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WSWS : News
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: Sri
Lanka
Sri Lankan SEP marks 20th anniversary of Keerthi Balasuriyas
death
By our correspondents
20 December 2007
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The Socialist Equality
Party (SEP) in Sri Lanka held a short ceremony on December 18
at the graveside of Keerthi Balasuriya to mark the 20th anniversary
of his death. Keerthi Balasuriya was the founding general secretary
of the Revolutionary Communist League (RCL), the forerunner of
the SEP. He died in 1987, at the age of just 39, of a massive
heart attack while at work in the RCL offices.
Leading SEP members, including comrade Keerthis long-time
political collaborators, party supporters from around Colombo
and members of Keerthis family gathered in the Colombo General
Cemetery. SEP general secretary Wije Dias, also a founding member
of the RCL, laid a floral tribute and read a commemorative message
sent by Nick Beams, SEP national secretary in Australia, which
stated:
It is hard to believe that 20 years have passed since
the death of comrade Keerthi. His loss is felt all the more keenly
because of the knowledge that, having battled through all the
difficulties created by the degeneration of the WRP, he was about
to come into his own. But we who had the honour and privilege
of working with him still find much to draw from the legacy of
principled struggle and attention to theoretical understanding
which he left behind. What we said 20 years ago about the significance
of that legacy is truer than ever today. We will need to draw
upon it in the upheavals in Sri Lanka and internationally which
are to come.
Please pass on our deepest and warmest regards to comrade
Vilani and all our comrades in Sri Lanka on this day when we recall
one of the finest fighters of our international movement.
Dias also quoted from the two-part article by David North,
chairman of the WSWS International Editorial Board and national
secretary of the SEP in the United States, to mark the 20th anniversary
of Keerthis death. (See Twenty
years since the death of Keerthi Balasuriya)

Dias pointed out that imperialist aggression had intensified
with the Bush administrations wars in Afghanistan and Iraq,
as well as its military preparations against Iran. A rebellion
was developing among workers and young people against militarism
and deepening social inequality. The situation in Sri Lanka and
South Asia was not separate from these international processes.
The mood among the working class and oppressed in this
country toward the civil war today is not the same as that which
existed at the time of comrade Keerthi Balasuriyas death
in 1987. Then racism had been intensified to fever pitch and the
Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) was aiming its guns at the heads
of the working class, he said.
New opportunities were opening before the party to mobilise
working people and youth based upon a socialist program against
war. Dias said it was essential to assimilate the political and
theoretical contributions made by Keerthi in order to grasp these
political opportunities.
SEP political committee
member Vilani Peiris told the gathering: When Keerthi started
his political life as a student in 1966, the political issues
he had to grapple with were immense. By 1964, the Lanka Sama Samaja
Party (LSSP), under the influence of Pabloism, had completely
betrayed Trotskyism by entering into a bourgeois coalition led
by the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP). Under those conditions,
a group of young people, with comrade Spike [long-standing Trotskyist
Wilfred Pereira], had to take up the struggle for the international
Trotskyist movement in Sri Lanka.
Keerthi was thoroughly committed to Trotskyist principles
and waged an uncompromising struggle against opportunism and revisionism.
He brought the whole experience of Marxist movement into the party
and we today in the party were educated through those struggles.
We are preparing to publish Keerthis political
and theoretical works for the international working class on the
20th anniversary of his death... The contributions made by Keerthi
in his relatively brief political life of 22 years are vital for
educating workers and youth on a revolutionary program today.
The SEP invites supporters and readers to attend a public meeting
on Sunday to commemorate 20 years since Keerthi Balasuriyas
death.
Time: 3 p.m. on December 23
Venue: Mahaveli Centre, Green Path, Colombo 7
Twenty years since the death of Keerthi
Balasuriya
Part one
[18 December 2007]
Twenty years since the death of Keerthi
Balasuriya
Part two
[19 December 2007]
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