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

Thursday, July 2, 2015

If music be the food of love.. James Rhodes, child rape and redemption

Channel 4 News
Thursday 02 Jul 2015
James Rhodes is one of the most gifted classical pianists of his generation. His interpretation of both Chopin and Rachmaninov are some of the most emotional and technically brilliant I have ever heard.
Yet for ten years in the middle of his forty-year life he never played a note.
He had been deeply traumatised by being child raped from the age of 6 to 11 years of age. His rapist was his boxing and PE coach. A teacher who found him crying, with blood trickling down his legs suspected there was something wrong but never imagined rape.
James has been through hell in his eventual recovery – drug abuse, attempted suicide, and depression so acute that he had at one point to be institutionalised.
The decade in which he never played finally ended when by chance in Italy, attempting to become a music agent, his host discovered he could play. He was the man who become both his mentor and his teacher.
Today, married for a second time, he played a London concert last week ahead of a major tour in the autumn.
I’ve been to meet James Rhodes.
It proved to be one of the most emotional and ultimately uplifting reporting experiences of my life.
Enjoy it with me.

Entrehub-Dr Travis Bradbury-June 28, 2015

Your days are filled with a constant stream of decisions. A study from Columbia University found that we’re bogged down by a good 70 decisions a day.

Welcome to Afghanistan’s Peace College

Can you teach your way out of a war?
Welcome to Afghanistan’s Peace College
BY HODEI SULTANHAMIDULLAH NATIQ-JULY 1, 2015
Last year, amid Afghanistan’s continuing war, the Gawharshad Institute of Higher Education, a private, nonprofit university, conducted a survey of its students’ attitudes toward conflict and violence. The poll, which included 383 responses from a targeted pool of the school’s roughly 1,700 students, was telling: When asked what the students would do when confronted with violent actions or words, 58 percent said they would “take revenge.” And though the results may not be surprising — decades of war have arguably ingrained a belief in revenge — the reason administrators at Gawharshad were asking the question is. The school has developed a curriculum to try to teach the skills needed to lift the country out of years of violent conflict.
For the students of Gawharshad, “Peacebuilding and Conflict Resolution” has now become a mandatory two-credit course, stamped in May with the seal of approval from the Ministry of Higher Education. If education is meant to prepare students for the world they’re going to live in, the thinking goes, then young Afghan scholars might require something different than what undergrads in Europe or the United States need to meet the demands of daily life. Gawharshad isn’t the first school to institute a peace and conflict studies curriculum — there have been similar efforts at the elementary and high school levels — but it is the first to have earned an official signoff at the higher education level. And if it shows promise, it might become a model for more universities across the country.
The school’s conflict resolution course is a response to the most pervasive kinds of violence throughout the country.reliably, and overwhelmingly, been a greater source of conflict." style="box-sizing: border-box; margin: 0px; padding: 0px; border: 0px; font-family: Tiempos, Georgia, serif; font-stretch: inherit; line-height: 32.7999992370606px; font-size: 17px; vertical-align: baseline;">Though targeted militant attacks in Afghanistan generate the most attention, issues such as disputes over land rights have reliably, and overwhelmingly, been a greater source of conflict. A 2008 Oxfam report, for example, found that disputes over land, water, and between families were far and away the leading causes of community conflict — and the problem has only gotten worse in recent years. A May report from the U.S. Institute of Peace (where we work) found that less than 20 percent of land was properly titled, and displacement, resettlement, and rising property prices have only made the situation more confused. Because both formal channels, such as government courts, and informal local councils lack the power to enforce decisions, the problems often escalate into violence.
Which is where Gawharshad’s program comes in.
Students in the school’s new program — who are also studying law, psychology, political science, and international relations — are taught how to analyze a conflict and the mechanisms for reconciliation, drawing on case studies from countries such as South Africa and Northern Ireland. But the course goes beyond the theoretical — it also provides its students with tangible skills, such as negotiation and mediation tactics, which they can use to find nonviolent solutions to localized problems in their community. Longer term, the idea is that these skills would be valuable whether students find themselves working at the grass-roots level or within the unity government to help resolve broader national conflicts.
In a sense, the program seeks to create a homegrown force that could take on the less sexy work of negotiating the mundane but important disputes that could tip the country towards a more or less peaceful future by providing people with techniques for de-escalating conflict before it explodes into violence. Significantly, similar programs have worked in the past. A 2012evaluation of a program that provided peace education in rural Liberia, conducted by Yale University and Innovations for Poverty Action, a nonprofit organization, found evidence that communities where conflict resolution skills were taught to groups of citizens experience “a decrease in violent disputes … lower rates of violence … and increased rates of dispute resolution and of satisfaction with those resolutions.”
The question of what role this kind of program might play in Afghanistan, however, has become increasingly pressing as the government of newly elected President Ashraf Ghani decides the course of the country’s path to peace.
During more than 30 years of war, the country’s educational institutions, including once-respected universities, were devastated as faculty and staff fled to take positions abroad and professional development lagged for those who stayed behind. Curricula, too, became outdated. The students’ response to the question of whether they would take revenge illustrates that Afghan youth continue to struggle with a perceived lack of options for responding to the violence that has surrounded them for as long as they can remember.
The country’s education system, however, has become one of the bright spots amid the continuing turmoil since the U.S. invasion that toppled the Taliban in 2001.Before the fall of the Taliban in 2001, girls studied in secret schools, and fewer than 1 million boys were in school in 2002, according to figures from the U.S. Agency for International Development. Now, more than 8 million students are enrolled; higher education enrollment alone has increased to 123,000 in 2013, from 7,800 in 2001, according to USAID. In 2009, the Afghan Ministry of Higher Education rolled out a national planthat underscored the need for improvement and reform in areas and skills that it decided graduates needed to contribute to for Afghanistan’s overall development — professions such as business, medicine, and computer science.
That plan, however, is overdue for review. Farida Momand, Ghani’s new minister of higher education, taught at Kabul Medical University and has a solid understanding of the education sector. Whatever replaces the current plan can, and should, include peace and conflict resolution courses as a mandatory component of the national curriculum.
To be sure, measures of impact of training programs in peace and conflict resolution are often qualitative in nature, and it can take several years to observe a pattern of increased nonviolent approaches to conflict resolution. But evidence is growing that this field of study is no longer a soft and fuzzy field; rather, exposing conflict-ridden communities to specific skills training can make a profound difference in shifting those societies from a violent approach to resolving disputes using nonviolent techniques. Currently, their potential is being explored at different educational levels in places such asPalestineNigeria, and the Balkans.
By equipping young college graduates with practical life skills such as problem solving, negotiation, and conflict analysis, they not only will be better prepared to enter the work force with sought-after capabilities, but they also will be able to demonstrate behaviors that can contribute to durable peace in their communities and country. The Gawharshad base line survey turned up another result that might be counterintuitive under the current conditions in Afghanistan: 91 percent of students responding believe their country will be peaceful in the future.
Photo credit: ADEK BERRY/AFP/Getty Images

ReutersThu Jul 2, 2015
India's $100 billion push into solar energy over the next decade will be driven by foreign players as uncompetitive local manufacturers fall by the wayside, no longer protected by government restrictions on the sector.
The money pouring into India's solar industry is likely to be soaked up by foreign-organised projects such as one run by China's Trina Solar - not the country's own solar panel manufacturers.
Last week, Softbank became the latest foreign player to enter India's solar market, leading an investment of up to $20 billion. The Japanese firm said it would consider making solar panels locally, but with Taiwan's Foxconn rather than a local manufacturer.
Many Indian solar panel producers have benefited over the past six months from a surge in demand for panels not yet fulfilled by foreign companies. But their small scale and outdated technology will quickly make itself felt when the global players arrive.
"The smaller manufacturers of India, especially the cell manufacturers, will be adversely hit because they are unable to compete both on technology and even on price structures," said Jasmeet Khurana at solar consultancy Bridge To India.
India's solar panel makers can no longer turn to the Indian government for help. The government is more concerned about creating jobs quickly and ensuring plentiful power supply in a country known for its many blackouts.
India, in contrast to Chinese and German efforts to protect local producers, has scrapped most restrictions on where equipment that turns sunshine into energy is bought. Last year, it dropped an anti-dumping duty on panel import.
Foreign players making panels in India are expected to compete with local manufacturers to fulfil so-called domestic content requirements for government projects.
Trina has unveiled plans for a $500 million plant and U.S.-based SunEdison is investing up to $4 billion in a manufacturing facility. Both are tying up with Indian power firms to build the plants.
SOLAR TARGETS
India has said it expects peak power demand to double over the next five years from around 140,000 megawatts today. To help meet that demand, 100,000 MW of new capacity is to come from solar panels, and of that it wants at least 8,000 MW to come from locally-made cells.
Foreign players manufacturing in India will probably win the bulk of those orders.
Indian rivals like Indosolar and Moser Baer produce panels, but they cost 8 to 10 percent more than foreign producers, Khurana said.
It is not yet clear which foreign firms will emerge as the winners, with most of the facilities years away from being built and the big tenders for huge solar parks touted by the government still to be awarded.
But those who can quickly build scale will be the most able to compete on cost.
"The lowest cost in manufacturing will only come from scale and integrated facilities," said Sujoy Ghosh, India Country Head at U.S.-based First Solar.
First Solar is to build 5,000 MW of solar power before 2020, but will rely on imported panels for now because it is cheaper to buy component parts internationally where they are more readily available.
As for some of India's small panel makers, they are looking to complement the efforts of foreign players instead of trying to derail them.
Maharishi Solar, a small manufacturer based in Delhi, is looking to tie up with a foreign company, the company's head Ajay Prakash Shrivastava told Reuters.
It stopped producing solar panels a few years back as it could not compete with foreign manufacturers, primarily Chinese. Shrivastava said import panels are as much as 45 percent cheaper thanks to subsidies in their home countries and lower borrowing costs.
"The Indian manufacturers do have a disadvantage," he said. "We are trying to find a partner who can bring in the latest technology."
(Editing by Ryan Woo)

Top 7 Foods that People Who Suffer From Chronic Pain Should Avoid

Healthy Food House
December 11, 2014
Chronic pain affects many people and fibromyalgia is the most common form. This chronic condition is chatacterized by symptoms like muscle pain, fatigue, depression, and sleeping disorders.
Latest studies suggest that the central sensation, in which neurons in the spinal cord are sensitized by inflammations or cell damage, could get involved in the same way people with fibromyalgia process pain. The food you eat may contain chemicals that trigger the neurotransmitters, which increases the sensitivity.
top-7-foods-that-people-who-suffer-from-chronic-pain-should-avoid
1. Reduce The Intake of Sugar And Artificial Sweeteners
High insulin levels affect the condition, and thus worsen pain and inflammation. Reduce the sugar intake and the foods that contain hidden sugar.
Sugar cravings appear once in a while, but focus on eating more fresh fruits. Aspartame, sorbitol and xylitol are sugar-free artificial sweeteners, but they contain compounds that transform sensitivity to pain and also trigger irritable bowel syndrome. Making your own food and eating whole foods is the best way to avoid hidden sugars.
2. Caffeine is No Good For You
Scientists associate chronic pain and fibromyalgia with insufficient sleep and fatigue. People drink too much coffee so they can go through the day more easily. Coffee provides the desired effect, but in the long run it can largely affect your good night’s sleep.
3. Avoid Gluten And Yeast
These are contained in baked goods and pastry. Regular consumption of these products stimulate the growth of yeast and fungus, and thus increase the pain.
4. Remove Dairy Products From Your Diet
Dairy and many other animal products contain a protein that worsens arthritis and fibromyalgia. It irritates the tissue around the joints, which worsens the pain. Think about going vegan, as this decision has helped many people to cure chronic diseases.
5. Say No To Refined Carbohydrates.
Carbohydrates, similar to sugar, can increase insulin levels and worsen any chronic condition. Always choose low-carb, low-sugar foods and often eat plant-based meals.
6. Tobacco and alcohol harm your body, and trigger severe health conditions including diseases that affect the joints
Statistics has shown that smokers have a higher risk of rheumatoid arthritis, and people who consume alcohol regularly are more likely to develop gout.
7. Food additives Are Dangerous
Monosodium glutamate (MSG) and other food additives cause additional problems for people with chronic pain, by stimulating pain receptors and increasing pain. Producers add MSG to fast food and pre-packaged foods to enhance their taste.

Wednesday, July 1, 2015

Democracy in Post War Sri Lanka

Centre for Policy AlternativesDemocracy survey June 2015_cover page30 June 2015, Colombo, Sri Lanka: According to the latest ‘Democracy in Post War Sri Lanka’ survey conducted by Social Indicator, the survey research unit of the Centre for Policy Alternatives, divisions between people’s opinions on key issues still persist.
On the topic of a credible mechanism look into accountability for what happened during the last stages of the war, 42.6% of Sri Lankans stated that there should be such a mechanism, while 36.3% said no. Among the 32.2% from the Sinhala community who are in favour of such a mechanism, majority (57.8%) said that it should be a mechanism that was exclusively domestic while 34% said that it should be a combination of both domestic and international.
The Tamil community has the least amount of faith in an exclusively domestic mechanism with only 7% in favour of one. 44.9% said it should be an exclusively international one and 35.5% said a combination of the two.
Sri Lankans are divided on whether the National anthem should be sung in Sinhala and Tamil. 29.3% of Sri Lankans strongly agree that it should be sung in both languages while 32.1% strongly disagree. Majority from the Tamil, Up Country Tamil and Muslim communities say that it should be sung in both languages, while only 13.4% from the Sinhalese community state the same.
With regard to the 2015 Presidential Election, around 55% of Sri Lankans agree with the submission that President Sirisena owes his victory to the minority vote, whilst 31.8% do not. From an ethnic perspective, 90.6% from the Tamil community, 85.5% from the Up Country Tamil community, 85.2% from the Muslim community and 44.9% from the Sinhalese community are of the opinion that President Sirisena owes his victory to the minority vote.
Majority of Sri Lankans (73.8%) believe that their vote has an impact on the outcome of an election, a notable increase from 2014 (59.5%). When asked of how free people feel in expressing their opinion on politics, irrespective of where they are and who they are with, 46.6% believe that they are completely free. This is an increase in comparison to 2013 (35.4%) and 2014 (31.2%). Almost 80% of Sri Lankans believe that they have the freedom to choose who to vote for without feeling pressured, a slight increase from 74.4% in 2013.
There has been an increase in the trust that Sri Lankans have for the Army, as 44.2% in 2015 stated that they have a great deal of trust in comparison to the 33.7% in 2014. The Tamil community has the least amount trust in the Army with 52% stating that they have no trust, followed by the Up Country Tamil with 47%.
There has been a notable change in opinion among Sri Lankans when it comes to the Election Commission. 17.2% said that they have a great deal of trust and 45.1% said some trust in the Election Commission, an increase when compared to 2014, where only 7.6% had a great deal of trust and 31% said some trust.
When comes to the media landscape under President Sirisena’s administration, 51.7% of Sri Lankans agree (with 12.7% strongly agreeing) that the media is completely free to criticise the Government as they wish. This is a noteworthy increase when compared to the previous years – 42% in 2011, 42.5% in 2013 and 39.2% in 2014.
‘Democracy in post-war Sri Lanka’ sought to record public perspectives on democracy in Sri Lanka today and the findings are presented under four key sections – The New Government, Security and Freedom, Trust in Institutions and Media in Sri Lanka. The first wave was conducted in 2011 and the second wave in2013 and the third in 2014.
Conducted in the 25 districts of the country, the 2015 survey captured the opinion of 1987 Sri Lankans from the four main ethnic groups. The selection of respondents was random across the country except in a few areas in the Northern Province where access was difficult. Fieldwork was conducted in March 2015.
Download the report in full here.

Crucial talks today on Rs 1000 per day wage demand by tea trade unions 


By Steve A. Morrell- 


Trade union sources in the tea plantations pressed their demand for a Rs. 1000 per day wage as the jump – off point for for further negotiations with the respective managements. This is to be granted irrespective of plantation losses.
Crucial negotiations between the parties today would either continue a period of relative industrial peace or end in confrontation.
The Planters’ Association of Ceylon ( PA) said prices for plantation commodities, tea and rubber and rubber based products have reduced. The tea price debacle for plantation crops was that tea prices realized were reduced by over Rs. 100 per kilo. Currently the Colombo net sales average ( NSA) is about Rs.350 per kilo. Plantation companies' cost of production ( COP) is in excess, Rs. 450.
Rubber is now an unsaleable product, consequent to a drop in global oil prices. Synthetics have taken over the alternatives and rubber based products now depend on synthetic raw material for their production needs.
Trade Union demands did not consider industrial down trend consequent to such price reductions.
Chairman PA Roshan Rajadurai said their negotiating proposals were based on a productivity formula; that is kilos plucked over the norm, could give an industrious plucker a wage of over Rs. 900 per day. He confirmed such productivity based wage structures were operative in other tea producing countries as well. Notably, India and Kenya.
The main cost component in plantations is worker wages. The cost factor under this expenditure item was about 60 percent. "Our brief, was that although all workers, men or Women, were paid equal wages, the men were less productive than women, Rajadurai said.
"Plantation managements were privatized because they was a drain on state finances. There was no plausible reason to believe that state ownership of the plantations could continue to be operative at that financial level. Privatization, subject to emergence of the ‘Golden Share Holder’ was a feature of the process at that time. 1992.
"Plantations were privatized. Since then plantation companies sustained continuous losses. There were about three years, some companies were profitable.
"Collectively, losses over the past approximately 20 years were substantial, Rajadurai, said. Cumulative losses amount to approximately Rs. 55 billion.
"The hypothetical position would have been that if plantations continued under state control such expenditure would have been the responsibility of the Treasury.
"Apart from wages, Plantation Companies invested in improvement to these holdings to ensure industry continuation. Factories were modernized, infrastructure improved, and more importantly welfare facilities were attributes that focused on allround improvement to worker welfare, Rajadurai pointed out.
"Child welfare, medical facilities, improvement to housing, and similar social welfare activities were continued and are improving.
"Negotiations based on our formula is practical and would ensure worker wages would improve and fall in line with real earnings. In short, productivity based negotiations will be feasible and its continuation would ensure progress of the plantation sector, Rajadurai explained.

Tamil GS officers interdicted with instruction to undergo ‘military rehabilitation’


TamilNet[TamilNet, Tuesday, 30 June 2015, 13:45 GMT]
Colombo's Ministry of Public Administration has interdicted six Eezham Tamil Village Officers (GS) in Karaichchi division of Ki'linochchi District a week ago. The reason given was that the SL Defence Ministry wanted the 4 female and 2 male GS officers to undergo ‘military rehabilitation’, meant for ex-LTTE members with immediate effect. The interdicted GS officers are not ex-LTTE members. But, the reason cited for the military rehabilitation was that there were ex-LTTE members, either living or dead, in their families or among their close relatives. The shocking harassment from the UNP-run Defence and Public Administration ministries of the SL State shows that nothing has changed with regards to the military rule in the occupied country of Eezham Tamils, concerned civil sources in Ki'linochchi told TamilNet on Tuesday. 

The six GS officers have been in duty for one year after they received initial training. 

Karu Jayasuriya is the SL Minister of Public Administration, Local Government and Democratic Governance. The ministry controls employment and the affairs of the GS, DS (Divisional Secretaries) and other officials at the district-level administration. 

The SL Government Agent of Ki'linochchi District Suntharam Arumainayagam has said he could do nothing to help the GS officers. 

The affected GS officers also approached a prominent ‘human rights defender’ in Colombo, who has been collecting evidences during the Rajapaksa administration. But, the response from the Sinhala activist was that it was not worth the effort to complain against the incarceration. The activist said the GS officers, if they want to retain their jobs, should undergo the ‘rehabilitation’ programme of the SL military. 

There are breast-feeding mothers among the four female GS officers, the sources further told TamilNet. 

The suspended GS officers have been instructed to present themselves at Poonthoaddam incarceration camp of the SL military, the sources further said. 

The nature of ‘military rehabilitation’ is not known and there are several detainees still languishing under the brutal programme. 

The family of a Tamil woman who was subjected to 4 years of ‘military rehabilitation’ was recently freed after the family approached UNP's Vijayakala Maheswaran, a deputy minister responsible for women's affairs. 

The woman was not an LTTE member. But, she was incarcerated for having worked as a medical staff of the Ponnambalam hospital, a civil medical installation of the de-facto civil administration during the times of the LTTE.

Another Tamil returnee arrested

Another Tamil returnee arrested
A Tamil youth returning from his job in the Middle East was arrested at the Katunayake airport on the day following the dissolution of parliament.
01 July 2015
Thirty-year-old Konesapillai Kugadasan was returning from Bahrain when he was taken on June 27, said former Batticaloa MP P. Ariyanendran, adding that the youth was being detained at the fourth floor of the CID.
A brother who visited him was told by police that the ex-LTTE member from Pangulaweli was being detained for rehabilitation, said the ex-MP.
Previously, he had returned safely twice from Qatar and Saudi Arabia.
Kugadasan joined the LTTE in 2000 and surrendered to the Sittandi military camp in 2006, and went for employment in the Middle East upon being released by the military.
Ariyanendran said he had information that 19 Tamil returnees had been arrested since Maithripala Sirisena took office as the president, jdslanka.org report.
Previous related articles
Sri Lanka should evolve a green energy 

missionto be achieved before 2030 - Dr. 

Abdul Kalam 


2015-06-30
Dr. Avul Pakir Jainulabdeen Abdul Kalam, an eminent scientist and engineer who has also served as the 11th president of India from the period 2002 to 2007 is a man of vision. Dr. Kalam is always been richly equipped with ideas aimed at the development of the country. He firmly believes that India needs to play a more assertive role in international relations. Making his presence as the keynote speaker at the International Symposium on Energy Challenges in the Knowledge Economy held in Sri Lanka on June 26, Dr. Kalam expressed his ideas on concepts such as Carbon neutral cities and most importantly the SAARC Energy Independence Platform: Livable Planet Earth. 

Excerpts are as follows: I am delighted to participate and address at the International Symposium on Energy Challenges in the Knowledge Economy, here in the beautiful city of Colombo. I am happy to know that this Symposium is organised by the Ministry of Power and Energy. Sri Lanka which envisages organising the scientific knowledge base for plan implementation and will provide the forum for Sri Lankan, invited foreign experts in the field to discuss, debate and share futuristic knowledge relevant to the challenges that the nation is facing in the evolving economy. 

Stakes at the Parliamentary Elections

maithri_kurunagaleEarly dissolution of Parliament also was a promise given to the people by the newly elected President in January. The promise was to dissolve it after 100 days. Instead, the Parliament was allowed to function over 150 days for one or the other reason.
by Laksiri Fernando
( July 1, 2015, Sydney, Sri Lanka Guardian) Over 15 million are registered as voters and around 75 percent of them most probably would be voting at the scheduled parliamentary elections on 17 August. Although the 20th Amendment was proposed in Parliament, it was clear from the beginning that the next elections would be held under the prevailing PR system. This means preferential competitions within parties or coalition of parties, in addition to the bitter competitions between political parties. Under the circumstances, keeping electoral violence at a minimum should be a priority. Already, the first death is reported due to electoral violence from Ratnapura.
The Dissolution
Strictly speaking, the present Parliament had a mandate until April 2016. It is best for any democracy to allow the representative institutions to function their full terms. In that case, the early election may appear as something not so democratic. While this is true in principle, the dissolution of Parliament became imperative given the increasing chaotic situation within it. It is not so long ago that some members opted to sleep at night in the well of that august body.
Early dissolution of Parliament also was a promise given to the people by the newly elected President in January. The promise was to dissolve it after 100 days. Instead, the Parliament was allowed to function over 150 days for one or the other reason.
There was an apparent contradiction between the mandate the President received and the composition of the Parliament. This was primarily the result of the former President’s decision to go for elections prematurely, to gamble his ambitions for a third term. When it failed, the contradiction was created. This does not mean that the mandates would always be harmonious if the elections for the presidency and parliament are held proximately. But the likelihood undoubtedly is higher and good for democracy.
It is a known fact that the former President controlled his party supporters in Parliament as a gang. Anyway, the term of the Parliament was too long, previously fixed for six years. According to the new norm of five years, the legitimate period of the Parliament was already over. The proceedings were completely unproductive.
20th Amendment
There were sincere attempts to pass the 20th Amendment before dissolving Parliament. However, the gazetted draft was quite a mess irrespective of its good intentions. It could have become messier if it went into the committee stage. For the last 19th Amendment, the agitated opposition proposed over 70 amendments. If that were the case for the 20th, they could have completely killed the electoral system.
This is apart from it being unfavourable to minority and minor parties particularly without a two ballot system. Therefore, the dissolution of Parliament was a good thing without dragging the country into an ignoble mess.
Free and Fair Elections
Election is the most important mechanism in a representative democracy. Voters are the kings, at least temporarily. When they hold the ballot, they can make an informed choice if the other conditions are in place. It is mainly up to the Election Commissioner and the Police to ensure a free and fair election. It is unfortunate that the Election Commission is not set up as envisaged in the 19th Amendment. There were obvious disruptors within Parliament for good governance and for the implementation of particularly the independent commissions.
It is possible that the ‘ghost voters’ are still in the electoral lists. Their presence was obvious when the figures of the registered voters, the population and voter turnouts were analysed for the last presidential elections. It is possible that they might lie low or become inactive under the present circumstances. However, the democratic parties, civil society organizations and election monitors should be vigilant.
The March 12 Movement has put forward a manifesto which can ensure a sound parliament if all parties adhere to the conditions when nominating candidates. Some of them are about ‘not being a criminal,’ ‘free from bribery and corruption,’ ‘free of anti-social trades,’ and ‘not abusive of authority’ etc. These are the most difficult things to come by given the created political culture in the recent past.
Reportedly, all parties have signed the manifesto, including the President, but Mahinda Rajapaksa (MR) has not signed or not invited to sign. If the parties don’t adhere to these principles, then it is up to the voters to ensure the conditions, by not voting to them.
Voter Intelligence
Traditionally, voter intelligence in Sri Lanka has been quite high. The average voter knew how to select the best candidate/s out of rogues. This has considerably dipped after the introduction of preferential voting. Similar distortions have occurred during the civil war period. There have been extreme polarizations of electors on ethnic and religious lines.
It is evident that the situation has changed at least partially leading up to and after the January elections. After a long time, minority parties in the North, united with the parties of the majority (South) against the former autocratic President. They may have to contest separately given the electoral system at the coming elections, but their solidarity for the promotion of democracy and good governance would remain intact.
In the long run, it would be good if Sri Lanka could adopt a compulsory voting system. I am saying this for the first time. The voting is not only a right but also a duty. Compulsory voting is another means of curtailing voter impersonation.
Too Many Parties
There are too many organizations accepted as registered political parties; 66 of them altogether. Some of the office bearers of these parties even cannot be found. This is an apparent weakness in the electoral system. Democracy does not mean everything is free for all. There should be some strict rules in accepting a political party for registration. A persistent membership, proper organization, credible office bearers, record of reliable activities and legitimate funds could be some of them.
There is no much point in accepting a political party for parliamentary elections unless that party has some representation in provincial councils or local councils. Political party registration for provincial councils or local government could be more relaxed. This does not mean that no political group can function as a political party for ideological or other purposes. There can be unregistered political parties.
Who Would Contest?
The main battle at the elections would be between the UNP led ‘relatively democratic’ forces and the political formations rotating under the Rajapaksa hegemony. I use the qualification ‘relative’ advisedly because within that camp too there are undemocratic and/or corrupt tendencies.
It is still not clear whether MR would contest directly or indirectly from the opposite camp. What he has declared from Madamulana just few hours ago is “we will contest.” It is unlikely for him to get nominations from the SLFP or even the UPFA. If Maithripala Sirisena’s (MS) standing (not to mention powers) is of any worth he should be blocked.
At a personal level, it would be foolish for MR to contest. He would soon be a septuagenarian. He entered parliamentary politics in 1970 and completed 45 years. He was a MP, a Leader of the Opposition, a PM and then the President. If not for his attempt for a third term, he could have ‘ruled the country’ until next year. He has certain things for his credit, and certain other things for his discredit. The best thing for him would have been to gloriously retire. But some people cannot obviously change their ‘genes’ or habits. MR apparently is such a person.
Apart from perhaps his genes, there are strong political compulsions at least to contest as a ‘national list’ candidate from another front. The compulsions come from the political forces that he himself created. He obviously changed the SLFP particularly at district and local levels. From a people’s party, he tried to change it into an Arachchi party of course with a popular appeal.
It would be interesting to investigate the socio-economic or class forces behind these changes at a later time. These are the roots of authoritarianism as well. Some indications of these social roots can be gleaned from now telecasting tele-dramas like Meedun Amma orSath Pathini.
Role of Sirisena
There are some who have expressed the view that President Sirisena should be neutral at the coming elections. The argument is too formalistic. MR obviously retreated when he handed over the SLFP and thus the UPFA to the President. MS has and should seize this opportunity. The task is to democratize the SLFP and if possible the UPFA. This an important task of democratization of the country.
Last few months, MS has been toiling like hell ‘collecting jumping frogs into the proverbiallahe’ (washing vessel). Both collecting and washing them are difficult tasks. Whatever the results, President should lead them at the elections. It is true that it is better if he could have handed over this task, for example, to CBK and be neutral. But CBK has her own limitations (age) and follies (unsavoury speech) in addition to male opposition against her based on misogyny.
President can become neutral and truly independent after the elections.
It is also important to have a countervailing power to the UNP, within the democratic camp, through a ‘democratic’ SLFP because the UNP is not spot clean. Far from it. The unfortunate bond issue is one example. Ranil Wickramasinghe also has not changed his bad habits or ‘genes.’ As Dayasiri Jayasekara happened to express at a recent Satana,not only the Sinhala horu (rogues), but also the English horu should be dispelled under democracy and good governance.
However, if the President Sirisena embraces Mahinda Rajapaksa and makes him the prime ministerial candidate or the leader of the SLFP/UPFA group contesting the elections, it would be a blatant betrayal of the January victory of democracy.