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, January 29, 2017
Unity-government in disarray, no thanks to divided opposition
by Rajan Philips-January 29, 2017, 12:03 pm

The government is facing several other questions as well and many more
will arise as the country seamlessly slides into fighting floods while
it is still weathering the ill effects of a damning drought. The
government’s response to the worst drought in decades has been lukewarm
at best, and despite years of experience with recurrent floods the
country has no infrastructure for preventing or minimizing flood
disruptions and damages. The drought took a toll on rice production last
year not only in Sri Lanka but also in the major rice exporting
countries. A direct consequence is the devastation of farming families
who will be left with neither income nor food. Most of last year, they
didn’t have even water. Those active in the food and agriculture sectors
have been warning the government of impending shortage of rice and
destitution of farmers, but the government has pro-actively done nothing
except for a reported recent meeting the President belatedly had with
relevant Ministers and their Secretaries.
The Prime Minister has no time for agriculture. When he is not flying he
is scouring for land for building factories, apparently by their
thousands. Rice cultivation has no place in the new economy that the
UNP-side of the government is busy unrolling. It is all about building
Singapore-style urban showpieces in Colombo, sowing Chinese factories on
every available piece of land elsewhere, and reaping Indian houses
including steel houses earmarked for, of all places, Jaffna. When the
rice shortage hits importers and hoarders will be given the green light
to step forward and prosper. Just like it was done with electricity:
talk solar, stop coal and do nothing for years. Then turn to your
buddies to turn on their private generators. Every one gains except the
consumers.
No fault of Mathri-Ranil!
To say that the government is in disarray is not an exaggeration. As JVP
leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake has said the Sirisena-Wickremesinghe
government has broken all records in clocking the shortest time to
become unpopular after winning not one but two elections within eight
months in 2015. Once a forceful partner in the ‘Common Opposition’, the
JVP is now prepared to topple the yahapalanaya government before 2020.
The last straw for the JVP is the government’s pussyfooting over
Rajapaksa-regime corruption and pigheadedness about its own corruption.
"This is not an issue with Maithri or Ranil," Mr. Dissanayake insisted,
but the manifestation of broader systemic problems, social as well as
political. People are more impatient than before and are also
unforgiving about corruption in government. The JVP leader warned that
if the government fails to act against corruption, the people will
overthrow the government in 2020. But the JVP would do it sooner if an
opportunity were to arise.
Also dismayed with the government, for different reasons, is the Tamil
National Alliance (TNA). Like the JVP, the TNA too will not blame
"Maithri or Ranil", but unlike the JVP the TNA has no motivation to
topple the government. Insofar as the TNA leaders are concerned, it is
fair to say that they have in Maithripala Sirisena and Ranil
Wickremesinghe the most accommodating and flexible Sri Lankan President
or Prime Minister ever in regard to addressing the ‘Tamil Question.’ And
unlike their predecessors, neither the President nor the Prime Minister
has repudiated their commitments. Only, they are avoiding talking about
it in public and might confess to being helpless in private. The TNA
leaders will have nothing to gain by issuing ultimatums to the
government, soft or hard. They are constrained, in my view, to maintain
friendly silence, hoping for a better turn of events soon or late.
While the TNA can constrain itself in Colombo, it cannot contain the
growing frustration among its people. Frustration leads to resentment
and there is no shortage of provocative agents to take advantage of
public resentment to further their own stupid schemes. The foiled
attempt at Mr. Sumanthiran’s life is a stark reminder of how quickly
matters got out of hand in Tamil politics after 1972. If there is any
lesson from that era for this government, it is that the government must
not keep running from its own initiatives and promises. Before the
Sumanthiran scare, the government was already jolted by the
fast-unto-death direct action launched in Vavuniya by 13 women looking
for official information about their family members who have not been
accounted for after the war. After four days of fasting by the women
taking neither food nor water, and their conditions deteriorating, the
government panicked and flew, last Thursday, the State Minister for
Defence, Ruwan Wijewardene, to meet with the fasting women in Vavuniya.
The Minister managed to persuade them to withdraw from the fast with the
written promise to arrange for "a proper response on February 9 through
a meeting between the families of the disappeared and a delegation of
government ministers and officials at the office of the Prime Minister"
in Colombo.
A day or two earlier, Chief Minister Wigneswaran had written a
remarkably restrained letter to President Sirisena precisely inviting
ministerial intervention. The letter included a polite reminder to the
President of the expectations among the Tamils when they voted massively
for his victory in January 2015. They were not expecting Eelam or
federalism, but simple measures to restore normalcy after the war, such
as the withdrawal of the PTA, amnesty for political prisoners, official
information on the status of missing persons, and giving back to
displaced people their land taken away by the army. While there have
been improvements after 2015, they have not been nearly enough to match
the scale on which humanitarian improvements need to be undertaken. As
the Chief Minister’s letter noted: "The Office of Missing Persons is
presently only in name. It has no teeth."
All of this could have been easily avoided if the government, after the
January and August 2015 elections, picked its priorities and focussed on
them purposefully. Given their experience in politics and in
government, President Sirisena and Prime Minister Wickremesinghe could
have jointly run a tight administration avoiding corruption and
achieving results. Instead, they have ended up imitating many of the
Rajapaksa initiatives and examples with new corruption and added chaos.
They cannot solve the problem of Missing Persons in a single meeting on
February 9. The least the government can do is for the President and the
Prime Minister to give a joint assurance about definitive next steps
and to keep taking each step one after the other. There is no other way.
Before February 9, the government has a busy week ahead as it prepares
to draw a bigger crowd for the Independence Day celebrations next
Saturday to answer the Joint Opposition’s Nugegoda rally on Friday.
There will be plenty written in today’s papers comparing Friday’s rally
size to that of the 2015 (February 17) rally. Sri Lankan pundits are not
alone in being preoccupied with crowd sizes. It is now a presidential
obsession in the US, in the wake of the largest turnout of women in
Washington and across the world the day after President Trump’s
inauguration. The message was loud and clear: Women’s rights are human
rights, human rights are women’s rights, and all rights do matter. Sri
Lanka should be no exception.