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Lanka
SEP holds public meeting in Colombo to oppose the war in Sri
Lanka
By our correspondents
24 November 2007
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About 100 workers, youths and professionals attended a public
meeting held by the Socialist Equality Party (SEP) and the International
Students for Social Equality (ISSE) in Colombo on November 13
to discuss a socialist program to oppose the countrys renewed
war. Over the past two years, the government of President Mahinda
Rajapakse has plunged the island back into communal conflict,
steadily intensifying offensive operations against the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).
SEP general secretary Wije Dias delivered the main report.
Other speakers included Kapila Fernando, ISSE steering committee
convener in Sri Lanka and K.B. Mavikumbura, an SEP central committee
member and president of the Central Bank Employees Union (CBEU).
SEP political committee member K. Ratnayake chaired. He opened
the meeting by pointing to the serious political changes taking
place in Sri Lanka and internationally. He quoted from the SEP
presidential election manifesto in November 2005, which had predicted
that Rajapakse, if elected, would return the country to civil
war.
Ratnayake explained that since Rajapakse assumed power, the
renewed war had claimed at least 5,000 lives, military spending
had shot up by 267 percent and inflation was soaring. Sections
of the working class were entering struggles to defend their rights
and living standards, but to do so they needed a socialist program
to oppose the government and its war, he said.
Placing these developments in their international context,
he warned that the Bush administrations preparations for
war against Iran, following the US-led occupations of Afghanistan
and Iraq, threatened to lead to broader conflicts.
SEP political committee member Vilani Peiris
examined in detail the political crisis in Pakistan and Washingtons
support for the dictatorship of General Pervez Musharraf. She
pointed to the duplicitous role of Benazir Bhutto, leader of the
Pakistani Peoples Party (PPP), in seeking a US-brokered deal with
Musharraf while posturing as an opponent of the junta. Peiris
warned that the support in sections of the Colombo political and
media establishment for the Pakistani military regime was an ominous
sign of what was being prepared in Sri Lanka.
K.B. Mavikumbura explained that working people
were being thrown into intolerable conditions. During our
campaign for this meeting, a mother of three explained she was
increasingly facing difficulty providing meals and education for
her children. This is common. Life for ordinary people is getting
miserable. The government is diverting money for the war. When
workers demand wage increases, they are branded as supporters
of the LTTE in order to suppress their legitimate struggles.
We presented a resolution in the CBEU calling on workers
to unite on socialist policies to end the war. We pointed out
that the campaign for the withdrawal of the military from the
north-east, which is under de facto military rule, is a necessary
condition to unite workers. The union affiliated to the Sinhala
extremist Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) immediately branded
us Sinhala Tigers. In communal language, this means
a traitor who should be eliminated. The government and communal
groups are using this label to intimidate struggling workers and
suppress opponents.
Recently I attended a trade union meeting to organise
a picket in support of teachers. The government had said it could
not increase the salaries of teachers as it had to pay for the
war. It took out an order in the Supreme Court to intimidate teachers.
I explained that workers should take up a political fight against
the government. The central question is to oppose the war, but
the trade unions leaders rejected that. Instead they said workers
should form an alliance with the opposition United National Party
(UNP), which is notorious for attacking workers rights.
Workers need to build an independent political movement based
on a socialist perspective.
Kapila Fernando explained how the war has
affected young people and students. Only 15 percent of students
who are eligible to enter university can get admission each year.
About 19 percent of youth in the age group of 15 to 29 are unemployed.
When the budget was presented for 2007, a year ago, the president
promised 10,000 jobs for graduates, but only a handful got jobs.
Now another 5,000 unemployed graduates have joined the job queues
and the president is promising 15,000 jobs. When students recently
staged protests in Colombo, the police unleashed a brutal attack
on them. The education ministry has admitted that it has no money
to print the required number of text books for school children.
Kapila referred to ongoing student protests at Sabaragamuwa
University for better facilities. The education minister
admitted that the treasury has cut 20 percent from the budget
allocation for higher education for this year due to financial
problems. But the JVP-affiliated Inter University Student Federation
(IUSF) leaders insist there is no connection between the huge
expenditures on the war and the slashing of education. The victims
of the 25-year war are young people, including students, many
of whom have no alternative but to join the army.
Wije Dias began the main report to the meeting
by declaring: World capitalism has reached an impasse, similar
to the conditions that existed prior to the First World War. The
capitalist ruling class internationally has nothing to offer billions
of people other than devastating wars for the colonial re-subjugation
of the world. He pointed to the growing turn to internal
military repression in many countries and the predatory military
adventures by the imperialist powers, above all by the Bush administration.
Turning to the war in Sri Lanka, Dias said working people were
presented with two false alternatives by the ruling elite. The
first was a never-ending war to annihilate the LTTE, not unlike
the Bush administrations phony war on terrorism.
This is the line taken by President Rajapakse. He reiterated
his position while handing down the budget this month, saying
that his program to defend the motherland would not be surrendered
before any challenge. This is a direct threat to the working people
and youth fighting for their legitimate social rights, Dias
said.
Dias referred to reports in the media noting that Rajapakse
had tried to orchestrate a military success to coincide
with his budget speech on November 7. But the military adventure
in Muhamalai ended up in a debacle, costing the lives of scores
of soldiers and injuring nearly 150. This single episode
confirms that the war is a matter of survival for this government
and for capitalist rule as a wholewhich has completely failed
to provide basic needs such as food, jobs, education, health care
and agricultural subsidies for working people, youth, students
and farmers, he said.
The speaker then turned to the second optionan internationally-sponsored
peace processwhich is often peddled by sections
of the political establishment and their left hangers-on
as the alternative to civil war. The same imperialist powers that
sponsor the Sri Lankan peace process have backed the wars in Iraq
and Afghanistan and have not objected to the governments
military offensives launched over the past two years. Farcically,
Rajapakse continues to announce that he is for a negotiated settlement,
even as he prosecutes his brutal war.
To place any hopes on this peace process is not only
naïve but dangerous, Dias warned. Its purpose, he explained,
was to block any independent political intervention by the working
class to end the war. One of the main roles in hoodwinking workers
about the role of the peace process was played by
various middle class radical groups and parties such as the Nava
Sama Samaja Party (NSSP).
Dias referred to the NSSPs response to the militarys
recent assassination of the LTTEs political wing leader
Thamilchelvan. In his statement, NSSP leader Wickramabahu Karunaratna
enthusiastically declared: Not only the [pro-LTTE] TNA,
but also the great poet, the Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu, has
accepted that the death of Thamilchelvan is a loss for all Tamil
people. This shows that this death has taken the Tamil liberation
struggle to a wider circle.
Dias explained that Tamils had been led into a dead-end by
the separatist program of the LTTE, which had constantly looked
for support from sections of the Tamil bourgeoisie in southern
India. The great poet hailed by Karunaratna was none
other than Muthuvel Karunanidhi, whose DMK [Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam]
was part of the Indian government that had not raised a murmur
of opposition to the Rajapakse governments military offensives
against the Tamil population in the North and East of Sri Lanka.
The speaker said the NSSP was opposed to a turn by Tamil people
to a working class solution to their democratic and social problems.
Instead the party encouraged the dangerous illusion that the Tamil
workers and poor should rely on sections of the Tamil bourgeoisie
in Sri Lanka and India. On this basis, the NSSP encouraged a communal
settlement between the Colombo government and the LTTE.
Dias explained that, in the South, the NSSP promoted the view
that Sinhala workers should rely on bourgeois Sinhala parties.
The NSSP denounced a vote for the latest war budget by the Rajapakse
government as a massive crime. But it then called
on all trade unions to form a broad front to defeat the budget.
This was a call to line up with the right-wing United National
Party that started the war in 1983.
As we said on the very day that Rajapakse was narrowly
elected as president, we again stress that the defence of the
democratic rights and living conditions of the masses that are
being trampled on cannot be achieved without opposing the war,
based on an independent political program aimed at initiating
a struggle against the capitalist system itself.
Dias said that to end the war, the essential first step was
to demand the withdrawal of troops from the north and east. This
demand, raised by the working class in the south, would galvanise
an alliance between working people in the south and north in a
struggle for a workers and peasants government. This
was the meaning of the SEPs call for a Sri Lanka-Eelam Socialist
Republic as part of a socialist federation of South Asia and internationally.
See Also:
Sri Lankan government rams war budget
through parliament
[23 November 2007]
Sri Lankan president hands down war budget
[13 November 2007]
Sri Lanka: Oppose the JVP threats against
the SEP
[10 November 2007]
Sri Lankan military assassinates LTTE
political leader in air strike
[5 November 2007]
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