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Lanka
Sri Lankan business demands deal with LTTE to end war
By K. Ratnayake
22 September 2001
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Big business in Sri Lanka has launched an aggressive campaign
to demand that the Peoples Alliance government and the opposition
United National Party join hands to strike a deal with the separatist
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) and end the countrys
18-year civil war. The highly-orchestrated campaign of advertising
and public rallies underscores the corporate elites dissatisfaction
with this months agreement between the PA government and
the extreme chauvinist Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) to rescue
the government from defeat.
Ceylon Chamber of Commerce chairman Chandra Jayaratna told
the press that business was singularly calling for cessation
of hostility and resumption of peace talks ... [as] the single
most important issue before the country.
A lunchtime demonstration was organised by business chambers
in Colombo on September 19, which was joined by thousands of people
despite an attack by 300 thugs from the racist Sihala Urumaya
led by one of its leaders, Champika Rananwaka, a member of parliament.
The Sinhala supremacist organisation has declared that it will
not allow such rallies.
President Chandrika Kumaratunga signed a Memorandum of Understanding
with the JVP on September 5, after a three-month struggle for
survival triggered by the defection of the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress
to the opposition in June. The pact gave the government a new
temporary lease of life, providing it with a thin majority of
six in parliament and pushing back a United National Party (UNP)
no-confidence motion.
The JVP agreed to protect the regime for a probation
period of one year. In return, Kumaratunga promised, in
effect, not to pursue negotiations with the LTTE during that time.
The PA government agreed not to introduce proposals for
the devolution of power or any other proposals that may lead to
controversy for 12 months and also pledged to prune the
cabinet to 20 ministers and halt the privatisation of the financial
sector and education system.
The JVP committed itself to not support any subversive
line of action adopted by other parties that may result in paralysing
the government and the economyin other words, to help
suppress workers struggles. Through its trade union in the
health sector, the JVP last week issued a leaflet urging nurses
not to engage in strikes arbitrarily that would harass people
and that would be thoroughly opposed by the people.
Yet, the PA-JVP alliance is fragile. Four senior ministers
resigned last week (one later rejoined the cabinet), on the grounds
that the JVP agreement would block any peace arrangement.
These ministers have held discussions with the UNP and seem to
be marking time before crossing over to the opposition, taking
other MPs with them. Other conflicts have erupted between the
JVP and the PA, including controversies over the number of ministerial
portfolios and appointments to a new constitutional council.
Though the JVP pact saved the day for the PA and employers
are pleased with the JVPs willingness to discipline workers,
big business is not satisfied. Just as the PA was concluding discussions
with the JVP, 14 chambers of business met on September 4 and launched
a campaign on the slogan Sri Lanka FirstIts
Now or Never.
National Development Bank chief executive officer Ranjith Fernando
told the meeting: Enough is enough. This country is bleeding.
We need peace... This campaign will continue until the two sides
decide to resume talks. Business leaders said they were
taking this initiative to mobilise peace-loving people to
tell the politicians to stop the war and start talks. They
have allocated 20 million rupees to the campaign and enlisted
the support of non-government organisations, professionals and
popular film and sports stars.
One business tycoon, Lalith Kotalawela, has written to LTTE
leader V. Prabhakaran, seeking a meeting with him to discuss peace.
While Kotalawela informed Kumaratunga and UNP leader Ranil Wickremesinghe
of his initiative, he told the media that he did not believe politicians,
and would like to emulate Nelson Mandela in building a peoples
power movement.
Economic slide
Corporate leaders first raised the Now or Never
slogan following the LTTEs devastating July 24 raid on the
countrys main air force base and international airport,
which destroyed half the air force and civilian air fleets. The
attack deepened the crisis of the government, already facing huge
war expenditure, political instability and the world economic
downturn. In purely financial terms, the damage at the airport
added 10 billion rupees to the cost of the war, which has consumed
an estimated 600 billion rupees (nearly $ US7 billion) in government
funds over the past 18 years.
International airlines and shipping lines seized upon the airport
disaster to increase fares and insurance charges, naming Sri Lanka
as a war risk country. The charges were reduced after
the government offered a bond worth $US50 million to cover all
risks. But surcharges have hit imports and exports and foreign
investment has fallen due to the political turmoil.
Economic growth in the first half of this year dropped to just
1 percent, well down from the original forecast of 4 percent.
Exports declined by 1.5 percent, with industrial exports falling
by 2.6 percent. Tourism, the countrys main source of foreign
income, has declined by 28 percent since the airport attack. Central
Bank governor A.S. Jayawardana told the Far Eastern Economic
Review: On the one hand we have the political crisisthe
government has been reduced to a minority in parliament and is
fighting to surviveand then there is the impact of the airport
attack.
Business leaders fear that continued political instability
will threaten loans from the IMF, the World Bank and other institutions.
The IMF has delayed granting the second installment of its standby
loan, due in November, to early next year. Its chief representative
in Sri Lanka, Nadeem Ul Haque, has indicated that the JVP-PA agreement
must not be allowed to cut across the governments pledges
to the Fund. In an interview with the Daily Mirror, he
spoke approvingly about the two parties agreement to reduce
cabinet posts and eliminate other waste, but insisted on reductions
in the budget deficit and public debt, the removal of subsidies
and other structural changes.
The continuation of the war could also generate popular unrest.
Following the attack on the airport, major conglomerates such
as Keels Holdings have retrenched hundreds of hotel workers. About
30,000 health workers struck last week, while thousands of station
masters and railway technical officers downed tools for two days,
demanding higher wages. About 700 nurses at a semi-government
hospital launched a strike.
In June, the financial elite demanded a national unity
regime comprised of the PA and UNP to end the war and deal
with the working class, but the two parties could not agree on
who would lead the government. In the past, neither the PA nor
the UNP has been able to reach an accommodation with the LTTE,
because both utilise Sinhala-Buddhist chauvinism to divide the
working class and rest on racialist forces. As recently as last
August, the JVPone of the most extremist partiesforced
the PA to abandon autonomy proposals designed to forge a deal
with the LTTE.
Given the pressure from business, Kumaratunga appears to realise
that her regime cannot survive unless it seeks a settlement with
the LTTE. The PA has written to the UNP proposing a common appeal
to the LTTE and Foreign Minister Lakshman Kadirgamar announced
last weekend that the government will seek a mutually-agreed
cessation of hostile military operations. Kumaratunga also
held a meeting with Sri Lanka Muslim Congress leader Rauf Hakeemwho
defected to the UNP in Juneto discuss how to proceed toward
peace talks. After the meeting, he announced that he would act
as a mediator between the PA and UNP.
Business agenda
The Now or Never campaign has nothing to do with
establishing the democratic rights of the Tamil people. The business
elite has long utilised the racist war to split the working class
along Sinhala and Tamil ethnic lines and enforce attacks on jobs,
wages and living standards. Now, however, the war has become an
economic burden and international investment is being withdrawn
from the country. Big business hopes that an agreement with the
LTTE, representing the aspiring Tamil bourgeoisie, will widen
its economic base and strengthen the governments hand in
implementing the IMFs agenda.
Moreover, given Sri Lankas strategic importance in South
Asia, the major Western powers have been exerting pressures on
the PA regime and the LTTE to come to a settlement. Their concern
is that the political impasse in Sri Lanka and any LTTE move to
create a separate state would have adverse repercussions across
the Indian sub-continent, where a myriad of separatist organisations
are now active.
The ruling elite is attempting to exploit the war-weary sentiments
of the masses for its own purposes, but its agenda is to establish
the best conditions to continue slashing working conditions, overhauling
labour laws to enforce a hire and fire policy, reducing holidays
and privatising government services, including education and health.
See Also:
Sri Lankan government reaches deal with
the chauvinist JVP
[5 September 2001]
Big business pushes for national
unity government in Sri Lanka
[11 August 2001]
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