonstrating against is the incapacity to seek "revenge" on those
who pillaged the nation, raped, abducted and murdered during the
Rajapaksa decade. President Sirisena according to reports is now making
himself an obstruction to justice. Folks in the rally know all this but
their attitude is "Our lot are only slightly worse scoundrels than the
other lot" – ung okoma horu.
Now to the most important of the opposition’s rallying cries,
distributed in three points in the Colombo Telegraph summary. Let’s pull
them together. The ‘separatist constitution’; attacks on the Buddhist
clergy; imprisonment of ‘war heroes’. The purpose of this portfolio of
slogans is unmistakable, it is to incite racial tension, fall back on
wells of deep chauvinism and provoke anti-Tamil and anti-Muslim
sentiments in the bleaker psyche of susceptible citizens. This wicked
agenda did not resonate with on-lookers nor did it enthuse the marchers
themselves. Bahu claims the racist cry
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JnQryg2hKfw – in Sinhala) did not echo
in the streets and was not taken up by the public. My other sources
agree. So, is chauvinist incitement beginning to fall flat? I hope so,
but I am not reassured. But he is right on another point: Salvation for
this government lies in enacting the new constitution. He is, however,
far more confident than I am of the ability of Ranil and the UNP to get
anything important done in the next two years.
Then there is the Namal factor; or rather the war of the Rajapaksas
which was evident in the jamboree. Basil seems to have been left on the
side-lines. A high-profile attendee, Gota, has previously been touted as
the opposition’s presidential candidate; but there’s a hitch! Big
Brother himself rode in (not on a piebald stallion but standing in a
grey-green jeep) charming, resplendent in white, a twinkle in his eye
and a smile that does credit to his dentist. Reading the leaves, it
seems the opposition has swallowed Nihal Jayawickrema’s shifty story
hook line and sinker and is set to petition the Courts in earnest
seeking a third innings for Big Brother.
If GL and his bunch of black cloaked dimwits proceed along these lines
one possibility is that the government may find reasons to drag the
match on for as long as possible in order to compound uncertainty in the
SLPP. The worst would not be the uncertainty of candidature but the
multiplication of infighting in the ranks of the hopefuls. Will Court
interventions flop? Will the Courts play along with parliamentary (with
Mr Speaker’s connivance) or government procrastination? Will Gota
abandon the Stars & Stripes, if so how long can he delay jumping
flagship America? The leading role given to Namal, the side-lining of
Basil and the de-facto side-lining of Gota (that else is the message of
Big Brother striding into JBD to the rapturous adoration of the flock)
surely implies that the game plan is as follows: Another innings or two
for Big Brother and thereafter the succession to pass directly to Eldest
Son. Do you foresee another civil-war, this time inside the Rajapaksa
wildlife park?
Two of the Dead-Left’s aging helmsmen showed their faces while their
parties lie in tatters. Greed for one final round of Cabinet perks
springs hope eternal in their asthmatic breasts. The Dead-Left is a
cranky existential nonentity, but in the context of this pandemonium it
has taken to promoting its own Quixotic challenger. But every SLPP and
JO body I have quizzed declares that brother Chamal has as much chance
as a three-legged donkey at the Ascot Derby.
There is however one useful thing Dead-Left leaders can do prior to
their long overdue final public appearance in the obituary columns. They
can campaign within the Joint Opposition in favour of the new
constitution. It is no secret that Dead-Left leaders and cadres (I am in
contact with dozens) know full well that the term ‘separatist
constitution’ is racist rubbish. They know that many so-called ‘war
heroes’ are war criminals. As for justice-obstructing, novice-monk
sodomising, late dining men draped in saffron robes, sometimes referred
to as clergy, every soul in the Dead-Left despises them. The problem is
that most cadres and two leaders believe that they must turn a blind eye
for the sake of playing along with the Rajapaksas. But with their
mortal souls in exit mode in the departure lounge, if they were to take a
stand against chauvinism inside the Opposition at least the last page
on their copybooks will not be blotched and besmirched.
Let me sign off by saying that the JBD challenge fell flat; it was game
and set (only) to Yahapalana. But no, not yet match! There is time more;
but Yahapalana shows no inclination towards reincarnation, the
constitution seems a non-starter. So, what do we have? A championship
match where both contenders wrestle with one hand tied behind their back
and their mouths stuffed with crap. Consequently, the outcome of the
parliamentary elections in 2020 is far from certain; the presidency is
floored by uncertainty. Hmm time for a short nap you might say.

