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: Sri
Lanka
Splits in Peoples Alliance regime as Sri Lanka heads for general
election
By Wije Dias
23 August 2000
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On August 18, President Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga
dissolved the Sri Lankan parliament and announced that the country's
general election would be held on October 10. The dissolution
was rushed through six days prior to the scheduled closing of
parliament, in order to bring the elections forward and undermine
the campaigns of opposition parties. The president's action flows
from a deep policy crisis within her Peoples Alliance (PA) regime
as well as widening splits within the main coalition party, her
own Sri Lankan Freedom Party (SLFP).
Two weeks ago, the government failed to win the necessary two-thirds
majority for its new draft constitution, aimed at settling the
civil war that has engulfed the northern and eastern provinces
of the island for more than 17 years. Both the government and
the United National Party (UNP) opposition offered bribes and
counter bribes to their MPs in a bid to manipulate the vote. In
the end, the PA suffered an ignominious defeat. It was forced
to postpone all parliamentary debate on the draft, after just
one and a half days of discussion, without taking a vote. This
political debacle was preceded by even more serious military disasters
that began with the fall of the key Elephant Pass military base
to the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) on April 22.
The entire election campaign will be conducted under the shadow
of emergency rule, which is still in force, along with draconian
media censorship. The censorship laws prohibit any spoken or written
references to war-related matters, under pain of prosecution.
Thus no full and open discussion will be allowed on the most crucial
issue in the elections: the 17-year civil war. At the same time
the government has stepped up its attacks on LTTE forces in the
northern peninsula and other areas, using recently acquired high-tech
bombing equipment to strengthen its standing with Sinhala extremist
elements.
The main opposition party, the UNP, participated in the drafting
of the constitution, which was facilitated by Norway and backed
by the European Union and the United States. While the PA and
the UNP arrived at a consensus on 95 percent of the new draft,
the UNP withdrew its support at the last moment, under pressure
from the Buddhist clergy and racialist elements.
The PA immediately launched a media campaign, beginning with
an interview given by President Kumaratunga on national television
on August 11, accusing the UNP of betraying the consensus built
up over several months of discussions. The president insisted
the PA would not give up its attempts to pass the bill and would
transform the next parliament into a Constituent Assembly, if
necessary, to secure the bill by a simple majority without relying
on the UNP's support.
Amid accusations of sabotage against the UNP by the PA regime,
the imperialist powers and sections of the Indian ruling class
joined in to express their dissatisfaction at the UNP's about-face.
Editorials appeared on the same day as Kumaratunga's TV interview
in two Indian national dailies, the Hindu and the New
Indian Express, condemning the UNP's refusal to vote for the
new constitutional reforms in almost identical terms.
The Hindu editorial declared: ...It is regrettable
that the United National Partywhich, like other political
parties, was closely associated with the formulation of the draftdeclared
it would not support the new Constitution. Given the political
arithmetic in Sri Lanka's Parliament, it was virtually impossible
to muster up the required two-thirds majority to pass the new
Constitution. The UNP's change of heart left Ms. Kumaratunga's
Peoples Alliance government few options but to declare it was
deferring the vote on the Constitution Bill.
Likewise , The New Indian Express opined: After
decades of suicidal political manoeuvres by the Sinhala politicians,
hopes of a breakthrough on the ticklish autonomy issue were raised
when Ranil Wickramasinghe, UNP leader, appeared to support draft
proposals during discussions with President Kumaratunga. When
it came to the crunch, however, when the bold and visionary were
called to stand up to be counted, Wickramasinghe had a change
of heart. It may have been a delayed attack of populism or the
impact of protest chants by the monks; if he had genuine second
thoughts, it was the worst possible moment for a responsible leader
to discover it.
These pressures drove the UNP leader to declare, at a public
meeting last Friday, his willingness to restart PA-UNP negotiations
on a political solution to the Tamil problem. Addressing a gathering
called to mark the first anniversary of the death of A.C.S. Hameed,
a veteran UNP Foreign Minister, he remarked: An all-party
consensus and a common negotiating position with the LTTE would
have been a solution that Mr. Hameed dreamed of. This followed
a keynote address by Norway's former prime minister, Kjell Magne
Bondevik, in which he stressed: The day the war is over
and a political settlement is completed, Sri Lanka will be poised
for unprecedented progress.
In a pointed reference to Wickramasinghe's adaptation to the
racists, Bondevik also declared: What has happened in Dr.
Hameed's electorate during the last 39 years is an indication
that the people of Sri Lanka are above narrow-minded religious
or ethnic issues. It shows great democratic maturity, that a predominant
Buddhist, Sinhalese community could elect a Muslim as their representative
to parliament, time and again.
Divisions in the SLFP
In the lead-up to the election campaign, the PA's main constituent
party, the SLFP made two crucial changes in its leadership in
an effort to patch up differences that emerged in the course of
the drafting of the constitutional reforms. First, it appointed
Ratnasiri Wickramanayake as the Prime Minister, replacing the
84-year-old Mrs. Bandaranaike, the president's mother. Second,
it elected the Minister of Youth Affairs, Sports and the Samurdhi
(Prosper) Program, S.B. Dissanayaka as SLFP General Secretary,
which fell vacant due to the death of the former secretary.
The government-owned Daily News, in its front page political
round-up on August 19, nine days after the appointment of the
new Prime Minister, noted: Ratnasiri Wickramanayake has
with great skill defused the tension with the Buddhist clergy.
His conciliatory approach and confidence building with the SLFP's
traditional constituency has paid dividends already. Attempts
to split the PA on the basis of pure SLFP policies by some political
opportunists within the party have been successfully thwarted.
Coming from the government's mouthpiece, which is controlled
by the Media Minister Mangala Samaraweera, the reference to an
attempted split amounted to a direct criticism of
more senior SLFP leaders, such as Laksman Jayakody, the Minister
of Buddha Sasana, and D.M. Jayaratne, the Minister of Agriculture.
Both aspired to the post of Prime Minister, claiming they had
always stood with the party in crisis situations. Wickramanayake,
on the other hand, joined the SLFP from the MEP in the 1960s,
then left the party in the 1980s with Kumaratunga to found the
Sri Lanka Mahajana Party (SLMP). They both only rejoined the SLFP
in 1992.
The article's allusion to the SLFP's traditional constituency
was a reference to the vast numbers of rural petty bourgeoisie
dependent upon agriculture and dominated by Buddhist ideology.
Their social significance is reflected in the fact that the two
ministries covering these areasagriculture and Buddhismare
occupied by senior party figures.
But rural life and, to an even greater extent, urban life have
undergone vast changes during the past two decades, with the implementation
of privatisation and free market policies. A new prosperous middle
class layer has emerged with no roots in the traditional way of
life. In the Cabinet, Samaraweera and S.B. Dissanayaka are closer
to this layer, which is politically unstable and has become increasingly
desperate due to the regime's economic and political crisis. At
the same time, under conditions of the growth of poverty throughout
the country, the Samurdhi Program, under Dissanayaka's portfolio,
has seen the appointment of several thousand officials to oversee
the most impoverished sections of the masses, wielding their powers
to recommend food subsidies and other concessions.
It is widely known that these Samurdhi officials have been
engaged in the intimidation of voters in different areas and the
organisation of ballot rigging in Provincial Council elections
and in last year's presidential election. The PA requires their
services in this election even more, because it faces severe competition
for the Sinhala Buddhist constituency from the newly-formed, virulently
racist parties like the Sihala Urumaya (Sinhala Heritage) Party.
Dissanayaka's election to the post of SLFP General Secretary
constitutes a significant move toward further anti-democratic
vote catching campaigns by the PA regime. The News Analyst
of the Daily Mirror wrote on August 22: S.B. Dissanayaka
has a reputation for getting things done, especially winning elections.
To him must go the credit for the past victories at the Wayamba
provincial council and 1999 presidential elections, however dubious
that honor may be. Now, with SB as the party general secretary,
the President has made her intentions clearthe PA will make
an all-out effort to win the forthcoming poll, come what may.
But the election was not a smooth affair. Dissanayaka received
16 votes at the central committee meeting, including that of Chandrika
Kumaratunga, against his rival, who polled 12. The defeated candidate,
Maithripala Sirisena, the Minister of Mahaveli Development, who
joined the SLFP in 1968, was a longtime assistant secretary of
the party and was reportedly supported by the party's traditional
constituency. Dissanayaka, on the other hand, joined the
SLFP in the late 1980s after gaining his primary political education
as a student leader in the Stalinist Communist Party.
It has become the custom for politicians, including those of
the Lanka Sama Samaja Party and the CPSL, to mark their accession
to office with a visit to the Chief Priests of the Bikkhus. This
decadent ritual has served to boost the authority of Buddhism
on the island. But while Wickramanayake received the customary
blessing as the new prime minister from the Chief Prelates of
the Buddhist Bikkhus of Malwaththa Chapter, the same priest refused
to meet Dissanayaka and bless him in his new position. Apparently
the priest also avoided meeting Kumaratunga when she visited Kandy
two weeks ago to officially wind up an annual Buddhist festival.
The rifts that have developed within the SLFP are a stark expression
of the crisis of the entire political system in Sri Lanka. With
voter participation rapidly declining, electoral contests between
the main bourgeois parties have turned increasingly into bloody
conflicts, with gangs of thugs mobilised to prevent voters from
exercising their rights and to rig the ballots. Usually it is
the party in powereither the UNP or the PAwhich has
the greater advantage in what has become nothing much more than
gang warfare.
See Also:
Sri Lankan Socialist Equality Party to
contest general election
[23 August 2000]
Sri Lanka
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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