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Lanka
Sri Lankan government on the brink of collapse
By K. Ratnayake
17 June 2005
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Yesterdays decision by the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna
(JVP) to quit Sri Lankas ruling coalition has left the government
on the point of collapse and once again plunged the island into
political turmoil. The United Peoples Freedom Alliance (UPFA)
has been reduced to a rump of just 79 MPs out of a total of 225
and is completely dependent on its long-time rival, the opposition
United National Party (UNP), not to bring it down.
In the midst of this political crisis, President Chandrika
Kumaratunga appeared on national television to denounce her former
allies for lying and misleading the people,
violating the coalition agreement and blocking her policies. She
called on all parties to support her government and its tsunami
reconstruction plans for at least a year and then, in a none-too-subtle
threat, warned that dictatorship and military dictatorships
often emerged in situations such as the present.
The December 26 tsunami, which devastated large areas of the
island and left tens of thousands of people destitute, has heightened
social and political tensions to breaking point. The JVP, which
held eight ministerial posts, walked out over Kumaratungas
plans to establish a joint tsunami aid body or joint mechanism
with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). For weeks, the
JVP, the Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU) and other Sinhala chauvinist
organisations have been denouncing the planned joint mechanism
as a step toward a separate Tamil state and a betrayal
of the nation.
Last week the JVP issued an ultimatum to Kumaratunga to abandon
her proposal by midnight on June 15 or face a walkout. Fearful
of the impact of the communal campaign in its own ranks, leaders
of her Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) bent over backwards to accommodate
the JVP. Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapakse, the UPFA secretary
Susil Premajayantha and others held marathon talks with JVP leaders
but to no avail. At the last minute, Rajapakse even pleaded with
the JVP to extend its deadline until the end of June.
Kumaratunga, however, had little room for manoeuvre. Representatives
from the US, Japan and Norwaythe co-chairs of Sri Lankas
international donor groupmet in Washington on Monday and
issued what amounted to their own ultimatum. While expressing
support for Kumaratunga, their statement demanded the immediate
signing of the agreement [with the LTTE] in order to ensure proper
flow of reconstruction aid to tsunami victims in the North and
East. It also insisted on the restarting of peace talks,
stalled since April 2003.
The cash-strapped UPFA government is desperate for the $3 billion
in promised aid. Moreover, it is under pressure from sections
of business in Colombo concerned at the broader crisis of the
Sri Lankan economy. S. Jeyavarman, chief executive officer of
National Asset Management Ltd. in Colombo, told the Bloomberg
web site: There must be a framework to obtain these funds
or else the economy is going to suffer. Referring to the
countrys deepening political crisis and the danger of war,
he added: [We] need harmony to attract investment, otherwise
the markets are in for a rough ride.
The UPFA government now confronts a parlous situation. When
contacted by the WSWS yesterday, Gihan Hettige, an aide to the
chief presidential spokesman Harim Peiris, declared: The
government might carry on but no important legislation can be
passed. The opposition benches in parliament are now so
full that JVP MPs will be compelled to physically sit on the government
side. As well as losing its majority in parliament, the UPFA lost
control of seven provincial councils after the JVP pulled out.
In a letter to the JVP on Wednesday, Kumaratunga declared there
was no justification for leaving the coalition as
the final document on the joint aid mechanism had not even been
formulated. Clearly seeking to woo the JVP, she played down the
aid bodys importance, declaring it was purely an administrative
mechanism that would not affect the sovereignty or
integrity of the country. Its activities will be limited
to coastal areas up to 2 kilometres from the sea in just six districts.
Kumaratungas twists and turns highlight the deep crisis
of bourgeois rule on the island. Economically, the ruling class
has been pressing for an end to the protracted civil war, which
is an obstacle to its plans to transform the island into a cheap
labour platform and to gain a slice of the investment flowing
into the Indian subcontinent. Politically, however, all of the
political partiesincluding the SLFP and UNPare deeply
mired in Sinhala chauvinism, which they have repeatedly exploited
to deflect opposition and divide the working class.
None of the major parties enjoy any broad popular support.
Both the UNP and SLFP are responsible for imposing economic restructuring
policies that have had a devastating impact on the lives of ordinary
working people. As a result, the JVP, which is based on communalism
and populist demagogy, was for a time able to win a measure of
influence, particularly in poor rural areas. In government for
the first time, the JVP has broken all of its promises and in
the space of just over a year rapidly lost support.
All these processes have been accelerated by the December 26
tsunami and the governments failure to assist tens of thousands
of victims. At the same time, a growing wave of strikes and protests
has developed among workers and farmers over the loss of jobs,
privatisation, rising prices and the lack of rural assistance.
The JVPs chauvinist campaign against the joint mechanism
is above all a desperate effort to shore up its own social base,
particularly in the tsunami-devastated south.
Kumaratungas reference to the danger of dictatorship
expresses the extreme frustration in ruling circles over the exhaustion
of the old mechanisms of parliamentary rule. The comment is a
sharp warning to working people that the ruling elites, and Kumaratunga
herself, are contemplating a turn to dictatorial forms of rule.
It would not be the first time.
In November 2003, the president denounced the then UNP-led
government for preparing to betray the country to the LTTE, arbitrarily
seized three key ministries and moved to impose a state of emergency.
She only backed away temporarily under international pressure
from Washington and New Delhi. In February 2004, Kumaratunga sacked
the government, formed a coalition with the JVP and called fresh
elections, which the UPFA narrowly won.
Kumaratunga is now reliant on the UNP, the party that she threw
out of office less than two years ago. After meeting the president
on Monday, UNP leader Ranil Wickremesinghe promised to support
the joint mechanism and not to topple the government on
this issue. But there are already indications that this
promise will not extend to other issues and may not last long.
The UNP has already criticised her decision to have the joint
mechanism debated in parliament, declaring that she should take
responsibility for the package. UNP spokesman G.L. Peiris announced
his party would abstain on any vote, compounding the governments
problems.
The opposition has also called for presidential elections to
be held in November. Having been thrown out of office once, the
UNP wants the presidency which has broad executive powers. UNP
co-secretary Tissa Attanayake told the WSWS that the party was
not interested in forming a government.... [There is] no
purpose in doing so. We are concentrating on the presidential
election.
The JVPs press conference yesterday was remarkably restrained.
JVP leader Somawansa Amarasinghe told media representatives that
the party had quit the government with deep regret
and did not rule out a future alliance with the SLFP. The condition
for a new coalition, he said, was maintaining the countrys
sovereignty and integrity.
At the same time, however, the JVP is set to intensify its
chauvinist campaign against the joint mechanism and is planning
a series of strikes to re-establish its credentials. In recent
weeks, as part of the government, the JVP has been shutting down
protests and strikes over privatisation and wage demands. The
JVP has also issued an appeal to disaffected MPs from both the
SLFP and UNP to join a new coalition.
In the immediate aftermath of the tsunami, working people throughout
the island spontaneously came to the aid of victimsregardless
of whether they were Sinhala, Tamil and Muslim. This expressed
both a profound distrust in the entire political establishment
and a rejection of the communal politics that has dominated the
island for decades. Both of these impulses were entirely healthy.
However, nearly six months after the tsunami disaster, not
only has there been no reconstruction, but the ruling elites are
preparing to plunge the country into new disasters, including
dictatorial forms of rule, communal violence and war. What this
experience demonstrates is the necessity of working people uniting
and waging a ruthless struggle for their own independent class
interests against the entire political establishment.
See Also:
Sri Lankan government in crisis over tsunami
aid
[11 June 2005]
Aid conference highlights
political impasse in Sri Lanka
[27 May 2005]
Sri Lanka returns
to the brink of war
[18 August 2004]
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