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Lanka
Splits in Sri Lankan government coalition deepen
By Sarath Kumara
4 September 2000
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Just over a month before nationwide parliamentary elections
in Sri Lanka, all the major political parties are being wracked
by internal divisions, splits and realignments that point to a
deep-seated malaise within the entire political elite. Nominations
close today and the poll will be held on October 10.
Both the government and opposition parties face widespread
resentment over declining living standards and the impact of the
country's protracted civil war, but none have any policies to
meet the needs and aspirations of ordinary working people. What
has dominated the campaign so far is personal mudslinging, vitriolic
recriminations, sordid horse-trading over seats and electoral
alliances and outright thuggery.
The ruling Peoples Alliance, which came to power after the
last elections in 1994, is a disparate coalition of parties grouped
around President Chandrika Kumaratunga's Sri Lanka Freedom party
(SLFP). It has included the traditional, and now largely moribund
parties of the leftthe Lanka Sama Samaja Party
(LSSP) and the Stalinist Communist Party of Sri Lanka (CPSL)as
well as various Tamil and Muslim bourgeois parties. The PA exploited
hostility to the previous United National Party (UNP) governments
by promising to end the war against the separatist Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in the north and east and to alleviate
unemployment, poverty and the lack of services in the south.
But after winning office, Kumaratunga intensified the war,
and presided over rising prices and growing unemployment. Moreover,
she goes into these elections having proclaimed, just four months
ago, a series of draconian emergency powers. While the PA is under
pressure from sections of big business and the major international
powers to end the war, it is at the same time beholden to the
army, the Buddhist clergy and various fascistic organisations,
which are demanding the stepping up of military action. In early
August, Kumaratunga failed to push through a series of constitutional
reforms aimed at establishing the basis for peace talks. Now she
is seeking to appeal to Sinhala chauvinist groups who bitterly
criticised the package for making concessions to the Tamil minority.
Under the pressure of these contradictions, the ruling coalition
is splitting apart. Kumaratunga's own declining popularity was
revealed during the presidential elections at the end of last
yearshe hung onto office but with a much-reduced majority.
As a result the various PA partners feel they are in a stronger
position to drive a hard bargain in the pre-election wrangling
over seats. But in trying to consolidate a deal with one of her
allies, Kumaratunga inevitably ends up alienating others.
Just over a week ago, the PA sealed an electoral arrangement
with the Mahajana Eksath Peramuna (MEP) or Peoples United Front,
which just weeks ago had been demonstrating against the constitutional
changes. The MEP had been negotiating with other chauvinists groups
to form an anti-PA electoral alliance but the talks broke down
over the issue of how many seats each was to contest.
In orienting to the MEP, however, Kumaratunga is widening divisions
in the coalition with parties based in the Tamil and Muslim minorities.
In 1994, the PA had the support of all Tamil parties including
the LTTE. In the upcoming elections, however, neither the LTTE
nor the bourgeois Tamil United Liberation Front (TULF) is backing
the PA. Among other Tamil parties there are deep splits.
Kumaratunga was only able to patch together a fragile agreement
last Thursday with one of its key partners, the Sri Lanka Muslim
Congress (SLMC), after a week of pleading and anxious talks.
The rift with the SLMC erupted on August 22 when another Muslim
cabinet minister, A. H. M. Fowzie, from Kumaratunga's own Sri
Lanka Freedom party (SLFP), attacked the SLMC leader M. H. M.
Ashraff calling him a cardboard king maker and saying
that his party could not win more than five seats in the election.
Fowzie's scathing attack came at a time when the SLMC was engaged
in bargaining with the PA to contest 10 seats.
That evening Ashraff tendered his resignation and told President
Kumaratunga that the SLMC was taking up Fowzie's challenge. Kumaratunga
did not accept the resignation, invited Ashraff for talks and
instructed the PA General Secretary D.M. Jayaratne to issue a
public statement disowning Fowzie's views. Ashraff refused to
meet the president, sent a 25-page letter instead and flew to
Mecca. Two other SLMC deputy ministersM.L.A.M. Hisbullah
and U.L.M. Mohideenalso resigned their posts.
Although his comments provoked a crisis for the PA, Fowzie
refused to change his position. After 10 days of suspense and
tension, Kumaratunga was forced to issue an apology on behalf
of the PA. Writing to the SLMC leader on August 31, she condemned
the rude, undisciplined and dangerously damaging behavior
of Fowzie saying: I wish on my own behalf and on that
of my party to tender our apologies to you as leader of the SLMC
and to the SLMC itself.
Her letter paved the way for Ashraff to enter a conditional
agreement with the PA. Under the deal, the SLMC will stand under
the PA banner in three districtsDigamadulla, Batticaloa
and Trincomaleein the eastern province. Ashraff and Hisbullah
will head the PA nomination lists respectively in Digamadulla
and Batticaloa. But in 10 other districts, including Colombo,
Puttalam (in the northwestern province)an area with considerable
Muslim presenceand Jaffna, the SLMC will run under its own
bannerthe National Unity Alliance.
The SLMC was formed as a regional party in 1986 by a section
of the Muslim Tamil bourgeoisie based in the eastern province
following the outbreak of the war. The SLMC demanded its own separate
regional administration for Muslims. All the seats the party won
in the 1988 and 1994 elections were in the east. Although the
SLMC contested the Colombo district in 1994 it was unable to win
a single seat. The party joined the PA coalition after it became
apparent that the opposition UNP was unable to form a government.
The tensions between the SLMC and Muslim leaders in the SLFP
have existed for some time as the SLMC has tried to expand its
influence into Colombo and other areas outside the east. Ashraff
formed the National Unity Alliance to extend its base and to counter
charges that the SLMC was a communal organisation favouring only
Muslims. He is also trying to shore up divisions in his own party
after some of the SLMC's main organisers, including former parliamentarians,
defected to the UNP. According to some reports, the UNP approached
the SLMC leadership last week to make an electoral deal.
Kumaratunga also faces other splits and defections. Five former
parliamentarians of the Ceylon Workers Congress (CWC)all
are former CWC vice presidentshave left the PA to contest
under the UNP's banner. The CWC is still the largest trade union
amongst Tamil-speaking plantation workers and operates as a political
party. The dissidents are in a battle with the CWC leadership
for the control of the union and are seeking to exploit anti-government
sentiment among plantation workers. Just prior to last year's
presidential election, another plantation union leader and deputy
minister P. Chandrasekaran left the ruling coalition and aligned
himself with the UNP.
Another coalition partner, the Democratic United (Lalith) Fronta
group that previously split from the UNPhas broken ranks
with the PA, bemoaning the fact that it has not been given the
promised number of seats to contest in the election.
The conservative UNP faces its own internal crises. Deeply
unpopular because of its record in office, it has already suffered
a number of defections. Just last week a leading UNP figure, Sarath
Kongehage, announced his intention to leave the party and join
the PA. He was reported in the Hindustan Times as denouncing
the UNP for having a very lenient policy towards the fascist
LTTE murderers. His comments will no doubt provide further
grist for Kumaratunga who has resurrected her rather hysterical
allegations that the UNP was in cahoots with the LTTE in the attempt
to assassinate her last December.
See Also:
Splits in Peoples Alliance
regime as Sri Lanka heads for general election
[23 August 2000]
Sri Lankan Socialist Equality
Party to contest general election
[23 August 2000]
Sri Lanka
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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