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Lanka
A sign of political crisis: coalition of Sri Lankan parties
formed
By K. Ratnayake
3 November 2006
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The two main establishment parties in Sri Lankathe ruling
Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) and the opposition United National
Party (UNP)for the first time signed a formal coalition
agreement last week. The grand alliance has been hailed by corporate
leaders and the media as an epoch making achievement.
In reality, it is another sign of the countrys deep political
crisis.
The SLFP and UNP have been bitter rivals for power for more
than 50 years and have rejected all previous appeals to form a
government of national unity. The desperate hope in ruling circles
is that this new political formation will somehow end the islands
escalating civil war and provide the means for pressing ahead
with an agenda of market reforms to boost foreign investment.
SLFP general secretary Maithripala Sirisena and UNP chairman
Malik Samarawickrama signed the memorandum of understanding (MoU)
on October 23 at the presidents official residence, Temple
Trees. Under the two-year agreement, the UNP has promised to assist
the government in resolving four main issuesconflict
in the north and east, electoral reform, good governance
and social development.
The structure for collaboration is yet to be decided
between Rajapakse and UNP leader Ranil Wickremesinghe. A section
of the UNP leadership, including Wickremesinghe, is extremely
reluctant to accept any cabinet posts; knowing full well that
the party will have to face the inevitable hostility generated
by unpopular policies. At this stage, Wickremsinghe has proposed
that the UNP remains on the opposition benches.
Both party leaders are conscious of what is at stake. At the
signing ceremony, Rajapakse warned: Let this nation not
go down the precipice due to differences between political parties.
Wickremesinghe later told a press conference that during a
crisis, when the people are affected, the opposition and the government
work together. It is very rarely that an opposition supports the
government.... We have come to this crucial phase in our countrys
history.
Central to the crisis is the renewed civil war. Rajapakse narrowly
defeated Wickremesinghe at last Novembers presidential elections
by signing electoral pacts with two Sinhala extremist partiesthe
Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) and Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU).
Following his victory, the military initiated an escalating covert
war of assassination and provocation against the Liberation Tigers
of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). Open warfare erupted in July when Rajapakse
ordered the military onto the offensive.
Prior to reaching an agreement with the UNP, the SLFP had been
negotiating a coalition with the JVP. These talks collapsed, however,
after the JVP insisted that the government tear up the 2002 ceasefire
and wage a more aggressive war against the LTTE. Rajapakse is
acutely aware that openly declaring war would create great political
difficulties for the government. He has attempted to disguise
the militarys operations as defensive, both
to contain widespread antiwar sentiment at home and to retain
international backing.
The SLFP turned instead to the UNP, which had signed the 2002
ceasefire and held peace talks with the LTTE in 2003. The SLFP-UNP
agreement does not represent a step towards peace, however. The
deal is not based on a return to the 2002 ceasefire and thus continues
to give the military a free hand. The UNP, which was responsible
for starting the war in 1983, is just as steeped in Sinhala chauvinism
as its rival. Its turn to peace talks in 2002 was not out of concern
for the impact of the war on working people, but reflected frustrations
in corporate circles that the conflict had become a barrier to
foreign investment.
While no detailed joint policies have been announced, the Sunday
Leader has published the contents of several discussion papers
drawn up by the two parties. The document on the conflict
in the north and east declares: The state has the
paramount duty to protect the sovereignty of the country by all
means at its disposal, including military action when appropriate.
At the same time, it calls for a political solution to the
ethnic issuein other words, to the discrimination
against the islands Tamil minority that provoked the war.
These formulations allow the government to posture as peacemakers,
while continuing to wage an aggressive war. The UNP has agreed
to return to the all-party conference sponsored by Rajapakse to
propose a political settlement to the war. This conference, which
includes JVP representatives, has been nothing more than political
camouflage for the militarys offensives against the LTTE.
The SLFP-UNP agreement was signed just days before a round
of peace talks in Geneva last weekend. The deal was immediately
hailed by the US embassy in Colombo as a sign that the islands
two main parties were determined to work together to find
a political solution to the conflict. In fact, as Washington
is well aware, the government, with the UNPs backing, is
making harsher demands on the LTTE than was the case in 2002.
Not surprisingly, the Geneva talks broke down with no proposal
for another round.
The JVP political bureau, which is openly campaigning for all-out
war against the LTTE, has condemned the new coalition as a UNP
trap that will dilute the limited moves to defeat separatist
terrorism. The JVP plans to organise meetings in several
districts, including Colombo, hoping to capitalise on anti-government
discontent. At a rally on Wednesday, JVP secretary Tilvan Silva
warned: If he [Rajapakse] fails to come back to the right
track, we will be forced to dethrone him and replace him with
someone else.
The JVP campaign is a rather desperate attempt to rebuild support
after its previous entry into an SLFP coalition government in
2004 produced widespread disillusion over its failure to fulfil
its promises. While there is no popular support for war, many
working people are deeply hostile to the social impact of the
governments economic policies. The JVP has focussed its
attack on the UNP, knowing full well that it is widely hated for
the accelerated pro-market reforms it implemented between 2002
and 2004.
Economic policies
The joint SLFP-UNP discussion papers on economic and social
policies outline a series of austerity measures that will inevitably
widen the gulf between rich and poor, including:
* A national health fund has been proposed, financed
by citizens along with business taxes. Free public
health care, which was established in the 1950s and 1960s, has
been whittled away by successive governments. A fund would entrench
the present two-class health system: an expanding private sector
for the wealthy and a deteriorating public system for the majority
of the population.
* Limited welfare support for the poor will now include social
market elements. Under this scheme, subsidies will increasingly
be targettedthat is, limited to the very poorest
layers of society. The policy is in line with IMF claims that
broad subsidies only benefit the rich. While the wealthy have
undoubtedly gained, the purpose of the IMF policies is not to
help the poor, but to slash overall social spending.
* Further restructuring and privatisation of the public sector,
including transport and communication, is to be carried out. The
government is to promote the concept of share owning society,
in which every person in the society [will] be a share holder
in these ventures. The beneficiaries will be those who have
the money to buy up shares in privatised enterprises. Most people
will face higher prices for essential services.
* In the agricultural sector, a farming for the market
scheme is proposed, particularly to encourage exports. Those who
will reap the benefits will be agricultural businesses and better
off farmers with the ability to grow for the international market.
The vast majority of Sri Lankan farmers have neither the capital,
land nor know-how to switch from staple crops to more lucrative
exports.
Big business has responded enthusiastically to news of the
SLFP-UNP alliance, with sharp rises on the Colombo share markets.
Federation of Chambers of Commerce and Industries (FCCI) chairman
Nawas Rajabdeen outlined the expectations of the corporate elite.
Partisan politics and the power play between the major parties
had forced successive leaders to ignore unpopular yet critical
reforms. They have merely taken refuge in popular politics with
short term effects, he declared.
The formation of the SLFP-UNP coalition marks a turning point
in Sri Lankan politics. While the conservative UNP has always
been an unashamed advocate for vested corporate interests, the
SLPF has in the past attempted to make a populist appeal, particularly
to the islands rural Sinhalese.
The SLFP came to prominence in the 1950s on a combination of
Sinhala communalism, socialistic phrasemongering and promises
of reforms. The party never had anything to do with socialism,
but was based on a program of national economic regulation. Its
limited social reforms and Sinhala chauvinism were aimed at containing
and dividing an insurgent working class.
As in other countries, however, the globalisation of production
over the past three decades has destroyed any basis for a nationally
regulated economy. The SLFP has followed the UNP in implementing
market reforms to the point where their programs are indistinguishable.
The protracted assault on the social position of working people
has generated widespread hostility and anger.
The governments responsewhether led by the UNP
or SLFPto mounting opposition has been to stir up anti-Tamil
chauvinism to confuse and divide workers. This dependence on communal
politics produced the civil war in the first place and has led
to its renewal. The UNP and SLFP have no solutions to any of these
intractable problems other than to place the full brunt of the
war and economic crisis onto the backs of working people.
See Also:
Sri Lankan peace talks collapse
amid intensifying civil war
[31 October 2006]
A socialist program to end
the war in Sri Lanka
[21 October 2006]
A sign of crisis: two major
Sri Lankan parties to form a grand coalition
[18 October 2006]
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