|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Sri
Lanka
JVP assists the Sri Lankan government to pass its war budget
By K. Ratnayake
20 December 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
The Sri Lankan government managed to pass its war budget in
the third and final parliamentary vote last Friday. To do so,
it depended on the support of the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP),
which came to the rescue of the shaky ruling coalition by abstaining
rather than voting against the budget, as it had done in the second
round.
The final vote was 114 in favour and 67 against, with the 37
JVP MPs abstaining. The JVP, which continually postures as a defender
of workers and the poor, is now politically responsible for a
budget that will not only intensify the countrys reactionary
civil war, but place its full burden onto the backs of working
people through rising prices and cutbacks to subsidies and services.
The government, which began launching offensives against the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in July 2006, has allocated
a record 166 billion rupees ($US1.5 billion) on military spendinga
20 percent increase over last years record. To pay for the
war, President Mahinda Rajapakse, who holds the defence and finance
portfolios, has imposed a number of new indirect taxes and cut
social spending.
With the exception of the pro-LTTE Tamil National Alliance
(TNA), all the opposition parties back the war in one way or another.
At the same time, the right-wing United National Party (UNP) opposed
the budget in order to capitalise on growing popular anger over
deteriorating living standards. Supported by two senior defectors
from Rajapakses Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP), the UNP
was hoping to defeat the budget and force new parliamentary elections.
The key to the parliamentary equation was the JVP. While the
JVP did not have the numbers by itself, a clear stance against
the budget would have encouraged wavering members of the ruling
coalition to cross the floor. The budget has thrown the JVP into
crisison the one hand, it stridently demands an intensification
of the patriotic war, but, on the other, it demagogically
calls for measures to alleviate the plight of working people and
claims on occasions to be socialist.
The issue opened up divisions in the JVP, which prevaricated
for weeks prior to the second reading on November 19. The government
narrowly won that vote after the JVP voted against. Prior to the
third reading, the JVP issued a series of demands, not to ease
the economic burdens, but to demand a tougher stance on the war,
including the illegalisation of the LTTE. The JVP insisted in
particular that Rajapakse tear up the 2002 ceasefire agreement,
which, while a dead letter in all but name, allows the government
to claim it still supports the so-called international peace process.
Behind the scenes, the government was compelled to bribe and
bully its own MPs to prevent them voting against the budget. Four
days before the vote, a paramilitary group allied to the military
kidnapped the relatives of three TNA MPs and announced it would
kill them if the parliamentarians voted against the budget. The
threeP. Ariyanethran, K. Thangeswari, S. Jeyanandamoorthywere
not in parliament for the vote.
The UNP was also working overtime to woo government MPs. Sri
Lanka Muslim Congress (SLMC) leader Rauf Hakeem and three deputy
ministers resigned and joined the opposition. Hakeem accused the
government of discriminating against Muslims, particularly in
the East. Last Friday, the day of the final vote, Anura Bandaranaike
a leading SLFP member and cabinet minister, defected to the opposition.
There were also signs that the Ceylon Workers Congress (CWC)
and Up-country Peoples Front (UPF), which are based among Tamil-speaking
plantation workers in the central hills districts, were preparing
to cross the floor. UPF member V. Radhakrishnan told parliament
that people wanted them [his party] to oppose the budget,
which would have meant the loss of another two votes.
In these conditions, the defeat of the budget hinged on the
JVPs vote. Right up until the last minute, JVP leaders were
declaring that they would vote against, as they had done last
month. Even on Friday, JVP general secretary Tilvin Silva speaking
on the partys radio station, V-FM, confirmed that the leadership
had decided to vote with the opposition.
On Friday afternoon, however, after talks with the presidents
brother Basil Rajapakse, the JVP changed its stand. A closed
door meeting in Parliament at 2 p.m. on Friday between the Janatha
Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) Parliamentary hierarchy and Presidential
Advisor Basil Rajapakse had led to the JVP announcement that they
would abstain from Fridays crucial budget vote, the
Nation reported.
Those who were considering switching sides rapidly changed
their minds. The CWC and UPF were not about to quit the government,
give up their ministerial privileges and take a stand, if the
budget was going to pass anyway. To underscore its support for
the war, the JVP actually voted for the defence allocation, which
was taken as a separate item prior to the final vote. After the
budget was ratified, Basil Rajapakse made a point of thanking
the JVP.
Justifying the JVPs stance, JVP leader Somawansa Amarasinghe
told the press on Saturday: A UNP triumph would have a catastrophic
impact on the ongoing security forces campaign against the LTTE.
There would have been chaos, political instability and that would
have been to the advantage of the enemy. The JVPs desire
to ensure stability, particularly in view of the successful military
campaign, surpassed the need to defeat the budget, thereby bringing
the government to its knees.
Amarasinghes statement speaks volumes. This party is
for deepening the war and maintaining the stability of capitalist
rule and the Sri Lankan state. Amarasinghe is simply rephrasing
the JVPs longstanding chauvinist slogan Motherland
First. Those who will be forced to sacrifice their lives
and living standards for this 24-year communal war are working
people and their sons and daughters.
The JVPs stance is completely in line with a chauvinist
press release from the defence ministry, hailing the vote for
the budget. [I]t was none other than terror chief, V. Prabhakaran,
[LTTE leader] who had the greatest desire to see the government
lose in the budget vote. Failure of the terror sympathisers, treacherous
politicians and media manipulators is certainly a great victory
of all peace loving Sri Lankans, it declared.
The JVPs decision to support the budget has exposed its
posturing among workers. On December 11, prior to its decision
to abstain, JVP parliamentarian K.D. Lal Kantha demagogically
told the annual meeting of Lanka Postal Services Union (LPSU)
that the Rajapakse government was the most corrupt, inefficient
and tyrannical government ever to come to power in Sri Lankas
political history. The entire hierarchies from the very top to
the very bottom are corrupt and guilty of mismanagement.
This government is now even more dependent on the JVP, which
has been weakened by its support for the budget. Far from stepping
back, however, the JVP will intensify its communal Motherland
First campaign and will not hesitate to use threats and
physical violence against anyone who opposes the waras the
JVP has in the past.
See Also:
Sri Lankan military conducts massive
anti-Tamil sweep through Colombo
[5 December 2007]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |