[<<On July 14, 2022, Sri Lanka’s parliamentary speaker announced that he
had accepted the resignation of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, sent by email
from Singapore where he had fled via The Maldives. That this former
military commander—known as “the terminator” due to his propensity to get
critics assassinated—was forced to resign by an overwhelmingly nonviolent
mass movement marks this as a major episode in Sri Lanka’s protracted
democratic revolution.

The term “bourgeois-democratic revolution” is confusing because it suggests
that democracy is a gift from the bourgeoisie, is inseparable from
capitalism and has nothing to do with socialism, whereas in fact most
sections of the bourgeoisie have no interest in it and the Communist
Manifesto states that “the first step in the revolution by the working
class is … to win the battle of democracy.” Democracy—freedom from
killings, torture and enforced disappearances, freedom of expression,
association, and peaceful assembly, equality of rights and opportunities,
and the right of people to participate in making decisions that affect
them—is only won and defended by struggles of working people in solidarity
with one another. Furthermore, while a bourgeois revolution can be
accomplished quickly, a democratic revolution may take decades and
encounter serious setbacks.

The uprising in Sri Lanka, which started with a few small candlelight
vigils in early March 2022 and developed into a full-scale revolution with
protesters taking over the presidential palace and prime minister’s office,
was triggered by critical shortages of food, fuel, cooking gas, and
medicines, accompanied by long power cuts and skyrocketing prices. As
Nimanthi Rajasingham explains, the protesters blamed President Gotabaya
Rajapaksa and his family members, including then-Prime Minister Mahinda
Rajapaksa, for the catastrophe. Demonstrations spread throughout the
country, the most iconic location being “GotaGoGama” at Galle Face Green in
Colombo opposite the Presidential Secretariat. She also points out that
although criminal mismanagement by Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s regime dealt the
final blow to the economy, the mountain of foreign debt had been growing
for more than four decades after J.R. Jayawardene of the United National
Party (UNP) won the elections of 1977 and introduced neoliberalism.>>

These are the opening paragraphs of Rohini Hensman's highly informed and
insightful exploration of the turmoil in Sri Lanka.
What it actually means?

For yet another dimension of the turmoil, please look up: <
https://www.oaklandinstitute.org/events/reckoning-holding-perpetrators-accountable-sri-lanka
>.
And here is a series of news reports and analyses on Sri Lanka in recent
years, with exhaustive coverage of the developments since last April 1st
till July 27th, as they happened: <
https://www.bbc.com/news/topics/cywd23g0gxgt>.]

https://www.tempestmag.org/2022/08/sri-lankas-democratic-revolution/
Sri Lanka’s democratic revolution

The latest episode in a decades-long drama
------------------------------

by Rohini Hensman <https://www.tempestmag.org/author/rohini_hensman/>
Months of protests brought down Sri Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa
last month. Scholar-activist *Rohini Hensman* situates this victory as one
step in a protracted struggle for democracy in Sri Lanka.

On July 14, 2022, Sri Lanka’s parliamentary speaker announced
<https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-62160227> that he had accepted the
resignation of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, sent by email from Singapore
where he had fled via The Maldives. That this former military
commander—known as “the terminator” due to his propensity to get critics
assassinated
<https://www.colombotelegraph.com/index.php/from-terminator-to-predator-gota-enters-worldwide-ranking-of-press-freedom-predators/>—was
forced to resign by an overwhelmingly nonviolent mass movement marks this
as a major episode in Sri Lanka’s protracted democratic revolution
<https://internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article7739>.

The term “bourgeois-democratic revolution” is confusing because it suggests
that democracy is a gift from the bourgeoisie, is inseparable from
capitalism and has nothing to do with socialism, whereas in fact most
sections of the bourgeoisie have no interest in it and the *Communist
Manifesto* states that “the first step in the revolution by the working
class is … to win the battle of democracy.” Democracy—freedom from
killings, torture and enforced disappearances, freedom of expression,
association, and peaceful assembly, equality of rights and opportunities,
and the right of people to participate in making decisions that affect
them—is only won and defended by struggles of working people in solidarity
with one another. Furthermore, while a bourgeois revolution can be
accomplished quickly, a democratic revolution may take decades and
encounter serious setbacks.

The uprising in Sri Lanka, which started with a few small candlelight
vigils in early March 2022 and developed into a full-scale revolution with
protesters taking over the presidential palace and prime minister’s office,
was triggered by critical shortages of food, fuel, cooking gas, and
medicines, accompanied by long power cuts and skyrocketing prices. As
Nimanthi Rajasingham explains
<https://www.tempestmag.org/2022/06/sri-lankan-uprising-struggles-against-neoliberal-austerity/>,
the protesters blamed President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and his family members,
including then-Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa, for the catastrophe.
Demonstrations spread throughout the country, the most iconic location
being “GotaGoGama” at Galle Face Green in Colombo opposite the Presidential
Secretariat. She also points out that although criminal mismanagement by
Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s regime dealt the final blow to the economy, the
mountain of foreign debt had been growing for more than four decades after
J.R. Jayawardene of the United National Party (UNP) won the elections of
1977 and introduced neoliberalism.
[image: Anti-government protest in Sri Lanka in front of the Presidential
Secretariat, April 13, 2022.]Anti-government protest in Sri Lanka on April
13, 2022 in front of the Presidential Secretariat. Photo by AntanO
<https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Anti-government_protest_in_Sri_Lanka_2022.jpg>.


However, it is significant that although this is obviously an economic
crisis, the demand that has unified the *aragalaya*—struggle—was
“GotaGoHome.” Protesters were not demanding that Gotabaya provide them with
what they needed; instead, they wanted him and his government gone,
appealing to a higher form of democracy that includes the right to recall
representatives who fail to carry out their mandate. This is the clearest
indication that at the root of the economic collapse lies a political
debacle.
An ultra-authoritarian state on one side, a divided electorate on the other

How could successive governments and especially the last one take such
disastrous policy decisions without being prevented from doing so by the
public? The short answer is that the state had assumed virtually absolute
power while the public was so divided that any section which opposed a
particular policy could be isolated and crushed. Dividing the electorate
along ethno-religious lines has been the policy of the ruling class since
Ceylon (as it was then) got independence from the British in 1948, and this
in turn has allowed the executive to centralize enormous power in its hands.

In 1948 and 1949, the UNP government enacted legislation depriving around a
million Tamils of more recent Indian origin (most of them super-exploited
plantation workers in the central Hill Country) of their citizenship and
franchise. This initiated the policy of isolating one section of working
people and subjecting them to discrimination, violence, and deprivation of
their human rights. The policy has since been used against Sri Lanka Tamils
(who have been inhabitants of the island for as long as the Sinhalese),
Muslims, and occasionally even Sinhalese Christians. In each case, some
members of the majority community—Sinhalese Buddhists—orchestrated the
attacks, others mounted a strong defence of the victims, and many remained
passive.

The Official Language Act introduced by the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP)
government of S.W.R.D. Bandaranaike, who came to power in 1956, accelerated
this process. It made Sinhala the only official language, thus
discriminating against Tamil speakers, especially in government employment.
Peaceful protests against it led to the anti-Tamil pogroms of 1958. Sri
Lanka Tamils being a much larger minority than Hill-Country Tamils, the
resulting sense of injustice—heightened when the SLFP led by Bandaranaike’s
widow Sirimavo introduced a policy discriminating against Tamil students in
university entrance—contributed to the slide towards civil war.

In 1978, J.R. Jayawardene introduced a new constitution which centralized
almost absolute power in the hands of the Executive President, a post that
he proceeded to occupy. Not only was parliament disempowered, but
institutions that should be independent of the executive and ruling
political party—like the Election Commission, Supreme Court, and judiciary,
National Police Commission, Commission to Investigate Allegations of
Bribery and Corruption, Human Rights Commission, and Public Service
Commission—also came under the control of the executive, with predictable
consequences.
A more authoritarian Executive Presidency is associated with more lethal
assaults on human rights and democracy. It’s not surprising that a growing
number of voices … are demanding its abolition.

Given its obvious role as an assault on democracy, there has been a tug-of-war
over the Executive Presidency
<https://www.sundaytimes.lk/211017/columns/will-the-new-constitution-be-worse-than-the-known-devil-458743.html>
since then. The campaign to abolish it has been hamstrung by a Supreme
Court opinion that this would need support from a two-thirds majority in
parliament and a simple majority in a referendum, which has been difficult
to achieve. Instead, under Chandrika Kumaratunga’s presidency (1994-2005)
the 17th Amendment drastically reduced the powers of the president; then
under Mahinda Rajapaksa’s presidency, the 18th Amendment (2010) repealed
the 17th and scrapped the two-term limit on the presidency. When SLFP rebel
Maithripala Sirisena became president and Ranil Wickremesinghe prime
minister on the crest of a popular “Yahapalanaya” (Good Governance)
movement in 2015, the 19th Amendment again curtailed the powers of the
president, but was promptly reversed after Gotabaya Rajapaksa, now in the
Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP), a right-wing split from the SLFP, came
to power in 2019 and the 20th Amendment was passed in 2020. A more
authoritarian Executive Presidency is associated with more lethal assaults
on human rights and democracy. It’s not surprising that a growing number of
voices from the *aragalaya* are demanding its abolition.

These pernicious divisions among ordinary working people on one side and
centralization of power on the other allowed the state to violate the human
and democratic rights of everyone, including Sinhalese Buddhists. There are
many examples of this, including the assassination of Sinhalese critics and
sacking of tens of thousands of workers in 1980, but the most spectacular
example is the UNP’s crackdown on the second Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna
(JVP) uprising of 1987-1989. This included most of the same measures used
against Tamils, like subjecting Sinhalese civilians to arbitrary arrest,
prolonged incarceration without being tried or even charged, torture (often
resulting in death), and enforced disappearances. The main difference was
that mass murder was suffered not from bombing and shelling but by being
hacked to death, burned on tire-pyres, buried in mass graves or dismembered
and dumped by the roadside or in rivers. An estimated 60,000 Sinhalese were
killed in this conflict, including around 6,000 by the JVP; some of those
killed by state security forces were JVP combatants but the vast majority
were noncombatants.
Opposing state authoritarianism and ethnic supremacism

The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) and the JVP fought against the
Sri Lankan state, but the alternatives they offered were no less
authoritarian and ethnic supremacist. The LTTE consolidated its dominant
position by exterminating members of other Tamil militant groups, and its
goal was a Tamil-supremacist state. It started by killing and driving out
Sinhalese from the Northern and Eastern provinces, which it claimed as its
territory, and later did the same to Tamil-speaking Muslims. Its supreme
leader, V. Prabhakaran, aspired to totalitarian control over Tamil Eelam,
and ruthlessly exterminated Tamil dissidents. There were tens of thousands
of such victims, some of whom were tortured before being killed. One of the
best known is Rajani Thiranagama
<https://uthr.org/Reports/Report3/Rajaniwork.htm#_Toc515857060>, socialist,
feminist, doctor, lecturer, writer and human rights defender, who
challenged the nationalism, militarism and macho authoritarianism of the
LTTE and their forcible conscription of child soldiers. Other dissidents
were forced into exile.

Similarly the JVP headed by Rohana Wijeweera, who called himself a
“Marxist-Leninist” and “modern Bolshevik”
<https://newleftreview.org/issues/i84/articles/rohan-wijeweera-speech-before-the-ceylon-criminal-justice-commission>,
had a strong Sinhala-supremacist streak. Its five education classes
included one characterizing Hill-Country Tamil plantation workers as tools
of Indian expansionism: an abysmal failure of class analysis, apart from
expressing racist prejudice. It opposed the Indo-Lanka Accord of 1987,
which included recognition of Sri Lanka as a multi-ethnic country, equality
for the Tamil language, and devolution of power to the provinces, all of
which offered a modicum of redress to the grievances of Tamils. It was also
extremely authoritarian. Threatening to kill people if they didn’t go on
strike or boycott elections was not exactly the promotion of democracy
required for moving towards socialism. The modern JVP has renounced
violence and abandoned its anti-Tamil racism, but without an adequate
critique of its earlier politics.
Healing divisions between working people of different communities and
combating authoritarianism are preconditions for solving the economic
crisis.

This brings us to the role of democracy activists, both party and
non-party, in the democratic revolution. They were at the forefront of the
struggle against British colonialism. Ponnambalam Arunachalam argued for
universal franchise (which would include the plantation workers) and a
welfare state with free education. At the founding meeting of the Ceylon
Workers’ Federation in 1920, he called for unionized labor to protect the
interests of workers
<https://www.colombotelegraph.com/index.php/statelessness-the-vanishing-of-habeas-corpus/>.
After Arunachalam died in 1924, his vision was pursued by the Lanka Sama
Samaja Party (LSSP, formed in 1935) and the Communist Party of Sri Lanka
(CPSL), which fought for independence and against the legislation depriving
Hill-Country Tamils of their citizenship and franchise, organized a
successful nationwide hartal (civil disobedience and general strike)
against the withdrawal of the highly-subsidized rice ration in 1953, and
opposed the Sinhala Only Bill put forward by the SLFP.

Yet these parties entered into an alliance with the SLFP in 1964, and in
1968 formed a United Front with it that came to power in 1970. In 1972,
Colvin R. de Silva of the LSSP presided over the drafting of a republican
constitution that enshrined Sinhala as the sole official language and gave
a special place to Buddhism
<https://www.dailymirror.lk/opinion/the-national-question-all-about-state-power-sp-18248235/172-46752>.
Principled members split off, and in many cases split again. What possessed
them to take such a suicidal step? LSSP theoretician Hector
Abhayawardhana’s opinion
<https://www.ft.lk/columns/The-recurring-struggle-for-independence/4-737510>
that the SLFP victory in 1956 represented Sri Lanka’s “belated national
liberation” gives us a clue. The UNP, wedded to the West, was seen as
prolonging colonialism, whereas the SLFP’s policies of nationalization,
import substitution, and hostility to the West were seen as
“anti-imperialist” and “anti-capitalist,” despite their simultaneous attack
on equality and democracy. The same pseudo-anti-imperialist,
pseudo-socialist politics of the leaders of the LSSP, CPSL and Democratic
Left Front (DLF, formed out of successive splits from the LSSP) ensured
that they continued to support the Rajapaksas, thus sharing responsibility
for the ongoing catastrophe.
The appointment of Ranil Wickremesinghe as president demonstrates the
impossibility of political reform under the existing parliament.

The irony is that with Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s resignation, the SLPP has
anointed UNP leader Wickremesinghe—who failed to win his own seat and whose
party was wiped out in the 2020 parliamentary elections—as their new
president. His first actions on coming to power were to declare an
emergency and unleash the police, army, and Special Task Force
paramilitaries in a “shameful, brutal assault on peaceful protesters,” as
Amnesty International described it
<https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2022/07/sri-lanka-shameful-brutal-assault-on-peaceful-protestors-must-immediately-stop/>.
This is not surprising. Wickremesinghe and Gotabaya have been partners in
crimes against humanity during the pre-1994 period of the civil war and the
anti-JVP counter-insurgency, when as a member of the government and an army
commander respectively they were responsible for massacres of Tamils and
Sinhalese; they have also both been responsible for Sri Lanka’s loss
<https://groundviews.org/2019/08/30/a-betrayal-of-trust-on-gotabhayas-candidacy-and-shavendras-promotion/>
of tens of millions of dollars. Moreover, shocking evidence has emerged
<https://www.dailynews.lk/2019/10/10/tc/199357/inside-story-sri-lanka%E2%80%99s-easter-attacks>
that an Islamist group funded and protected by Gotabaya through the deep
state carried out the devastating Easter terrorist attacks in 2019,
enabling him to win the presidential election as the national security
candidate. Sirisena and Wickremesinghe, president and prime minister at the
time, ignored numerous warnings from Muslims that the group had been
radicalized, thus becoming complicit in the slaughter.

Given the bankruptcy of the old Left parties, with only small groups like
the United Left Front adhering to the agenda of carrying out a democratic
revolution, the role of non-party human rights and democracy activists and
groups is all the more important. From the 1970s onwards, they have worked
with exemplary courage in extremely repressive circumstances.
Moving forward

Healing divisions between working people of different communities and
combating authoritarianism are preconditions for solving the economic
crisis. The celebration of Sinhalese and Tamil New Year together, other
communities participating in breaking the Ramadan fast along with Muslims,
and the first commemoration in the south of Tamils killed in the war are
positive developments, but democracy activists need to push them much
further. The unusually high profile of women and young people in the
protests is also a hopeful sign.
[image: The Indian Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi meeting the Prime
Minister of the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka, Mr. Ranil
Wickremesinghe, at Hyderabad House, in New Delhi on September 15, 2015.]When
the movement forced President Gotabaya Rajapaksa to resign last month,
Ranil Wickremesinghe (pictured here in 2015) stepped into his place. “His
first actions on coming to power were to declare an emergency and unleash
the police, army, and Special Task Force paramilitaries in a ‘shameful,
brutal assault on peaceful protesters,’ as Amnesty International described
it. Photo by Press Information Bureau
<https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:The_Prime_Minister,_Shri_Narendra_Modi_meeting_the_Prime_Minister_of_the_Democratic_Socialist_Republic_of_Sri_Lanka,_Mr._Ranil_Wickremesinghe,_at_Hyderabad_House,_in_New_Delhi_on_September_15,_2015_(1).jpg>
of India.

As a Sinhala-speaking half-Tamil whose family in a Colombo suburb was
displaced by the anti-Tamil pogroms of 1958, my reading of the so-called
“ethnic conflict,” which I investigated in my oral history *Journey Without
a Destination: Is there a solution for Sri Lankan refugees?* and explored
further in my novel *Playing Lions and Tigers*, is more complex than most
views. My own experience and interviews testified to strong bonds of
friendship and solidarity between people from different ethnic communities,
with numerous stories of Sinhalese saving the lives of Tamil friends,
neighbors and even total strangers during anti-Tamil pogroms.

There have certainly been Sinhala-supremacists, including Buddhist monk
groups, organizing violent attacks on Tamils and Muslims with the
complicity of the state, but I attribute much of the support they have
received to the language divide created by Sinhala Only. The decline of
English as a link language and the inability to communicate across
linguistic communities, combined with tight censorship and relentless
propaganda via Sinhala media and schools, resulted in ignorance among large
sections of the Sinhalese public about the discrimination, violation of
civil rights, displacement, incarceration, torture, and mass killings
suffered by Tamils. It was easy to blame the civil war of 1983-2009
entirely on the LTTE without acknowledging the terrible injustices suffered
by Tamils. Yet when their own experience clashed with what they had been
told—as occurred during the anti-JVP counter-insurgency—many Sinhalese were
willing to re-examine their beliefs.

This moment, when state security forces are once again inflicting violence
on Sinhalese activists, is a good opportunity to raise these issues. Many
Tamils feel uncomfortable in a movement that ignores their concerns; but
for their own sake too, Sinhalese who voted for the Rajapaksas despite
knowing that they had looted the country when they were previously in
power, who voted for mass murderer Gotabaya as a knee-jerk reaction to the
Easter bombings, need to understand that voting for Sinhala supremacist
authoritarianism can lead to disaster for themselves.

On the other side, Tamils who say that this movement doesn’t concern them
also need to look inwards. Since it is patently absurd to argue that Tamils
don’t suffer from the prevailing shortages, power cuts and inflation, the
subtext of such a claim is that Tamils don’t belong in Sri Lanka but in a
separate state. This Tamil nationalist position is advocated precisely by
those who stifle criticism of the LTTE’s terror attacks against Sinhalese
civilians including children, their massacres of Muslims in the East and
ethnic cleansing of Muslims from the North, their torture and murder of
Tamil dissidents, and the barbaric cruelty of tearing Tamil children from
their parents and sending them to their deaths on the battlefield. The more
nuanced position
<https://inmathi.com/2022/07/11/sinhala-majoritarianism-is-a-major-factor-in-sri-lankas-economic-crisis/57265/>
of Rajan Hoole and Kopalasingham Sritharan of University Teachers for Human
Rights (Jaffna) argues that Tamils must engage positively with the
*aragalaya*, combating “both Sinhala chauvinism and narrow Tamil
nationalism.”
The lead actors in this drama are the working people of Sri Lanka, but they
cannot solve all their problems alone. Internationalist solidarity is
necessary to support the *aragalaya* against … brutal repression.

The appointment of Ranil Wickremesinghe as president demonstrates the
impossibility of political reform under the existing parliament. New
elections will have to be held and a new constitution enacted. There have
been suggestions for the formation of a People’s Council, or multiple
People’s Councils
<https://island.lk/peoples-councils-more-democracy-not-less/> that elect
delegates to an apex federation, with the dual responsibilities of
alleviating the sufferings of their constituencies and forging a new
constitution. Such a body, backed by a general strike to bring down the
existing government, could organise the election of a new parliament,
campaign against the SLPP and its allies
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2020_Sri_Lankan_parliamentary_election>
including Tamil, Muslim and Left parties, and put forward their proposals
for a new constitution to be upheld by other candidates. These should
include abolition of the executive presidency and devolution of power to
the provincial and local levels.

Solving the economic crisis is the biggest challenge for the *aragalaya*
and any new government. Only a few voices
<http://cadtm.org/Sri-Lanka-No-agreement-with-the-IMF> have called for a
suspension of foreign debt repayment, an audit of the foreign debt, and
cancellation of illegitimate debt, but this is absolutely necessary.
Transparency about the holders of securities is required; when an
investment banker said he was “flabbergasted”
<https://www.ft.com/content/09e1159f-9c45-4379-b862-98cb5e30a4da> at the
“amazing willingness” of the Rajapaksas to pay their creditors despite
being “bankrupt,” it’s worth asking: Are they among the offshore holders of
Sri Lanka’s sovereign bonds? Others have suggested that a new government
should not agree to austerity as a condition for future borrowing, given
the overwhelming evidence of its negative effects
<http://ssalanka.org/imf-debt-restructuring-resurgence-austerity-urgency-fiscal-justice-bhumika-muchhala/>;
it should impose a wealth tax
<https://www.dailymirror.lk/print/opinion/Sri-Lanka-stares-at-bankruptcy-or-redemption/231-235115>,
restrict imports to essential consumption goods and production inputs,
install a public distribution system, defend state ownership of utilities
and public services, and encourage producer cooperatives.
The lead actors in this drama are the working people of Sri Lanka, but they
cannot solve all their problems alone. Internationalist solidarity is
necessary to support the *aragalaya* against the brutal repression
<https://www.themorning.lk/rule-by-emergency-the-default-refuge-of-an-authoritarian/>
it is facing, extend humanitarian assistance without strings attached, and
resolve the foreign debt crisis. That would also help numerous other
countries facing similar crises.

Rule by Emergency: The default refuge of an authoritarian - The Morning ...

By Ambika Satkunanathan During the early hours of the morning on 22 July,
the armed forces, at least several hun...
<https://www.themorning.lk/rule-by-emergency-the-default-refuge-of-an-authoritarian/>

File:Anti-government protest in Sri Lanka 2022.jpg - Wikimedia Commons

<https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Anti-government_protest_in_Sri_Lanka_2022.jpg>

Sri Lanka’s democratic revolution - Tempest
<https://www.tempestmag.org/2022/08/sri-lankas-democratic-revolution/>

Sri Lanka’s democratic revolution - Tempest

Rohini Hensman

Months of protests brought down Sri Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa
last month. Scholar-activist Rohini Hens...
<https://www.tempestmag.org/2022/08/sri-lankas-democratic-revolution/>




File:The Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi meeting the Prime Minister o...

<https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:The_Prime_Minister,_Shri_Narendra_Modi_meeting_the_Prime_Minister_of_the_Democratic_Socialist_Republic_of_Sri_Lanka,_Mr._Ranil_Wickremesinghe,_at_Hyderabad_House,_in_New_Delhi_on_September_15,_2015_(1).jpg>








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Peace Is Doable

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