A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)![](https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/_wDzb26_rsiU/SccVZH0VZ1I/AAAAAAAAAFU/zlOM6bDTxjo/s200/Slide6.JPG)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, January 8, 2015
Sri Lanka on tenterhooks as election nears
Divided nation prepares to choose a president amid ruling party defections, war animosity, and corruption allegations.
Sri Lanka's presidential candidate Mithripala Sirisena addresses the nation at his party's office [Reuters]
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Colombo, Sri Lanka - It
is being described as one of the most closely fought and significant
presidential elections in the past two decades as Sri Lankans get set to
vote amid a backdrop of rising campaign violence.
Thursday's
election is significant because it's the first national poll since a
2010 constitutional amendment made by President Mahinda Rajapaksa that
removed term limits on the presidency, thereby allowing him to seek an unprecedented third term in office.
Rajapaksa,
69, announced a snap election on November 19, two years ahead of
schedule. At the time, many people in the South Asian nation expected
Rajapaksa to secure a comfortable victory over what was seen as a
disorganised and divided opposition.
But
24 hours after the election announcement, a series of defections from
the ruling United People's Freedom Alliance took place, raising
questions about Rajapaksa's rule - and his ability to sustain it.
The
opposition - led by the United National Party - announced it had
convinced Rajapaksa's then-health minister Maithripala Sirisena to
abandon the president and contest the vote as his main opponent.
Sirisena, 63, immediately accused Rajapaksa of
leading the island nation into "dictatorship" and engaging in nepotism
by awarding his family members prominent positions inside government.
Rajapaksa's supporters responded by calling him a "traitor".
The surprise move by the opposition to field Sirisenasuddenly threw the doors wide open in a contest that had earlier appeared to be all but won by the incumbent.
Oversteps
Rajapaksa
was first elected in 2005 and overwhelmingly won another six-year term
in 2010, a year after government forces crushed a decades-long
insurgency by defeating ethnic Tamil rebels in a bloody months-long
military operation.
While
the resounding defeat of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE)
boosted Rajapaksa's image among the ethnic Sinhalese majority, an
estimated 40,000 minority Tamil civilians were killed in the controversial final stage of the war.
Tamils - who predominantly live in the north and east and represent about 11 percent of Sri Lanka's nearly 22 million people - are widely expected to support Sirisena at the polls.
Constitutional
amendments that bestowed far-reaching powers upon the president led to a
serious reduction in support from members of Rajapaksa's government
with 26 members, including Sirisena, defecting and erasing a two-thirds
majority in the 225-seat parliament.
Rajapaksa, meanwhile, has been able to recruit only two members of parliament from the opposition ranks.
The
opposition has accused Rajapaksa of sidelining officials and instead
using relatives to run the country. On a platform of "anti-family rule",
it has accused the president and his family of corruption and abuse of
power.
Rajapaksa,
however, has justified running for a third term because he helped end
the civil war in 2009, which opened the door for significant development
in the country. Some analysts say it is the president'sclose relationship with China that
has seen the country's economy enjoy significant economic growth
through infrastructure projects, including the construction of a
multi-billion dollar port.
Sri
Lanka's GDP has grown from about 2.0 percent at the war's end to a high
of 7.7 percent in the third-quarter of 2014. Many in the business
sector here have put this success down to ending the decades-old
conflict and encouraging foreign investment in the country.
Economic realities
However,
despite steady economic growth, the country continues to suffer rising
inflation that has hit ordinary Sri Lankans hard.
"While
the government boasts of economic prosperity, the average person in the
country is forced to pay three times the normal amount for essential
goods," Ranawaka said. "This government continues to maintain high
prices due to corruption."
Susil Premajayantha, minister of the environment and renewable energy, denied Ranawaka's accusations.
"The
reduction of the global petrol prices only came in to effect in the
past few months. Once President Mahinda Rajapaksa is re-elected, we can
re-negotiate and reduce the price of fuel," Premajayantha said.
The
continued rise in the cost of living, and the president's inability to
reduce it over the past few years, has resulted in Rajapaksa's declining
popularity that soared following the end of the civil war.
The opposition accused him, however, of attempting to relive his glory days.
"The
president's propaganda machine is in overdrive with images and footage
from the war. He hopes to play on a fear factor of the LTTE [Tamil
Tigers], rather than take the country forward," opposition MP Harsha de
Silva told Al Jazeera. "It has been five years and he still continues to
use the war as a popularity tool."
Angry Tamil voters
Memories of the war will certainly count against Rajapaksa when it comes to the Tamil vote. The United Nations has continually pushed for an investigation into the conduct of the Sinhalese-dominated government during the final stages of the bloody conflict.
Rajapaksa's continued denial to do so has resulted in Tamils widely opposing him.
Mathiaparanan
Sumanthiran, a member of the Tamil National Alliance party, told Al
Jazeera it is the president's continued prevention of accountability for
the large-scale death and destruction that has cost Rajapaksa among
Tamil voters.
"The president refuses to implement the recommendations his
own Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission has made. If he does,
this would assist in solving the national issues faced by the Tamil
people," Sumanthiran said.
While
election campaigning, Rajapaksa has pledged to promote reconciliation
in the country, a promise that many say will fall on deaf ears in the
Tamil-dominated north.
Religious tension
Another factor weighing on the election is Rajapaksa's handling of recent religious violence in the country's south after attacks on the Muslim community, which so far have gone unpunished.
The hard-line Sinhala Buddhist group Bodu Bala Sena,
which has been accused of inciting religious hatred, has joined
Rajapaksa's supporting ranks. That move led to Muslim parties that had
been part of the ruling coalition leaving the government and pledging support for the opposition.
As the election approaches, violence and voter intimidation continue with attacks on opposition supporters. Gunfire
from unidentified assailants wounded three opposition workers preparing
a stage for a Sirisena campaign speech on Monday in southern Kahawatte town, about 130 kilometres from the capital, Colombo.
Only
one thing is certain ahead of Thursday's vote - an electoral contest
that once promised to be a one-sided affair is now too close to call.
Follow Dinouk Colombage on Twitter: @dinouk_c
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