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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, August 31, 2016
Govt. fast tracks the superstructure reform p
rocess
by Jehan Perera-August 29, 2016
The
constitutional reform process moving forward rapidly, though without a
high level of publicity, indicates that the government leadership has a
businesslike approach to political reform. It is reported that four of
the six subcommittees who were given different areas of constitutional
reform to deal with have handed in their reports to the steering
committee on constitutional reform headed by Prime Minister Ranil
Wickremesinghe, which is responsible for producing the draft
constitution. The subcommittees are on Fundamental Rights, Judiciary,
Law and Order, Centre Periphery Relations, Public Finance and the Nature
of the State. The government appears to be making the best use of the
opportunity that has presented itself in the form of the government of
national unity, which gives it a 2/3 majority in Parliament, capable of
getting even controversial legislation through. Some of the
constitutional reforms will be controversial, especially those
provisions that relate to the ethnic conflict. The absence of fanfare
may be because the government prefers to get those through the
parliamentary hurdle first before taking them to the people.
The unique opportunity that has presented itself in terms of
constitutional reform is the existence of a government of national unity
that is formed by the partnership of the two major political parties,
the UNP and SLFP, which have hitherto always been on opposing sides of
the political divide. Never before have these two parties formed a
government together. One has always been in opposition to the other.
This has also meant that whenever a government led by one them tried to
come up with constitutional reforms or a political solution to the
ethnic conflict, the other party in opposition always tried to undermine
what the government was trying to do. Thus, both the 1972 and 1978
constitutions were essentially creations of one party, which those
governments bulldozed into law without the support of either the major
opposition party or the ethnic minority parties.
The inability of previous constitutional reform efforts to obtain a
bipartisan consensus, let alone a consensus that included the ethnic
minorities, was a fatal flaw that had catastrophic consequences to
inter-ethnic relations and eventually led to protracted civil war. On
this occasion, however, the government comprises both the UNP and SLFP
which has a large voter base that supports them politically. The
political support given to the government by the ethnic and religious
minorities at the last elections has also created a political obligation
on the part of the government to take their interests into account in
fashioning the constitutional reforms. Although the SLFP is for all
practical purposes divided, the official part of the SLFP is headed by
President Maithripala Sirisena, who is giving increasingly forceful
leadership to his more liberal faction of the SLFP.
NO FANFARE
However, the division in the SLFP means that a substantial number of MPs
and local level politicians are supporting the nationalist faction led
by former President Mahinda Rajapaksa. The existence of a nationalist
Sinhalese opposition to the government in the form of the Rajapaksa
faction of the SLFP appears to have pressed the government to steer
clear of engaging in mass politics regarding the legislative reforms at
this time. The government may be concerned that if the issues of
constitutional reform or the reconciliation mechanisms are canvassed too
strongly with the general population at this time, the nationalism that
exists within the country, and in all its communities in competing
ways, will lead to a rising tide of opposition from below which could
influence, or even include the members of the official SLFP. This may
explain why the government is proceeding with constitutional reform
without much fanfare or engaging in mass politics on it.
This same pattern can be seen in the case of the reconciliation process.
The government’s passage of the Office of Missing Persons Act (OMP)
through parliament was achieved at top speed that has now become a
problem as several legitimate amendments proposed by the opposition were
neither discussed nor voted upon. The government has itself admitted
that amendments proposed by the JVP, which is a party that itself caused
and suffered from disappearances in the era of its insurrection in the
late 1980s and early 1990s, were missed in the melee in parliament on
the day that the OMP bill was taken up for debate and rushed through to
ratification. The law regarding the OMP has also been criticized by
civil society groups for the reason that it has not been prepared in
consultation with victim groups and the civil society organizations that
have tried to sustain them.
In the case of both the constitutional reforms and the reconciliation
processes the government has shown it is interested in pursuing public
consultations but on a limited scale by civil society organizations
which have emerged as trusted intermediaries. The insights from this
process of consultation have been useful and are being incorporated in
the final drafts that the government is preparing for the new
constitution. But it does not take the message of what the government is
trying to do to the larger population. The government appears to be
keeping that for a later phase when it will have to actually champion
the reforms it is currently undertaking to win the hearts and minds of
the people. At the present time the general population remain more or
less as passive observers with regard to the two most important
political processes underway in the country without knowing too many of
the details as to what is happening in the country and why.
CIVIL SOCIETY
On the other hand, the political championing the reform process will
necessarily have to take place at the time a referendum on the
constitutional changes is called for by the Supreme Court. If there is
to be a political solution to the ethnic conflict, which is the long
unresolved and festering sore in the body politic, it is very likely
that it will entail a referendum as such a solution will include some
major changes to the constitution. At that point the government will
need to go all out to win the referendum. Losing a referendum on
constitutional change will have catastrophic consequences to the
government and to the polity itself on a scale that exceeds the Brexit
reversal in the UK. In the UK the prime minister felt obliged to resign
but the UK is under the same ruling party that is negotiating its exit
from the EU. However, if a referendum is lost in Sri Lanka, the
government’s mandate to govern will itself be eroded, rival nationalisms
will take the upper hand and ethnic relations will be sundered.
At the beginning of this year, the government provided civil society
with an opportunity to get involved in the constitutional reform process
by appointing a Public Representations Committee which was expected to
go round the country and gather the views of the people on the main
issues that require constitutional change. The PRC submitted its report
about three months ago in May to the Prime Minister who is chairing the
steering committee of the constitutional drafting process. The
government also gave civil society a similar opportunity to play an
intermediary role when it appointed the Consultation Task Force to
ascertain the views of the general public on the reconciliation
mechanisms it has proposed. This body has submitted an interim report on
the first of the reconciliation mechanisms, the Office of Missing
Persons, and is likely to submit the full report which includes the
other three reconciliation mechanisms soon.
In the interim period civil society organizations that focus on peace
building, human rights and good governance are seeking to influence the
drafting of the legislation relating to constitutional reform and the
reconciliation mechanisms in order to improve them. Civil society needs
to also engage in an awareness creation and education campaign with its
own networks of partners at the community and grassroots levels. Such a
course of action will ensure that a network of conscientised opinion
formers will be available in all parts of the country to give their
support to the government’s campaign when it has to face the referendum
on constitutional reform and implement the reconciliation mechanisms
that it has passed into law. The changes in the superstructure of laws
and institutions need to be accompanied by corresponding changes in the
attitudes of the general population whose thinking has been conditioned
by decades of nationalism, over centralization of power and focus on
national security-centered policies which were justified as necessary in
a time of war.