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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, January 8, 2018
LG result will set course for 2-years
Political parties in both South and North are testing the waters
"This Tamil fellow is toxic"
http://www.tamilguardian.com/
http://www.tamilguardian.com/
Kumar David-January 6, 2018, 7:11 pm
Local
Government elections should, primarily, be about local affairs and
local welfare, national political skulduggery should be secondary.
Pradeep Kariyawasam in a piece on LG elections and Colombo’s health
problems (Sunday Island, 24 December) calls attention to one such issue.
But Sri Lanka is over-politicised, stricken with the ailments but few
of the benefits of democracy. The potential fallout from next month’s LG
elections has taken attention away from choosing competent councillors
and addressing issues at grassroots. The UNP and SLFP inYahapalana, the
Poroppaya (or Pohottuwa or whatever) and the JVP are testing the waters
in the South and the TNA is anxious about the North; all with an eye on
the 2020 general election. February will not only be a weathervane for
2020 but will also set the mood for political chicanery and
horse-trading in the next two years.
I will try to discuss the LG scene without letting my prejudices intrude
too much – tough! Despite frequent‘ breaking news’ flashes from the
Rajapaksa Joint Opposition (JO), and not withstanding the media (Sinhala
and English) unearthing the impending doom for the UNP-SLFP alliance,
the Sirisena-Ranil duo seems to hang together comfortably. I wouldn’t
know about acrimony in private, but in public both display proper
protocol and at this time, prior to LG elections, this apex relationship
seems amicable. At the next lower level there is much backbiting
between UNP, JO and Sirisena cohorts, but cynic that I am, I attribute
this simply to pre-election opportunism.
President Sirisena and his Ministers and MPs are searching, it seems
searching desperately, for options and possibilities; the number of
Deputy Ministers is swelling. Team-Sirisena will not give up on its
relationship with the UNP, especially if it comes third (or fourth
behind the JVP), neither has it ruled out a post-election deal with the
JO. It depends on how the chips fall. If, lubricated by cross-over
opportunists, Team Sirisena does well enough not to need to kowtow
before Rajapaksa, rapprochement with the JO is possible. If the price of
reunification is kneeling before Rajapaksa, then it will prefer to stay
with the UNP and think about what to do at leisure. That is, the
Sirisena-SLFP will, logically, prefer the status quo to genuflection
before Rajapaksa’s throne.
The JVP is, as usual, shooting in the dark without torchlight or
searchlight. It eschews an alliance with the left, including the CP,
smaller parties like the ULF (LSSP Majority Group) and the NSSP, and
like Don Quixote, tilts at windmills. Most people say it will secure
more seats than before, but for sure it will fall short of its potential
had it spearheaded a left alliance. Daft, self-destructive,
self-centred egotism; but that’s an occupational hazard of the JVP.
The UNP is battling to defend the Ashes and will be grateful if it does
better than the English touring team in Australia. The UNP-Front will be
satisfied if it can retain the same proportion of total votes as in the
2015 parliamentary elections and come first in the Moratuwa to Negombo
costal belt, the Central Province, parts of Uva and pockets in the NWP
and EP. The UNP and its buddy Mano Ganesan will carry all the
geographical constituencies in Colombo City and most of the proportional
seats. However, there is visible dissatisfaction on economic issues,
the inability to bring big time Rajapaksa era crooks to book, the bond
scam, and permitting thieving, conniving, fornicating relatives of the
Rajapaksa household to get away Scot free after running Sri Lankan
Airlines to the ground and foisting a $702 million write off on the
state (you and me). Enough, normally, to destroy an incumbent regime.
The crucial enigma
The performance of the JO, alias SLPP, alias poroppaya is an enigma. The
course of politics in the next two years will be decided by this more
than any other result. If it does well, we are in for another spell
where the politics of race and religion will dominate. If so, the
primary culprit is not any political entity, not even the JO,
fundamentally; it is the people. If the Sinhala-Buddhist mass will not
permit devolution of administration to the Ceylon Tamils, then what?
What the Tamils will do remains to be seen, but the groundwork for
Prabakaran Mark II would have been laid. I mean it, if Tamils and
Muslims are not allowed to run their affairs in their principal areas of
domicile, do you, dear reader, have any better predictions about the
long term?
The Sirisena-Ranil government has cut and run on the proposed
constitution. Unless the UNP scores a resounding LG victory, which is
unlikely, we can kiss the new constitution goodbye. Then the TNA,
Tamils, the liberals, the left and this correspondent can all go lick
their wounds. If it turns out to be a big victory for poroppaya in the
Sinhala-Buddhist heartland, it will signal a return to the bad old
SWRD-JR era. If you disdain what I say, let’s go our separate ways for
now and catch up after more blood has flowed. I see this election as a
referendum on Sinhala-Buddhist ethics, limits and hegemonic aspirations;
it is more than a storm in a local government tea cup.
If (once) the constitution goes belly-up, Eelamists and Tamil
nationalists will eviscerate Sampanthan, Sumanthiran, the TNA and its
principal constituent the ITAK. The critique will be: "You led us up the
gum tree again. B-C Pact, Dudley-Chelva Accord, JR’s half-baked 13A,
the lessons are obvious. The Sinhala majority will never give us
reasonable space; but you compromisers, have hoodwinked the Tamils and
made asses of yourselves – again!" The obvious TNA defence that it tried
hard and was cheated will not cut any ice with the Tamils.
I have consistently maintained that Gota cannot win a presidential
election. No one can do better than Mahinda did in 2015 if all the
minorities – Muslims, Ceylon and Upcountry Tamils and Catholics – band
together in a rock-hard obstacle. In that case Gota will be defeated by
more than 10 points – worse than 45:55. However, parliamentary,
provincial and local polls are different because minority votes are
locked away in their own regions. Gota losing a presidential election
and the UNP and Team-Sirisena losing local and provincial polls in the
Sinhalese areas, are not inconsistent.
The opposition has built its campaign against this government from
day-one with sustained non-cooperation, by engineering strikes,
disruptions and sometimes sabotage. Yahapalana’s response has been
capitulation (SAITM), flummoxed confusion (student boycotts and trade
union actions), or popularity contests (Sagala, Kiriella, Rajitha,
Mangala versus Team-Sirisena). Bourgeois-democracy bares its bottom
widest at election time.
The point has been made that it is reductionist to attribute an
extensive strike wave to JO machinations alone. That’s true; yes, when
the opposition’s instigation sowed the seed, it fell on fertile ground.
Worker disillusionment is in part due to a non-performing economy and in
part the ‘tragedy of the traditional working-class’. As technology
advances the mode of production breaks new ground alienating the old
working-class. This motivated a surge of white worker support for Trump
in "rust belt" states. Many state/corporate institutions in Lanka are
crumbling; railways, ports, buses, government hospital, postal and other
sectors are ramshackle, but modernisation will endanger jobs. This is
why modernisation, improvement and efficiency enhancement are often
opposed by trade unions. The traditional or old working-class all over
the world is being marginalised and the capitalist order has no solution
to this social debacle.
The GMOA is a different story. Doctors are conspiring to defend a closed
shop and sabotage private medical education so as to eradicate
competition. Talk of patient welfare and standards is hogwash. Professor
ANI Ekanayaka ("Peace . . . at any Cost", Island 1 Jan 2018) is
ferocious and forthright in taking a scalpel to the throat of humbug
doctors, hoodlum undergraduates and spineless leaders. The voter sees a
President, a PM and a subject Minister, all blathering babes in wet
nappies, too yellow livered to confront and break the sabotage of public
health services or oust brutish students. Tough decisions are evaded,
consequently, the old war-winning team shines in forceful contrast. This
time I make no electoral predictions; wonky predictions are the bane of
every political columnist.
Correction: In the penultimate paragraph last week I said FDI in Sri
Lanka between 2011 and 2016 fluctuated between "$900 billion and $700
billion". Of course it’s million not "billion". Sorry.