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Lanka
Desperate manoeuvres give Sri Lankan government a thin majority
By K Ratnayake
1 February 2007
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Two dozen opposition MPs joined the Sri Lankan government of
President Mahinda Rajapakse last weekend. Superficially, the move
has strengthened the governments hand giving it a bare parliamentary
majority for the first time. In reality, the unwieldy coalition
and huge cabinet are signs of deep political crisis as Rajapakse
escalates the unpopular civil war against the Liberation Tigers
of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).
The cross-overs18 from the United National
Party (UNP) and 6 from the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress (SLMC)followed
weeks of behind-the-scenes haggling. All 18 of the UNP members
have been given a post in the government10 as cabinet ministers
and the remainder as non-cabinet and deputy ministers. SLMC leader
Rauf Hakim was given a cabinet post and other SLMC members were
appointed as deputy ministers.
The coalition government now has 113 members in the countrys
225-seat parliamenta majority of just one. The essential
glue holding this alliance together is the perks and privileges
of office. After his reshuffle on Sunday, Rajapakse presides over
the largest cabinet in Asia104 government members have posts.
Of those, 52 are cabinet ministers, 33 are non-cabinet ministers
and 19 are deputy ministers.
When Rajapakse narrowly won the presidential election in November
2005, his Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) had just 58 seats. The
SLFPs Peoples Alliance with five other parties
had a total of only 88 MPs, well short of a majority. To avoid
defeat in parliament, Rajapakse was dependent on the support of
two Sinhala extremist partiesthe Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna
(JVP) and Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU)with which he had signed
electoral pacts.
Rajapakses deals with the JVP and JHU committed the government
to an aggressive stance against the LTTE. For months, the military
in collaboration with allied paramilitary groups waged a dirty
secretive war of assassination aimed at terrorising the Tamil
population and provoking the LTTE. In July, Rajapakse ordered
the army onto the offensive in open breach of the 2002 ceasefire
agreement. The military has seized the eastern areas of Mavilaru,
Sampur and, most recently, Vaharai.
At the same time, Rajapakse has been desperate to bolster the
governments parliamentary position in the face of growing
popular opposition against the war and also declining living standards.
Last August Rajapakse enticed the Ceylon Workers Congress (CWC)
and Up-country Peoples Front (UPF) into the government. The CWC
and UPF are trade unions that also function as political parties,
with support from Tamil-speaking plantation workers.
The latest cross-overs have given the government
a slim majority, but also effectively scuttled an agreement signed
between the SLFP and UNP on October 23just three months
ago. While not a formal political alliance, the countrys
two major bourgeois partiesand long-time rivalsagreed
for the first time to collaborate on a range of issues, including
the war. The UNP pledged to support the government for two years,
while Rajapakse promised to consult UNP leaders on major questions.
The UNP-SLFP pact was hailed in the media, by business leaders
and foreign powers, including the US, EU, Japan and India, as
a major breakthrough that would pave the way for renewed peace
talks. By presenting a common front, so the argument went, the
government would be able to marginalise the JVP, which was demanding
all-out war, and reach a deal with the LTTE to end the countrys
protracted civil war. The deal between the two parties was itself
a recognition that the country faced a grave economic and political
crisis generated by the war.
In fact, the war has continued to intensify. Rajapakse has
responded to deepening social discontent over rising prices and
widespread poverty by stirring up communal divisions and generating
an atmosphere of war hysteria. His government has imposed a series
of anti-democratic measures, including a strengthened version
of the notorious Prevention of Terrorism Act that allows for lengthy
detention without trial. Far from opposing the government, the
UNP, which is just as mired in anti-Tamil chauvinism as the SLFP,
has tacitly supported its policies.
Having stabilised his government with the cross-overs,
Rajapakse will further intensify the war. Defence secretary Gotabhaya
Rajapakse, who is also the presidents brother, told Reuters
last Friday: We definitely want to destroy their [LTTE]
assets, wherever those arewhether it is in the north, east,
south... We want to destroy their assets everywhere, because as
long as they have Sea Tiger bases, as long as they have artillery
pieces... terrorists are always thinking wherever possible they
want to do damage.
President Rajapakse delivered a similar message to the Sri
Lanka Donors Conference on Monday, saying: Our aim in defeating
terrorism is to liberate the people who have become victims of
terrorism. The repeated denunciation of the LTTE as terrorists
is to obscure the real causes of the war, which lie in the systematic
discrimination of the countrys Tamil minority by successive
governments. While everyone urged peace, no one at the conference
challenged Rajapakse or his governments obvious breaches
of the 2002 ceasefire agreement.
In fact, the US indicated its support the Sri Lankan governments
aggression. While paying lip service to the need for peace,
American ambassador Robert Blake declared: We are a strong
supporter in assisting Sri Lanka combat terror by helping to stop
the financing and flow of arms to the LTTE, by providing law enforcement
assistance, and by providing training and equipment to help the
Sri Lankan military to defend itself.
The cross-overs have thrown the UNP into crisis.
UNP leader Ranil Wickremesinghe previously warned the SLFP against
poaching UNP members, saying it would endanger the agreement between
the two parties. Party chairman Rukman Senanayake tore up a copy
of the agreement at a press conference on Sunday. Party general
secretary Tissa Attanayake lamented that Rajapakse had lost an
opportunity to resolve the countrys problems and indicated
that the UNP would launch a campaign against the government, possibly
in league with the JVP.
The JVP has also criticised Rajapakses acceptance of
UNP members into the cabinets ranks, indicating that its
own support for the government may be at risk. The JVP is bitterly
opposed to the UNP, which it has repeatedly accused of betraying
the country for signing the 2002 ceasefire with the LTTE. JVP
leader Anura Kumara Disanayaka specifically denounced three of
the cross-overs who backed peace talks with the LTTEG.L.
Peiris, Milinda Moragoda and Rajitha Senaratneas having
acted against the interests of the country.
Before signing the agreement with the UNP, Rajapakse held talks
on a formal alliance with the JVP. No deal was reached, however,
after the JVP presented a 20-point program that amounted to a
declaration of war against the LTTE. Rajapakse preferred to maintain
room to manoeuvreto posture as a man of peace and paint
the LTTE as the aggressor so as to retain public and international
support. In a political committee statement on Monday, the JVP
foreshadowed a chauvinist campaign to defeat attempts to
dilute the mandatethat is, the program of war implied
in Rajapakses 2005 election manifesto.
The governments latest manoeuvres to cling to power underscore
the degenerate character of the major parties. Utterly incapable
of addressing the deepening social crisis of the masses, all of
them resort to whipping up chauvinism to divide working people
along communal lines and thus have no solution to the countrys
barbaric civil war. So widespread is the alienation from the entire
political establishment that neither the SLFP nor the UNP command
any significant active base of support. Both parties are riven
with factional infighting and preoccupied with obtaining and hanging
onto power using any available means.
Unable to win popular support for his reactionary policies,
Rajapakse has now managed to coax and bribe sufficient MPs to
establish a parliamentary majorityof one seat. This whole
political edifice, which is wracked by competing and contradictory
interests, is inherently unstable and will inevitably crumblesooner
rather than later. The issue for working people, however, is the
construction of a progressive alternative. What is needed is a
complete break from all the parties of the ruling elite and the
building of an independent political movement based on socialist
internationalism to end war and social inequality.
See Also:
Sri Lankan military captures
strategic eastern town from LTTE
[25 January 2007]
Sri Lankan military
launches new offensive in country's east
[16 December 2007]
Sri Lankan president
reimposes anti-terror laws in preparation for intensified war
[9 December 2006]
A socialist program
to end the war in Sri Lanka
[21 October 2006]
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