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Sri Lankan government rams war budget through parliament
By K. Ratnayake
23 November 2007
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The Sri Lankan government pushed its war budget through the
parliament on Monday with a majority of just 16 votes118
to 102. Although the opposition parties formally voted against,
the right-wing United National Party (UNP) and the Janatha Vimukthi
Peramuna (JVP) both made clear their support for the intensifying
war against Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).
President Mahinda Rajapakse, who also holds the finance and
defence portfolios, presented a budget on November 7 that boosted
defence spending by another 20 percent to a record 166 billion
rupees ($US1.5 billion). Since winning office in November 2005,
Rajapakse has been responsible for destroying the 2002 ceasefire
through the launching of military offensives to seize LTTE-held
territory in the East and now the North.
The budget places the full financial burden for the war onto
the backs of working people through the imposition of numerous
new indirect taxes that will further increase prices. To find
money for the military, the government has cut back on services
and subsidies. To fill the remaining budget holes, it simply runs
the printing presses, further fuelling inflation.
The government was desperate to secure the support of the JVP,
which has rabidly supported the war. While not part of the ruling
coalition, the JVP has backed the government in parliament, increasingly
exposing its empty populist, and occasionally socialist, posturing
as a defender of workers and particularly the Sinhala rural poor.
Speculation was rife that the JVP might vote with the government
or abstain. In either case, however, the JVP would have been seen
as lining up with the government and its relentless assault on
the living standards of the masses. Obviously torn internally,
the JVP vacillated up until the last minute before voting against
the budget, together with the UNP and pro-LTTE Tamil National
Alliance (TNA). A vote giving final approval for the budget is
scheduled for December 14.
Leading up to the November 19 vote, Rajapakse was distinctly
worried that his unwieldy coalition of 13 parties and groups would
not hold together. So blatant was the behind-the-scenes horse-trading
that cabinet minister Rauf Hakeem warned in parliament on Tuesday:
The masses are seeing parliamentarians as commodities with
price tags that can be bought. Every MP in the ruling coalition
has some form of ministerial post as a pay-off to keep them on
side.
On November 14, Wijedasa Rajapakse, a parliamentarian from
President Rajapakses own Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP),
crossed the floor to the opposition. He was chairman of the Committee
on Public Enterprises (COPE), responsible for investigating corruption
in government institutions. He called for a reduction in the size
of the current cabinet to 30 and the sacking of two cabinet ministers
charged with corruption by COPE.
UNP MP Mahinda Ratnatilleke switched to the government side,
declaring that everyone should back Rajapakse and his conduct
of the war. Two days after the budget vote, Ratnatilleke was sworn
in as the 109th minister in the Rajapakse government.
Rajapakse has waged a hysterical campaign to whip up patriotic
fervour to justify the budget and intimidate any opposition, including
in the government ranks. Taking a leaf out of US President Bushs
war on terrorism, Rajapakse and his ministers routinely
brand any opposition to the war as support for Tiger terrorism.
The president told unemployed graduates last Friday: We
brought this budget to destroy terrorism while developing the
country ... The Tigers as well as others want to defeat this budget.
When Wijedasa Rajapakse crossed the floor to join the opposition
last week, he was greeted with government howls of Tiger.
The government and its allies did not hesitate to make more
direct threats. Three prominent UNP MPs were hauled in by the
police departments Criminal Investigation Division (CID)
for questioning over alleged corruption. The TNA complained on
Monday that three of its MPs had received warnings from a pro-government
paramilitary group known as the Tamileela Viduthalai Makkal Pulihal
(TVMP). A TNA MP, T. Kanagasabai, was not present for the vote
after a relative was abducted, then found after the
budget vote.
Sections of the media joined the communal campaign. The right-wing
Island entitled its editorial on November 19 Mahinda
vs Prabhakaranthat is, the president versus LTTE leader
Velupillai Prabhakaran. The Island acknowledged that the
budget had all the characteristics of a war budget.
It accused opponents of the budget of joining forces with opponents
of the war in all but name to bring down the government.
Opposition parties
The Island editorial put its finger on the duplicitous
position of the UNP and JVP, which back the governments
reactionary war but try to posture as defenders of working people
by opposing the budget.
UNP speakers accused the government of corruption and vigorously
criticised the economic aspects of the budgetits reliance
on huge loans and the imposition of new taxes that will fuel inflation.
But they assiduously avoided any criticism of the huge military
expenditures or the war.
The UNP, which was responsible for first starting the civil
war in 1983, certainly is no opponent of war. In 2002, however,
reflecting concerns in ruling circles about the impact of the
war on the economy, the UNP signed a ceasefire and began peace
talks with the LTTE. Having lost the presidential election in
2005, the UNP has largely fallen into line with the Rajapakse
governments renewed war. At the same time, the UNP reflects
the continuing concerns of the corporate elite that the government
is generating a massive economic and political crisis, not least
because of growing popular hostility to the war.
The JVPs balancing act was even more tortured. It voted
for Rajapakses last two budgets, which have increased defence
expenditure dramatically and imposed huge burdens on working people.
This time, after a great deal of vacillation, it voted against
the budget, criticising the lack of public sector wage increases
and the governments failure to direct the private sector
to raise salaries. JVP MPs also criticised rising prices, government
corruption and huge ministerial expenses.
The JVP is deeply fearful of being discredited in the eyes
of working people by its close association with Rajapakse and
his government. In 2004, it capitalised on broad disaffection
with the SLFP and UNP to significantly boost its parliamentary
numbers. Recently, however, the JVP opposed any calling of a mid-term
poll by the government, knowing full well that it will lose parliamentary
seats in any fresh election.
While posturing in parliament as defenders of living standards,
the JVPs demands on the government as the price of its support
were all about intensifying the war. Prior to the budget, JVP
leader Somawansa Amarasinghe presented four conditions: the formal
abolition of the 2002 ceasefire, dissolution of the All-Party
Representative Committee (APRC), which was established to find
a political solution to the war, a ban on UN visits to Sri Lanka
and a formal government pledge to Sri Lankas sovereignty
and territorial integrity.
None of the measures targeted by Amarasinghe has anything to
do with ending the war. Rajapakse has not formally pulled out
of the ceasefire agreement, but it has not stopped the military
seizing most LTTE territory in the East and launching new offensives
in the North. The government established the APRC in order to
maintain the pretence that it would negotiate with the LTTE and
keep the major powers on side. As for the UN, the JVP has bitterly
opposed its limited criticisms of the militarys appalling
abuse of democratic rights.
The JVP is particularly sensitive to government criticisms
over its failure to support the war budget. At a press conference
on Tuesday, Amarasinghe dismissed accusations that the JVP was
not patriotic, declaring the party voted against the
budget because it had placed tax burdens on ordinary people and
increasing debt.
Significantly, Amarasinghe held up the record of the British
prime minister Winston Churchill as the model that the Sri Lankan
government should emulate. He got support from all sections
of the country because he set an example by sacrificing his personal
benefits, the JVP leader said.
In other words, far from slashing military spending, Rajapakse
should make gestures of shared sacrifice like the
conservative leader of British imperialism to appease the anger
of the masses. If the Sri Lankan president were willing to adopt
such a posture, Amarasinghe explained, the JVP would be ready
to vote for the war budget on December 14.
To defend their basic rights and living standards, working
people are being propelled into a struggle against the war and
the government. But as the budget debate has demonstrated, they
cannot rely on any of the parliamentary opposition parties.
See Also:
Sri Lankan president hands down war budget
[13 November 2007]
Sri Lankan military assassinates LTTE
political leader in air strike
[5 November 2007]
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