|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Sri
Lanka
Sri Lankan police break up student protests over deteriorating
university education
By Sujeewa Amaranath and Panini Wijesiriwardane
15 August 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Sri Lankan police mounted major operations to break up two
student protests on July 30 and August 1 outside the offices of
the ministry of higher education in Colombo. Water cannon, baton
charges and tear gas were used to disperse hundreds of students
demonstrating for better facilities and an end to the governments
cutbacks to free education.
Three students were hospitalised as a result of police attacks
on the first protest involving students from the Rajarata University.
One student was detained and later released. Another two were
hospitalised during clashes on the second day involving students
from Aesthetic University. Doctors from the nearby National Hospital
complained that the tear gas was so dense that their patients
were being affected.
Higher Education Minister Wishva Warnapala met student union
leaders and told them the government was not increasing, but cutting
the budget allocation for universities by 20 percent this year.
Chinthaka Sri Shantha, student union president at the Aesthetic
University, told the World Socialist Web Site the minister
had said that even with the 20 percent cut, the allocated funds
could not be released because of the economic difficulties
of the government.
One major factor in these economic difficulties
is the resumption of the communal war against Liberation Tigers
of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) over the past 18 months. To pay the billions
of rupees expended on military offensives, President Mahinda Rajapakse
has slashed spending on essential services, including education
at all levels. Confronting growing unrest, the government has
not hesitated to employ police measures to silence dissent.
The student protests were organised by the Inter University
Student Federation (IUSF), which is controlled by the Janatha
Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP). The IUSF, however, is not prepared to
seriously challenge the Rajapakse government over its cutbacks
to university education as the JVP not only supports the war,
but demands its further intensification. The JVPs main slogan
Motherland first. Other things later sums up its insistence
that workers and students have to sacrifice for a reactionary
war.
Student leader Chinthaka Sri Shantha refused to comment on
the ministers declaration about economic difficulties. The
minister did not say much about this. Also we did not ask much
about it, he told the WSWS. The JVP student leaders accepted
at face value the ministers empty promises to consider improving
conditions and postponed any further protests to the indefinite
future.
In other words, the protests were called not on the basis of
a political program to oppose the government, but because the
IUSF is under pressure from students and wanted to be seen doing
something to defend public education. Having organised two rallies,
the JVP student leaders have now shut down the campaign as it
threatens to undermine Rajapakses war plans.
The same process took place earlier this year when non-academic
staff stopped work from April 27 to May 7 for higher wages. The
university authorities, backed by the government, refused to make
any concessions to the striking workers, declaring that it could
not afford any pay increase. In addition, striking workers were
subjected to unprecedented pay and holiday penalties. Those who
objected were victimised. Rather than turning to students and
other workers, the unions, including those controlled by the JVP,
shut down the campaign.
To maintain its grip on university student unions, the JVP
resorts to thuggery to intimidate and silence its political opponents.
Last week, IUSF leaders at Peradeniya University near Kandy threatened
physical violence against members of the International Students
for Social Equality (ISSE) who had set up a bookstall on campus.
ISSE members were campaigning against the US-led war on Iraq,
the war in Sri Lanka and for a socialist perspective to defend
democratic rights and living standards, including free education.
Worsening conditions
Students at the two universities engaged in the protests face
similar problems. Rajarata University, located near Anuradhapura,
north east of Colombo, is suffering from a severe lack of lecturers.
In the faculty of management, for instance, only 22 of the 33
lecturer positions have been filled and none has a doctorate.
The faculties of management, social science and humanities do
not have separate buildings. The reading hall has places for only
20 students to study. There are no sports facilities.
Rajarata University was started in 1996 in vacant buildings
constructed to celebrate a limited housing program. The facilities
were not built properly and were unsuitable for a university.
A burning problem is the lack of student hostel facilities. Only
782 students of the current student population of 2,204 have hostel
accommodation. Others have to board in substandard housing with
6 to 8 students packed into a room.
At the Aesthetic University in Colombothe countrys
only institution for the performing arts and fine artsonly
83 of the 154 lecturer posts are filled. Departments such as theatre
history and applied music have ceased to function because of the
lack of lectures. The department of Western music has only two
of the 15 lecturers required.
Many departments suffer from lack of non-academic staff and
inadequate infrastructure. There is no theatre hall, recording
studio or computer lab. Students of visual arts lack basic equipment
such as an air compressor, digital cameras and printers. With
the exception of a few rented buildings, the university functions
in the same buildings as it did in 1974. Only 320 of the 3,180
students have hostel accommodation on campus. The remainder are
housed in rented accommodation up to 20 kilometres away.
Free university education, the product of the post-war struggles
of the working class, has been steadily eroded since 1980 when
the United National Party (UNP) government launched a restructuring
program with the release of a White Paper. Its main provisions
included the establishment of private schools and private institutions
able to grant degrees. Foreign universities charging high fees
were able to establish branches for the sons and daughters of
the wealthy.
Universities such as Rajarata were established in response
to growing protests over the lack of university places, but failed
to address the problem. Even with this limited expansion, less
than 15 percent of eligible students are able to enter university.
In 2006, for instance, about 115,000 students gained the necessary
exam marks to enter university, but only 17,630 students gained
places. The cutbacks being made under the Rajapakse government
have made further inroads into public university education.
See Also:
Sri Lanka: JVP student leader physically
threatens ISSE campus team
[9 August 2007]
Sri Lankan unions betray university
workers' struggle
[25 June 2007]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |