The Editorial from Sunday Observer - 05/07/2015
We, Sri Lankans, love to show off our country as the
'Light of Asia', the Dhamma Dveepa, the 'Thrice Blessed Isle', the 'Pearl of
the Indian Ocean' and sundry other self-laudatory epithets. Amid all this
syrupy self-labelling, we also had to face up to labels applied by others -
labels quite denigratory. After the 1983 anti-Tamil pogrom, for example, we
became known the 'tear drop' in the Indian Ocean. A little earlier we became
known as the country with a Constitution that was (is) like a periodical
journal with constantly changing content. More recently, we became known as a
country suspected of genocide, or, at least, a brutal, counter-insurgency
massacre.
On January 8, 2015, Sri Lanka also became known for
near-heroic social and political struggles that toppled a bumbling
dictator-plunderer who allowed sorcerers and astrologers to define his, and by
default, his country's destiny.
Although that historic 'regime-change' was hailed by many
overseas as a 'surprise', those within the country who followed local politics,
knew of the potential for change after the provincial election in Uva which
showed a very clear waning of popularity within Mahinda Rajapaksa's own
Sinhala-centred support base. After the narrow shave for the UPFA in retaining
the Uva administration, analysts were already doing their psephological
analysis and coming to the conclusion that with the disillusionment of the
Sinhala rural poor demonstrated in the Uva, any political force that relied
solely on that vote bank now ran the risk of losing out.
Notwithstanding that political reality, the Rajapaksa regime
thought fit - on the advice of their astrologers, not psephologists - to hold
presidential polls two years in advance and lost it and, convincingly, at that.
Today, the nation faces another major electoral exercise -
one that is as consequential as the last presidential poll.
That political miscalculations can occur not only among the
ultra-superstitious and ultra-nationalistic, was demonstrated last week with
the sudden decision by the United People's Freedom Alliance (UPFA), now under
the chairmanship of President Sirisena, to include Mahinda Rajapaksa in its
nominations list. Whether this was a genuinely collective decision by the UPFA
high command or whether the announcement was more the sleight-of-hand by the
more dominant faction within, remains to be revealed.
The fact is that the UPFA has forced the issue of a return
to formal national politics by someone who, just six months ago, was soundly
defeated in presidential elections and whose regime has, for several years,
been accused of ridiculously ad hoc political management, severe corruption and
brutal authoritarianism.
People outside this Blessed Isle may now ask as to how there
could be such a paradox of politics and civilisation on an island ostensibly
respected for its religious and civilisational legacy. This same question is
being asked ad nauseam within the country as well as all those millions of Sri
Lankan citizens who voted for change - and got it, courtesy of Sirisena and the
allied UNP.
The answer lies partly in the realpolitik of Sri Lankan
affairs and partly in the inner strength - in terms of values and intelligent
deliberation - of the politicians as they attempt to manage on-going political
dynamics. On the one hand, the Sri Lanka Freedom Party faces a split as it
deals with the larger UPFA filled with restive political has-beens and
wheeler-dealers all keen to cling to their one-time godfather in the hope of a
return to power for the purposes of either their political survival or their
safety from prosecution for plunder, authoritarian rule and even war crimes.
On the other hand, the political leadership is challenged to
navigate this tortuous path of electoral strategy without compromising on their
received electoral mandate on January 8. The challenge to "put country
before party" is not easily met. The head of the UPFA, currently, has
compromised on his presidential mandate although he may justify his actions as
ones relevant to his internal party role and not his presidential role.
That he is now attempting to convince his electorate on this
matter is clear by President Sirisena's speech in Matara yesterday while
inaugurating the last phase of the horrendously over-budgeted Southern
Expressway. The 'silent revolution' of January 8 should not be reversed, he declared.
All those Sri Lankans who voted silently on January 8 for
that 'revolution' were surely not merely thinking of regime-change. Rather,
they were, and still are, looking toward a civilisational development that
would take the country out of the depths and towards decency, genuine
stability, social unity and planned economic development rather that so-called
'beautification'. All these Sri Lankans will remain steadfast in their faith in
those political parties and groups who have, with creative unity, joined forces
across ethnicity and ideology and, begun this movement out of the darkness.
President Sirisena's own party, the SLFP, may, no doubt, be
weakened by the selfish opportunism of many within its ranks. But as long as
the current leadership stands firm and remains in clear consensus with its
principal ally, the UNP, there is hope that Sri Lanka may move towards a new
political firmament that enables free choices within the framework of decency,
pluralism, meritocracy, rational deliberation and genuinely democratic
representation.
A unity of all such progressive forces will surely enable
the flushing out of the remnants of treacherous opportunism, authoritarianism,
unintelligent superstititon and plunder. It will be up to the voter to ensure
that even the parliamentary opposition will be framed by such values and
quality.
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