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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, January 1, 2016
Factional Infighting in Both North and South Should not Undermine Opportunity For Political Solution
(Media release by National Peace Council)
The government has declared its intention of prioritizing constitutional
reform in the New Year. Parliament is to be converted into a
Constituent Assembly (parliamentary committee) that will deliberate on
issues pertaining to a new constitution. The government has also
appointed a 24 member committee drawn from political and civil society
leaders to obtain the views of the people and feed them back to the
parliamentary committee. The promise to amend the constitution was made
by government leaders at both the last presidential and general
elections that took place in January and August of this year. Their
main pledge was to abolish the executive presidency and to change the
electoral system from one based on proportional representation to a
mixed system of proportional representation and first-past-the-post
voting in which parliamentary seats would be apportioned in proportion
to the total number of votes obtained by each of the political parties.
There is a general consensus in society about the need to reduce the
power of individuals elected to power and to ensure their
accountability.
However,
amongst the key issues that will need to be part of the constitutional
reform process is the issue of power sharing between the different
ethnic and religious communities who, together, constitute the Sri
Lankan nation. At the regional level for this has been the demand since
1956 when the Sinhala Only Act was passed to make Sinhala the only
national language.
Attempts to change or even soften this law at that time were not
supported by the Sinhala majority. So deprived having the Tamil language
as a national language the Tamil parties demanded devolution of power
to regions to be demarcated linguistically. This was opposed by the
ethnic majority assuming it would lead to a federal state. This has been
the most contentious issue in post-independent Sri Lanka. Efforts made
by previous leaders of government to tackle this problem from 1957
onwards floundered due to opposition from nationalist elements in the
polity who roused the fears of the general population that it would mean
the break up of the Sinhalese-dominated state.
The National Peace Council believes that the present period offers a
unique and unprecedented opportunity to politically resolve the ethnic
conflict once and for all, based on equity and justice. This is due to
the cohabitation of the two main political parties headed by President
Maithripala Sirisena and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe in the
National Unity Government. Historically these two parties have never
worked together to resolve the ethnic conflict.
Instead when one party sought to resolve the issue the other party took
to the strets against the proposed solution. It is noteworthy that
virtually all of the small political parties, whether ideology-based or
ethnic and religious-based, are broadly supportive of the National Unity
Government. We note that the government has gone to the extent of
postponing local government elections that might have been divisive in
the context of the constitutional reform process.
We urge that the opportunity that now exists should not be undermined by
factional infighting in both north and south. It appears that this
factional infighting is less about policy differences than about power
struggles for inclusion in the political process and control. We call
on members of all political parties to start discussions within their
parties and collectively towards a vision of Sri Lanka as a prosperous
and united nation where the rights of all are safeguarded.