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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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, July 1, 2019
Leadership crisis in Sri Lanka
"One of the problems of leadership is the ability to recognize a problem before it becomes an emergency." – A. Glasgow
These days the general comments one hears around in Colombo are that the
Easter Sunday killings and destruction have impacted badly on the
quality of our leadership, on our intelligence services even as much as
it did on the ISIS bombers. Whether it could have been avoided or not is
the question that calls for a response. From whom? Who is accountable
to whom? The leaders are strutting around as if they were a law unto
themselves unaccountable to none, unaware of SHAME.
The Easter Sunday is however not the only occasion on which our leaders
have sent this nation reeling for want of appropriate policy decisions;
shakeups of this tenor had happened before and we, the people, have to
pull out of this Easter Sunday mayhem even as we pulled through on many
of the earlier instances. Yes, this time, too, we have to move on, not
without some serious damage to the dubious quality of the present
leadership, to the economy, to the concept of pluralism as well as to
the rule of law.
There are no visible signs of seeking alternative strategies to contain
the damage caused to the nation and economy. A vicious, well planned
campaign, not by any means a veiled one, to destroy the business of the
Muslims is afoot. Muslim companies and their products are listed openly
on the social media calling for the boycott of their products. There has
not been even a whimper from our leaders condemning this move or on the
need to seek strategies to contain this alarming trend from the racist
counter endangering the unity within the nation. The boycott will
negatively affect the already limping economy and the investment climate
both from local and foreign sources. Are these causing anxiety to our
leaders? If not, are they complacent, hoping that their silence will
indicate empathy towards the call by extremists to boycott those
enterprises owned by Muslims. Negativity from politicians? Is garnering
votes and more votes their only concern?
Disenfranchisement of
the plantation workers
As early as 1948 the controversy concerning disenfranchisement resulting
in statelessness of some among the Indian plantation workers led to
political upset internally eventually spreading to India as well. A
serious conflict situation was averted through mature leadership by the
then political leaders. They chose negotiation as a tool to resolve the
problem in hand rather than blow it out of proportion to become
confrontational. It took over a decade to find a solution acceptable to
all through skillful management by competent leaders like Prime
Ministers Lal Bahadur Shastri in India and Sirimavo Bandaranaike in Sri
Lanka. This is an illustration of what can be achieved by mature
leadership supported by experienced and well equipped bureaucracy. In
the matter referred to above, the leaders and officials from the two
countries must share the credit for dousing what could have flared into a
battle cry affecting the nerve center of Sri Lankan economy, the
plantations, while rupturing Sri Lanka’s relations with India. Mature
leadership is not the chosen guideline of policy making in the
subsequent years.
1956
1956 and after are the benchmark years when the country had its share of
problems to deal with consequent to populist policy making by
subsequent governments. The absence of leadership qualities and grounded
vision for the nation were the main reasons for this. Sri Lankan
history is replete with instances of social upheaval due to the
shortsightedness of their leaders. The ‘Glasgow quote’ amply exemplifies
why countries face the kind of situations as we did over the years. Sri
Lankan leadership allowed simple problems to snowball into major issues
which then assume emergency proportions that require a complex purview.
These are the years when the game plan changed from people centric
politics to political gain for a win-win position for the politician.
Leaders looked at political manoeuvrability as a tactic for personal
advantage regardless of its impact on the welfare of the people;
increasing the vote base gathering for electoral success took precedence
over communal harmony unity or national development.
The moment that the Sinhala Only legislation was passed two reactions
followed; one, the Sinhalese felt they had become more relevant in an
assertive way while two, the rest of the ethnic communities felt
marginalised. That it is necessary to recognise one’s mother tongue
cannot be questioned; but this truism assumed a discriminatory
complexion with the strong presence of a multi ethnic population in the
country. This remained so despite English being proclaimed the link
language later on to knit together this multi ethnic population.
Appeasement and trust building were two very urgent qualities vital at
this juncture but the leaders both from the government and the
minorities, had closed the channels for both. Consequently, poor
management of the issues in hand produced the conflict situation. What
followed is history. This could have been avoided if mature leadership
had tried to contain the yawning gulf among the communities.
During the following years problems linked to the 1956 language
legislation followed and became increasingly complex with the
chauvinists entering the fray to resolve matters. The result was the
1958 Tamil Sinhala riots that killed and maimed people and destroyed
homes; much of it could have been avoided by a more circumspect
leadership, who could have avoided viewing all matters ethnic through
the prism of immediate advantage to themselves. Consequent to these
events, large sections of the Burgher community conversant in English,
but lacking competence in working in the vernacular migrated to other
countries. They feared they would become second class citizens in the
land of their birth. Their migration was a great loss to the country,
again a leadership failure of colossal proportion.
English- link language
Facilities available to gain proficiency in the English language did not
keep pace with intent. English was declared the link language, a
palliative given to make peace among the angry communal groups. The use
of English was much as in the years prior to the introduction of Sinhala
Only legislation. Rural youth were frustrated since their training in
Sinhala only excluded them from the high profile opportunities available
to those competent in English. The youth revolt in 1971 referred to
English as the kaduwa that spliced society into two, the English
speaking and the non- English speaking ones. The youth took to arms to
correct this and to improve their economic conditions. The movement came
to be notorious for its brutality. They killed and were killed in turn.
A receptive leadership engaged with the people in the post-election
years could have perceived policy from a multiple group interest that
would have helped to gauge the impact of the language policy on the
multi- ethnic society. Although the Sinhala only policy resonated with
sections of the majority community, it created suspicion and mistrust
between the members of the plural society.
In summation, the 1956 legislation created the environment for
alienation of the minorities, the creation of a majority minority
division, justified the use of violence to secure a cause, and in turn
made use of State violence acceptable as a tool to control violence in
society. Race and religion became important features in political
dialogue. Leadership over time permitted Buddhist clergy to influence
policy although we are not a theocratic state. This created tension
among the non -Buddhists.
Brief reference is made to the policy decisions taken by the leaders in
the late 60s and early 70s, many of which were reverted subsequently for
poor policy judgement. The nationalisation of plantations, economic
interests and Christian schools together contributed to destabilising
the existing system. A rethink of these changes compelled them to revise
their policy. The plantations were returned for private management,
Christian denominational schools were independently managed. Much later
private schools were established to satisfy the felt need of the student
population in the country.
Executive Presidency
The UNP government that came in 1977 introduced the Executive
Presidency, a drastic structural change that further complicated Sri
Lankan governance procedures. Every President who was elected promised
the removal of the executive president. But the lure of power made all
to renege and the system continues. The immediate past President
retained it and passed the 18th Amendment permitting the incumbent a
third term. The powers of the president were extensive which provoked
the initiator to comment flippantly that under constitution he could do
anything except to change a man into a woman or vice versa.
The impunity from justice during his tenure in office encourages
dictatorial tendencies, a lack of accountability, corruption,
lawlessness and personal insecurity.
A fundamental transformation in approach and management of the system is
required. Change through elections is not the answer. It can very well
mean that yet another lot will come in with the same or similar outlook
and people’s circumstances will remain the same, similar to the election
of the unity government in 2015.
Concentration on the sustainability of leaders makes concern for the
people they have been elected to serve recede in importance; then the
administration loses direction and no policy of importance is initiated
or implemented.
The first President J. R. Jayewardene’s obsessiveness with stay in power
made him contravene the democratic principles on many occasions.
Elected Prime Minister, he became President. Later to make the MPs of
his party stay in course he collected their unsigned letters of
resignation to be used if necessary. An absolutely impermissible action
in a democracy.
During the outbreak of communal violence the President as the head of
state did not take timely action. He stated publicly that he was giving
the army leave of action which meant that there was no law and order in
the country, and the Tamils was left without protection while the
hoodlums torched and attack them. Estrangement of the two communities
was complete and the 30-year-war that followed impoverished the Tamil
community and led to large scale migration to other countries. This is
the origin of the diaspora, a group said to influence international
opinion to highlight policy contrary to Tamil interest.
The end of the war saw international outcry about war crimes that were
committed during the course of the war particularly towards the
concluding stages. Assurances for a fast track inquiry to put this
matter to rest has not yet seen anything conclusive. The government’s
need to take a public stand on reconciliation strategies for a policy
stand is not visible. Several ad hoc approaches are in progress but
there is no way of gauging the scale of their success. An Office of
missing persons has been set up but mothers and relatives are still
walking around looking for their near and dear ones. Its role seems a
protracted one in the play of the leaders.
The Unity Government
to rescue democracy?
The present government was set up to control the abuses under the
previous government. Undemocratic practices were the way of life. Strong
tendency towards dictatorial system, corruption of an unprecedented
level, abuse of the rule of law and divisive communal politics were
rampant. Sections of the SLFP and the UNP formed the unity government to
do away with the abusive practices and to bring the offending leaders
of the previous government to book through judicial scrutiny.
What a disappointment! One of the first acts of the President was to
nominate defeated candidates from the SLFP to the national list
contravening the basis laid out to nominate persons to the national
list. Following on this questionable path the UNP became entangled in
the Central Bank Bon Scam, which to date had not been investigated to
the satisfaction of the public. After a time the President who came to
investigate the corruption charges of the previous government violated
the constitution by removing the Prime Minister and appointing the
former President as the Prime Minister who in turn nominated a cabinet
in place.
Sri Lanka had the unique citing of having two PMs and two Cabinets
sitting concurrently. It was a question of enough is enough. When the
President called for dissolution of Parliament then the judiciary
intervened to declare it unconstitutional leaving the Prime Minister and
the Cabinet of the unity government in place. The President’s action
was a gross denial of the constitution and conduct unacceptable in a
President who came on the agenda to right the wrongs of the previous
government. Accountability to public opinion is totally missing and
politician behave as if there are no constitutional precedents to
follow. The poor showing of the leadership needs condemnation.
Easter Sunday tragedy
The national tragedy keeps growing. The Easter Sunday attacks appear to
be the result of gross neglect both of leadership and the failure of the
intelligence services to act on information received which could have
averted the disaster. Lives were lost, people have suffered immense
physical suffering as well as destruction of property. The economy is in
dire straits and a bad jolt given to the tourist industry which was
gaining buoyancy only to have international travel advisories posted
against visiting Sri Lanka.
How could political leaders have permitted the setting up of a "Sharia
University" except that many of the leaders became vulnerable to the
temptation of easy money that came their way? Corruption has not been
arrested by this government nor the rule of law established. The easy
way to survive the tide appears to ride the ethnic hate which has
brought together the traditional leaders and the Buddhist clergy
spouting hate contrary to the lofty teaching of the Buddha.
Mechanism of bargaining used to summon Cabinet meetings
The latest peccadillo of the present government was the President’s
refusal to chair the Cabinet meetings if the Parliamentary Select
Committee set up to investigate the Easter Sunday Bomb attacks was not
withdrawn. Although Cabinet meetings were not held for two weeks it was
summoned on Tuesday last and the constitutional crisis was stalled. That
it should be possible for the Head of State to bargain thus is a grave
leadership shortcoming; a total lack of integrity so vital in
governance.
This combination of opportunistic political leaders and sections of the
Buddhist clergy are mindlessly wrecking the peace, security and
development of the country. Civil society has to wake up and agitate for
their rights. The coming election is a good opportunity for the people
to make a wise choice. If their choice continues to be wanting, we as a
nation will be doomed to darkness without salvation. Leadership crisis
in the country will be complete.
A recall of past indiscretions in policy decisions are made here to
emphasize the need for well thought of policies and strategies mindful
of their consequences. Communication skills to engage with the citizenry
must prevail if appropriate choices are to be made for the benefit and
the development of the nation state.