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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, November 22, 2019
Resisting political adventurism following Sri Lanka’s presidential polls
Sunday, November 17, 2019
Days before the November 2019 presidential polls on Saturday, a roadside
fruit vendor in Colombo confessed his dissatisfaction to me in pungent
terms, ‘see, what turmoil this election has caused’, he said bitterly,
‘all my four daughters and my wife are voting for Saji putha while I am determined to vote for the Pohottuwa.’
By Sunday, we would (probably) know if the Premadasa campaign’s focus on
issues ranging from affordable sanitary hygiene products, a dire
problem in rural areas where girls cannot afford these products most
often leading to serious health complications, to the safety and
security of Sri Lankan women, has succeeded or not in the nation-wide
vote. Notorious cases of rape of women by Rajapaksa-linked local
politicians during the Rajapaksa Presidency, who terrorised entire
districts such as Deraniyagala, Kuruwita, Akuressa with impunity while
police officers either looked on helplessly or colluded in the attacks
lent much fodder to that focus. So did the rape of a foreign tourist and
the killing of her British boyfriend at a hotel in Tangalle which was
brought to court only following intense pressure by the United Kingdom.
Indeed, the difficulties in bringing these perpetrators before the law
in all these cases was meticulously documented. In a column that I
wrote, I remember asking if the victim had to be of foreign nationality
for Sri Lanka’s legal system to work and if so, what of justice then for
Sri Lankan women, Sinhala, Muslim and Tamil? The subversion of the
legal process occurred right from the initial law enforcement stage
where women could not even record their complaints at police stations to
the enforced apathy of prosecutorial officers, nervous to move against
Rajapksa confidantes. There was ample reason for this nervousness. This
was a period where the Chief Justice and the Attorney General of the day
were more often found in the residences of the former President and his
brothers rather than in their offices, belying a bland denial by a
retired senior state law officer caught in the crossfire of politically
aligned statements, that there was no Rajapaksa interference into the
prosecutorial process.
Projecting a future Sri Lanka
So when Pohottuwa candidate
Gotabhaya Rajapaksa and his brother, the former President holds forth
on womens’ rights, there is manifest condescension at play. But leaving
aside this Saturday’s electoral outcome, the shift in gender focus and
the deliberate courting of the ‘youth vote’ has been a refreshing change
to the exaggeratedly nauseating machismo that normally dominates
election rhetoric. This emphasis needs to continue during the
forthcoming General Elections. By the time this column is printed, we
would also know if a pan-Sinhala vote has evolved for the Pohottuwa candidate
notwithstanding the robust challenge offered by Premadasa who took the
attack into the Rajapaksa camp by stressing that the core of Buddhist
teachings is not to evoke fear in the minds of minorities and not to
repress and harass those who have different opinions.
This is an obvious truth, yet, it needed to be said with force and vigour on the election stage, facing off against Pohottuwa campaigners
whose hate-filled rhetoric against Muslims and Tamils pervaded social
media spaces. That again is a message that must be continued. On that
rests Sri Lanka’s future; will this country be governed by racism and
fear or will it be a ‘work in progress’, warts and all, slowly building
on growing institutional strengths and fashioning democratic systems to
stand against repression. Over and above these factors and in a
deliberate departure from the past two decades, the Premadasa-driven
welfarist thrust has deliberately courted Sri Lanka’s rural vote as
opposed to kowtowing to urban corporate giants who unhesitatingly lean
towards his opposing candidate, the former Defence Secretary of Pohottuwa colours.
In a way, this replicates the Ranasinghe Premadasa period where the
traditional elitism of the United National Party was discarded.
In sum, this election illustrates several positives that must not be
lost sight of in the tug and pull of political imperatives. In
significant ways, the obeying of election laws apart from disgracefully
partisan behaviour of certain media houses, the commitment of the
Elections Commission and the police to ensuring a free and fair election
has indicated that institutional democracy had held its own, despite
considerable fears. This must prove true once the winner in November’s
presidential polls is declared. There must be adherence to
constitutional norms, despite foolhardy declarations by Presidential
candidates relating to ‘instant’ dismissal of the sitting Prime
Minister.
Warnings for Sri Lanka’s future President
Clearly, such a scenario only follows if the Government ‘loses the
confidence’ of Parliament in defined constitutional terms, ie; on a vote
of no confidence in the government, on the government losing the vote
on the budget, on the government being defeated on its statement of
policy, or on the resignation or death of the Prime Minister or by
him/her ceasing to be a Member of Parliament. These constitutional
parameters must not be lost sight of in the aftermath of Saturday’s
poll.
As Sri Lanka’s Supreme Court declared late last year in holding the 2018
dissolution of Parliament by outgoing President Maithripala Sirisena,
unconstitutional, ‘…this Court has emphasized on several occasions, the
President is subject to the Constitution and the law, and must act
within the terms of the Constitution and the law…the guiding principle
must be the furtherance and maintenance of the Rule of Law.‘ Almost a
year later, England’s Supreme Court warned in a similarly reflective
reprimand to the British Prime Minister that his decision to prorogue or
suspend Parliament was unlawful.
Writing for the Court, its President, Justice Lady Hale observed
witheringly that the Prime Minister had an ‘improper purpose’ in so
proroguing the House and that this ran counter to the established
principle of parliamentary democracy, affecting the ‘democratic
legitimacy of the Government.’ These are wise words of caution that the
incoming Executive President would do well to remember. As Sri Lanka
faces politically tumultuous weeks if not months ahead, political
adventurism that undermines the Rule of Law must be strongly and
unequivocally resisted.
That is what Saturday’s poll is all about, after all.