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COLUMN
Warning bells in Sri Lanka
The Provincial Council elections in Sri Lanka, along with other recent
developments, could erode the ruling alliance's support base and lead to
greater political turmoil ahead.
WHEN Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga assumed the Presidency of Sri Lanka
four and a half years ago, she kindled many hopes in what then appeared to
many a benighted country brutally battered by war since 1983. Her bold initiative
to tackle the ethnic conflict came like a breath of fresh air after the stale
and cynical approaches made during the United National Party's (UNP) 17-year-long
reign. Her proposals for devolution of power to provincial and local authorities,
and her promise to replace the overcentralised French Fifth Republic-plus
presidential system with a more democratic form heralded a non-cynical, anti-
Machiavellian, open, pluralistic politics. Although no economic policy radical,
she seemed remarkably responsive to new ideas. In the first year, she galvanised
and enthused Sri Lanka's liberal-Left intelligentsia and non-governmental
organisations (NGOs) as few other political leaders had ever done.
Today, scepticism, if not despondency, has replaced much of that hope. The
paradigm shift to more open, democratic, participatory governance appears
to have been arrested and partly reversed.
The anti-LTTE "Operation Jayasikurui" (Certain Victory) ran out of steam
after bleeding Sri Lanka heavily - an annual cost estimated by the National
Peace Council at 21 per cent of GDP (gross domestic product). The economy
is stuck in a neo-liberal rut. The time for new initiatives seems to have
passed; there is a return to the ways of manipulative politics, and the politics
of patronage, so dismally familiar to South Asia. The upward-looking phase
of Kumaratunga's ruling People's Alliance (P.A.) may be running out. The
warning bells now ring loud and clear.
Nothing illustrates this more clearly than the run-up to and the results
of the fraught, contentious elections to five Provincial Councils (P.Cs)
on April 6. The P.A. barely managed to retain the Western province, Sri Lanka's
largest and richest, with a quarter of its population and 45 per cent of
its GDP. It wrested the other four from the UNP which had won them in 1993
(before the P.A. was born).
But the quality of its victory was at best poor, uncertain and slippery.
Worse, it came amidst strong accusations of electoral malpractices, some
of them backed by independent NGOs such as the Centre for Monitoring Election
Violence (CMEV).
Even if the rigging charges are discounted, the P.A's performance in the
P.Cs marked a sharp decline in relation to the 1994 presidential elections
and the 1997 elections to local bodies.
Compared to 62 per cent five years ago, its vote fell to just 49 per cent
in 1997, and now further down to 45 per cent. This puts it barely two percentage
points ahead of the rival UNP, itself unblessed by a great leadership,
faction-ridden, and not free from the odium of long years of cynical misrule.
The difference in the five P.Cs between P.A. and UNP votes is only about
126,000. This would be wiped out more than twice over by the votes rendered
invalid.
In the five P.Cs - Western, Central, North-Central, Sabaragamuwa and Uva
- as a whole, the P.A. won 120 seats, and the UNP 112. In Colombo district,
the P.A's vote declined by a massive 44 per cent over 1994. In other urban
areas such as Kandy), the UNP increased its vote share to come within a couple
of percentage points of the P.A's. In only one of the five P.Cs (North-Central)
did the P.A. win an absolute majority of seats. Elsewhere, it can only form
a government in alliance with other parties, some of them ideologically hostile.
SRIYANTHA WALPOLA
Sri Lankan
President Chandrika Kumaratunga. The Provincial Council election results
mark the erosion of the ruling People's Alliance's vote bank.
The conduct of the polls came in for critical scrutiny from observers such
as PAFFREL (People's Action for Free and Fair Elections), MFFE (Monitoring
of Free and Fair Elections) and CMEV, especially after the P.A's performance
during the end-January elections to the North-Western (Wayamba) P.C. These
were widely acknowledged to have been badly rigged, with 1,557 incidents
of violence, of which 895 took place on polling day.
These acts of violence included physical assault, intimidation, threat, removal
of names from electoral rolls, booth-capturing and stuffing of ballot boxes.
The P.A. was held responsible for about two-thirds of these cases. Wayamba,
much like Meham in Haryana, became synonymous with unconscionable electoral
malpractices, which affected a quarter of all polling centres. Even the Election
Commissioner was forced to admit that as many as 212 polling centres (of
a total of 1,160) witnessed serious malpractices (although he, contradictorily,
ordered a repoll in only nine centres).
This time around, independent monitors received over 1,300 complaints during
the poll campaign. The police registered 298 complaints on polling day. But
the intensity of violence was much lower than at Wayamba. The CMEV claimed
that the performance of a third of all polling stations it monitored was
"unsatisfactory". Even if this sample is considered unrepresentative, it
amounts to five per cent of all polling stations. This may not have drastically
affected the party-wise outcome of the elections, but in Sri Lanka's
individual-candidate preference-vote system, each vote has a unique value
and can alter candidate-wise outcomes.
It is regrettable that there should have been electoral malpractices in the
Third World's first democracy, where adult suffrage goes back to the 1930s.
And it is worse that the P.A. should have got into an ugly confrontation
with independent election monitors, especially the CMEV, to the point of
running a campaign against them in the pages of the state-owned Daily
News.
Indeed, Kumaratunga personally attacked the CMEV as "a cat's paw" of foreign
interests and UNP "agents", and questioned (at Kandy on April 1) the integrity
and genealogy of one of its prominent members. It could be argued that the
CMEV at times overstated the incidence of violence, that it did not carefully
distinguish between minor and serious cases, and named those accused of
misdemeanour without verifying the allegations. But it is malicious to claim
that it represents the UNP or "foreign interests". The confrontation only
lowered the P.A's stature and invited parallels with the "Wayamba factor",
to the P.A.'s own embarrassment.
Today, the P.A. is a party largely on the defensive. It has lost much of
its elan, most of its idealism, and a good deal of its appeal. It is now
seen to be exercising power delinked from a larger, universal, purpose. Its
earlier hope, that the UNP, hampered by Ranil Wickremasinghe's inability
to give it political direction, would face steep erosion, and pave the way
for its own upward growth, stands belied.
BESIDES exposing the P.A's weakness, recent political developments, in particular
the P.C. elections, serve to highlight five significant trends. First, the
votes of the ethnic-religious minorities in the south, which had swung towards
the P.A. five years ago, are returning in appreciable measure to the UNP,
their traditional representative. Thus, argues Dr. Neelan Tiruchelvan, the
well-regarded scholar-MP and director of the International Centre for Ethics
Studies, it is hard to explain the UNP's strong showing in central and northern
Colombo (two-fifths of it Tamil- speaking) or in the coastal fishing villages,
without such a shift.
Second, in the central highlands, with their tea estate labour of Indian
origin, the influence of S. Thondaman's Ceylon Workers' Congress (CWC), a
P.A. constituent, is on the decline. In 1993, Thondaman allied with the UNP
and won 12 seats in the tea districts. This time, the National Union of Workers
sponsored by him has won only seven, with slim margins. This is partly owing
to the emergence of an educated and aware youth among the "Indian Tamils"
(as distinct from the long-settled/indigenous "Ceylon Tamils" of the North
and the East). This layer is discontented with the CWC's paternalist
conservatism, the corruption and extravagant lifestyles of its leaders, and
their failure to respond to its aspiration for better educational and employment
opportunities. Thus, the Upcountry People's Front, a CWC rival, has cut into
its vote, which is shrinking with the grounding of the peace process.
A third trend is the re-emergence of the Sinhala ethnic-chauvinist Janatha
Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) as a significant force. The JVP was brutally crushed
after its 1987-89 violent uprising, but has tripled its vote-share to five
per cent since 1994. Its present vote-share is 54 per cent higher than that
in the 1997 local elections. The JVP is now the third largest party, with
15 of the 263 seats in the five P.Cs. This puts it in a uniquely strong position,
for instance in the Western P.C., where the P.A., lacking a majority, can
only form a government with the support of ideologically distant parties.
This will of course involve some kind of bargain with the JVP so that its
eight P.C. members support the 46-member P.A. in the 102-strong council.
Just such an understanding is apparently being reached, under which the JVP
will probably be offered the council's chair. More important, its exiled
leader Somawansa Amarasinghe, an important former politburo colleague of
Rohana Wijeweera, is allowed to return without serious criminal charges being
pressed against him. It is unclear if this will facilitate the JVP's
"normalisation" and "parliamentarisation", or encourage it to shift the centre
of gravity of politics towards the ethnic- chauvinist pole. The development
raises awkward questions.
A fourth noteworthy trend is the emergence of Karu Jayasooriya as a major
power-centre within the UNP. Until he quit as Colombo Mayor after the P.C.
polls, Jayasooriya had earned exceptional goodwill among the city's middle
class as an able administrator who improved municipal services much in the
fashion of the efficient, result-oriented manager. He has won over 2,50,000
preference votes, the highest polled in this elections, and only slightly
lower than the earlier score of Chandrika Kumaratunga (2,86,000) with all
her assets. Jayasooriya is a political maverick - a businessman not known
for political vision or skills, conservative on the ethnic question, but
earnest, uncorrupt and accessible. His emergence signifies middle class despair
with the "normal" politician, and a temptation to look for managerial quick-fixes
for political problems.
Finally, there is growing discontent within the P.A. - among sections of
the Left which joined the alliance five years ago in the hope of creating
a radical-democratic, progressive alternative to the UNP's misrule. This
is partly because the P.A. leadership has failed to deliver on most of its
promises, including exceptional provincial autonomy, especially for the North
and the East; partly because its economic performance has been poor; partly
because association with it increasingly attracts the charge of doing
Machiavellian politics. Historically, the Sri Lankan Left has enjoyed a very
special intellectual and moral status. But after state socialism collapsed,
its cadre base has eroded, It now faces a grim dilemma: influence the P.A.
from within towards more progressive policies, or quit and adopt an independent,
critical posture while building a cadre base. Many leaders like MP Vasudeva
Nanayyakara seem inclined towards the second option. The election results
have strengthened them.
These trends together mark a watershed so far as the P.A. is concerned. It
has to choose, and rather quickly, its strategy for the near future. Should
it call an early presidential election or should it wait till August next
year? The outcome of the recent elections has jolted sections of its leadership.
They now prefer to temporise and hold on to power as long as possible in
the hope that the UNP's internal crisis will worsen. The other view is that
there is no merit in waiting; that will only mean further haemorrhage and
base erosion; it is better to take the plunge and call an early election.
This view derives strength from the likelihood that the economy, which has
slowed down by two percentage points in GDP growth, will decelerate further.
Sri Lanka's public finances are a mess, with the fiscal deficit almost 10
per cent of GDP, export growth plummeting to 2 per cent from 8, and prices
of essential goods rising sharply. With tighter garment quotas, low oil prices
(which will hit remittances from the Gulf) and pressure on tea exports, the
slowdown could have harshly unpopular effects.
Besides, after the fall of Killinochhi and the suspension of "Jayasikurui",
there is little likelihood of a big change in the military balance of forces
in the North and East. The prospect of a negotiated settlement of the ethnic
question is dim. Because of the political uncertainty looming ahead, it might
be best to call a damage-limiting early election.
Whichever course the P.A. chooses, one thing is certain. The phase of hope,
new initiatives and change inaugurated in 1994-95 is now past. Sri Lanka's
politics has entered a contentious phase. If political polarisation accelerates
and ethnic tensions get aggravated, it could plunge deeper into turmoil and
strife.
AN INDIAN POSTSCRIPT
Sri Lanka is delicately, precariously, uncertainly poised. We in India must
do nothing to upset the situation there. New Delhi has done well to keep
its hands off the island's ethnic issue in recent years. But it damaged its
own interests by acting duplicitously on the free trade agreement issue -
first by promising freer imports of tea, and then reneging on its promise.
Along with the nuclear and missile tests, which only underscore the "Big
Brother" image , this has bred resentment - dangerous in the present
circumstances. New Delhi must take corrective action, promptly and sincerely.
Deviousness on its part could spell disaster.
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