Pseudo socialists defend:
crime, corruption and lawlessness?
by Latheef Farook
At the January 8 presidential elections, people voted for the common
candidate Maithripala Sirisena who promised good governance, restoration
of law and order, end to crime and corruption and create a good society.
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Pic:
Courtesy Lankabusinessonline.com |
Though ambitious, it is an uphill task in view of the mess created by
the Rajapaksa regime, which virtually ruined every government
institution, society and the country.
However, riding against the popular wave some pseudo socialists who
were ministers in the defeated government wanted to bring back former
President Mahinda Rajapaksa, perhaps to ensure crime, corruption and
lawlessness continue to pave the way for a dictatorship?
During a joint press briefing on Monday, February 9, four United
People's Freedom Alliance (UPFA), allies announced their desire to bring
back defeated president Mahinda Rajapaksa to power by fielding him as
the prime ministerial candidate at the forthcoming general elections.
They included National Freedom Front (NFF) leader and MP Wimal
Weerawansa, Democratic Left Front (DLF) leader and MP Vasudeva
Nanayakkara, Mahajana Eksath Peramuna (MEP) leader and MP Dinesh
Gunawardena and newly formed Pivithuru Hela Urumaya (PHU) leader Udaya
Gammanpila.
Fear
Their announcement shocked the already shocked nation, which voted
President Mithripala Sirisena to power in an unprecedented peaceful
revolution and saved the country from sliding into dictatorship.
The previous regime was known for lawlessness and crime when people
lived in an atmosphere of fear.
They were afraid to express their anger fearing revenge attacks. The
ever rising cost of living and economic hardship were unbearable. The
mainstream media virtually ended up as government bulletins.
Only political parties like the Janatha Vikumthi Peramuna (JVP) and
Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU) were in the forefront bravely highlighting
injustice, crime, corruption and demanding regime change.
The overall mood of the people was to free themselves from the
oppressive government to ensure justice and rule of law prevails so that
they could live without the fear of being waylaid, kidnapped and even
killed.
It was under such dark political environment that the unexpected
presidential elections were held and there was jubilation all over when
Maithripala Sirisena was elected.
The oppressive atmosphere changed overnight with the restoration of
freedom.
Corruption
Since the unprecedented January 2015 political change, exercising
their newly won freedom, mainstream print and electronic media opened
the floodgates of allegations accusing the former president Rajapaksa,
his family and his associates of widespread corruption, crime and
lawlessness the scale of which was never known in the island’s history.
These shocking disclosures include large scale plundering of the
nation’s wealth, lawlessness and injustice, pilfering billions of
rupees, unprecedented waste of tax payers’ money, mismanagement of
almost every institution and organisation incurring billions of loss,
racist attacks on minorities especially on Muslims and much more
shocking and shameful revelations. Since then never a day passes without
some disclosure of corruption, crime, plunder and looting and that too
not in thousands, hundred thousands and millions but in billions of
rupees. The more the disclosures, the worse the public anger.
The never ending exposures diminish the chance of bringing defeated
president Mahinda Rajapaksa to power though they would deploy every
means towards that end.
It was under such circumstance that these four UPFA allies expressed
their support to Mahinda Rajapksa as prime ministerial candidate.
This shows they are living in their own world.
Now the question is how come these so called socialists are going
against the newly elected government, which is struggling to establish
good governance, communal harmony and put the nation in the proper
footing and move the country forward.Even ordinary people ask whether
these four UPFA allies don’t read newspapers or watch television. Some
even ask whether they are living in this planet or not.
One should not forget that two of them, Vasudeva Nanayakkara and
Dinesh Gunawardena, belong to parties which produced legendary
politicians, known for their great intellectual caliber, honesty,
integrity and their sacrifices in serving the country.
They spent their own wealth to be in politics and fight for the
rights of ordinary people.
The country will never be able to forget or erase their great
contributions though under the fast changing political, economic and
social environment in the new order not much attention was paid to them.
Some of them include Communist Party chief Pieter Keuneman, Dr S.A.
Wickremasinghe, Lanka Sama Samaja Party’s Dr N.M.Perera, Colvin R de
Silva, Bernard Zoysa and Mahajana Eksath Permuna leader Philip
Goonewardene to name a few.
I remember the speech made in parliament by the founder of MEP and
then Industries Minister Philip Gunawardena following the former Soviet
invasion of Czechoslovakia around August 1968. It was such an
enlightening one that most of us, parliamentary correspondents, bought
the Hansard copies of that speech which I preserve to date.
It was his son Dinesh Gunawardena who is keen on bringing former
President Mahinda Rajapaksa back to power.
Once a journalist colleague of mine asked a Muslim housewife at
Dematagoda for whom she would cast her vote in the 1970 general
elections. Her abrupt response was “my first vote is for Pieter Keuneman
and then for Faleel Caffoor.
When asked why she gave top priority to Keuneman her response was,
"he is a very good man, known for honesty and integrity and helps the
poor without any discrimination, be they Sinhalese, Tamils or Muslims ”.
It was around early 1970s and Dr N.M. Perera was the Finance Minister
in the United Front government led by Prime Minister Mrs. Srimavo
Bandaranaike.
Listening to his speech winding up the budget debate, the Arab League
Ambassador in New Delhi Abdullah Murad who was in the Speaker’s Gallery
told me that "Sri Lanka is too small a country for Dr Perera who
deserves to be the Finance minister for the whole third world".Vasudeva
Nanayakkara who declared his support to bring former President Mahinda
Rajapaksa to power began his political career under this very same Dr
N.M. Perera.
I still can’t understand what really happened to Vasudeva Nanayakkara
whom I knew since mid 1970s.Of course MP Wimal Wirawansa’s political
ideology and career is known to everyone and thus needs no comment.
However in the case of Udaya Gammanpila his frustration is understood
as the defeat of former President Mahinda Rajapaksa shattered his dream
to commemorate the unfortunate 1915 Sinhala Muslim riots this year,
2015, with an Aluthgama, Dharga Town and Beruwala-style attack on
Muslims islandwide.
Time and again he claimed that the attack on Muslims was inevitable
this year to mark the century of 1915 riots.
This is the sad plight of today’s socialist comrades who incidentally
belonged to two of the oldest political parties in the island. |