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Lanka
SEP holds public meeting on the political crisis in Sri Lanka
By our correspondent
30 December 2003
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In the midst of the ongoing political crisis in Sri Lanka,
the Socialist Equality Party (SEP) held a public meeting in Colombo
on December 18 to explain its perspective and program. The working
class could not stand passively on the sidelines as events unfolded
but had to intervene independently into the political situation
on the basis of its class interests, SEP General Secretary Wije
Dias stressed in the course of his report.
Around 200 workers, students, unemployed youth and pensioners
attended the meeting. The SEP had distributed copies of its political
statements in Sinhala and Tamil and put up posters advertising
the meeting. Several people attended after reading the notice
published on the World Socialist Web Site (WSWS).
K. Ratnayake, a member of the WSWS International Editorial
Board, chaired the meeting. In opening, he explained that the
political crisis which erupted with the autocratic moves by President
Chandrika Kumaratunga on November 4 marked a turning point. He
pointed to the frustrations in ruling circles over the failure
of the president and the government to reach a compromise, citing
the warning contained in a Daily Mirror editorial that
the country was facing a political volcano.
Some analysts sought to reduce the crisis to a constitutional
standoff between the president and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe,
Ratnayake said. The conflict, however, was the result of more
fundamental issues connected to the countrys 20-year civil
war. He said the working class could only understand its own tasks
through an examination of the historical roots of the crisis as
well as the profound economic and political shifts that have taken
place internationally.
Wije Dias, who is also a WSWS International Editorial Board
member, delivered the main report. He began by placing the political
crisis in Sri Lanka in the context of the changed world situation.
The aggressive neo-colonial policies adopted by the Bush
administration in particular have had a grave destabilising effect
in every part of the globe, he said. The invasion
of Iraq laid bare not only the ruthlessness of US imperialism
in pursuing its policy of plunder but also the bankruptcy of international
regulatory bodies, such as the United Nations, that have existed
for more than five decades.
Dias explained that the US invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq
had sharpened tensions on the Indian subcontinent. The Pakistani
regime of President Pervez Musharraf was under pressure from Washington
to crush the Muslim fundamentalist organisations on which the
Pakistani military and state apparatus had relied in the past.
At the same time, the US was forging close ties with the Hindu
supremacists of the Bharathiya Janatha Party (BJP) in India, Pakistans
longtime rival.
Dias said Washington wanted an end to the long-running civil
war in Sri Lanka, which it regarded as a destabilising influence
and thus an impediment to its strategic and economic ambitions
in the region. Responding to the pressure of the major powers
and local business interests, Wickremesinghes United National
Front (UNF) government which came to power in December 2001, signed
a ceasefire with the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam
(LTTE) and commenced negotiations for a peace deal.
But the cease-fire signed in February 2002 and the peace
talks started in September 2002 created sharp divisions within
the ruling elite and between the bourgeois political parties.
Even the pretence of granting concessions to the Tamil minority
is vehemently opposed by sections of the political establishment
in Sri Lanka. To understand why, one has to delve into the historical
questions.
The war that began in 1983 was a continuation and the
culmination of the Sinhala chauvinist politics of the Sri Lankan
ruling elite that started from the beginning of the last century.
They learnt the pernicious method of divide and rule
from their British colonial masters.
One of the first acts of the Colombo government, after
independence in 1948, was to bring in a Citizenship Bill to disenfranchise
more than a million Tamil-speaking plantation workers on the grounds
of their Indian origin. Eight years later, Sinhala was enthroned
as the only official language, forcing many Tamils to leave government
jobs because of their non-proficiency in Sinhala.
In the 1972 constitution, Buddhism was declared the state
religion, discriminating against all other religions, including
Hinduism, practiced by a majority of Tamils. On all these occasions,
when the Tamils held peaceful protests they were suppressed using
brutal police and military force.
Dias explained that the United National Party (UNP), which
came to power in 1977, adopted open market policies to integrate
the island into the developing trend toward globalised production.
Social welfare measures and thousands of jobs in the state and
corporate sector were axed, provoking a general strike in July
1980. The UNP government responded by stirring up a vicious communal
campaign to divide the working classa process that led to
the outbreak of war in 1983.
All the bourgeois parties, including the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna
(JVP) and the old left partiesthe Lanka Sama Samaja Party
(LSSP) and the Communist Partysupported the war. Only the
Revolutionary Communist League, the Sri Lankan section of the
International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI) and
the forerunner to the SEP, unequivocally opposed the war and called
for the unconditional withdrawal of the military from the north
and east of the island.
Ranil Wickremesinghe was a cabinet minister in the UNP government
that prosecuted the war for 11 years and, while in opposition
from 1994, backed the military efforts of Kumaratungas Peoples
Alliance (PA) to defeat the LTTE. Now, under pressure from the
major powers and big business, he is seeking a settlement to the
war and confronts the results of decades of communal politics.
The two main bourgeois parties, the UNF [the ruling UNP-led
alliance] and the PA, are caught in a dilemma, Dias said.
They cannot go against the dictates of the imperialist powers
and their local big business allies to end the war and transform
the island into a cheap labour platform. But they face vehement
opposition from sections of the military, the Buddhist clergy
and Sinhala chauvinist layers of their own electoral base.
Pandering to these sections, President Kumaratunga waged
a campaign against the cease-fire agreement and the peace
process, claiming it undermined national security and sovereignty.
When her attempts to scuttle the peace talks through directing
the navy to sink LTTE vessels failed, Kumaratunga decided on more
direct action to destabilise the UNF government.
Dias said there had been an ongoing struggle for months over
the levers of state power between the government and the president,
who has substantial executive powers under the countrys
constitution. Kumaratunga insisted on making military and other
senior appointments. She sought and won a Supreme Court ruling
to confirm her constitutional right to exercise control over defence
matters. The government responded by preparing an impeachment
motion against the chief justice.
Matters came to a head shortly after the LTTE released its
proposals on October 31 for an interim administration in the north
and easta step toward restarting stalled negotiations. On
November 4, Kumaratunga unilaterally seized control of three key
ministriesDefence, Internal Affairs and Mediaand prorogued
the parliament for two weeks. She announced a state of emergency,
but before it could be formally imposed was compelled to retreat
under strong international pressureparticularly from Washington
and New Delhi.
Despite enormous pressure by foreign diplomats, local business
organisations and the media for the president and the government
to work together, the political standoff continued. Kumaratunga
and Wickremesinghe could agree on only one thingthat discussions
take place in complete secrecy. This expressed the reactionary
nature of the new arrangements being prepared and their common
fear of any public exposure of their real intentions before the
workers and the oppressed masses, Dias said.
The working class in Sri Lanka must not remain as onlookers
in this crisis. It must find the means to intervene independently
as a subject of history to take the leadership of the masses that
resist the capitalist rule that is driving them into increasing
misery. But to undertake this historical task, the working class
must be armed with the strategic lessons of its past struggles
that are deposited in the Marxist movement.
Dias said it was critical that workers understand the consequences
of the LSSPs betrayal in 1964 when the party abandoned the
basic principles of Trotskyism and entered the bourgeois government
of Sirima Bandaranaike, Kumaratungas mother. The LSSPs
actions led directly to the emergence of radical petty bourgeois
movements based on communalist politicsthe JVP among oppressed
Sinhala youth in the south and the LTTE which exploited grievances
in the north against growing anti-Tamil discrimination.
The working class had to completely reject all forms of nationalism
and racialism, which have produced two decades of war. The inability
of the political establishment in Colombo to find a way out of
the present impasse was not just an acute crisis of bourgeois
rule but reflected the unviability of the nation state system
itself. The so-called independent state of Sri Lanka established
in 1948 depended on the peculiar conditions of the post-war boom
and the limited expansion that took place with a nationally-protected
economy. The development of globalised production had completely
undermined any basis for national economic regulation in Sri Lanka
and internationally.
Elaborating a program for the working class, Dias emphasised
the essential need of the working class to have an independent
political perspective. Recently, we have seen many sections
of workers, in the south as well as in the north, entering into
struggles. The strike movement has also had the active support
of poor peasants, both Sinhala and Tamil. But a revolutionary
alliance between the workers and the poor masses cannot be forged
without the working class rising up to the task of providing an
independent political leadership.
This is why the working class must reject the peace deals,
between the Colombo regime and the LTTE, brokered by the imperialist
powers and call for the withdrawal of the Sri Lankan military
from the north and east as the pre-condition for the ending of
the war. The reactionary nature of these deals are revealed by
the proposals of both the government and the LTTE for an interim
administration for the northeast, plans which are thoroughly anti-democratic
and communally divisive.
What was necessary was not a secret patch-up job between
the two bourgeois parties to end the political crisis, but a free
and open election for a constituent assembly to draft a new constitution
that abrogates all discriminatory communal laws, repressive parliamentary
acts and military agreements with reactionary regimes.
These democratic demands must be combined with the demand
for the reorganisation of the economy to fulfill not the profit
needs of the capitalist exploiters but the social needs of the
working people. Only the socialist transformation of society can
guarantee the achievement of full democratic rights. This is the
perspective advanced by the SEP and the ICFI. It means the establishment
of a Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka and Eelam as part of a unified
socialist states of the Indian sub-continent.
Dias concluded by explaining that this program could be achieved
only on the basis of an internationalist working class perspective.
He urged the audience to support the World Socialist Web Site,
which provided political guidance on a daily basis for workers
all over the world, and to join and build the SEP in Sri Lanka.
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