28 March, 2024

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It Is Only A Matter Of Time Before Mahinda Rajapaksa Starts To Fear Elections

By Kath Noble

 

Kath Noble

Mahinda Rajapaksa must really love elections. Since he came to power, at least some part of the country has gone to the polls almost every year, sometimes more than once. We had local and provincial council elections in both 2008 and 2009, parliamentary and presidential elections in 2010, more local elections in 2011 and now more provincial council elections in 2012. No prizes for guessing that in 2013 somebody somewhere in Sri Lanka will be voting.

I hope that it will be the turn of the Northern Province.

Concerns have been raised about the prospect of a TNA-led administration in the North, on the basis that the party may use the platform to push for more devolution or even a separate state, by itself or with the support of the West.

Indeed it might. The TNA hasn’t done enough to distance itself from the use of violence to achieve political ends, or to distance itself from the goal of Eelam. Both would have been helpful for its constituency and for the country, since distrust of the TNA’s intentions encourages or is used as an excuse by the Government to delay the much-discussed ‘political solution’, or to avoid it altogether. Perhaps the TNA is under pressure from the diaspora, or maybe it is yet to be convinced that the war is over.

Whatever, keeping it out of power by undemocratic means isn’t going to convince either the party or its supporters to change their ways. The voters of the Eastern Province demonstrated as much on September 8th.

There have been many fascinating attempts in the media to present the results of the provincial council elections in the East as a resounding endorsement of the Government and its policies. However, this is no more than wishful thinking.

For a start, the UPFA won by a margin of less than 1%, receiving 31.58% of the popular vote compared to 30.59% for the TNA. Given the usual massive abuse of state resources by the incumbent administration, it is ridiculous to suggest that people are anything like enthusiastic about Pillayan et al staying on at Trincomalee.

Also and most importantly, while the UPFA’s vote share fell by well over 10% of the total, the TNA’s went up by nearly 10% – it secured only 21.89% of the popular vote in the 2010 parliamentary elections. The TNA now enjoys the support of the vast majority of Tamils in the East. And it got eleven Tamils elected to the provincial council, compared to only one from the UPFA (the former chief minister, whose achievement has been questioned).

Being out of office clearly isn’t a problem for the TNA in terms of popularity.

Of course it isn’t. While the Government insists that life is now very good in the former conflict areas, a lot of people living there don’t agree. They aren’t so hopeful about Mahinda Rajapaksa’s development agenda. This we know from many sources, including the fact that according to official figures, 2,992 Sri Lankans crossed the sea to Australia in the first eight months of this year, compared to 736 in the last twelve months of the war. The vast majority of them were Tamils. And this data includes only those who reached their destination, not those who are now being caught by the Navy on an almost daily basis. Everybody is debating whether or not they should be classified as refugees, as if it would be quite normal for so many people to want to undertake such a perilous journey for economic reasons – it is not.

In the North, the TNA will be the sole beneficiary of dissatisfaction with the Government. The party has its faults, but at least it won’t put up any more signboards in Sinhala and English in areas where Tamils make up 100% of the population. (I am taking a trivial example not because there aren’t more important things to be done, but to demonstrate that it is will as much as ideas and resources that is lacking.)

The TNA must know that its prospects are only going to improve the longer it is prevented from challenging the Government, so it isn’t going to feel at all pressured to fall into line.

The other point to note from the East is that the SLMC too increased its vote share. At the 2010 parliamentary elections, the SLMC and UNP together achieved 26.57% of the popular vote, increasing to 32.80% in 2012. The ever-hopeful supporters of Ranil Wickremasinghe may like to think that the UNP is the party whose fortunes improved, but that is plain silly. It achieved 11.82% of the popular vote in the provincial council elections, compared to 20.98% for the SLMC. And for their information, 11.82% is pretty close to zero! The UNP is in a deep hole, electorally speaking, but it is hard to feel sorry for people who believe that clinging to the same leader for nigh on two decades is perfectly normal. If only their foolishness didn’t have such an impact on the rest of the country.

It is equally clear that the SLMC would not have seven provincial councillors if it had run under Mahinda Rajapaksa. The party leadership’s decision to form an administration with the UPFA, going against the wishes of its members from the Eastern Province and likely also the views of its voters for the sake of concessions in Colombo, is not very democratic.

Totally undemocratic are the moves reported by DBS Jeyaraj to persuade five of the eleven provincial councillors from the TNA to switch their allegiance to the UPFA, which if they had been successful would have given the Government its all-important majority without the need for the support of the SLMC. DBS Jeyaraj says that the TNA representatives were approached by military intelligence operatives with a range of ‘carrots’ and ‘sticks’, including the offer to one provincial councillor who is also a building contractor of a major state infrastructure project and the threat to another that his young son would be taken into custody for alleged involvement with the LTTE.

As DBS Jeyaraj points out, attempts to engineer crossovers are nothing new, although the employment of military intelligence operatives certainly adds a novel and even more reprehensible dimension to the phenomenon.

Also, we don’t normally get to hear the details of the ‘carrots’ and ‘sticks’.

For this we should be grateful to the TNA. It has shown us what politics in Sri Lanka has become, and how difficult it will be to clean up – Mahinda Rajapaksa is clearly very good at engineering.

I hope that we will find more reasons to thank the party once elections are called in the North.

Although the TNA did not stand up to Prabhakaran, for which it deserves the harshest of criticism, it is willing to stand up to the Government. And it would be in a position to do so in the Northern Province. A TNA-led administration could do what most Sri Lankans now agree is necessary and show the Government that it cannot get away with everything everywhere. The danger for the TNA and indeed for Sri Lanka as a whole is that as things stand its positions and actions can easily be dismissed as sectarian and extremist, which could end up deepening the divisions in society and further entrenching the Government.

For that reason, and of course also as a matter of principle, the West should firmly resolve to say and do absolutely nothing.

It is only a matter of time before Mahinda Rajapaksa starts to fear elections.

Kath Noble’s column may be accessed online at http://kathnoble.wordpress.com. She may be contacted at kathnoble99@gmail.com.

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Latest comments

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    The fact is that TNA has made itself irrelevant in the East ever since is turned up its nose EP elections back in 2007! IT was because they refused to participate then that Pillayan won. TNA should have demanded holding of Northern PC elections from the beginning. Smbanthan is collosally stupid and brain dead!

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    why should the uneducated uncultured ones fear elections when a foreign journalist can be threatened with deportation for asking where is BASIL knowing he had spent the night in the election commissioners ofice.

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    Does MR know that Leon Panetta gave a warnning to China on Sep 19th. May be MR dosen’t know who is Leon Panetta.

    MR is stuck inbetween China-India-Europe & USA. He is pushing his tail deep inside and very soon the monkey’s tail will be stuck and he wont be able to pull it out. India and USA wants him to push his tail deep inside to put the last nail for his coffin.

    Obama admistration knows how much money MR is giving for Mitt Romney under Xxxxx company name. 2013 is going be the worst year in MR’s life. Also the new USA high commissioner didn’t waste any time and she went to north. Now Mr is India.

    Civilised countries have no respect for MR & company.

    At the end the Tamil people will be very thankful to MR because he is going to give every thing what they are looking for.

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    Kate, if we all know what will be the out come of the northern provincial council election surly Rajapaksha know better than all of us. he started this game before you and me was born. he too well aware what is TNA upto and his game will be against it by any possible way from start to end.TNA know this well and they are fear of any election. even now Rajapaksha is ready to pay any amount of money to eastern opposition council members. TNA is loosely connected bunch of political parties with those party members are looking out for various perks and peaks. sooner or later one of them or their family members need a latest model BMW. that is the time all of your political theories will go wrong. nothing wrong with your wish full thinking yet you need to educate with South Asian model of democracy. or you know these facts yet ignoring them to throw out your wishes.

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    This writer says; “Although the TNA did not stand up to Prabhakaran, for which it deserves the harshest of criticism, it is willing to stand up to the Government.” But we all know that TNA has been a proxy of LTTE. And LTTE wanted nothing but division of Sri Lanka. And this separation demand by Tamils is nothing new. According to writing by DBSJ, a man named Viswalingam had first mooted for a separate country named ‘Elom’ in 1928. Needless to say, Ramanathans, Ponnambalams, Chelvernayakams, Pirapakarans and of late Sambandans took the baton from thereafter.

    Not just that; we also know that the predecessor of TNA, the ITAK was led by the so-called the father of Tamils, Mr. Chelvernayakam and he is the man who promoted armed insurrection first at a mass rally in Waddukkodi on May 14th, 1976. And the present leader of TNA, Mr Sambandan has been a prodigy of that Tantai Chelva who is a sworn separatist of Sri Lanka. And that separatism that proceeded for over 33 years by means of arson, murder, suicide bombings and etc may have ended on the 18th May s are 2009 but the legates of the original separatist are rolling their Eelam project along a new roadmap now. And those who were deft and blind for LTTE atrocities have now have come out as budding Human Rights activists.

    This writer praises TNA for standing up to the government. I too agree that that is the thinking of Tamils of the East and no doubt of the North. Knowing very well that TNA can never elect Chief Minister or form an administration in the east with their limited population, almost all demagogic Tamils in the East voted for the TNA.

    In spite of their demagogic heart feelings, this writer and the likeminded Tamils should have known that majority Muslims live among Sinhalese all over Sri Lanka. As such they should have known very few Muslims would have any truck with separatists. They should have also known that Muslim Congress is a part of the present government alliance. And they should have known that majority of Muslims are cashing on the current political stability and the ongoing accelerated development of the country.

    So long as they see a blinker t the end of the tunnel, TNA doesn’t mind working against all odds. At the presidential election in 2010, TNA backed the arch enemy of their buddy, LTTE for they thought that would be the best way to unsettle this country. Likewise, TNA tried their best to upset the prevailing peace and tranquillity this time as well. That’s why, forgetting afore said realities, TNA tried to hoodwink Muslim Congress into forming an administration with them with the aimless UNP

    Present day Politics is no game even for the great Sages. It’s a game best suited for shrewd opportunists. And time and again Hakeem and Mahinda have shown that they are masters at it while Sambandan lingers on as a stiff old clown. If that is so, I presume Muslims have become victors and Tamils looses for their chosen leaders opted yet again for confrontational and separatist politics. And Rajapakses love it for they know it is nothing but that would propel them to power at each and every election. I say, UNP has no chance for foreseeable future. The great party has drifted in to doldrums for one; it can no longer cover its antinational trait by Sirasa and et al, and for another, Mahinda Rajapakse has become an undisputed champion of the nation where matters. So, changing leadership in the UNP alone would never propel it to power; it will have to prove the mass that abandoned the ship that its policies have changed. And that’s no easy task given the antinational forces that roosts it right now.

    And what’s wrong having some election somewhere every year? I thought, in the epitome of democracy, the US, a third of senators resign and get re-elected in turn. Anyway, if elections could take the heat off the pain-in-the-butt agitations, what’s wrong the government use it as a diversion tactic?
    Leela

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    From a journalist to a psychic !

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    An unpopular government,farmers crops gone,killings/murders in Ratnapura,food prices up,parents of A/L kids in all 3 provinces angry,uni teachers and students too,police brutality in the 3 provinces,rampant corruption in the 3 provinces,boys & men dissapear regularly in the east and yet UPFA in power for 17 years wins???
    Wake up,this cannot be ! Where in the world in such a bad scenario did a sitting government win??
    It was all rigged and this is yet another stolen election.

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