Post-Rajapaksha Sri Lanka:
President Sirisena for communal harmony, stability, development!
Dr. Abdul Ruff Colachal
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The arrival of
President Maithripala Sirisena, who is seen committed to people’s causes as
well as nation’s pride, signals the rise of a new phenomenon in Sri Lanka,
governance and politics, just like what
the new political phenomenon the Delhi CM Arvind Kejriwal in Indian politics meant
to India. Both have aroused the hopes of people, conscience of the nation and government
commitment to the national causes.
With the dawn of
Sirisena in Lankan politics with a bang it seems people’s faith in the political
leadership and government has returned to play its legitimate role in nation
building task in new beginnings. His balanced foreign diplomacy added clarity
to the purpose to the cause of national building.
President Sirisena
came when Sri Lankans had almost lost their faith in the government, in the national
ruling elites, in the future of Sri Lanka and also lost hopes in their own
future as former president Mahinda Rajapaksa became extremely a despot,
prompting a divisive rule, harming the very
purpose and stature of the nation.
The exit of powerful Rajapaksa, who had taken people for
granted, happened as he and his close associates had appeared well-entrenched.
The 69-year-old came to power in 2005, led his country’s military to a bloody
victory over violent Tamil separatists four years later and surfed a wave of
popularity among the Sinhala majority to win again in 2010. He then had the
constitution changed to allow the third term he hoped to win in January’s poll,
which was called two years early.
The serious
allegations of corruption, violent intimidation of political opponents, attacks
on journalists, growing resentment among Tamils and mounting sectarian violence
led to concern at home and abroad. The appointment of two brothers, a nephew
and a son to key posts prompted charges of nepotism. The constitutional changes
led to accusations of authoritarianism. Taxi drivers, cooks and shopkeepers in
working-class neighborhoods in Colombo blame the ousted president’s entourage
for the steeply rising prices of basic foodstuffs and major development
projects that do not seem to have improved their lives. Rajapaksa sought to
present his vision of a government which is unanswerable to people.
Rajapaksa and
family lost and Sri Lanka won by voting Sirisena to power for protecting their
genuine interests at home and abroad.
Voters do not vote
for corrupt or ineffective governance but when that happens they are helpless
as they can do literally nothing to the rulers who can ruthlessly suppress
agitations demanding better governance, and welfare measures for the poor and
needy. They reveal their anger and anguish in the next general elections by
casting their valuable votes against the government and replace the incumbent
ruling dispensation with a new government.
Generally
politicians do not learn anything from people and their reactions. They just
try to mold voter mindset to suit their designs.
Now the Lankans have
regained their faith and hopes under Sirisena, a well wisher of freedoms and
peace. Understandably, they now look upon the new leader with high hopes.
A month after his
surprise victory over Mahinda Rajapaksa, whose controversial rule had lasted
more than nine years, the new president of Sri Lanka has launched an ambitious
100-day program of reform and redirection. The progress report looks fairly
satisfying. Already, there is a change
in atmosphere in Sri Lanka that even the usually oblivious tourists filling
Colombo’s rapidly proliferating luxury hotels must notice. “The people changed
the situation. They want democracy,” a leftist Lankapelli told the Guardian,
speaking in a rundown trade union federation office below a faded portrait of
Leon Trotsky.
President Sirisena
is encouraging people to live fearlessly. Many refer to the victory of Sirisena
over both Rajapaksa and Tamil separatists as a reason to vote for him again.
Hana Ebrahim, a respected journalist and former editor in Colombo, said the
“fear has gone”. He’s a good politician who has a link with the poor and rural
people,” said one of his sympathizers, “He knows how to appeal to them, even if
his pure majoritarian policies eventually backfired”.
Muslim and
Christian leaders also said they had been reassured by the new president’s
recent statements. The issues in the north are complex however, and much
depends on Sirisena persuading Sri Lanka’s powerful Sinhala-dominated military
to give up land, businesses and a view of Tamils as potential troublemakers.
Representatives of
the Tamil minority, who have faced discrimination and repression in recent
years, are equally upbeat. His supporters say Sirisena’s attempt to reform and
redirect is a big task. “The early signs are very promising. The mood has
totally changed. Earlier, it was very scary. Now there’s lightness,” a western
diplomat in Colombo said.
Observers were
encouraged by the 63-year-old career politician’s speech on Sri Lanka’s
Independence Day last month, in which the president spoke of the losses of all
communities and made a series of other conciliatory statements towards the
Tamil minority. In an address to top diplomats last week, Sirisena spoke of
matching “the physical defeat of terrorism” with “a deeper and genuine peace”.
“All people living in the country whatever language they speak, whatever
religion they follow, should... live with feelings of strong brotherhood and
with bonds of unity,” he said.
Such statements
have allayed some concerns that the new head of state might be less inclusive
than hoped. Sirisena was close to Rajapkasa, is a Buddhist like most of the
Sinhalese majority and comes from a conservative rural background. Brian Keenan
of the International Crisis Group said: “He comes from the same stock but is a
very different kind of person. He is on the softer side of the Sinhala
nationalist spectrum. There are indications that he wants to be calm,
statesman-like reformer who doesn’t have a personal agenda but keeps the whole
process going forward in a positive way”.
President Sirisena
remains unprovoked by negative comments from opposition quarters and that is
his positive mindset the people like.
President Sirisena,
known now known as a good and calm politician who has a link with the poor and
feel for rural people, is eager to change the roadmap of his country and is now
seen too busy as he began his democratic duty as mandated by the people of this
island nation. He is often busy with a regular stream of officials, visitors,
business people, soldiers and ambassadors meeting him through the colonial-era
gates to his white-washed residence in Sri Lanka’s principal city.
Yet no one doubts
the challenges facing Sirisena and his new government, which is led by Ranil
Wickremesinghe, a veteran of Sri Lanka’s convoluted and bitter politics. One
problem is the instability of the coalition. Essentially united only by a
desire to oust Rajapaksa, the government faces parliamentary elections in June
and needs to consolidate its hold in the national assembly to push through new
laws and repeal others. Even before the polls, legislation including major
constitutional amendments and a right to information act has been tabled.
One key problem
for the new government is an impending UN report into alleged war crimes
committed during the civil war and particularly its last year. Launched under the Rajapaksa government,
largely by the US and the UK, the report has the potential to embarrass the new
administration as well (if the government approves the Rajapksha regime
anomalies) by exposing acts by Sri Lankan government forces. After Sirisena’s
foreign minister trawled western capitals, the report’s publication was pushed
back to September.
There are also
deep economic problems, only partially mitigated by the Rajapaksa’s investment
in infrastructure, and the scars of the 26-year war are still livid. The
closing phases of the conflict saw thousands of Tamil civilians killed in army
bombardments and confused fighting with separatist extremists from the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). Many hundreds of Tamil political
prisoners are still believed to be imprisoned, often without charge“.
There has been an
economic crisis in Jaffna and the north and the new budget created a sense that
the economy will now change. Human rights campaigners said surveillance and
harassment of activists in the north have continued, however.
The Rajapaksa government
swung Sri Lanka closer to Beijing, with scores of agreements signed with
Chinese state firms for huge infrastructure projects and massive private
investment too. The most high profile project involves building a marina, a
Formula One circuit, luxury flats and businesses on a 200-plus hectare plot
reclaimed from the sea off Colombo itself next to the city’s main port. A
strategic tilt towards China also worried the US and India, Sri Lanka’s
northerly neighbour.
Lanka sits astride
key shipping lanes down which much of the oil and gas required by East Asian
nations, including China, travels. The new administration appears undecided
over the fate of the project, which will create and occupy some of the most
strategically and commercially important real estate in south Asia.
Of the first acts
of Wickramesinghe, the new prime minister, was to cancel tax breaks given to a
huge casino project launched by Australian gambling tycoon James Packer. The
high-profile investors are easier to see off.
The feeling in
Colombo is broadly optimistic because there is a sense here that people
contributed to Sirisena’s victory, a movement from dictatorship to democracy
and they want to reap the fruits from the changing political atmosphere in the
country under President Sirisena, a rare leader of the corruption ridden third world.
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