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WSWS : News
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: Sri
Lanka
CWC joins an unstable Sri Lankan government
By Vilani Peiris
23 September 2004
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After five months of behind-the-scene negotiations, Sri Lankan
President Chandrika Kumaratunga has finally induced the Ceylon
Workers Congress (CWC), a political party/trade union based among
Tamil-speaking plantation workers, to join her coalition government.
While the ruling United Peoples Freedom Alliance (UPFA) now has
a formal parliamentary majority for the first time, the inclusion
of the CWC will only further destabilise an already shaky coalition.
CWC head Arumugam Thondaman announced the decision on September
3. As part of the pay-off, the CWC was given two posts in the
governmentCWC leader Muthu Sivalingam was sworn in as minister
of community development on September 10 along with a CWC deputy
minister. A 13-point CWC-UPFA agreement was announced on September
15, which includes a commitment to the resumption of peace talks
with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) and promises
to improve social conditions in the plantation areas.
Senior UPFA minister Mangala Samaraweera, who conducted negotiations
with Thondaman, hailed the agreement as a major boost for the
government. Since the April general election, the UPFA has had
to function as a minority government with just 107 seats in the
225-seat parliament. With the addition of the CWCs eight
MPs, Kumaratunga now has a slender majority. Far from strengthening
the government, however, the deal with the CWC will only exacerbate
sharp divisions within the coalition, in particular over the resumption
of peace talks.
Up until the April election, Kumaratunga had been a constant
critic of the so-called peace process initiated in 2002 by the
previous United National Front (UNF) government. She collaborated
with the military top brass in provocative actions against the
LTTE and encouraged Sinhala chauvinist groups such as the Janatha
Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP). Just prior to sacking the UNF government
in February, Kumaratunga formed the UPFA alliance between her
Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP), the JVP and several minor parties.
After the UPFA narrowly won the poll, Kumaratunga did an abrupt
about-face and called for the resumption of talks with the LTTE.
The government confronts a mounting financial crisis, compounded
by high world oil prices and a protracted drought; it is also
desperate for foreign loans, assistance and investment. Donors,
however, have insisted that financial support be tied to resuscitating
the peace process. World Bank country director Peter Harrold recently
underscored the point, declaring: There is a strong link
between the peace process and assistance.
At the same time, Kumaratunga faces opposition from the JVP,
which regards any concessions to the LTTE as tantamount to treason.
While not openly calling for a renewal of civil war, the JVP has
opposed any negotiations on the LTTE proposals for an Interim
Self-Governing Authority (ISGA) in the North and East. The LTTE
on the other hand insists that the ISGA has to be the basis for
any resumption of talks. The protracted deadlock over the issue
is compounding what is already a very tense situation.
Kumaratunga has turned to the CWC not only to provide a parliamentary
majority but to bolster her own position within the ruling coalition
as she attempts to restart talks. However, the CWC insists that
talks have to go ahead based on the ISGA proposals, while the
JVP has threatened to withdraw from the UPFA if such negotiations
proceed. The departure of the JVP with its 39 seats could cause
the government to collapse.
The tensions have soon come to the surface. Shortly after the
CWC joined the government, JVP general secretary Tilvin Silva
told a seminar on September 7 that, while the government had a
majority for the first time, the CWC had to adhere to the UPFA
manifesto.
CWC minister Muthu Sivalingam responded aggressively, declaring
that the CWC joined the government on the assurance that
... the UPFA would resume peace talks based on ISGA. He
called on Kumaratunga to resume peace talks and ignore the JVP,
saying the government would be able to get the necessary votes
to proceed from UNF and other opposition parties.
In comments to the Sunday Leader on September 12, Environment
Minister AHM Fowzie, a key SLFP leader, played down the obvious
rift, saying this was a government of many different ideas. He
blandly called on the JVP and CWC to sort out their differences
but gave no indication how their diametrically opposed positions
could be resolved.
CWCs opportunist politics
For the CWCs part, its alliance with the UPFA is the
latest in a long series of opportunist manoeuvres. It was part
of the previous UNF government and contested the April election
under the UNF banner. Its decision to abandon the UNF and join
the government is based on pure political expediency and has nothing
to do with defending the interests of working people.
The CWC is now seeking to paint a rosy picture of Kumaratunga
and the UPFA as being prepared to launch peace talks. Yet just
six months ago, the CWCs present allies were branding the
UNFs attempts to restart peace talks on the basis of the
ISGA as an act of betrayal that would divide the island and hand
the LTTE its demand for a separate Tamil state. This was the basis
on which Kumaratunga arbitrarily dismissed the UNF government,
of which the CWC was a part, in February.
More fundamentally, the peace process is not designed to establish
democratic rights of the masses including Tamils. It has been
pushed by the major powers and big business to secure a power-sharing
settlement between Colombo government and the LTTE in order to
implement an economic reform program dictated by IMF and the World
Bank to establish cheap labour conditions. The CWCs concern
over peace talks is bound up with protecting the interests of
business rather than those of workers.
The other parts of the 13-point CWC-UPFA agreement are designed
to bolster the position of Thondaman and other CWC leaders who
face growing hostility among Tamil plantation workers over declining
living standards. The CWC claims that the deal will provide 3,500
teachers to fill school vacancies in plantation areas; 20,000
new housing units annually; 2,500 posts for A-level graduates
in the provincial council clerical service; and 1.2 billion rupees
(about $US11.5 million) to be spent annually over the next five
years for plantation infrastructure.
The CWC also pointed to the governments promise to abandon
a hydropower project at Upper Kotmale in the central plantation
district. Workers in the area were concerned that the project
threatened their housing and their jobs. Neither the CWC nor the
government has explained how any of these promises are going to
be fulfilled. Prior to the April election, the UPFA made a series
of promises to lift pay, halt privatisations, extend welfare and
provide jobs, virtually none of which have been carried out.
The CWC has been a partner in every government since 1977 and
each time it has switched sides it has made similar pledges. Yet
Tamil-speaking plantation workers remain among the most oppressed
layers of the working class on the island. In fact, the CWC has
been the main instrument for privatising the plantations and driving
down the conditions of workers. The daily wage of a tea plantation
worker is just 147 rupees (less than $US1.50), while rubber workers
earn only 131 rupees per day.
Once the biggest trade union in the plantation sector, the
CWCs membership has plummeted from nearly 400,000 in 1977
to 150,000 as jobs have been axed. Last month thousands of workers
in the central hills area at Kotagala, Laxapana and Maskeliya
stopped work to demand better wages and conditions, accusing the
trade unions, including the CWC, of failing to defend their interests.
One aspect of the CWC-UPFA agreement is particularly significant:
a plan to recruit 1,000 Tamil youth from the estate areas to the
police force. The proposal to strengthen the police in the plantation
districts is an indication that state repression is being prepared
amid signs of growing restiveness among plantation workers over
their declining living standards and a willingness to take action
outside the CWC and other unions.
The inability of the UPFA government to meet the demands of
plantation workers, or working people generally will further sharpen
the tensions within the coalition. While the CWCs support
may provide Kumaratunga and the UPFA some temporary benefits,
it does nothing to resolve any of the governments fundamental
problems. Just how fleeting the CWCs backing may be is underscored
by the parliamentary seating arrangements: the two CWC ministers
will sit on the government benches but the remaining CWC MPs will
continue to sit with the opposition.
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