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, January 2, 2020
Gota’s Vision & Gautama’s Villains

Rajapaksa’s
(GR) immediate admission after winning the presidency that he was
elected overwhelmingly if not solely by the Sinhalese voters, but that
he would be a president for all communities was applauded by the whole
country and even by foreigners. Some of the measures, which he
undertook, such as minimising the traditional pomposity and durbar
attached to his office, choosing a leaner cabinet, reducing the tax
burden on producers, middlemen and consumers, removing political
interference in public appointments, economising public expenses and so
on certainly won kudos even from his sceptics. Quietly, they came to
accept the fact that in spite of GR’s
questionable past, the country needs an iron fist at the top to bring
some sanity and order into the chaotic polity and economy created by
former regimes.
However, the most controversial aspect of his vision is the belief in
solving the issue of national reconciliation through economic
development rather than devolution of power. In an earlier piece, I
captioned this strategy as “Political Exclusion & Economic Inclusion” (Colombo Telegraph 19
Dec. 2019), and pointed out that in a plural society, economic
prosperity, instead of promoting acquiescence will accentuate antipathy,
and the agitation for political inclusion will become irresistible.
What is happening in Hong Kong now is a clear evidence of this
phenomenon. What is more problematic in GR’s strategy, and in a sense
exposes his difficulty, is the argument that the “majority” is not
willing for any power sharing. That shows that even if he would be
willing as a devout Buddhist, the forces that brought him to power are
not. He is unable to release himself from the clutches of majoritarian
politics. That so called majority is an emotionally charged mass led by
an evangelical group of Buddhist supremacists, whose behaviour and
pronouncements are in total contradiction to the philosophy and ethos of
Buddhism. The purveyors of this supremacist ideology are the real
villains of Gautama. Their advocacy for a hegemonic Buddhist Sri Lanka
is in no way different from that of the architects of Hindutva and
Islamism. The hidden danger is that these extremist ideologies may feed
into each other, deepen divisions, create chaos and ultimately sabotage
Gota’s vision.
There are already signs that Buddhist extremism after taking a short
holiday during and immediately after the Presidential election, is
re-emerging. For example, slapping a Christian preacher by that
pugnacious Ampitiye Sumanarathana, identified as a “saffron clad thug”,
attached to the Mangalaramaya temple in Batticaloa, and the erection of
a Buddha statue in the precinct of a mosque at Nelundeniya in Kegalle
are worrying signs of supremacist resurgence. If these incidents are not
nipped in bud by the judiciary and security forces, and if the culprits
go unpunished that would certainly undermine GR’s original intention to
be a president for all communities. Even the announcement that national
anthem would be sung only in Sinhala at Independence Day Celebrations
cast a supremacist shadow over it.
Immediately after GR’s victory, the cantankerous Ven. Gnanasara, the
secretary of BBS, announced that his organization had served its
purpose, that there was no need for it to continue any more, and that he
was prepared to dissolve it. Instead, it still operates. The same was
said by another priest attached to Ravana Balaya, but that organization
also continues to exist. Moreover, radical priests are dictating to the
government on who should be charged and on what offences, and who should
be released and on what conditions. These radicals are functioning
virtually as an alternative government. Is the president’s silence on
these matters to be read as condonation? Even if he wants to condemn the
highhandedness of these villains his hands are tied because of the
forthcoming General Elections in which he expects his brother’s SLPP to
win with two-third majority.
In the meantime, it is imperative that the economy of the country needs
strengthening and economic growth with equity be pursued. GR should be
congratulated for appointing Professor W.D. Lakshman,
a first class economist and, more than that, an impassioned humanist,
as the Governor of the Central Bank. With Lakshman’s impeccable
credentials, his reported reservations about the supposed benefits of
neoliberalism and Washington Consensus are highly warranted and to be
applauded. However, the Central Bank does not have a magic wand to
produce economic miracles. There is a rising consensus among world
economists that in a world of highly integrated and heavily
financialised economies, Central Banks are becoming an “institutional
anachronism”. Even the most brilliant of Central Bank Governors
therefore, can only take care of the macro fundamentals of the economy,
and advice the government on the required direction of the fiscal side.
Unlike monetary policy, both fiscal and social policies are entirely the
domain of the President and his parliament. Of the three, the primacy
of social policy should not be under-rated if the stimulus provided by
the other two are to produce robust growth.
