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Sri Lankan government in crisis over tsunami aid
By K. Ratnayake
11 June 2005
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After dragging her feet for months, Sri Lankan President Chandrika
Kumaratunga is moving to finalise the establishment of a joint
body with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) for tsunami
reconstruction in the north and east of the island. The proposal,
which has provoked vehement opposition from Sinhala chauvinist
groups and the Buddhist clergy, threatens to split the ruling
United Peoples Freedom Alliance (UPFA) and bring down the government.
The Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP), the second largest UPFA
partner, has served notice that it will quit the government if
Kumaratunga signs such an agreement. The UPFA would be left without
a parliamentary majority, plunging the country into political
crisis just 15 months after national elections. On the other hand,
if the president fails to agree to a joint aid body, there is
little prospect for restarting stalled peace talks with the LTTE
and the already strained ceasefire could break down completely.
Kumaratunga only hastened to set up the Post Tsunami Operation
Management Structure (PTOMS), commonly called the joint mechanism,
after a Sri Lanka donor conference in mid-May indicated that much
of the promised $US3 billion in aid depended on a resumption of
peace talks. Not only is her government in serious financial difficulties
but significant sections of business in Colombo argue that the
economy needs the aid and a permanent settlement of the countrys
devastating 20-year civil war.
Last week, Kumaratunga made a three-day visit to New Delhi
to meet with Indian leaders, including Prime Minister Manmohan
Singh, to clarify the plans for a joint mechanism. She calculated
that Indias blessing would help disarm her political opponents
who have been urging India to take a more active stance against
the LTTE. She received only conditional support from New Delhi.
Speaking at a War Heroes Day meeting in Kandy on June 7, the
president gave the clearest indication yet that she was about
to finalise the PTOMS. She told the gathering that the country
could not afford to continue the war but should seek peace through
negotiations [with the LTTE]. At her request, Norwegian
ambassador Hans Brattskar travelled to Kilinochchi on the same
day to meet LTTE political wing leader S P Thamilchelvan to finalise
an agreement on the joint mechanism.
The following day, the JVP denounced Kumaratunga. JVP parliamentary
group leader Wimal Weerawansa declared that the PTOMS would help
the LTTE establish a separate Tamil state and that the JVP would
defeat this betrayal with the sacred intention of safeguarding
our motherland. He accused Kumaratunga of taking the decision
without informing her coalition partners.
Last weekend the JVP announced that it would withdraw its support
for UPFA administrations in seven provincial councils. On Tuesday,
the partys front organisation of Buddhist monks, the Jathika
Bikkhu Peramuna (JBP), launched a fast-until-death protest near
Fort railway station in central Colombo.
The JVPs campaign recalls its fascistic opposition to
the Indo-Lankan Accord, which paved the way for the Indian military
to supervise a peace deal with the LTTE. At that time, the JVP
denounced the Accord as a betrayal of the country, part of the
designs of Indian imperialism, and mounted a patriotic
campaign to defend the nation. Squads of JVP gunmen
killed scores of political opponents and workers who refused to
support their strikes and protests.
Now in government for the first time, the JVP is confronting
growing opposition, including among its own social base in rural
areas, over its broken election pledges. The cost of living is
climbing, placing intolerable burdens on the rural and urban poor.
The government is proceeding with plans to corporatise state-owned
oil and electricity bodies and other economic restructuring measures.
Nearly six months after the December 26 tsunami, reconstruction
has barely begun.
The JVPs chauvinist campaign is aimed at whipping up
communal tensions to divert attention from these social issues,
which have provoked a series of protests. Last Friday, thousands
of bus workers stopped work over the governments broken
promise to increase wages. University non-academic staff are threatening
to strike by June 16 if their wages are not increased. In eastern
Pottuvil, 10,000 people protested on Monday against
the governments decision to ban rebuilding in coastal areas.
The JVP confronts political competition from the Jathika Hela
Urumaya (JHU)a rightwing Sinhala supremacist party dominated
by Buddhist monks that was formed before the general election
in April last year. JHU secretary and MP Omalpe Sobhitha, a Buddhist
monk, is conducting his own fast-until-death campaign in Kandy
for a series of communal demands, including opposition to the
joint mechanism. On Monday, the JHU announced that its MPs would
boycott parliament until Kumaratunga withdraws her plan.
Political tensions
The JVP-JHU agitation has created sharp tensions within Kumaratungas
own Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP), which is also deeply mired
in Sinhala chauvinism. The president cancelled a government group
meeting scheduled for Monday to head off opposition from the JVP
and SLFP MPs. She met instead with senior ministers, including
Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapakse, Finance Minister Sarath Amunugama
and Tourism Minister Anura Bandaranaike.
After the meeting, Rajapakse told the media he had urged Kumaratunga
to be flexible, saying it would be futile to
take a hurried decision where even the future of the UPFA is under
threat. In an effort to placate the JHU, the prime minister
visited the fasting party leader Omalpe Sobhitha in Kandy.
Ports and Aviation Minister Mangala Samaraweera, previously
a close presidential confidante, took a similar stance. In an
interview last weekend in Irida Lankadeepa, he said: [I]f
the JM [joint mechanism] is the reason to weaken the coalition
or destroy it, then the JM will be useless and it is essential
to think again. Even if the JM is to be a bridge builder, yet
if it is going to lead to a government break up, then I am definitely
against it.
On Monday, Samaraweera resigned his post as media minister,
saying he wanted to concentrate on his other portfolios. His decision
has been widely interpreted as a protest against the joint mechanism.
Samaraweera was a key figure in facilitating a coalition between
the JVP and SLFP in 2003 against the previous United National
Front (UNF) government.
For its part, the LTTE is insisting that Kumaratunga proceed
with the PTOMS. After talks with Norwegian Ambassador Brattskar,
the LTTEs Thamilchelvan warned: [I]f they [Colombo]
do not definitely say they will sign the joint mechanism, the
situation will become very serious and dangerous. The LTTE
is desperate for aid to dispel growing resentment in areas under
its control.
The LTTE is also exploiting the communal agitation in Colombo
to argue that the Kumaratunga government is obstructing aid and
the peace process. In May, the LTTE invited major donor agencies,
including the World Bank, the Asian Development Bank and IMF,
to Kilinochchi to discuss the outcome of the international aid
conference. A meeting was expected last weekend but the agencies
cancelled the visit, citing political uncertainty.
The LTTE is confronting deepening political problems, particularly
in the east, where a senior military leader V. Muralitharan, also
known as Karuna, has broken away. The LTTE has still not re-established
its authority in the east and is engaged in an ongoing armed conflict
with the Karuna group, which has the covert backing of elements
of the Sri Lanka military. If Kumaratunga refuses to establish
a joint mechanism, it could rapidly lead to an escalation of fighting
and the breakdown of the tenuous ceasefire.
Whichever way Kumaratunga twists and turns, she confronts a
political crisis. If she agrees to the joint mechanism, the president
will lose the JVPs support and risks a split in her own
party. She will be compelled to turn to the opposition United
National Party (UNP) or call a new election, which her SLFP is
likely to lose. If she refuses to sign or procrastinates further,
the danger of war looms.
Reflecting frustrations in the ruling elite in Colombo, the
Daily Mirror on June 7 urged all political parties, particularly
the UNP, to act wisely and responsibly in the present situation.
Warning that possible armed conflict is looming large on
the horizon, the newspaper declared: [I]t is incumbent
upon all parties who have the countrys interest at heart,
to assist the government to adopt a common approach on the present
national issue of establishing a joint mechanism, without allowing
the country to slide down the precipice.
Kumaratunga phoned the US ambassador Jeffrey Lunstead early
this week, obviously looking for political assistance. To date,
the Bush administration has backed a peace deal with the LTTE
as a means of preventing a return to a civil war that threatens
growing US interests on the Indian subcontinent. Lunstead spoke
to UNP leader Ranil Wickremesinghe, no doubt to seek reassurances
that the UNP would not further destabilise the situation.
There is every indication that matters will come to a head
next week. Kumaratunga is playing her cards close to her chest
and has not even revealed details of the proposed PTOMS. Information
leaked to the press indicates the top body will have three nomineesfrom
the government, the LTTE and Muslim organisations. Press speculation
is that Kumaratunga has set June 15 as the date to sign an agreement.
At a press conference on Thursday, JVP leaders Somawansa Amarasinghe,
Tilwin Silva and Wimal Weerawansa declared that the party would
quit the government on June 16 if Kumaratunga did not drop her
plans for the joint mechanism on June 15. The JVP called for a
mass demonstration in Colombo.
The JHU has also stepped up its opposition. On Thursday, JHU
leaders organised a march to the presidential residence to demand
that Kumaratunga abandon the joint mechanism. They also sought
an assurance that the president would take no action without the
support of top prelates from each of the four main Buddhist chapters
in the country.
While not formally part of the JHU, these Buddhist prelates
took the unprecedented step on Thursday of warning Kumaratunga
that they would issue an edict and mobilise protests if she did
not withdraw from the joint mechanism. Demonstrating her acute
sensitivity to such opposition, the president wrote to the monks
pledging not to take any final decision without their consent.
In a particularly ominous sign of what is to come, the media
on Thursday reported the menacing comments of a JHU leader and
monk, Galagodaatte Gnanasara. He warned Kumaratunga to drop her
plan within 24 hours or we will be forced to resort to undemocratic
moves. While Gnanasara did not elaborate on his threat,
the JHU, its predecessors and other chauvinist groups have a long
record of provocation and violence.
See Also:
Aid conference highlights
political impasse in Sri Lanka
[27 May 2005]
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