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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, October 28, 2017
Is There An Alternative?
There
is increasing frustration created by the fact that a government which
proclaimed its adherence to all that is sacred in democratic practice
has continued to slide into the slough of equivocation and the practice
of the very corruption that they derided while in opposition. Their
bumbling and stumbling along, trying to be all things to all people save
those who try to adhere to principled conduct, has earned the disdain
of every thinking Sri Lankan.
The Ranil Wickremesinge (RW)/Maithripala Sirisena (MS)
coalition appears to be a study in confusion, the only consistency
being in the matter of looking after the financial well-being of its
constituent members.
The open wound that is the South Asian Institute of Technology and Medicine (SAITM)
issue, has not seen anything resembling firm action of any description
to stop its continuing putrefaction. The old adage, “S…t or get off the
pot” would be an appropriate admonition to those supposedly having
authority to act on this issue. Its
prolongation has done nothing but inconvenience the public with no
resolution in sight. In this context, I cannot resist the temptation of
asking a question I have asked several times before of those such as the
Government Medical Officers’ Association (GMOA) who persist in acting
“holier than thou:” “Why was this not an issue when Mahinda Rajapaksa was doling out hundreds of millions from the national treasury to establish this very institution?”
One
doesn’t need a crystal ball to conclude that there is an orchestrated
campaign to destroy whatever was gained in the way of democratic
practice in January 2015. Given
the fact that the Rajapaksa horde has effectively alienated all the
minority communities of this country, save for that rump of the Roman
Catholic community still influenced by a Cardinal who was consistently
and vociferously supportive of Mahinda Rajapaksa and all he represented,
the chances of the Rajapaksa family returning to its hegemonic status
through democratic means – one man/woman, one vote – is anything but a
probability. That state of affairs only leaves one avenue open to those
seeking to unseat the current Yahapalanaya government: making the country ungovernable. That
they are on their way to success in this endeavour is obvious, the
chances of that endeavour being successful enhanced by the behaviour of
the RW/MS lot who appear to believe that anything resembling a
sea-change in governance will affect them, if at all, only marginally.
The
current lot are in cahoots with those who might unseat them because, as
they perceive the situation, the only risk they run in the event of the
return of their predecessors is, perhaps, competition in their plunder
of the public purse. No
sea change, only the possibility of a slight reduction in their
misappropriation capacity. At first glance, it is easy enough to fall
into the trap of thinking that it is only ineptitude and stupidity that
is generating the stumbling around of the present lot. Look
a little harder and you will realize that this conduct flows from the
simple reality that there is little, if anything, to choose between them
and their predecessors. More dangerous yet is the fact that both sides
of this coin have realized that they are precisely that – two sides of
the same (debased) currency – and are conducting themselves accordingly.
The
pattern was set before the last general election with the elevation of
Karu Jayasuriya to the upper levels of the United National Party. Mr.
Jayasuriya had led a massive defection of members of the UNP caucus to
the Rajapaksa regime, presenting the President of that time with the
means of destroying anything resembling democratic practice which had
survived J. R. Jayewardene and those who chose to walk in his footsteps.
In a nutshell, Karu Jayasuriya presented Mahinda Rajapaksa with the
steamroller majority that he applied to whatever was left of principled
democratic parliamentary procedures and practice.
When
Mr. Jayasuriya’s petulance at his new boss’s conduct of affairs did not
permit his remaining in MR’s fold, he returned to hurrahs from the
United National Party.
Something
else of significance was that the fact that he left with a dozen and
half of the UNP caucus and returned alone generated nary a mutter from a
national media whose conduct was hardly exceptional given its kowtowing
to one or the other of the major political configurations of this
country. That is also indicative of something else in the Pearl of the
Orient: the media choosing not to provide anything resembling political
analysis of any depth because, in their wisdom, they know that at the
end of the day, you don’t bite the hand that feeds you or one that might
soon be delivering crumbs from the national table to you!

