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, June 3, 2018

Journalists protest in North-East against attacks

Home02Jun 2018

Journalists in Jaffna and Batticaloa protested on Wednesday against the increasing number of attacks on media workers, including one last week.

Journalists criticised the complete lack of action and justice around murdered and attacked Tamil journalists and media workers.

Parliamentarians and Northern Provincial Council members also took part in the protests.

Jaffna 

 

‘Bondgate’ Mother Of All Lankan Financial Scams?

Amrit Muttukumaru
logoThe manner in which things are continuing to unravel in the egregious bond scam in terms of its magnitude and reach, it would appear it has all the credentials to be described as the ‘mother of all Lankan financial scams’. It isnot merely due to its high value and ramifications but more importantly as increasingly apparent due to its all encompassing reach allegedly involving government and opposition politicians and a varied section of influential persons in civil society. This is probably why there is muted demand even on the issue of getting former CBSL Governor Arjuna Mehendran to Sri Lanka to face due process. 
New developments include Additional Solicitor General Yasantha Kodagoda revealing to court that a cash cheque for Rs. 1 Million from an associate company of the bond scam tainted Perpetual Treasuries Limited (PTL) controlled by Arjun Aloysius was “encashed by a security officer of a Parliamentarian”. 
If not for this revelation after which key opposition parliamentarian Dayasiri Jayasekera identified himself as a person who had received Rs. 1 million from a PTL related company, the public would have never known there was the possibility of a further 118 persons drawn from among politicians, civil society activists and professionals who were the beneficiaries of the largesse doled out by PTL related companies. This in turn led to cabinet minister Field Marshal Sarath Fonseka admitting he had received Rs. 100,000/= from a PTL related company either by cash or cheque.
Hidden Documents
It is preposterous that sections of the bond report which include annexures and also the CID investigation report were not presented to parliament. Things become murkier with the President’s Secretary, Austin Fernando revealing (i) he had sent the entire report to the national archives which generally has a 30 year embargo on making it public (ii) the Attorney General advising him that certain sections of the report cannot be made public as it is ‘sub judice’. Austin Fernando needs to ‘educate’ the public as to why he prematurely archived the bond report and connected documents when the bond scam is very much a ‘live’ issue?  I ask Fernando whether his “Belly” continues to be “White” after this? One wonders what other current documents have been archived! For instance, has the Thajudeen case also been archived?
On the issue of sub judice one gets the impression this is ploy to avoid a public debate. On this basis all a wrongdoer has to do is file a case and then shout from rooftops it is sub judice. There is legal opinion that “Publication may be justified on the grounds of being true and in the public interest   even before the matter reaches open court.” 
The PM & PCoI Report 
The report of the Presidential Commission of Inquiry (PCoI) into the Treasury Bond scam is like thecurate’s egg good and bad in parts. It had already laid the ground work at the investigative stage by its glaring partiality to Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe.

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Lasantha murder: Client was an 'unwilling accomplice' -counsel

2018-06-02 
When the Lasantha Wickramatunga murder trial was taken up for hearing, counsel for the second suspect told Mount Lavinia Magistrate Mohamed Mihal that his client, former Mount Lavinia Police Crimes branch OIC Tissasiri Sugathapala, is not a part of the offence but an unwilling accomplice.
Defense Counsel Rasika Weeratunga, appearing with Isuru Karaliyadda and Chandra Jagoda for the second suspect, told the Mount Lavinia Magistrate that his client was a suspect in the case due to death threats he had received from the third suspect, Prasanna Nanayakkara, who was the Senior Gazette Officer for the Western Division at the time.
He said although Sugathapala, his client, had performed his duties according to protocol and conducted investigations into the case, it was DIG Nanayakkara who had instructed him to destroy vital evidence by removing the pages of the GCIB and the Field Note Book belonging to late Sunday Leader Editor Lasantha Wickramatunga.
The Counsel further submitted that when Sugathapala refused to destroy evidence DIG Nanayakkara had threatened him saying he was following a directive from the then IGP and that he would also be killed like Lasantha if he does not adhere to the directive given to him.
The Counsel said Sugathapala had handed over the GCIB and the Field Note Book belonging to Wickramatunga to Nannayakara, but despite destroying the vital evidence he had secretly photocopied and preserved the evidence that helped the CID to obtain concrete proof against those behind the assassination.
He requested court to consider these facts and to grant bail to his client.
Senior State Counsel Janaka Bandara requested permission from the Magistrate to submit into evidence and provide photo copies of the statements made in camera by the second suspect and SP Hemantha Adikari to the prosecution.
The first suspect, military intelligence officer Premananada Udalagama, is out on bail
The CID arrested the former OIC Sub Inspector Sugathapala for concealing and destroying information pertaining to the murder of Wickramatunga. Further inquiries were fixed for June 12.
(T. Farook Thajudeen)

RightsCon 2018: Trends, lessons and connections

Featured image: Presenting Groundviews’ research on a panel put together by Counterpart International, photo by Marilyn Vernon
The first months of 2018 have seen global scrutiny of Facebook steadily increase and the reveal of the data breach by Cambridge Analytica. Several countries impacted by the weaponisation of social media and curtailment of online freedom of speech are due to hold elections later in the year. Against this background, Groundviews attended RightsCon to share insights on research we have conducted on technology-based violence against women, as well as to share insights on the role, relevance and reach of social media in the violent riots against Muslims, earlier this year. This work addresses the factors that keep citizens from fully participating in democratic spaces online and the responsibility social media platforms have to their users, both topics that resonated with the RightsCon audience, especially those from the Global South.
RightsCon – held mid-May with nearly 2,500 participants attending from 115 countries – claims to be not so much a digital rights conference, but a conference on human rights in the digital age. This meaningful pivot in focus becomes essential as our offline and online lives grow even more intertwined. This year, the conference was held in Toronto, Canada.
Technology-based violence against women: local research, regional trends
Our research, monitoring the way women are discussed on social media platforms since late 2017, primarily on Facebook, shows how this participation is compromised due to harassment and violence. Those impacted range from young women and members of the LGBTIQ community to politicians and activists – who at the gathering described the way these vicious attacks affected them mentally, and disturbingly, sometimes resulting in physical violence.
During discussions at the conference, the issues with women’s safety online raised as being prevalent in Sri Lanka were echoed by activists, particularly from the South Asian region. The impunity that anonymity affords, coupled with law enforcement officials who discriminate against women, amplify the issue across countries.
Activists from India note how difficult it is for women to access solutions to this online violence given how widespread it is and considering the geographical extent of the country. Authorities are either inaccessible to the women who need their help or officials themselves engage in shaming the survivor.
The operators of a help-line in Pakistan said a majority of the calls they receive are with regards to cyber-bullying, and many callers are on the verge of suicide. Shaming by the authorities is a reason why many don’t come forward with their stories either.
While not the ideal response, as the fault is not the woman’s own, stronger digital security is a first step to safety, especially for outspoken activists. As a Ugandan activist pointed out, civil society would need to take these steps if the law wasn’t going to hold the perpetrator to account. They are therefore creating community-sourced tools to educate girls, as existing material is not easily relatable. With familiar imagery and simple language, girls are better able to access essential information that is usually technical. Groundviews’ trilingual digital security wiki was also created to further this knowledge.
We presented our findings on Sri Lanka at a panel put together by Counterpart International on the second day of the conference. In addition to the reporting trends, we highlighted how tech-based violence played out during the February 2018 local government election, toward female political candidates. Our field research on this aspect has shown us that online, and offline violence, impacts the full participation of women in civic spaces.
This restriction of voices from democratic discourse and political or social critique was addressed by other participants on the panel, including internet shutdowns in Venezuela and Zimbabwe, as well as state-sponsored misinformation campaigns in Ukraine and Ecuador. Participants noted the extent of the damage done so far, and the need to address this before key elections in their countries.
There was a lot of critical interest in Sri Lanka’s recent experience of hate speech on Facebook. The blocking of the platform and the engagement we have had with its representatives was of interest to those looking at accountability of large social media platforms. This included journalists from Vice, professionals from the Business and Human Rights Resource Centre, and lawyers from the American Bar Association.
Accountability of technology and media platforms
Accountability was widely discussed across various panels of the conference. Activists highlighted the grassroots impacts of their standards and moderation policies. They stressed that when not enacted fully, these policies lead to the silencing of voices on the Internet. The most widely agreed-upon action was that transparency was needed from these platforms to the users that engage on them daily.
Groundviews had been in contact with activists from Vietnam and Myanmar, the latter’s experience with hate speech online and violence offline being closely mirrored in Sri Lanka, and vice versa. Having watched the violence in Digana unfold, and the response of all stakeholders to the violence, it was troubling to see that we were far from the only ones frustrated with addressing the effects that Facebook has had on our communities. Global South activists shared the following insights into the harmful impacts;
  • In Syria, journalists who put their lives on the line to report from the warzone have their content removed, and are also tracked through their accounts.
  • In India, Facebook and WhatsApp are used as machines for misinformation by Modi’s BJP, which leads to mobilisation of hate groups against minorities. Facebook is used to track Dalit activists, and they are arrested for the content they post. In addition, activists expressed concern due to Facebook’s role in India’s 2014 elections, which brought Modi into power.
  • In Taiwan, any alternate media that is critical of China finds their content removed.
  • In Israel, the government has an agreement with Facebook on content removal, which regularly sees Palestinian content being removed.
  • In Ethiopia, activists critical of the government are blocked for posting too much on Facebook and if arrested, then often made to disclose all their social media passwords.
The list goes on, and the group of activists therefore strategized that regional/coordinated activity would have more value considering the slow responses given to individual countries, as put forward in Sri Lanka’s open letter to Facebook.
These activists met with officials from Facebook’s Policy, Safety and Security teams, to present issues not just as they pertained to specific countries, but broader concerns echoed by the entire group. These related to enduring concerns around moderation, transparency, the weaponisation of social media particularly around electoral processes and parity of treatment with Western markets.
‘West-focused’ conversations on digital rights
Across the conference, panellists critiqued current discourse around digital rights and the internet, from the lens that most of it is focussed around a Western/Global North perspective. Several participants noted that some panels themselves embodied this flaw.
South American panellists noted that the discourse around ‘foreign interference’ in elections is largely framed by and linked to the United States-Russia context and the fallout of the Presidential Election in 2016. They went on to stress that domestic interference is a bigger concern for their countries, going into elections soon. Based on past observations, they believe it has more real life impacts for citizens at the grassroots, by way of the tracking of activists and location-specific blocking of the internet based on activities of pro-democracy groups.
Indian activists concurred with the South American participants, flagging how Facebook’s Governance Team’s support for Modi and the BJP ensured the party’s rise to power. Their concern is largely due to the fact that the party’s Hindu nationalist stance has put the lives of minority religious groups at risk.
The call for parity therefore was key for the group advocating to Facebook, and was created for the purpose of amplifying the Global South perspective on digital human rights, a perspective often called on only as a showcase of token diversity.
Global networks and knowledge-sharing
The conference provided a range of opportunities to build understanding and linkages between people with interest on a certain topic. Meetings with Twitter, the Electronic Frontier Foundation and UN Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression David Kaye were important interactions in this regard.
Twitter noted with concern the issues Sri Lanka has had with social media platforms due to the limited capacity to moderate the Sinhala language and the possible weaponization of social media to spread misinformation through the platform.
With the Electronic Frontier Foundation, we shared issues of internet shutdowns and the problems that crop up when governments begin to talk about ‘regulating’ social media’.
David Kaye, while aware of Sri Lanka’s history of the curtailment of freedom of expression offline, is looking into trends that map onto the country’s ongoing struggle with this online.
These topics will grow more relevant for Sri Lanka in the wake of the short-lived but disturbing, arbitrary and entirely ineffective block on social media in March, which follows what is even under the present government a deeply censorious approach to online content that is critical of it.
Most conversations at RightsCon were still lead by developing countries, those with more access to artificial intelligence, cyber-security and advanced technological solutions. This often meant that the basic stepping stones, which developing countries need to account for, were not discussed. For example, technological solutions aren’t as quickly adapted in the developing world due to inadequate infrastructure or government influence. Concerns with online surveillance and violence have devastating effects in the real world, and in some cases have to do with the spread of polarised messages by the weaponization of social media. Algorithmic bias of artificial intelligence (AI) and lack of language support can lead to the silencing of voices that are already the most vulnerable in their contexts.
Contextual knowledge and holistic recommendations need to be put forth by those designing digital solutions – the existing lack of these contribute to the dangerous and restricted digital spaces for women and minorities in the developing world.  Events such as RightsCon, therefore, must do more amplify the voices and account for practical ground realities of countries that still have a long way to go in this regard.
The diverse community present at RightsCon serves to remedy this to a certain extent; the presence of women, people of colour and the LGBTIQ community bring welcome nuance to these discussions. These individuals are operating in environments that are most hostile to them, in terms of infrastructure and socio-political actors, yet are making incredible impact with their community-focused work. This representation allows access to knowledge that is more easily transferable to our contexts than expert publications that come from the developed world. These conversations, that are often centred around gender, minority rights or limits to access, have more far-reaching impact than those that are centred solely around technology.

Sri Lankan police photograph Tamils demonstrating against Thoothukodi shootings

Home02Jun 2018

Tamils protesting in Jaffna against the killing of Thoothukodi protesters in Tamil Nadu faced police intimidation as officers and security personnel photographed participants. 
The protest, which took place in front of the Consulate General of India in Jaffna on June 1, condemned the Tamil Nadu police's violence against the protesters and the government's inaction to provide justice for those killed. 
Sri Lankan police officers and security personnel from within the Consulate were seen taking photographs of all participants. 


The Subversion Of Our Democratic Political Spaces & What It Means For Sri Lanka’s Future


Dayapala Thiranagama
Introduction
logoSince Independence in 1948, Sri Lanka has witnessed three unsuccessful armed struggles. Two of these (1971 and 1987-89) have been confined mainly to the Sinhalese South. The last one in the North and East of Sri Lanka waged an armed campaign for almost 30 years until the Tami Tigers were defeated in 2009. The manner of the Sri Lanka’s state victory created acute political wounds and left unresolved the fundamental problems that gave rise to Tamil militancy. The devastating effects of all three armed campaigns conducted by the state and non-sate actors have scarred democratic governance in the country and its commitment to pluralism. These violent struggles have torn apart Sri Lanka’s social fabric and hindered economic wellbeing of its citizens. It has damaged the continuing efforts to create a healthy and pluralistic democracy for our young and fragile nation.
When SWRD Bandaranaike first attempted to reach an understanding between the Tamil and the Sinhalese in 1957, faced stiff opposition. James Manor observed ‘ this was an important moment in the Island’s political history. It marked a first cycle in a pattern, which recurred as central and poisonous feature of the political process at critical junctures. The party in power strives to foster communal accommodation. The majority party in opposition manipulates Sinhalese parochialism to wreck that attempt ‘. [1]This destructive cycle has continued, damaging fragile ethnic relations and the political unity as a nation.https://www.colombotelegraph.com/index.php/the-subversion-of-our-democratic-political-spaces-what-it-means-for-sri-lankas-future/
The successive armed campaigns and the cumulative damage of the 30-year civil war has landed massive blows to democratic pluralism and narrowed our political space. Where democratic activity should have expanded and deepened people’s understandings of the collective challenges facing all citizens, it has instead narrowed them. Rather than healing ethnic frictions, it has exploited them. It has been too easy for the Sinhalese political leadership to whip up narrow nationalist sentiments to bolster their voter base. Even 30 years the Manor’s observation pattern has not changed despite the obvious need for a political settlement after a long and brutal war.
It has become a severe testing ground of the country’s political leaders and as well as the leading political parties particularly of their political honesty and responsibility towards plural democracy. There is a huge gap between political promises and the willingness of their leadership to achieve them.
Democratic Political Space and Pluralism
Modern democracy cannot   offer meaningful freedom and basic rights unless it is able to expand and deepen the democratic political space incorporating diverse needs of the people it serves. If the space is not dynamic enough to incorporate such needs the potential for political emancipation becomes a difficult task. ”Pluralism lies at the very core of modern democracy: if we want a more democratic society, we need to increase that pluralism and make room for multiplicity of democratically managed forms of associations and communities’ [2].
However, the introduction of the Westminster model of majoritarian democratic governance to Sri Lanka in 1948 without any accommodation of an inclusive multi-ethnic notion meant Sri Lanka was politically ands constitutionally unprepared for what was to come. The new nation came into being with democratic and emancipatory aspirations amongst its ethnically diverse communities –but without the means to meet them. However, this was a logical extension of British colonial policy that had begun prior to Independence. Nissan and Stirrat have highlighted a major paradox at the heart of Sri Lankan polity under colonial rule. “On the one hand all citizens in Sri Lanka were to be treated equally: the island was subject to one set of rules and one set of governors; in terms of citizenship, all should be equal. Yet at the same time, British rule substantialized heterogeneity, formalizing cultural difference and making it the basis for political representation. This should not be interpreted as the manifestation of a wish to ‘divide and rule; it was done out of misguided ‘liberal’ sentiments which sought to protect different customs of different races”[3].However, this British policy and its continuation since Independence thus favored the further growth of majoritarian Sinhala Buddhist   sentiments. Sinhala Buddhist supremacy occupied as the hegemonic ideology of the post -Independence political space, marginalizing minority communities and their right to be equal citizens. This marginalization has continued with utmost vigor despite some reformist zeal shown by the Sinhala leaders, which has tended to evaporate   overnight when they faced with vociferous Sinhala Buddhist opposition.

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COALITIONS OF THE EVIL




Home3 June, 2018

Among politically significant developments to have occurred during the past week or so, three stand out. They, not necessarily in the order of their importance, are: (a) Revelations made by MP Dayasiri Jayasekera about business donations to election funds of politicians, (b) the proposed 20th Amendment to the Constitution, and (c) Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s launching of his 2019-2020 election campaign. This essay examines only the first.

Campaign donations

Dayasiri Jayasekara is the first MP who has openly admitted to accepting Rs. 1 million as donation from a company linked to Arjun Aloysius who is alleged to have masterminded the massive Central Bank bond scam in 2015. According to media reports, there are altogether 118 MPs, representing both, the ruling coalition and the opposition, who are alleged to have shared a total donation of Rs. 1.8 billion from the Aloysius fund. MP Jayasekera has challenged the other 117 colleagues to come out and admit it in public. Only Sarath Fonseka, Minister of Wildlife, has so far responded to Jayasekara’s call, which many of his MP colleagues are very likely to ignore.
In terms of the volume of cash involved, the Aloysius-Jayasekera transaction is a relatively small donation. But, that does not make the episode any less dramatic.

In a press conference, MP Jayasekara, himself a lawyer, has made some astonishing admissions that are great quotations for any political science student of elections and campaign funding. He said, the amount he received, -- a mere Rs. 1 million – was such an insignificant share of the total amount of donations that businessmen make during election campaigns that it was ‘like a coconut husk in the ocean.” Aloysius, according to Jayasekera, has distributed Rs. 1. 8 billion among 118 MPs of the ruling coalition as well as the opposition. He also protested: “Why single me out? 118 MPs have done it.” He also revealed: “Many businessmen do it. Aloysius is not an exception.”

Business-politics nexus

In a sense, MP Jayasekara’s admissions are no new revelations at all. As citizens, we all know that there is a close symbiotic relationship between politicians and businessmen. Political scientists call it ‘business-politics nexus.’ It is also part of our citizens’ background knowledge about how practices of democratic political competitions are sustained by means that are not necessarily ethical. What is new in Jayasekera’s revelations is that a politician has (a) voluntarily admitted to the existence of this business-politician nexus, and, (b) justified it as a legitimate transaction perfectly normal during election times.

Further reflecting on Jayasekara’s admissions, we can dwell on a few other aspects of the phenomenon of business-politics alliance. It is part of an elaborate system of patron-client dependency between politicians at all levels and business people at all levels. Even at Pradeshiya Sabha elections, village-level politicians would raise campaign funds from local businessmen. The latter’s generosity is often reciprocated with contracts and other moneymaking opportunities available at the Local Government institutions. Sitting and would-be MPs, Chief Ministers, Ministers, Prime Ministers and Presidents have much bigger roles to play to keep their political machines well-oiled by means of securing and reciprocating private donations of truly massive proportions.

This is really the dark, if not the darkest, side of democratic politics. We citizens can only pray that the other 117 MPs will also join Jayasekera to tell us their stories as well. That will compel their leaders too to tell us among whom the rest of Aloysius’s profits from the Central Bank bond business got distributed. One can visualize the unfolding of an informal Truth Commission of a sort, at last!

President’s revelations

Meanwhile, statements made by President Mathripala Sirisena at the ceremony to commemorate Ven. Maduluwawe Sobitha, just four days ago, confirm a hypothesis that citizens maintain on the basis of political commonsense. Corruption is more than some unethical practice among individual politicians or public officials in making deals for private gain. It is pervasive and an organising principle of modern governance; it is freshly re-institutionalised; it touches the highest levels of government’s leadership that claims to be clean; and it has become inseparably integral to governance practices of even the regime of ‘good governance.’ Moreover, corruption is now an entrenched way of life even among those who get themselves elected to power on promises of eradicating corruption. The sharpening bitterness between the two camps of the Government might lead to more sensational disclosures only to re-confirm what the citizens already know by instinct.

Let us also hope that President Sirisena will soon come out with some real stories that he knows, as he warned at the Sobitha commemoration. That would be great stuff for researchers who endlessly search for real life stories of high-level Government corruption.

Private sector

Meanwhile, a serious point that continues to be suppressed in relative silence is the private sector’s role in political corruption. Stories about business-politics bonds are something we often share in social gatherings, name the names, express shock at the sheer volumes involved in the transactions, and then, laugh about it only to forget until the next story comes. Political corruption through the politician-businessmen nexus has always existed, but it has expanded phenomenally with the spread of the free-market economy, foreign investments and massive volumes of government contracts and business deals available practically in all Ministries.

As stories coming from other countries as well – for example, India, Russia, Pakistan, Malaysia, Nepal, Indonesia, South Korea, Nigeria, and South Africa – tell us, racketeering is an important mechanism of the working of the political economy of business-politics alliance.

Minister Arjuna Ranatunga’s recent revelation, as reported in the media, that even under his own Government Ministers openly ask for bribes from foreign investors at the very first meeting, is probably not a rhetorical claim. It tells us about a pattern of racketeering behaviour that has been normalised to spread so wildly. It also opens our eyes to a culture that has given rise to a tripartite coalition between politicians, entrepreneurs, and government officials of all hues. No FCID, nor any Presidential Commission, nor corruption watchdog can crack it, as Sri Lankan citizens have come to realize of late.

Approaches

In Sri Lanka’s public discussions on corruption, there are several approaches to deal with corruption in public life. Key among them are (a) the punitive approach through the enforcement of criminal law, (b) the moral approach of naming and shaming of the corrupt, (c) the republican approach of virtuous public life in which public good is never compromised for private gain, and (d) the neo-liberal approach of good governance, transparency, and accountability.

None of these approaches seems to have worked to even restrain corruption at any level in our society and politics. As the accusations and counter-accusations between the two factions of the Government clearly indicate, the law enforcement process is at present thoroughly politicised. They also suggest that investigations into, and the judicial process on, corruption, abuse of power and even high-profile murders are politically manipulated. President Sirisena was quite forthright the other day to comment on it. If we take another clue from President Sirisena’s speech, the institutional process that was set up in 2015 to clean up public life from corruption and abuse of political power has broken down. Political deals, as the President suggested, are behind it.

Coalition of the corrupt

Worse still, Sri Lankan citizens have also been witnessing the emergence of a new grand coalition of the corrupt, by the corrupt and for the corrupt. It is a coalition that transcends political and party divisions. It is a broad coalition among politicians, officials, and entrepreneurs, defended by a protective belt made up of, as Professor Sarath Wijesuriya recently commented in a powerful essay, top legal professionals who possess the best brains of our society.
It is indeed a new ‘evil’ that confronts Sri Lanka’s democracy. Yet, Sri Lanka’s democracy does not seem to have found an effective way to fight this new evil and has allowed itself to be overrun by this formidable coalition. That is a part of the message that President Sirisena seems to have suggested, though unintentionally, in his emotionally-charged speech that was obviously meant to clear the names of the President himself and his men.

Two evils

Sri Lanka’s democracy is now being challenged by two coalitions of the evil: the coalition of the corrupt, and the coalition of the autocrats. The second coalition of the evil is making serious preparations to gain political power next year. Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s ‘Viyath Maga’ is its vehicle at the moment. The coalition of the autocrats might succeed, and eventually, the two coalitions might even seek informal fusion, because there are no rigid lines of demarcation between the two.
Meanwhile, for Sri Lanka’s democracy agenda to survive, it needs to re-invent itself. In that process of self re-invention, democracy has to detach itself, at least temporarily, from two of its most important and conventional institutional mechanisms, political parties and the class of professional politicians.

How to work out a new theory and practice of democracy with relative detachment from corrupt political parties and the corrupt professional political class? This is a new challenge for the 21st century political theory and philosophy world over. Sri Lanka is only one, small, case study.
Finally, it is not unwise to make the argument that the coalition of the autocrats is the lesser of the two evils, because democracy has ways to deal with it, resist it, and even defeat it. But not the coalition of the corrupt.

It corrupts democracy to its core and smashes its ethical-normative backbone. Once corrupted, democracy runs the risk of becoming a slavish servant of the corrupt and autocratic alike.

They need to be handled not systematically but immediately


“When you see some evil you proceed to immediate action, you make an immediate attack to cure the symptom.” 
 ~Johann Wolfgang von Goethe 
 2018-06-02
In the Third World people go into government to enrich themselves. When patriotism and service have been sacrificed for bottomless appetite for personal avarice and indulgences, loyalty within the power bubble counts immeasurably. The Rajapaksa government managed to elevate that loyalty to a new level; a level that was beyond the average wage earner and self-employed vendor, the gram seller or coconut plucker. They attracted to their political abode partners, who were equal not only in that society-gutting greed and natural magnetism towards self-enrichment, who were hell-bent on destroying accepted norms and traditional human values. For them human life is of no greater value than the quick buck they could make by circumventing the so-called Administrative and Financial regulations (AR & FR) of public service.   

When AR and FR began its downward ride, Presidential decrees became the rule of law in the country. The Governor of the Central Bank became a mere pawn in the grand chessboard of a nasty political dynamic. Secretaries to President and the Ministry of Finance were executioners of devious acts of financial fraud. The siblings of the President became more powerful than senior ministers. There is no more evidence necessary than the current President who was a senior minister in that Cabinet until he said enough is enough, just before the presidential elections in 2015. Those senior minsters had to be satisfied with the bare bones while the meat, flesh and blood, including the marrow was sucked out by the First Family. It was against such a backdrop that the presidential election was held in January, 2015.   
The UNP, whose economic policies and principles are based on capitalism and the SLFP which advocates at every corner of the country a society that has to share its poverty instead of wealth were bound to clash when the time came. That time has come
But a more profound tragedy occurred after the presidential elections. The platform that was so strongly built as a counter to the many misdeeds and criminal activities such as the slaying of Lasantha Wickramatunga, the then editor of the Sunday Leader newspaper and disappearance of another journalist, Prageeth Eknaligoda, could not withstand the stormy waves of the vicious propaganda of the joint opposition (JO). Not holding parliamentary elections immediately after the presidential elections in 2015 came to haunt the current Administration, as is seen today. That blame is held against Maithripala Sirisena, the new President. His ambition to salvage the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) instead of looking after those who elected him, the Northern and Estate Tamils, Muslims all over the country and the United National Party (UNP), the traditional rival of the SLFP, overshadowed the real purpose of the election.   

Two strategic blunders were committed not only by Mahinda Rajapaksa opting out of the leadership of the SLFP, and Maithripala Sirisena too, by betraying his voters and embracing the SLFP which he left to become the ‘Common Candidate’ against the Rajapaksas. Had Mahinda Rajapaksa chosen not to withdraw from the leadership of the SLFP, he would not have had to grapple with the current impasse the SLFP is in. He would have been the undisputed ‘King’ of his party and would have been a much more formidable threat to the current government. Had Sirisena chosen to stick with the ‘common platform’ (Northern and Estate Tamils, Muslim conglomeration and the UNP), instead of choosing to salvage his former SLFP, he would not have had this disunited ‘Unity Government’ and maybe, just maybe, the UNP would have had to choose him again as the next Candidate for the forthcoming presidential election.   

This double-jeopardy committed by the double - Ms, Mahinda and Maithripala, took its unkind toll. The wisdom of this inept and disparate double-move will be the subject talked about by many a social scientist and historian yet to come. But we, as contemporaneous writers, can indulge in the analysis of such a foolhardy strategy hugged by our leaders.   

The people at large are paying a very high price for a commodity that is rotten and soiled to the core. The momentum of defeating the ‘spoiled brats of power’, the Rajapaksas, is lost. The loss of momentum has in turn engendered a lackadaisical approach to the country’s financial woes created by the Rajapaksas. Instead of a UNP cabinet led by a UNP Prime Minister and a ‘common President’, Sri Lanka is being led by a UNP cum SLFP Cabinet headed by a clumsy duo of party leaders whose primary goal is safeguarding their own self-interests. The UNP, whose economic policies and principles are based on capitalism and the SLFP which advocates at every corner of the country a society that has to share its poverty instead of wealth were bound to clash when the time came. That time has come. The basic clash between the two philosophies which are diametrically opposed to each other has produced the current gridlock. The birth of crony capitalism which occurred somewhere in the mid nineteen-nineties (1990s) has come of age from its pangs. That vicious subtext of capitalism has continued its meandering journey triggering unforgiving circumstances turning the politically pious into a venomous creed of political scavengers. Their prey is the national coffers and an ill-fated people whose susceptibilities are beyond repair.   

This session of predator-prey game has been in play for the last twenty five years. That’s a long time for any cultural pattern to set in. The prey gets used to its being used by the predator to unimaginable extents, until the prey gets intensely enveloped in the web, hardly noticing that its very survival becomes dependent upon lengths to which the prey gets consumed by its own blood. This morbid survival game has been continuing unhindered, without the knowledge either of the predator or the prey.   

We have reached the depths of that existence. The cynical politician has realized that stark truth. His willful participation in the deception of the voter is exponentially expanding. The politician and the voter, one feeding on the other, have bonded together, forming a bizarre relationship to sustain a self-destructive dynamic whose irreversible passage doesn’t look all that unrealistic. People at large don’t seem to have either the time or the willingness to sort this curious collection of social energies out by themselves. So they look to the politicians whose wicked activities have clouded the whole issue of corruption, nepotism and wanton killings and disappearances of political opponents.   
In the Third World people go into government to enrich themselves. When patriotism and service have been sacrificed for bottomless appetite for personal avarice and indulgences, loyalty within the power bubble counts immeasurably
The deliberate attempts and carefully crafted propaganda gimmicks engineered by the Rajapaksas and his henchmen have taken a full toll of Sri Lankan mindset. As an unintended and collateral damage of these shocking schemes are our culture and traditions. These traditions and values have taken a blast from the Rajapaksa-led regime. A society that was being gradually swallowed by the jaws of Capitalism’s ill-effects strode more vigorously during the Rajapaksa-rule. They calculated that the war-victory against Prabhakaran and other Tamil militants gave them an open licence to kill and rape the country they thought they saved.   

But this writer’s grievance is this: when elected to power on an unambiguous platform of undoing the Rajapaksa-rule, instead of undoing those society-destroying acts immediately, they adopted a more slow process of systematic handling. Systematic handling is another phrase for ‘not handling’. Period.   
Ranil Wickremesinghe, if he still frits with the idea of winning at a presidential election, has one chance and one chance only. He has to go after the corrupt Rajapaksas and bring them before justice. Not tomorrow or day after, but yesterday! He doesn’t have time, maybe six months. With the dawn of the next year, the country will be on a campaign-roll. At the beginning of 2019, the people will be beginning to form their opinions on the forthcoming presidential election due within 12 to 13 months thereon. His covert attempt at driving a telling wedge in the SLFP has fallen flat. President Sirisena’s share in the SLFP seems to be less than a pathetic 5%! The rest is with Mahinda Rajapaksa and his gang and that was well articulated in the 2015 Presidential Election itself, which was later reconfirmed at the recently concluded local government elections.   

Therefore, in the context of the failure of this master strategy to divide the SLFP in the middle, Ranil Wickremesinghe’s space for further manoeuvrering has shrunk. If he wishes to nominate himself as the next UNP candidate for President in 2020, Ranil has to move fast. The recent Band-Aid solutions introduced into the UNP structure do not mean anything unless and until the fundamental issue of prosecuting the Rajapaksas for their alleged felonies is settled. If, however, Ranil Wickremesinghe decides to introduce another candidate other than himself for the 2020 presidential elections, either Navin Dissanayake or Sajith Premadasa, the prognosis will be certainly different. A new face, for that matter, a much younger one than anyone else in the field now, would attract a lot of attention provided a correct branding and campaign plan is executed.   
The writer can be contacted at vishwamithra1984@gmail.com