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Lanka
Sri Lankan election: Vote for Wije Dias and the Socialist
Equality Party
By the Socialist Equality Party (Sri Lanka)
17 November 2005
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The Socialist Equality Party (SEP) calls on working people
in Sri Lanka to vote for Wije Dias in the presidential election
today to demonstrate their support for a socialist alternative
to war and social inequality. The SEP is the only party offering
a program of struggle to unite working peopleSinhala, Tamil,
Muslim and Burgher, young and old, men and womento fight
for their social needs and democratic aspirations.
There are just two camps in this election. On the one side,
there are the candidates of the ruling classMahinda Rajapakse
of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) and Ranil Wickremesinghe
of the United National Party (UNP). Behind these are lined up
all of the factions of the political establishment. The Sinhala
chauvinists of the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) and the Jathika
Hela Urumaya (JHU) have backed Rajapakse while various parties
of the Tamil and Muslim elites support Wickremesinghe.
On the other side, there is the SEP, whose candidate articulates
the interests of the working class. From the outset the SEP has
made clear that it stands in diametrical opposition to the two
bourgeois parties and all their apologists. Our manifesto declares:
The cornerstone of the SEPs campaign is internationalism.
The SEP is standing not simply to win votes in Sri Lanka, but
to initiate a discussion throughout the Indian subcontinent on
the necessity for workers to adopt a socialist program and perspective.
To combat the predatory activities of global capital, the working
class needs its own international strategy: the reorganisation
of the world economy along socialist lines to meet the social
needs of the majority, not the profits of a few.
In the course of the campaign, the UNP and SLFP have demonstrated
their organic incapacity to address the pressing problems of ordinary
people. Rajapakse and Wickremesinghe have both gone to absurd
lengths to offer promises to everyone, knowing full well that
their plans will be vetoed by the IMF and World Bank. Neither
candidate has offered any explanation for the repeated failure
of his party to keep its promises from past elections.
Above all, neither party has a solution to the countrys
long-running civil war. Rajapakse is fooling nobody with advertisements
showing him clutching the dove of peace. As the price for his
alliance with the JVP and JHU, he agreed to demand the revision
of the current ceasefire with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam
(LTTE) and to tear up an existing agreement for the joint distribution
of aid to the victims of the December 26 tsunami. These ultimatums
to the LTTE, far from securing peace, will only set the course
for war.
Wickremesinghe began the campaign declaring he would renew
the peace process. But the peace talks, backed by
corporate leaders in Colombo and the major powers, are not an
attempt to resolve the outstanding democratic issues that led
to the war. Rather, their aim is a powersharing arrangement between
the ruling Tamil, Sinhala and Muslim elites that will pave the
way for the islands integration into global economic processes
and intensify the exploitation of the working class.
As the campaign has worn on, Wickremesinghe has increasingly
adapted to the chauvinist campaign of Rajapakse and his JVP cheerleaders.
Senior UNP leaders have boasted that the party when in government
from 2001 to 2004 trapped the LTTE in peace talks
and helped bring about a debilitating split in the organisation
in early 2004. The purpose of this bragging is to show that the
UNP, like the SLFP, is also interested in destroying the LTTE.
What it demonstrates is that both the parties responsible for
prosecuting the war are incapable of extricating themselves from
communal politics.
The SEP has not presented voters with long lists of false promises.
Our candidate Wije Dias has bluntly warned that this election
will resolve nothing and that, in its wake, the next president,
whether Rajapakse or Wickremesinghe, will be compelled to intensify
their onslaught on the living standards and democratic rights
of working people. The SEP has insisted that the only way the
working class can begin to solve its problems is to break decisively
from the parties of the bourgeoisie and wage an independent political
struggle for its own class interests. Such a struggle will inevitably
strike a chord with workers throughout the region and internationally,
as well as with poor peasants, oppressed communities and young
people across the island.
The SEP advances a class solution to the war, based on the
unity of Tamil and Sinhala workers and the rejection of all forms
of racism and communalism. The SEP opposes the forcible maintenance
of the unitary state and demands the immediate and unconditional
withdrawal of the Sri Lankan military from the north and east.
At the same time, the party rejects the LTTEs perspective
of a separate capitalist statelet, which will only intensify the
exploitation of the Tamil masses. We fight for the establishment
of a United Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka and Eelam as part
of a United Socialist States of South Asia and the world.
The SEP advocates the convening of a constituent assembly,
democratically elected by working people, to draft and adopt a
new, genuinely democratic constitution that abrogates all discriminatory
laws based on race, caste, religion and sex, and repressive legislation
such as the emergency powers and Prevention of Terrorism laws.
For workers in Sri Lanka and throughout the region to take
up the fight for this socialist and internationalist perspective
has become an urgent necessity. What capitalist governments are
preparing was revealed at the South Asian Association for Regional
Cooperation (SAARC) conference of regional leaders in Dhaka last
week. At the top of the agenda was the closer economic integration
of the region and its further opening to global capital, a process
that will inevitably further undermine the social position of
workers.
The SAARC leaders demonstrated a complete disregard for the
poor of the region, particularly those affected by the Kashmiri
earthquake and the tens of thousands of tsunami victims who, 11
months after the disaster, have received no assistance to put
their shattered lives back together. Highly significant was the
unanimous agreement at the conference on a tougher stand against
terrorism. Not only did this amount to tacit approval
for the criminal actions of the US in Iraq, but it signalled the
strengthening of the state apparatuses in each countryaimed
not primarily against terrorists, but against the
mounting opposition and resistance of ordinary people to the agenda
of economic restructuring.
The contempt of the ruling class for the sentiments of the
masses is self-evident in the Sri Lankan election. Hundreds of
thousands of Tamils in LTTE-controlled areas will have to run
a gauntlet of obstacles imposed by the Supreme Court and Election
Commissioner, with the backing of all the other parties, just
in order to cast a vote. Some 1.5 million Sri Lankan citizens
working in the Middle Eastfor the most part poor rural womenhave
been completely disenfranchised because no mechanism has been
established for them to vote. In addition, there are already widespread
reports of large numbers of voters being struck off the electoral
role for political purposes.
Virtually the entire election campaign has taken place under
a state of emergency imposed, with the agreement of almost all
the parliamentary parties, after the assassination of foreign
minister Lakshman Kadirgamar in August. Voters will go to the
polls today with 95,000 police on the streets and 100,000 troops
on standby for immediate deployment. Every one of the major political
parties is capable of mobilising gangs to create deliberate provocations
in rival strongholds in order to disrupt voting. The police have
the power to impose a curfew, which, as many people have learned
from bitter experience, will be designed more to cloak the work
of thugs than to protect ordinary citizens. Under these conditions,
to call this a democratic election is a fraud.
We call on voters to take a principled stand against the political
representatives of the capitalist system and the disasters they
have created by casting a ballot for the socialist solution advanced
by Wije Dias and the SEP. Dias is a founding member of the Revolutionary
Communist League, the SEPs forerunner formed in 1968 to
fight for the principles of international socialism. He is a member
of the International Editorial Board of the World Socialist
Web Site and the SEPs general secretary, and has devoted
nearly four decades to the struggle for the emancipation of the
working class.
Just as the ruling class is preparing its strategy for the
aftermath of the elections, so the working class must adopt its
own perspective. The SEP urges the many young people, workers,
housewives, unemployed, professionals and intellectuals who have
heard Wije Dias speak at meetings or through the media to become
regular readers of the WSWS, to seriously study our program and
policies and make the decision to join and build the SEP as the
new mass party of the working class.
See Also:
Colombo meeting concludes Sri Lankan
SEP election campaign
[16 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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