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, November 26, 2015
BJP confronts Gandhis as parliament gathers
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi (L) and Amit Shah, the president of
India's ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), wave to their supporters
during a campaign rally ahead of state assembly elections, at Ramlila
ground in New Delhi January 10, 2015.-REUTERS/ANINDITO MUKHERJEE
BY DOUGLAS BUSVINE AND RUPAM JAIN NAIR- Wed Nov 25, 2015
Prime Minister Narendra Modi has just suffered a bruising election
setback, yet his party appears in no mood to compromise with the main
political opposition to get stalled economic reforms back on track.
Instead, the nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has launched an
all-out offensive against the Congress party, in a potentially dangerous
game of brinkmanship that risks turning the next parliamentary session
into a prolonged slanging match.
"It's a political vendetta," said veteran newspaper editor and
commentator Shekhar Gupta of the BJP's attacks on Congress, and
specifically Rahul Gandhi, heir apparent to his mother and party leader
Sonia Gandhi.
Yet behind the sound and fury on TV news networks may lie a more
considered tactic, party strategists and political analysts said:
isolate Congress while quietly persuading regional parties to back a tax
reform bill that is the BJP's top priority.
"We are trying to convey to everyone that the government is willing to
tweak the bill and present it in a form that benefits all the states,"
said one senior BJP source, who did not want to be named.
Sanjay Kumar, director of the CSDS think-tank and a leading opinion
researcher, said: "They keep hitting the line that Congress is a
dynastic party. The idea is to split the opposition."
In May, 2014, Modi won India's strongest election mandate in three
decades, but his dominance in the Lok Sabha is neutralised by the Rajya
Sabha where the BJP is in the minority.
And, while he has pushed through some reforms by executive order, that
solution is temporary and likely to put off foreign companies who want
stable legal frameworks in place before investing in Asia's
third-largest economy.
One of the biggest changes Modi envisages to make the economy run more
smoothly, a unified tax system, requires altering the constitution.
Securing that amendment in the winter session of parliament that starts
on Thursday would be vital to implementing tax reform in 2016, as Modi
has repeatedly assured global investors he would.
APPEARANCE OF STRENGTH
The BJP's aggression may serve as cover for backroom deals that
recognise the realities created by its defeat this month in Bihar,
Modi's biggest setback as prime minister.
That election result has given a sense of empowerment to regional
leaders like Nitish Kumar, chief minister of Bihar, who teamed up with
Lalu Yadav to rebuff Modi's challenge in the state of more than 100
million people.
So, while the BJP strategist spoke of exposing rampant corruption during
the decade of Congress rule that ended in May 2014, he saw no
contradiction with the idea that "Modi may consider having a cup of tea
with Sonia Gandhi".
The two party leaders have not held face-to-face talks in this parliament since it was elected.
Congress, part of the victorious Bihar alliance, sees no sign that the government wants to engage in sincere dialogue.
Instead it has chided Modi for going on a series of foreign trips since the Bihar landslide and neglecting his work at home.
"Where is a conciliatory attitude?" asked Anand Sharma, a senior Congress leader and interlocutor on the key tax reforms.
"You have a prime minister who has a confrontational mindset, who is
arrogant. He humiliates the opposition, day in and day out," Sharma told
ET Now, a financial news channel.
That is despite some senior aides recommending to Modi that he engages
the opposition more actively, while a handful of top BJP figures have
openly questioned his leadership.
GST OR NOT GST
Perhaps more worrying for businesses waiting with increasing frustration
for the new national goods and services tax (GST), there appears to be a
lack of consensus on how it would work in practice.
The GST would create a single market in India for the first time since
independence in 1947 and, the government estimates, boost the economy by
up to two percentage points.
But there is as yet no agreement on what rate the tax should be levied
at; three separate committees have yet to make their final proposals.
And, at a meeting of central and state officials last week, there was no
agreement on the threshold at which the tax should apply to small
businesses. Finance Minister Arun Jaitley skipped that discussion to
attend a film festival.
Some officials express doubts over the Modi government's strategy for
securing the passage of the GST amendment, saying it could miss its
self-imposed deadline.
"You have to go more than half the way to convince the Congress," said a
senior government official involved in the policy process. "You have to
be more than generous. But the BJP is still behaving as if it was in
the opposition."
(Additional reporting by Manoj Kumar; Writing by Douglas Busvine; Editing by Mike Collett-White)