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

Friday, November 23, 2018

‘JVP AND TNA MUST FIGHT TOGETHER’ – ANURA KUMARA, JVP


Anura Kumara Dissanayake. File photo.   | Photo Credit: Meera Srinivasan 

Sri Lanka Brief22/11/2018

Sri Lanka’s Leftist Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) or the People’s Liberation Front has been a crucial dissenting voice in the wake of the political crisis persisting for a month now. Its six MPs in Parliament, including party leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake, have been both emphatic and strategic in their resistance to Mahinda Rajapaksa, who was questionably installed as Prime Minister on October 26 by President Maithripala Sirisena. The party moved two No Confidence Motions against him last week that were passed with a majority in the House.

All the same, the JVP’s fight is only for democracy and not intended to back ousted Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, says Dissanayake, who also has a sharp critique of Wickremesinghe’s government that has been in power for three-and-a-half years. In an interview to The Hindu at the party’s headquarters in Battaramulla, a busy suburb of Colombo, on Wednesday, the 49-year-old leader points to the party’s future course and the possibility of working with the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) representing the Tamil minority in the north and east.

In your recent letter addressed to President Maithripala Sirisena, you have called him the “architect of the current anarchy and instability”. In your reading, what prompted him to take such drastic measures?

After the Presidential elections of 2015, there was a power struggle between Maithripala Sirisena and Ranil Wickremsinghe. Consequently, both camps – Sirisena and Wickremesinghe – were working with the Mahinda Rajapaksa group right from the beginning.

This hidden power struggle, or cold war had been there for the three-and-a-half-years since they formed government together. It became more evident in the February local authority elections [in which a new party backed by Rajapaksa won big].

What we saw recently was really the long-prevailing cold war between the two camps bursting out. By resorting to such moves, Sirisena thought the Rajapaksas will back him in the next presidential election.

As a party we do not accept Sirisena’s allegations that there was an assassination plot targeting him. He also said he had many personal disagreements with Ranil. But those are not the real reasons for his actions.

At the very beginning, there was an agreement with Sirisena that he would dissolve the Parliament after 100 days of forming government. But he did not do that. Contrarily, he took the leadership of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) as well as its front, the United People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA). He led the UPFA in the parliamentary election that year [August 2015].

He agreed to form this unity government with Ranil because he didn’t have his own MPs in the government. He asked UPFA and SLFP MPs to join the unity government, so that he could exert some power within the government. The power struggle was visible even within the cabinet, right from the beginning.

With the deadlock now in parliament, after the Mahinda Rajapaksa rejected the two No Confidence Motions — moved by you and backed by a majority in the House — do you see a resolution in Parliament?

We think what happened on October 26 is a conspiracy that violated the Constitution and led to the appointment of an illegal government. First, they violated the Constitution and established an illegal government. After that, in order to protect that illegal government, they violated the Constitution again, and violated due process in Parliament.

The two No Confidence Motions that we moved, and were subsequently passed, were according to Parliamentary procedure. As per the Constitution of Sri Lanka, the Executive [President] is responsible to Parliament for the due exercise, performance and discharge of his powers, duties and functions. But what has happened now is that the Executive has interfered with the Legislature.

According to the Constitution, Article 48 (2), it is very clear that after a No Confidence Motion is passed, the government and cabinet automatically stand dissolved. Once it is ruled in Parliament that such a motion is passed then no one, including the President, has a say in the matter. The President has no powers to question or challenge the contents of the No Confidence Motion. He has no powers to demand the list of names or signatures, according to the Constitution. What he must do is to appoint a new Prime Minister and cabinet of ministers. He has no power other than that.

When we observe the actions of President Maithripala Sirisena for the last 25 days, it is clear that he has repeatedly violated the Constitution to protect the illegal government he appointed.

The immediate impact of the President’s actions is visible. What, in your opinion, are the long-term implications?

As a party we think we should go for general elections, go in front of the people and get a new mandate – that will be a solution to the current crisis. However, we do not accept the illegal dissolution of the Parliament by the President. As you know, the Supreme Court of Sri Lanka has given an interim order staying the President’s dissolution of Parliament and call for snap elections.

If we accept the dissolution, it means that we accept the position that the President can dissolve Parliament at any time. We cannot accept that. On the other hand, we are not ready to go for elections when an illegal government is holding on to power. If we go for polls under these circumstances, it would mean that we endorse this illegal government, and all the illegal moves of the President. So, we are fighting against both the illegal government appointed by President Sirisena, and his illegal dissolution of Parliament.

Once a government, which has the majority in Parliament, is established, and the situation in the country is normalised, our party is ready to bring a motion to dissolve the House with two-thirds majority and go for general elections.

Both groups trying to establish majority at the moment can do so only by buying over MPs or resorting to other unethical practices. That is why we are saying let us go for a fresh mandate after the situation is normalised.

We think Mahinda Rajapaksa’s government from 2010 to 2015 was an anti-democratic, racist and highly corrupt government. Because of that Sri Lanka was isolated internationally as well. We took the position that his government must be defeated. As a party we felt that we must defeat the Rajapaksa government, well before the 2015 elections.

In January 2015, whether we liked it or not, the reality was that the front that was able to defeat Rajapaksa was a UNP-led coalition. However, we saw in the last three and a half years that the UNP-led government’s actions and policies were completely against the mandate they were given.
We oppose the economic policies of the UNP government, we oppose the free trade agreements signed by the Ranil Wickremesinghe administration. We launched agitations against such policies. As a party we don’t think we have a political course aligned to that of the UNP. Our political course will certainly be one opposed to their policies.

In this particular situation, that President Sirisena has initiated, our position is to fight against the unconstitutional, undemocratic move of the President. There aren’t many truths about that, there is only one. From the UNP’s point of view, they are fighting his actions just to get their power back. Seeing that, some may say that we are working together with the UNP, but that is not the truth.

We are in this battle purely to fight Sirisena’s anti-democratic actions. UNP is using this opportunity to try and come back to power again. Our fights may appear similar, but the underlying reasons are very different.

Even within the last three and a half years, the UNP-led government did not work according to democratic principles. For example, take the Singapore Free Trade Agreement. The cabinet had decided to discuss it first, not to sign it immediately. But Ranil went ahead and signed it. Similarly, on the privatisation of the Hambantota Port, [then] PM Ranil Wickremesinghe told Parliament that the matter will be debated in the House first before an agreement is inked. But he didn’t do that.

During the SAITM protests by student [for nationalising a privately-owned medical college], for almost 18 months the government attacked protesting students, without listening to the voices of students, teachers and parents. The government acted very undemocratically. The UNP’s interest therefore is not so much about democracy itself, but about reclaiming power.

You have been on the negotiating table for a new Constitution that, among other things, seeks to arrive at a political solution to the country’s national question. You have also been supportive of reconciliation efforts such as the Office on the Missing Persons – perhaps because the JVP has faced state repression in the past, particularly during the two insurgencies in 1971 and 1987-89. Could you reflect on your engagement on the reform agenda?

The Steering Committee, leading the drafting process of the new Constitution, met more than 80 times. There were three main issues taken up for discussion – abolition of executive presidency, introduction of electoral reforms and power devolution.

From our own experience, we think that if the government wanted to bring a new Constitution the chairman of the steering committee Ranil Wickremesinghe could have expedited the process and put in in place some good systems, but he failed to do that.

On the question of power devolution and the abolition of executive presidency, there were two extreme positions. We were against executive presidency and argued that it must be abolished, but other smaller parties were for it.

Similarly, on power devolution, those from the Rajapaksa camp were completely opposed to the idea. Sirisena was also opposing power devolution but instead of explicitly taking the position, he manipulated Rajapaksa MPs to push that line. Practically speaking, it was obvious that there was little room for a compromise, by reconciling these extreme positions. We have lost the opportunity to bring a new Constitution because the government and Ranil Wickremesinghe wasted a lot of time trying to arrive at such a compromise.

What I mean when I say they missed the opportunity is that, the process ought to have been very swift in the first one, or one and a half years of the government. But they purposely delayed it and now, that political opportunity has gone. Particularly after the outcome of the local authority elections [in February 2018], we don’t see any possibility of bringing a new Constitution.

The government’s political stock plummeted, and they could not have pushed a new Constitution successfully.

In a broader sense, what is your take on the politics of the two major parties – the SLFP and the UNP?

Since the beginning of these two parties, SLFP has had an image of a Centre-Left formation, while UNP has been seen as a party that is for a free-market, liberal economy. But when you take the privatisation of state corporations the largest number of such privatisation efforts were in fact led by the SLFP. At their core, the economic policy of these two parties is the same. That is why a former General Secretary of the SLFP [Sirisena] could become the Presidential candidate in a UNP-led alliance, that is why Ministers and MPs are able to switch camps so easily on a daily basis. There is no difference in the fundamental economic project of these two parties.

After the recent crisis broke out, the JVP, along with the Tamil National Alliance (TNA), articulated a common position, opposing President Sirisena’s “unconstitutional” moves. Do you see a possibility of the two parties, with your respective, competing strains of nationalism, working together long-term, in the future?

The JVP and TNA represent sections in the country’s south and north, that have suffered most due to the actions of the repressive State. We have a duty to fight together and protect democratic rights. The TNA as a party does politics based on principles and policies. We also work based on principles and policies. Parties which have such an approach can easily work together.

Even though we may have some differences on certain issues, we will be able to work together closely in the future, on most questions. The JVP does not have a secret agenda. The TNA too doesn’t have a secret agenda. With such transparency we know each other’s positions and disagreements clearly. So we can work well together.

The TNA has been used by both the Rajapaksa administration and the Ranil Wickremesinghe-led government just to posture to international community or for their own power.

Neither of the leaders worked with the TNA with integrity. They exploited the TNA and its engagement for their own interests. Be it the All Party Representative Committee (APRC) in 2010, or initiatives taken by this government, the TNA was always used, exploited and cheated.

The JVP has been trying to independently engage with the people of the north. You held a big May Day rally there. What has your experience been?

After the end of the war, because of the socio-economic situation in the country, people in the north and east have been suffering the most. Because of the discrimination they faced for 30-40 years in the past, at one stage they expressed their political aspirations through other means.

Now we need a united struggle by the people of the south and north. We work with the people of the north accepting the principle of equality of all rights – be it language, political, cultural or religious rights. We work with them on the basis of democracy and equality. We are working for social transformation in this country and the Northern Province must also be part of that transformation. We have a common cause and we are committed to working together will all communities.

In the 53 years since the JVP was founded, the party has seen many ideological shifts – from radical activism to parliamentary participation; two key instances of factions breaking away. As leader, how do you see today’s JVP?

Left parties must have a pragmatic approach. Capable Left parties must have the ability to change according to the needs of the people. The changes in the economy, the changes in people’s ideologies and political positions, the changes in technology – all these have to be taken into consideration.

We had two armed insurrections. But from the beginning we have had a deep-rooted faith in building a mass movement. To build such a movement, the party since its early days has been working with the peasantry, working class, trade unions and students. We continue to do that. We are also working with professionals, intellectuals and artistes and have gained a lot of support.

Participating in Parliament or in elections is not our only political pursuit. It is done parallel to our efforts towards building a mass movement.

(The Hindu.)

Here’s what you need to know about Sri Lanka’s escalating political crisis

Two prime ministers are claiming power.



Mahinda Rajapaksa, one of Sri Lanka’s two dueling prime ministers.
 Paula Bronstein/Getty Images


By 
Two prime ministers are claiming power in Sri Lanka in a bizarre political struggle that has flung the country’s democracy into crisis.
Violence erupted Friday in Sri Lanka’s Parliament after supporters of one prime minister reportedly flung chairs, books, and chili paste at the opposition.

Sri Lanka: Why is this unfair criticism at diplomats?

To listen to all sides is part of our job – German Ambassador to Sri Lanka

( November 23, 2018, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) Why this unfair criticism at Canadian HC and members of the diplomatic Community, German Ambassador to Sri Lanka Jörn Rohde questioned by taking his official Twitter handle.
“Last Tuesday around a dozen envoys including Canadian High Commissioner and myself met with 4 leading UFPA MPs/Ministers on their request. We respected their request for confidentiality,” he added.
“Afterwards we were invited to meet TNA leadership. Diplomatic Community also had meetings with President, Speaker and other stakeholders.
To listen to all sides is part of our job,” Ambassador Rohde further said.

Heroes & Jokers Of Sri Lanka

logo
Dr. Jagath Asoka
The actual events that are happening in our political realm are constantly distorted and disguised on TV, radio, newspapers, Facebook, and webzines; therefore, we cannot recognize the truths. When we see or hear the distorted and disguised events, we feel that we have been deceived; our distrust of the crooked politicians and our refractoriness are fully justified. So, if you are a politician or a sycophant, do not distort and disguise the truth.
This article is about the archetypal characters in politics; you will recognize these characters in other endeavors as well. 
You have probably seen the following characters in Sri Lankan politics. These characters are not unique to Sri Lanka or to politics; they are universal and archetypal. I think, if you are interested in your own well-being—in politics—knowing these characters and their motives will help you understand this fiasco. I have seen people blindly follow politicians and treat them like gods, thinking that they are the true Saviors. A janitor who cleans toilets is worthy of veneration and respect, not some politician who plays the role of a hero. When a politician plays the role of a hero, most people mistakenly identify him with the archetypal hero in their own psyche.    
Hero is willing to sacrifice his or her own needs on behalf of others. Who is your hero in Sri Lankan politics? If you think a politician is a hero, has he or she sacrificed his own needs on behalf of others? Was he or she willing to sacrifice his or her life to save our country or save you? Self-aggrandizement is not a heroic act. Your hero is probably exploiting the current situation to aggrandize himself; he is trying to enhance this own power, wealth, and position, while pretending to be a sage. I have not seen a political hero in Sri Lanka. It is a grave mistake to worship a demagogue, thinking that he is a legendary figure, a mythological figure of divine descent endowed with great strength and ability to save our nation. 
Mentor is a character who teaches and protects a hero and gives him or her gifts. Can the Supreme Court judges be mentors in this fiasco? Can the Supreme Court judges protect this tormented nation?
Threshold Guardian is a menacing face to the hero, but if understood, he or she can be overcome. In this fiasco, who are the Threshold Guardians? Can they be overcome?
Herald is a force that brings a new challenge to the hero. Every day, our nation is faced with new challenges. The only problem is that there are no political heroes to face these challenges.    
Shapeshifter is a character who constantly changes from the hero’s point of view. In Sri Lankan politics, Shapeshifters are a dime a dozen; in Sri Lanka, they are the political frogs who jump from one side to the other at the first sight of money.
Shadow is a character who represents the energy of the dark side. We have seen the dark side of our politics. Why do we need a true leader? The most general picture of our politics is an association of competing interests, with constant rivalry and alliances. A country is a collection of competing interests. Only a true leader, not a demagogue, has the vision and the skills to harmonize the abundance of competing political interests and provide coordination to the plethora of competing forces within our country. Only an organizing idea—a dominant master idea that forms the living center of the nation—can provide this coordination. An organizing idea arranges the plethora of competing interests in a nation in such a manner that allows all citizens to strive with single-minded devotion toward a goal which gives pride, meaning, and a sense of belonging. Where is the leader with a vision? What is the organizing idea of our nation?
An Ally is someone who travels with the hero through the journey, serving a variety of functions. Just like in your own life, in our country’s political life, there are allies. Who are the true allies of our tormented nation?

Read More

Country is In Danger..!


LEN logo(Lanka e News - 23.Nov.2018, 9.45PM)  Defend Democracy in Sri Lanka Movement in Melbourne - comprised of Politicians, Professionals and Australian Community Leaders from diverse backgrounds hold a protest meeting on last Sunday 18th  November 2018 against the unconstitutional sacking of Prime Minister Ranil Wickramasinghe and proroguing of the Parliament. A large crowd of Australians of Sri Lankan Origin has attended this meeting.
All the speakers who have addressed the gathering emphasized, “When the NCM has passed against the Government, the Cabinet stands dissolved and constitutionally functioning of the government is illegal”. They also stressed, “Rajapaksa and Sirisena clan has dragged the country in to a chaotic and unstable situation. Foreign investors are leaving the country. IMF is delaying the loan discussions with the Sri Lankan Government”.
The meeting has adopted a Resolution against the unconstitutional acts of by the President Sirisena and agreed to send this resolution to foreign missions including UN, Commonwealth Secretariat, Australian Government and other foreign missions.
Following Community Leaders addressed the meeting.
​Hemantha Kuluppuarachchi – former President of UNP Australia Main Branch
Jude Perera – Member for Cranbourne in Victoria Parliament
Lionel Bopage – Former General Secretary of JVP
Pubudu – on behalf of JVP
Shahim Mathaiz – on behalf of Muslim Community
Athula Pathinayake – Director of Law School Deakin University
Shaymon Jayasinghe – A Former Permanent Secretary and a community leader
Arun Kumarasan – on behalf of Tamil Community
Ryle Moldridge – on behalf Sri Lanka Burger Community
---------------------------
by     (2018-11-23 16:36:40)

JVP MPs call for establishing democracy in and out of Parliament


Camelia Nathaniel and Amali Mallawaarachchi-Saturday, November 24, 2018

A group of JVP MPs pointed out that their struggle is for establishing democracy in and out of Parliament and demanded President Maithripala Sirisena to take the necessary action to restore the balance in the country, considering the majority shown by 122 MPs of the UNP, JVP and the TNA in Parliament, for the third time yesterday.

The JVP MPs holding a press briefing in Parliament yesterday emphasised that they shall not vote in favour of Ranil Wickremesinghe at any given circumstance. We have never voted in favour of him and we will continue to follow the same stance in the future, the JVP MPs observed.

“It is the President’s responsibility to appoint a new Prime Minister and a Cabinet now that the UPFA has failed once again to show a majority in House.

The JVP is an independent party that will neither enslave itself to the UNP nor to the UPFA.

We also would like to deny the allegation made by Dinesh Gunawardena who says that the Speaker has violated the Constitution and the Standing Orders when conducting the proceedings of the House. The JVP made sure that everything happens in line with the Constitution and the Standing Orders,” JVP MP Vijitha Herath pointed out.

Commenting on the recent statement by S.B.Dissanayake requesting President Sirisena to withdraw the Gazette dissolving Parliament, Herath said that S.B.Dissanayake has now panicked that they will lose if they go for a general election.

“There are, I think, only seven MPs left in the SLFP. This is why Dissanayake is asking for a Provincial Council election. They are the people who supported the President in these reckless decisions. Now they are trying to protect him from the repercussions,” Herath also said.

Meanwhile, JVP MP Sunil Handunnetti said that whoever shows a 113 votes in Parliament now shall not represent the mandate of the people. Thus, it is important that a free and fair general election be held,” Handunnetti pointed out.

JVP MP Dr. Nalinda Jayatissa urged the people and religious leaders to stand against the purported government. He also observed that any decision taken by the purported government would stand invalid and legal action must be taken against such a decision in due course.

The unholy trinity of coup politics’ realpolitik


TRIAD: Cloud ‘Coup-Coup’ Land
– Pic by Shehan Gunasekara
logoFriday, 23 November 2018
Much has been made of Sri Lanka being a sort of ‘anti-Cloud Cuckoo Land’… a nation in a state of absurdly overoptimistic fantasy or unrealistic idealism where everything is perfect. And once upon a time, this was never if ever true. But things change. And thus, we do too. If our position seemed partisan before the contretemps, it was because we loved the state of Rome more than its republicans.

Today, though, if we can ever again claim to be in the ranks of Tuscany – where the true patriots and genuine democrats sit – we must willing to suspend belief in the greater congregation of democratic-republicans who sit (or do not sit yet) in the House. Like them, we too must go – not gentle into that dark night – for all the good we might have done. But ASAP!


But not before we may essay an observation or three on the state of the nation. There is an unholy trinity at work in the corridors of power, to bring our land full low in one fell swoop. Here we do not mean the muddle-headed trio of president, prime minister and would-be premier. Nor the troika of brothers three who would be prophet, priest and king among the pseudo-patriots. Or even the trifecta of democracy, social-liberalism and republicanism ruled over by realpolitik. It is the three-pillared stool on which our political persona itself perches.

Tradition
It dies hard. From the customary behaviour of MPs before elections to the fatuous lamentations of the polity upon closer inspection of their candidates’ track record after the fall… Can civil society – academics, professionals, big business in the shape and form of champions of the bourse, SMEs as much as chambers of commerce and industry – ever cease and desist from inviting sundry two-bit political thugs to ‘grace’ their events, occasions, openings and myriad functions? Would they see even now that it is a national ‘disgrace’ to tolerate our law-breaking lawmakers one iota of a moment more?

CONVENTIONAL WISDOM: Politicians are the lubricants of our society. Births, baptisms, big openings, bright future! Four wedding-like events may as well be one large funeral for the nation, no?

DEVIL’S ADVOCATE: No, they’re dirty grease: an unpleasant damp spot; so stop lionising them sooner than you can say ‘honourable’ backwards in Hansard-expunged speech.

Authority
By this, I mean the tendency to accept political norms and mores as being more than ‘normative’ – but as ‘desirable’. If chicanery and corruption are par for the course, so be it? All civil society can do is to grin and bear it! They are our political masters rather than us being theirs. Where is the sense of service, accountability and transparency that was the hallmark of old? It went out like a dimming light with the Grama ‘Sevaka’ (servant of the village) who desired to be apotheosised as Grama ‘Niladhari’ (an official or bureaucrat). Which is neatly encapsulated in that venial grasping of a ‘common candidate’ (common enough, by any civilised standard) whose ambition could or should have been made of sterner stuff.

CONVENTIONAL WISDOM: Power tends to corrupt and absolute power corrupts absolutely. Acton was spot on!

DEVIL’S ADVOCATE: Great men are almost always bad men – that’s why we keep falling for the ‘keep the executive intact in some form’ trap. The presidency must go – lock, stock and barrel. That canard that it is good for the minorities, and protecting sovereignty and integrity, must be shot down! Like a mallard in a southern sky far from home and winging it alone over troubled waters.

Revelation
The folly of a cross section of demographics in fervently believing in their respective parties, personages, and political planks – to the exclusion of principle and practical common sense! The problem with good sense is precisely that it is not common. Thus the uncritical acceptance of fairytales, tall stories and folk legend as cardinal truths, which range from new discoveries such as the lineage of a modern Dutugemunu to the urban legend of Mr Clean. We once thought he was a king but found out to our detriment that he was nothing much more than a churlish tyrant. The other we felt was a prince among men; but rather than a statesman, he proved himself a pauper among the people both morally and politically bankrupt.

These are the remnants of dreams from our democracy’s childhood. We must grow up from infancy and into a more sterling republicanism if Sri Lanka is to be stalwart enough to face its future – caught between the Charybdis of China and the Scylla of a combined US-Indian desire for hegemony in our local pond.

CONVENTIONAL WISDOM: We must be diplomatic about the regional power blocs and international plate tectonics of shifting power.

DEVIL’S ADVOCATE: No – we can and must assert our sovereignty, independence, civilisation… even if it means starting all over again at the bottom of a non-aligned grouping spanning uniting ideologies, not individual and undermining nation-states. As long as we don’t end like Marshal Tito’s “former Yugoslavia” but rather Vaclav Havel’s Czech Republic.

It is these three boards that are at bottom the fundamental cause of our troubles today. It has made our MPs ‘men without bottoms’ – those with no fundamental ethos. It has made our mandarins singularly lacking in ‘logos’: the ability to think and act critically. It has made every man jack in power, from ambitious presidents to premiers tolerating moral turpitude among their supporters, spectacularly wanting for ‘ethos’. That credibility which so eludes their respective political monuments. It has made the pathetic politics of our realpolitik bereft of the ‘pathos’ that appeals to true patriots.

The men and movements and machines which base their activity on these three planks would do well to inspect them more closely if they desire a stronger stand at future exercises in the art of the possible. The polity from which they draw power to serve and run amok in the delusion of such service should also examine the undergirding of their own body politic more closely. To see if our society is so rotten at the core that it is only capable of throwing up woodworms to eat away at these boards overnight. The author of this piece has done so and it is only the gnawing away at wood rot that he hears all day long. The brush of tradition, authority, revelation, has tarred him to the soul and queered his pitch. So until the patch is fixed, the rest is silence for the nonce.

(Journalist | Editor-at-large of LMD | Writer #SpeakingTruthToPower)

Public finances, debt repayment would be paralysed from Jan 1, Mangala warns



From left: Former state minister of finance Eran Wickramaratne, former finance minister Mangala Samaraweera and former state minister of national policies and economic affairs speak to the media in Colombo on Tuesday. Photographer: Gamini Munasinghe

by Sanath Nanayakkare- 

The Executive continues its conflict with a section of the Legislative Assembly and if there is no solution to it by December 10, allocation and distribution of state finances would be paralyzed plunging the country into an economic abyss, former finance minister Mangala Samaraweera said in Colombo on Tuesday.

"If the current political impasse persists, public servants will not have the proper authority to pay out the monies due for critical areas including public sector salaries, pensions, welfare payments Samurdhi, and debt repayment leading the country to a Greece-like situation.

"All payments of government from 1st January 2019 are illegal and cannot be effected by public servants and Sri Lanka is on the brink of economic anarchy and chaos as never experienced before", he said.

Samaraweera went on to say that the cavalier and irresponsible actions starting on October 26th places Sri Lanka’s ability to meet its immediate debt obligations at risk.

"In early January 2019, we have to repay US$ 1 billion of Rajapaksa debt taken in January 2014, the repayment of which is also under the purview of parliament. The actions of 26th October have irreversibly undermined Sri Lanka’s credibility in global markets – risking our ability to service future debt", he said.

Reproduced below is the statement made by Mangala Samaraweera.

Just 9 days prior to the presentation of the 2019 budget, the Sirisena-Rajapaksa duo" ousting the legitimate and lawful prime minister and cabinet has thrown the country and citizens into an unprecedented crisis.

The Speaker having gone through all legal procedures in parliament has also declared that as per Article 48(2) of the constitution, the purported prime minister and his cabinet are illegal.

As per Article 148 of the constitution, "Parliament shall have full control over public finance." In the absence of a legitimate government, a grave situation has now arisen as there is no legal way to meet public expenditure and obligations of the state from 2019. The constitution does not provide for any alternative arrangements for public finance, even with the intervention of the executive envisaged under the limited circumstances of article 150(3) under which the President can only allocate finances for the first 3 months of a new parliament. Thus, under the current circumstances, from January 1st 2019 until a new parliament is convened, the spending power of the state ceases to exist.

As the Finance Minister, I have made allocations to ensure funding until December 31st 2018, however from January 1st 2019, the country will fall into a crisis.

A legitimate government with an adequate majority in parliament would have had the opportunity to present at least a vote on account which would have covered at least the first 3 months of the new year enabling payment of pensions, salaries, samurdhi payments, and settlement of debts. It is still not too late to reestablish the government that commands the clear majority in parliament to present a budget/vote on account to authorize expenditure from the consolidated fund from 2019.

This illegal government has no majority and are pirating the government benches through force and violence, and they cannot muster a majority to even pass a vote on account, they are forcibly preventing the lawful government from taking the critical steps to provide funding for 2019.

In any event as per Article 150 (2) of the constitution, only a legitimate finance minister can sign a warrant to release funding. As per the ruling of the Speaker on 16th November, as per article 48(2) of the constitution, the purported government, its finance minister, and cabinet stands dissolved.

As a result of the actions of the Sirisena-Rajapaksa duo, all payments of government from 1st January 2019 are illegal and cannot be effected by public servants. Some of the critical areas include public sector salaries, pensions, welfare payments including samurdhi, and all debt repayments.

Furthermore, as per the ruling by the Speaker under Article 48 (2) as the purported prime minister and cabinet are illegitimate, as per section 52(3) all ministry secretaries cease to exist and any actions taken by them are null and void and illegal. Such actions are serious violations and would be punishable under the Public Property law and other relevant legislation.

As a result of these actions, Sri Lanka is on the brink of economic anarchy and chaos as never experienced before. The cavalier and irresponsible actions of the President starting on October 26th based on personal animosities and precipitating a series of illegal acts, places at risk Sri Lanka’s ability to meet its immediate debt obligations. In early January 2019 we have to repay US$ 1 billion of Rajapaksa debt taken in January 2014, the repayment of which is also under the purview of Parliament.

Sri Lanka has hitherto never defaulted its debt obligations. The actions of 26th October have irreversibly undermined Sri Lanka’s credibility in global markets – risking our ability to service future debt as well. We are being pushed towards a state of economic collapse as we stumble on to a road of a Greece like situation.

The only way to rescue Sri Lanka from this unfortunate and unnecessary crisis is for the President to recognize the Prime Minister and the government that was in place prior to October 26th and continues to command the clear majority in parliament. It is necessary for all like-minded people, regardless of political affiliation, to come forward to save the country from an otherwise impending economic collapse, by supporting efforts to reestablish the supremacy of parliament and the constitution.

UNP has promising ‘young’ members

The millions who support the UNP do so in recognition of the values the party stands for and its proud historical achievements   


2018-11-23

In the wake of the constitutional crisis following the sudden, wrongful and unceremonious sacking of the Prime Minister and what flowed thereafter, the question posed by many is; has the UNP lost the plot again? Regardless of the answer to that question, the one question that is repeatedly asked by UNP voters is: Need the UNP be in this sorry position?  

After all, going by the party members with talent among the UNP it is easily the best equipped local political grouping to lead Sri Lanka. When the major opposition to the UNP is embroiled in discussions and arguments looking for a leader from and within one family, the UNP is oozing with untapped young talent in the form of Sajith Premadasa, Harsha De Silva, Harin Fernando,Navin Dissanyake, Eran Wickramaratne, Ruwan Wijewardene,Buddhika Pathirana, Ajith Perera, Marikkar from Kolonnawa, Mujibur Rahaman, Kavinda jayawardene, Harshana Rajakaruna and Ananda Kumarasiri among many others. None can disagree that no other political party in Sri Lanka ( Not the greatest comparison one may say) has such an array of talent. Regrettably, the ‘truth’ in the perception of the average citizen is that this talent, notwithstanding high sounding designations given to a few persons within the party, is suppressed when it comes to strategic planning of the Party at the highest levels. Instead, a coterie of people, some with little or no common touch, rule the roost and attunes the party out of step with the national mood. Bill Clinton says in his memoirs; one cannot restrain the “source of your power”. How can any politician worth his salt, forget that the source of power in a democracy is the average Voter and it is they who set the mood of a Nation?  

"The younger leaders of the Party owe this to the millions who YET place faith in the party. It is not for the writer or political commentators to suggest as to who should now lead the party"

Can’t be blind to reality   

As stated by the writer in a “wake up call” article in the aftermath of the February 2018 Local Polls: “The UNP and its allies cannot be blind to the fact that its’ share of the national vote declined to 32%. It was just 2 ½ years earlier that the UNP with its allies polled 45.6% of the vote at the General Election”. Eight months on, it appears however that the party hierarchy continues to remain blind to stark naked reality.  
The UNP having earned for itself the sobriquet of “The Grand Old Party” has under charismatic leaders built for itself the reputation of being a political force that can be relied on for consolidating Democracy, Liberal Values, Social and Economic Freedom and moreover, National Unity”  

The millions who support the UNP do so in recognition of the values the party stands for and its proud historical achievements.A force of this nature is an imperative for the functioning of a healthy democracy. If not, millions of Sri Lankans may well be deprived of a voice that has hitherto fought and warded off despotic regimes, stood for liberal thinking, Social and Economic freedom, at the worst of times  
These millions comprise, but 0.5% or even less of the so called “social elite”. The large numbers are among the middle classes, ordinary rural and urban folk; Farmers, Factory Workers and the self- employed. The entire latter group now feels let down by the party. It is however still not too late to salvage the UNP for the sake of the millions that continue to look towards it for leadership. Perhaps, there can be no better time than this unfortunate constitutional crisis for the UNP to regain its rightful place as the “GOP”; in keeping with the vision of its founders. 

This necessarily calls for radical change in the strategic thinking of the party. The young talent in the party must rise to this challenge. Say Thank You to the Old Brigade and take charge of the battles ahead. You cannot wait to be served as that may never happen.  
The younger leaders of the Party owe this to the millions who YET place faith in the party. 
It is not for the writer or political commentators to suggest as to who should now lead the party. Ask the ordinary men and women of Sri Lanka as to who it should be and the clear answer would lie there. In the name of Sri Lanka and her people, the average men and women desperately appeal to all who matter in the UNP; Get your act together NOW and move on, or be doomed. If doomed, the current leadership of the party will be cursed by generations to come. 

Economic policy-making impacted by grave political instability: Friday Forum



11/22/2018

The Friday Forum shares the despair and disgust of most Sri Lankans with recent political events in the country that have now spiraled into a serious impasse in governance. The economic, social and political repercussions of this crisis will undoubtedly cause a serious set-back to the sustained and inclusive development and reconciliation that our nation urgently needs.

While the social and political repercussions of the crisis in government are being continuously discussed in the media, Friday Forum draws attention to the economic fallout of this fiasco. Friday Forum is particularly concerned at the haphazard government policy-making on the economy, which puts the country’s economic stability and the welfare of ordinary people at risk. This situation has been further exacerbated by the anarchy which currently prevails in the country.

These risks to the economy are not only high and already manifest in the external sector, but also threaten the ordinary citizens’ efforts to maintain current standards of living. Friday Forum will not comment on the causes of these sources of instability at this point, but will attempt to point out some measures that may mitigate these risks.

But first, a few sentences about the nature and weight of the problems we face. During the five years from 2019 to 2023, this society and its agent, the government, will have to pay back foreign debt amounting to USD 4 billion in 2019 and roughly USD 5 billion in the period 2020-2023. Interest on these debts alone will cost about 5% to 6% of GDP and 15 percent of total government expenditure. As foreign debt must be paid in foreign currency, our economy needs to save those amounts from exports, after meeting needs for imports. As the government needs to buy these amounts of foreign exchange from the market for this purpose, it must save enough from government revenue. As some 80 percent of all government expenditure is already committed and the balance must go into essential capital projects, the government must have the courage to raise tax revenue and curb expenditure. These are, in fact, sacrifices that everyone in society must make, as there is no government other than the members of this society.

When burdens like this weigh on countries, they might be temporarily lightened by foreign countries and intergovernmental organisations acting in concert for that limited purpose. The absence of a legitimate and well established government that can take the initiative and act fast to handle these questions, puts our people in serious jeopardy, where the country’s economy and finances are concerned. While these issues may seem abstruse and remote from the everyday life of the ordinary man and woman, they will take on a sharper reality when food becomes scarce and jobs are lost.

When President Sirisena dismissed the government then legitimately in office on 26 October 2018, he began a process of de-stabilization of government which has lasted longer than anyone expected. There has not been a legitimate and effective government in the country for close upon a month and there is no viable solution in sight. Friday Forum calls upon the President to immediately act within the framework of the Constitution and establish a legitimate and stable government, without which our country will slide towards disaster, not only socially and politically but also economically.

A government so established must set to work immediately to seek international assistance to ease the grip of the crisis that has engulfed the country’s economy. Friday Forum sees the prospect of a government seeking immediate assistance from a group of friendly countries who can provide a grant for immediate succour. The government should immediately submit to that Group an intermediate period programme to re-schedule repayment of debt. That programme will include the re-consideration not only of the maturity pattern of debt but also the rates of interest on these loans. The repayment of even rescheduled debt will necessitate reducing consumption and production of goods and services for exports without importing more for domestic use. A government must not pretend that this society can both eat more cake and also offer more to hungry lenders, unless we grow at rates which now seem astronomically high. Government, opinion leaders, academics and others must take the public into confidence and explain clearly the choices available to us, and the rationale for the options that government chooses. To become apologists for any government will be to lose the attention of the public.

Signatories:

Mr. Priyantha Gamage

Bishop Duleep de Chickera

Prof. Arjuna Aluwihare

Dr. Geedreck Usvatte-aratchi

Dr. A.C. Visvalingam

Mr. Danesh Casie Chetty

Rev. Dr. Jayasiri Peiris

Ms. Manouri Muttetuwegama

Mr. Tissa Jayatilaka

Prof. Savitri Goonesekere

Mr. Dhammapala Wijayanandana

Ms. Shanthi Dias, Mr. Prashan de Visser

Prof. Gananath Obeyesekere, Prof. Ranjini Obeyesekere

Mr. Faiz Ur-Rahman

Dr. Upatissa Pethiyagoda

Prof. Camena Guneratne

Mr. Chandra Jayaratne

Mr. Pulasthi Hewamanna.

The Friday Forum is an informal group of concerned citizens pledged to uphold norms of democracy, good governance, rule of law, human rights, media freedom and tolerance in our pluralist society.

Fake Foreign Minister Amunugama’s Daughter’s Desperate Damage Control Attempt Further Exposes Diplomatic Snub In Maldives

logo
Following the expose by Colombo Telegraph revealing how the fake Foreign Minister was snubbed during the inauguration of President Ibrahim Solih in the Maldives last week his daughter and media moghul Varuni Fernando (nee Amunugama) has alleged on Facebook that this website was engaging in fabrication about her father’s visit. Varuni Fernando posted the images and her message below on a Facebook Page known as ‘Colombo telegraph readers” which is in no way associated with this website. However Varuni Fernando suddenly became a member of the FB group to post the following message:
Varuni Fernando And Sarath Amunugama
Colombo Telegraph! Please let this important communication space be used for verified facts not blatant lies the by those who post falsities just simply because they are jobless and want to create pain of mind to others”
Tagging a picture of Fake Foreign Minister Amunugama being greeted by President Solih Varuni Fernando posts – “A picture speaks a thousand words!!!!! Do not blatantly lie. Why would you enjoy Spreading false information???? One can only feel pity for people like you.” On her facebook she has further tagged a picture of Amunugama in conversation with former Maldivian President Nasheed.
Unfortunately for Ms Fernando these desperate efforts and so called ‘picture evidence’ further reinforces the humilation faced by the purported Foreign Minister in the Maldives as exposed by Colombo Telegraph.
The Colombo Telegraph story at no point claimed Dr Amunugama was not given any courtesy. The snub in fact was that former President Chandrika Kumaratunga who holds no official post in the current illegal regime and is well known for her anti-Sirisena-Rajapaksa positions was given pride of place at the inauguration ceremony being seated next to three former Maldivian presidents (Wahid, Nasheed, Gayoom) along with South Asia’s most powerful man, Narendra Modi, PM of India.
The self-proclaimed leader of the Sri Lankan delegation and fake Foreign Minister Sarath Amunugama and along with Faizer Mustapha and MP Namal Rajapaksa were allocated seats no where near the VVIPs at the official inauguration ceremony.
Colombo Telegraph can now additionally report that former President Kumaratunga was granted a one on one bilateral meeting an honour granted to a handful of high level dignitaries who attended the inauguration. These include PM Modi and his delegation, special envoys of the kings of Morocco and Saudi Arabia, special envoys of the PM of Japan and the President of China and the Foreign Minister of Palestine. It is inconceivable that Sri Lanka being the closest neighbour and ally of the Maldives, that the purported head of delegation did not have a one to one bilateral meeting with the new Maldives President.
Which brings us to the pathetic pictures posted by Varuni Fernando – where fake Foreign Minister had to resort to a picture taken at a reception hosted by the President of the Maldives where he greeted over 400 guests coming into the hall, as evidence of purported Minister Amunugama’s meeting with the VVIP. The Maldives President’s media unit which posted a clip of President Solih greeting his guests at the entrance of the reception for 43 minutes which included the purported Sri Lankan head of delegation. However by contrast the Maldivian president’s office gave explicit coverage via photographs and youtube video of the bilateral meeting between former President CBK and the Maldivian top leaders.
The purported Foreign Minister who in desperation resorts to a shaky photograph of a split second greeting by former Maldivian President Nasheed at the above reception sees no snub by the Maldivian side where President Kumaratunga was warmly greeted at the foot of the gangway upon her arrival in Male by Nasheed himself.

Read More