The post-war State and the nemesis of the Rajapaksa regime
by Prof. Gamini Keerawella
Before July 2013, Rathupaswala was a little known village near
emerging township of Weliveriya. The people in Rathupaswala and in a few
adjoining villages gathered together in the month of July 2013 to launch
a peaceful protest against the authorities for turning the blind eye to
their burning problem relating to pollution of water in the area.
 |
The protests at
Rathupaswela against water pollution, where three people were
shot and killed by the Security Forces. Pic: Dushmantha
Mayadunne |
They charged that the water in the area was polluted due to the
release of industrial waste by a factory nearby manufacturing latex
gloves by processing natural rubber. On July 16 the villagers lodged a
formal complaint at the regional office of the Central Environment
Authority in Gampaha.
The lukewarm response on the part of the authorities to the urgent
issue affecting their day-to-day life prompted the angry villagers to
intensify the protest on July 27. In the backdrop of the escalation of
protest, a discussion was held between the government representatives
and the villagers but the parties failed to reach an acceptable
settlement.
Later, the protest escalated further and on August 1 the villagers
began to block the main road. At this point the government decided to
summon Special Task Force and the Army and they used force including
live bullets and water cannon to disperse the crowd. The outcome of the
use of military force against the protesters was the death of three
protesters, in addition to hundreds of major and minor casualties.
Live bullets
This was not the first incident of this nature that took place in the
South since the end of the war. In June 2011, when the workers of the
Katunayake Free Trade Zone (FTZ) staged a non-violent political protest
demanding the withdrawal of proposed legislation relating to their
pension, the government mobilised the police against the agitators.
The police used water cannon, tear gas and batons and rounds of live
bullets. As a result, a 21 year-old worker in the FTZ died from gunshot
wounds and scores of casualties were reported. After the incident, the
government withdrew the proposed legislation.
 |
Attack on UNP MPs who were
on a fact-finding mission at Hambantota |
Again in February 2012, when small-scale fisherman in Chilaw area
took to the streets in protest against rising fuel prices, the police
used tear gas, water cannons and live bullets to stop demonstrators
killing one person and wounding three. The protest was stopped but not
the anger over the use of force.
When one looks at the above chain of events that took a score of
human lives it is not possible to avoid raising two key questions as to
the conduct of the Rajapaksa regime.
First, why did the political authorities fail to find a negotiated
settlement to the issues of the people before their protests grew out of
proportion to a point of no control?
Force
Second, why did the government use such an excessive military force
against unarmed civilians who were in ‘non-violent’ protest and
legitimate political action in a democratic framework?
The use of coercive force including military power against unarmed
general public engaging in legitimate political protest is not a
characteristic of a stable and confident State. It definitely reflects a
demeanor of a weak state and a threatened regime.
However, the Rajapaksa regime put up a façade of strength, especially
after the war. President Mahinda Rajapaksa handsomely claimed all the
credit for eradicating terrorism and liberating the country from the
throes of separatism.
 |
There were brutal attacks
on fishermen in Chilaw. |
The euphoria at the end of war was visible everywhere. In addition,
by enticing crossover of members of the Parliaments from the opposition,
the regime was able to secure the two-thirds majority in the Parliament
which hitherto has been considered unattainable in the present system of
proportional representation. Furthermore, the opposition was intensely
divided and engaged in fratricidal conflicts allowing the regime a free
play in the power game.
The protest of the people of Rathupaswala and adjoining villages was
by no means a threat to the existence of the regime.
It was simply a civil society initiative with no political party
behind them. Why was the regime, outwardly stable and powerful,
compelled to employ such cohesive methods instead of resorting to
methods of peaceful settlement of the conflicts?
This is exactly where the paradox of Rajapaksa regime lies: despite
all the politically favourable conditions, the regime was essentially
insecure and suffering from a besieged mentality.
The mobilising of armed squadrons, with uniforms and without, and the
use of fire power against its own population on non-violent protests was
definitely a demeanor of a weak regime.
The nemesis of Rajapaksa regime should be analysed in the light of
the contradiction between the appearance and the reality in governance
in post-war Sri Lanka.
Contradiction
To understand this contradiction it is necessary to pay attention to
certain salient features of Sri Lankan state. These features evolved
over quite a long period of time. However, they became more conspicuous
and got accelerated under Rajapaksa regime after the war.
As far as its political implications are concerned, the most
fundamental among them was the disappearance of the boundary between the
state and the regime. The regime is a crucial component of the state but
it is something more than the regime.
There is a subtle and important difference between these institutions
and maintaining the difference is very important for the democratic
political process. It is this difference that underlies the crucial
democratic principles such as the rule of law, the constitutionalism and
other fundamentals of good governance. The failure to identify and
demarcate the sites of two parallel institutions and to mutually respect
the spheres of each other disturbed the balance in mechanisms of
democratic governance.
The process of infringing the relative autonomy of state structures
and making them overtly subservient became more naked under Rajapaksa
regime. The State and the regime become one entity, the Rajapaksa regime
tied up the security of the regime with national security. As the
domestic security of the regime was tied with national security the
regime invoked the concept of national security to justify the use of
force to suppress legitimate political protest.
Subverted
With the margin between the State and the regime blurred, the
Rajapaksa regime manipulated and subverted the institutions of the State
to serve narrow political interests of the regime.
The disappearance of the margin between the State and the regime led
to another corollary development: the merging of political power with
State power. The political power became de facto and de jure State
power.
It had two main serious political implications. First, those who held
political power in the regime saw no limit to their exercise of power
and authority. The institutions of the State were made subservient to
the narrow political interests of the regime.
The institutions of power and authority of the state became the
instruments of power and authority of the ruling alliance. Second, the
ability to exert control over the state institutions went to the wider
section of political agents through the party in power. Those who
exercised power and authority over state institutions and the
bureaucracy were not necessarily linked to any legislative structure;
what was required was only to indicate that they represent the political
power of the regime.
The political authority prevails over the all state institutions. In
deciding who heads the local state institutions such as the police, the
Divisional Secretariat and state schools in the area, the voice of the
local political leadership was decisive.
All internal departmental mechanisms and institutional structures and
procedures were made secondary to the political will. What really
happened in the constitutional sphere along with this was that all
remaining barriers, checks and balances to the exercise of power by the
all powerful Executive Presidency have been removed one by one.
Contradictory
It reached a summation with the 18th amendment to the Constitution in
September 2010. As such, the regime weaved step by step all the
constitutional paraphernalia required for constitutional despotism. When
people lose their faith in the institutional apparatus of the State and
in the administration of justice, the only alternative left for them is
to take the law and order into their hands.
To locate these trends in a broad politico-historical canvas we need
to pay attention to two seemingly contradictory but in fact interrelated
political developments. Increasing concentration of state power at the
center in the hands of the executive president is the first and the more
conspicuous tendency.
The second is the co-option of a large section of political agents of
intermediary layers to state power.
Though these two processes are seemingly contradictory, in really it
is not. Dialectically they form the unity of the order. The executive
president with unprecedented concentration of power through
constitutional and political means is in need of a wide array of
operators and agents to exercise his authority at different levels —
centre, districts and village. There are many ‘owners of the state’ at
different levels. As a result, there are many personalities who can
claim ‘I am the State’ in their respective geographical spheres. These
two processes, namely, concentration of power at the centre and the
co-optation of provincial political commissars as sub-contractors of
power formed the unity of the system.
In the light of working of the political order it was far from a
modern democracy; it was in fact a form of ‘neo political feudalism’ in
democratic garb. Furthermore, those who exercised State power believed
that they ‘owned’ the State and that it was their cardinal duty to
protect it as it is.
As their access to State power solely depended on their political
power they were ready to do anything to stay in power. It was a matter
of life and death for them. Their entire social recognition and command
rest on political power.
Many of them would become non-entities without political power. The
Provincial Councils system was introduced in 1987 as a second tier of
government in order to promote devolution of power. Without accompanied
devolution-friendly political culture and practices of good governance,
the prevailing political culture and practices subverted the entire
Provincial Councils system to make it another avenue for the parasitic
‘political class’ to gain access to state resources.
The economic and political exigencies linked with these developments
demanded continuous expansion of the public sector. The need for direct
intervention of the state in economic affairs was presented after 1956
as a necessary step to facilitate economic development and ensure
distributional justice.
Mismanagement
Before long it was realised that the expansion of the State sector
would bring an enormous reservoir of resources and economic activities
of the country under the control of those in power. The direct
interventionist role of the State expanded continuously and the state
sector has become an overburdened Goliath.
It is a holy cow that no one dared to touch. Under Rajapaksa regime
many state-run service providing institutions in effect became rent
collection institutions. Many of them are run at a huge loss mainly due
to sheer mismanagement and bureaucratic and political corruption,
according to the COPE report. The COPE report revealed numerous
instances of waste, corruption and mismanagement of State funds running
into billions of rupees, in all the examined institutions, with little
or no follow-up action to bring to book those responsible for such
lapses.
The Ceylon Electricity Board, The Ceylon Petroleum Corporation and
MIHIN Lanka are not the exceptions; but the norm. Political power was
the key to gain access to state resources, the entry point to the
Eldorado.
As this system evolved numerous avenues were offered to the
‘political class’ to extract state resources at various levels. The
political power not only bestowed them social recognition but also
offered wide opportunities to siphon state resources.
The unimaginable wealth amassed by those who were attached to the
ruling alliance for some years cannot be explained otherwise. On the one
hand there are accepted concessions and privileges to the top rung of
the ruling alliance.
Appendage
Who would get contracts and sub-contracts in all big development
projects was decided by the top political leadership. The second and
third layers in the political agents were also compensated by making
other small-scale state contracts and sub-contracts to them. Without
this filtering process the system could not be maintained. All these
developments contributed to a sea change in the attitude of the people
towards the state and Rajapaksa regime.
Parallel to these new developments as to the nature and the functions
of the state, the entire political order was also gradually changed from
a party-centered political system to an individual-centered one. The gap
between the party hierarchy and the members became very wide.
The party leader prevailed over the party organisation firmly, making
the party only an appendage to the leader. It was the not the party
organisation but the leader as an individual with the advice of his
personal advisers that decided policy directions of the party.
Ethnic conflict
As far as party matters were concerned, all other factors were
secondary to the will of the leader. The personal loyalty to the leader
was more important than the party loyalty. The entire state craft and
political order gravitated around the Fuehrer and everything in the
state came under his will. What matters in this context was not policy
or political ideology but the loyalty to the leader. In this context,
moving from one party to another was very easy.
By the time of the end of the Elam War in 2009 the Sri Lankan State
and political order was faced with the strong need of profound political
reforms in order to check continuous erosion of democratic institutions
and processes and to arrest the institutional collapse.
Five years after the end of the war, in the absence of any meaningful
democratic reforms, the entire political system was affected with
multiple political maladies. The Rajapaksa regime believed that with the
people in the South could be made to overlook the issue of democratic
political reform in the context of pervasive war triumphalism in the
south following the defeat of the LTTE.
However, the Rajapaksa regime failed to recognize the fact that the
issue of democratic reforms in the South and the ethnic issue in the
North constituted different though organically linked elements of the
crisis of the state.
In the final analysis the ethnic crisis and the resultant war was an
outcome of the failures of liberal democratic project in Sri Lanka.
The conclusion of the civil war did not mark the end of the end of
ethnic crisis in Sri Lanka. However, it opened up a new political space
to have a new political dialogue among all communities in order to find
a mutually acceptable solution to the nationality question.
Thus, with the end of the war Sri Lanka reached a critical historical
juncture.
This historical moment offered Sri Lanka many opportunities and
possibilities; it was also impregnated with new challenges and problems.
The challenge was how to move from conflict to post-conflict society.
The transition was not fait accompli with the silencing of the guns.
Reforms
It had to be a long and multi-deck process that needs to be carried
out assiduously with a clear vision as to future direction of the
post-war Sri Lankan state. It had to be an integral part of broader
systemic political reforms in the direction of restructuring the state.
The modes operandi of Rajapaksa regime during the last five years
clearly showed it had no political will or vision to proceed in that
direction. Another striking feature in the post-war scenarios in the
North is the failure of the Rajapaksa regime to move away from the
war-security framework and mechanism to a post-war framework.
But security of the state continued to remains the highest priority.
However, in the post-war context it is necessary to develop new concepts
to suit ground realities with a clear vision and direction as to the
role of the military.
In the post-war context, any reemergence of a secessionist threat has
to be checked in the political sphere.
After a realistic assessment of security needs, new security
operational mechanisms need to be introduced. Visible military presence
in every nook and corner of the North is practically counter-productive
and security interests of the state could be taken care of by
well-trained, strong and smartly less-visible military presence with a
new security perspective.
The military victory over the LTTE strengthened the narrow perception
of state-centered national security. The concept of national security
goes beyond military-strategic security of the state. The security of
collective identities and individual security must be a part of national
security.
In the post-war context, the Sri Lankan state cannot afford to
consider a section of its own citizenry a security threat. The
difference between dissent and subversion must be identified. Dissent is
an important safety valve necessary for healthy democracy.
Peace
When the regime failed to make this difference and act accordingly,
any democratic dissent and peaceful protest of ordinary citizens of the
country came to be considered a security threat that should be
suppressed by using force instead of dealing it in the political plane.
The lack of vision as to post-war reconciliation made the regime to
consider those who were not with the ruling alliance in the North a
security threat to the state.
It became abundantly clear after five years of the conclusion of war
that the Rajapaksa regime failed to transform the hard-fought military
victory against the LTTE into a foundation for durable peace. In order
make use of the opportunities offered at the post-war historical
juncture it is imperative to have a clear political vision and a will to
achieve a political solution to the ethnic issue.
The first concrete step needed to be taken in this direction was to
widen democratic political space to integrate those who felt alienated
on ethnic grounds from the decision-making process and institutions and
processes of power and authority.
The ultimate outcome of the inability to summon the political will
and courage to initiate reforms to promote democracy and national
reconciliation was the gradually slipping away of this unique
opportunity to build a cohesive society and a healthy state.
The real objective of political reforms must be the empowerment of
the people through widespread distribution of political power. The
devolution of power must be viewed from this perspective and the
devolution would not be effective without relevant democratic political
practices and mind-set.
This underscored the importance of democratic reforms and good
governance, the need of the day.
'Enemies'
To negate the call for democratic reforms, the Rajapaksa regime
needed an alternative mission. In this context, the regime assumed a
mission of ‘saving the motherland’ and for that it needed an ‘enemy’.
Even after the defeating the LTTE, there were ‘enemies’ of the State
everywhere.
There were conspiracies against the State in every nook and corner.
The main task of the state was to identify and counter internal and
external enemies who were waiting for an opportunity to destabilize and
divided the country.
Therefore, any means used to defeat or control these enemies was
justified. Thus, there came to be only two types of citizens: patriotic
and non-patriotic. The criterion was very simple; those who support the
regime were patriotic. It created fear and thereby curtailed and
narrowed the range of public debate on broader political and economic
issues.
A direct consequence of the failure of the regime to embark on
necessary political reform was the continuation of Sri Lanka as a weak
state, curiously even after militarily defeating one of the most
ruthless and well organised terrorist groups in the world.
Difference
The political space opened up by the collapse of the LTTE could have
been used to chart out a new political path towards a strong state by
initiating political reforms to address the ethno-political crisis that
pushed Sri Lanka to a protracted civil war.
The strength or weakness of the State principally correlates with the
degree of socio-political cohesion, not always with military power. Some
countries that can claim to be militarily strong are in fact weak
states. The concept of strong and weak states is based on the structural
component of State and there is no single indicator to define the
difference between strong and weak States.
Barry Buzan identifies a number of conditions that can be found in
weak states: high levels of political violence, conspicuous role for
political police in the everyday life of citizens, major political
conflict over what ideology will be used to organised the State, lack of
a coherent national identity, or the presence of contending national
identities within the State, lack of a clear and observed hierarchy of
political authority and high degree of control over the media. In weak
States the challenge to the key components of state, namely the idea of
the state, institutions of the state and its human and physical base
emanates internally. These challenges are diverse and come from
different forms.
For example, the functional capacity and the legitimacy of
institutions of State are destroyed by over-politicisation, political
interference and nepotism.
As a result, the citizens of the state do not have a faith and
confidence in state institutions and they are often subjected to the
wrath of the people. In this situation, weak states define its national
security in terms of internal threats.
The threatened regime resorts to coercion rather than accommodation
and compromise. The manner in which Rajapaksa regime handled aspirations
of the citizens is an ideal example for a conduct of a threatened regime
in a weak State even as it appears to be politically powerful. It
explains the nemesis of the Rajapaksa regime.
Empowerment
The political solution to the ethnic problem and the issue of
political reform in the country are two intertwined elements of the
solutions to same crisis of the post-colonial state. Ethnic
reconciliation and political integration in the North and the East must
be a part of broader political reforms.
The rebuilding and rehabilitation of North cannot be isolated from
the political reforms in the South. Without political empowerment of the
people in the North, true national cohesion is not possible. It should
be done in the context of broad democratic reforms to ensure good
governance.
Therefore, the key to political, social and economic rebuilding of
the North is democratic political reforms in the South.
In the changed political environment after the war the Rajapaksa
regime had a historic opportunity to embark on essential democratic
political reforms in order to restructure the state and set a new
direction to politics.
The changed conditions in the ethnic issue in the North and the
multi-faceted political crisis in the South made democratic political
reforms a key issue in the post-war political discourse. Instead of
bringing necessary democratic political reforms into forefront what the
Rajapaksa regime really pursued was the ‘national security state’
project.
The democratic impulses of society and the thirst of the people for
good governance and rule of law forced the opposition forces to unite
and provide catalysts for the nemesis of Rajapaksa regime. |