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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Back to 500BC.
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, January 1, 2017
Year 2017 for Sri Lanka ; Reading outside Astrology
There
naturally will be public protests against land grabbing and
environmental issues with large extent of land acquired, displacing
people. There will also be brewing unrest and protests within employed
labour too. Trade unions don’t seem to understand the crisis they’ll be
dragged into in 2017.
( January 1, 2017, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) Year
2017 dawns with all arrangements including a week for “reconciliation”
put in place to celebrate two years of Maithripala Sirisena presidency
and Wickramasinghe government, beginning from 09 January 2015. More
precisely, it would be 02 years celebrated for ousting the Rajapaksas.
UNP on its own was conceded as no strong contender to floor Rajapaksa.
Wickramasinghe thus agreed on Sirisena as the Common Candidate to defeat
Rajapaksa. Ousting Rajapaksa is all what the Colombo “civil society”
owners too wanted. They still cry proud not about them winning but about
them defeating Rajapaksa. Everything else is unimportant for them even
now.
Two Years Spent
From there, drawing up a brief profile of this government’s 02 year
performance begins with leaders of this government exposed as totally
incapable of reading the global economy, “post 2008”. They expected the
West to fund their projects as soon as they came to power. No funds
coming from West, they ended up at the doorsteps of China. They are also
far more untidy and corrupt than the Rajapaksas. Already they have 47
cabinet ministers plus another 45 Sate and Deputy ministers on tax payer
funds. In just 18 months they have at least 07 mega corruptions
including 02 bond scams as against 03 such mega deals during the first
36 months of Rajapaksa.
The government failed miserably in annual budgeting, 02 years for now.
The 2016 budget was cut, chopped, axed and sawed from day one. So is
this 2017 budget. It ran into public protests immediately. Different and
contradictory interpretations were given to proposals by the Finance
Minister himself. President promised protesting bus owners he would
amend budget proposals, least concerned about revenue and expensiture.
Having failed in smuggling a VAT without informing parliament, the
government blundered again in getting a proper bill in parliament to
levy the VAT. On finance and monetary policies and management, this
government is pretty amateurish. Within an year PM made 02 statements on
economic policy and strategy. Yet budgets don’t reflect any policy nor
does what President proposes and implements under him.
The most shameless betrayal by this government is on reconciliation and
in letting down Tamils and Muslims. The North and the East have not been
out of the “Rajapaksa grip”, 02 years after January 2015.
With all those messing up come efforts to bully and intimidate media.
The PM publicly threatened and coerced media many a times demanding
media “fall in line” with the government. These were no isolated threats
to democratic life. This government proposed amendments and bills that
are more draconian and tyrannical than what the Rajapaksas passed.
With them the year 2017
Two major issues that have been dragged along for two years post January
2015, await reasonable and justifiable answers at least in the year
2017. The IOSL Resolution 30/1 demands more serious attention than it
had in 2016. Tamil political demands and war related issues tinkered
around with no political will to address them needs no more delaying. On
the economic front, “national development” must go beyond urban
economic gains. Rural economy should be able to retain youth with space
for viable economic life. That is what’s necessary. But what’s in store
for the North-East Tamils and Muslims and for the majority rural Sinhala
poor in 2017, under this famously labelled “Yahapalanaya”?
The “reconciliation week” proposed by President Sirisena to mark his 02
year presidency is a publicity gimmick that wouldn’t fool the Tamil
people. A president who clubs the Ministry of Buddhism with the Ministry
of Justice in Sri Lanka, is one who is wholly ignorant of the
conflicting ethno religious mind sets in this war battered society. It
is also chaotic to leave these two conflicting ministries in the wrong
hands too. But he has done just that. A president who cannot instruct
the Justice Minister to unconditionally release all Tamil youth detained
without charges for many long years, can only talk of reconciliation
for publicity. A president who patronises extremely racist and violent
Buddhist monks nurtured by the Rajapaksas and should be arrested for
openly inciting racial and religious hatred, is frighteningly dangerous
to pin hopes on. A government led by such confirmed Sinhala leaders will
not leave any hope for the Tamils and Muslims in 2017.
This government shows no deviation from the Rajapaksas to believe they
could be better in 2017. Torture continues with impunity proving the
government is incapable of disciplining the law enforcement agencies. It
refuses to admit the judiciary as a system is ethnically bias. Even
before the verdict on the murder of former MP Raviraj raised serious
concerns, the judicial process was proved bias against Tamil victims and
when indicting security forces personnel, President Sirisena vows to
defend as “war heroes”. The case on the mass murder of 24 Tamil
villagers including 12 women and 07 children of Kumarapuram in
Trincomalee exposed the judiciary’s racial bias. The Kumarapuram case
was transferred from Muttur to Anuradhapura High Courts after a long
lapse. Transfer to Anuradhapura allowed for a Sinhala jury. All accused
were identified by victims as those who committed the crimes. In July
2016, the Sinhala Jury nevertheless decided all suspects as innocent.
With 03 PC elections and the unjustifiably postponed island wide LG
elections to come in 2017, this Sinhala political trend is destined to
take a more aggressive leap. Desperate in grabbing control of the SLFP,
President Sirisena is seen collecting Sinhala extremism around him with
Rajapaksa making loud promises to the Sinhala constituency. That
competition to be more Sinhala than Rajapaksa has prompted the
government to leave the OMP bill adopted in parliament in cold storage.
The new draft Constitution the TNA wants with more power sharing than in
the 13A and genuine reconciliation would thus be a far cry in 2017
under this government.
Reconciliation limited to rhetoric, a “corruption free” rule and
“national development” in 2017 will not be the fate of the people.
Frantic haste in bringing investments into this crude neo liberal
economy will certainly ensure mega corruption. “Development” promised by
this government is now exclusively Chinese and Indian. This free market
model with direct Chinese investments and designed for profits with
economic growth, will have to allow Chinese labour in massive numbers
into the country.
Already there is an unaccounted number of Indian, Bangladeshi, Pakistani
and Chinese labour on “tourist visa” employed in factories. Agreements
with China on Hambantota industrial zone and Chinese invested FTZ will
involve large scale Chinese labour, more than what the government would
publicly accept. Indian sponsored investments would be no different. All
of it could even compel the government to amend the Immigration and
Emigration Act to accommodate foreign labour legally. Export industry
had been canvassing for the right to import labour, even during the
Rajapaksa era. Initial protests by the Rajapaksas therefore will only be
publicity stunts. These after all, are extensions of their own
projects.
For its own survival and in serving its own financiers, these mega
investor projects would need arrogant implementation, ignoring protests
and disregarding existing laws. Most mega projects including the
redesigned Colombo Port City, pays no response to continued public
protests and scant respect for environmental concerns, totally
disregarding coastal zone management plans. 2017 will see an
acceleration of all such arrogance.
There naturally will be public protests against land grabbing and
environmental issues with large extent of land acquired, displacing
people. There will also be brewing unrest and protests within employed
labour too. Trade unions don’t seem to understand the crisis they’ll be
dragged into in 2017. Sri Lanka will have to have carved out large zones
with Chinese and South Indian labour, with no labour laws applicable to
them. Not even to the extent they are presently applied in already
existing FTZs. A condition the government will have to agree to, when
big Chinese and Indian investments are canvassed. That certainly will
have a viral effect. Other investors will also want the right for same
relaxed conditions applied in their factories too. The reading is
already on the wall. The employer thrust even now is in union busting
especially in the Katunayake FTZ. Key players in the government seem to
be bidding time, to give the nod for a complete go. Trade unions will
have a turbulent year ahead.
The rabidly free economy the government is obsessed with, demands the
State to facilitate arrogant and repressive rule in 2017. The role of
this repressive State is being defined by draft bills, the government
has in its hands. The draft “Development (Special Provisions) Bill” that
was rejected by PCs but would be brought up in February 2017, together
with the draft “Counter Terrorism Bill” to replace the existing PTA,
spells out how much centralising the government wants in canvassing
Chinese and Indian investment and how repressive the government intends
to be, in its effort to crush all inevitable protests.
Thus 2017 will be a year that would test the ability of this “two part” government to stay together.
Shameless and morally unacceptable greasing of MPs with numerous
packages and privileges are legal bribes to hold the government together
for wheeler dealer projects. That while disappointing and leaving
Tamils and Muslims in a further polarised Sri Lanka. It would also be a
year the government replicates few more “Rathupaswelas” and workers’
could taste from the Hambantota port “menu”. PM thanking Navy action at
the Hambantota port, says it all.