|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Sri
Lanka
The JVP reassures Sri Lankan business leaders
By Nanda Wickramasinghe
25 February 2004
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
One of the first initiatives of the newly-formed alliance between
the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) and the Sinhala extremist Janatha
Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) has been to meet with top business leaders
in Colombo to offer reassurances that corporate interests will
be safeguarded in the event that the parties win the April 2 election.
The United Peoples Freedom Alliance (UPFA) was established
on January 20 and the grouping was formally registered with the
electoral authorities on February 6just one day before President
Chandrika Kumaratunga sacked the United National Front (UNF) government
of Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe. The UPFAs meeting
with the corporate elite took place on February 17 at the Bandaranaike
Memorial International Conference Hall in Colombo.
Present at the gathering were representatives from the Joint
Business Forum (Jbiz) and the nine major chambers of commerce
and industry organised under the Jbiz. Officials from the IMF,
World Bank and other multilateral donor agencies as well as local
CEOs, accountants and financial journalists also attended.
The SLFP was represented by Lakshman Kadirgamar, one of Kumaratungas
chief advisers, who was installed by the president as communication
minister just hours before she sacked the government. The JVP
dispatched three of its top leadersSomawansa Amarasinghe,
Wimal Weerawansa and Bimal Ratnayakato rub shoulders with
the business leaders and offer them the necessary guarantees.
The meeting in Colombo took place on the same day that the
representatives of donor countriesthe US, Japan and European
Union countriesgathered in Washington to review the situation
in Sri Lanka. This exerted added pressure on the UPFA representatives
to allay concerns in business circlesin Colombo and internationallythat
if they took office there would be a return to war and a slowdown
of economic restructuring.
Kadirgamar was the chief UPFA spokesman at the meeting. He
was part of Kumaratungas Peoples Alliance government from
1994 to 2001, which carried out sweeping market reforms, including
cutbacks to state subsidies and services and the privatisation
of large state-owned corporations. Tens of thousands of workers
lost their jobs while many others had their working conditions
and rights seriously eroded.
Kadirgamar bent over backwards to reassure the corporate leaders.
International and national investment will be welcomed,
nay wooed. We will sponsor and promote the private sector in every
possible way because it is very important to achieve rapid economic
growth for our country... The private sector has a vital, even
decisive role to play not only in the economic development of
the country but also in other aspects of national life.
He promised to help revive local companies with modern management,
adopting global advances in technology and opening the economy
to global economic progress. Wooing small businessmen, Kadirgamar
declared that the UPFA knew and would address their crushing
problems.
Questioned by Jbiz chairman Mahendra Amarasuriya on the alliance
attitude to peace talks with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam
(LTTE), Kadirgamar declared that all parties in the alliance supported
political dialogue with the LTTE and other relevant groups.
He emphasised that the ceasefire stands and the
alliance will not disturb it.
While Kadirgamars comments were no doubt listened to
politely, the real focus of the meeting was the JVP. The business
elite has concerns that the JVPs demagogic denunciations
of the peace process and its populist appeals to Sinhala
farmers, small businessmen and youth will derail talks with the
LTTE and impede the implementation of economic reforms.
The JVP leaders did their best to reassure their business audience
that such fears were groundless. JVP Propaganda Secretary Wimal
Weerawansa began by lamenting the rumours being circulated in
business circles about his party. The private sector need
not fear the JVP, he declared. He emphasised that the alliance
was confident that it would work with the major donor countries
and organisations, including the IMF and World Bank.
But it was JVP leader Somawansa Amarasinghe, recently returned
from exile, who provided the most open-ended promise to big business.
We made mistakes. Because of that UNPers, people, the country
suffered. Even we suffered. However, we are learning from our
past mistakes and dont intend to repeat them, he pledged.
Please wait and see. We have already surprised you. We are
going to surprise you more in the future.
Amarasinghe did not spell out what he had in mind. However,
in an interview with the Asian Tribune in London on January
19, he unambiguously declared his partys alliance with the
SLFP was for a pure capitalist democratic form of government.
He went on to say: Sri Lankan entrepreneurs will be placed
in an unprecedented advantageous position to develop Sri Lanka
to the fullest possible extent following in the footsteps of the
new Asian leaders like Malaysia, India and China.
In a questionnaire to Kumaratunga and Wickremesinghe, Jbiz
asked their attitude to a series of market reforms, including
privatisation, cutbacks to the state sector and the amendment
to labour laws restricting retrenchments. When questioned at the
Jbiz meeting, the SLFP and JVP leaders avoided giving any clear
answers, other than to declare that the government would remain
involved in banking, electricity and education. Amarasinghes
previous reference to Malaysia, India and China, however,
makes clear that once the election is over, a UPFA government
would be prepared to do whatever was necessary to transform Sri
Lanka into a cheap labour platform for foreign capital.
The JVPs statements at the Jbiz forum underscore the
class character of the organisation. While it is often described
in the media as Marxist and uses militant and socialist
phrases in appealing to workers, the JVP is a petty bourgeois
formation that originated among layers of alienated rural youth
in the 1960s. In offering the JVPs services to big business,
Amarasinghe is making absolutely clear that his party is committed
to the maintenance of the capitalist system.
To what extent the offer is accepted is another matter. The
JVP is a highly unstable political formation that threatens to
inflame an already volatile situation and plunge the country back
to war. That sections of the ruling elite are even contemplating
backing the JVP-SLFP alliance is an indication of the depth of
the present political crisis.
See Also:
Socialist Equality Party to stand in
Sri Lankan elections
[24 February 2004]
Socialist Equality Party condemns Sri
Lankan presidents dictatorial actions
[19 February 2004]
Sri Lankas constitutional coup thrusts
JVP to political prominence
[12 February 2004]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |