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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Sri
Lanka
Following a string of military defeats
Sri Lankan government imposes severe new censorship and emergency
powers
By a correspondent
8 May 2000
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this version to print
In an act of desperation, the Peoples Alliance (PA) government
in Sri Lanka last week responded to a series of major military
defeats at the hands of the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil
Eelam (LTTE) by putting the entire country on a war footing.
Over the past two weeks the Sri Lankan army has lost control of
the key military bases on the northern Jaffna peninsula at Elephant
Pass and Pallai and faces the prospect of losing control of the
entire area including Jaffna town for the first time since 1995.
Sri Lanka was already under severe wartime restrictions. Yet
last Wednesday, the government issued a new list of emergency
regulations in a 101-page document, promulgated under the Public
Security Act, which make drastic new inroads into democratic rights
including new censorship requirements, the banning of strikes
and protests and the granting of powers to seize property for
military use.
The draconian new regulations were announced the day after
President Chandrika Kumaratunga met with opposition United National
Party (UNP) leader Ranil Wickremesinghe and shortly after the
PA government learnt that India had turned down its request for
military assistance. Not only has the Indian government announced
that it will not help Colombo fight the LTTE but on May 3 External
Affairs Minister Jaswant Singh told reporters that the evacuation
of 35,000 Sri Lanka troops trapped in Jaffna is not India's
responsibility.
The new regulations provide sweeping powers to the president
to appoint persons as a competent authority to regulate
all aspects of civil life. The first to be hit have been the media,
including for the first time foreign journalists, who are now
subject to a series of extensions to the country's already severe
censorship restrictions.
Regulation No. 14(1) allows for the competent authority
to restrict or ban publications in all or part of Sri Lanka and
transmissions to other countries on any matters which would
or might be prejudicial to the interests of national security
or the preservation of public order or the maintenance of supplies
and services essential to the life of the community or of matters
inciting or encouraging persons to mutiny, riot or civil commotion,
or to commit breach of any law for the time being in force...
The competent authority will have the power to
compel anyone to submit for censorship the following: documents,
pictorial representations, photographs, cinematograph films, teleprinter,
telegraph, television, transmission of matters relating to the
operations of security forces including news reports, editorials,
articles, letters to the editors, cartoons and comments.
Those who fail to submit their material to the censor will be
banned from printing, publishing or distributing and any printing
presses suspected of printing such material can be closed down.
Even before the new powers were enacted the government had
attempted to shut down local BBC Sinhala service broadcasts on
the basis that the British news programs had quoted from LTTE
press releases. The new regime involves not just the censorship
of details of the Sri Lankan armed forces and their operations
but open political censorship of items critical of the government
and its policies. The weekly Sunday Times newspaper, for
instance, had its editorial Of maturity and panic
and its political column All want to know what's going on
so extensively cut last weekend as to make the arguments virtually
incoherent.
These actions make clear that the government is in a deep political
crisis and is fearful of any avenue that might allow the widespread
opposition among workers, villagers, intellectuals and others
to the war and its policies to be expressed. The new regulations
are a frantic attempt to preserve its own grip on power as much
as they are to bolster the fortunes of the beleaguered Sri Lankan
troops on the Jaffna peninsula.
The government has banned all strikes, demonstrations, processions
and public meetings and imposed a series of economic measures,
including a wage freeze, aimed at shoring up the economy and the
budget, both of which have been hard hit by the intensified fighting.
The pay freeze immediately affects 400,000 plantation workers
who have been agitating for a 40 percent wage increase. Coming
on top of recent price rises for gas and telephones, the government-owned
Electricity Board has announced that it will increase charges
by 25 percent from July 1. At the same time many youth will be
affected by the drying up of jobs caused by the decision to suspend
all non-essential development projects.
Other regulations allow the government and the military to
seize property and to conscript people, including:
* Regulation 8(1) enables the competent authority
to commandeer any article in Sri Lanka (including any vessel
or aircraft which is owned by any person resident in Sri Lanka
or in which is in Sri Lanka or in any part of Sri Lanka).
* Authorities will also be able to take possession of buildings
and evict any person if the premises are alleged to have
been used in the commission of or in connection with the commission
of any offence under these regulations or the prevention of terrorism
act no 48 of 1979.
* Regulation 10 allows the president to appoint officers or
authorities to require any person to do any work or render
any personal service in aid, or in connection with, the national
security or the maintenance or essential services.
The new regulations can only be compared with those promulgated
in 1971 in the midst of an uprising of young people organised
by the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP), or Peoples Liberation
Front, which was brutally put down by a coalition government led
by Kumaratunga's motherSirima Bandaranaike. Or to the period
of 1987-89, when the UNP government again unleashed the security
forces against rebellious rural youth in the south of the island,
resulting in 60,000 deaths. During those times a mere telephone
call to the police from a vindictive neighbour or a personal enemy
was enough for an innocent individual or his family to be tortured
or killed at the hands of the army, police or their terror squads.
The most vocal support for the PA government has come from
Sinhala extremist groupings that demand that the war be fought
to the finish and the LTTE defeated. The fascistic National Movement
Against Terrorism, which is a component of the newly-formed Sinhala
Heritage Party, commended Kumaratunga for carrying out what it
had been demanding for a long timeto put the country on
a war footing. The print and electronic media controlled by the
PA government is churning out war mongering propaganda heavily
laced with anti-Tamil racism that is indistinguishable from the
ravings of such groups.
But the ability of the government to be able to impose these
emergency measures is dependent on the active or passive support
of the so-called left parties and the trade union leaders. Both
the Lanka Sama Samaja Party (LSSP) and the Stalinist Communist
Party of Sri Lanka (CPSL) are part of the PA government and so
are directly responsible for the emergency measures.
When contacted LSSP leader Batty Weerakoon said that he could
not comment on the new regulations as he had not yet received
a copy. But he had been at the cabinet meeting on May 3, which
unanimously decided to promulgate the measures. If one takes him
by his word, Weerakoon voted for the emergency powers on the say
so of the president without having read the document. The CPSL
has also said nothing.
The JVP has taken a similar stance. For all its posturing as
an opponent of both the ruling PA and the opposition UNP, the
JVP supports the stepping up of the war to defeat the LTTE. In
an interview on May 7, JVP propaganda secretary Wimal Weerawansa
commented: When we say we will stop the war that does not
mean that we give north and east to [LTTE leader] Prabhakaran.
If he continues to fight we are prepared to face such a situation.
We will not allow him to have any more victories. He also
indicated that the JVP had substantial support within the armed
forces.
The only party in Sri Lanka that opposed the PA government
from the outset and warned the working class about the dangers
posed by this left coalition was the Socialist Equality
Party, the Sri Lankan Section of the International Committee of
the Fourth International. Its stance, which was attacked at the
time as sectarian, has been completely vindicated.
The LSSP, CPSL and the trade union bureaucracy are now supporting
a government, which, in pursuing its racist war against the Tamils,
has abolished fundamental democratic rights and rests more and
more directly on fascistic elements and the military.
See Also:
EPDP thugs in the service of Colombo
regime
A serious threat to the lives of SEP members in Sri Lanka
[5 May 2000]
An air of desperation in Sri Lankan ruling
circles as the LTTE makes further advances
[4 May 2000]
Military debacle at Elephant
Pass set to trigger political crisis in Sri Lanka
[25 April 2000]
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