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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, June 3, 2019
Beware of rushed laws and agreements:

By Lasanda Kurukulasuriya-June 2, 2019, 7:01 pm
After Narendra Modi took oaths on Thursday for a second time as India’s
Prime Minister, having steered the BJP-led coalition to a landslide
election victory, there was a string of announcements relating to
diplomatic engagements involving Sri Lanka, India, China and the United
States. Modi will visit Sri Lanka on 9th June, President Maithripala
Sirisena told a press conference in Delhi, where he attended the Indian
leader’s inauguration ceremony. Before that Modi will visit the
Maldives, his first overseas trip as prime minister. The Indian media
anticipates that the Indian PM will have bilateral meetings with the US
and Chinese leaders in September and October, respectively.
Discussions on what the US calls its ‘Indo Pacific Strategy’ are to
figure at meetings of senior US officials in Singapore for the Shangri
La Dialogue, and in India – a ‘major US defence partner.’ US Assistant
Secretary for Political Affairs Clarke Cooper is on a tour of Singapore,
India and Sri Lanka from 29th to 6th June.
Against this backdrop, an unusual statement appeared on Friday titled
"Indo-Lanka relations under the second term of Modi - In the backdrop of
Chinese foothold in SL and US proposed SOFA," on the President’s Media
Division (PMD) website. It is in the nature of a commentary on Sri
Lanka’s relationship with India which, it asserts, is ‘at a high now.’
The gist of it was to reassure Delhi regarding Colombo’s foreign policy
moves.
Worrying about India’s possible reactions to controversial defence pacts
with the US, it said "… Sri Lanka will have to be very careful not to
antagonize India while shifting foreign policy decisions or entering
into a new pact to replace Acquisition and Cross Services Agreement
(ACSA) with the United States. … Now, the US proposes to replace ACSA
with a Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA)."
Repeating the US’s misleading assurances in relation to the SOFA – that
there is no need to fear the establishment of a US military base, that
Sri Lanka ‘will retain all its sovereign rights’, etc. - the article
asserts that "Currently, there is an acknowledgement in Washington with
regard to India’s regional supremacy and its role in regional security
and stability" and that "there is an understanding of the need for
cooperation between India and the US to check rapidly expanding Chinese
influence in this region." Inexplicably, it adds: "Hence, it is
essential to keep India informed about Sri Lanka’s intended military
cooperation with any outside country, especially with a superpower such
as the US."
External pressure
Could the uncharacteristic comment posted on the PMD website be
interpreted as an indirect admission that Sri Lanka has in fact agreed
to sign up on the SOFA (which, till now, officials have been at pains to
say, is still only ‘under discussion’)? Or is this an indirect (if
somewhat clumsy) attempt to reassure India – timed to coincide with the
president’s visit to Delhi for the Indian president’s oath-taking
ceremony? Whatever the purpose, the sub-text of the essay suggests that
political leaders are more interested in appeasing external forces and
bowing to pressure from diverse quarters, than guiding policy in a
manner that serves the national interest. There appears to be much
external pressure being exerted to finalise this pact that gives carte
blanche to US defence personnel entering the country, and threatens Sri
Lanka’s sovereignty.
The SOFA is not the only agreement that the US has been pushing to
conclude in Sri Lanka. The country’s pro-US-prime minister led
government is working hard to conclude or implement a number of other
pieces of legislation and policy at the behest of its Western patrons,
against all odds. If there is a sense of urgency in these efforts, it is
because time is running out. With a presidential election only six
months away, and the government showing a dismal report card on its
performance in most areas, its Western backers know that its days are
numbered. Hence the pressure is turned up, to fast-track the desired
laws and agreements. It is the US-friendly UNP leadership that will be
instrumental in this process. The public will need to be on alert
because once these laws are passed there is no possibility of judicial
review, under the constitution.
One example is the proposed Counter Terrorism Act (CTA). From the moment
the Easter Sunday attacks took place Prime Minister Ranil
Wickremesinghe has been vigorously arguing that a new law is needed to
curb terrorism. This is despite multiple arguments that have been made
showing that there is ample provision in the country’s existing
legislation, to deal with terrorism. It has been pointed out that
amendments to the existing Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) would
suffice. It is an open secret that the eagerness to have the CTA passed,
stems from pressure to comply with the demands of the US-led UNHRC
resolution against Sri Lanka, which calls for repeal of the PTA.
Land reform and MCC
Parallel to the defence-related agreements and arrangements sought by
Western powers, such as the SOFA, a number of laws have been drafted
and/or passed relating to the economy as well. Reforms that would bring
the economy in line with the Western neo-liberal model, represent the
‘other side of the coin,’ of the defence agreements that advance US
hegemony on the military front. Among them are the Millennium Challenge
Compact (MCC), new laws that will radically transform patterns of land
use and ownership such as the proposed Land Bank Act and
already-gazetted State Land (Special Provisions) Bill and, according to
some, the revised National Physical Plan 2050 (NPP).
The Millennium Challenge Compact (MCC) is said to be a US grant for
development purposes. The MCC was developed in secrecy by a team located
in the Sri Lanka prime minister’s office. A government minister in
parliament even denied its existence. There has been no public
discussion on it. The MCC’s approval of the $480 grant for Sri Lanka was
announced by government just days after the Easter Sunday attacks –
when one would imagine that Sri Lanka’s investment credentials were at
an all-time low. The secrecy, the odd timing of the announcement and
other aspects would suggest that the MCC is being imposed by the US for
its own purposes, rather than for the benefit of Sri Lankans.
From the little that is known, the MCC relates to two projects, on
Transport and Land. The goal of the Land project is said to be to
‘increase land market activity’ and the ‘tradability of land’ through
‘policy and legal reforms.’ Eighty percent of Sri Lanka’s land is owned
by the state. Making such land a ‘tradable commodity’ or creating a
‘land market’ as the MCC aims to do, has long been advocated by the
World Bank to bring about what it calls ‘market based land
consolidation’ for the benefit of private (including foreign) investors.
Dispossession of farmers
Environmental groups and land rights activists who are aware of details
of the MCC, are strongly opposed to the project. Smallholder farmers
cultivate land on the basis of state grants or other forms of tenure
short of outright ownership. Since farmers are chronically indebted, the
reforms underway will in all likelihood lead them to sell their plots,
activists have pointed out. The end result will be mass dispossession of
farmers and other rural populations engaged in animal husbandry,
fishing etc. These groups whose livelihoods will be destroyed, are the
source of food sovereignty, says Sajeewa Chamikara from MONLAR, a
grassroots land-rights organization.
The government’s moves to remove the bar on foreigners owning land, the
removal of the 50-acres limit on individual ownership, the proposed
‘Land Bank’ (that will bring publicly owned land under a single hub and
make it available for private investors), are inter-related.
"You need to look at all the factors to see the final outcome" explained
Chamikara. One needs to ask, if the government is genuinely interested
in addressing the land-related and other multiple problems faced by
farmers, why doesn’t it address these issues directly, in consultation
with the farmer organisations – rather than bowing to pressure from
foreign ‘advisors’ who may have their own agendas?
The State Land (Special Provisions) Bill was gazetted on 27.03.19, and
the National Physical Plan 2050 was recently reported to have got
presidential approval. Both were strongly opposed by the president,
during the November-December 2018 constitutional crisis. The land laws
which he, at the time, described as ‘anti-national,’ were among reasons
he cited for his move to sack the prime minister. What pressure was
brought to bear on the president to make him give his assent to them
later? Why did he give in? It would seem that the instability caused by
in-fighting between president and prime minister has made the country
particularly vulnerable at this time.
The State Land (Special Provisions) Bill, gazetted by the UNP’s Minister
of Lands (and not the president), will need to be passed in parliament.
Its purpose is "to grant absolute title to state lands held by citizens
who are holders of grants or instruments of disposition." Its validity
is for seven years. So it would appear the government seeks to dispose
of large tracts of land in a short time, to make them quickly available
for investors. This again will accelerate the dispossession of
smallholders.
Drastic changes
The revised National Physical Plan 2050, prepared by the National
Physical Planning Department of the Megapolis and Western Development
ministry, is yet to be made public, although it is said to be
‘completed.’ The NPP seeks to concentrate economic activity in four
‘Economic Corridors’ of which the Colombo–Trincomalee corridor will be
its showpiece. Attracting private investment is a key objective.
According to a draft summary seen by this writer, the NPP’s medium term
goals include the ‘transformation of the economy from conventional
industries to high tech and innovation based Industries,’ increased
international trade and increased ‘attraction for investment and trade.’
The NPP expects to transform land use patterns and bring about
movements of population, to achieve a ‘reversal of the rural-urban
population ratio’ in 30 years. This gives a clue to the drastic nature
of envisaged changes. The NPP however will not be required to be passed
in parliament. According to NPP Director General Dr Jagath Munasinghe
"it is a policy document, not a Bill" and so it only needs to be
gazetted.
It has been observed that the districts covered in the NPP more or less
overlap with those coming under the MCC. From the little available
information it would appear the goals of the two projects broadly
dovetail. It is unlikely that this is coincidental, they both come
within the economic thrust of the UNP government that seeks to put the
country’s land and other resources at the service of foreign capital.
Whatever the merits of these projects, it is unconscionable that plans
to bring about such far-reaching social and economic change, are not
made available for public debate. The secrecy surrounding them shows
that the government knows they will be unpopular. The overarching
question is. whether the present government is more interested in
pleasing its Western backers, than the constituencies in Sri Lanka,
millions of voters, to whom it is answerable.

