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

SRI LANKA MASS GRAVES: 230 SKELETONS FOUND AT COUNTRY’S LARGEST SITE



Sri Lanka Brief23/11/2018

Sri Lankan experts say a mass grave found earlier this year in the north-western town of Mannar has turned out to be the country’s biggest such site.

More than 230 skeletons have now been found at the grave in the former war zone, up from about 90 in August.

Human rights groups say at least 20,000 people disappeared during Sri Lanka’s long civil war which ended in 2009.

The 26-year war between troops and separatist Tamil rebels left at least 100,000 people dead.
A court ordered detailed excavations at the site – a former co-operative depot near the main bus terminus – after human remains were found by workers digging foundations for a new building earlier this year.

It is still not clear who the victims were or how they died.

“We have excavated more than 230 skeletons so far,” said Professor Raj Somadeva, a forensic archaeologist from the University of Kelaniya near Colombo who leads the team at the site.
“According to my experience this is the largest mass grave ever excavated.”

He said that apart from the human remains, the archaeologists had also found porcelain, ceramic and metal objects, in addition to some jewellery worn by the victims.

“The bones are scattered and [it’s] very difficult to trace the stature of the bodies,” Prof Somadeva told the BBC. “And some bones were missing…it’s chaotic.”

The town of Mannar is dominated by ethnic minority Tamils and community leaders says hundreds of people from the region went missing during the decades-long conflict between Sri Lankan security forces and Tamil Tiger rebels.

While Mannar town remained mostly under army control during the civil war, Tamil Tiger rebels dominated its surrounding areas and many other parts of the district. The military captured the entire district after ferocious battles which ended almost 10 years ago.

After the remains are uncovered, they are transferred to the custody of the court in Mannar, which will decide what should happen next once the excavation is complete.

A number of mass graves have been unearthed in Sri Lanka’s former war zone since the conflict ended.

The remains of 96 people were discovered in 2014 at a site in another part of Mannar – adjacent to Thiruketheeswaram, a prominent Hindu temple.

But four years on there’s still no clarity in that case either, about who was killed and by whom.
Rights groups allege that both the military and the defeated Tamil Tigers inflicted widespread civilian casualties.

But the government has always denied its forces had anything to do with civilian deaths or disappearances, and the army dismisses any suggestion that soldiers are connected with the bodies found in the mass graves in Mannar.

After years of international pressure, the government earlier this year set up an independent body, the Office of the Missing Persons (OMP), to investigate the disappearances. The OMP has provided partial funding for the excavation in Mannar.

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Sirisena and MR fail majority test again


Parliament session continues after parlimentarians supportive of MP Mahinda Rajapaksa staged a walkout yesterday - Pic by Shehan Gunasekera

  • UNF receives 121 votes to appoint 7 MPs to Committee of Selection
  • UPFA lawmakers stage walkout, boycott vote in calm P’ment 
  • UPFA member list reduced to 5, UNP also gets 5, TNA and JVP get one each
  • Dinesh rejects Speaker’s decision, says Executive decision should be accepted by P’ment
  • UNP tells UPFA to show majority, JVP insists no confidence motion valid  

By Ashwin Hemmathagama, Our Lobby Correspondent-Saturday, 24 November 2018 

logoThe United National Party (UNP), Tamil National Alliance (TNA), and Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) joined forces once again to show that parliamentarians supporting MP Mahinda Rajapaksa do not command a majority in the House when the Selection Committee membership was taken up for vote yesterday. 

As a result of the group backing Rajapaksa staging a walking out as the vote was called, their votes were not recorded. However, the UNP, TNA and JVP together with other constituent parties managed to show 121 votes. This resulted in the United People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA) being given five slots and the UNP five, as well as one position each for the TNA and the JVP in the Selection Committee.

Sessions began with Speaker Karu Jayasuriya explaining to the House the reasoning behind his decision to allocate an equal number of seats to both the UPFA and the UNP.

Unable to reach a final verdict at the party leaders’ meeting held in the morning, Speaker Jayasuriya proposed to include lawmakers Lakshman Kirella, Rauff Hakeem, Rishad Bathiudeen, Mano Ganesan and Patali Champika Ranawaka from the United National party (UNP); MP Mawei Senathiraja from the Illankai Tamil Arasu Kachchi (ITAK); and MP Vijitha Herath from the JVP following the provisions of Standing Orders 136 and 143. With the United People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA) lawmakers boycotting, the vote was taken by name using the electronic system and received 121 in favour of the appointment.

“The party leaders were unable to reach an agreement in nominating MPs to the Committee of Selection. According to the Standing Orders of Parliament, 12 MPs should be appointed with my leadership to the Committee of Selection. In the absence of an agreement between the party leaders in appointing the members to the Committee of Selection, I will seek House approval to appoint MPs on par with the provisions of Standing Orders 136 and 143,” he said, setting the stage to go for the vote and to confirm the appointment of United People’s Freedom Alliance UPFA MPs Dinesh Gunawardena, S.B. Dissanayake, Nimal Siripala de Silva, Mahinda Samarasinghe and Wimal Weerawansa. Lawmakers Thilanga Sumathipala and Udaya Gammanpila were unable to receive appointments.

Rejecting the Speaker’s move to present additional names to the Committee of Selection and reducing the UPFA nominations, UPFA MP Dinesh Gunawardena now seated on the Government benches held that the Speaker had no right to challenge a decision of the Executive President and should accept changes in the new Government.

“Every Parliament in the past allowed the political party with the highest majority to appoint the maximum number of MPs to Committees of Selection. The UPFA has the majority in this Parliament. On the other hand, the President has appointed Mahinda Rajapaksa as Prime Minister and his Government, which is now in full control of the country and its business. The party the Prime Minister represents will get the majority in the Committee of Selection. This has been the tradition. We will not accept your wrong decision highlighting that there is no government in the country,” said MP Gunawardena.

UNP MP Lakshman Kiriella who was on his feet challenged the UPFA to show its majority in the House if it wanted to establish a government and function without any hindrance from the Opposition. In response UPFA MP Bandula Gunawardane held that the Speaker was violating the Constitution.

Urging the House to accept MP Mahinda Rajapaksa and his team of lawmakers as the legitimate government to continue to act as a government, MP Gunawardena warned the UNF lawmakers and State officer to follow their command. “The Speaker should provide us the right place guaranteed in the Constitution. The Speaker is addressing the Parliament as he would a UNP meeting. We demand you act impartially,” he charged.

JVP Leader Anura Dissanayake rejected UPFA claims of manning the majority in Parliament and establishing a government. Demanding a vote, MP Dissanayake said: “As per Standing Order 114, the Speaker is bound to disregard the Government and the Opposition in appointing members to the Committee of Selection. The no-confidence motion moved and approved in Parliament on 14 November proved that there is no government. You should not allow the President to appoint prime ministers under the moonlit sky. It is the law of jungle and I propose to conduct a vote by name to decide the appointing of MPs to the Committee of Selection.”

MP Dissanayake proposed that the UPFA should bring in a no-confidence motion against the Speaker in the event they found the conduct of Speaker Karu Jayasuriya unconstitutional and in violation of Standing Orders and parliamentary traditions.

On Wednesday, the lawmakers supporting Rajapaksa presented names of seven members to the Parliament Secretary-General as nominees for the Parliamentary Selection Committee. The list included UPFA MPs Dinesh Gunawardena, S.B. Dissanayake, Nimal Siripala de Silva, Mahinda Samarasinghe, Wimal Weerawansa, Thilanga Sumathipala, and Udaya Gammanpila. However, the UNF objected the nominations, citing that the MP Mahinda Rajapaksa-led UPFA did not command the majority in the Parliament and the UNF had a proven majority of 121.

The Committee of Selection is appointed at the commencement of every session to consider the Constitution, number, functions and quorum of sectoral oversight committees and ministerial consultative committees and to report with all convenient speed their opinions thereon to Parliament, and to nominate members to serve on the 12 other important committees. The Committee of Selection consists of the Speaker as Chairman and 12 other members including the leaders of political parties or their nominees to be nominated by the Parliament at the commencement of each session.

The members to the Committee on Parliamentary Business, Committee on Standing Orders, House Committee, Committee on Ethics and Privileges, Legislative Standing Committee, Ministerial Consultative Committees, Committee on Public Accounts, Committee on Public Enterprises, Committee on Public Finance, Committee on Public Petitions, Committee on High Posts, and Backbencher Committee are appointed by the Committee of Selection in Parliament.

With the President summoning the prorogued Parliament to meet on 14 November by virtue of the powers vested in him by paragraph (3)(i) of Article 70 of the Constitution, Parliament was unable to carry out its functions in the absence of an Order Paper and the Agenda, which should have been decided by the Committee on Parliamentary Business.

The political party composition of the eighth Parliament at the commencement stood to include 106 MPs from the United National Party (UNP), 95 from the United People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA), 16 MPs from the Ilankai Tamil Arasu Kadchi (ITAK), six MPs from the People’s Liberation Front (JVP), and one member each from the Eelam People’s Democratic Party and the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress. 

Thousand Other Deps

Former Chief Justice Priyasath Dep
The epic poet Homer in 8th Century BCE defined the Goddess of Justice Themis as “the organizer of the communal affairs of humans, particularly assemblies”. The facilitation of the assembly of people and their ideological discourse, platforming their aspirations and beliefs on justice were all viewed as the divine responsibilities of Themis, the Goddess of Justice.
Homer communicated to the reader, a sense of divinity associated with justice via the Goddess of Justice. Sir Moses Finley, poetically dissected Homer’s definition of the Goddess of Justice as follows:
“Themis is untranslatable. A gift of the gods and a mark of civilized existence, sometimes it means right custom, proper procedure, social order, and sometimes merely the will of the gods with little of the idea of right”.
logoThroughout civilization, divinity has been associated with justice. The law has been interpreted as an extension of gospel. The courts of law are considered the shrines of justice. Why so? This is because few other forces on earth has the shattering effect that injustice has on the human soul. What pains man, even more than injustice is the common belief in society that the quest for justice is a futile one. Even more painful is the realization that society was correct all along. But what is it that compels us to seek justice when our dual with injustice bleeds our souls and tears up our eyes in the dark? 
I think what still ignites our quest for justice as Sri Lankan citizens is our indomitable belief in our judiciary. Although there are a few stray dogs, there remains beacons of respect for those who are not. It is easy to ride on the common rhetoric of “everything can be bought for money” and “judges are bought just like that!” belittling the system of justice in a simplistic manner. My belief is that the reality is more complex and more hopeful than that.
On Their Way Home!
In a recent controversial expose, attorney-at-law Sugandhika Fernando entered in to social dialogue about the corruption and impunity within the justice system in Sri Lanka. It attracted unprecedented response in the internet and in society. In the course of a few weeks the wave of consternation and her celebrity died down amidst insults and discrediting aimed at Fernando. I do believe that she spoke the truth; that the demons she presented were indeed demons. However, all lawyers and judges are not demons.
In her own words Eva Wanasundara was “called by Mahinda Rajapaksa on her way home to his office where she was sworn in as a judge of the Supreme Court and this may have been influenced by her association with him in Law College”.  Former Chief Justice Sarath N Silva who abused the power of his office was found engaging in sexual intercourse on his way home near the Diyawanna. In another occasion he apologized to the nation for sending Mahinda Rajapaksa scot free when he should have imprisoned Rajapaksa for his involvement in the Helping Hambantota fraud.

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‘I act in accordance with the Constitution’

Saturday, November 24, 2018

President Maithripala Sirisena told the Commonwealth Secretary General, Baroness Patricia Scotland that he had acted in accordance with the Constitution of Sri Lanka and would continue to stand for democratic practices.

In a telephone conversation with Baroness Patricia Scotland, he explained that he had very clearly asked the Speaker of Parliament to follow the Parliamentary Standing Orders and conventions and take any vote on a No Confidence Motion using the electronic voting system or by name.

Baroness Patricia said that the Commonwealth values Sri Lanka’s adherence to democracy as one of the oldest democracies in Asia and as a long-standing member of the Commonwealth.

She assured that the Commonwealth would continue to work in close cooperation with Sri Lanka. She expressed confidence that Sri Lanka would solve the current political crisis amicably.

Speaker dares Govt. to move NCM against him

... asserts solution possible following Dec 7 SC ruling


article_image

UNP leader Ranil Wickremesinghe on the phone as MP Ravi Karunanayake looks on. MP Lakshman Kiriella is seated near Wickremesinghe.

by Shamindra Ferdinando- 

Speaker Karu Jayasuriya yesterday challenged the government to bring in a no-confidence motion (NCM) against him if it believed he was not suitable to function as the Speaker.

Reiterating his commitment to upholding the stand taken by 122 lawmakers from four political parties that the incumbent administration wasn’t acceptable to them under any circumstances, Speaker Jayasuriya pointed out that he could be removed with a simple majority.

Speaker Jayasuriya said so at a party leaders’ meeting held before Parliament met at 10.30 am. Previous sittings were held last Monday (Nov 19).

Jayasuriya, who contested the Gampaha District at the last parliamentary polls in August 2015, told top government representatives that he would be really happy if the government at least could prove its majority in parliament by moving an NCM against him.

He said there wouldn’t be any point in causing turmoil both in and outside parliament. The Speaker was referring to week-long disturbances in parliament since the House reconvened on Nov. 14 after the Supreme Court temporarily suspended the dissolution of parliament pending ruling on the matter on Dec 07.

At the onset of the meeting, Speaker Jayasuriya requested representatives of political parties to conduct the proceedings in an orderly manner though they represented different views.

Referring to a meeting he had with President Maithripala Sirisena on Oct 27, Speaker told the gathering that he strongly believed the government should show its majority in parliament and it would be the responsibility of the new administration to do so.

The Speaker said that the government would get another opportunity to prove its majority in parliament next Thursday (Nov 29).

A spokesperson for the Speaker’s Office said that the party leaders had not been able to reach a consensus on the appointment of a 12-member House Selection Committee (HSC).

In the absence of a consensus, Speaker Jayasuriya declared that he would make appointments in terms of the Standing Orders 136/143. Accordingly, he allocated seven slots to the group comprising 122 MPs whereas the UPFA received five slots.

At the conclusion of the meeting, the Speaker said that he believed a solution could be found after the Dec 7 SC ruling.

Of the seven slots allocated to the UNP-led Opposition, the Speaker assigned a position each to the UNP (Lakshman Kiriella), the SLMC (Rauff Hakeem), the All Ceylon Makkal Congress (Rishad Bathiudeen), the Democratic People’s Front (Mano Ganesan), the Jathika Hela Urumaya (Patali Champika Ranawaka), the Tamil National Alliance (Mavai Senathirajah) and the JVP (Vijitha Herath).

Speaker Jayasuriya accepted five out of seven names proposed by the government leaving out Pivithuru Hela Urumaya (Udaya Gammanpila) and the UPFA (Tilanga Sumathipala). The following members were accommodated: Dinesh Gunawardena, Wimal Weerawansa, S. B. Dissanayake, Nimal Siripala de Silva and Mahinda Samarasinghe.

The HSC is tasked with naming members to all other parliamentary committees.

Political sources told The Island that the UNP and its allies would continue on the basis the parliamentary group opposed to the Sirisena-Rajapaksa government comprised 122 lawmakers. Sources said that the TNA, JVP, ACMC and the DPF had remained solidly with the UNP.

Of the UNP’s partners, only the TNA suffered a defection when one of its MPs crossed over  to the government.

Who is more neoliberal? Mahinda or Ranil?


Former President Mahinda Rajapaksa and UNP Leader Ranil Wickremesinghe
– Pic by Shehan Gunasekara
logoFriday, 23 November 2018

Former President and current Member of Parliament Mahinda Rajapaksa has undertaken his second great humanitarian rescue effort. This time, he has come forward at the invitation of President Maithripala Sirisena to retrieve and restore the national economy, which according to him was inexorably hurtling to disaster through the neoliberal economic policies of Ranil Wickremesinghe.

Bismarck famously said that a statesman “must wait until he hears the steps of God sounding through events, then leap up and grasp the hem of his garment”.

In this instance, it is doubtful that our great war-winning hero has heard the steps of God and grasped the hem of his garment. It is more likely that he heard the gargles of a ‘Gamarala’ and grasped the ‘Gamarala’s proverbial amuday’.

Just as imperialist comprador detractors attempted to diminish the dazzle of his earlier epic endeavour as the product of a ‘war without witnesses’, the same lot accuse him of practicing democracy without 113 ‘demos’ or a legitimate mandate.

In short, our great war-winning redeemer is now accused of hijacking our democracy – conduct that would have been the first option of a Bin Laden or a Baghdadi.
Ranil’s neoliberal flicker, Mahinda’s promised patriotic nationalist economic glitter
This essay is not about the current conundrum in Parliament.

It is about Ranil’s neoliberal flicker and Mahinda’s promised patriotic nationalist economic glitter. More specifically this essay attempts to contextualise the post-Marxist mumbo jumbo of the two false prophets Dr. Dayan Jayatilleka and comrade Vasudeva Nanayakkara in the naked power grab under the fictitious notion of preventing a descent in to a neoliberal hell.

The most immediate provocation for this missive is Dayan’s chicken-livered cheek in identifying the Lipton circus pro-democracy protestors as representing the “puppet, parasitic comprador or intermediaries between imperialism and the nation”.

The neoliberal label freely bandied about and the supposed comprador origins of the protestors against erosion of democratic space is a deliberate despicable distortion of Marxist class analysis by the two circus clowns or bozos – Dayan and Vasu – in the ‘Rajapaksa Royalisation’ circus aimed to seduce the progressive thinking class.

There is no doubt that Ranil Wickremesinghe and his crony clique are ardent followers of what is known as the ‘Washington Consensus’. But did they embark on a neoliberal economic agenda in the last three years?

What did they do, that is radically different from what Mahinda and P.B. Jayasundera did since 2005?  Why is the business community not so anxious about our dicey democracy? Why does Professor Rajiva Wijesinha appearing on Al Jazeera claim quite sanguinely that the business community is elated that Mahinda is back in saddle?

Why did the tycoons who appeared at the ‘Fireside Chat’ at the Hilton complain of Ranil’s lack of direction and were consciously nostalgic of Mahinda’s macho economics that promised them a ‘Shangri-La’?

Dayan and Vasudeva epitomise the adage that politics is the worship of jackals by jackasses. Both excel in mouthing Marxian superfluity to assume a fraudulent moral superiority dismissing opponents simply by labelling them as blind reactionaries or moral lepers.
Engineered prosperity and growth leaps under Mahinda Rajapaksa 
We must not forget the engineered prosperity and growth leaps under Mahinda Rajapaksa at the wheel driving the economy.
Under his watch the comprador bourgeoisie formed the top layer of the bourgeois class. A tycoon who gathered his initial seed capital by running casinos served as a ministry secretary and did quite a good job at it.

Buccaneer stock market operators amassed massive wealth worshipping the god Mammon. A predatory class of the nouveau riche and parasitic upstarts moved into mass communication and mind manipulation.

Some of them were so successful nationally, they readjusted their periscopes to look globally. They ventured in to non-productive but profitable sectors – trade, banking and services. Driven only by the logic of profit they moved their capital from one field to another. They excelled not on the productive but in the speculative.

The ‘underground’ economy of the war profiteers acquired colonial era Scottish agency houses. They have taken great ‘liberties’, cashing in on the urbanisation boom. They have thrived on identifying and exploiting ‘holes in the law’. That they found a willing proponent and booster in Malik Samarawickrama is another story for another day.

We are in the second decade of the 21st Century. In the age of exponential advances in technology, it is obvious that there are major changes in the class structure, but not in the direction that half-baked or power pursuing fraudster post-Marxists of Dayan and Vasu types point to.

Invention of the microchip did not reduce the relevance of Marxist class analysis. On the contrary it fortified the essence of Marxist class conflict.

Technology has reinforced class differences and class exploitation and the nature and conditions of the exploited and exploiter classes have drastically changed.

Just look around. There are more temporary wage workers today than was the case in 2005 when the great redeemer Mahinda Rajapaksa took over the presidency.

Neoliberal or not Mahinda Rajapaksa as the all-powerful Executive President cum Finance Minister designed and drove a ‘bandit economy’. While doing so, he set up a ‘satellite political elite’ in parallel, to feed the bandit economy and also feed on the ‘bandit economy’.

Dr. Dayan Jayatilleka with deliberate dishonesty locates the comprador bourgeoisie at the Lipton Circus where thousands thronged to demand democratic governance. If Dayan or Vasudeva wish to know what real neoliberalism is, I can tell them. Neoliberalism is unmediated ruling class state power. That is what Nivard Cabraal and Nalaka Godahewa wish to reinstall with Gotabaya’s Viyath Maga, the coalition of professionals, entrepreneurs and academics.
Principal determinants of economy and regime behaviour 2005-2015
Let us do a retrospective assessment of the principal determinants of the economy and the regime behaviour in the period 2005-2015.

It was classic neoliberal economics or untrammelled exploitative market economics directed by rigid centralised State control. It was unobtrusively but quite patently linked to the international banks to implement debt payments and to export sectors to earn foreign exchange. The Central Bank under Nivard Cabraal hired the public relations agencies in Washington. The social explosion in Rathupaswala was mercilessly suppressed in the interest of the tycoon making surgical gloves for export.

The economic regime and the political regime under Mahinda Rajapaksa were carefully compartmentalised. The ‘Samurdhi’ sop was left in the avaricious care of either S.B. Dissanayake or an equally voracious political beast. A repressive State had a vertical tie to the citizens who were in a real sense subjects kept in place with the efficient assistance of the saffron clerical mafia.

In the 21st Century the genius of Mahinda Rajapaksa took us to 19th century methods of labour exploitation. It was Mahinda Rajapaksa who allowed the setting up of the SAITM private medical college.

Imports of luxury goods for the urban middle class was surely and squarely based on the earnings remitted by “exported” labour of the poor.

If Dr. Dayan and comrade Vasudeva really wish to discover the nexus between Mahinda’s economics and neoliberal economics they should focus on the impoverishment of the interiors that made Rizana seek employment in Bin Salman’s murderous kingdom at the age of 14 years where her neck was severed purely because her burden was too heavy for her frail limbs.

It is Mahinda’s neoliberal economics that impoverished the already-parched interiors uprooting the peasantry and plantation workers to crowd in to the cities and to overseas slave markets.

In the decade of the Mahinda presidency approximately 2.3 million or more than 10% of the population have sought employment beyond our shores.

Remittances of the “exported labour” and borrowings from China financed neo-liberal infrastructure projects to promote the dependent economy and reign of apparel exports and tourist businesses that acquired exotic labels such as citrus and cinnamon.

It was indeed peppery neoliberal progress where super highways were forbidden for three wheelers. Only the supper classes were assured of speedy commuting.

J.R. Jayewardene introduced free market economics in order to dismantle the welfare state. When Premadasa introduced Jansaviya it was a temporary arrangement to sustain a social structure that was under the threat of genuine social discontent. Chandrika promised a free market with a human face. Human folly over took the human face.

Mahinda won the war. Then he decided to build a port city, a port and an airport. Why?
Unmistakable imperative of neoliberal globalisation
The idea of the three signature projects of Mahinda Rajapaksa is the unmistakable imperative of neoliberal globalisation. It serves the essentially neoliberal purpose of globalisation. The three projects are intended to integrate the global markets with elite exporters and medium and small compradores – the types who took part in the Hilton ‘Fireside Chat’ – importers of electronic goods, tourist hoteliers tied to multinational hotels and resorts and other essentially service-oriented enterprises relying on human resources retained to serve the new age of artificial intelligence and applications.

In these new ventures, the chain of exploitation is more circuitous, but it still is located ultimately in the capital-labour relations.

I am not passing judgement on these economic initiatives. I just want to persuade comrade Vasudeva and Dr. Dayan Jayatilleka to desist from their hum buggery in these troubled times when Mahinda Rajapaksa has difficulty in counting from a single digit to three digits making up 113.

There is no doubt that there is a legitimate demand to recreate the “nation”, a “national market”, and a “national production process” in the dying days of neoliberal economics.

Joseph Stiglitz, Paul Krugman are Nobel laureates who have eloquently testified to what needs to be done to alleviate the discontent of neoliberal globalisation.

Our problems are not peculiar to us alone. The world is discovering alternatives to neoliberal economics that went in to orbit after the collapse of the Soviet Union. The new czar in Russia has discovered crony oligarchic economics. Our envoy in Moscow is mesmerised. Good luck to him.

Marxist Economist Mary Mellor has produced a treatise on the impact of debt on democracy and the fallacies inherent in the demand for austerity to sustain the myth of paper money.

Economist Marianna Mazzucato in her path breaking treatise ‘The Value of Everything’ has exposed the wicked cunning embedded in the demand for privatisation of socially-owned enterprises.

Comrade Vasudeva and Rhetorician Dayan cannot be trusted with a genuine Marxist class analysis because their purpose now is to re-enact a ‘Brumaire coup’ like that in 1851 in France that restored the degenerate nephew of Napoleon to the French throne.
What do we need today?
What do we need today? Our age demands substantial, purposeful, powerful public investment and a regulatory state that guarantees liveable social conditions.

Class analysis needs to be adapted to the rule of unmediated capital in an unregulated labour market that is necessarily linked to the global market. We cannot put the clock back.

The reformist redistributive politics of the SLFP of T.B. Ilangaratne in the seventies have been replaced by neo-liberal policies after 1978. Those policies over four decades have concentrated income and power at the top. Meanwhile technological progress has left us behind. The Mahanayakes have smart phones but have no idea of what’s up with WhatsApp.

Technology has exacerbated class differences, not abolished them. The microchip has not eliminated the working class. As sensible economists with a social conscience have pointed out modern trends have “shifted the sites of activity and the mode of producing within the continuing process of exploitation.”

There is a new class structure geared to the greed of the new technologies. It has spawned new and more controlling forms of exploitation.

Inevitable automation has contributed to an increased tempo in the work place. CCTV cameras increase worker surveillance and reduces the administrative staff. “Quality work circles” is the name of the game. Workers pressure workers. It increases self-exploitation without increases either in pay or power.

Computers allow for agribusiness to control the costs and volume of pesticides to be sprayed by reducing the number of low paid seasonal workers who spray the pesticide in larger areas, breathing its poison.

International networks have created a new breed of ‘merchandisers’ whose information networks are linked to air-conditioned sweat shops producing apparel, shoes and household goods.

It is not Ranil’s liberal economics that has caused our current and present grief.

Our liberties are under imminent threat. The Comprador class wants Mahinda to offer autocratic stability – the sine qua non for speculative investment in the bubble of the ‘feel good’ idea.

The noise on the streets is not to the liking of investors. I salute Mahinda Rajapaksa. He has got comrades Dayan and Vasu by their cojones.

Said Karl Marx: “Men make their own history, but they do not make it as they please.”

Checks and balances: Lanka’s Magna Carta moment

Democracy promotion: A civil activist holds up a placard during a demonstration in Colombo amid an ongoing political crisis. AFP


 2018-11-23

n a positive note, the current political crisis in Sri Lanka can be the country’s Magna Carta moment to chart a course to the pinnacle of democracy.
The developments since President Maithripala Sirisena on October 26 sacked Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe have placed Sri Lanka on a constitutional cliff. But, if the power- greedy politicians do not drag the country into an autocratic abyss, the crisis could be a blessing in disguise to lead the country towards a democratic haven where the doctrine of separation of powers will be held supreme to remind politicians that the people’s mandate has to be exercised with responsibility. The power exercised by elected representatives is not their ancestral property to be abused at will but is a trust subjected to checks and balances and needs to be held sacred.

Those who abuse or betray the people’s mandate are no better than monarchs who, only a few centuries ago, taking cover behind what they called a divine right to rule, oppressed the people and amassed wealth by exploiting them. In this age of post-post enlightenment, politics is not for those who do not care a damn about democracy in their quest to establish autocracy though they make use of democratic instruments such as franchise and elections. 
While most Sri Lankans are shocked by the shenanigans being unravelled in the political front, the happenings in the United States, however horrendous Donald Trump’s hubris-driven governance is, make that country a shining example in constitutional democracy.  The Democratic Party’s victory at this month’s mid-term elections to the House of Representatives has been hailed as a people’s mandate to strengthen the checks and balances to control a maverick president before he could do more harm to the United States and the rest of the world. 

With the Democrats now controlling the House and chairing the Oversight Committee, the Trump administration has now been well and truly checked. The Democratic Party-controlled House can now summon witnesses, especially with regard to the Robert Mueller investigations into allegations that Trump campaign officials had any links to Russia’s interference in the 2016 US election. For the past two years, Trump had survived scrutiny because both the Senate and the House of Representatives were under Republican control. But from January, Trump will not find it easy to beat around the bush. 
To check the unbridled power of the executive president, especially when his party controls both houses of Congress, the mid-term elections, as provided for in the US Constitution, restore the balance of power by empowering the legislature to check the president, in keeping with the doctrine of separation of powers. 
In another recent incident that proved how checks and balances worked in the US through the judiciary, a federal judge ruled that CNN reporter Jim Acosta’s “First Amendment rights overruled the White House’s right to have orderly news conferences.” The ruling followed CNN journalist’s petition challenging Trump’s executive order to withdraw his media credentials to cover White House events.

"With the Democrats now controlling the House and chairing the Oversight Committee, the Trump administration has now been well and truly checked"

This week, there was another blow to Trump from the judiciary. A federal judge on Tuesday temporarily prevented the Trump administration from denying asylum to migrants who crossed the border illegally. The court in its interim order ruled that the president violated a “clear command” from Congress to allow the migrants to apply for asylum. In another move that underlines the doctrine of separation of powers, this week, Congress members, including Senators from the President’s Republican Party, challenged Trump’s statement defending Saudi Arabia over the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi. They sent a letter to the White House on Tuesday, urging Trump to officially trigger an investigation into whether Sauid Arabia’s crown prince ordered the assassination.

Sri Lankan politicians and their blind supporters would do well to look at how the US system works and how it upholds the balance vis-à-vis the separation of powers principles as expounded by French political philosopher Montasqueiu.  In his great work, “Spirit of the Laws,” which inspired the the Rights of Man declaration, the French revolution’s gift to mankind, Montesqueiu said that in any form of democratic governance, the inclusion of the separation of powers is a sine qua non.
The Constitution of the United States was made based on the Montasqueiu’s model. Under this model, the political authority of the state is divided into legislative, executive and judicial powers. Montesqueiu asserted that, to most effectively promote liberty, these three powers must be separate and must act independently so that one arm of government can check the excesses of another.  Separation of powers also refers to the division of government responsibilities into distinct branches to limit any one branch from exercising the core functions of another.  The intent is to prevent the concentration of power  in one arm of government and provide for checks and balances.

It goes without saying that Sri Lanka’s 1978 Republican Constitution does not contain proper checks and balances. The framers of the 1978 Constitution justified the overconcentration of powers in the executive presidency on the grounds that it would ensure poltical stability which in turn would ensure rapid economic growth.  However, without effective checks and balances in the Constitution, we saw how the powers vested in the executive presidency turned even politicians with democratic credentials into unchecked autocrats or even out and out dictators. Some even acted like virtual monarchs.  Sri Lanka became a political lab for students researching on the validity of Lord Acton’s famous statement that power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely. 

In advanced democracies like the United States, a study of amendments shows they have been made to strengthen democracy and shut loopholes for the abuse of power. But in Sri Lanka, the history of constitutional amendments shows they have been made largely to make the president and the ruling party more powerful. 
Of the 19 amendments made to the 1978 Constitution so far, eight could be identified as being politically motivated ones. They included the Second Amendment also known as the infamous Rajadurai Amendment and the preposterous 18th Amendment which can easily be labelled as the Rajapaksa era democracy killer, for it repealed the democracy-enhancing  17th Amendement.  

"The Constitution of the United States was made based on the Montasqueiu’s model. Under this model, the political authority of the state is divided into legislative, executive and judicial powers"

It was depressing to note the manner in which the so-called Joint Opposition MPs expressed their opposition to many of the 19th Amendment’s pro-democracy clauses when it was being debated in Parliament in 2015. Instead of strengthening it, they extended their support for the amendement on condition that some clauses -- for instance, as this column pointed out recently, the anti-defection provision -- were withdrawn. 
Yet, today at a time when constitutional governance has been undermined by what is being described as unlawful usurpation of state power by a cabal backed by the executive president, democracy activists heave a sigh of relief that at least some checks and balances introduced through the 19th Amendement have survived, especially the provisions to set up the Constitutional Council and the independent commissions on police, public service, the judiciary and elections.  This became evident in the Independent Police Commisison’s decision to cancel the Police Chief’s directive this week to transfer an inspector probing several high profile cases linked to the Rajapaksa regime. 

Yes, checks and balances involving the executive, the legislature and the judiciary -- this country needs more of them to prevent abuse of power and protect democracy. The county is on a cliff. It can fall into a dark abyss or saved by the nobel intentions of those who recognise checks and balances.

On The Dimensions Of Colombo-Phobia

Uditha Devapriya
logoA friend of mine, who suggested on Facebook that democracy touting Colombo 7 liberals have been calling Maithripala Sirisena a gamarala and a gramasevaka, got the following reply from an irate Colombo citizen: “Those insults came from the SLFP when he contested.” This same friend, when he suggested that “Colombo 7 wants democracy but not elections”, got an even pithier response: “Aren’t they Sri Lankan citizens too?” To which the friend retorted: “Supposedly.”
Both sides have a point. Colombo, specifically Colombo 7, hasn’t exactly been quiet about its preferred political outcomes when it comes to its rhetoric about democracy and good governance. On the other hand, Pamankada is as much a part of this country as Alimankada and for this reason, dishing the blame for the country’s problems to a specific suburb is as self-defeating as claiming that what this country needs is a leader from Cinnamon Gardens and Colpetty.
When Malinda Seneviratne once suggested that residents of these places would be perfectly happy to secede from the rest of the country and install the Queen as their head of state, he was indulging in caricature. Many of those who bash Colombo today, however, are not indulging in that sort of caricature. They are indulging in invective. The anger of these bashers, in that sense, is more complicated.
At one level it’s a reaction against the simplifications many of those from Colombo tout. It is true that Sirisena was branded as a gamarala and godaya and gramasevaka negatively by the SLFP (before he won the 2015 election), but as commentators like Seneviratne have observed, long before Sirisena thought of defecting, those same Colombo democracy-loving good governance-fetishising citizens minced no words in their insults against Mahinda Rajapaksa over the latter’s rural roots.
Sure, it’s hard to say whether those insults were motivated by a sustained antipathy from their end towards the non English speaking majority, but it’s not hard to say that they were provoked in part at least by anger at seeing an “outsider” calling the shots in their part of the world. That the UNP, the preferred party, scrounged up the highest number of votes (101,920) and seats (24) FROM THE WHOLE COUNTRY at the 2011 Local Government election in Colombo, DESPITE the Urban Development Authority’s unparalleled beautification drive (spearheaded by Gotabaya Rajapaksa), confirmed just where this milieu’s loyalties were. They also confirmed what Rosy Senanayake once crassly remarked during her campaign as the UNP’s candidate for Mayor of the city: that Colombo was the heart of the Party. “Is Buttala its buttocks then?” Malinda asked. Tongue-in-cheek, of course.
Given these facts, equating Colombo with everything anti-Rajapaksa and anti-Sirisena and equating everything anti-Rajapaksa and anti-Sirisena with everything anti-rural and anti-outstation is not the sign of political reductionism some cut it out to be. On the other hand, that this means a vast majority of Colombo residents are opposed to those outstation areas is a hasty conclusion to jump to. If at all, it betrays the critics’ inability to see beyond simplistic binaries, since in their discourse, Colombo is “bad” and outside-Colombo is “good.” (If there’s a single statistic proving this dichotomy beyond a shadow of a doubt, I am yet to come across it.)
Let’s get some perspective here. What is Colombo? It is a city spanning an area of 37 square kilometres extending from the four storey households of Cinnamon Gardens to the two roomed apartments of Pamankada. It begins just after Kohuwela, Nugegoda, and Dehiwela in the south and ends in Mattakkuliya up north. It houses those who attend Colombo International and reside in Ward Place as well as those who attend Royal College and reside in the shanties of Thimbirigasyaya.
The national majority (Sinhalese and Buddhist) make up less than 50 percent of the population, while the figures for Tamils, Muslims, and other minorities exceed their corresponding national percentages. Like most capital cities, it drains people from the rest of the country, provoking a massive rural-urban exodus. The population density, the highest in Sri Lanka (more than 50,000 per square mile), which this exodus serves to compound, makes strange bedfellows out of racial diversity and social disparity: an engineer can expect an opening monthly salary of Rs. 45,000 living in an annexe with a monthly rent of Rs. 15,000, while the driver of the Uber you just hailed sleeps in his cab parked next to a kiosk every night. It is home to both opulence and poverty, both amity and bigotry. In short, it is a world inhabited, and shared, by two cultures.

Read More


Fri, Nov 23, 2018, 11:52 pm SL Time, ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka.


Rajapaksa
Lankapage Logo

Nov 23, Colombo: Sri Lanka's parliamentarians opposing the de facto government have challenged in court the authority of the Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa appointed by President Maithripala Sirisena after sacking incumbent Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe last month.

As many as 122 Members of Parliament in the opposition on Friday have filed a Writ of Quo Warranto in the Court of Appeal of challenging Mahinda Rajapaksa on what authority he continues to hold the office of Prime Minister after a no confidence motion had been passed in Parliament against him.

The case is likely to be heard early next week, legal sources told The Hindu.

The opposition of 122 members in 225-legislature has voted out Prime Minister Rajapaksa and his purported government twice earlier and for the third time today. However, his supporters have refused to accept the rejection saying that the votes were not taken according to the "proper parliamentary procedures"

However, the Speaker ruled that a majority in the House had voted against Mr. Rajapaksa in a motion that adhered to the rule book.


The Speaker�s declaration was subsequently published in the Hansard (official transcripts of parliamentary proceedings) and is likely to be produced as evidence in the case, The Hindu said.

Govt. members walk out as 120 lawmakers back Speaker’s move 


article_image
Minister Wimal Weerawansa confers with Ministers S.B.Dissanayake and Dinesh Gunawardena before government
members walked out of the chamber.


By Ajith Alahakoon and Akitha Perera-November 23, 2018, 11:22 pm

One hundred and twenty Opposition MPs yesterday voted in favour of the list of names put forward by Speaker Karu Jayasuriya for the special House Selection Committee, despite opposition from the ruling party.

Electronic voting system was used.

Thereafter, Leader of the House and Joint Opposition leader Dinesh Gunawardena (MEP) walked out of the parliament with other ruling party members, claiming they would not recognise a Selection Committee which did not have a majority representation from the government. He said the government refused to recognise Karu Jayasuriya as the Speaker from the Opposition.

Gunawardena said the government members didn’t recognise Parliament acting against the country’s Constitution.

Prior to Parliament meeting at 10.30 am, the Parliamentary committee of the ruling party and the UNP met in two separate committee rooms followed by the partly leaders meeting chaired by Speaker Karu Jayasuriya at the Speaker’s Office.

Speaker made the announcement about the appointment of the select committee.

Speaker: As per standing orders, I hereby announce the names of MPs who will be included in the select committee.

UPFA: Dinesh Gunawardena, S.B. Dissanayake, Nimal Siripala de Silva, Mahinda Samarasinghe and Wimal Weerawansa.

UNP: Lakshman Kiriella, Rauff Hakeem, Rishad Bathiudeen, Mano Ganesan and Patali Champika Ranawaka, Vijitha Herath (JVP) and Mavai Senathirajah of TNA.

Leader of the House Dinesh Gunawardena said the government had been constitutionally appointed Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa by the President. "The Leader of the House and Chief Government Whip are from our party.

"We move forward with Mahinda Rajapaksa as Prime Minister attending to the day to day issues (amidst jeering for the Opposition).

"Whether the ruling party enjoys a majority or not a higher representation is given to the ruling party in committees.

"We don’t accept the decision made by Speaker.

"We requested the representation of seven members of our party on a committee of 12, as according to the tradition the majority slots are given to the ruling party. You have acted in violation of the right of the government in Parliament and we condemn the unconstitutional decision of yours. We reject your action of depriving us of the number of MPs of the ruling party represented in the select committee.

"We are not in agreement with the Speaker’s decision.

"We don’t accept a Speaker who is subservient to the UNP and working against Parliamentary traditions. (jeers from the Opposition).

 Bandura Gunawardena: It is wrong for you to continue with Parliamentary proceedings whilst challenging the constitution.

Anura Kumara Dissanayake: According to Standing Orders, when a select committee is formed it is not considered whether the members represented are from the Opposition or the Ruling Party.

"It is very clear that there is no government since November 15. For this select committee, a vote should be taken naming the MPs. If Speaker has violated the constitution, Parliament has the authority to take action against him. A no-confidence motion can be brought against the Speaker and we will ask for a voice vote.

Wimal Weerawansa: Though UNPs organiser Anura Kumara Dissanayake says a no-confidence motion has been passed. No voice vote can be taken for a no-confidence motion. The Speaker has accepted two financial bills. According to the Constitution, only a Minister could submit a financial bill.

"This Parliament is run according to the whims and fancies of Ranil Wickremesinghe. We don’t accept you as Speaker and we will leave parliament. At this juncture all ruling party MPs leave the house."

(Opposition MPs jeer).

Ajith P. Perera: The list of names presented by the Speaker for the select committee is constitutional and hence a vote should be taken.

At this juncture all ruling party seats were empty. As there was no room on the opposition benches, seven UNP MPs occupying back benches on the ruling party side remained there.

Speaker: Voice vote will be taken (the bell rings calling MPs).

Lakshman Kiriella to Speaker: I request you to allow MPs to cast their vote standing so that the entire country can see who has the majority.

Speaker: Is the house in agreement?

The house shows ascent

Speaker: The electronic system of voting is seen by the whole world. Let’s follow this system without wasting time.

Parliament sittings were postponed with the Speaker announcing that Parliament would meet again at 1.00 p.m. on November 27 and 10.30 a.m. on 29.

Thereafter Vijitha Hearth made the proposal for the adjournment debate.

JVP and minorities: Towards a third way


Although the traditional vote banks of the two contending factions, the UNP and SLFP cut across communal and religious boundaries, they lack the sincerity and honesty to treat all communities equally. This is where JVP can rise to fill the vacuum – Pic by Shehan Gunasekara

logoThursday, 22 November 2018 

As Sri Lanka moves toward a political show down between the UNP and SLFP/SLPP traditional political rivals, there is a third force with great potential strength emerging as a decider in any final outcome, provided that force remains united.

By this I refer to the combined strength of JVP, TNA and SLMC/ACPC parties. There is certainly no common program or policy that brings them together at the moment, but the current constitutional crisis that has derailed the functioning of democracy in the country, and the role these three have played so far in preventing the realisation of a constitutional coup engineered by an erratic president, must have made them realise that in their unity lies the survival of democracy, justice and peace and prosperity of this paradise island. It is worth exploring the possibilities for a closer alliance among these three groups and provide a third alternative for a beleaguered electoral public.

A common economic program must be worked out that would provide a solid foundation to such an alliance. Some lessons from the past can become useful in designing such a program. The tradition of cooperative movement is still not dead among the Jaffna farmers. The cooperative movement can be revived and reintroduced on national level as a means of not only bringing together the toilers of this country but also adding a human face to the current predatory market economy. The tradition of market gardening and cottage industries in the Jaffna peninsula and peasant farming handicraft industries in Sinhalese villages can be linked through the cooperative movement.

Also, the linguistic link between the Tamils and Muslims must be strengthened further but without its religious parochialism. The Muslims and Hindus should work hard to move away from their foreign injected religious zealotry. If this can be achieved there can be common ground between the two communities for some form of political devolution, particularly in the Eastern Province.

The JVP of today is not the JVP of 1970s. It has grown out of its initial revolutionary political delinquency and evolved into a matured national democratic political party looking for support across all ethnic and religious communities. It is essentially patriotic in outlook but pragmatic in approach.

Although the JVP’s vote bank is based chiefly in the Sinhalese electorates, it is trying hard and with some success, to reach out to the Tamil and Muslim voters also. With a manifesto that prioritises solutions to minority grievances and the nation’s economic woes JVP could present an alternative platform attractive enough for disgruntled Tamil and Muslim voters who have so far seen no tangible benefits from backing their ethnic parties. Obviously, there are enough hurdles to overcome.

First of all, TNA and its Tamil rivals, including Wigneswaran’s yet to be formalised new party, have to accept the reality and realise that bargaining with either of the two main Sinhalese dominated parties without the support of Muslims and a critical Sinhalese mass is not going to yield them any substantial outcome for their demands. The international pressure they hope for is a mirage. They can forget about India ever coming to their assistance in time of crisis.

Likewise, Muslims also must realise that both SLMC under Hakeem and ACPC under Bathiudeen are only a coterie of self-motivated individuals conveniently operating as political parties without any coherent philosophy or program. Because these two groups are primarily Muslim focused they lack a national vision and their leaders rarely express their parties’ views on national issues. Their only program so far seems to be winning maximum personal benefits from the ruling power. In fact at the last elections only one from the two groups, the MP from Eravur, contested under SLMC ticket and won. All others entered the Parliament either through the UNP or through backdoor.

Their informal alliance with the Yahapalana Government could not protect the Muslim community from recurring episodes of racially-motivated violence. It only goes to prove that the strategy of party-hopping by Muslim MPs in return for personal favours imperils the life and survival of ordinary Muslims, particularly in the current environment of simmering ethno-nationalism.

This being the case both minorities need a critical quantum of Sinhalese voice that speaks for everyone irrespective of language, religious or ethnic differences. The two national parties have developed the art of addressing the Sinhalese and Tamil audiences with forked tongue. What they say to the Sinhalese is not what they say to the Tamils and Muslims. This is why the minorities need a Sinhalese voice that tells their side of the story to the Sinhalese masses also.

An attempt to do this was undertaken by the leftists in the 1950s and 1960s and particularly by the Lanka Sama Samajists. But Tamils and Muslims never supported them. While the former chose to go behind their own ethnic parties, the latter alienated the Tamils and alternated between UNP and SLFP in search of preferential treatment. Both have reached a dead end at the moment. Time has come to rethink their strategies.

Although the traditional vote banks of the two contending factions, the UNP and SLFP cut across communal and religious boundaries, they lack the sincerity and honesty to treat all communities equally. This is where JVP can rise to fill the vacuum.

Unlike the leftists of yesteryear, today’s JVP has a rural Sinhalese Buddhist base. The voice that speaks on behalf of all Sri Lankans including the minorities from such a base has a greater chance of receiving acceptance than the one that comes from an urban milieu. If the minorities can realise this fact and forge a closer alliance with the JVP, their prospects for a peaceful and prosperous future would look promising.

The strength of that informal but formidable alliance has already been demonstrated in the current constitutional drama. A formal coalition among them may lead to a Third Way in Sri Lanka’s hackneyed bi-party politics.

(The writer is attached to the School of Business and Governance, Murdoch University, Western Australia.)