SRI LANKA:
Rajapaksa’s Victory & After - Update No. 191
Col. R. Hariharan
This
article is a summary of answers to questions
put by various national and international
print and electronic media on January 27,
2010.
President Mahinda
Rajapaksa has won a second term as President
of Sri Lanka with a handsome margin. Did you
expect this victory? Would you take it as
peoples’ recognition of his leadership role
in the victory against the Tamil Tigers?
Of course President
Rajapaksa’s rise in popularity was mainly
due to his contribution in designing and
orchestrating the actions of the entire
government to achieve military victory.
While he provided the canvass for the
victory, it was Fonseka who led the campaign
and made it a reality .So both gained public
acclaim after the military victory.
According to one assessment the popularity
of Rajapaksa and Fonseka on this count was
in the ratio of 60:40 respectively.
Many of us had forecast a
victory for the President by a narrow
margin. In fact he was expected to scrape
through. So winning by over 58% plus
majority was indeed a surprise. This is a
sizeable increase over the 50.3% majority he
secured in the 2005 election. Actually a
popular poll prediction in the early days of
election ring said he would win by 62% and
nobody was prepared to believe that. On the
other hand, another pollster on January 21
had forecast a lead of 12% for Fonseka. So
much for poll predictions.
However, it is too early
to carry out a detailed analysis of the
polling patterns. We need more inputs to do
that. But it is clear that majority of
Tamils in the north did not vote and the
President was elected by overwhelming
Sinhala support.
Do you think the
President’s victory came by fair means? How
did he achieve it?
Stuffing of ballot boxes
is not an uncommon phenomenon in South Asia
and in particular in Sri Lanka. Probably
there were such cases in this election also.
The detailed reports of monitors would
surface in due course, I presume.
But there was
considerable misuse of state media by the
ruling coalition; and government servants
campaigned openly against the opposition
candidate. The Election Commissioner was so
disgusted at the utter disregard shown to
his directions that he decided to retire
from office before the next parliamentary
poll in April. Even while announcing the
results of the election, the Elections
Commissioner said that though he tried his
level best to ensure the polls were
conducted in a free and fair manner, it was
“largely out of his control to manage,
especially in areas like Puttalam,
Anuradhapura and Matale.”
In spite of all this, it
would be unfair to the voters to trivialise
the overwhelming mandate Rajapaksa has
secured as solely due to electoral
malpractices.
I think President’s
victory came about because of overwhelming
Sinhala majority support, and large scale
abstention of Tamil voters of Northern
Province, just as it happened in the 2005
presidential poll. Many Tamils in Vanni have
not been able to get back to their normal
life savagely destroyed by the war. Many
believed there was nothing much to choose
between the two main candidates. In their
eyes probably both the candidates lacked
credibility particularly on the Tamil issue.
Though the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) had
supported General Fonseka, it could
influence only those who voted, but not the
majority who stayed away from voting. In the
end only around 19% of them voted. As a
whole it has exposed the lack of credibility
of Tamil political class among the public.
At the same time the
ruling coalition had generally created a
climate of fear and suspicion in the country
before the election. There was intimidation,
high handedness and muzzling of opposition
media. By January 24 there were over 900
incidents of election related misconduct.
Five people were killed. In this kind of
environment the explosion of a few bombs in
Jaffna in the early hours of Election Day
probably came as a final straw for the
voters not to stir out of their houses.
Rajapaksa’s overwhelming
support came from Southern Sinhala voters
particularly in rural areas. Apparently,
Fonseka had not been able to make a dent in
this vote bank. Even Mrs Chandrika
Kumaratunga’s belated show of solidarity
with Fonseka had only symbolic effect.
General Fonseka had
alleged that the troops had surrounded the
hotel where he was staying and it was part
of a plot to kill him. What are your
comments?
“Politics of revenge”
became the order of the day in Sri Lanka
ever since the ambitious General fell out
with the President and his brothers. Its
pitch increased when he decided to contest
the presidential poll. The General has since
moved out of the hotel to his house. The
government had said the troops were out
there “to protect the opposition leaders”
(from whom?) and the search was carried out
to apprehend deserters holed up in the
hotel. This is hardly a credible story as
police can to carry out these tasks.
The General’s accusation
of a plot to kill him needs to be
substantiated. The allegation was probably a
manifestation of the confrontational
politics. Presumably, the aggressive act of
massing of troops was a continuation of
pressure tactics used against Fonseka
starting with allegations of corruption and
nepotism. The General’s statement also could
be to enrol international sympathy for his
plight and uncertain future after his
defeat.
The General Fonseka led
the army to victory in the Eelam War under
President Rajapaksa. Despite this he appears
to be daggers drawn with the President. What
was most important reason for his
relationship with the President going wrong?
Basically, the General
was an ambitious person. He felt the
President had not given the recognition he
deserved for his contribution to the
military victory that eluded Sri Lanka for
26 years. After the General became the CDS,
he spoke of a grandiose vision of building
300,000-strong army. His talk of building a
huge and powerful army, when even the
200,000-strong army was becoming redundant
after the war, made political classes
uneasy.
The President apparently
felt uncomfortable in handling him and
sidelined him from the mainstream of
decision making. This process of
“downsizing” reached its low point when he
was appointed Secretary of Sports Ministry.
The differences between
the President and the General came out in
the open and culminated in the fight for
presidency. And the opposition parties
desperately looking for a suitable candidate
to oppose the President, they found a useful
foil in Fonseka.
What was India’s equation
with the two candidates?
Over the years, President
Rajapaksa has built a strong relationship at
various levels of Indian leadership. He is
quick to acknowledge India’s help and
appreciates the political limitations of
India in supporting him during the Eelam
War. Even though India had harped on
activating the 13th amendment to
the Constitution on provincial autonomy, it
chose to ignore when the President deferred
action on it and went to war. India had
consistently supported Sri Lanka under his
leadership in international forums even on
some of the critical issues like human
rights violations.
On the other hand,
Fonseka was an unknown quantity to Indian
leadership. The UNP leader Ranil
Wickremesinghe, who is on a good wicket with
Indian leaders, had tried to plead for
India’s support to the General. Apparently,
India was not comfortable with the idea.
When he was the army commander, General
Fonseka’s pronouncements had smacked of
Sinhala nationalism and support to him would
at best be controversial.
Moreover, India
considered Rajapaksa a safe bet, as it
probably expected him to come on top in the
election. So probably India favoured his
victory although it stand on the subject was
never made public.
President Rajapaksa has
been elected with a sizeable majority votes
for a second term. Do you expect him to be
dictatorial in his second term? Will he use
the majority Sinhala support he enjoys to
crush the Tamils?
I agree there are
instances where presidents repeatedly given
a democratic mandate tended to be
dictatorial. And the executive presidency
gives considerable leeway for the president
to be dictatorial. But Sri Lanka has an
enlightened political class and strong civil
society which had become vocal during the
election. It had always opposed such
tendencies as was seen during the
Jayawardane regime. So it would not be easy
for the President to behave like a dictator.
Rajapaksa is a seasoned
politician who uses existing political
instruments to get his writ through. He has
demonstrated this a number of times say by
splitting political parties in his favour,
buying time on the Tamil issue etc.
Tamils are a sizeable
minority who can make a difference between
the winner and the loser in national
elections. So over the years, all major
parties have tried to cultivate a Tamil
lobby. So I do not expect the revival of
vintage anti-Tamil attitude of rabid Sinhala
nationalism as a major political force.
Already Rajapaksa enjoys huge Sinhala
support and he will gain no political
advantage by “road rolling” Tamils and their
concerns.
There is also the
lingering India factor in Sri Lanka, however
reluctant India might be to acknowledge it.
Rajapaksa knows that across the Palk
Straits, Sri Lanka Tamils enjoy considerable
empathy and emotional support. This has
already been tested during the war. And
Tamil Nadu has a big clout in New Delhi in
the ruling coalition. So Rajapaksa would
always keep India at the back of his mind
while dealing with the Tamil issue. India is
also likely to come under considerable
pressure to bring up the issue with
Rajapaksa as Tamil Nadu gets ready for the
2011 assembly polls.
Overall, although the
election mandate has boosted Rajapaksa’s
power, I expect the President to show a
nuanced approach during his second term.
However, he could be encouraged by those
around him to deviate from this path when
pressure builds up against him internally or
externally.
It had been reported that
the U.S. favoured Fonseka in the
presidential poll. What are your comments?
It is true the U.S. had
been quite unhappy with the Rajapaksa regime
on two counts: its indifference to the U.S.
concerns over gross human rights violations,
and its contacts with the anti-US club –
Venezuela, Iran, Cuba, Myanmar etc.
Moreover, considerable anti-U.S. feelings
were whipped up in the closing stages of war
when the U.S. wanted to extricate the
beleaguered Tamil Tigers.
Countries do
act at times in strange ways but
I do not believe the U.S.
ever seriously considered supporting Fonseka,
despite its frosty relations with Rajapaksa.
I am sure the U.S. is realistic
enough to know of Rajapaksa’s strengths as
demonstrated in his success against the
Tamil Tigers. I am sure this was the reason
for Senator John F. Kerry led Senate Foreign
Relations Committee’s call for friendlier
relations between the U.S. and Sri Lanka in
December 2009. Moreover, the U.S. does
consult India on key issues relating to Sri
Lanka. And India’s lack of enthusiasm for a
regime change in Sri Lanka would have
definitely discouraged the U.S. from any
thought of favouring Fonseka.
When Mrs Indira Gandhi
was Prime Minister she reacted strongly to
America’s planned foray into Sri Lanka.
China has already made an entry into Sri
Lanka. As Sri Lanka is in a 1987-like
situation now, do you expect Rajapaksa to
slowly marginalise Indian influence in the
island to accommodate the Chinese?
The Cold War scene of Mrs
Gandhi’s time does not exist anymore. The
world and this region have changed
considerably along with international power
equations. China is poised to become a
global power; it has become the financier to
boost up America’s sagging economy. Its
economic influence is spreading the world
over and in support its military reach is
also growing. This is the reality.
And the Chinese influence
in Sri Lanka is a part of this reality. And
Sri Lanka would need China’s economic
support to build its war ravaged economy as
much as it needs India’s support. In spite
of this, Sri Lanka had carefully tried to
balance the relationship. In fact, it
offered the Hambantota project to India
first; it went to China only after India
failed to respond. On the other hand as
China’s foot print increases in Sri Lanka,
India’s security concerns would also
increase. And India should constantly keep a
watch on Chinese activity in Sri Lanka,
regardless of its nature.
At the same time, India
has also become an important economic power
and militarily a strong regional player. It
is building its strategic security
relationship with the U.S. This is likely to
grow in the coming years. As the U.S. sees
India as a factor to balance the Chinese
power projection in this region, despite
India’s reluctance to acknowledge it. So
India of today is not the same as it was in
1987.
Sri Lanka-India relations
are closer than ever before. It has a fairly
successful free trade agreement with India.
Indian capital flow to Sri Lanka is poised
to increase and this would boost employment
and economic opportunities for Sri Lanka.
There is considerable similarity of
perception on many international issues
between the two countries. So it is doubtful
whether Rajapaksa would gain any major
advantage by enlarging his relationship with
China at the cost of India. In fact, it
would be strategically risky for him to do
so as India is physically too close to Sri
Lanka. This is an advantage that China does
not enjoy.
The President is
politically savvy enough to understand these
nuances of the Sri Lanka, India and China
triangular relationship. He would probably
try to reap maximum advantage for his
country from India using the China card.
(Col. R Hariharan, a retired Military
Intelligence specialist on South Asia,
served as the head of intelligence of the
Indian Peace Keeping Force in Sri Lanka
1987-90.He is associated with the South Asia
Analysis Group and the Chennai Centre for
China Studies. Blog:
www.colhariharan.org
E-mail: colhari@yahoo.com)
Responses Received from Readers- ( Taken
from "Tamil Week".)
Col Hariharan,
You say won with a "handsome margin"! - we
are not stupid to believe this.
Go, tell it to the marines.
Posted by: Anton Jay |
January 29, 2010 02:17 AM
When parliament elections come, opposition
wont be united... each will contest under
their own party.
Mahinda has a chance to get 2/3 majority
even under proportional system.
Good or bad, TNA is still strong in
north-east.
If
Mahinda is smart, he'll make deal with TNA.
Posted by: aratai |
January 29, 2010 12:36 PM
Colonel,
"Rajapaksa
knows that across the Palk Straits, Sri
Lanka Tamils enjoy considerable empathy and
emotional support. This has already been
tested during the war. And Tamil Nadu has a
big clout in New Delhi in the ruling
coalition."
Really? What could 60 million Tamils in
Tamil Nadu do, or the DMK, a ruling partner
at the center, do, while thousands--perhaps
more than 30,000-- of innocent Tamils were
murdered in the final stages of the war, or
when more than 300,000 Tamils were interned
in camps under abysmal conditions?
Absolutely nothing. Other than doing some
self-immolation, the majority had no will,
no backbone to challenge the center to
intervene and protect civilians.
We, the SL Tamils, are tired about your
reiteration of a phony claim. TN Tamils have
essentially left the SL Tamils to fend for
themselves and we will have to be mindful of
that and be self-reliant going forward.
Posted by: Expatriate |
January 29, 2010 07:12 PM