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, June 1, 2013
Sri Lanka at a critical crossroad: JHU and the 13th Amendment
Udaya Gammanpila, Senior Member of the Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU), courtesy FT.lk
Dr. Dayan Jayatilleka-30 May, 2013
The country stands at a crossroad. A parliamentary victory for the JHU
bill will complete the negative process which commenced with Sinhala
Only in 1956 and the distortion in 1972 of the laudable shift to a
Republic with mono-linguistic and mono-religious hegemony. If ’56 and
’72 were paving stones for the Tamil Eelam project, the passage of the
JHU bill to abolish the 13thamendment will complete the process of the legitimisation of secessionism.
A victory for the JHU will also cast a pall over the Commonwealth Heads
of Government Meeting and guarantee Sri Lanka’s defeat at the UN Human
Rights Council in March 2014. It will embarrass our allies Russia and
China and drive South Africa and much of the Non-Aligned Movement away
from us. It will irreversibly discredit and radically isolate the
country and the Sinhalese, regionally and internationally. In short, in
terms of Sri Lanka’s national interest, it will be the single most
self-destructive act this Parliament could perform.
Conversely, a defeat of the JHU bill will enable Sri Lanka to put the
stigma of majoritarian extremism behind it. Such a victory will be the
necessary complement of the military victory of May 18th 2009
and the diplomatic victory of May 27-28, 2009. Having militarily
defeated the secessionist minoritarian fascism of the LTTE, Sri Lanka
has a chance to defeat majoritarian extremism of the JHU-NFF-BBS
politically.
In the run-up to the parliamentary battle, is a dual debate in Sri
Lankan politics. The Sinhala polity is divided between on the one hand,
those who wish to abolish the 13th amendment
or delete land and police powers from it and on the other, those who
see fit to proceed, however reluctantly, with elections to the Northern
Provincial Council without attempting any drastic truncation of the
powers devolved upon it. The Tamil polity is divided between, on the one
hand, those who are keen to contest the Northern PC election and regard
the 13th amendment as worthy of defence, and on the other, those who regard the 13th amendment as hardly worth the paper it is written on.
What is missing in the picture is any drawing together and mutual
reinforcement between the moderates or pragmatists on both sides of the
ethnic divide who defend, however reluctantly, the provincial council
and the prospect of elections to it in September.
What is also missing is the engagement of the intelligentsia, especially
civil society intelligentsia, in either supporting the Sinhala
moderates in this important battle or in building a bridge between the
Sinhala and Tamil moderates in defence of the existing system of
devolution of power to the provinces.
The lack of a structured dialogue between the Sinhala and Tamil
parliamentary moderates across Government and Opposition lines, deprives
each other of vital support and partnership.
That, taken together with the absence of engagement in the ongoing
battle by the intelligentsia prevents the construction or reconstitution
of a zone of moderate opinion in polity and society.
The battle over the 13th amendment
provides an enormous opportunity in the battle of ideas, because the
arguments adduced in favour of abolition or gutting are symptomatic of
the most retrogressive notions within our society ranging from the
conservative to the militarist, the neoconservative to the racist.
Grappling with and combating these ideas provides a fine opportunity for
asserting the values of reason, democracy and pluralism.
Why then isn’t the battle being joined? The answer is political and
ideological sectarianism. There are important precedents. When SWRD
Bandaranaike was striving to defend the pact with Chelvanayakam, the
powerful, union-based left was absent from the fray. Had it thrown its
weight behind SWRD, the history of this country may have been
significantly different and better.
Contemporary sectarianism takes two forms. The first is that the 13th amendment
doesn’t deserve defending because the Tamil people need and deserve
something considerably beyond it. The second is that the hole is on
Mahinda Rajapaksa’s side of the boat, or that he is patently insincere
and merely playing ‘good cop’ to the far right’s ‘bad cop’.
The first argument is easily dispensed with. The TNA should contest the
election even if the council is gutted of most of its powers, just as
one should not abandon even the skeleton of a house that is one’s
patrimony simply because someone has made off with its roof.
The second argument, even if true is irrelevant. The opportunity for a
politico-ideological battle against neo-conservatism, racism and
ethno-religious fascism is far too important to be contingent upon a
reading of Mahinda Rajapaksa’s politics, let alone speculation about his
psyche.
The JHU’s counter-reform bill constitutes a classic ‘wedge issue’.
Resistance provides the only opportunity that has arisen in years, for
the SLFP parliamentary group to defeat the parties of the extremist
fringe which have ideologically dominated the UPFA administration and
distorted its discourse.
The battle to defeat the JHU-NFF-BBS attack on provincial devolution is
thus utterly decisive. Against such a backdrop, only an aficionado of
black humour would appreciate as I do, an invitation I received in the
mail for a conclave at which the best and the brightest of Sri Lanka’s
cosmopolitan intelligentsia are scheduled to discuss and debate such
exquisite irrelevancies as “Ethical Reconstruction: Primitive
Accumulation in the Apparel Sector?”, “Philanthrocapitalism,
Philanthronationalism: the ethics of corporate gifts in post-conflict
Sri Lanka” and “On Heterophobic and Heterophilic Casteism and
anti-Casteism”. Where the topic is relevant, such as “Diplomacy at the
UN Human Rights Council”, the sole designated presenter is Yolanda Foster of Amnesty International (which exclusivity is no fault of either Ms Foster or AI).
No Gramscian ‘organic intellectual’ stuff or words for a Modern Prince,
here. If these are the good guys and gals and this is their discourse,
no wonder the bad guys are way ahead: they have the advantage of being
organic and sounding ‘national popular’.
If the bad guys win, the centre of gravity of Sri Lankan politics and
society will shift still further to the right. It may even impact upon
the choice of candidacy. If the neo-con project with its totalitarian
notion of national security succeeds, the present dispensation will
appear in a roseate afterglow as an era of tolerance and democracy.