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Lanka
Sri Lankan local polls: a travesty of democracy
By Sarath Kumara
2 April 2008
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Local elections in Sri Lankas Eastern Province last month
provide a graphic picture of the regime that the government intends
to impose on areas liberated from the Liberation Tigers
of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in the countrys renewed civil war.
Far from being a fair and free vote, the campaign was dominated
by intimidation and thuggery directed against the governments
opponents.
Not surprisingly, the victors in the March 10 poll were the
ruling United Peoples Freedom Alliance (UPFA) in alliance with
the Tamil Makkal Viduthalai Pulikal (TMVP). The TMVP is a notorious
militia previously known as the Karuna group, which broke away
from the LTTE in 2004 and has operated closely with the military
over the past two years in seizing LTTE strongholds in the East.
Together, the UPFA and TMVP won 76 of the 101 seats and secured
control of all nine local councils in Batticaloa district. The
TMVP now dominates eight small councils and the two parties won
a majority11 out of 19 seatson the more important
Batticaloa municipal council. The TMVP and the UPFA will undoubtedly
exploit their control of the local government apparatuses to ensure
a win in the wider Eastern Provincial Council elections scheduled
for May 10.
President Mahinda Rajapakse proclaimed that the March 10 results
would bring satisfaction to all those who value democracy.
The aim of the government, he declared, was to create an
environment in which all our people could live in freedom and
harmony. Swearing in the newly elected councillors on March
18, Rajapakse boasted that the poll had brought democracy to the
people of Batticaloa and likened the election to the granting
of universal suffrage in 1930.
These claims are ludicrous. The major opposition partiesthe
United National Party (UNP) and the pro-LTTE Tamil National Alliance
(TNA)did not stand candidates, justifiably citing concerns
for their safety and security. Last December, the TMVP abducted
the relatives of four TNA MPs in the national parliament and threatened
to kill them if the parliamentarians voted against the governments
budget. They were released after the MPs abstained in the vote.
No police or official action was taken against the TMVP.
Other parties that contested the elections included the Sri
Lanka Muslim Congress (SLMC) and a coalition of Tamil groups headed
by the Eelam Peoples Democratic Party (EPDP). The EPDP is part
of Rajapakses ruling UPFA, but was passed over in favour
of the TMVP. EPDP leader and cabinet minister Douglas Devananda
called on the president to disarm the TMVP, but its heavily-armed
members continued to move around freely. Together, these groups
gained 25 seats and all complained of vote rigging by the TMVP.
The military sent an additional 6,500 soldiers and police to
bolster an already substantial presence throughout the district.
In Batticaloa town, at least a dozen additional checkpoints were
erected. While ordinary voters were stopped and harassed, armed
TMVP thugs had no such difficulty. Such was the atmosphere of
fear and intimidation that most opposition parties did not have
election agents at polling centres. A report by the Peoples Action
for Free and Fair Elections (PAFFREL) noted that the TMVP was
the only party with agents at 11 of the 15 booths observed by
their observers. The official turnout was less than 60 percent.
A resident of Batticaloa town told the WSWS: No free
elections were held here. Government security forces were on the
one side; paramilitary groups are on the other side. Officials
were in fear that they would be punished if they do not carry
out the orders of the [security] forces and the TMVP. In some
polling centres, the names of the candidates were marked [on the
ballot paper] and handed over to put into the ballot boxes.
Earlier the TMVP operated somewhat under cover. Now they
do their work openly. More and more the Tamil people will be kept
under the gunpoint. I dont think the Tamil people will be
able to speak up about the shortcomings of these local bodies.
In a comment to Reuters on March 9, government defence spokesman
Keheliya Rambukwella tacitly acknowledged that the election was
being held under conditions of repression. Responding to criticisms
from human rights groups, he declared that our methods may
be sometimes commented on as unethical but they were justified
for liberating the east.
Far from liberating the east, the government is
tightening what amounts to a military occupation. The Northern
and Eastern provinces, which were amalgamated until last year,
have effectively been under military rule for most of the past
25 years of civil war. After narrowly winning the November 2005
presidential election, Rajapakse unleashed the security forces,
firstly in a covert war of provocation, and then from July 2006
in offensives to seize LTTE territory in open breach of the 2002
ceasefire.
The Karuna group was an integral part of the militarys
strategy in the East, where the generals calculated that the LTTE
had been seriously weakened by the 2004 split in its ranks. The
TMVP is widely held responsible for the many hundreds of assassinations
and disappearances of government opponents. In particular,
the murder of pro-LTTE parliamentarians Joseph Pararajasingham
in Batticaloa in December 2005 and V. Vigneswaran in April 2006
in Trincomalee played a significant role in undermining any return
to peace talks.
After the LTTEs remaining eastern stronghold fell last
year, the Rajapakse government held elaborate victory celebrations,
proclaiming a new period of peace and prosperity in the East.
In fact the renewed war has brought widespread death and destruction
resulting in at least 5,000 deaths and the displacement of more
than 200,000 people. The governments main economic initiative
has been to create a free trade zone, surrounded by high security,
preventing the return of thousands of villagers to their homes.
Throughout the fighting, the government and military routinely
denied allegations that the Karuna group was collaborating with
security forces, despite mounting evidence from international
observers and human rights groups. Several major reports documented
complaints of the TMVPs involvement in child kidnapping,
extortion and murder. The electoral alliance between the UPFA
and the TMVP exposes the previous denials as outright lies.
Not surprisingly, Sinhala extremists have hailed the election
as a great triumph. Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU) leader Omalpe Sobhitha
described the poll in the East as a slap in the face for
[LTTE leader] Prabhakaran. In an editorial entitled Democracy
has triumphed in the East, the right-wing Island
newspaper claimed the election had allowed the TMVP to enter the
democratic mainstream.
In reality, the election was not democratic in any sense of
the word. Instead, the paramilitary thugs of the TMVP have been
installed in local councils, where they will continue to suppress
any opposition to the government and the huge military presence
in the East. As during the fighting, the TMVP, backed by the Rajapakse
government, will not hesitate to resort to thuggery and violencein
the first instance, to ensure a victory in next months provincial
election.
The holding of a separate provincial election in the East is
a further confirmation that the Rajapakse government has no intention
of returning to negotiations with the LTTE. The peace talks that
followed the 2002 ceasefire were based on granting a degree of
political autonomy to the North and Eastwhich were combined
in 1987. The autonomy proposal, which was never discussed in detail,
was bitterly criticised by the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP)
and other Sinhala chauvinist groups as splitting the
nation.
Last year the Supreme Court ruled in favour of petitions from
the JVP and JHU claiming that the amalgamation of the two provinces
was unconstitutional. The Rajapakse government did not oppose
the petition or the court ruling, which it is now using to conduct
phoney elections and install its paramilitary allies in the East.
No doubt there are similar plans for the North where the army
is continuing to wage to brutal war to seize the LTTEs remaining
strongholds.
The election is a sharp warning to workers, not only in the
North and East, but throughout the island. If he hails this bogus
poll as the triumph of democracy, Rajapakse will not hesitate
to use similar methods to cling to power in other parts of the
country.
See Also:
Sri Lankan government plans
sham local elections in eastern Batticaloa
[22 February 2008]
Sri Lankan government proposes
phony solution to communal conflict
[15 February 2008]
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