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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, July 18, 2019
The President has a better option
by Jehan Perera-July 15, 2019, 9:04 pm
Once again the issue of the long postponed provincial council elections
are coming into national focus. The problem, however, is that the focus
is not on improving systems of governance as it should be, but on the
forthcoming elections. It is being reported that President Maithripala
Sirisena is seeking to ensure that provincial elections are held prior
the presidential elections that are scheduled to be held by the end of
this year. The president appears to be increasingly conscious that he
needs to do something out of the ordinary, which others do not dare to
do or do not want to do, to leave behind a legacy of greatness or obtain
a second terms of presidency for himself. So far his plans have been
unsuccessful. They range from the attempt he made in October 2018 to
topple the government he came to power in alliance with, to winning the
war against drugs and to re-imposing the death penalty, to lengthening
his term in office.
It would be galling for the president to note that these strategies have
not been successful so far. But there are other options he could
consider. Ideally, the president would like to ensure that his term of
office can be lengthened sufficiently for him to be able to dissolve
parliament after it passes the four and a half year mark in February
2020. This is when he becomes constitutionally empowered to dissolve
parliament even without its consent. The president would then be in a
position to negotiate with the contesting political parties regarding
his future if they are to obtain his blessings. He would then be in a
position to offer the party that is prepared to work with him on his
terms the wherewithal that accompanies the defense ministry and police
department which are vested in him and which are powerful instruments of
state that can be deployed if need be.
Unfortunately for the president it appears that his previous attempt to
extend his term of office, which was done last year in January when he
asked for a declaratory judgment from the Supreme Court, has worked to
his detriment. On that occasion the Supreme Court ruled that the
president was not entitled to a six-year term in view of the 19th
Amendment and his term commenced on the day he was sworn in as president
on 9 January 2015 for five-years till 9 January 2020. It also appears
to be the case that his hope that his term of office only commenced
running the day the Speaker signed the 19th Amendment into law, which
was on 15 May 2015, thereby giving him a five year term till 15 May 2020
is likely to be unrealistic. It is in this context that an attempt is
being made to hold the provincial council elections prior to the
conclusion of the president’s term of office. This would once again give
him an opportunity to negotiate with the political parties regarding
his future in return for his support at those elections.
QUICK FIXES
Only one of the nine provincial councils is still functioning with a
democratically elected leadership. All others are under the control of
governors appointed by the President as their terms have ended and fresh
elections have not been held. They are barely functioning due to lack
of resources and political leadership even though many of the public
servants continue to do their best by the people they are expected to
serve. Holding provincial elections would be a national priority from
the perspective of electoral democracy. However, the electoral laws and
problems regarding the equitable demarcations of electoral units has yet
to be completed. It is unlikely this problem will be resolved in the
short term as these are the subject of inter-party disputation.
There is a reason why the delay in provincial council elections has not
agitated the general population is that most people see the provincial
councils as unnecessary structures that are expensive to maintain and
which add another layer of bureaucracy to their lives. This is not as it
should be or was meant to be. The 13th Amendment to the Constitution
was brought in to solve the ethnic conflict and bring the war to an end
with the support of the Indian government. The 13th Amendment partakes
of features of the Indian model of devolution of power, which has
empowered each of the Indian states so much so that the chief minister
and state ministers become more important to the people than their
central counterparts.
In Sri Lanka, on the other hand, the provincial councils are
disempowered, both in terms of power and resources so that they can only
meet their recurrent expenditures with difficulty and have little left
over to do the development work that is the people’s priority. The blame
comes to the provincial council rather than to the central authorities
who have denuded the provincial council system of the power and
resources they need to be effective agencies of development and problem
solving. The only champions of devolution at the national level remain
the Tamil political parties, who have for many decades been seeking more
self-government for the ethnic minorities who predominate in the North
and East of the country.
One of the overlooked national priorities at this time is to find a
better solution to the problems of devolution of power that would give
the ethnic minorities a greater sense of being in charge of their lives,
rather than in being in subject to the political decisions of the
representatives of the ethnic majority. This is the grievance that
directly led to three decades of war. Now although the war is over a
decade the grievance remains due to the lack of a solution to the
problem of inter-ethnic power sharing that is equitable and reasonable.
An option to reconsider at this time is the possibility of asymmetric
devolution in which each of the provinces are able to negotiate the
powers they believe they need. However, in the post-Easter Sunday
context, the focus has totally moved to dealing with the fallout of
those bombings, protecting the country from more such bombings and
improving inter-community relations.
RETHINKING DEVOLUTION
In this context, the call for provincial council elections to be held
before the presidential elections is not likely to gain much traction
from the political parties which see the provincial councils as they are
presently structured as the equivalent of white elephants. They are
more focused on national structures of power rather than on provincial
ones. They would prefer to have the presidential election first, as this
is the election that would have a decisive impact on all the elections
that follow. The psychological impact of winning the presidential
election would be a tremendous morale booster to the political party or
alliance of parties whose candidate wins the election. A victory at the
presidential election would strengthen the winning parties in all the
elections that follow, be they general or provincial elections.
Instead of seeking quick fixes to gain popularity and bargaining power,
the president may wish to consider spending his final months in office
dealing with the core issues that have been retarding the economic and
political progress in the country for decades. This is particularly
important in the context of the rise in inter-community suspicions and
prejudice in the aftermath of the Easter Sunday bomb attacks. The main
ingredient would be to reassure all communities that they are
stakeholders in the process and their views will be taken into
consideration. Before the elections take place, the president can summon
an all party conference to work out the basic principles they would
commit themselves to whichever political party or coalition of parties
wins the elections. Sri Lankans from all walks of life might then better
face the future with confidence rather than despondency.
Despite being denuded of many of its most educated and intrepid citizens
who have emigrated due to the perilous conditions within the country,
Sri Lanka continues to have topmost human resources. This was seen
vividly during the World Cup Cricket tournament that captivated the
world for a month. The caliber of Sri Lankan born and Sri Lankan
educated persons is so high that the World Cup tournament referee was a
Sri Lankan, Ranjan Madugalle, and the chief tournament umpire was
another Sri Lankan, Kumar Dharmasena, while the chairman of the most
prestigious English club that hosted the finals was yet another Sri
Lankan, Kumar Sangakkara who also performed a stellar role as a
commentator for the international media. With human resources such as
this at the disposal of the country, it is worthwhile for the president
to reflect on where the political leaders have gone wrong and steer
them, even at this late stage, to the correct path.