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Colombo meeting concludes Sri Lankan SEP election campaign
By our correspondent
16 November 2005
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The Socialist Equality Party (SEP) in Sri Lanka held its final
public meeting for the November 17 presidential election in Colombo
on Saturday afternoon. More than 150 workers, students, intellectuals
and housewives came to hear the SEP candidate and general secretary
Wije Dias. A number had travelled for hours from Kandy and Bandarawela
in the central hills districts and from Ambalangoda in the south
of the island.
The meeting was also addressed by SEP Political Committee member
Vilani Peiris and Peter Symonds, a member of the International
Editorial Board of the World Socialist Web Site (WSWS)
from the Australian SEP. The meeting was conducted in three languagesEnglish,
Tamil and Sinhala. Despite the time taken for translation, the
audience followed the speeches carefully.
The SEP has conducted an extensive campaign over the past six
weeks, including 11 public meetings and several informal discussions
in diverse parts of the island. These included meetings at Galle,
Kurunagala, Polonnarunwa and Matara where the party has not had
active branches. Dias has given a wide range of interviews to
newspapers and television and three half-hour addresses in time
allocated on state-owned TV and radio. He also took part in a
two-hour TV debate with United National Party (UNP) and Sri Lanka
Freedom Party (SLFP) MPs on the Swarnavahina TV channel on the
rising cost of living.

Prior to last Saturdays meeting, SEP members carried
out a concentrated campaign in and around Colombo. Thousands of
election manifestos and 25,000 leaflets were distributed. Party
teams campaigned door-to-door in Dematagoda, Jayawadanagama and
Slave Island, among workers at railway stations and bus stands
and at universities.
Opening the meeting, the chairman K. Ratnayake said a balance
sheet of the parties in the presidential election could now be
drawn. The main capitalist candidatesMahinda Rajapakse of
the ruling SLFP and UNP candidate Ranil Wickremesinghehad
proved they had nothing to offer the masses except empty promises.
Only the SEP and its candidate Dias had advanced a viable socialist
and internationalist perspective to prepare the working class
for the struggles ahead.
Vilani Peiris said the election was taking place amid a series
of attacks on democratic rights. She pointed out that a Supreme
Court ruling had just imposed severe restrictions on voters from
areas controlled by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).
Not only had the decision barred the establishment of polling
stations in LTTE areas but booths had to be at least one kilometre
from the line of control. We oppose this discrimination
against the Tamil masses and the suppression of their democratic
rights. The SEP demands that they should have the right to vote
in their residential areas, she said
Peter Symonds outlined the international context in which the
presidential election was taking place. As a member of the Australian
SEP, he said it was quite natural to be addressing the SEP meeting
in Colombo as all the sections of the International Committee
of the Fourth International (ICFI) fight for the same strategy
in every country. The election campaign here is part of
our broad and integrated strategy to mobilise workers around the
world against global capitalism, he said.
Symonds recalled that just over a year ago, Bill Van Auken,
the presidential candidate for the US SEP, addressed meetings
in Colombo and Kandy emphasising the necessity for a counteroffensive
by working people around the world against the eruption of US
imperialism. The same axis animated the Australian SEPs
election campaign in October 2004 and that of the German Partei
für Soziale Gleichheit this September.
Symonds said that to build an international movement to combat
capitalism required more than a vague sense of class solidarity.
It required a worked-out political program grounded in a historical
and internationalist scientific analysis and above all a political
party and leadership that fought for such a perspective.
He identified US militarism as the key factor in world politics
and dealt with the lies told by the Bush administration to justify
its illegal occupation of Iraq. Referring to the latest referendum
in Iraq, he said: Elections conducted under the guns of
the US military in Iraq have no more validity than the sham exercises
in democracy conducted by the British colonial authorities
in India and Ceylon in the early part of the twentieth century.
Symonds explained that the US aggression in Iraq and Afghanistan
was not a sign of strength but of weakness, and provided details
on the social inequality in the US and the political crisis surrounding
the Bush administration. He pointed out that the war in Iraq had
been a turning point in world politics. Millions of people around
the world had taken part in protests against the impending invasion
in February and March 2003 but their views found no expression
within the political establishment of any country.
Commenting on the Indian sub-continent, the speaker noted that
governments and parties of all political complexions had dumped
any anti-imperialist rhetoric. None of the major parties in Sri
Lanka opposed the US occupations of Afghanistan and Iraq. The
UNP, the SLFP and the JVP are all calculating how they can use
the fraud of the global war on terror to enlist the support of
the US closer to home, he said.
Workers cannot put any faith in any of the parties of
the bourgeoisie or their hangers-on among the so-called traditional
workers parties. The only social force capable of halting the
slide towards war is the international working class. The ICFI
is seeking to develop a global counteroffensive by the working
class against imperialism and the predatory activities of global
capital.
Explaining that the struggle for socialism would not develop
spontaneously, Symonds said a relentless political and theoretical
struggle against capitalism and all its defenders was needed.
That was what the ICFI and its sections were carrying out on a
daily basis through the WSWS. He concluded his speech by appealing
to the audience to join the ranks of the SEP and ICFI and to fight
for its political program.
Sri Lankan crisis
Wije Dias opened his speech by emphasising the centrality of
internationalism to the SEPs program. He said the difference
between the SEP and other so-called left candidates boiled down
to this. Without internationalism, their talk of socialism was
just talk. Socialism was internationalist and could only be realised
by the world working class.
Elaborating on the political situation in Sri Lanka, Dias said:
The crisis of the Sri Lankan ruling class has intensified
to a serious degree. People are alienated from the two main ruling
parties. That is why the elites are turning to repressive measures
and this is symbolised by the fact that this election is being
held under a state of emergency.
Dias pointed out that the ruling class parties traditionally
made false promises at election time but that the long lists of
lies in this campaign were without precedent. He noted that the
recent budget handed down by the ruling SLFP-led coalition failed
to even include the promises made by its candidate. While not
providing for the poor and the unemployed, he said, the budget
kept Rajapakses pledge to the wealthy by removing the duty
on imported cars.
Dias noted that the ruling elites throughout the region confronted
similar crises stemming from the growing hostility of ordinary
working people to their market reform agenda. Indian Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh, speaking just before leaving for the
South Asian Association of Regional Cooperation (SAARC) conference
declared, borrowing a term from the Bush administration, that
all the countries neighbouring India had become failed states.
Dias pointed to the crisis fermenting in India itself: Last
week External Affairs Minister Natwar Singh was compelled to resign
his portfolio. He tried to live in the pastthe India of
the non-aligned and Cold War periodbut powerful sections
of the Indian ruling elite want strong connections with the US
and so Singh was something of an obstacle.
Dias said the living conditions of the masses throughout the
region were being slashed to pave the way for international investment.
Concessions and subsidies to farmers were being cut, he said.
Welfare programs were being reduced and private profit allowed
to penetrate areas such as education and health. There was a constant
pressure to force down living standards, facilitated by free trade
agreements such as those being negotiated through SAARC.
The only viable perspective for the working class is
to fight for international socialism. There is a long tradition
of Trotskyism in South Asia. The Bolshevik Leninist Party of India
(BLPI) as a section of the Fourth International advanced a socialist
perspective for the working class throughout the region, including
India, Sri Lanka, Burma and Malaya, to fight British colonialism
and its local lackeys. In opposition to this, the British and
the local ruling elite carved up the region into the artificial
states of India, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka and created a communal
and religious cauldron.
The SEP advances its perspective to unite workers across
ethnic, communal, religious, caste and gender differences. Our
perspective is for a Federation of South Asian Socialist republics
which would include a Sri Lanka-Eelam Socialist Republic,
Dias said. Socialism could not be built nationally, he said, pointing
to the collapse of Soviet Union, which was run by the Stalinist
bureaucracy on the basis of the reactionary theory of socialism
in a single country.
Dias explained that the SEP called for the immediate and unconditional
withdrawal of the Sri Lankan military from the north and east
of island as the first step toward ending the war. The party also
called for the convening of a genuine constitutional assembly
to draw up a new constitution to establish basic democratic rights
for all. Such a program had to be fought for by mobilising and
uniting Sinhala, Tamil and Muslim workers independently of all
factions of the ruling class on a socialist basis.
In the limited discussion time, two questions were asked: how
was the SEP going to campaign against the suppression of its political
meeting in Jaffna, and secondly, what was the purpose of the slogan
for the United Socialist States of South Asia.
Answering the first, Dias said whoever was responsible for
the thuggery that led to the cancellation of the SEPs Jaffna
meeting, it was a sign of weakness. Tamil workers and youth had
lost faith in the Colombo government and its various allies a
long time ago and were losing faith in the LTTE. Driven to look
for an alternative, working people in Jaffna would find ways to
discuss and fight for the SEPs perspective.
Commenting on the second question, Symonds pointed out that
the ICFI was not fighting for a series of regional programsthe
United Socialist States of Europe and of South Asiabut rather
that these were completely subordinate to the program of world
socialist revolution. Within that context, workers in South Asia
shared problems with common historical roots in the carve up of
the British Empire in the region to create a series of artificial
and communally-based states. Overcoming these divisions was an
essential part of the struggle to unite workers throughout the
region as part of the global struggle against capitalism.
The audience responded strongly to an appeal for donations
to the SEP election fund, contributing 11,300 rupees, and several
people remained for further discussion. See accompanying interviews.
See Also:
SEP debates radical "left"
in Sri Lankan presidential election campaign
[14 November 2005]
Sri Lankan presidential election: the
NSSP and the dead-end of national opportunism
[10 November 2005]
Support the Socialist Equality
Party in the 2005 Sri Lankan presidential election: The socialist
alternative to war and social inequality
[22 October 2005]
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