Wimps And The Monolithic Basil Rajapakse Empire
By Kumar
David -October
13, 2012
Among
the Wimps are many erstwhile champions of devolution, including the brave
knights of the Dead Left, who heroically “opposed the 18-th
Amendment in principle but supported it is practice”; a version of
the dialectic that would have floored Hegel and Marx in one karate shot! Also
among the Wimps are one time stout defenders of devolution such as Rajitha,
Dilan and Douglas who offered to lay down their honour or lay down their cabinet
portfolios, but when it came to the crunch had no hesitation about which one
they would choose to lay down.
Towards
a Corporatist State
Anybody
who thinks it was the Secretary of the Judicial
Services Commission, who was assaulted by a squad of pro-government
goons, would be dead wrong. This is not an attack on the JSC Secretary; it is an
unmistakable message to the Chief
Justice: “Bugger off or this is what is in store for you.” The CJ is
a lady and – no offence meant – maybe they think psychologically a soft target.
This is a message to the judiciary, the legal profession and to anyone who dares
defy the siblings. However, it goes even deeper; essentially it is not even
about a ruling cabal that brooks no opposition. No the cabal thinks and
strategise long-term; the looming agenda is about an emerging Corporatist State,
so let me dwell on the concept a little.
Though
the word fascism is of Italian origin (fasci, meaning tightly gripped bundle),
high fascism in its most ruthless manifestation is identified with Hitler and
the Nazis; the Mussolini original which came to power in 1922 is a more
corporatist, say a softer version. Here are a few key words we can link with
Mussolini’s Corporatist State; ardent nationalism, totalitarianism in the sense
of bringing everything under the umbrella, if not the direct control of the
state, a perverse kind of socialism, and top-down state control of trade unions,
public administration, police, military, judiciary and the economy. It did not
smash every vestige of independent activity, Church, learned societies,
universities and scientific bodies as Nazism did. It was called national
syndicalism, in that it gathered populist organisations, anti-communist unions,
business interests, the media and some notable Italian intellectuals under the
patron umbrella of Il Duce. Hence there was a degree of patron-client
relationship in Mussolini’s Corporatist State and if you sense you are reading
this in Colombo and not Rome, well the similarity is not of my making!
Sri
Lanka is not, and is not on the way to becoming a military dictatorship. The
Generals are poodles kept on a leash and made to dance to a sibling tune; they
have no alternative power base; they never had except in the brief months
overlapping the end of the war. Sri Lanka is not, and is not on the way to
becoming a classic fascist state. Despite the political corruption of a
clientele public there is a sufficient reside of resistance in the political
opposition, the media, the educated and business classes and in the working
class to render an experiment with naked fascism unsustainable. Above all the
international climate and democracy in India so long as it lasts, make military
dictatorship or naked fascism an impossibility in this Island. In my judgement
what we are sliding towards is totalitarianism of the Corporatist variety.
Divinaguma
another nail in the coffin
The
most obnoxious feature of the Divineguma Bill is that it expands the Corporatist
Empire of a Rajapakse sibling by somewhere between Rs60 billion and Rs80
billion. The second abominable feature is that is an instrument for the
centralisation of power rendering impotent even the barebones of devolution now
in place. I say barebones since the existing provincial councils are but vassal
instruments of the regime with backbones moulded of the softest clay. If a
sibling says “Stand up! Sit down!” the honourable councillors fall over each
other to rise or to squat. The wimps in Cabinet long ago folded-up their
vertebrates and put them away; in post-Divineguma Lanka the provincial wimps
will next be bypassed to the tune of tens of billions of rupees. And it is all
being done with the fullest and most genuflecting corporation of Cabinet and
Provincial Councils, assimilatory corporatism at its best!
Although
there are weaknesses, inefficiencies and coordination weaknesses in the present
distributed administration of poor relief these will pale in comparison with the
abuses that will result from consolidating the entire programme in a
monolithic Basil
Rajapakse empire. The regime will make use of its controlling
position to make political capital out of poor relief which will also be twisted
when necessary into an election gimmick. Political appointees loyal to the
regime will secure sinecure appointments, efficiency will decline and corruption
will proliferate. There will be conflict between the Empire and Provincial
Councils except in the case of UPFA Councils which have little taste or gumption
for asserting independence from the regime.
The
net effect is that the consolidated monolith will be one more tool in the hands
of the Rajapakse
Regime in its relentless bid to foist a Corporatist State on the
country.