20 April, 2024

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What’s Wrong With Ranil?

By Uvindu Kurukulasuriya

Uvindu Kurukulasuriya

This article was first published in the Sunday Leader and Colombo Telegraph on December 25, 2011. It is reproduced here given the political context of the no-confidence motion and internal strife within the United National Party in the call for Ranil Wickremesinghe to step down as party leader. The arguments are very similar to the ones made at the time. This article considered the objections raised then to Wickremesinghe and therefore is still relevant. 

The UNP has over the years been reduced to a Colombo-centric pressure group, run by an elitist cabal whose members usually catch a cold if the Queen happens to sneeze in London. The UNP of yore used to be a vibrant political movement backed by the elite and the masses alike. It will have to regain its lost image and vigour if it is to gain enough political traction let alone, win elections. Ranil has his work cut out because President Rajapaksa is well versed in grassroots politics like the late President Premadasa.” – Last Thursday The Island editorial

However, there is another side to the story that might be hard to swallow. So, Let us start from London!

Margaret Thatcher came to the Conservative party leadership on February 11, 1975. Thatcher was the longest serving prime minister in more than 150 years securing three election victories in 1979, 1983 and 1987. In 1990, John Major became the party leader and served as the Prime Minister between 1990 and 1997. So, Conservatives, the UNPs UK counterpart, managed to stay in power for 18 years.

In 1973, JR Jayewardene became the UNP leader and was successful at the 1977 elections. He promptly changed the Constitution and became the first Executive President of Sri Lanka. Thereafter, Premadasa and D. B. Wijetunge served as successive presidents until 1994. So, the UNP managed to stay in power for 17 years like the Tories did in the UK.

Both the UNP and the Conservatives shared and practised the same political thinking, that of an open economy. Famed for their tough uncompromising style they privatised state controlled industries and curbed union power.

The UNP lost the 1994 election and the Conservatives lost the 1997 election. What happened next? Leftists came to power in

both countries, but with a new political philosophy. Tony Blair came to power preaching “responsible capitalism” and Chandrika Bandaranaike came to power preaching “a human face to an open economy” (vivurththa arthikayata maanusheeya muhunuwarak deema). This was simply to satisfy the left wingers in continuing with an open economy. The collapse of the so-called socialist/Soviet style economic order was complete .

This new phenomenon had brought the left closer to the centre. One cannot see much difference between the opposition and the ruling party on the economic front. Let us see what Basil Rajapaksa said to the US. Rajapaksa said that the government has done all that the IMF has asked. (see colombotelegraph.com for the full US diplomatic cable). What did the Central Bank Governor Cabraal say to the US? He said, “GSL has done all that the IMF has asked, including, for example, introducing new tax measures and altering its monetary policy.”

Once the Conservatives lost in 1997, intra-party leadership struggles emerged as is common the world over. They changed five party leaders ; William Hague 1997 to 2001, Iain Duncan Smith 2001 to 2003, Michael Howard 2003 to 2005 and David Cameron 2005. All of them lost the general elections and were unable to form a government except David Cameron. In 2010 the election ended in a ‘hung’ parliament with the Conservatives having the most seats but being 19 seats short of an overall majority. The Conservatives managed to form a government with the Liberal Democratic Party in a coalition, in a trade off giving them high profile ministries including the deputy premiership.

But, in Sri Lanka it is Ranil Wickremesinghe who stays as the party leader regardless of defeats. I would like to raise a couple of points regarding this issue. Firstly, the Conservative Party changed five leaders since their defeat. Did they manage to win because of leadership changes? Secondly, it is a Sri Lankan tradition that party leaders remain regardless of elections defeats. Look at Sri Lanka’s oldest and perhaps the most democratic party, the Lanka Sama Samaja Party; Dr N. M. Perera served as its leader from the inception until he died. Take the Sri Lanka Freedom Party; Sirima Bandaranaike served as the leader until she died. What about the JVP? Wijeweera was the leader until he was killed. If someone proposes to change this tradition, that is another matter. Then one has to admit that losing, is a factor not confined to Ranil.

My point is Ranil is not the losing factor. Ranil is unlucky to be remembered as the author of the peace process which in fact weakened the LTTE (though I am not endorsing his peace strategy, those who are opposed to him in his party as well as other critics, who have the blessings of the Maha Sangha and pretending to be patriots – have to accept it) His achievements in areas such as media freedom and reforms and the economic policy laid part of the foundations for the steady recovery in the economy during the early part of 2000 and like all the better leaders he resisted the temptation to panic in the face of cries from the opposition, the press, and the backbenchers.

When Ranil won the election to be Prime Minister, he was good. Just after the UNP lost the 2004 April election he was subjected to smear campaigns. In May 2004 the US Ambassador to Colombo Jeffrey J. Lunstead wrote to Washington, “after the recent election defeat, UNP leader Wickremesinghe is under fire from within his party.” He wrote “Long-standing UNP members have also criticised Wickremesinghe’s election strategy, though mostly in private.

In a May 10 meeting with the DCM, for example, former Interior and Christian Affairs Minister John Amaratunga said the UNP had lost the election due in part to a lack of charisma on Wickremesinghe’s part.” “ Amaratunga related that one party member had complained to Wickremesinghe’s face that his constituents were unhappy that the former PM never smiles and they wonder why they should vote for the UNP” ( see colombotelegraph.com) If these allegations are correct how did he win the 2001 general election and became prime minister? Did the UNP win because of John’s charisma or John’s smile ?

There will always be discontent, there will always be people who seek to stir trouble in every political party. Even before he faced his first presidential election in 1999, some sections of the UNP, such powerful party figures as Wijepala Mendis and Susil Moonasinhe, started to criticise Ranil publicly. It was in 1997 that I asked Ranil; “what is this all about? Why does this kind of criticism take place in public?” Ranil replied; “I’m not a Premadasa, let them criticise, President Premadasa never let others criticise him, and always suppressed critics, at the end he faced the consequences”. In another occasion I asked Ranil, why don’t you support Chandrika’s political proposals (Package)? He replied; “the issue is the parliamentary group and the working committee. They were nominated and appointed by Gamini Disanayake.” The answer was clear, though he was the leader of the party, the decision making body wasn’t under his control. It was his opponent the late Gamini Dissanayake who appointed them. Any leader likes to make some changes at some time, and if Ranil chooses to do that, that is entirely his prerogative as the leader of the party. The party leader has to have authority to make decisions. That is the UNP tradition.( The bad version is Sri Lanka’s oldest democratic party’s leader Minister Tissa Vitarana. He has manipulated the party annual general meeting and membership lists in order to get favourable decisions.) If the UNP dissidents need to change this tradition, there must be another way. But it should not be on the basis of Ranil being a loser, so-called sexual orientation allegations, or his smile.

What was President Rajapaksa’s motive behind introducing the18th amendment before taking oaths into his second term? He knew in the second term even though he is the president, struggles to be the next leader will start from within the party and he will not be able to control it. JR Jayewardena and Chandrika Kumaratunga both faced leadership struggles in their second terms.

Ironically, London has had struggles for leadership from grass root levels in political parties. Iain Duncan Smith was the first Conservative leader to be elected by grassroot level members rather than MPs. It was not a happy experience, however, and the self-confessed “quiet man” fell to a vote of no confidence from MPs never getting to fight an election as party leader.

Some argue that the UNP need a leader like Mahinda or Premadasa. Ranil of course is not like them. On the one hand, I don’t think the country needs another Rajapaksa or Premadasa or even a son like Premadasa. People who preach this, forget how undemocratic leaders they are and were. On the other hand if the UNP found a leader like Rajapaksa, voters will say, oh, we already have a Rajapaksa in power, so why do we need another ? He can do this better than the UNP one, because he has already served two terms and he is better than an amateur. If one needs to change the UNP leader, they should find someone who is different to both Ranil and Mahinda!

After the 1994 elections, the UNP began to disintegrate. It was the end of an era and a shock to so many people who had been in power for such a long time. It was inevitable, since after a while the public just gets sick of a party, and after 1991 there was a sense of inevitability about the end of the Premadasa era. Gamini Dissanayake and Lalith Athulathmudali formed another party and the UNP’s grassroots started dying, people began leaving and the party was falling apart.

As I mentioned last week, people who consider Ranil as the losing factor should not forget the fact that the party’s entire senior leadership was either killed or assassinated and Ranil became the party leader with a parliamentary group and a working committee which were loyal to his opponent Gamini Dissanayake. So, it is not a simple challenge to build the party as well as develop a new political philosophy. People who believe that the UNP needs a Premadasa type leadership must not forget the fact that; in Sri Lanka there were only two instances when people took to the streets to rejoice over a death; one was when Prabhakaran was killed and the other was when Premadasa was assassinated.

I heard that the UNP dissidents were bemoaning the UNP’s loss of the Sinhala Buddhist vote bank and that they need to win it back. I think that is why their leader Sajith Premadasa is going around  donating large sums of money to Monks in Buddhist temples (if he is a transparent leader he must declare where that money comes from!)

Of course Ranil is not like that. I remember when we were discussing Lasantha Wickrematunge’s funeral arrangements in the funeral organising committee where Karu Jayasuriya and Ranil participated.  Someone suggested giving a speaking opportunity to someone like Ven. Sobhita. Ranil said we will do it as a layman’s (gihiyange) event. He did not want mix politics with religion.  Sure it is against his party’s history and its leaders’ philosophies. D. S. Senanayake said, “We are one blood and one nation. We are a chosen people. The Buddha said that his religion would last 5500 years. That means that we, as the custodians of that religion, shall last as long” (Ceylon Daily News 17.4.1939). It was the political philosophy of the nationalist Right. Ranil also shared the same philosophy in his early days. If you read his parliamentary speeches in the early 1980s especially after 1983 riots, one can find it there.  We all now know what the country paid for that nationalist Nazism. Do the UNP dissidents want to go back to that again to start a fifth Eelam war?

As Rajan Hoole cleverly analyses in his book “The Arrogance of Power”; these developments also affected the image and content of Buddhism as a partner in this millennial ideology. By becoming linked to an ethnic group and the power ambitions of its ruling class patrons, this brand of Buddhism lost its universal appeal and moral content. It became a one-issue religion – that one being the Tamil issue. Buddhist clergy speaking on almost any other issue are frequently heard with indifference and bemusement. But when it comes to the Tamil question, a ritual hard-line is expected from them and is duly given wide publicity in the media. The political leaders are then quick to point out that the Sinhalese are totally opposed to federalism. This is a unique role played in any country by the religious establishment.

When a political leader prostrates himself before a Buddhist-prelate, it is a public transaction viewed with cynicism by both. It is also a ritual that they both find useful. The prelate enjoys symbolic power at the sufferance of the political leadership. At the same time intransigence on the Tamil issue, which the practical politician is loath to own up to, is voiced for him by the Buddhist establishment. This ritual hypocrisy that has become part of the political culture has made the Tamil question more difficult to resolve.

If Ranil wanted to go back to that nationalist Nazism which the Rajapaksa led coalition preaches he has whole package with him. “The Revolt in the Temple” (1953) was an important piece of ideological writing by Helena Wjewardene’s son Don Charles Wijewardene (Ranil’s grandfather), which appropriated for the Kelaniya Temple and the ‘Sinhalese Race’ a 2500 year history, and likewise by allusion for the Wijewardene family, the temple’s recent patrons. The destinies of the country and the patrons of the temple were linked together by the writer in his eloquent slogan, “When Kelaniya fell, Lanka fell, when Kelaniya rose, Lanka rose.” (Ironically now Kelaniya has fallen Lanka has fallen – now it is Mervin de Silva and not Ruwan Wijewardene!) According to Jonathan Walters, “constitutes a blunt statement that the Tamils are a threat to that historic mission and lays out Wjewardene’s blue-print for a post independence Sinhala Buddhist state which has gradually become a reality.” Ranil only needs to upgrade his grandfather’s theory a bit and lay the foundation for another war with Tamils. Is that what those UNP dissidents want? Are they suggesting going beyond the Rajapaksa Sinhala-Buddhist racism? I do not think the country needs that.

I think as the leader of the UNP he clearly understands that and he changed the party philosophy. But he does not have an energetic group to take that ideology to the grassroots level. He has an energetic bunch of no-good men and women who are thinking of jumping over to the other side. Though I am not a UNP fan, this is how I understand the UNP; Rajapaksa is about state and UNP is about society. The UNP needs to establish a good energetic team which is armed with all those arguments on protectionism versus free trade, privatisation versus nationalisation, trade union power versus consumer power and nationalism versus liberalism. You do not just go jumping over fences because your party has nowhere to go. You want to make an impression; here is a fabulously sexy, modernised United National Party.

Some people’s public image is so different from their private lives. Ranil Wickremesinghe is one of the nicest and kindest people you will ever meet as a political leader. I know Mahinda Rajapaksa well; he is only good for gossiping. But Ranil has an incredibly clever mind, one of the sharpest. One day in 1997 Michael Roberts presented me with his newly edited book, “Collective Identities Revisited” and since I was having a meeting with Ranil after that, the book was in my hand and Ranil remarkably gave me an introduction to the book. He is widely read and according to one of his closest friends, often he will win an argument even when he is wrong, which is just the most frustrating thing when you are a politician. But the difficulty is that in politics you have to be what you are. I think that is something he has to think about. I wonder why the Sri Lankan electronic media does not arrange a debate between Colombo educated Ranil and London educated Sajith Premadasa. Then the UNP membership as well as the country can decide who is better.

Former US Ambassador to Colombo E. Ashley Wills wrote in a leaked US diplomatic cable; “Wickremesinghe is also surprisingly knowledgeable about U.S. history and politics; he is an avid reader about the American Civil War, U.S. military history, and U.S. legislation.” So, now Ranil must be thinking about American President Lyndon Johnson’s explanation for not sacking his powerful FBI chief, J. Edgar Hoover, on the grounds that it was “better to have him inside the tent pissing out, than outside pissing in”.Before concluding this Sunday essay, I would like to ask a question: What is missing in the entire UNP leadership battle? For me it is the gender perspective. There was not a single woman nominated by either camp. There are seventy people in the UNP Working Committee (Members of Parliament 37 plus Non-MPs 33) only seven female members in it. Why do they not think about that? On the one hand they should think about women voters instead of the so-called Sinhala-Buddhist voters, since women comprise 52 percent of the population. On the other hand they need to give chance for their voices to be heard, that is what democracy is all about.

Why do they not think about Rosy Senanayake? Ranil should think  about making her the party’s deputy leader.  She is even a good choice for the UNP leadership someday.  I cannot think of anyone in the present group of UNP men who is better than her. One has to analyse how she became the leader of the opposition in the western province and how she faced the Sinhala-Buddhist Wimal Weeravansa type smear campaigns. Anyone who has followed her morning talk-show knows how intelligent she is; she is not just a beauty queen!

To read a Sinhala translation click here

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Latest comments

  • 4
    2

    I don’t know much about Ranil. But I can talk about the NCM. When I am bored, I enjoy writing fiction like this.
    .
    Ranil can easily convert a totally adverse situation to his benefit:-
    1) If the NCM is passed with the support of SLFP, he could say he wants to withdraw from the Unity Government and form his own government.
    – Ranil already has 106 seats as one party. If the necessity of a Vote is arose, through a good political dialogue, he can garner the support of TNA’s (16), SLMC’s (1), may be, JVP (6). The total will be 129.
    – Then they will unanimously select Ranil as the PM and inform the President that they have more than the required number to form a government. President has no choice but to accede to this.
    .
    2) Even if the NCM is defeated, Ranil can still say that he lost the confidence in President and the SLFP and that he wants to withdraw from the UnityGovernment and form his own government. .
    What can the President do? Nothing. After that, President won’t have any say in the Government or even in the Cabinet as his party is not in Ranil’s Alliance. He will completely lose control over Ranil. Then the President will have to sing a song…Baiiby… without you…. I am nobodyyyy..
    .
    I don’t know who the President’s advisers are. Whomever they are, they don’t have common sense.
    .
    If the NCM is defeated with SLFP abstaining, Ranil will stay in the Unity Government which is good as the President have a control over him.
    .
    Is this what JO wants? JO bringing an NCM against Ranil is ok. But SLFP’s support to NCM will create a totally different scenario.
    .
    At the very beginning I asked. Do we want to exchange ginger for chili?

    • 3
      0

      A comment came up saying that RW should join force with SLFP to protect the HORAS OF RAJA PAKKI CLAN.
      That’s exactly he had been doing under the UNP banner.
      He’s a liar , he will win the motion as the country is between Sharks and the Piranhas.

      The western nations do not want the return of the Modamulla family in power.
      If that family rises up again the country have no future but within the clutches of the Thieves and the very unpopular China in the world arena.
      Very difficult times indeed when you trust a Party with promising promises for the country , when in He came to Power , Protected all the Crooks and Thieves.

      He should resign after the Motion whether he wins or not.
      He must RESIGN. LET HIM GO AND JOIN JARAPASSA & CO..
      ADIOS RW.
      WE need someone truthful to their words.
      NOT A CUT THROAT PLAYING DOUBLE GAME LIKE YOU AS A PARTY LEADER.YOURE DESTROYING OUR COUNTRY WITH YOUR SLIMY WAYS.
      NO NO NO . Not you.

    • 1
      2

      I have an urgent request for former President Mahinda Rajapaksa. I don’t know where to post. Sometimes CT’s comments publish late. Ada too. I have a word for former President.

      • 1
        2

        Mr. former President, I most sincerely and strongly urge you to talk to the President, the PM and the Speaker and CANCEL today’s Vote to save the country from disgrace/a grave danger.
        .
        I am sorry for using the word, but this dog-fight in the Parliament should be ended. I only suspected President’s involvement. I am not one to go by hearsay. Now as Bimal has confirmed, it was the President who initiated the NCM, which is foolhardy as throwing the PM out from the Unity Government is opening a stronger and steadier path for him and the UNP. Once the NCM is defeated by UNP, which is inevitable now, they will not listen to the President anymore. They can even go little further and form a UNF government. Who can stop? Nobody.
        .
        Mr. former President, I am your worst critic. I don’t think anybody has criticized you as much as I did. I attacked you mercilessly sometimes. I made my criticism as nasty as possible. But I still love you. You are a strong person, you can take my criticism head on. If you are a weak person, I never criticize you. I am as strong as you but more determined than you.
        .
        Mr. former President, you are not a mere politician or a mere leader. You are a statesman, a legendary leader. If there is a Vote and if the NCM is defeated, PM will never listen to the President again. They will not see eye to eye. President will lose control over the PM. We don’t want that to happen. We must always make sure to keep someone above the PM. This risk is not worth. Therefore, please cancel the Vote. The nation will be grateful to you forever for saving the country from a perilous future!!!

        • 0
          1

          Wooo hooo, my comment is a crap. I am world’s best fiction writer.
          Congratulations to Wimal. He somehow made Mahinda vote against Ranil. If not Wimal would have lost face. Throw the NCM to the trash, Wimal. You have a great future. Well done!!!!

    • 4
      1

      Ranil won the NCM 126 votes to 56.

      At least now punish the crooks of the last regime.

      Game over!

    • 2
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      Champa

      RE: What is wrong with Ranil?

      The real Question is what’s wrong with Sirisena?

      The No-Confidence Motion brought against Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe by the Joint Opposition was defeated with a majority of 46 votes a short while ago.

      The vote on the No-Confidence Motion was taken a short while ago in Parliament following a day-long debate.

      Hundred and twenty two MPs voted against the motion while 76 MPs voted in favour. Twenty six MPs were absent during the vote.

      Time for a no confidence motion against Sirisena.

      Charge: Whoring

    • 1
      0

      champa
      “When I am bored”

      which must be 24/7 from the number of comments from you.Are you on the dole?

  • 9
    2

    Sri lankan parliament is full of clowns. Ranil is one of the prominenent jokers. Sri lankan LAw enforcement system is non-existing. If I were the head of that, I would quit. do some paddy cultivation if I can not find anything. I will be happy. I don not need drug money to live.

  • 1
    1

    How come Ranil should go now?

    • 0
      0

      Fathima

      Yea, must be that god’s brother is more powerful than god now.

      So pray not to god, do something like what’s done by Ranil.

  • 9
    3

    Nothing wrong with him. Fault is with his people around him and the silly culture in the country since the colonials left us.

  • 5
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    Uvindu Kurukulasuriya

    RE: What’s Wrong With Ranil?

    “It will have to regain its lost image and vigour if it is to gain enough political traction let alone, win elections. Ranil has his work cut out because President Rajapaksa is well versed in grassroots politics like the late President Premadasa.” – Last Thursday The Island editorial”

    What’s Wrong With Ranil?

    “But, in Sri Lanka it is Ranil Wickremesinghe who stays as the party leader regardless of defeats. “

    “Firstly, the Conservative Party changed five leaders since their defeat. Did they manage to win because of leadership changes? Secondly, it is a Sri Lankan tradition that party leaders remain regardless of elections defeats.”

    “Some argue that the UNP need a leader like Mahinda or Premadasa. Ranil of course is not like them”
    “that the former PM never smiles and they wonder why they should vote for the UNP”

    “I think as the leader of the UNP he clearly understands that and he changed the party philosophy. But he does not have an energetic group to take that ideology to the grassroots level.”

    First of All, Ranil Wickramasinghe needs to drop his trousers and start wearing a sarong, the so-called National Dress, and wear a yellow. orange and green scarf, just like Mahinda Rajapaksa.

    Then he needs to go out to the outstations , and visit a temple or two and go to some pirith and bana ceremonies, and hold some babies.

    When he goes abroad. he can wear his trousers. .

    Change is what Ranil W. needs.

  • 12
    7

    A pretty sound analysis. Never saw this before. Written many years ago, much of it is still valid and this makes the article prophetic. I like the proposal about Rosy Senanayake for leadership. I have been thinking of that for some time. She has great potential charisma. She is equally fluent in English language and Sinhala. Rosy can reenergise the UNP

    • 4
      9

      Yes, Yes, no doubt ‘poththa rathu’ Rosy is the favourite of boot lickers like you. What has she got in common with the rural women of Sri Lanka? Poththe ratha, and being married to a former IGP to get the ticket to prominance. Wanted Colombo Mayor post because of the official residence (mansion). Saimons without a conscience or shame should be kept in Melbourne and never allowed to come back to Sri Lanka even on holiday.

      • 4
        3

        Maname Saimon

        There are women in high positions all over the world , please don’t show your arrogance and ” Male Chauvinism “
        This attitude is too prevalent in SL.
        Is it a kind of JUNTA?? Sinhala Buddhists Junta??
        A country gets enriched with a mixture of people in power.
        Not Male dominated Junta for sure.
        The ” Srilankan Junta Politics ” does not let the Minority oppositions nor the women to speak or heard of their views.
        Still in the dark ages or Jungle politics.

  • 4
    0

    Unfortunately the Crab Mentality is deeply rooted in our nation’s DNA. Until this is changed we will never progress as nation. Ranil, might be well versed and educated, but 95% or even more of those who were elected by the people, for the people to represent us in parliament aren’t. All those elected on care about one thing, how do they make their fortune. There is no accountability. What this country needs is a new party, blooded with young energetic and educated individuals, i.e less than 45 to take this country forward. In short a Radical Overhaul of the entire system.After all, youth are our future.

  • 2
    1

    The writer has not an approach that core issues political maneuvering of 1977 UNP -JRJ line of crony capitalism. It has undermined whole order of the system of parliamentary democracy operation last 40 odd years. The roots cause of core of crisis is goes back to 1977 by neo-liberalism of political and economy order introduce by JRJ -UNP.
    JRJ system set of policies has new republic constitution , the range of economic package of an” Open economy’ of that neo-colonialism nexus to Old US global order of economic hegemony system.
    1977 that UNP of JRJ had been that diverted from sustainability capitalism development and its democracy.
    Sorry to say that Writer is lack of knowledge of to be realized simple facts theory of development capitalist path and models in related to Sri Lankan peculiar conditions in Island. .
    Until address key issues that while you are telling about past merits and demerits of political incidents will not serve the purposed of political revitalization of order of democracy governance is quite impossible at all.
    An Economy is life-line of our country and politics of nation been NOT address by current Ranil Wicks of UNP leadership. RW of UNP are bunch of puppet of politics of USA, UK and Indian.
    He(UNP+RW) cannot no way to revival even he win the no-confidence motion in Chamber in4th of April 2018 that day before April 5th of 1971, which of 47 anniversary of rebelled against state of Ceylon by JVP anarchist of terrorism. Politics of Anarchism which remain in our soil that against norms of democracy !

  • 10
    2

    The value of writing of this kind can only be judged retrospectively and this certainly passes muster. Thanks for that thought-provoking piece of political intelligence!

  • 7
    5

    It is no secret that Ranil is the darling of anti-Buddhist groups feeding on Evangelical Christian largess, and other fringe groups generally against the Sinhala-Buddhist nation. This item (dug up from 2011!) is typical. Keep on (bogus) Christian brothers. He will be gone by tomorrow but.

  • 6
    0

    ranil may be intelligent but he is a poor tactician and.his misjudgments are many
    he could never understand the masses and they could not understand him
    his type of intelligence does not suit SL politics that is why he lost so many elections
    it was his mother not his father that pushed him into politics and he might have done better in another profession
    like the brook you cant go on forever in politics
    when your time has come you have to go and the time has come
    the SL public like immediate hand outs not long term development
    he had his chance and like last time he failed to realise this so he spent his time talking but not doing UNP supporters like men of action like JR and PREMA and ranil has proved a failure in this regard so go home and practice your version of theravada buddhism by worshipping statues and trees and visting hindu kovils in india

  • 7
    0

    British gave the countrY back in 1948. they could not govern at least 20 years. JVP began then LTTE began. Youth unrest since may be 1965 until 2009. Now, the clowns are hanging like leeches. Country’s politicians talk a lot about the country. Welikada and bogambara are missing 225 criminals. Now, they are found in side diyawanna Oya. shameless people. Liive with blood money.

  • 4
    4

    Simply put, Sri Lanka and Sirisena would both be poorer by the exit of Ranil.

  • 8
    4

    Thank you. Pleasure to read an article which sees the positive side of the UNP and it’s leader.

  • 6
    4

    So very partial !!! A big fan of West worshipping Ranil, eh??

  • 4
    1

    This reproduced article “What’s Wrong With Ranil?” by Uvindu Kurukulasuriya was first published in the Sunday Leader and Colombo Telegraph on December 25, 2011.
    After some 7 years, answers may emerge today at the NCM. Ranil is an enigma alright!
    In 2011, corruption/nepotism was rampant – but was not talked about like today. Wonder why?
    The 1981 Jaffna Library bibiliocide is not mentioned at all!

  • 4
    0

    Ranil’s thought isn’t compatible with average Sri Lankan thought.

    His key words, democracy, media freedom, rights to youth & women are just flattering words to many.

    No uniqueness in his approach & those who follow him are also not shining enough to attract people.

    He became the PM because he’s the UNP leader, not his achievement but party achievement; even that’s when the rival party has been weak.

    Rosy is a prototype of Ranil in female attire, so Rosy on the top may not make a difference.

    Sajith’s housing spell is out of date, it’s boring to average citizen’s ears. Silly concept to cheat people’s money through lotteries. Take him to the task of telling people to save money & build their own homes without gambling.

    It’s good for UNP to think about Tissa Attanayake & give more exposure to Navin, Gayantha, etc to make good future leadership.

    I think there’s one from D.S. Senanayake family ( sorry his 1st name?) please give him more exposure as he’s very cultured person as sons of the soil expect.

    Ranil deserves something else, not politics.

  • 2
    5

    It is to be noted that when people praise Ranil W for weakening LTTE through peace process, Sri Lankan military was also weakened proportionally. It took the army about 3 months just to clear the Mavillaru aniket. A small open aniket located very close proximity to the Sri Lankan government areas. Besides, army faced 2 bloody battles within months sustaning many casualities. Infact Both army and navy took almost an year to regain their lost fighting capabilities.

    Moreover, if we lost Mutur back in the summer of 2006. We could well have lost the Jaffna peninsula as well. We were fortunate to win that crucial battle. LTTE positioned themselves around Trinco as to strangle that strategic city during Ranil’s time. Not only Ranil didn’t do anything prevent the illegal LTTE build up but even harassed the navy commander who tried to make aweranence about it.

    Still, are we expected to praise Ranil for his peace prosses?

  • 6
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    When I completed reading this fine essay the time was 10.10AM. The NCM was moved by Dinesh Gunawardena in Parliament.
    Premier RW is a Pearl amongst the Swines.

  • 2
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    What is London or conservative party has got anything to do with Ranil or Sri Lanka. They on one hand, and SLK and UNP on the other are like cheese and chalk. In particular the mindset of Sri Lankan populace, the issues that they face, and more importantly the phenomenon of jumping frogs (MPs)s according to the amount of flies offered by the buyers are entirely unique to this country. No point in predicting, or arguing for or against RW at this 11th hour, as to how this messy game would be played out; we would know it for a fact before we go to sleep tonight (4th April).

  • 0
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    “party leader with a parliamentary group and a working committee which were loyal to his opponent Gamini Dissanayake”. What utter rubbish. How did Thilak Marapana, Malik Samarawickrama et al are the decision makers of UNP? Are they also Gamini Dissanayake appointees??? Just wasted my time reading this two cents of an article

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    Ranil has read a book and he is very intelligent ! More intelligent than the other UNP guys for sure ! May be more intelligent than the British MPs too. We can judge all this from the state of these two countries. What has he done and achieved with all this intelligence ?

    R. Sambandan who is also very intelligent says there is no evidence of a direct link between the Bond scam and RW ! Sambandan says RW put his confidence in Mahendran foolishly. Is that why RW appointed 3 UNP lawyers to investigate the scam ? Why he put the foot notes ? Why even after the fraud was discovered and Mahendran removed he brought Mahendran as a special adviser on national development ?

    I dont know what these intelligent people are doing !

    Listening to Sambandan I think it is a very good thing there is no Eelam. If they had Eelam all the rascals of the world -Mahendran, Aloysious, Raj Rajaratnam and even malik and RW would become dual citizens of Eelam. And the President of Eelam Sambandan will see no evil and hear no evil !

  • 3
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    Great analysis. Rosy Senanayaka would be the better option for the future leader of UNP and the country as well.

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      Normally you write such sense. Do you think an evangelical Christian would make a good leader of a Buddhist nation? Have you forgotten Ngo Dinh Diem?

  • 4
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    uvindu

    i went through your article word by word but had no time yet to make comments because of some urgent commitments,and will do it later as it is a article that as you rightly pointed out is relevant today even though it is 7 years old.However there is one very important incident that has happened since you wrote that article and it is better that you write another one with that included.You know quite well that it is the bond scam.1.Was it a scam?2.If so what was the approximate amount involved?3.What is your views on that?4.Is ranil directly responsible and why?5.Is he indirectly responsibleand and why?6.If he is directly responsible should he go?7.If he is indirectly responsible should he go?

    This additional factor clouds the issue when you compare the article done in 2011 and the present circumstances.So we have no choice but to include it when we talk of ranil today and compare with ranil,the Mr clean of 2011.I was so proud of him at that time as a fellow royalist who kept his integrity.Now i’am devastated.How do we go after the the rajapakshe clan who plundered the country when our own PM is allegedly to have either directly or indirectly plundered his own central bank.I think this might be a worlds first and ranil should be in the Guinness world records.

    • 0
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      Shankar,
      ” bond scam.1.Was it a scam?2.If so what was the approximate amount involved?3.What is your views on that?4.Is ranil directly responsible and why?5.Is he indirectly responsibleand and why?6.”
      It seems you are a great Sirasa fan.
      1. NO there was no scam , only insider trading.
      2. IF there was a loss, it was the 3% increase in rate. 300 million. Peanuts. Compare what Mahinda wasted on Mattala, 40 billion.
      Even the PCOI has not accused anybody.

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        Raman,

        1) Scam is a dishonest scheme.
        2) Approximately around 11 Billion rupees
        4) Yes Ranil is. Because he appointed Mahendrean guy and took the entire responsibility for his actions.
        5) He is directly responsible.

        Insider trading is the scam. It is a serious offense.
        3% increase for 30 years you fool. This is not considering the economic loss the country sustains by increased inflation, decreasing wages etc., by the result of bond scam. No one will able to calculate the true damage of this scam.

        If Mahinda wasted that money on Mattala, fine. At least one could sell it to recover the cost.

        PCOI is just another tool of the government apparatus. How can we expect it to deliver a genuine result?

        • 1
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          Shenal,
          “3% increase for 30 years you fool”
          Ha Ha! That shows your knowledge of economics. As bad as your knowledge of the origins of kavun and kokis!
          Do you know that there is such a thing as time value of money?
          30 years ago, in case you didn’t know, a loaf of bread was 3 rupees, and a 3-year old car was 175,000. Before you call me a liar, yes, I did buy a car in 1988.
          Similarly, by 2048, 3 billion will probably buy a couple of Marutis.
          You call that a loss?

          The fact is that the goverment BORROWED the money.
          10 billion is peanuts compared to 40 billion on Mattala airport and 18 billion loss in ONE YEAR from Sri Lankan Airlines.
          If you don’t know what you are talking about (like kavun and kokis for example) it is better to keep quiet.

  • 4
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    Good article.!

    Dear Shankar, See the chapter 26 of the Presidential Commission’s Report on Bond Scam. It tittles as ” The Hon. Prime Minister’s role in matters relevant to our Mandate “. No such a direct responsibility is revealed.

  • 2
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    Kolla’s comment @
    Ranil is not an intelligent, but he is a crook who advocated christen line of politics of UNP line of’ democracy’ . There are many books read by people, that is through the world .Some of them are without heart and sense of commoners.
    That is the party of UNP .no interest of country nation and people of our land//.

    • 1
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      Rex

      Could you explain as to what you exactly meant by “but he is a crook who advocated christen line of politics of UNP line of’ democracy”

  • 0
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    It is OImmaterial to identify Ranil. Ranil Must go.

  • 0
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    Is this same Ranil that you talking about who promised to establish FCID and catch all the thieves, said it is JRJ jayawardane’s constitution whoch allowd corrupt politicians inside the parliament so he would change the constitution. Instead he wanted MAsiristhan, Orumiththa Nadu, A senare and more national list MPS and increase PArliament to some 295 politicians, one who promised one million jobs t youth, one who promsoed lichchavi -malla type govt and even vbecomong the legally appointe dPM, emptied state banks via the central bank and now three banks are bankrupt. List is longer. He used to spend harbour/port import taxes for his needs, Sri lanlan airliens continue to be bankrupt. I heard one new appointee is a very old lawyer who was watiing to make it (cash wise) at least the through the Suprememe Court and now he is saying I could not make it by LAW so now I make it there without LAw.IT is the same who is following the Economic vision of MCC (CHURCH, CIA and ZORRO) for the ciuntry, Remember as soon as he came to power Zorros came via Belgium (Arjun Mahendran is/was there and Ranil went there t discuss GSP+) and gave money to start the govt. List is more, he can not fire PENT HOUSE RAVI. He fired Wije Dasa Rajapakse to fasten the justic process with Tahlatha Athukorala. His local elelction made another 4500 and and now is handing over Pohottuwa with some idea in his mind. through out all these MY3 is missing. How come ?

  • 2
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    Ranil’s fault is shamelessness

    Caught almost red handed looting the CB but not ready to leave politics.

    He survived the vote of no confidence because majority MPs exhibited the same shamelessness.

    They must be st–ed for not bowing down to “country 1st” motto.

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      Real Revolutionist

      “Caught almost red handed looting the CB but not ready to leave politics.”

      Could you explain as to how Ranil looted the Central Bank.
      Did he tunnel his way into the vault?

    • 0
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      R.R,
      Looting the CB? The whole thing was manufactured by Sirasa..
      Even if it was true, do you think 10 billion will break the bank?
      MR borrowed 45 billion for Hambantota, if you don’t know.
      If you are so sure about it, show us the numbers and timelines..
      Otherwise, keep quiet.

  • 0
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    Chanpa: I enjoy reading your comments, because those contain a mix of everything and anything of “Spices” – (hot, bitter, sour, sweet ….) In one of above, you said (I believe referred to MR) ” You are a strong person, you can take criticism head on”. Make an “Offering” to any “GOD” (if you have one) that this MR is not in “POWER” any more, as otherwise you would have had a FREE ride in one of those “White Vans” and there would have been no trace of a “Champa”. You would have been “history” and there will be case records lying in the Office of the Commission of Missing Persons. I am glad that you are with us to share and dare to say whatever you feel true and good.

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