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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, February 2, 2013
Importance Of International Solidarity In National Struggle For Democracy
It
has come from the horse’s mouth. Sri Lanka needs a “strategy for democratic
resistance.” However, there can be several or multiple strategies for change and
not one, at least at the beginning. Many have already aired their views and
Dr Dayan
Jayatilleka’s recent article is one among the others or a rejoinder
to others. What would finally work is a matter for the history to decide. Of
course history is not the fate of the providence, but a product of human efforts
and forces. What needs to be avoided as much as possible is the clash of forces
going in the same direction of reinstating democracy in the country while a
healthy debate on theoretical and practical issues might be useful. Fierce
debates are rather old fashioned and may be counterproductive.
Sarath
Fonseka and the DNF made a premature effort at the last elections and
got badly defeated. Except for his bitter personal experience, it was not clear
in what direction that the Rajapaksa
regime would proceed after the end of the war or in the second term.
People wanted to give them a chance. It was not possible for those who supported
the government’s effort in defeating the LTTE for
good and valid reason to opposeRajapaksa at
that juncture. Even if the trends were correctly anticipated, a credible and
effective opposition was practically premature. But after three years since
then, defeating the LTTE is not the only criterion in determining the future of
the country. Both democracy and economic development are decisive criteria. The
general masses however might not grasp this reality instantly unless a credible
opposition is launched.
Present
Status
Apart
from the relative stability that is created after the defeat of the LTTE, there
may be few marginal benefits that the general public accrued through the
so-called economic development of the government. But the main benefits, by any
assessment, are with the ruling political elite, politically related business
classes and the new (corrupt) bureaucrats serving as intermediaries between
business, politics and international operations. These are not difficult to see
irrespective of the government propaganda but must be properly exposed by the
opposition. On the spatial plane, these contrasts are more dramatic and
indefensible affecting the majority of the people living in rural and minority
areas. Sri Lanka is sure to face a ‘revolution of rising expectations’ soon on
the economic front given the demonstration effect.
The
political balance sheet so far is more pathetic than the economic balance sheet
and the ‘authoritarian trend’ of the government perhaps is also in preparation
for future economic fallout. The main thrust is related however to the way the
war was waged against the LTTE. Unless and until this matter is properly
addressed, the democratic forces in the country would not be able to unite the
masses across the ethnic divide, thus not be a proper democratic force.
The
first major deviation of the government after the war from a possible democratic
and reconciliation path in my opinion was on the accountability issue. I say my
opinion, to admit that there can be credible other opinions. Accountability
issue of a war situation in any country is manifestly an international concern.
It is a latent but potent force in reconciliation in a domestic context. The
President first conceded to address the issue with the UN Secretary General and
then backtracked on it.
Accountability
issues are raised usually in different forms and on different interests. The
proposed EU resolution before the Human Rights
Council in 2009 went beyond the issues of legitimate accountability
issues to denounce the war. The defeat of that resolution was necessary,
skilfully handled by the then Ambassador Jayatilleka , on the basis of giving
certain guarantees and assurances on reconciliation. But the victory over the
resolution was taken as an excuse for neglecting accountability and
reconciliation by the government for obvious reasons. The rest is history and
towards blatant authoritarianism. Completely unnecessary or rather vindictive
persecution of Sarath Fonseka, the 18th Amendment and
the recent Impeachment against the Chief
Justice are some of the landmarks in this process, in addition to the
continuous violations of human rights of journalists, political activists,
students and the minorities – religious and ethnic.
National
and International
The
struggle for democracy in any country is primarily a national struggle but not
necessarily a nationalist one. Democracy is not in essence a national phenomenon
but an international one. TheJanasammathawadaya that Mahinda
Chinthana talks about is not democracy but authoritarianism on the
basis of popular sanction. Sri Lanka has already seen the debacle of fighting
for democracy on the basis of nationalism in the 1956 revolution. Nationalism
however defined is very easy to get degenerated into ethno-nationalism. This
does not mean at all that a democratic struggle should be an anti-nationalist or
an anti-nationalism movement. There are obvious national interests of the
country that needs to be safeguarded and even promoted. Striking a balance
between the pressures from the West and the East is a necessary perspective in
an enlightened foreign policy for a country like Sri Lanka. There is a good
measure of rational patriotism that is required for the national development.
But patriotism is not a monopoly of the rulers or a blind obedience by the
people for the ruling classes.
The
power balance of the world has so much changed today, particularly in the
economic sphere; Sri Lanka does not need to worry much about Western
imperialism. Sri Lanka along with India has a strong tradition of seeking the
popular support of the people in those countries, the Labour in particular,
against any undue pressure from the British or the Western governments. As
history has shown, not only the support of the people but also the governments
might be necessary in certain measure in struggling against tyrannical movements
or rulers in countries where democracy and human rights are at stake. In any
event, a distinction needs to be made between what is inimical to the interests
of the country and what is supportive of developing democracy in the country. If
this understanding is met then any democracy movement in a country could easily
work with international democratic forces in promoting democracy and human
rights in the particular country. Sri Lanka has come to this stage.
It
is obvious that international pressure is not a substitute for a hard national
struggle for democracy. Those who wait for the ‘international community’ to sort
out matters in the national context in order that they could have a cakewalk for
power are terribly mistaken. What the international community could do varies
and also is limited however it might be decisive in certain junctures. But this
is not a reason to underestimate the importance of the international factor in
democratic development. In a ‘classical model’ of human rights or democracy
development in a country, as Richard P. Claude used to argue, the national
mobilization is the sole and primary force. But even in the
18th century, the circulation of ideas and the ‘international
environment’ propelled the democratic revolutions in America and France
contiguously and a thinker like Thomas Paine used to influence both
countries.
The
relative weight of the international factor in democratic development, in a
‘neo-classical model,’ is more decisive today, after the Second World War, the
formation of the UN and various other multilateral organizations such as the
Commonwealth Association. There are conventions and international laws governing
them. No state can exist without the attendant obligations of these realities or
organizations. No Chinese Wall can circumvent these pressures. Both the
government and the opposition should grasp these realities and act accordingly
without being the proverbial ostrich. The revolution in IT has enhanced these
processes to a great extent that no one can hide its head today in the national
sand. It is in a context of China moving towards democracy, grudgingly though,
Sri Lanka tries to emulate the past regimes of China or more correctly North
Korea. It is possible that Mahinda Rajapaksa received his formative political
education from Kim Il-sung rather than Mao Zedong in early seventies when his
books were translated into Sinhala.
Inter-linkages
There
are examples from our own region that signify the importance of international
pressure or factor in transforming countries into democratic or semi-democratic
pathways. Apart from the UN pressure, the ASEAN played a decisive role in
releasing Cambodia from the remaining grip of Pol Pot after Vietnam decided to
withdraw irrespective of the previous Chinese support for the Khmer Rouge. By
this time even China had dropped its support for Pol Pot. Apart from the US,
ASEAN again was a decisive factor in changing the political landscape of Myanmar
or Burma, however you call it, in recent times again irrespective of the Chinese
backing for the military or Tatmadaw. Recent Sri Lanka itself is an example and
shows the interplay between national and international factors in forging a
democratic opposition to the autocratic Rajapaksa regime.
The
raising of the accountability issue by the UN Secretary General in May 2009
itself was an eye opener for many in the country for possible civilian
atrocities during the war against terrorism. This must have encouraged the
former Army Commander to defect among other factors and also to reveal the
so-called ‘white flag incident’ although his political backers pressured him to
withdraw some of the statements later. It is undoubtedly the impending
appointment of an UN expert panel (Darusman Committee) that prompted the
government to appoint its own LLRC.
Its report again was the sustenance for the US to bring a resolution against Sri
Lanka with the support of India at the last Human Rights Council session in
March 2012. It should be noted that the US and India are the two main countries
who backed the government in defeating terrorism. It is my contention that if
not for that UNHRC resolution, the Chief Justice or the judiciary would not have
got the necessary courage to assert the previously lost independence of the
judiciary against the Rajapaksa regime that led to the impeachment confrontation
thereafter. There was a considerable internal weakening of the regime after the
resolution. There is no need to say that the lawyers’ movement against the
impeachment, however vacillating it was, was encouraged by the international
protest against the impeachment move.
Domestic
Dynamics
There
have been of course several domestic dynamics unrelated to the international
pressure or dynamics. These have been crucially important. The defection
of Karu
Jayasuriya even before the end of the war revealed some of the
vindictive and authoritarian tendencies within the regime. Hemakumara
Nanayakkara also defected for the same or related reasons thereafter. During the
local government and provincial council elections, internal rifts became
aggravated and killer instincts of the regime became abundantly exposed with the
murder of Bharatha
Lakshman in Colombo. Kelaniya was a major flash point which has
erupted again and again with several killings. These are in addition to the
continuous human rights violations, abductions and disappearances both in the
North and the South. There have been three key defections from the regime which
might indicate the future directions. First was the former Army Commander,
Sarath Fonseka. Second was the Chief Justice, Dr Shirani Bandaranayake. Third is
the former Ambassador, Dr Dayan Jayatilleka. All these have considerable
ramifications.
There
have been critical policy issues related to education that led to major trade
union action by the university academics led by FUTA last
year. Some of the decisions of the Supreme Court that angered the government
also related to these policy matters. The so-called ethnic reconciliation was a
non-starter without the government being able to credibly persuade the TNA to
participate in the PSC. The nature of a PSC under the present regime was
completely exposed during the impeachment saga. There are emerging but slow
domestic and national dynamics against the regime after the
18th Amendment although there was no visible opposition to this
outrage from any credible quarter at that time. Only the CP and the LSSP have
accepted their decision to support the amendment as a mistake yet with dissent.
It is a positive sign that the CP, the LSSP and the LP (Liberal Party) did not
vote with the government on the impeachment motion. But they didn’t vote against
the impeachment either. They are still lingering around the government for some
reason and a major breakthrough for democratic resistance could be achieved only
when they decisively break from the government and align with other oppositional
forces.
Some
Conclusions
There
are of course several other issues in terms of strategy or manifesto. Not only
the form but also the content of a ‘democratic manifesto’ is important. It would
largely depend on how we understand the ‘democratic challenge of the country’ or
the ‘nature of the present regime.’ Even if we agree on the importance of
‘necessary international solidarity’ for a democratic transformation then there
would be the unanswered issue of how to counter the anti-international or
anti-Western mobilizations which would be the modus operandi of anti-democratic
and authoritarian forces based on archaic patriotism and parochial
nationalism.
It
is in the above context that Sri Lanka (both the government and the human rights
lobby) would be going to Geneva in March to attend the UNHRC meeting. It is
announced that Minister Mahinda
Samarasingha would be leading the official delegation. He did the
same last time, but I have seen on You Tube that Mr Mohan
Pieris prompting him from his side even the actual pronunciation of
some words when he was delivering the final statement! Perhaps Pieris was the
chief mover and architect of all the HR defences of the government last time.
Now this time he is the Chief Justice of course. Therefore, Geneva would miss
him unless the Chief Justice himself is sent there to the Human Rights
Council.
Last
time the TNA was reluctant to go. I am not sure whether they would be going this
time. I am raising this issue because Geneva 2 is going to be a decisive
juncture for the future of democracy and human rights in Sri Lanka. It would
also be interesting to know whether Prof. Rajiva
Wijesingha and his Liberal Party or Council would be going to Geneva
or not with their side show of ‘human rights and reconciliation.’ They were
there last time. The next stage of polarization for democracy and (if I may say)
dictatorship in Sri Lanka would be after March. It is my hope that the CP, the
LSSP and the LP leave the government as soon as possible without confusing the
people as to what strategy that they should adopt in defeating the authoritarian
scheme of the government and upholding democracy and human rights.
If
we want to find a leader who could challenge Mahinda Rajapaksa whose credentials
are not tainted with any anti-patriotic deviations who would also be
unhesitatingly willing to abolish the presidential system, then there can be
few, but DEW
Gunasekera might be the best choice not as a communist party or left
candidate but a common candidate. There is also the historic precedent, the
communist party during the war aligning with the Ceylon National Congress or the
embryonic UNP. Although he has been a ‘communist,’ he has been one of the most
liberal persons in politics in my personal view. Why not, even the democracy
movement against the Rajapaksa autocracy might even get the China support in
addition to the US sympathy!