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Lanka
Election violence in Sri Lanka foreshadows further political
turmoil
By K. Ratnayake
5 December 2001
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Sri Lankans vote in a general election today after an 11-week
election campaign that has been dominated by bitter rivalry between
the ruling Peoples Alliance (PA) and the opposition United National
Party (UNP). The high level of violence that has characterised
the poll points to the sharp underlying tensions and a state of
continuing crisis within the countrys political establishment.
President Chandrika Kumaratunga called the poll, just over
a year after the last general elections; one day before her government
faced certain defeat in a parliamentary no confidence motion.
The decision was the end product of 12 months of tortured political
infighting following the previous election, and rising frustrations
in ruling circles that their agenda was not being implemented.
For months big business pressured and cajoled the PA and UNP
to form a government of national unity to address two demands:
to initiate peace talks with the separatist Liberation Tigers
of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) to end the countrys long-running civil
war and to implement the IMFs restructuring demands. When
the PA failed to reach a deal with the UNP and turned instead
to chauvinist Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) for support, the
most powerful sections of business moved against the government.
A number of PA politicians, including several senior figures,
were induced to switch sides, leaving the government in a minority
in parliament.
Throughout the campaign, UNP leader Ranil Wickremesinghe, with
the aid of the private media, has sought to paint the conservative
UNP, which began the war in 1983 and brutally prosecuted it for
over a decade, as the party of peace. Wickremesinghe told Reuters
yesterday that he would immediately open talks with the LTTE if
he won the election. When asked about the LTTEs demand for
a lifting of its proscription, he said he would consider the issue
as soon as he received a positive reaction from the LTTE.
Wickremesinghe is counting on the support of a number of Tamil-
and Muslim-based parties that have abandoned the PA and now see
the UNP as the best means for striking an agreement with the LTTE.
Such a deal would be a power-sharing arrangement between the Sinhala
and Tamil elites that would devolve limited powers on a regional
basis and further entrench ethnic divisions.
The UNP, which was widely discredited after its previous terms
in office, is seeking to exploit the popular hostility to the
war to lever itself back into power. A recent University of Colombo
survey of more than 3,000 people found that 77 percent supported
talks with the LTTE as the best means for ending the conflict.
A poll by Survey Research Lanka found that support for the UNP
had risen from 40.4 to 43.5 percent over the last month, putting
it ahead of the PAs 38.8 percent.
The University of Colombo survey also found that 45 percent
of those polled ranked the countrys stagnating economy ahead
of the war. Wickremesinghe is pitching to these concerns, promising
to reopen factories, create jobs and revive economic growthwithout
saying how.
Hit by defections, the PA is desperately attempting to avoid
defeat. Kumaratunga came to power in 1994 promising talks with
the LTTE and an end to the war but rapidly ditched the promise
and intensified the war. In the current campaign, the government
has accused Wickremesinghe, without offering any evidence, of
having a secret deal with the LTTE to divide the country. While
accusing the UNP of treachery, Kumaratunga has not ruled out talks
with the LTTE but has insisted that there will be no lifting of
the ban on the LTTE and no discussion on a separate Tamil state
of Eelam.
The government has also offered a series of crude electoral
bribes, including increased salaries and pensions for state employees,
the recruitment of teachers and casual employees, and promotions.
In a bid to woo sections of business, Kumaratunga called a last
minute meeting of employer groups at the presidential place to
offer state subsidies to help firms pay wages, as well as restructuring
funds for the ailing garment industry.
Election violence
A measure of the crisis confronting political parties is their
open resort to various forms of thuggery and violence. Official
police reports up until yesterday indicated that 26 people had
died and another 700 were injured in election-related incidents.
Private election monitors put the death toll at 41. Both parties
have private gangs of underworld thugs and former soldiers. The
opposition has also accused the PA of using state security forcesthe
police and army.
Last Sunday, sharp clashes erupted between the PA and UNP supporters
in Anuradhapura after a grenade exploded in the midst of a PA
march, killing two people and injuring 13. The police stepped
in with the support of the army to impose an indefinite curfew
in some areas of the city. Last week, two supporters of Tamil
parties were killed and others injured during an attack on the
northern Jaffna peninsula, allegedly by thugs from the government
ally, the Eelam Peoples Democratic Party.
Party leaders have endorsed the use of violence. Kumaratunga
provocatively told a public rally at Tissamaharama on November
15: It is okay to kill one of theirs who killed one of ours.
S.B. Dissanayake, one of the top-level PA defectors to the UNP,
responded in kind on November 22, telling a meeting of junior
lawyers: If one or two persons involved in ballot rigging
get killed, then others would stop further [ballot] stuffing.
In business circles, there is increasing concern being expressed
that the elections will resolve nothing. There is a clear preference
for the UNP as witnessed by a 25 percent rise in share prices
in recent weeks, in the expectation that the UNP will win. But
even if the UNP and its allies obtain a clear parliamentary majority,
Kumaratunga will continue to hold office until 2005 and has substantial
executive powers.
Wickremesinghe has indicated that the UNP is prepared to work
with Kumaratunga, pointing to the French political system where
the president and prime minister may come from different parties.
We dont want to oust her, he said. She
can remain a virtual figurehead and perhaps take care of things
like foreign policy. But we will run the government.
Kumaratunga, however, is not about to be reduced to a figureheadsomething
that would require significant constitutional amendment. In the
event that the UNP wins, she already set a course for political
confrontation. She declared to Reuters: I cannot
work with their policies.
With the prospect of further political chaos in the aftermath
of the election, some business leaders have renewed the call for
a national unity government. On the eve of the vote, Ken Balendra,
chairman of the state-owned Bank of Ceylon, commented: The
best thing for the country is a national government of all parties.
Otherwise there will be no end to this uncertainty.
The Lanka Monthly Digest sent a more emphatic warning:
So the economy, the cost of living, and the on-going war
(or the impasse on the peace front) are uppermost in the minds
of business and ordinary people alike. If nothing is done to address
them, the voices of business and the people may
soon be sending the message to Sri Jayawardenepura [the seat of
government]: Hang Parliament! [Emphasis in the
original]
These comments are a sharp warning of the discussion now taking
place in ruling circles. If the election fails to break the political
deadlock, sections of the ruling elite are prepared to dispense
with parliament and impose their agenda through more direct, dictatorial
methods.
The ongoing political crisis is not simply the product of personal
ambitions and party rivalries but reflects deeper contradictions.
For more than 50 years since independence from the British, the
entire political establishment in Colombo has resorted to Sinhala
chauvinism to divide the working class and bolster its own positiona
process that erupted in war in 1983.
Big business is now demanding an end to the war because it
has become an obstacle to its plans to attract global investment
to exploit Sri Lankas cheap labour. But neither the PA nor
UNP has been able to reach a deal with the LTTE because both of
them are deeply mired in Sinhala chauvinism. Any move by one party
to negotiate an end to the war, inevitably results in accusations
of treachery from the other. The UNP and PA are unable to come
together to jointly prosecute talks because they fear that by
doing so they would lose ground to various Sinhala extremist parties.
The Socialist Equality Party, which is fielding a slate of
24 candidates in the Colombo district, is the only party standing
on a socialist and international program which emphatically rejects
all forms of nationalism and chauvinism. The SEP has unequivocally
opposed the US-led war in Afghanistan and warned that the support
of other parties for the US aggression is the sharpest indication
of their anti-working class character. Its candidates have campaigned
for the building of an independent political movement of the working
class to end the war in Sri Lanka and to reconstruct society on
socialist lines.
The SEP advances the only viable program to end the war: the
unconditional withdrawal of the Sri Lankan armies from the north
and east and the convening of a constituent assembly of representatives
elected through a direct and democratic vote of the masses to
address the outstanding issues of democratic rights. The SEP campaigns
for a Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka and Eelam as part of the
struggle for a Union of Socialist Republics of the Indian subcontinent
and internationally.
See Also:
A socialist platform for the
2001 Sri Lankan election
[23 November 2001]
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