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Lanka
Sri Lankas new president faces crisis over forming a
government
By K. Ratnayake
23 November 2005
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The newly elected Sri Lankan president, Mahinda Rajapakse,
confronts a political crisis within days of being sworn in last
Saturday. Far from the conflicts and tensions wracking the Sri
Lankan ruling class being resolved by his narrow victory in the
November 17 election, they have immediately re-surfaced as he
attempts to form a government.
Rajapakses United Peoples Freedom Alliance (UPFA) has
just 71 members in the 225-seat parliament. It has yet to win
the backing of any more MPs. The UPFA had clearly hoped that it
would be able to form a government with the support of the Janatha
Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP), which had campaigned for Rajapakse during
the election. Only last Saturday, former cabinet minister Mangala
Samaraweera, declared that cabinet changes are on the card
and the JVP has already agreed to accept cabinet portfolios
in the Rajapakse government. Wijitha Herath, a leading JVP
member, however, told the Hindu on Monday that his party
had not yet made a decision. Some reports now indicate that the
JVP intends to sit in opposition, supporting Rajapakse from the
outside.
The JVPs hesitation to join the government underscores
not only the new presidents problems, but also its own.
The JVP left the previous UPFA government of former president
Chandrika Kumaratunga in June, on the basis of opposition to Kumaratungas
attempts to establish a joint post-tsunami operational management
structure (P-TOMS) with the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil
Eelam (LTTE). The JVPs walk-out was an attempt to shore
up its eroding base of support, under conditions where it had
been widely discredited by its role in government. The UPFA had
broken all the promises it had made to ordinary working people
in the course of the 2004 parliamentary elections, attacking living
standards and social facilities.
Upon leaving the government, the JVP intensified a Sinhala
chauvinist campaign against any concessions to the LTTE, in order
to divert social discontent into communalism. Following the calling
of the presidential election, it entered into an agreement to
support Rajapakse on condition he scrap the P-TOMS and review
the ceasefire agreement that had been signed with the LTTE in
2002 to end the 20 year civil war. If implemented, these demands
could spark the resumption of military conflict.
Throughout the campaign, the JVP took the lead in advancing
a series of empty promises that Rajapakse would improve living
conditions. Now that the new president has assumed office, and
confronts the same economic, social and political crisis as Kumaratunga,
the JVP appears to be calculating that any participation in the
new government would further undermine its political credibility.
It may well decide that it can better exploit the disaffection
of the masses by remaining in opposition.
The Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU), another Sinhala extremist party
that supported Rajapakse on the basis of anti-Tamil chauvinism,
has likewise issued no statement on whether it is prepared to
join a Rajapakse government.
For his part, Rajapakse is still conducting behind-the-scenes
horse-trading to win support. If he is unable to put together
a majority, he will confront a major dilemma, as he cannot constitutionally
dissolve the parliament for one year. While initial reports indicated
that he would announce a cabinet on Monday or Tuesday, this has
now been postponed, with no definite date set.
On November 21, Rajapakse appointed Rathanasiri Wickremanayake,
a leader of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP)the largest
party in the UPFAas the new prime minister. Under Sri Lankas
executive presidential system, the post of prime minister is largely
ceremonial. Nevertheless, the appointment of Wickremanayake, one
of the most ardent Sinhala-Buddhist chauvinists within the SLFP,
constitutes a clear appeal to the JVP and JHU to enter the government.
Wickremanayake has held several ministerial positions in SLFP-led
governments since the 1970s and was appointed Buddhist Affairs
Minister and Deputy Defence Minister in Kumaratungas UPFA
government. Last year, he advanced an anti-conversion
bill, fraudulently called the Act for the Protection of
Religious Freedom, which would criminalise attempts to convert
Buddhists to other religions.
Rajapakse appointed Wickremanayake as prime minister despite
the SLFPs earlier decision to give the position to Kumaratungas
brother and former UPFA foreign minister, Anura Bandaranaike.
The bypassing of Bandaranaike is a sign of the deep-going conflicts
that exist within the UPFA and the Sri Lankan ruling class as
a whole. Although instrumental in negotiating the JVP-SLFP agreement
to form the coalition in 2004, Bandaranaike criticised Rajapakse
for lining up with the JVP in this election, declaring it would
be an obstacle to pushing through the peace settlement with the
LTTE being demanded by Sri Lankan big business and the major powers.
Reaching a deal with the LTTE is seen as vital to carrying
through economic restructuring, slashing government spending and
attracting to Sri Lanka a share of the foreign investment that
is flowing into the Indian subcontinent. For that reason, big
business largely supported Ranil Wickremesinghe, the United National
Party (UNP) presidential candidate, who had pledged to carry through
its agenda.
The corporate sector has already signaled its disappointment
with Rajapakses victory. More than 103 billion rupees ($US1.3
billion) was wiped off the Colombo stock market during trading
on Friday and Monday. The All Share Price Index (ASPI) plunged
by 165 points, or 7 percent, while the blue chip Milanka Index
(MPI) crashed by 250 points, or 8 percent, over the two days.
The appointment of Wickremanayake as prime minister on Monday
also affected the market, with fears that Rajapakses policies
could result in the resumption of the war and disrupt economic
restructuring.
The Daily Mirror financial pages reported that the Colombo
stock exchange had offered a 63 percent return prior to the presidential
election, which had slumped to just 14 percent on Friday and Monday.
An analyst told the newspaper that the new president and
his government have to do something quickly to restore investor
confidence. Yesterday, the stock market rose by some 3 percent,
but financial commentators are predicting the volatility will
continue.
As well, the major powers have started to apply pressure to
Rajapakse to toe their line. On Monday, US State Department spokesman
Adam Ereli condemned the LTTE for boycotting the election but
declared that Rajapakse confronts many significant and immediate
challenges, including to strengthen the ceasefire
agreement and bring renewed vigour to the peace process so that
progress may be made towards a negotiated solution.
This insistence goes directly against Rajapakses election
promise to review the ceasefire agreement and seek
to alter its terms. The intervention was a reminder that Washington
and other powers have major strategic and economic interests in
South Asia that they will not allow the Colombo government to
compromise. Likewise, the international media, including the Indian
press, are describing Rajapakse and Wickremanayake as hawks,
hawkish and hardliners to designate them
as opponents of the so-called peace process.
The fact that the latest election has produced yet another
political impasse in Colombo can only fuel the discussion taking
place in Sri Lankan ruling circles that they must turn toward
authoritarian forms of rule.
Underscoring the threat that exists to the democratic rights
of the Sri Lankan masses, Rajapakse has convened a sitting of
parliament for next Friday to obtain approval to extend the state
of emergency imposed in August, following the assassination of
former foreign minister, Lakshman Kadirgamar.
At the same time, the energy companies Shell and Laughs have
just increased the price of gas by 7 percenta decision that
cannot have been made without Rajapakses knowledge, since
gas and other fuels are subsidised by the government. The price
rise will intensify popular opposition to the new regime.
Rajapakses insistence on continuing emergency rule is
an indication that, amid political uncertainty and rising class
tensions, he is preparing to use his autocratic powers. The emergency
laws give sweeping powers to the security forces and police to
arrest anyone without a warrant. They also empower the president
to declare any service essential and to make industrial action
illegal.
See Also:
After the Sri Lankan election: what next
for the working class?
[22 November 2005]
Rajapakse narrowly wins Sri Lankan presidential
election
[19 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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