One must avoid arguments with three types â ass holes, ass wipers, and ass kissers. That said, there is little that can be done with a Shyamon the common denominator of all three types who insists further on shitting all over. I said this once before.Â
My earlier essay, âPreaching good governance from Penthousesâ seems to have irked many apologists of Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe. If Mahinda Rajapaksa was guilty of financial profligacy, the unfolding evidence suggests that Ranil Wickremesighe can be accused of shielding, defending and justifying grand larceny or virtual rape of the nationâs exchequer.Â
Mr. Shyamon Jayasinghe has described my indictment of Ranil Wickremesinghe as a comical drama piece. I do not wish to contradict him. It must indeed appear comic to a Bozo. Â
In reviewing our plight after two years of âYahapalanayaâ we must draw comfort from Trotskyâs dictum that History is the natural selection of accidents. It explains the 2015 election victory of President Sirisena. It was an accident. It was unexpected. That we yearned for it, is another matter.
President Sirisena must heed the advice Hugh Gaitskell gave the labour party that was in turmoil after the death of Clement Attlee. He told the warring left and right wings of the party âLet us not forget that we can never go farther than we can persuade at least half of the people to goâ. It is not consensus but numbers that finally matter.Â
As I said, his success on 8th January 2015 was an accident. The group responsible for his nomination led by former President Chandrika expected that the announcement at the New Town Hall on 21stNovember 2014 would trigger a substantial number of defection from the SLFP ranks. It did not happen. Why?
The SLFP parliamentarians and many representing ethnic minorities then aligned with the government knew how Mahinda would respond to the challenge. If he won, he would do another JR and hold a referendum and extend the docile parliament by another six years. The possible jumpers decided to wait and watch. Even after 8th January only a handful did.Â
Apart from Mahindaâs demonstrated political machismo, there was another vital factor. They knew that the Leader of the Opposition would only offer a token protest. He would either walk out as the UNP did on the 18th Amendment or discover some abstract constitutional gibberish that would help confuse the issue, as he did in the case of the impeachment of the Chief Justice.
Mahinda Rajapaksa held the presidential election in the belief that Ranil Wickremesinghe would be his opponent. Ranil is a narcissistic personality that has little empathy for contrary views. He was convinced that he could win the Presidency as he nearly did in 2005. He was clever enough to shelve the notion in 2010 given the âRanaviruâ syndrome that overwhelmed the Sinhala psyche.Â
While Tamils and Muslims would not have voted for Rajapaksa, they would not have rushed to vote for Wickremesinghe in the same phenomenal proportions as they did for the common candidate Sirisena.Â
Closer to the watershed event, UNP ranks were motivated and energized. It was not due to any Ranil magic. The selfless decision of young Harin Fernado to resign his seat in Parliament to take on the Rajapaksa monolith in the Uva provincial elections, uplifted the morale of a party. Though Harin failed to win outright, UNP ranks saw the promise of a new alternative leadership. There was life after Ranil, the leader with a fragile self-esteem and a distorted sense of his own destiny. Â
Very soon, we will know what happened and who did what in the Bond Issue in February 2015 and the repeat of it in 2016.Â
The Bond controversy emboldened the Mahinda faction. There were no major defections to the Maithri camp. The UNP failed to obtain a decisive mandate. The new President appointed defeated candidates through the national list and cobbled up a two thirds majority and for two years we have lived with the chimera of a national coalition. Â
Had Mahinda won, resolving the debt conundrum would have been his burden. He would have had to deal with the same illiquidity and the same worries of insolvency. He too would have adopted drastic measures. He would have relied on brother Gota to manage social order and handled parliament with a more than a tame leader of the opposition.
Pieter Keuneman, commenting on the undemocratic features of the 1978 Constitution wrote that the âthe task of bringing Parliament back to the people and of making it a real instrument of the peoples will be settled not in the edifice designed by Jeffrey Bawa in the Diyawanna lake. It was more likely, to be settled elsewhere.â
It was his perspicacious, classically Marxist refrain that prompted my anguished remonstration that âwe made a terrible mistake on 8th January 2015.
As Hannah Arendt points out, regimes that are corrupt and without authority, lacking the confidence of the people can be of extraordinary longevity. What we see today is an extension of the Rajapaksa regime with Rajapaksa himself in hibernation.
What the bond controversy did was to put information that was previously held by a few in to the hands of almost everybody curious about how we manage or mismanage our public debt.
Ranil Wickremesinghe never wanted a commission of inquiry. He made sure that Parliament was dissolved preventing the first COPE committee seeing the light of day. The next COPE committee had a general idea that there was indeed an iceberg but as we know now, it too missed the tip but was guided by the tap of surmise and common sense. Â
It is not Raviâs penthouse. It is Ranilâs madhouse that has to be dismantled. When the commission of inquiry publishes its findings, we have the opportunity for a genuine revolution. To begin something anew. It will open up space for the President to form a truly representative national government for the remainder of his presidency. We must dismantle the petrified structure and rediscover the spirit of the movement for a just society that started it all.Â
Prime Minster Ranil Wickremesinghe stands indicted for his sordid attempt to cover-up the Bond Scam. He cannot sit next to the Governor of the Central Bank and promise economic reforms or announce economic strategy. He never wanted him in that position. He wanted Arjun Mahendran reappointed. Failing that, he wanted Charitha Ratwatte.
The country needs a new credible Prime Minster who can communicate with people and not tainted with scandal. If hard economic choices are needed we need a credible administration. It is much easier to lose credibility than to gain it back. The nation needs action not words.Â
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