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Lanka
Sri Lanka: Central Bank union demands retraction of threats
against SEP
By our correspondent
29 November 2007
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The executive committee of the Central Bank Employees Union
(CBEU) in Sri Lanka passed a resolution on November 12 demanding
that the leadership of the Sri Lanka Central Bank Employees Union
(SLCBEU) withdraw its threat against CBEU president K.B. Mavikumbura
and treasurer M.W. Piyaratna. Mavikumbura is a long-time member
of the Socialist Equality Party (SEP) and Piyaratna is a close
SEP sympathiser.
After the CBEU annual general meeting in September passed a
motion opposing the governments return to civil war, the
Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP)-aligned SLCBEU issued a leaflet
denouncing the call for the withdrawal of troops from the North
and East of the island and branding Mavikumbura and Piyaratna
as Sinhala Tigers. In the language of Sinhala chauvinist
supporters of the war, the label Sinhala Tigersthat
is, supporters of the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam
(LTTE)is equivalent to traitor.
The JVP has supported the renewed war to the hilt. Its criticism
of President Mahinda Rajapakse is that his government has failed
to openly declare war on the LTTE, dispense with the so-called
international peace process and seek to crush the LTTE militarily.
In the trade unions, the JVPs supporters, while posturing
as defenders of workers rights and conditions, call for
sacrifice for the war effort and have sought to witch-hunt opponents
of the communal conflict.
The CBEU executive rejected the SLCBEUs slander that
Mavikumbura was a Sinhala Tiger, pointing out that
he, as a long-standing SEP member, was well known for his
principled opposition to LTTE separatism as well as JVP chauvinism.
The resolution warned that declaring Mavikumbura and Piyaratna
to be Sinhala Tigers carried the threat of physical
violence. Death squads are carrying out abductions and disappearances
with impunity and the detention of persons without charges is
taking place throughout the island, it noted.
The threat coming from the SLCBEU is not a ruse. In the
1988-1989 terror-period, the JVP unleashed death squads and killed
hundreds of political opponents, trade unionists, workers and
youth including three members of the Revolutionary Communist League
[the SEPs forerunner], which opposed and did not join the
JVPs communal protests at the time. A group of JVP gunmen
was sent to trace Mavikumbura to subject him to a similar fate.
The JVP goons visited the site where he was building his house
but failed to find him, it continued.
As the resolution stated, the SLCBEUs real objection
to the original CBEU motion was to the truth contained in
itthat without opposing the war working people cannot defend
even their most basic living standards and rights. The SLCBEU
and the JVP fully support the war and demand workers sacrifice
for it. It explained that the SLCBEUs allegation that
the call for the withdrawal of troops was to help the LTTE was
a lie. On the contrary, this is a call to unite Sinhala
and Tamil speaking people against the government and the LTTE
on the basis of socialist policies, it stated.
The CBEU executive demanded that the SLCBEU retract its slanderous
allegations against Mavikumbura and Piyaratna and issued a broad
appeal to workers. This threat against CBEU leaders is a
warning to all those who fight to defend the living conditions
and democratic rights of the masses. The campaign against it must
be taken as a part of a broader struggle to defend these rights.
We request all those organisations, workers, youth and intellectuals
who value the democratic rights to issue statements condemning
and demanding the retraction of SLCBEU slanders against the CBEU
leaders, it stated.
All 12 members of the CBEU executive committee present on November
12 voted for the resolution. Three of the five absent members
later signed the resolution to express their support. Other Central
Bank employees have condemned the provocative role of the SLCBEU
and expressed their sympathy for the SEPs statement circulated
as a leaflet in the workplace.
One employee told the WSWS: I warned Mavikumbura about
the threat in this JVP leaflet as soon as I saw it. The JVP trade
union leaders have done a policemans work. In another leaflet,
they have quoted resolutions presented by Mavikumbura and Piyaratna
to previous annual general meetings. They have quoted only the
parts of that resolution that demands withdrawal of troops from
the northeast. Anyone who reads the resolutions would see that
this is part of a campaign to unite Sinhala and Tamil workers.
The Central Bank is located in a high security zone.
When Mavikumbura and Piyaratna are branded as Sinhala Tigers
then the danger is enormous.
We know that Mavikumbura fights for principle. A few
months back an anonymous petition was sent to the Central Bank
administration complaining that JVP union president Sarath Ekanayake
was conducting politics during his overtime. A copy of this petition
was sent to Mavikumbura also. He showed the petition to Ekanayake
and said he opposed any witch-hunt. He told the committee members
too.
The JVP is now praising the military and supports it
fully. One would wonder why this organisaton which was crushed
by the military in 1988-1989 killing even its leader, Rohana Wijeweera,
is now supporting the military. Their support is based on Sinhala
chauvinism. This organisation has no faith in the working class
even though it tries to pretend to be a workers organisation.
Another Central Bank employee opposed the SLCBEU statement
against Mavikumbura and Piyaratna. They [the JVP] fully
support the war and campaign for it. The JVP opposes the demands
against war because such demands go against their aim.
I agree that the demand for the withdrawal of Sri Lankan
armies from the northeast has been advanced to unite workers against
the Sinhala and Tamil capitalist class. The military and police
suppress Tamil masses there. Here also they do the same thing.
Nothing can be done without uniting these workers. The JVPers
call themselves Marxists, but they are not.
The employee had once supported the JVP, but now regards their
policies as hostile to the working class. He was also hostile
to the SLCBEUs opposition to politics in the workplace.
I do not agree with the idea of no politics
in the unions and in workplaces and that it is enough to talk
about our [immediate] problems. Workers have to discuss international
questions, problems in the country and about the government.
He explained that the government wanted the war because it
was in a political crisis. The government deals blows against
workers rights and wants to divert the attention of people
[with the war].
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]
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