The Crisis in Sri Lanka - Kanishka Goonewardena
The Crisis in Sri Lanka - Kanishka Goonewardena
The Crisis in Sri Lanka - Kanishka Goonewardena
GOONEWARDENA
Mahinda Rajapaksa speaks to the media on November 11, 2018 in Colombo, Sri
Lanka. Paula Bronstein / Getty.
03/02/2019
“In the name of God, go!” Rarely have these words of Oliver Cromwell been
recycled with such farce and frequency as during Sri Lanka’s recent political crisis,
not least by parliamentarians addressing rivals. As far as crises go, however, it was
a remarkably peaceful affair outside of parliament and unrelated to any kind of
revolution. Everyday life continued as usual even in Colombo despite extra-bold
newspaper headlines, which were greeted in the distant North by “near silence.”
The crisis seemed to appear out of nowhere on the evening of Friday, October 26,
2018 when President Maithripala Sirisena abruptly removed Prime Minister Ranil
Wickremesinghe of the United National Party (UNP) from office and appointed in
his stead the former president Mahinda Rajapaksa. Sirisena himself had defeated
Rajapaksa in the last presidential election on January 8, 2015, having defected in
late 2014 from a senior position in Rajapaksa’s United People Freedom Alliance
(UPFA) regime to become the surprise but successful candidate of the United
National Front (UNF) opposition.
Over the last weekend of October, a new cabinet, too, was haphazardly sworn in,
with the promise of a caretaker government. This was to be composed of the Sri
Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) led by the new Prime Minister Rajapaksa and
President Sirisena’s loyalists of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) and its
coalition in parliament, the United People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA) — a part of
which had collaborated with the multiparty UNF “national government” of “good
governance” led by Wickremesinghe’s UNP since the parliamentary elections of
August 2015.
Sirisena’s re-alliance with Rajapaksa
Sirisena’s re-alliance with Rajapaksa — which immediately gathered predictable
populist-nationalist enthusiasm as well as liberal-cosmopolitan opprobrium —
eventually proved to be methodologically flawed. This was especially so in light of
the December 13 Supreme Court ruling against the president’s dissolution of
parliament, once it became apparent to Sirisena that Rajapaksa would not secure
the parliamentary majority needed to form a new government. Much to the
delight of the “international community,” if not a majority of Sri Lankans, normal
service has resumed more or less in the island after nearly two months of political
chaos and juridical suspense.
Wickremesinghe was sworn in again as prime minister for a record fifth time on
December 16, albeit with a new cabinet limited (by the constitution) to thirty
ministers, about half the number of the profligate “national government”
preceding it — amounting to significant savings in public coffers. Although the
crisis in the most immediate sense is now over, how it was precipitated and
played out remains instructive for students of Sri Lankan politics.
In further bad news for the attempted new government, on December 4 the
Court of Appeal issued an interim order restraining the new prime minister and
cabinet, on the basis of a no-confidence motion against Rajapaksa passed in
parliament with 122 signatures, with support from the main ethnic minority
parties: the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) and the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress
(SLMC).
In the weeks leading up to the anxiously anticipated Supreme Court ruling, while
the country was without a prime minister and cabinet, legal and non-legal pundits
hogged newspaper columns, debating the constitutionality of the dissolution of
parliament. Their collective exercise exposed the ambiguities in the Nineteenth
Amendment — a rapidly written document open to various interpretations.
Hence the conviction with which they presented their case to the people — to
place the fate of the country in the hands of fifteen million voters rather than
with 225 overvalued MPs, a thin majority of whom were still propping up a
massively delegitimated government, at an unbearable and unwarranted cost to
the nation.
“Provincializing Colombo”
While Sirisena’s rhetoric here could well bear the name “provincializing
Colombo,” the decisive political question of the hour pitted democracy against
liberalism. Due respect for liberal political-juridical institutions held in high
esteem by Colomboans connected to the “international community” was
countered by a duo of peasant stock with a direct appeal to the popular will of the
people.
Though hardly unanimous, the general feeling in the streets disgusted with career
politicians on all sides seemed largely to favor an election as the best way out of
the crisis. In contrast, the liberal opposition to the populist Sirisena-Rajapaksa
initiative pinned all hopes on the judiciary, which eventually ruled in its favor on
December 13, forcing Rajapaksa’s resignation and Wickremesinghe’s return as
prime minister.
Given the “Marxist” label attached to the JVP militants, no audible outcry about
their liquidation emerged from the “international community” concerned with
human rights. Instead, Jayewardene was feted in Washington by Ronald Reagan
and praised as an example for the rest of the Cold War world; a suitably self-
orientalized Yankee Dickie returned the favor by gifting the Gipper a Sri Lankan
baby elephant on the White House lawn.
Under these circumstances, no Sri Lankan president since 1978 from either of the
two main national parties seriously contemplated abolishing the executive
presidency, least of all Mahinda Rajapaksa, whose Eighteenth Amendment to the
constitution in 2010 got rid of the two-term limit on the most powerful office of
the country. To be sure, it was he who deployed its full force more effectively
than any other incumbent, to militarily defeat the Tamil Tigers in 2009, amid
allegations of alarming numbers of Tamil civilian deaths in the final stages of war,
subsequently reported to be in the region of forty thousand or more according to
UN and other incriminating — and disputed — estimates.
The issue of accountability
Influential efforts have been and still are under way to hold accountable those
responsible for such deaths and disappearances, both internationally and in Sri
Lanka, supported by the Tamil diaspora and NGOs. These, however, played only a
marginal role in Rajapaksa’s surprise defeat in the 2015 presidential election,
after he had won a second term in 2010 by easily prevailing over the challenge
mounted by his former army commander General Sarath Fonseka, who was
recruited to run as the common opposition candidate with UNP support because
Wickremesinghe knew he had no chance.
Having won the war, the Rajapaksa regime shot itself in the head. Drenched with
power, and with an opposition in tatters, it squandered the opportunity to reach
an agreeable political settlement with minority communities. Instead of sublating
majoritarian nationalism, moreover, it encouraged the most deplorable elements
of extreme Sinhala-Buddhist ideology such as the Bodu Bala Sena to run riot —
adding to its postwar repertoire a series of Islamaphobic pogroms against the
Muslim community.
Ethnic Issue: Rajapaksa view
Enamored with modernization, the Rajapaksas viewed the ethnic problem not as
political but economic — one that could be solved by development, on the basis
of large-scale infrastructure projects involving late-capitalist highways, airports,
ports, and Haussmannian urban planning. While all that no doubt buttressed
unprecedented GDP growth, thanks to special contributions from China, the
expected trickle-down to the masses fell well below expectations, especially in
the North and the East, amid impatient cries of corruption — amplified by the
regime’s nepotistic surplus.
Yet he may have conjectured plausibly — with a majority of the voters — that the
worst of “good governance” would be better than the best of Mahinda
Chinthanaya. In the definitive rejection of that hypothesis following the Bond
Scam, local government elections and other misdeeds — in conjunction with
Sirisena’s own ambitions for a second term — lay the origins of the crisis.
Wickremesinghe’s unceremonious re-appointment
Whereas the Supreme Court resolved the crisis by judicial fiat, it was Sirisena who
acted out its political denouement. Upon Wickremesinghe’s unceremonious re-
appointment as prime minister behind closed doors at the presidential
secretariat, the crème de la crème of the new government were assembled
around a conference table. There, seated at the head, with Prime Minister
Wickremesinghe immediately to his right, President Sirisena delivered a forty-
minute lecture that will be etched in memories of Sri Lankan politics.
Yet the final nail in the coffin of “good governance” may have been hammered by
the prime minister himself, by re-inviting to his new cabinet a disgraced former
finance minister, one centrally implicated in the bond scam and forced to resign
from his last cabinet appointment. Even diehard liberal supporters of “good
governance” are wondering: what kind of influence does Ravi Karunanayake exert
over Wickremesinghe in order to regain a ministerial post, against every
conceivable expectation?
In Sri Lanka now, the political class — and perhaps more worryingly, politics
itself — is roundly despised. With the betrayal of “good governance,”
progressive voters are scrambling for a choice in the forthcoming provincial
(overdue), presidential (2019/2020) and parliamentary elections (2020). The
responsibility for this state of affairs lies not solely with the CEOs of “good
governance.”
From a left perspective, the dangers of the present conjuncture in Sri Lanka are
clear enough. These in essence are not different from those of other countries
with failed neoliberal projects, and ripe with conditions for right-wing and
xenophobic forces. The inability of political liberalism to address them in Sri Lanka
is also overdetermined by ethnic conflict and attendant nationalisms.
The failed Colombo October revolution
Surveying this situation with characteristic élan, Dayan Jayatilleka, Sri Lanka’s
ambassador in Moscow and admirer of both Rajapaksa and Putin, prescribes as
the appropriate response to it a “left populism,” with a gracious nod to Ernesto
Laclau and Chantal Mouffe’s reading of Antonio Gramsci’s notion of the “national-
popular.” How this is to be distinguished from the all too prevalent nationalist-
populism of his current political role models, however, requires elaboration, along
with sober reflection on the recent trajectories of “left-populism” in Laclau’s
home continent.
Better with than without Gramsci, then, the crimes of cosmopolitan Colombo may
be most rewardingly viewed from the provincial Tamil capital of Jaffna. Especially
pertinent in the context of what Jayatilleke announced on Facebook as “our
October Revolution” — before conceding that “we’ve lost the battle but won the
war” — are Ahilan Kadirgamar’s perspicuous reflections from the North on the
local government election. In a close reading of election campaigns and results of
a multitude of parties and independent groups, he underlines the losses recorded
in February 2018 by the TNA — more adept at exchanging high-level favors with
the UNP in parliament than connecting to Northern grassroots — and the
corresponding ascent of two opposed tendencies.
One is the Tamil National People’s Front (TNPF), with its “virulent Tamil
nationalist politics” mirroring extremist Southern tendencies and even welcoming
them, as nothing nourishes one suicidal ethno-nationalism more dependably than
another. The other has emerged from “pockets of progressive politics which have
eschewed narrow Tamil nationalism,” by engaging in impressive anti-caste
mobilizations, social development initiatives, and projects of economic
democracy — under the auspices of Eelam People’s Democratic Party (EPDP) and
some who have broken away from it, the Social Democratic Party of Tamils
(SDPT), the New Democratic Marxist Leninist Party (NDMLP), and a few
independent groups.
The left option to say “In the name of God, go!”
In their theoretical visions beyond nationalism, democratic organizational efforts,
and local-electoral successes — matching or exceeding the much older TNA in
several electorates — Kadirgamar finds “hope to re-chart Tamil politics.” What’s
left of the Left in the South too would do well to follow the example of these
comrades — and the refreshing radicalism of Tamil estate workers in the
plantation sector of the Hill Country — rather than old pyramids of patronage
maintained by the political status quo.
For only a constellation of emancipatory left forces from the South as much as the
North, liberated from ethno-nationalist temptations and neoliberal delusions,
would be qualified to tell the ruling gang of Sri Lankan feudal lords and liberal
technocrats: “In the name of God, go!”
www.jacobinmag.com
Kanishka Goonwardena was trained as an architect in Sri Lanka and now teaches
urban design and critical theory at the University of Toronto. He is the author
of The Future of Planning at the End of History.
Posted by Thavam