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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, January 8, 2015
Spectre of Violence Hangs Over Sri Lanka Polls
By Amantha Perera-Wednesday, January 7, 2015
COLOMBO, Jan 6 2015 (IPS) -
As 14.5 million Sri Lankans prepare to select their next leader, there
is growing fear that violence could mar the Jan. 8 elections, billed as
the closest electoral contest in the island’s history.
Election
monitors were worried that as incumbent President Mahinda Rajapaksa and
his rival Maithripala Sirisena wound down their campaigns on Jan. 5,
violence would scare off voters.
Keerthi Tennakoon, executive director of the national election
monitoring body Campaign for Free and Fair Elections (CaFFE), observed
that a worrying precedent has been set by police who have by and large
remained inactive against violations of election laws, especially those
perpetrated by government supporters including at least two
parliamentarians.
“The police always appear to be late on the uptake when decisive action
by law enforcement can be the most effective deterrent [to violence],”
he told IPS.
He pointed to recent clashes in Kahawatta, a town in the central
Ratnapura District, as an example. In the early hours of the morning on
Jan. 5, while a group of opposition supporters were busy setting up the
stage for a rally by common opposition candidate Sirisena in the town’s
public grounds, a band of government supporters arrived in eight
vehicles and began attacking them.
Rather than running away, the opposition group retaliated. The situation
escalated, and shots were fired. Three opposition supporters were
injured, and one was rushed to the hospital in critical condition.
Enraged, the opposition supporters launched a retaliatory attack on
election offices set up by government followers. The main roads of the
town were blocked for at least four hours while the mayhem unfolded.
“Police [did not] take any action until two hours after the initial
incident,” CaFFE noted in an update. “They only reacted when the
[opposition] United National Party (UNP) supporters started attacking
[Deputy Minister Premalal] Jayasekara’s offices,” the monitoring body
added.
A couple of hours earlier, another group of government supporters loyal
to a deputy minister assaulted officials from the election
commissioner’s department in the eastern town of Trincomalee after they
had gone to investigate a digital screen in a public space relaying
election propaganda.
The attack took place despite the officials being provided security by nine policemen.
“The last 48 hours before the election are crucial; ordinary voters will
not want to risk being assaulted, or worse, if they feel that there is
such a risk,” Tennakoon said.
Voting for equality?
The elections have been billed as one of closet in recent history.
President Rajapaksa, who called elections two years before they were
due, is facing a stiff challenge in the form of his one-time health
minister Sirisena.
The run-up to the election has been dominated by personal attacks
against the top contenders, and has remained largely empty of policy
discussions.
Despite robust growth, Sri Lanka still faces vast economic disparities.
The richest 20 percent of the population enjoys half of all national
income, while the poorest 20 percent has access to just five percent of
the country’s wealth.
According to the latest Household Income Survey by
the government’s Department of Census and Statistics, the monthly
income of the poorest 20 percent of the population was 10, 245 rupees
(about 78 dollars), while the richest 20 percent earned a monthly income
of 121,368 rupees (about 933 dollars).
Furthermore, the war-ravaged North is mired in poverty despite the civil war ending in May 2009.
Anushka Wijesinha, an economist and policy advisor, observed that the
election manifestos are full of promises relating to public spending and
low on strategic policies that would ensure long-term stability.
“Unsurprisingly, both manifestos are populist and full of public
spending goodies – from welfare handouts to public sector salary hikes.
These will boost short-term consumption, and are unlikely to be
inflationary as recent inflation has been low. But the spending will
hurt the fiscal consolidation efforts of the past few years and public
finances may come under increased pressure,” he said.
The elections are likely to create economic uncertainty at least in the
short term and will in all likelihood be followed by parliamentary
elections. A day after elections were announced on Nov. 20, the Colombo
Stock Market recorded its worst slide in over 15 months, and has
remained sluggish ever since.
“Both [leading candidates] have a heavy emphasis on state-led
initiatives and taxpayer-funded programmes, which in the past have been
notoriously inefficient. Instead, focus of policies should be on making
it easier for private sector entrepreneurship and innovation to thrive,”
Wijesinha asserted.
The election has also seen a crumbling of the broad-based support
President Rajapaksa enjoyed in Sri Lanka’s parliament since the war’s
end.
Since late 2010, the President has had a two-thirds majority in the
225-member parliament. But a little over a month after elections were
called on Nov. 20, 26 members from the government’s camp have crossed
over to the opposition.
The Sirisena campaign has also gained the support of parties
representing Muslim and Tamil minorities, who together comprise some 15
percent of the country’s population of 21 million.
There has been some attention paid to issues of importance to the minorities, especially development in the Northern Province.
President Rajapaksa campaigned in the North twice and pledged to revitalise the economy and create jobs.
Still, the unemployment rate in the Northern Province is stubbornly high
at 5.2 percent, well above the national rate of 4.4 percent and the
third highest in the country.
The island’s highest unemployment rate of
7.9 percent was recorded in the Kilinochchi District last year,
according to government statistics. Poverty is also rampant in the
North, with four of the five districts that make up the province
registering rates higher than the national poverty rate of 6.7 percent.
But Muttukrishna Sarvananthan, who heads the Point Pedro Institute of
Development based in northern Jaffna, told IPS that if the Northern
economy is to regain momentum, more private investment needed to be
channeled in.
“I would argue that more private capital investment that could generate a
large number of [jobs] is the critical need, rather than foreign aid,”
he said, pointing out that policies needed to be formulated with
long-term stability in mind.
He also feels that decentralising power could help address political as
well as economic grievances. “Fiscal devolution to the provinces should
be undertaken immediately to provide the necessary financial resources
for the provinces (including the Eastern and Northern Provinces) to
operate independently and effectively without interference from the
national government,” he stated.
Power devolution has been a critical demand of minority Tamil groups
throughout the island’s post-independence history. In fact, the lack of
political power was a major catalyst for the growth of separatism and
the rise of the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE),
which waged a protracted battle for an independent ‘homeland’ for the
Tamil people from 1983 until 2009.
However, Ponnadurai Balasundarampillai, former Vice Chancellor of the
Jaffna University, told IPS that power devolution would be a tricky
subject for any administration.
“If it is a new president, he will have to take stock of the situation.
The incumbent presidency has already shown that it favours a more
centralised form of governance and administration,” he said.
Edited by Kanya D’Almeida