Little big Island
Whether it wishes or
not, Sri Lanka has become a player in the geo-political game among
bigger players, and the onus is now on President Maithripala Sirisena to
restore democracy and pacify the major powers
When the Sri Lankan President's motorcade encounters a red light now
on the streets of the capital, Colombo, it does something unthinkable
just months ago. It stops and waits for a green signal.
 |
Maithiripala Sirisena, 63,
pledged to reverse Sri Lanka's slide towards autocracy.
(Picture courtesy: Time) |
The convoy itself is much smaller than it once was, down to three or
four cars and two motorcycles from the as many as 16 cars and numerous
outriders that sped through this port city until the man at the center
of the procession, the then President Mahinda Rajapaksa, encountered an
unexpected red light on January 8.
That morning, election results showed a sudden reversal for Rajapaksa,
69, who had ruled the island nation for nine years. In 2009 he crushed
separatists from Sri Lanka's Tamil minority to end a nearly three-decade
civil war in a final push that the UN says may have claimed the lives of
as many as 40,000 Tamil civilians.
A year later, backed by the country's Sinhala Buddhist majority,
Rajapaksa overwhelmingly won a second term in office.
As he tightened his grip on power, blithely ignoring calls to
investigate allegations of human-rights abuses during the close of the
war, the extended Rajapaksa clan wrapped itself around government like
out-of-control wisteria. One of the President's brothers oversaw
national defence, another had charge of economic development.
Shadowy thugs
A third was Speaker of Parliament. Dissidents, meanwhile, risked
being squashed by an iron fist.
Critical journalists and activists were arbitrarily detained or
harassed by shadowy thugs who would haul them away in unmarked white
vans. Some did not return. (The Rajapaksa regime has denied any such
involvement).
Then, suddenly, it was over for the moustachioed strongman. Voters
jettisoned him in favour of a little-known former ally who promised to
be the anti-Rajapaksa.
Maithiripala Sirisena, 63, pledged to reverse Sri Lanka's slide
towards autocracy and save it from becoming a one family state. Even
Sirisena was surprised by the outcome.
"For a short period after being elected, I was not really certain
that I am the President Sirisena tells TIME, breaking into a smile
during an interview at his Colombo office, his first with an
English-language news organisation since becoming Sri Lanka's leader.
Similarly, the Rajapaksa family... must be thinking, what happened here?
More than Rajapaksa's extensive motorcade and security detail are
out. The former presidential compound expanded by Rajapaksa to include a
5,000 capacity banquet hall with shimmering chandeliers that change
colour at the flick of a switch - has been passed to the new Prime
Minister, Ranil Wickremesinghe, who uses it as an office.
Chain reaction
Sirisena continues to live in the Colombo home he occupied as
Rajapaksa's Health Minister.
It's not just optics, say Sirisena's aides. He is supporting
constitutional amendments to weaken presidential powers, reintroduce
term limits scrapped under Rajapaksa, and share authority with a
stronger parliamentary executive headed by the Prime Minister.
Under the Rajapaksas, Sirisena tells Time, Sri Lanka fell into the
hands of one family. With the amendments to the Constitution, we will
not leave room in the future for any single family to control the
country in this manner ever again.
Sri Lanka is one of the developing world's oldest democracies, with a
tradition of elections that predates full independence from the colonial
British in 1948.
So a return to past freedoms and lighter governing touch are critical
for the country's future after years of strife. But the ripples of
Sirisena's unexpected ascent reach beyond Sri Lanka.
Whether it wishes or not, the island nation is a player in a
geopolitical game among bigger powers.
Sirisena works out of a large first-floor office in a grand
colonial-era building on the Colombo waterfront. Right opposite,
extending out from shore, giant red cranes loom over piles or rock and
sand the site for the Colombo port-city project, an ambitious $1.4
billion Rajapaksa-era venture to build shopping malls, hotels and
apartment complexes on reclaimed land that has been suspended as the new
government reviews the project's approvals and permits.
Backed by Beijing, which pumped in billions of dollars in loans to
fund big-ticket infrastructure projects under Rajapaksa, the project was
inaugurated in September by Chinese President Xi Jinping. XI's visit
underlined Sri Lanka's growing strategic significance.
India's southern coast
Though small, with a population of only around 20 million, Sri Lanka
sits just off India's southern coast, making it a coveted bride head to
the vast Indian Ocean where India, China and the US are vying for
influence falling out with the West over his alleged human -rights
record, Rajapaksa steered Sri Lanka towards, Beijing, borrowing billions
and then twice last year alarming India by allowing a Chinese submarine
to dock in Colombo. Rajapaksa had been very much playing up his
relationship with China, says Teresita Schaffer, a former U.S.
Ambassador to Sri Lanka and a senior fellow at the Washington-based
Brookings Institution, casting it as the diplomatic equivalent of
thumbing his nose at the West for its focus on allegations of wartime
abuses.
The election of Sirisena, whose campaign manifesto said Sri Lanka's
foreign policy had fallen into disarray after the military victory of
2009, has sparked speculation of a diplomatic realignment. "I don't call
it a tilt away from China," Prime Minister Wickremesinghe tells Time.
An unlikely leader
"The fact is we moved away from everyone else, leaving only China. We
antagonised the West, we antagonised India. You can't carry on like
this. Sri Lanka needs the West, it needs India, it needs China," he
says.
Indeed, since January, Sirisena has visited India his first overseas
trip after taking office hosted its Prime Minister Narendra Modi, and
travelled to China, where he was accorded accorded a grand welcome,
complete with an honour guard at Beijing's Great Hall of the People.
Still, the now suspended port project has become something of a test
case for relations between Colombo and Beijing.
Sirisena says his administration is reviewing both foreign funded and
domestic ventures as it investigates allegations of irregularities and
corruption under the previous regime.
But, he tells Time, we do not have any enmity toward anybody; we
extend the hand of friendship to all countries.
There is little in Sirisena's political resume to herald a disrupter.
Like Rajapaksa, Sirisena is a member of the country's Sinhala Buddhist
majority and a veteran of the establishment Sri Lanka Freedom Party,
joining its youth wing while still at school.
Clean-living leader
In the early 1970s, Sirisena was jailed for 15 months for his alleged
involvement in a left-wing anti-government insurrection.
He was arrested again in the late '70s, shortly after quitting his
job as a local administrative official to become a full-time politician,
eventually entering Parliament in 1989.
In the years that followed, Sirisena held a series of key party posts
and did a variety of ministerial jobs.
Throughout, he avoided scandal and cultivated an image as a
clean-living leader with his feet firmly rooted in the paddy fields of
his native Polonnaruwa district, traits that served him well when he
defected from Rajapaksa's side in November.
He made a contrast with the (Rajapaksa family's) plans for dynastic
rule, their love of luxury, the allegations of large-scale corruption,
says Alan Keenan, a senior analyst with the International Crisis Group.
Sirisena has also won a global PR battle. Rajapaksa resisted
international pressure to allow a UN probe or to conduct an independent
local inquiry into the allegations of human-rights abuses by the
military at the end of the civil war against the separatist fighters of
the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam. (The Tigers were themselves known
for brutality-they pioneered the use of suicide bombers.)
Sirisena campaigned with the promise of setting up an independent
domestic probe, the details of which, he tells Time, will be announced
by the end of June. Giving Sirisena time, the U.N. has postponed the
release of its own report to September.
Colombo has also appointed a new governor in the Tamil
dominatedNorthern Province, replacing a retired soldier with a
civilian,and has revived efforts to form a South Africa-style truth and
reconciliation commission.But, first, Sirisena's political supporters
must win re-election. The President tells Time he plans to dissolve
Parliament in May, which means a general election at the end of June or
early July.
The vote could bring Rajapaksa back into the political picture an
aide says he is likely to contest a parliamentary seat.
He is like a sword of Damocles over the new government, says
Paikiasothy Saravanamuttu, executive director of the Centre for Policy
Alternatives, a Colombo-based think tank. In his villa in the seaside
town of Tangalle on the southern coast, Rajapaksa tells Time that the
new government should not write him off: Too much of confidence is not
so good.
He also denies accusations of misrule, nepotism and allegations that,
before he left in January, he attempted to forcibly hold on to power.
Rajapakse tells Time the new government wants to throw mud at him.
Critical voices
For now, Sirisena is looking good. As he nears the completion of his
first 100 days in office. Activists and journalists in Colombo speak of
a more tolerant attitude toward critical voices. I feel less scared now,
says Ruki Fernando, a human-rights activist detained last year when
investigating the arrest of a Tamil campaigner against political
disappearances.
"If you look at the state media, people they called traitors before
are now on TV talk shows," he adds. Sirisena says he wants to reinforce
the foundations of Sri Lanka's democracy. "I came here not to strengthen
power but to give over the power that is in my hands," he says.
It's a major problem for the country that power has been centralised.
Power must be distributed. In a nation that only months ago seemed
destined to become a full-fledged autocracy, that message and hope rings
loudest of all.
With reporting by Amantha Perera, Colombo
(TIME) |