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, November 18, 2019
Gota’s Citizenship, US Silence & Presidency
As soon as Gotabaya Rajapaksa‘s’s
dual citizenship became a debatable issue on the eve of his nomination
by his brother’s party, SLPP, US authorities must have realised that
they have been presented with manna from heaven to help them achieve
what they wanted from Sri Lanka, irrespective of who wins the tight
contest. In one single stroke of her pen the US Ambassador in Colombo
would have cleared the air immediately, but she must have been advised
not to and allow the controversy continue, perhaps until the election is
over. The Election Commissioner also, either through deliberate or
innocent neglect did not bother to check Gota’s credentials. Was he in
cahoot with the Ambassador?
Generally
speaking, in any event or issue that dominates the politics outside its
own territory, what immediately matters to any country and its
government, is its own national interest, and in the case of US, its
imperial interest. This is the stark reality of international relations.
On that basis, US meddling in Sri Lankan politics has a long history
and dates back to 1950s, but its intensity increased no sooner than when
China’s influence in the Indian Ocean in general and Sri Lanka in
particular started deepening. The island’s geostrategic position in the
Indian Ocean is too precious to be ignored by any regional or imperial
power. It is through the Indian Ocean, from the Straits of Hormuz
through Bab el-Mandab Strait and Strait of Malacca that more than 80% of
oceanic trade is being carried out. Sri Lanka is at the crossroad of
this trade artery. One cannot therefore underestimate the crucial
importance of Sri Lanka’s harbours and sea lanes.
By gaining a ninety nine year leasehold over Sri Lanka’s Hambantota
Harbour and through funding quite generously the infrastructure
development of the country, China outbid all her rivals and brought
closer the realisation of her One Belt One Road (OBOR) strategy. Now,
the Americans want to check mate China by gaining at least an equal
footing in Sri Lanka. The controversial Status of Forces Agreement
(SOFA), Acquisition and Cross-Servicing Agreement (ACSA) and the
Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) are all means through which such
footing could be achieved. The question is who or which government in
Sri Lanka will sign these agreements and entrap the country into the
imperial net.
There is already a number of supporting voices towards signing these agreements within the present government, and if Sajith Premadasa becomes
the president and his UNP captures the government after the next
General Elections, US will feel more comfortable and be confident in
achieving those objectives. However, it may be problematic under a Gota
Presidency with a pro-Chinese Rajapakse government. This is where Gota’s
citizenship issue and the court cases filed against him in California
can be used as trumps by US government. Whether Gota will be allowed to
remain president or be dethroned would depend on his response to US
requests. US will use his citizenship as the trump. This is why US is
silent now.
Landmark Saturday
Unlike the elections before, the Presidential Election on Saturday will
be a landmark event. Reduced to a straight contest between two men, Gota
and Sajith, while another, Anura, running third, the presidential race
is going to determine not only the direction of Sri Lanka’s economic and
foreign policies but also the future of the country’s democracy and
ethnic pluralism. It is a contest between one who is promising a
technocratic cabinet ruled by an iron fist, and another promising a
cabinet of ministers with honesty and integrity while protecting the
country’s pluralism and the framework of participatory democracy. There
is a broad suspicion that the technocracy and iron fist may translate
into a family oligarchy and plutocracy. Does it mean the end of
democracy in Sri Lanka?
Both candidates have no clarity about their respective economic
strategies to promote growth with equity, and about measures and
techniques to improve the welfare of ordinary mases. Only Anura promised
to narrow the wealth gap. However, given the constraints of a
ballooning budget deficit, trade deficit and national debt, one is not
sure whether Gota and Sajith would be able to honour their lavish
promises given to the gullible during the campaign. The one who seems to
have a credible alternative path, Anura Kumara Dissanayake, may have to work harder to sell his program before the forthcoming General Election.
Above all, how the leading two candidates are going to rein in the
recklessness of ultranationalist Buddhist supremacists and their
lawlessness against minorities is not clear. There is a threat of
violence and bloodshed against Muslims after the election, and there
appears to be a sinister plan drawn up by these supremacists to narrow
the open economy space for the role of minorities in economic and
commercial ventures. Having hijacked the public administration already
and reduced the weight of minorities to just 8 per cent, these
supremacists are aiming to achieve the same in the economic sector. This
is a self-defeating strategy.