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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, May 29, 2016
Sampur Incident and Tensions in Devolution
by Laksiri Fernando

The CM has apparently regretted his behaviour according to the SLMC
leader, Rauff Hakeem (The Island, 26 May 2016), but in any decent
democracy this is a matter that any responsible politician or political
officeholder should have resigned on. Unfortunately we don’t have that
responsible tradition in Sri Lanka. In addition to any ‘disciplinary’
inquiry conducted on the matter by the President or the government, the
aggrieved naval officer has every right to claim damages from Nazeer
Ahamed, and he may be liable not as the CM but in his personal capacity.
Otherwise, the tax payers’ money would be wasted.
Bigger Issues
Having said that, there are two other issues more profound in my opinion
than what appears to be the case. First is about the way the CM has
apparently been treated at the said event without being invited to the
stage by the compere. It is said that it was the Governor who gestured
him to come on board and when he was approaching the stage he was
stopped by the naval officer probably to give way for the small
children. Could it be a mistake or misunderstanding? I really doubt. As
The Island editorial (26 May 2016) rightly said, while condemning the
behaviour of the CM, “The CM should be treated with due respect and if any official has been remiss in his duties action is called for against him.”
It is said that the event was organized by the Navy to declare open a
computer unit and a science lab at the Sampur Mahavidyalayam to the
benefit of the students. This is commendable. On the Navy initiative,
they were the donations of the David Pieris Group and the incident has
happened when some school bags were being distributed to the students on
the stage. As the organizers of the event, it may be the prerogative of
the Navy to choose the chief guest for the event although they could
have invited both the Governor and the CM as chief guests or one as the
guest of honour.
Sampur Mahavidyalayam to the best of my knowledge is a provincial school
and not a national one, and the CM of the province and his
administration have every right to participate and look into the matters
of that school or any school under their purview. At least the CM
should have been treated at the event with respect. If the present CM is
an assertive one unlike the past CMs, it is not a negative attribute
per se but rather a positive one except that the assertiveness should
have been exercised with sophistication which is a rare commodity among
many politicians.
It is not long time ago (only in March) that the Navy handed over 177
acres of land in the area to the original owners, on which the Sampur
Mahavidyalayam was also situated, under President Sirisena’s directives.
For that ceremony, the present CM also has participated. Therefore, the
CM cannot be an unknown person to the Navy or the Captain. Even last
year, 60 acres were released to the original owners on the initiative of
the President.
CM Nazeer at the event in March (blue tie)
Key Questions
Second issue is the following. According to the Navy News (website), the
Sri Lanka Tamil Teachers’ Union has also praised the handing over of
the ‘Maha Vidyalaya,’ the building renovated and furniture repaired, to
the school management. This is again commendable.
However, who is in charge of the school management now? The provincial council, the central government or still the Navy?
These seem to be the crust of the problem where the CM and the
Provincial Council were side-lined or neglected by the Navy or the
Governor.
It is understandable in a way that the Navy or any section of the armed
forces would prefer the Central Government to the Provincial Council/s
or a Governor to a CM. There is no doubt that when the Governor is
there, he should get priority. But this does not mean that the CM should
be side-lined.
In addition, the Navy or the Army should come to terms with the devolved
government structures in the provinces particularly in the North and
the East where a heavy presence of them is required for security
reasons. The relations should be most amicable on both sides. If these
matters are not clear to the Navy or the Army, there should be some
efforts to make them clear or clearer.
Some Experiences
I happened to visit the Eastern Provincial Council and Trincomalee in
connection with an evaluation project of the Finance Commission and the
World Bank in December 2010. That time the CM was Sivanesathurai
Santhirakanthan. In addition to what we were investigating, it was my
observation that the PC was under resourced particularly in terms of
competent officers, knowhow and equipment/facilities except for
buildings. Meagre capital and project funding was another issue. The
tasks of resurrecting education and schools were enormous. I understand
that for 2016, there is an increased capital fund allocation but this is
still 1/4 of the recurrent expenditure. The recurrent expenditure
mainly means for salaries and day to day expenses.
Displacement, poverty and housing were major problems affecting the
people in the province. It is true that the contribution of the province
to the national GDP still lingers around 7 percent as a consequence of
the destructive separatist war. But the Eastern Province is
traditionally called the country’s ‘Rice Bowl.’ There are many other
areas through which the province could contribute to the national
economy. But the most important pre-condition before all these is
people’s confidence in the administration where their elected
representatives are respected and their concerns are taken into proper
consideration. This is the value of devolution and provincial councils
closer to the people whatever the intermittent weaknesses.
Most important factor in this province is the ethnically mixed character
of the population with almost an equal balance between the three major
communities of the Tamils, the Muslims and the Sinhalese. In that sense,
this province could be a laboratory of ethnic reconciliation if handled
properly and with understanding. Otherwise it would be a future hell.
This is where the Governor has a major neutral and empathetic role to
play in addressing and appeasing various concerns and communities.
To make the long story short, during our visit to Trincomalee, there was
a dinner invitation to us from a key naval officer who was a
post-graduate student of one of my colleagues. On our way to the
cantonment and his official mess that evening, almost near the premises,
we were astonished by a small ‘shantytown’ with make shift structures
and lingering human souls even at that hour. We stopped and watched.
There were similar backyard areas even in the Trincomalee town which
disturbed me most but this was different in scale and atmosphere.
In contrast, our friend’s official mess or the surroundings were like
going from hell to heaven! We were facing the ocean, the sea breeze
stimulating our cheeks and earlobes while we were sipping beer. It was a
picturesque atmosphere minutely maintained by the navy soldiers. When
we went near the beach, there was an illuminated ship and a building on
to the further north. When we inquired, they were part of a navy-run
tourist resort.
I did inquire about the ‘shanty town’ from our friend. He frankly
admitted that those were the displaced people, mostly fisher folk,
because of the land taken for security purposes. He himself was troubled
as he himself admitted originating from a ‘poor family’ in the south.
Those people were barred from fishing at least in that area. ‘We all are
in a vicious cycle’ as he said.
Governor and the CM
There are obvious tensions behind the event between the Governor and the
CM, if not at a personal level, in an institutional context. This is
the biggest issue. However, what the CM has expressed so far relates to
the person in the Governor, not so much of the institution. He has told
the Daily Mirror (25 May 2016) that “I know the navy officers are
innocent. It was the governor who was at fault.” What he has said about
the ‘helicopter ride’ however is almost trivial although it was not at
all tactful or diplomatic on the part of the Governor. There are
delicate matters to be handled in the relationship between a Governor
and a CM, on both sides, in particularly in the East or the North.
But subsequently the CM has expressed broader grievances saying ‘the
Governor had shown a lack of respect for him, frequently undermining his
authority in the province and interfering in his work.’ This is where
some (controversial) constitutional arrangements between the Governor
and the CM seem to be at play. This is what I call the ‘tensions in
devolution.’ This is particularly true as the devolution of power is
instituted in Sri Lanka under a presidential system unlike in India.
Even in India, according David Butler, “Conflicts between State
Governors … (who are appointed by the central government) and Chief
Ministers are endemic.” This he says in a study on “Surrogate for the Sovereign: Constitutional Heads of State in the Commonwealth” (p. 314). There is a more substantial study by Madhusoodanan Nair titled “Governors and Chief Ministers in Indian States: Conflicts and Relations.”
There may be a different angle to the current conflict, what P. K. Balachandran has highlighted as ‘Muslims Politics’ (“Indian Express,”
27 May 2016). As he says, right or wrong, ‘the Muslims in Lanka have
traditionally striven to make use of state power for the benefit of
their community and this has led to confrontations with the
powers-that-be.’ He also states that the ‘Eastern Tamils charge that
Muslim-led administrations have not been giving them their due, and
praise the Governor Fernando for standing up for them.’
All may be misunderstandings, miscommunications or misconceptions
(hopefully). However, if there is any perception or doubt to that
effect, then that needs to be addressed in a more amicable manner.
Cooperative devolution, in its broadest sense of the term, might be the
solution. This means not only the Governors and the CMs cooperating, but
also the centre and the provinces as well as all political parties
representing the people in the provinces cooperating. A committee system
of government like introduced under the Donoughmore constitution (1931)
or what is largely practiced in Switzerland might be the best.