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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, June 2, 2015
Can Sirisena ride the storm in Sri Lanka, or will Rajapaksa claw back?
The incumbent president is no showman like his predecessor. But he has showed his mettle.
Sri
Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena, or Mi3, as scribes refer to him,
is continuing his perilous political journey of going ahead with the
constitutional reform process though it has overshot the 100-day
deadline he had set. His episodic journey, not unlike Tintin, Herge’s
immortal comic book hero, is moving from crisis to crisis. Most of his
political problems emanate from the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP),
which he is supposed to lead. It is behaving very much like Captain
Haddock, the tipsy master of Tintin’s ship.
Sirisena needs the support of his party to sail through the last two
eddies of the reform process - to get the Parliament to pass the 20th
Constitutional Amendment (20A) to reform the electoral system, and
constitute the Constitutional Council (CC) – before he can hold an
election for a new Parliament. The CC is supposed to be in place before
the election so that it can ensure that the structural reform process
culminates in a system wherein the accountability of the executive
president to the Parliament and greater powers to the prime minister are
enshrined in order to ensure highest standards of governance for a
corruption-free society.
This is the complex solution that seems to be taking shape after the
people voted out their Eelam War hero Mahinda Rajapaksa who was seeking a
third term as president. The people found that his autocratic regime
was run as his personal fief where fundamental freedoms were curbed and
law and order became a joke while allegations of corruption against his
family and siblings mounted.
The SLFP though in majority, has about 40-50 Rajapaksa-loyalists in the
Parliament who have been trying to pull the rug from under Sirisena's
feet at every step. Rajapaksa’s immense popularity in the rural southern
Sinhala region is their trump card though its charm seems to be fast
fading. The other is to play upon the traditional animosity of the SLFP
rank and file to their opponents in the United National Party (UNP), now
in power despite lacking a majority in the Parliament. The UNP leader
Ranil Wickremesinghe, the current prime minister, in league with
Sirisena and former president Chandrika Kumaratunga masterminded the
downfall of Rajapaksa that resulted in a win-win situation for both the
UNP and Sirisena, though not for the SLFP.
But Sirisena has a strong suit in the anti-corruption investigation he
is carrying out into the various cases of serial corruption across the
board during the Rajapaksa regime. If he gets enough evidence to
prosecute the Rajapaksas, many SLFP leaders would also be sunk like
bumboats going down when a large ship sinks. So the SLFP leaders are not
averse to break bread with Sirisena who seems to be determined to
unravel the evidence of corruption and sleaze against the Rajapaksas.
Basil and Gotabaya are being grilled by the anti-bribery commission. The
two Rajapaksa brothers who controlled development finance and defence
respectively are facing inquiries into their personal dealings and
official projects. The commission is planning to pose Mahinda
uncomfortable questions. India and the US are assisting the government
to look into secret Sri Lankan bank accounts in tax havens across the
globe. The US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the US Homeland
officials have visited Sri Lanka in this connection. A former Sri Lankan
ambassador to Russia and Ukraine has gone into hiding to escape
inquiries into his alleged gunrunning and secret deals made in arms
procurement.
It would be a dream solution for the SLFP and the United Peoples Freedom
Alliance (UPFA) leaders including the Rajapaksa-loyalists if they can
replace Prime Minister Wickremesinghe to grab power in the present
government. Then they can hold the election while in power and the 20A
and CC can be moulded to their comfort. So elements within the SLFP and
UPFA have brought a no-confidence motion against Wickremesinghe. It will
come up in the Parliament shortly; two other no-confidence motions -
against Finance Minister Karunanayake and Public Order Minister
Ameratunga - are also awaiting disposal. Thus Sirisena has a major
problem on his hands. He will require the SLFP's support to get the 20A
passed in the Parliament while retaining the collaboration of
Wickremesinghe to take the reform process forward.
The president’s internal conflict with the Rajapaksa-loyalists within
his party is continuing. Four ministers belonging to the SLFP
dramatically have resigned to affirm their allegiance to former
President Rajapaksa. The loyalists want the SLFP to nominate Rajapaksa
for prime minister. However, Sirisena has put his foot down. According
to the local media, this has infuriated Rajapaksa who had said he would
contest the election even if the SLFP did not nominate him. But
Rajapaksa, the street-smart kung-fu fighter of Sri Lankan politics,
knows doing is much more than talking.
In the midst of all this, can Sirisena come out smiling? Sirisena is no
showman like Rajapaksa. But he showed his mettle when he managed to get
the SLFP to support the passing of the 19th Amendment to the
Constitution to clip the powers and increase the accountability of the
executive president. But 20A is proving to be more difficult; there has
been no agreement within the ruling coalition as well as the opposition
on the draft of the 20A as yet. And things are no better on the forming
of CC.
But all the song and dance are part of the Sri Lankan political theatre,
where the popular hero comes out smiling in the end. In this respect,
Sri Lankan politicians are very much like their Indian kin. Sirisena’s
deadline has been passed sometime back; much water may still flow in
Kelani river before the Colombo leadership successfully manoeuvres
through the political tides. The next three weeks will tell which way
the tide is turning. Both Sirisena and Wickremesinghe must be keeping
their fingers crossed. And Rajapaksa is probably vigorously praying.