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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, March 20, 2019
SLPP and the Gotabaya Chinthanaya
By Harim Peiris-March 18, 2019, 11:34 pm

The Mahinda Chinthanaya
in retrospect
Sri Lankan politics post the war’s end in 2009, is indeed a new era, now
entering its second decade in May 2019. Mahinda Rajapaksa understood
this very well, when as president addressing parliament after the defeat
of the LTTE in May 2009, he stated that there was now, no longer the
excuse of a war to blame for a lack of national development.
Accordingly, Sri Lanka, her economy and her society must take off on a
development drive of peace and prosperity. The people of Sri Lanka
accepted him at his word and the following year in 2010 accorded him Sri
Lanka’s second highest presidential election mandate at 57.8% of the
popular vote, second only to former President Chandrika Bandaranaike
Kumaratunga’s record setting mandate of 62.3% of the popular vote at the
presidential election of 1994. It is worth noting that Mahinda at his
zenith in 2010, was significantly behind CBK at her own high point in
1994.
The Rajapaksa second term or the implementation of the Chinthanaya’s
"idiri dekma" or way forward, resulted in the imprisonment of the war
winning army commander who was his presidential election opponent, the
impeachment of the Chief Justice, a China centric foreign policy
detrimental to Sri Lanka’s regional and wider global interests, high
foreign debt driven white elephant projects of little utility value, the
reduction of democratic space and personal freedoms, the rise of
majoritarian extremist organizations engaged in anti-Muslim violence and
the complete absence of any post war reconciliation as per the
recommendations of either the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation
Commission (LLRC) and / or President Rajapaksa’s own All Party
Conference (APC) and its executive arm, the All Party Representative
Committee (APRC). The Rajapaksa Administration’s second term, engaged in
massive political overreach in the democracy truncating 18th amendment
to the constitution and mercifully ended one year ahead of its five-year
term, by calling and losing an early election in 2015, to seek an
unprecedented third term after four years.
Gotabhaya – old wine
in a new bottle
So, what would a third Rajapaksa Administration, but a Gotabaya
Chinthanaya look like? The noises emanating from both "Eliya" and the
SLPP seem to indicate, that despite the new packaging, the game plan
remains the same. Polarize society through a ratcheting up of ethnic
Sinhala nationalist rhetoric and also seek to capitalize on
dissatisfaction on non-delivery of expectations and promises by the
political forces, now in government, which defeated them in 2015.
There is also on display a distressing disregard for democratic, civil,
political and human rights, with the general thrust, that what Sri Lanka
requires is a strong leadership, which has been weakened as a result of
democratic discourse and processes. This argument of course is not new,
but several thousand years old, articulated first in the Senate of the
old Roman Empire, during its decline. Where the Roman Senate centralized
more and more powers in the emperor for the protection of the empire,
but to no avail. In fact, the term dictator originates from an
appointment during an emergency of a Roman Magistrate by the Roman
Senate as "Dictator" whose diktat or decree was absolute and law.
Fascist political theory and practice, mostly in Europe in the middle of
the last century, came closest to a modern articulation of these
theories and practices.
The Rajapaksas have learnt one lesson from their defeat in 2015, which
is that governance matters. The Sri Lankan electorate was not short on
nationalist rhetoric during that election. We had Rajapaksa propaganda
which rivalled that of Kim Jong-un’s North Korea, but ultimately
insufficient to win the election. Sri Lankans just did not feel that
they were well governed or their interests served by the Rajapaksa
Administration. Towards this end, Gotabaya is being packaged by his
handlers, as a non-politician, a professional who can get the job done. A
technocrat.
It is interesting that Gotabaya and Eliya sat out the local government
elections last year, which the SLPP won, with Gotabaya watching from the
US and Eliya studiously silent. Currently they articulate a critique of
the UNF, but have not clearly articulated their own program. Moreover,
had Mahinda’s "October 2018" revolution succeeded it would have put a
damper on Gotabaya’s presidential prospects, but that is water under the
bridge. However, Rajapaksa policies and politics have lost thrice now,
the latest being the failure to obtain a parliamentary majority in
October / November last year despite the President’s own estimation of
an inducement of several hundred million Rupees per potential cross over
MP. The SLPP did secure 40% of the vote in February 2018, well short of
the 50% required for a presidential election victory. Whether Eliya can
persuade another 10% of the electorate, perhaps those who voted SLFP in
2018, to support Mr. Rajapaksa in a presidential election, we will know
by year end. Current previews of what Gotabaya Chinthanaya may look
like, most likely resembles, the Mahinda Chinthanaya repackaged with a
fresh face. Fine wine does improve with age, if produced, bottled and
stored properly. Given the taste of Rajapaksa rule from 2010-2014, many
Sri Lankans may think closely about wanting the latest vintage from
Madamullane in Belliatte.