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
(Full Story)
Search This Blog
Back to 500BC.
==========================
Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, May 1, 2018
Ranasinghe Premadasa: His leadership had style
By Krishantha Prasad Cooray-April 30, 2018, 9:02 pm
As a young man interested in politics, there were people I looked up to.
There were people I believed had unique qualities. Ranasinghe Premadasa
was not one of them.
Indeed, my opinions about his policies and style of governance were a
permanent source of friction between myself and his Press Secretary of
30 years, my uncle Evans Cooray. Much to the chagrin of Evans, I was
openly critical of President Premadasa while he was in office, unable to
resist the urge to contrast his brash and populist leadership style
with the more learned and erudite ways of his political rival Lalith
Athulathmudali.
In his frustration, Evans cautioned me with words that today are no less
true than the inevitability of sunrise at dawn: "Some-day, when there
are no more leaders like him, you will appreciate the leadership
qualities and commitment of a man like President Premadasa. Today, you
are so young and inexperienced that you take them for granted," he
snapped. I was confident that time will prove Uncle Evans wrong.
Ranasinghe Premadasa was killed exactly 25 years ago, on May Day. He is
the only elected executive president to be assassinated. Some would no
doubt say that he himself was to blame for one of his glaring errors of
judgment was giving arms to the LTTE. The LTTE was not his only enemy.
He holds the dubious distinction of being the only President in our
history to have confronted a motion of impeachment by Parliament, one
which he survived only through the most unprecedented and fortuitous
political and constitutional maneuvering. One notes also, that among
these firsts there is the fact that he is the last President elected
from the United National Party, D.B. Wijetunga’s ascension being
procedural consequent to Premadasa being assassinated.
Today, as I reflect on Ranasinghe Premadasa 25 years after he was
killed, the words of Evans Cooray haunt me. They haunt me because I know
of leaders and leadership, and I know what’s lacking. When I reflect on
such things, I remember Premadasa.
Premadasa was alone among elected presidents or leaders of the United
National Party in that he, unlike anyone else, had to struggle for
everything he ever accomplished. He did not hail from a political
family, nor did he have the benefit of a first-class education. In his
era, many held against him what was then known as his "caste", a snooty
reference to his humble roots. As with so many others around the world,
it was in these flames of adversity and discrimination that the
tenacity, determination and leadership style of President Premadasa were
forged.
He saw the promise of the garment industry and made it a national
priority for growth, taking radical measures to ensure that a fair share
of the spoils of this thriving export industry made it to the villagers
and workers whose skill and sweat allowed that industry to thrive.
President Premadasa was the architect of the revitalized "Samurdhi"
programme, which is still today the backbone of our national poverty
alleviation effort.
While many can better expound on his accomplishments than I, my intimate
relationship with perhaps one of his closest confidants Evans Cooray,
has left me with a unique appreciation for how Premadasa accomplished so
much in so short a time.
He had an eye for talent, surrounding himself with none but the finest
administrators and public servants of his era. He identified and brought
into his circle rising stars such as R. Paskaralingam, Bradman
Weerakoon, K.H.J. Wijeyadasa, Evans Cooray and Susil Siriwardena. These
were dedicated, hard-working and disciplined government servants, who
appeared to outsiders to exist for no other reason but to serve the
institution of Premadasa around the clock. These are not qualities that
they brought to Premadasa, but ones that they shared with him.
Ranasinghe Premadasa believed in discipline and hard work above all
else. Rarely did he wake after 3.30am. Whatever he lacked in
intellectual capacity and finesse, he sought to make up for with sweat.
He knew that discipline involves sacrifice, and eschewed the luxuries
and trappings of the presidency to spend his time building a legacy and
achieving results. Whenever he was faced with adversity or disapproval,
his solution was simply to work harder.
His loyalty to those around him was unparalleled but conditioned on
performance, best exemplified by his daily morning phone calls to his
closest advisors, which more often than not, were made between 3.30 and
4.30 in the morning. Every day, he expected progress on his directives
from the previous day, and he spared no quarter for his ministers or
advisors who failed to perform.
It was this ruthless pragmatism that won him the support of many "doers"
in the country. People who could perform and deliver results were drawn
to Premadasa, who found room for them in his ranks. Being known as a
villager himself, surrounded by the trappings of Colombo, Premadasa
prioritized poverty alleviation above almost all else. Under his
direction, several amenities that were taken for granted in the capital
were brought to villages across the country – from clean water, to
pothole-free roads, schools and medical facilities.
As a leader, he held his people accountable for not just results but
also for their conduct. Under no-circumstances would he have sanctioned a
government where nearly every supporting member of parliament was
appointed to the cabinet or given a state or deputy ministerial
portfolio. He kept an intimate cabinet and expected the rest of his MPs
to focus on delivering in their electorates, ensuring that they had
access to the funds and resources to do so.
It is almost amusing to imagine how President Premadasa would have
reacted to discovering that a number of his ministers and officials were
gallivanting across the world with public funds at the drop of a hat,
or spending our tax rupees on expensive furniture and adornments for
their ministries and official residences. It is less amusing to recall
that during his time, no public servant would have dreamt of
participating in such abuses, which have become all too commonplace
today.
Never satisfied with any particular accomplishment, Premadasa believed
that a government, political party or individual had to keep growing in
order to succeed. Not comfortable resting on his accolades, and despite
lacking the formal educational background of most of his predecessors,
he constantly struggled to adapt and surmount newer and greater
political challenges.
As a man who struggled a great deal in his life, Premadasa was objective
and practical. He had extraordinary determination. He believed that if
you could see something in your mind, you could hold it in your hand. He
never ever gave up. He was a tough man to work for but he would stand
by his team members in a way no other leader would; thus did he secure
their loyalty.
President Premadasa had a way with words. He was a disciplinarian who
was effective because he was so disciplined himself. No president and no
leader since has followed up on matters he had delegated to ministers
and officials and agencies in the way he did. This is how, after being
at the helm of government and the UNP for only four years, Ranasinghe
Premadasa came to be recognised as a kind of demi-god by the country's
rural masses; and as the man who single-handedly lifted millions of Sri
Lankans out of poverty and brought them dignity and hope.
Ranasinghe Premadasa had extraordinary energy, determination and skill.
Indeed, in the words of Evans Cooray himself, Premadasa was not a man,
but "an institution".
Many years ago I did not have much regard for Ranasinghe Premadasa.
Today, when I reflect on that fateful May Day in 1993 and what followed,
I remember what Evans Cooray told me. If I made my uncle turn in his
grave over my opinions of Ranasinghe Premadasa, I am convinced he will
now rest in peace. He will rest in peace because today I am able to say
with full conviction, that he was right.