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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, November 21, 2019
Sibling Wins, Patriarch Celebrates & Minorities Stunned


Is there a more precious gift a family patriarch, who himself a former ruler, could expect to receive on his 74th birthday, than to see his own brother becoming the supreme head of the country he ruled? The victory of Gotabaya Rajapaksa (GR) as the seventh president of Sri Lanka was an unforgettable birthday gift to his elder brother Mahinda Rajapaksa (MR). On the 18th of
November, while the new president took his Oath of Allegiance, not in
front of members of the legislature, but in Ruwanwelisaya Stupa, a
historic Buddhist precinct at Anuradhapura, his family patriarch, MR,
celebrated his birthday, the day after. What a joyous coincidence and
what a heavenly omen! In short, to the Rajapakse clan, this victory and
the one to follow soon at the next General Elections are a double
bonanza to mark the dawn of a new era. But, what about the country, its
economy and the masses?
Ethno-Religious Divisions Deepen
In spite of all the colourful manifestos published and circulated among
voters and outlandish promises made to them, the one issue that
undoubtedly decided the winner in this contest was ethno-religious
nationalism. Bitter and lingering memories about the civil war, its
pestering wounds yet to heal and the shock of an Easter infamy inflicted
by a bunch of Muslim lunatics in April this year, all were marshalled
by the ethno-religious Buddhist nationalists to create and present an
image to the Sinhala public that the two minorities are a clear and
imminent danger to the security of this nation. While politicians of the
two minorities, Muslims openly and Tamils silently, hoped for a 2015
repeat scenario when their votes decided the winner in a tightly fought
presidential contest, and threw their support behind Sajith Premadasa (SP), who did not even carry the full support of his own party leader, Ranil Wickremesinghe,
an uncompromising but ultra-nationalist section of the
institutionalised Buddhist clergy spearheaded a campaign to deprive the
minorities of that privilege and rallied Sinhala Buddhist voters behind
Gotabaya, who in their view will be the man to save Buddhist Sri Lanka.
(It was more than a coincident that almost immediately after the Easter
bombing, GR announced that he would be the man to take care of the
security of the nation). Sections of both main stream and social media
in cahoot with Buddhist business interests also joined that campaign,
which in the final analysis emerged as a battle between the Buddhist
majority and minorities. While SP won handsomely in the Tamil and Muslim
concentrated Northern and Eastern provinces, GR registered victory in
all others. On the whole, he won by an absolute majority of 52.25%. In
this victory, Buddhist nationalist campaigners has given a clear message
to the winner that this is a totally Sinhala Buddhist country, and that
he does not need the support of any minority to govern, a disturbing
message indeed. Unlike the previous presidential elections, this one has
deepened the ethnic and religious divisions in Sri Lanka. The
victory of SWRD in 1956, which also saw the energetic role of political
Buddhism, pales into insignificance when compared to the victory of GR. Minorities
are obviously stunned and are forced to rethink of their political
strategies to cope with a rejuvenated Buddhist supremacist wave. Even
though the words of the new president, spoken immediately after taking
his oath of allegiance, ‘to uphold the rights of all citizens, create a
country where all religions and cultures can coexist’ are somewhat
soothing to a fearful minority, there are many hurdles he had to cross
if he were to deliver on this promise. One can only wish him well.
Issues of Governance
Attempts are already underway to make MR the Prime Minister and to
revisit the constitution to amend or re-amend in order to empower the
new regime to undertake any change it wants, except,
as the father of that constitution said, to make a man woman and vice
versa. In one of my previous pieces to this journal (“The Coming
Duumvirate & Economic Challenge”, 5 Nov. 2019) and published a day
later in FT,
I alluded to the possibility of personality differences and clash among
members of ruling families. In monarchical regimes, both in distant
past and in recent times, such clashes had led to palatial revolutions,
patricides, matricides, fratricides and even coup d’etats. Even
if one dismisses such extreme outcomes, one cannot totally ignore the
destabilising effects of personality clashes in family ruled regimes.
GR is known for his military style discipline and for being a
taskmaster. The way he cleaned up Colombo when he was attached to the
Ministry of Defence is proof of these qualities. He has promised to form
a technocratic cabinet, but an essential prerequisite for technocracy
is meritocracy. The technocrats should be selected on the basis of
merit. If he were to deliver on that promise, then, one can expect the
size of that cabinet be a lot smaller than what this country had
witnessed in recent times, hopefully less expensive and therefore more
productive and highly efficient. A
government run by such a cabinet can be expected to be free of
corruption and nepotism, the two evils that has ruined this country and
bankrupted the treasury. The big question however is, whether his
brother prime minister and members of the clan would allow GR a free
hand to undertake such fundamental changes. What are the constraints?
The size of the legislature has more than doubled from 95 elected and 6
appointed representatives, between 1940s and 1972, to the current figure
of 225 of whom 29 are unelected. The increase in the size of population
is the primary reason to increase the number of parliamentary
representatives. However, the quantity and quality of cabinet members
depend on the quantity and quality of the representatives. The low
educational qualifications of a large number of current representatives,
their inability to even comprehend the essentials of complex problems
facing the nation, and the unethical behaviour of these members are all
an index of a continuous deterioration in the quality of our
politicians. Given this situation, how will President GR create a
technocratic cabinet, introduce meritocracy, clean up corruption and
nepotism, and increase performance efficiency unless he brings such
technocrats through the backdoor or set strict quality conditions at the
outset for candidates contesting the General Election from his party?
Will his brother PM, who is a populist and a man for the gallery with
readiness to bend rules to favour his supporters and cronies agree to go
along with the demands of a disciplinarian president? Only time will
tell.
Economic Challenge
Ballooning budget deficits, continuing trade deficits, falling
productivity and rising debt burden both public and private, have made
the economy the victim of callous mismanagement. The wealth gap has
widened so rapidly and the pain of living has become so unbearable to a
vast majority, that suicide rate in the country has been noted
increasing. The president’s promises to reduce tax burden and provide
inducement to investors are to be welcome, but they have to be part of a
co-ordinated economic plan, which is not there yet. The neoliberal open
economy paradigm has to be revisited to make certain fundamental
changes to fit Sri Lankan environment. In the meantime, public
expenditure needs pruning, but how can that be done amidst all welfare
promises dished out by MR and company during the campaign? The
task facing the new regime is monumental and measures needed to rectify
the situation have to be comprehensive and systemic, and not
uncoordinated and spasmodic.
Economic growth and development are not simply the function of
mathematical models and some combination of micro and macroeconomic
variables. They are, in the final analysis, the product of people
participation. There is no better asset to an economy than its people.
This reality must be understood by policy makers. In a plural society
like Sri Lanka every component of that plural make up must be energised
to participate and benefit from the growth game. This is the secret
behind the success of tiny Singapore. Singapore economy was built by
Singaporeans and not by Chinese. Likewise Sri Lankan economy has to be
built by Sri Lankans and not by Sinhalese Buddhists alone. The president
may not have received many votes from the minorities, but they have to
be brought in into the growth equation to achieve economic prosperity.
To marginalise them in order to satisfy the hegemonic desires of
ultra-nationalists is to deprive the economy of invaluable resources.
From Latin America to Middle East and from Europe to Southeast Asia,
public unrest caused by economic injustice and denial of political
participation and absence of basic human rights, is spreading. There has
been a growing fear among groups of intellectuals, thinkers, writers
and journalists in Sri Lanka about a looming authoritarianism under the
GR-MR duumvirate. Subtle authoritarianism with participatory democracy,
economic justice and rule of law, as in Singapore and some other
Southeast Asian countries has no doubt produced economic miracles.
Bereft of those positive and harmony enhancing complementarities
political authoritarianism alone will end up in perennial disharmony and
economic disaster as witnessed in parts of Africa and Latin America.