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
(Full Story)
Search This Blog
Back to 500BC.
==========================
Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, July 30, 2014
Seven Reasons Why The Single-Issue Common Candidate Project Will Not Work

By Shyamon Jayasinghe -July 29, 2014

Sri Lanka’s political evolution has clearly arrived at a crisis stage
that demands just one great imperative action by the people, namely the
abolition of the institution of Executive President. The current incumbent in office,Mahinda Rajapaksa (MR),
has done one salutary service and that is to demonstrate the serious
fault lines in the system by reducing it to the absurd drama that the JR Jayewardene-led
United National Party government script can turn into. Governance has
been reduced to shambles and the basic need for law and order and public
confidence in what the rulers do has been totally obliterated. The
character of the powerful executive created by the script has been able
to capture every democratic institution-the Cabinet, the Parliament, the
judicial system, the policing agency, the electing mechanism and the
media all of which must necessarily have some measure of independence
and teeth to checkmate any possible abuse of power. A fundamental
reality of the use of power is its potential for abuse if gone
unchecked. That is the nature of human behavior and it is doesn’t vary
with a JR, a Premadasa, a MR or even a possible Ranil Wickremesinghe. There are no angels in politics. Read More
A Common Strategy

Momentum is gathering. At the mention of an unlikely common candidate, in the form of Wigneswaran (Kusal Perera’s contribution),
mainstream English editorials were quick to respond with what can only
be called reactive political propaganda. One editorial was called,
‘President Rajapaksa, the undisputed choice’ [1], another editorial was called ‘Masses hail President Mahinda Rajapaksa’,[2] a opinion was called ‘President’s political acumen incomparable’,[3] and a feature was called ‘The President: quintessential common candidate.’ [4] The pro-government paper The Island, contained a feature called ‘MR can head next government democratically.’ [5] It
is clear therefore that for every statement made in the press about a
common candidate, the mainstream media will be abused into producing ten
more that support Rajapaksa.
But as is clear to all those who have
been following recent events in Sri Lanka Mahinda Rajapaksa will not
head the next government democratically. He has subordinated the
mainstream media and the judiciary, he has compromised the civil and
foreign service, he has induced fear and self-censorship into what he
calls a ‘peaceful’ democracy, and his regime has villanized, bullied and
intimidated all those brave souls who stood, who still stand, against
him. Those who yet believe that by siding with the President they have
more to gain than by standing against him, have only to look at the
Muslim community’s (SLMC sadly still tows this line) futile calls for
peace in the wake ofAluthgama.
None were arrested, the police stood by. Further, the North is
militarized, despite the wipe out of the LTTE, and upon the least hint
of dissent in the South, of declining Presidential popularity; will
there be hesitation at militarizing the rest of our nation?
