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A socialist perspective for striking Sri Lankan teachers
By the Socialist Equality Party (Sri Lanka)
13 September 2007
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Tens of thousands of Sri Lankan public sector teachers will
walk out today on a one-day strike for higher pay. Tamil and Muslim
teachers have joined their Sinhala counterparts despite the atmosphere
of communal hostility whipped up by the government to justify
its return to war. The protest strike takes place amid mounting
unrest among working people over the spiralling cost of living.
The trade unions have limited todays strike to the demand
for a correction of a pay anomaly, widened by a 1997 government
circular, between the salaries of teachers and their colleagues
providing other government services such as nursing and clerical
services. If the anomaly is scrapped, they say, teachers would
receive a salary increase of 5,000 rupees ($US48) a month.
The Socialist Equality Party (SEP) warns that far more is at
stake in this strike. To prosecute its reactionary war, the government
is insisting that working people bear the burden. Without a political
struggle against the government and its war, the campaign for
even the most limited improvements in pay and conditions is doomed
to failure.
The government has signalled its stance at a meeting between
President Mahinda Rajapakse and the unions on August 13. Education
minister Susil Premajayantha bluntly told union leaders that more
than 9 billion rupees would be needed to cover the proposed pay
rise. President Rajapakse then exclaimed: We do not have
money to allocate for this. Do you say that we should withdraw
the military from North and East?
Ceylon Teachers Union president Joseph Stalin, who reported
Rajapakses comments, omitted the reply. When asked why the
unions had not challenged the president, Stalin lamely replied:
And if the government collapses? In other words, the
unions support the government and will not oppose the war. One
of the five unions, the Ceylon Teacher Service Union is affiliated
to the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna, which stridently demands that
the war be stepped up, not stopped.
At a meeting on September 6, the message was the same. Ministers
Susil Premajayantha, Karu Jayasuriya and John Seneviratne told
the assembled unions leaders: Even for the Samurdhi [welfare
program], the annual allocation is only 5-6 billion rupees. So
how can we allocate 9 billion for this? If we allocate this huge
amount the government will collapse.
The union leaders meekly responded by calling on the government
to issue a circular announcing the pay rise, then discuss later
where the money would come from. In other words, the unions are
seeking a worthless piece of paper to pacify their angry members
and have no intention of fighting for a pay rise. Not surprisingly,
the ministers rejected this manoeuvre and insisted the war came
first.
In last Novembers budget, the government boosted military
expenditure to a massive 139 billion rupees for 2007a 45
percent increase over 2006. Since then, it has made further allocations
as its military offensives in the East and now the North have
intensified. Just last week, new tax bills were put before parliament
to gouge more money out of the pockets of working people to fill
the empty treasury and pay for the war.
Rajapakse has also used the war to suppress democratic rights.
Along with emergency powers and the Prevention of Terrorism Act,
the president can now proclaim essential service orders to outlaw
strikes and protests. Ministers routinely denounce any opposition
or criticism as aiding the enemy. The media has been
browbeaten, threatened and violently attacked. The security forces
are implicated in the disappearance and murder of hundreds of
people, mainly Tamils, as part of their campaign of intimidation
and terror.
The government is demanding that working people sacrifice for
its communal war. Anyone who fights for their rights, whether
it be public sector workers, university students, farmers and
fishermen, university staff or plantation workers, is denounced
for betraying the country. At a meeting with unions
leaders in May, Rajapakse accused some unions of doing the
spade work for [LTTE leader] Prabhakaran. No one challenged
him.
At every point, the unions have caved in to the government.
In March and April last year, teachers joined an alliance of public
sector workers demanding a pay rise. But when the government denounced
the strikes as a threat to national security, the
unions backed off, called off the campaign and accepted the appointment
of a phony National Salary Review Committee as a face-saving device.
The war itself is an expression of the inability of governments,
past and present, to resolve the countrys worsening economic
and social crisis. Their policies of economic restructuring, privatisation
and public sector cutbacks have deepened the divide between rich
and poor. In the education sector, the government has opened the
door for private schools and allowed branches of foreign, fee-levying
universities to mushroom. This years allocation for higher
education was slashed by 20 percent.
Like his predecessors, Rajapakse responded to growing signs
of social unrest by cynically stirring up communal tensions and
plunging the island back into a disastrous war. It is the time-honoured
adage of divide and rule that the Colombo ruling class
learned from their British colonial masters. Nothing is a more
damning indictment of the ruling elites in Sri Lanka than their
inability to end a civil war that has lasted for nearly a quarter
of a century, left more than 70,000 dead and devastated the lives
of many more.
The basic political lesson that workers have to learn is that
it is impossible to fight to defend pay, conditions and democratic
rights outside of a socialist program to oppose the war. The working
class can only advance its own independent class interests by
rejecting all forms of nationalism and communalism. The governments
Sinhala chauvinism and the LTTEs Tamil separatism both serve
the interests of narrow ruling elites, not those of Sinhala and
Tamil workers who all face plummetting living standards.
The SEP demands the immediate and unconditional withdrawal
of the security forces from the North and East of the island.
Not a cent, nor a man for this war. The SEP calls for the repeal
of all anti-democratic laws, including the emergency regulations,
essential services orders and Prevention of Terrorism Act.
Workers can place no faith in the fraudulent international
peace process that is being advocated by the same
powers that are waging war in Iraq and Afghanistan. The aim of
the peace process is a deal between the government
and LTTE to turn the island into a cheap labour platform for foreign
investors. In opposition to this plan of intensified exploitation,
the SEP calls on the working class to unite around the struggle
for a workers and farmers government to implement
socialist policies. We fight for a Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka
and Eelam as part of the Union of Socialist Republics of South
Asia and internationally.
The working class needs to build a mass party to fight for
this international socialist perspective. We urge teachers, young
people and workers today to study our program, read the World
Socialist Web Site and apply to join the SEP, the Sri Lankan
section of the International Committee of the Fourth International
(ICFI).
See Also:
Sri Lankan police break up
student protests over deteriorating university education
[15 August 2007]
Sri Lankan unions betray university
workers' struggle
[25 June 2007]
A socialist perspective to
defend Sri Lankan university workers
[11 June 2007]
Sri Lankan university workers
protest against punitive measures
[31 May 2007]
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