[The magnitude of the current crisis in Sri Lanka is pretty much
mind-boggling.
Planful suppression of democracy and politics of brutal majoritarianism -
together with minority extremism that it'd spawn, have, as it appears,
played crucial roles.
Here lies a very relevant lesson for India.

The following is a transcript provided by the author of her talk at a
recent panel discussion.
Details are available at the bottom.

Before going to the body of the main text, here's a short excerpt on the
tragedy of (once strong) leftism in Sri Lanka, which has gone largely under
the radar.

<<Why did these self-professed [Sri Lankan] left leaders betray socialist
principles in this way? There seem to be three reasons. One is their belief
that nationalisation as such is a socialist measure, regardless of the
character of the state that is carrying it out. For example,
nationalisation of the plantations by a Sinhala supremacist state had a
devastating impact on Tamil plantation workers, but they didn’t care,
despite having fought for the rights of plantation workers in an earlier
avatar. The second reason is their disdain for democracy, which they see as
connected to capitalism and the bourgeoisie, whereas I see it as the
product of struggles by working people and an essential precondition for a
socialist movement. Finally, their support for any party that is friendly
with the regime in China and rejects what is seen as ‘the West’, including
proposals for an investigation into war crimes by the UN Human Rights
Council. They are not alone in taking such positions: a section of the
global left takes similar positions in support of brutal authoritarian and
even imperialist regimes so long as they are seen as opposed to the West.>>]

* Political Dimensions of the Crisis in Sri Lanka*

*Rohini Hensman*

Let me start with a childhood memory. My father was Tamil, my mother was
Burgher – that’s what they call people with European ancestry in Sri Lanka
– and we were living in a predominantly Sinhalese neighbourhood just
outside Colombo. One day in May 1958 our Sinhalese neighbour Menike, who
was like a member of our family, came over in great distress, insisting
that we leave our home at once and go somewhere safe because a bloodthirsty
mob was heading our way. At around the same time my mother’s former student
Yasmine, who had become a family friend, also Sinhalese, came over in a
car, offering to shelter us at her parents’ place. My mother had been for a
walk so my parents knew that Tamils were being attacked, but at that point
they refused to leave. They packed off my brother and me and our Tamil
grandmother in a taxi with another Sinhalese neighbour to stay with our
Burgher grandmother, and started making Molotov cocktails to defend
themselves and their home. By this time Menike was frantic and threatened
to commit suicide unless they left. They finally agreed, and yet another
Sinhalese neighbour drove them in his car to Yasmine’s parents’ place.

Thirty years later, when I was doing research on Sri Lankan refugees and
internally displaced people, I came across numerous similar stories in
which Tamils had been saved by Sinhalese friends, neighbours, colleagues,
or even total strangers. To me these stories encapsulate the divided soul
of Sri Lanka: hatred and violence on one side, love and compassion on the
other, racism on one side, anti-racism on the other, brutal
authoritarianism on one side, a stubborn pursuit of democracy and human
rights on the other.

The divisions were already present at Independence in 1948, when J.R.
Jayawardene, leader of the United National Party or UNP, and S.W.R.D.
Bandaranaike, who later became leader of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party or
SLFP, agreed on one thing: depriving around a million Tamils of more recent
Indian origin, most of whom were plantation workers in the central Hill
Country, of their franchise and citizenship. The exercise was carried out
in a patently discriminatory manner by demanding that these
poverty-stricken and super-exploited workers provide documentary proof of
Sri Lankan ancestry which the vast majority of Sinhalese citizens would not
have been able to provide. During the parliamentary debates on these bills,
the left parties – the larger Trotskyist Lanka Sama Samaja Party or LSSP
and the smaller Communist Party of Ceylon (now the Communist Party of Sri
Lanka or CPSL) – argued vehemently against them, denouncing them as racist,
anti-democratic and an attack on workers’ rights. The strength of the left
and the labour movement in this early period can be gauged from the success
of the hartal or nationwide general strike they launched in 1953, when the
UNP government tried to abolish the highly-subsidised rice ration on the
advice of the World Bank.

In 1956, Bandaranaike and his SLFP came to power on the promise of making
Sinhala the only official language. The Official Language or Sinhala Only
Act, as it came to be called, discriminated against Tamil-speaking people
in government employment, and peaceful protests were launched against it.
On this occasion too, the main left parties opposed the bill, although a
breakaway section of the LSSP supported it. In 1957, responding to the
protests, Bandaranaike signed the Bandaranaike-Chelvanayakam Pact,
recognizing Tamil as the language of a national minor­ity and of
administration in the Northern and Eastern Provinces. But a year later, in
response to a militant agitation by right-wing Buddhist monks, he renounced
the Pact, leading to a campaign by Tamils in Jaffna blacking out the
Sinhala letter *sri*, which had been substituted for English letters in
vehicle numbers. This was what sparked off the 1958 anti-Tamil riots in
Colombo and elsewhere. As the violence threatened to rage out of control,
Bandaranaike handed over authority to the Governor General, who declared an
Emergency and clamped down on the mobs. Angry with Bandaranaike for not
going far enough, an extreme right-wing Buddhist monk organisation, the
Eksath Bhikkhu Peramuna, assassinated him in 1959. His widow, Sirimavo
Bandaranaike, became leader of the SLFP, which was elected to power in
1960. In 1964 she negotiated an agreement with Indian Prime Minister
Shastri to deport over half a million Tamil plantation workers to India.

In 1964, the LSSP and CP entered into an alliance with the SLFP, and in
1968 formed a United Front with it which came to power in 1970. I feel this
was an unmitigated disaster. The left disintegrated as principled members
of the parties broke away and then split again, and the LSSP was expelled
from the Fourth International. There were no major anti-Tamil pogroms under
Mrs Bandaranaike, but discrimination continued. In 1970 the United Front
government introduced a university entrance system that discriminated
against Tamils, creating a group of frustrated and embittered Tamil youths.
Paradoxically, in 1971 there was an anti-government uprising led by the
Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna or JVP, which combined Sinhala nationalism with
an authoritarian brand of socialism and drew its membership and support
precisely from those sections of the population who should have benefited
from Sinhala Only. The uprising was crushed with at least 5000 people
killed. The depth of their dissatisfaction should have alerted the
government to the fact that anti-Tamil discrimination was not solving the
problems of unemployment and poverty among the Sinhalese, but the
anti-Tamil policies continued. In the name of nationalising the
plantations, plantation land was distributed to Sinhalese government
supporters under the Land Reform Laws of 1972 and 1975. Tamil plantation
workers and their families were assaulted and driven out, their dwellings
looted and burned; some were killed, and others were left to starve.

In 1972, a Republican Constitution was enacted. Ironically, the same Colvin
R. de Silva of the LSSP who had in 1958 warned that Sinhala Only would
result in ‘two torn little bleeding states,’ now presided over the drafting
of a constitution which entrenched Sinhala as the sole official language,
provided a special status to Buddhism, and omitted the protection of
minority rights. The 1972 constitution also omitted the second chamber of
Parliament, the independent Public Service Commission to guarantee
impartiality in public service appointments and the Judicial Service
Commission, which was intended to guarantee the independence and integrity
of the judiciary. Judicial review of legisla­tion was also prohibited.
Thus, in addition to further depriving minorities of their rights, the 1972
constitu­tion centralized power in a manner that could be used against the
Sinhalese majority.

After the UNP headed by J.R. Jayawardene won the elections in 1977, he
enacted a new constitution in 1978, further centralising almost unlimited
power in the hands of the Executive President – himself – and omitting the
right to life. Freedom of expression and other democratic rights were
crushed. He set up the Jathika Sevaka Sangamaya or JSS, supposedly a union
but more like a government-controlled mafia. JSS gangs were used to
intimidate and kill opposition supporters and judges who gave verdicts
against UNP criminals. They were used repeatedly against workers and trade
unions to break strikes, assault and kill trade unionists, and get members
of existing unions dismissed. It was obvious that the JSS had protection
from the very top because the police never acted against them, whereas
around 80,000 public employees who opposed them and went on strike lost
their jobs.

Starting just a month after the UNP took office, the JSS was used to
assault and kill Tamils, loot and burn their shops and homes, and drive
them out of the areas where they lived. In 1979, the Prevention of
Terrorism Act and provisions of the Public Security Act were used as a
cover for the torture, disappearance and killing of thousands of Tamils by
the state. Then in May 1981, violence broke out in Jaffna, and the targets
of widespread arson attacks included the Jaffna Public Library, with its
95,000 volumes and priceless manuscripts. This was followed by island-wide
pogroms against Tamils, which were only over-shadowed by the even more
gruesome massacres of 1983, which left thousands of Tamils dead and turned
a simmering conflict into a civil war between the Sinhalese state and Tamil
nationalist militias fighting for a separate Tamil state. The most ruthless
and powerful of these, the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam or LTTE, became
dominant by slaughtering its rivals. Tamil socialists were demoralised.
Some drifted into Tamil nationalist parties and militant groups, while
others were killed or driven into exile by the LTTE.

The fighting in the North and East halted temporarily after Jayawardene
signed an accord with Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi in July 1987
granting Tamil the status of an official language and providing for limited
devolution of power to the provinces. Fighting shifted to the rest of the
country as the JVP launched its second insurrection. Many of its former
members who disagreed with its chauvinism and authoritarianism had left,
and those who remained were hardliners whose response to anyone who opposed
them inside or outside the organisation was invariably violent. The state,
controlled by the UNP, responded with indiscriminate slaughter of Sinhalese
youth. This is what resulted in the grue­some atrocities and massive death
toll (estimated at 40,000-60,000) during the second JVP insurgency, which
ended in November 1989. On the pretext of fighting the JVP, government
death squads killed unarmed critics, political rivals and even dissidents
within the UNP, and this repression went on after the JVP was defeated. In
1990, fighting between the state and the LTTE broke out again. Ranil
Wickremasinghe, the current leader of the UNP, was a senior member of the
government throughout this period, and therefore shares responsibility for
the mass murder of both Sinhalese and Tamils, most of them unarmed
civilians.

What we see here is the trajectory that has led to the political crisis in
2022. On one side, working people have been divided and weakened again and
again, on the other side power has been centralised more and more, allowing
the Executive President leeway to appoint cronies to key posts and destroy
the economy. The struggle over the Constitution is crucial from this point
of view, and it has had a roller-coaster ride, partly because courts have
held that changing crucial elements of it like abolishing the Executive
Presidency itself requires a two-thirds majority in parliament as well as a
simple majority in a referendum. When Chandrika Kumaratunga was elected
president in 1994 on the promise of ending the war and abolishing the
Executive Presidency, democratic rights were mostly restored in the parts
of the country under government control. But the LTTE sabotaged her efforts
to end the war by assassinating two Tamil politicians engaged in crafting a
constitution that would devolve significant authority to the North and East
and trying to assassinate her too. Nor did she succeed in abolishing the
Executive Presidency. But the 17th Amendment to the constitution was
passed, taking away the power of the president to unilaterally appoint
people to institutions that ought to be independent, like the Election
Commission and Supreme Court.

In 2005, Kumaratunga was succeeded as president by Mahinda Rajapaksa, who
was then in the SLFP. Human rights violations against Tamils, which had
declined under Kumaratunga, increased sharply. In the South, freedom of
expression came under severe attack, and death squads targeting critics of
the government resurfaced. Among the many victims, perhaps the most famous
are Lasantha Wickrematunge and Prageeth Ekneligoda. Gotabaya Rajapaksa, who
was Defence Secretary at that time, not only controlled the armed forces
and multiple intelligence agencies, but also higher education and urban
development. As the war moved towards its terrible end in 2009, the UN
estimates that around 40,000 civilians were killed, partly because the LTTE
used them as human shields but also because Gotabaya directed government
forces to bomb and shell civilian targets, including hospitals and safe
zones.

The presidential election of January 2010 in which Mahinda Rajapaksa came
back to power was marked by massive irregularities
<http://www.asianews.it/news-en/Sri-Lanka%E2%80%99s-presidential-campaign-marred-by-deaths-and-violence-17397.html>.
He used state resources to support his own campaign and vilify his
opponent, assault and kill journalists who failed to fall in line, attack
opposition rallies, and rig the vote so blatantly that the election
commissioner admitted he was unable to guarantee the safety of even a
single ballot box. His coalition won the subsequent parliamentary
elections, and one of his first priorities was to pass the 18th Amendment
that reversed the reforms introduced by the 17th Amendment, allowing him to
appoint his family members and cronies to key ministries and all supposedly
independent institutions. It also abolished the two-term limit on the
presidency. With the LTTE defeated, a new enemy was found to rally the
Sinhalese masses behind the Rajapaksas: Muslims. State-sponsored far-right
Buddhist monk groups sprang up, driving Muslims from their homes and
businesses with arson and murder.

When the presidential election of 2015 was announced, with Mahinda
Rajapaksa standing again, it should be obvious why voters from ethnic
minorities would oppose him and vote for the United National Front for Good
Governance or Yahapalanaya alliance between an SLFP rebel, Maithripala
Sirisena, and Ranil Wickremesinghe of the UNP. But minorities alone would
not have been able to defeat Rajapaksa. It was widespread disgust among a
substantial section of Sinhalese voters with the scandalous nepotism and
corruption of the Rajapaksas that tipped the balance against them, along
with courageous campaigning and monitoring of the election by democracy
activists. Leaders of the LSSP, CPSL and Democratic Left Front or DLF
continued to support the Rajapaksas, expelling members who disagreed with
that policy. They remain in the same position to this day, and therefore
share responsibility for the current catastrophe.

Why did these self-professed left leaders betray socialist principles in
this way? There seem to be three reasons. One is their belief that
nationalisation as such is a socialist measure, regardless of the character
of the state that is carrying it out. For example, nationalisation of the
plantations by a Sinhala supremacist state had a devastating impact on
Tamil plantation workers, but they didn’t care, despite having fought for
the rights of plantation workers in an earlier avatar. The second reason is
their disdain for democracy, which they see as connected to capitalism and
the bourgeoisie, whereas I see it as the product of struggles by working
people and an essential precondition for a socialist movement. Finally,
their support for any party that is friendly with the regime in China and
rejects what is seen as ‘the West’, including proposals for an
investigation into war crimes by the UN Human Rights Council. They are not
alone in taking such positions: a section of the global left takes similar
positions in support of brutal authoritarian and even imperialist regimes
so long as they are seen as opposed to the West.

Sirisena was elected president in January. Wickremasinghe was appointed as
temporary PM, and after the parliamentary elections in August, he became
the PM in the new government. There were some improvements. The Executive
Presidency was not abolished, but the 19th Amendment
<https://www.thehindu.com/news/international/south-asia/sri-lanka-adopts-19th-amendment/article7151450.ece>
severely curtailed the powers of the president. The revival of freedom of
expression allowed long-suppressed grievances to be voiced in public
without fear of reprisal, and the Right to Information Act introduced
transparency in governance. Some of the land occupied by the army was
returned to its Tamil owners, and there was an attempt to protect Muslims
from mob violence. Investigations into the crimes of the previous regime
also began. But problems soon surfaced. Wickremasinghe’s neoliberal
policies were unpopular, and a bond scam in which his protégé was involved
sullied the image of the government. He was also accused of holding back on
prosecuting major crimes by Gotabaya and his son despite adequate evidence
being available – accusations that gained new credibility recently when
Gotabaya chose him as the new Prime Minister despite the fact that
Wickremasinghe lost his seat in the general elections and the UNP got a
pathetic 249,435 votes out of over 16 million. On the other side, Sirisena
too started drifting back to the Rajapaksa camp, now headed by their new
party, the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna or SLPP, and acting as their agent.
The final blow to the Yahapalanaya government was the Easter Sunday
bombings of 2019, which killed over 250 people and allowed Gotabaya to
campaign in the presidential election on a plank of ‘national security’.
Yet it emerged soon afterwards that mastermind of the terror attacks
Mohamed Zahran and his associates, who had pledged support to Daesh, were
being protected and bankrolled by the Rajapaksas themselves through their
contacts in the deep state, while Sirisena and Wickremasinghe looked the
other way!

Given this dreadful morass, the 2022 crisis is as much political as
economic. For me, the greatest cause for optimism is the participation of
women and young people in large numbers as well as the emerging unity
between people of all communities. The sight of Sinhalese and Tamil people
celebrating New Year together and joining with Muslims in ifthar parties
when they break their fast is heart-warming, but this new friendship could
easily melt away. Activists need to spread the message that tolerating the
oppression of some members of society leads to divisions that make it easy
to attack the rights of all. It won’t be easy, but it’s not impossible. As
I mentioned earlier, I came across numerous stories of life-saving
solidarity during the war. I also came across prejudice, especially among
Sinhalese displaced people, but it’s important to set this in the context
of profound ignorance resulting from the language divide created by Sinhala
Only, the silencing of dissident voices, and relentless disinformation in
the Sinhala media.

When I was conducting a workshop for garment workers, all of whom were
young Sinhalese women, a workshop for young Tamil women displaced from the
North by the war was going on in the same conference centre, and during
mealtimes, the Sinhalese women went over to talk to the Tamil women,
finding bilingual interpreters to help them to communicate. There was
curiosity as well as sympathy for women suffering a different form of
oppression from what they themselves suffered. And when I interviewed
Sinhalese women whose family members had been killed in the JVP
counter-insurgency – an episode that gets far too little attention both in
Sri Lanka and internationally – one of the sentiments they expressed was,
‘If the army can do this to *us*, what must they have been doing to
Tamils?’ The shared trauma between all three communities of displacement,
disappearances and mass killings can be one source of solidarity, provided
that it is communicated effectively.

But on the other side of the equation, tackling the huge concentration of
power in the hands of a brutal dictator without allowing the situation to
descend into violence and chaos is more challenging. The Bar Association of
Sri Lanka or BASL has proposed a roadmap that includes, among other things,
the creation of an interim government which introduces the 21st Amendment
repealing the 20th Amendment and plugging the loopholes of the 19th;
abolishes the Executive Presidency within 15 months; dissolves parliament
within 18 months; and acts as a caretaker government for a further 6 weeks
in order to hold fresh parliamentary elections.

The first step – appointing an interim government that will carry out this
agenda – is in some ways the most critical. It will require sustained
pressure from the democracy movement and possibly an indefinite strike
until it is accomplished. But it also needs MPs to lead the effort in
parliament. Who could these be? The Samagi Jana Balavegaya, led by Sajith
Premadasa, is by far the largest opposition party and has apparently agreed
to the BASL proposals. The Tamil National Alliance is the next largest, and
has played a progressive role in parliament. It should be part of an
interim government along with other minority parties which have opposed the
Rajapaksas, but they will have to resist being bamboozled or coerced into
joining a government appointed by Gotabaya. The JVP is the third largest
and has played a progressive role in the struggle for democracy, but its
leader, Anura Kumara Dissanayake, will have to understand that forming an
alliance with the SJB is necessary in order to move forward. The opposition
parties need to enter into urgent negotiations on how to proceed, taking
the advice of advocates of economic and social justice as well as democracy
and human rights activists.

As for the SLPP and parties which have been allied to it, including the
SLFP and the Tamil, Muslim and Left parties, they are jointly responsible
for the current catastrophe. In a longer-term sense, so are Ranil
Wickremasinghe and the UNP. They all belong in the dustbin of history.
The panel discussion as a whole is available at: What's Happening in Sri
Lanka? <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o4SE9pBf4JY&t=860s>

What's Happening in Sri Lanka?

<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o4SE9pBf4JY&t=860s>

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