Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Sunday, January 20, 2013

GL rubbishes impeachment issues raised by the West

January 19, 2013,
External Affairs Minister G.L. Peiris has rejected issues over the impeachment of former Chief Justice Shirani Bandaranayake raised by countries like the USA, Britain and Canada.

"We have the situation in which, for example, the prime minister of one country is specifically calling for the reinstatement of former CJ," Peiris said. "On no basis can one justify that. How can the Prime Minister of one country call for the reinstatement of the CJ in another country? That is almost impertinent."

The minister pointed out that the decision to have the 2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting here was taken in 2009 in Trinidad and Tobago and was reaffirmed in Perth in 2011.

"At that meeting, long before the impeachment issue arose, the prime minister of Canada brought up the issue of the 2013 meeting and tried to re-canvass it," Peiris said. "I strongly opposed that move. Fifteen countries took the floor to support me very strongly. It is only one country New Zealand that supported Canada."

Peiris pointed out that Prime Minister Kevin Rudd of Australia who was presiding said that the consensus was very clear and there is no way that this matter can be taken up.

``Further, (this) issue has been raised by Canada long before the impeachment situation arose," Peiris declared.

He made very clear that Sri Lanka continued making arrangements for CHOGM saying there can be no trade off simply in order to secure the attendance of one individual or a few individuals.

"We cannot distort national policy," the minister declared. "We cannot make decisions in this country with an eye who is coming and who is not coming. We cannot make decisions which are really the result of arm twisting."

He said that decisions in this country had to be made in the interest of Sri Lanka and we cannot make decisions in order to induce people to come. That did not mean that we are impervious to criticism. But they cannot be the basis of national decision making.

Peiris also pointed out that this was not new and when the war was going on there was tremendous pressure to stop the war.


Law Entrance Issue And The Politics Of Silence



By Chandra Jayaratne -January 20, 2013 
Chandra Jayaratne
Colombo TelegraphMy Dear Professional Economists ?
Is this story noted below appearing in the Front Page of the Sunday Observer today, meant to fool us and all along with all the the citizens of Sri Lanka and make us Venerate with “Sadu Sadhu” and hands above our heads, the Development Strategy that unfolds in the horizon or is it only a Personal Strategy for Brownie Points in the face of the impending Cabinet Reshuffle and needs to be ignored?
What ever your answer to above be, is it not time ripe for the professional voices of Economists to be heard by those in Politics, Governance, Business and leadership and also educate us, the simple citizens of this land, who have dedicated with determination to see growth and prosperity with equity, democracy and transparency bringing hope, empowerment and improved opportunities and life styles on a sustainable long term basis to all citizens of Sri Lanka , especially the young and youth of today.
The Million Dollar question to you as Economists is to assess and respond publicly and debate openly in media( therefore copied to media institution to encourage this debate) whether this goal of USD per Capita 10,000 by 2022 isan achievable target, even as an “Big Hairy Audacious Goal” (BEHAG) and will it equally share and enhance the lives and livelihoods of all  citizens in the face of the governance framework envisaged based on the following key pillars of governance;
  1. With Constitutional safeguards being violated at will and dictatorial and closely held reins of power replacing participatory democratic governance
  2. With the total abandonment of good governance principles and best practices of administration,
  3. With a total Lack of transparency and parliamentary control over National Resource Allocations and National Debt management
  4. Without any respect for upholding the rule of Law, Effective Law Enforcement and Justice
  5. Without an Education and Higher Education Policy that develops value adding human resources to stimulate niche economic value creation with required productivity and quality
  6. With the export Sector not being supported
  7. Without adequate emphasis on Technology, research and encouraging creativity, productivity and best practice transfers
  8. With foreign investments being frightened off with Expropriation Acts, Rule of Law being ignored and several other visible negative governance moves
  9. With Complete State Capture, with Policy Capture Corruption and Nepotism being at the helm of affairs
  10. With a disastrous foreign policy and abandoning value chain links with India and putting the nose up at the US and EU our key trading and investment partners
  11. With foreign debt being the key source of public investments and high level budget deficit financing, with many investments lacking free cash flow returns and balance of payments support mainly by exporting our human resources as menial workers in the Middle East
  12. Good Initiatives at Conflict resolution and Development of Collective Sri Lankan Identity is being frustrated and seeds of religious hatred being fast spread and encouraged
Please look at the attached statement from the Sunday Observer beginning with the 17th April  “Daily News” quote below
Sri Lanka would increase its per capita income from the current US $ 2,399 in 2012 to US $ 4,400 in 2015. The country would also develop fast and would have a growth rate of around 9% during the period said Dr. T. Lalitha Gunaruwan, Senior Lecturer (Economics), University of Colombo,”
If we assume an annual growth rate of 10% per annum with a flat population level from 2016 till 2022 beginning from the prediction of Dr. Gunaruwan, the per capita GDP will be around USD 8,500? and at 11% annual growth rate USD 9100 and at 12.5% annual growth rate only will the per capita GDP be USD 10,000? Is there an embedded  hope that relative movement of Exchange rates and inflation rates and population trends, like very high migration overseas, will  play a significant role in the achievement beyond mere growth rates achieved each year?
Is this BEHAG realistic and worthy of belief and committment by us as a civil societyon current state of play in the globalized World Order and the policy and executive framework in force or is there an urgent need for a citizen led and developed “NEW VISION 2022″ with Strategic Action Programme to be debated and developed and publicly advocated?
Looking forward to your media based public response?
With warm appreciation and Best regards
Chandra
C. Jayaratne
—————————————————————————————————————————————————————-
Great strides under Mahinda Chinthana :

Govt targets $10,000 per capita income in 10 years

by Uditha KUMARASINGHE
Higher Education Minister S.B. Dissanayake said if President Mahinda Rajapaksa governs Sri Lanka for another 10 years, it would reach the standard of a developed country exceeding the per capita income of US$ 10,000.
“We should do our best to take the country forward by strengthening peace, democracy and co-existence among the communities,” he told the Sunday Observer yesterday.
The country has made great strides under the Mahinda Chinthana vision for the Future.
Therefore, as President Rajapaksa hopes, Sri Lanka will exceed the US$ 4000 per capita income by 2015.
The Minister said from the day the Mahinda Chinthana was introduced in 2005, the Government developed the economy and infrastructure facilities while waging a war against the world’s most ruthless terrorist outfit.
Despite these challenges, the Government could bring down the inflation rate to a single digit and also increase its foreign reserves.
When the President assumed office in 2005, the per capita income of US$ 900 was increased to US$ 2,600. The Government has reduced the unemployment rate to four percent. In addition, the tourism sector has also recorded a dramatic improvement.
Dissanayake said that at present a massive economic resurgence has been launched under the Mahinda Chinthana. Investments too have shown a significant improvement.
“We defeated the most ruthless terrorist outfit in the world. The LTTE rump, the world over is still attempting to resurrect the LTTE. These pro-LTTE elements are engaged in rackets in some Western countries.
They are attempting to destabilise the country again. Security measures should be further strengthened without providing any room to create such a situation in the country” he said.

The disappearance of a system of law

The Sundaytimes Sri Lanka
Sunday, January 20, 2013
With the dust uneasily settling over a legal community thuggishly coerced into fuming silence, an unjustly ousted Chief Justice Shirani Bandaranayake may yet be proud.
Disastrous steps in a dictatorial journey
Despite overwhelming odds, she succeeded in uniting a deeply divided Bar, rallying judges to her side, provoking strongly worded editorials and unexpected protests from the normally quiescent business, investment and employment sectors, quite apart from religious leaders and concerned citizens.
Most of all, her dogged determination not to resign effectively pushed the political leadership over the brink, forcing it to take a series of disastrous steps in a dictatorial journey that surely cannot continue for too long. For, if any among us believed that President Mahinda Rajapaksa would have been capable of a statesmanlike stepping back from the brink which would have instantly turned hostility into accolades, those na�ve illusions were dispelled in no uncertain terms.
As security personnel peered into the vehicles of lawyers and judges entering the superior court complex this Tuesday as much as if Bandaranayake was hiding under the seat and the entirety of Hulfsdorp resembled a war zone with lawyers not being allowed freedom of movement, no reasoned person could profess ignorance of the iron hand now thoroughly out of the velvet glove.
Janus-faced weapons of�threat and promise
That the political leadership is well aware of the deep anger felt by the legal community is evidenced by the use of its customary Janus-faced weapons of threat and promise. Thus, even as threatening letters were sent by vigilante forces to lawyers at the forefront of the anti-impeachment struggle, empty reassurances were made by ministers that the constitutional process relating to impeachment of superior court judges will be overhauled. And from farce we progressed to unbearable comedy as a National Human Rights Commission, which has manifestly failed to live up to its statutory responsibilities, solemnly announced that it will initiate a reform process. These games may be entertaining to those who paddle where the Government tells it to go but they are scarcely credible.
Of course the Government would not have been so hard pressed if it had been able to coax a convenient resignation of the ousted Chief Justice, which indeed was the mistaken basis on which it first acted. The Minister of External Affairs and former law professor was reported to have stated this week that he was not proud of some of the actions of his former student. He may be unequivocally informed that the thinking citizenry is not only, not proud of him for his singular hypocrisy but further roundly condemn for his allegiances to and justification of a political leadership that, much as the Nazi boot did, engages in mercilessly grounding and stamping democracy into the dust in Sri Lanka.
From start to finish, this impeachment process was riddled with impropriety and at certain points, distinct illegality. The resolution was framed without formulating the charges in the expectation that the Chief Justice would be pressurized to step down. The hearings violated the right to natural justice in almost every conceivable way, despite President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s repeated mantra that the constitutional process was followed to the letter. Finally, in the ultimate idiocy, the wrong resolution was reportedly voted upon by the House on 11th January 2013. The Minister of External Affairs, who is blind, deaf and dumb to all these happenings, is a living example of the deplorable limits of seeming intellect. Such is the stuff of unreasoned ambition.
Recovery of the democratic spirit�
Meanwhile, it is interesting that alarm cries raised in regard to the judiciary struggle have raised skeptical eyebrows in a context where the summary disposal of a Chief Justice may seem to be somewhat dry and legalistic as compared to the decades of still unresolved killings, disappearances and extra judicial executions.
Some time ago, this column posed the question as to what was worse, the disappearance of individuals or the disappearance of a system. Answering this question has great significance now more than ever. The horrors of the Southern disappearances in the eighties or the tragedy of Tamil civilians ruthlessly dispensed with as ‘collateral damage’ in May 2009 are events that a country could still recover from if its systems and its citizens have the inner strength to withstand barbarities of a period.
We saw this in 1994 when Sri Lanka shook off a dark decade of the Southern terror, ushering in a new government on a mandate of peace. That Chandrika Kumaratunga failed to deliver is another question altogether. But the important fact was that Sinhalese, Tamils, Muslims and others dared to hope.
And they did so because, despite the brutalities, the country’s judicial institutions remained essentially intact and before long, judges and lawyers stood up for what was right. Flawed as it was, the notion of justice had not yet disappeared from the turning of the legal wheel. Consequently, from the mid to late nineties, the Supreme Court did the country proud in asserting the rights of all citizens, minorities and majority through voluminous jurisprudence that could have held its own anywhere in the Commonwealth.
Such recovery of the democratic spirit will not be so easy now. Ironically, we have not only a former Army Commander declaring that he is the actual President with the incumbent being a rogue president but also an ousted Chief Justice raising a similar cry. In that context, the promise made to uphold the Rule of Law and the legal system by Sri Lanka’s new Chief Justice, former Attorney General and legal advisor to the Cabinet Mohan Peiris sounded particularly hollow, even given the cynicism that normally attaches to these statements.
The repercussions of�dissent will continue
So while it hectors to the Bar quite spine chillingly not to use the courts as a political platform, the Rajapaksa Presidency has ushered in the ‘disappearance’ of an entire system. The institutional memory of an independent judiciary will be remorselessly erased and the very notion of legality lost, even though lawyers may practise and judges may ascend the bench. As much as an animal frantically struggles for the last time before it dies, we may look upon the events of the last few months as symbolizing a judiciary in its death throes.
Consequentially, to underestimate the danger of what Sri Lanka is now facing not only for the Sinhala majority but for the Tamil minorities, is to be abysmally if not myopically ignorant. Granted that, given the nature of this regime, the result of the anti-impeachment struggle was a foregone conclusion. In an appropriate analogy, it would be as if during the recent FUTA struggle, the Government had sent the army into the universities. In regard to the FUTA demands, it was a question of ego with the administration’s arrogant refusal to back down. In the case of the judiciary, what was in issue was far greater, going to the root of the political survival of the regime. Naturally therefore, the tactics used and the methods employed were far more brutal.
Yet amazingly enough, the Bench and the Bar, even despite the Judas-like betrayal of the leadership of the Bar at a game-changing meeting with the President this week, threw its weight together in a unified stand which lasted for several months. That by itself, was near miraculous. This dissent is not momentary. Its repercussions will continue to be felt.

LfD Condemns The Move By The Govt To Pass The Criminal Procedure (Special Provisions) Bill

Colombo TelegraphBy Colombo Telegraph -January 20, 2013 
The  Lawyers for Democracy calls upon all political parties to take a principled stand on the  government’s attempt to pass the Criminal Procedure (Special Provisions) Bill through Parliament disregarding the numerous concerns expressed by the legal community, political parties, Human Rights groups and civil society groups.
Lal Wijenayaka -Convener LfD
“This will be another instance where the government will be using its 2/3rd majority dubiously obtained by the crossing over of opposition members and not on a mandate from the people.  The government has no moral or legal right to make use of this majority as it is obtained against the provisions of the constitution and violating the principles of proportional representation.” says Lal Wijenayake, the Convener of the Lawyers for Democracy.
Issuing a statement LfD says; “The impact of this legislation has to be considered in the context of the happenings of resents times where it is seen that a process is in place to deprive the people of the democratic rights that they enjoyed for years, including the Rule of Law, independence of the judiciary and respect for human rights.”
We publish below the statement in full;
Statement by ‘Lawyers for Democracy (LfD)’ on the Code of Criminal Procedure (Special Provisions) Bill:
LfD condemns the move by the government to pass the Criminal Procedure (Special Provisions) Bill through Parliament disregarding the numerous concerns expressed by the legal community, political parties, Human Rights groups and civil society groups.
This will enable a suspect arrested without a warrant to be detained at a police station for 48 hours without producing the suspect before a magistrate.
The Law as it stands makes it obligatory for the Police to produce a suspect arrested without a warrant before a magistrate within 24 hours.
We are aware of a numerous instances where even this existing provision has been abused by the police, notorious for its ill treatment of suspects in custody.  This provision has existed for well over 100 years and no necessity has arisen for a change in the Law.  Specially in the face of advances made in science and technology in the investigation of crimes.
The impact of this legislation has to be considered in the context of the happenings of resents times where it is seen that a process is in place to deprive the people of the democratic rights that they enjoyed for years, including the Rule of Law, independence of the judiciary and respect for human rights.
Further, the Supreme Court has held that this legislation is in consistent with this Article 13(2) of the Constitution and has to be passed by a 2/3rd majority.
This will be another instance where the government will be using its 2/3rd majority dubiously obtained by the crossing over of opposition members and not on a mandate from the people.  The government has no moral or legal right to make use of this majority as it is obtained against the provisions of the constitution and violating the principles of proportional representation.
We call upon all political parties to take a principled stand on this vital issue as this is just one chain of events to follow aimed at suppressing the democratic rights of the people.
Lal Wijenayake
Convener Lawyers for Democracy.
‘Lawyers for Democracy’ (LfD) is a representative body of legal practitioners throughout the island.  Conveners include Lal Wijenayake, Chandrapala Kumarage, J. C. Weliamuna, K. S. Ratnavale, Sudath Netthisinghe, Sudarshana Gunawardana.  It was established on 10th December 2009’.

End Of Constitutional Governance In Sri Lanka: Gadaffi Also Said ‘The People Love Me’

Colombo TelegraphBy Nihal Jayawickrama -January 20, 2013
Dr.Nihal Jayawickrama
In Libya, at the height of the 2011 revolution, it was said that Colonel Gadaffi did not believe rebel claims of captured territory. And, as Tripoli was being encircled, Gadaffi famously exclaimed to a BBC interviewer that “the people love me”. The disinformation practised by the Libyan Government through the state controlled media was institutionalized to such an extent that even those in power, who concocted the lies, had begun to believe their own concoctions. When they saw the truth, it was too late for them. The rampaging mobs had ravaged their cities, and turned their palaces into rubble. I saw all of this both before and after.
In the past two months, we too, have experienced a virulent campaign of disinformation through the state media and other state organs in the effort to remove an inconvenient Chief Justice and replace her with one more amenable to the Government. It did not seem to matter that the exercise was both unlawful and unconstitutional, or that it would destroy the foundations of democratic governance. The Chief Justice had to go, and the load of gibberish gratuitously offered by state media and cabinet ministers was intended to lull the people into complacency. Even members of the Government had begun to believe the mumbo jumbo. One cabinet minister was so swayed by the Government’s own propaganda that he shouted out to the Supreme Court to “go to hell”.
The obsolete impeachment                             Read More
Weep My Beloved Country Weep; Vile Thugs are Supreme
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January 19, 2013,
Lawlessness is unleashed; rabble rousers abound and decency has fled, or is kept hidden?

We were invited to lunch at a friend’s home in Battaramulla on Black Friday as January 13th is named for it was the day that Parliament accepted the decision of the Select Committee that Her Ladyship the Chief Justice was found guilty and impeached in indecent haste. (I don’t know on what grounds, what her ‘crimes’ were and the choice of committee members on the government side left us gasping – you can name the reason for the shock: approval or disgust).

Traveling to Battaramulla we were curious to see so many alighting from buses and moving towards the Parliament junction. Returning after much joy in fellowship and reminiscing about the correct values we imbibed in our school which we were nurtured on in our homes, AND RETAINED, we were shocked to see a vast rabble shouting slogans, venting their wrath and demanding the removal of the Chief Justice. I wonder how many of them even knew her name, leave aside what the rumpus was about for which they were hired with money, food and drinks, we are told. They were terribly unpleasant to look on – sweaty, facial features contorted and prostituting themselves to a politician to shout insults, which we heard, to the Chief Justice. It rattled us. There was also a bunch of Golden Key depositors holding placards.

Further rabble rousing

Our perturbation continued when we saw TV news clips of thugs wielding poles and threateningly proceeding alongside a peaceful protest of dignified lawyers. And each day after watching the news, perturbation grew until it turned to agitation. We would ring each other and realize so many of us women felt the same. One said she could not sleep; another that she was so disturbed she was incapacitated with a headache, a third had to resort to taking a tranquilizer. We may be considered traitors when this article appears in print, but in truth we so love the country that when it is in trouble we are more concerned than even when a son or daughter is involved in a troublous situation. After all, the country has millions of children, who surely will suffer from the present conundrums.

Each day the thugs were more evident and more raucous and more vituperative.

The worst was seeing protestors, I would call them thugs, some labeling themselves on posters as Golden Key depositors, cooking and consuming kiributh in front of the entrance to the CJ’s bungalow on the day His Excellency the President pronounced the CJ was persona non grata and had to vacate her post. The thugs then lit crackers and I heard shouted obscenities. The police looked on. I wondered whether they, the police, were treated to the milk rice.

This to me was the nadir of indecency since I assumed there were middle class persons in the crowd and probably millionaires who had deposited their wealth in Golden Key, greedy for higher returns. However thankfully, a sister newspaper editorial had it that they were hired thugs impersonating Ceylinco creditors. Here was a very residential area with the bungalows of government VIPs, the British Higth Commission and the Vipassana Bhavana Centre close by, and riff raff were making merry. The police did not raise a single voice nor baton to disperse the crowd. I suspect they were directed to protect and encourage the ‘dogs’ of rioting let loose.

Then on Tuesday, consequent to the president appointing another Chief Justice, the thugs and police held sway, meaning took over. Law abiding people like persons of the judiciary were blocked in Hultsdorp by the police wheeling in their now much used yellow barricades. Watching this on TV news, we cheered the lawyers on as they pushed the barriers, questioned the police as to why their exit and entrance from and to the courts complex was barred. "Through fear." one lawyer said and added, "What have you to be afraid of?" We guessed the reason: they feared the Lady CJ would come in and they were ordered to keep her out and protect the new appointee. Those law persons at the barricades lit candles and said the candles were on account of the death of democracy, and seated in our homes, we women were one with them.

The worst was the police action at the gate on Wijerama Mawata opposite the Chief Justice’s residence on the evening of Tuesday 15th. Media cameramen had gathered to photograph Dr Shirani Bandaranayake’s departure. The police barred them from approaching the gate and we noticed how almost violent they were. What was the purpose? The camera crews were unarmed and anyway, the authorities did not care a pinhead for the safety of the Lady CJ who many say is still the country’s CJ. It then dawned on us that all force was used to prevent photographs being taken of the Lady and to block her making a statement.

Mercifully, much to our relief, the cameramen crowded round the car and took their shots. Dr Bandaranayake spoke, some of which we heard, some of which was blocked out by police pushing noisily the camera wielders. She thanked the public for being with her and the police for giving her protection (sic) and said she would always be loyal to the country. No blaming, no justifying herself. Nothing of that nature, only great dignity and a smile in all that melee. She and her family were brave to use the front entrance for their departure.

I, watching the scene on TV sobbed, my tears shed both with deep sadness at how she had been treated and because her elegant manner inspired a sense of triumph. She is a woman that should and will go down in Sri Lanka’s recent history. She is the only one who can stand beside Sirimavo Bandaranaike, or even a little ahead of her. Mrs B, as she was called, had her faults and misruled once in a while, but she was the world’s first prime minister and always carried herself with dignity and was not corrupt. So we shall place Dr Shirani Bandaranayke beside her on a pedestal as the first woman chief justice of this country, South Asian region and perhaps of Asia (Correct me if I am wrong). And then to have her wronged so deplorably and grossly. Consider how Members of Parliament insulted her! Also with what indecent haste the entire disgraceful and distasteful drama was enacted. Evil, like a boomerang zooms squarely back to the thrower. Evil begets evil which finally returns to roost.

The ousting of the Lady CJ was, to us a group of women friends, deplorable and incomprehensible. Multiply this group by all with like reactions and I am sure the huge majority of Sri Lankans would be of like opinion. If a favourite yes-person was to be appointed to the exalted post, it could have been done with decorum, time taken and not against the advice of religious heads, right thinking groups like the Friday Forum and representatives of foreign countries advising rectitude. But no, the government bulldozed itself through with hired thugs cheering and celebrating. And now when foreign governments with diplomatic finesse note the government is tampering with democracy and laying itself open to investors shying away from it, the government’s loud mouths will scream ‘foreign plot to destabilize Sri Lanka’ and ‘videshiya kumanthranayak’.

What paucity of sense! We humble folk realize the government has, in trying to enhance its face cut its nose. When will we ever be the hub of Asia; a fast developing country; a country set on reconciliation after a 26 year war and defeating the world’s worst terrorist? We certainly are a country like no other, a country isolated by western democracies and possibly booted out of the Commonwealth of Nations, sure of a hard time at the next UNHRC sittings and investors avoiding the country. No matter since the government will roll along on its way. It’s we ordinary citizens who will suffer. Proof already available. Just one example: the opening of a grand park in Nugegoda, not really needed, juxtaposed against a weeping peasant whose house had been washed away in the floods and a tent given for the entire family of six children and the parents to live in with no hope of receiving money to rebuild his house since he was a squatter on government land in a very rural area.

Weep bitterly, true patriots.

The Application Of Religious Exhortations To Sri Lankan Politics!

Colombo TelegraphBy Emil van der Poorten -January 19, 2013 
Emil van der Poorten
Despite my family tradition as free thinkers making it difficult for me to quote from the scriptures or formal religious references, I really couldn’t find a more apt theme for this column, than, “Abandon hope, all ye who enter here.”
Beginning with a piece I wrote a while ago for the now-defunct Montagemagazine, I have consistently sought to avoid the proclivity of those observers of the Sri Lankan political scene whose pet pastime appears to be Ranil Wickremesinghe-bashing.
If I came across as defensive of this politician then it was for two reasons.  One was because I do not think it serves any purpose to treat anyone as some kind of political piñata even though it might be the “in” thing to do at the time. The other reason is because I had perceived Ranil as a latter day J. R. Jayewardene who hadn’t rushed the UNP into premature action against the SLFP coalition of Mrs Sirimavo Dias Bandaranaike but bided his time until the opportune moment presented itself and then delivered a historically crushing blow to the most prominent product of the Balangoda Ratwattes.
I cannot resist a qualifier to that last sentence at this point:  I believed way back then that JRJ was simply the Machiavelli of Sri Lankan politics, singularly lacking anything resembling an ethical focus or a vision for this country and nothing since has reduced that opinion by an iota.  That a host of loyalists of  Sri Lanka’s Yankee Dick, close family included, have found very comfortable abode within the Rajapaksa edifice only confirms that fact.
Anyway, the recent contretemps involving the Chief Justice forced Mahinda Rajapaksa to conclusively reveal that under all the smarm and baby-kissing was a totally ruthless politician who, when the chips were down in terms of even minor impediments on the megalomaniacal journey of his government, was capable of grasping the nettle and clearing the decks, if I might mix my metaphors.
This behavior, apart from proving – if proof be needed – the caliber of Sri Lanka’s capo, had a most interesting by-product: flushing out the real Ranil Wickremesinghe, making that wanna-be emperor’s lack of raiment very, very obvious.
I don’t think this was intentional on the part of the Rajapaksa Regime because Ranil had been a most useful stalking horse for the Fascist Project that was building momentum and this flushing out of those parading in the disguise of “opposition” removes what was a small but important part of their democratic fig leaf.  It has forced the people of this country to confront the grab for absolute power with no possibility of ignoring that reality this time around.
In taking the UNP down the road of appeasement, Ranil Wickremesinghe has had little real opposition from within the UNP’s ranks.  Certainly not from the alleged “young Turks” in its ranks who were playing the same game as RW though with less subtlety.  Other UNPers were accepting favours in travel and entertainment with large dollar and Euro implications.  Of course, there was also the broad category of the UNP’s “class allies:” these being primarily businessmen, nominally supportive of the UNP, who, until crunch time, sought to create the impression of being brave and selfless defenders of democracy in Sri Lanka.  What they were really doing, with the active assistance of a government that no one has ever accused of being principled, was keeping up appearances of a dedication to democracy, tut-tutting periodically about the “unacceptable behavior” of our current regime.  This worked very well for those on both sides of the widening democratic deficit.  Suffice it to say that I have personally experienced this in fields at significant distance from the governance of this country which has forced me to a realization of what their game plan is and where it is seeking to lead all of us.
The impeachment of the Chief Justice has really upset the apple-cart, forcing them, at long last, to come out of hiding.  The tip of that particular iceberg was the picture which appeared in The Island newspaper that showed several UNP “firebrands” and their more staid colleagues having a great, good time with the President at a dinner (champagne and caviar, anyone?) on a day otherwise noted for its particularly nasty tone in the saga of the Chief Justice’s impeachment.  The cat was truly out of the bag with that one picture speaking far louder than a thousand words!
Given the political bankruptcy of the United National Party, the largest opposition entity, does it leave resistance to the Rajapaksa juggernaut totally rudderless?  I think not.  I believe that, while it might take more time for those opposed to this singularly venal regime to organize formal resistance and an alternative to the status quo, the demise of the UNP has, in fact, removed an impediment to that journey.  The history of Nicaragua, leading up to the removal of Somoza, provides a more-than-appropriate example of what can happen once an opposition like the UNP ceases to exist.
There have been political commentators like Kumar David who have consistently advanced the argument that what is needed is a single-issue leader who can capture the majority of the vote bank, immediately rescind a constitution that does little but subjugate the people of this country, set up a constitutional council that develops a democratic structure – perhaps even a modified version of the Soulbury Constitution which, warts and all, served us well – and then let the political parties loose to contest a general election and form an appropriate DEMOCRATIC government to run this country.
Previously, I have suggested that peaceful resistance is probably the only way to remove this monstrosity of a government that no one wants.  As tough as that road might be to travel, it is the only path open because a violent overthrow will bring us additional grief of a dimension that no one in his right mind wants to see, except, perhaps, for the goon squads of Kiribathgoda.
In the meantime, I would suggest that the title of this column be emblazoned over the entrance to Sri Kotha!
Damage control rates top priority


January 19, 2013, 
Ever since the smelly stuff hit the fan after the government decided to press on with the impeachment of Chief Justice Shirani Bandaranayake, now completed with a successor enthroned, President Mahinda Rajapaksa has not tired of stressing that those who must be punished for various acts of commission and omission will be dealt with regardless of the positions they hold. That goes for everybody, superior court and lower court judges included, he said on Friday at the opening of the Dikkowita fisheries harbor. That rule has, of course, not held for the likes of Minister Mervyn Silva whose various antics have been in the public eye over a long period of time. He has no doubt been suspended from his position of the UPFA’s organizer of Kelaniya where a member of the Pradeshiya Sabha with whom he was at loggerheads was murdered recently, and some of his aides are among the suspects. But Silva remains a minister and we do not know whether the police have even recorded his statement as would have been the case for any other Silva or Perera.

There have been recent statements from various members of the ruling hierarchy, including Speaker Chamal Rajapaksa, that certain changes to the 1978 constitution which is currently the country’s supreme law, may be appropriate. While governmental leaders have continued to justify what was done to Bandaranayake, who claims to be still CJ on the basis of court rulings that have been rejected by the establishment, there were indications at a news conference on Friday attended by Ministers Anura Priyadharshana Yapa, Susil Premajayantha and Keheliya Rambukwella that some constitutional amendments are possible. That is an indication that everything that was said and written during the drama-packed weeks when Bandaranayake’s head was on the chopping block has not been dismissed out of hand by the rulers. While making abundantly clear that the matter concerning the CJ or ex-CJ, whatever be her current status, was dealt with under constitutional provisions and parliamentary standing order that were then in place, they broadly hinted that making necessary changes for the future will be give due consideration.

It is also significant that President Rajapaksa gave his allies in the old left some leeway to unburden themselves on this matter. Although the decisions of the LSSP and CP appear to have been that their members would abstain from voting on the resolution to submit an address of parliament to the president to remove the CJ, they in fact absented themselves at voting time. Prof. Tissa Vitarana of the LSSP, like Prof. Rajiva Wijesinha, UPFA National List MP who was also not present at voting time, on Friday published the speech he planned to make but could not, to explain and justify his party’s stand on the whole question. We published Wijesinha’s text last Sunday. The Communist Party’s Dew Gunasekera was granted the parliamentary platform to express his party’s point of view. That would be sufficient airing for that particular standpoint, Vitarana and Wijesinha were told and politely denied speaking time on the floor. Given that all three of them owe their national list seats in parliament to the grace and favor of the president, there was very little they could do about it. But the fact that no whip was cracked and they were excused from voting for the resolution, with the intended abstention further diluted to permitted absence at voting time, was a clear signal that the president’s policy on such matters was not to break the camel’s back. He was willing to allow them a face saving formula of sorts given that he had the numbers to do what he wanted.

Few can match the president’s public relations skills. If Ms. Bandaranayake had a one-to-one meeting with him even a few days prior to the resolution being voted on in parliament, there was every possibility that a less painful exit for the CJ could have been arranged. There are many in the inner councils of government who are convinced of this for good reason. But that was not to be and Ms. Bandaranayake had to pay the ultimate price. Nobody knows better than the president that issues such as these lose steam sooner rather than later. The domestic campaign is not what it was the previous week although the story is still on the front pages of the non-state media. Statements from the western democracies, UN agencies and good governance activists continue to flow and it is all too clear that the country’s foreign policy managers will have their work cut out for them in controlling the damage. We do not need the US ambassador to tell us that issues such as these will undoubtedly make foreign investors re-think decisions to come here. Yet foreign inflows into the Colombo Stock Exchange continued unabated in the days following the changing of the guard in Hultsdorf. Nevertheless we cannot be unmindful of trade sanctions though no threats on that score have been made up to now.

The road ahead on the foreign relations front will undoubtedly be rough. The question can be asked whether we need to have embarked on the now concluded exercise in an unseemly hurry. The president could well have been of the view that it was better to finish it off quickly and surgically without allowing it to drag on with the resulting unfavorable publicity that would have been inevitable. The job, of course, was not done at all surgically and the blood on the floor was not only that of the CJ. The country’s reputation as a functioning democracy was also seriously eroded. There are those who think that we may not be able to host the forthcoming Commonwealth Summit as a result if some of the hawks in that organization have their way. Many people here would be happy if such is the case if only for the reason that there will be one less tamasha on which we will be wasting our limited resources. A considerable section of the urban middle class applauded our failed bid to host the next Commonwealth Games for this very reason. What was spent on the extravagant bid was bad enough, but that would have been small change against what the actual cost would have been had we got the games.

Kiss The hand And Bite The Hand

Colombo Telegraph
January 20, 2013
I was at a loss to choose between “kiss the hand that cannot be severed” and “bite the hand that fed” as the title for this comment because both titles are equally appropriate to represent the contents of it.  Since the end of the war, quite regularly, Rajapakshas have bitten the hands that fed them. Sarath Fonseka, Dayan Jayathilake and even Shirani Bandaranayaka are a few glowing examples among a plethora of them. People like Rajiva Wijesinghe are on the waiting list.  Present Rajapakshas would not hesitate to destroy any one who would not toe their line, no matter how much such people have done to bring the Rajapakshas to the helm of power.
Despite this and other misjudgements, mistreatments, misdeeds, mismanagement and the misrule of the miscreants, multitudes of people keep on kissing their hands perhaps being unable to sever them. It may be another blunder if Rajapakshas do not realise this before it is too late.
Misjudgments
Is it not a misjudgement to believe that all those kissers or lickers are loyal to Rajapakshas? Some are, but the most do it out of the fear of reprisals.  From 1977 with the coronation of the biggest conman in Sri Lanka’s history, Mr. Dharmister, the political psyche of the Sri Lankans changed irreversibly. The man who once claimed that the only deed he was unable to perform was to transform a woman into a man, had done irreparable damage to the mindset of the politicians and the people. He divided people along the party lines and enabled the politicians to wield  so much power.  This, transcended politicians to such heights that people are ready to assign godly status to them and worship them for personal gains. For the fear of the interference of the politician and his human machinery in the day to day lives of people, they have become subservient leaving no room for human dignity. There is absolutely nothing in the governance of Sri Lanka that can be dealt without the interference of the politician.  An example from the lower end of the society is that even a poor farmer is not allowed to freely irrigate his small rice holding if the local politician does not consider him a supporter, water could be blocked. As the majority of the population is farmers, this is the best example to highlight how individual freedoms have been curtailed in our society by the unique brand of politics of Sri Lanka.   At the top end, judges, lawyers, doctors, engineers, writers and the lot are prepared to betray any just cause or justify any misdeed for the fear of reprisals on the one hand and for the greed of perks on the other.  The corrupt maneuverings of the politicians have become cancerous and their spread is wide and fast. JRJ may have misjudged the power of political corruption that he invented and introduced, particularly when it falls on evil hands. Rajapakshas are making even a graver misjudgement in letting what JRJ introduced to escalate onto new heights to which their own children and grand children would fall victim. No man, no party, no family would have permanent hold on power. Nothing is permanent, the last words of the Buddha.
There is outcry for the people to rise against the potential dictatorship. Sri Lanka is not Rome. There is no Brutus to effectively conspire to stop one person becoming the dictator. Sri Lanka’s history is studded with examples that Sri Lankan people have the inclination to betray common causes for personal favours. From Wibhishana to Udugampola to those lawyers who talked to The Island a few days ago, the country has seen traitors, not by Rajapaksha interpretation, but in the true sense of the word. In such a country an uprising is only suicidal. Rajapakshas know it. Who is in the opposition, Ranil of the spineless fame, Premadasa of the father’s ill repute and JVP and the rest of chameleon ability?  Even together they are not a formidable force, divided they are no force at all. Rajapakshas know this too. With all that knowledge and assumptions, it still can be a misjudgement on the part of the regime not to address the needs of the poor, not to ensure equal opportunities to all, to nurture lawlessness on assumption that violence and the goons can save the day for them, to develop a massive perk culture and to subject the masses to indignity on assumption that they are all fools and cowards.   People have the god given ability to forget. Twenty years passed with the UNP in the political wilderness. Because of the repression of this government,  people have begun to forget  the past and forgive culprits. At the opportune moment they can even replace ginger with chillies.
It again is a misjudgement to rely on the effectiveness of the abuse of concepts of race, religion,  treachery and conspiracy. Race, religion and the “international conspiracy” are the strongest trump cards that the regime has been playing so far to rally support of a section of the society to cover their  misdeeds. The masses would intuitively know that it is a trump when those cards are played quite frequently and regularly at every game and in no time the players may become ineffective in these games. If the hypocritical Tamil politicians, who are not any different to Sinhalese or Muslim politicians, stop pretending that the issues are solely Tamil, but treat them as collective issues, the regime will not be able to play the race card any longer.
Mistreatment
Mistreatment of the very people that elected Rajas would have serious repercussions. A  news-site  carried a photo of an obese man with a club in hand standing in the middle of the road threatening the  ordinary people who want to protest peacefully, while the police  was standing by being unable to protect the people, undoubtedly for the fear of reprisals or losing perks, was the most  appalling scene to witness in the recent times. The majority of those people who were beaten, intimidated, verbally abused and humiliated have voted for this government not long ago thinking that Rajas have rescued them from the clutches of the deadly LTTE.   Humans are not immune to physical and mental torture.  Even a retreating dog turns round and bites if it is cornered and denied any escape route.
Misdeeds
Irrespective of whether Lasantha Wikremathunga was a traitor or a patriot, he was murdered in broad daylight and the killers are at large. Prageeth Eknaligoda surely had died, no doubt murdered, the killers roam the streets free. When no arrests were made,  speculation is bound to be rife as to who is responsible for the murders .  Now a Pradeshiya Sabha member is murdered. A minister stands accused. This minister is accused of many misdeeds. He is still free to rule in his terror reign.
Mismanagement
The economy is in tatters. The poor  truly struggle to make  ends meet despite Banduala Gunawardena’s  calculation that a family of five can live with 6000 rupees per month. Mismanagement of the state coffers is the primary cause of all ills within the country.  A section of the society, namely politicians and their cronies, can steal as they wish. Politics has become the most lucrative business in the island. It was manifest in the ease of  luring  the MPs of the opposition to government benches. Individuals spend millions  at their election campaigns , certainly not hoping to recover the losses with an MP’s salary . The system is geared to enrich the politicians, their kith and kin and the supporters . The controllers have double standards, one for the friend and another for the foe.  A good example is that the CJ has been impeached for not declaring her assets while hundreds of politicians and others happily ignore the requirement being aware nothing would happen as long as they remain “yes” men.
 Miscreants
Wimal Weerawansa had played a vital role in misleading thousands of young people of this country with his leftist ideologies to end up in mass-pyres or mass-graves. His luxurious life style including  the living in a 70 million Rupee mansion  is  an insult to the tens of thousands of the dead who sacrificed their lives believing that they were led by sincere leaders. It is disgusting how he uses the conspiracy theory for everything.  Sometimes children urinate on the tarmac to measure the length of their waters.  For Wimalwansa, urinating on the tarmac too can be an international conspiracy against Sri Lanka.
Mervin Silva has taken to the  filthy language, intimidation, harassment, abuse and allegedly even murder. A British tourist was murdered by a politician and his goons. Women are being raped  and  ordinary people are assaulted and intimidated everywhere in the island by the politicians. When their vehicles come  speeding  along , horns blasting , everyone else has to either stop and give way or jump into the roadside drain. If not , insult and  assault are guaranteed. They are just a  few examples to query what else these politicians should be called other than miscreants.
Summarily it is the misrule of this government. Obviously there is no credible opposition as a party or as an individual that the people of this country can rally around. The people still prefer Rajas if they can shift from misrule to just-rule. Rajas do not need to mislead people or do not need misdeeds if they can reform themselves sooner than later.  People are still hesitant to abandon them against their earlier beliefs that the Rajapakshas could take this country and its people to a higher plane in which poverty and destitution  alleviated, individual freedoms  safeguarded , lawlessness eliminated and justice  restored.  There is still time for  Rajapakshas to do a self appraisal.