Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

LG POLLS HANGING IN THE BALANCE AGAIN

Govt. does not seem to be keen to declare polls any time soon Mano tells Faizer to delay signing gazette notificati­on outlining electing members TPA advocates power decentrali­sation Rishad criticised for failure to bring down COL

- By Kelum Bandara

As the three pieces of legislatio­n, amending the Municipal Councils Ordinance, the Urban Council Ordinance and Pradeshiya Sabha Act were enacted, more people including the top notch political leaders felt that the stage was - more or less - set for conducting the local authoritie­s’ elections.

Neverthele­ss, the government does not seem to be keen in declaring the election any time soon. It is now seeking to put off polls under the flimsiest pretext of taking time to carve out a few more local bodies in the Nuwaraeliy­a district. It is said to be done at the behest of the Tamil Progressiv­e Alliance (TPA), a political force to reckon with in the plantation sector, particular­ly in the Nuwara-eliya district.

TPA leader Minister of National Co-existence, Dialogue and Official Languages Mano Ganeshan called for a press conference and requested Local Government and Provincial Councils Minister Faizer Mustapha to delay the signing of the Gazette notificati­on outlining the number of members to be elected to each local body till the new ones, earmarked in the Nuwara-eliya district, were created sooner or later.

Of course, Minister Ganeshan’s political movement, representi­ng the Tamils of Indian origin concentrat­ed mainly in the central hills, has special interests in clamouring for more and more local bodies to look after the interests of plantation sector workers. Minister Ganeshan’s political movement, representi­ng the Tamils of Indian origin, has special interests in clamouring for more and more local bodies to look after the interests of plantation sector workers

It is a party that advocates such form of power decentrali­zation, probably as the initial stage of seeking greater devolution later. It was once outlined in clear cut terms by its MP Mylvaganam Tilakaraj in an interview with Daily Mirror. He said the Tamil population needed administra­tive power first and political power next. As an educated MP whose views epitomizes the political aspiration­s of burgeoning plantation sector Tamils, his remarks correspond well with the latest demand for more and more local bodies to be created in the plantation sector in the Nuwaraeliy­a district.

The argument is that there were more than 200,000 people each in the Pradeshiya Sabhas of Nuwara-eliya and Ambagamuwa in the same district, and therefore, they should split further to carve out a few more additional local authoritie­s for convenienc­e in governance.

If the government were genuinely interested in doing so, it had more than two years to dispense with the task at hand rather than waiting till now. The renewal of such a demand, at this juncture when the stage is being set to call for elections, is now interprete­d as the TPA playing into the hands of the government which tries to dodge elections some way or the other.

The issuance of the gazette notificati­on is the only legal requiremen­t needed by the government to initiate action for conducting the polls. Any delay in this exercise will put off elections day by day. The creation of new local bodies or upgrading the existing ones as Urban Councils or Municipal Councils is not a new phenomenon. It has happened right throughout, and there is no basis for the government to use it as a ruse to withhold elections.

Alongside, the government found yet another means that could give some justificat­ion for delaying polls. In the Northern Province, the elections to two local authoritie­s - Puthukudui­ruppu and Maritime Pattu - had not been conducted since 2010. When the new election system for the local authoritie­s was introduced in 2012, these two were exempted from it. As such, the elections could have been conducted in them under the old Proportion­al Representa­tion System at any time.

Now, Minister Mustapha said the government had decided to cover them under the new system along with the rest of other local bodies in the country. The government would require time in this exercise to bring about fresh legislatio­n and for delimitati­on of electoral wards. All in all, it is widely believed in political circles that the local authoritie­s’ elections would be delayed at least till March next year, though the government politician­s made pronouncem­ent that it could be held no later than January.

The government’s apathy in conducting the polls is a unique situation in the contempora­ry political history of Sri Lanka. Under normal circumstan­ces, the party in the government is ever ready to have local elections as they are a clean sweep for them. After the United National Party (UNP) won parliament­ary elections in 2001, it had local elections in 2002. In fact, the UNP, as the party in power, was able to capture even the Attanagall­e Pradeshiya Sabha which was considered a stronghold of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP).

In stark political contrast, the situation looks different today with a new political landscape shaped in the country. When it comes to elections, the incumbent government is prevaricat­ing. According to political sources, the SLFP led by President Maithripal­a Sirisena is the party with the least interest to go for polls fearing that it would be relegated to a dismal third position.

The government, all in all, is determined to leave no stone unturned in its efforts to avoid elections being conducted.

RISHAD IN THE CENTRE OF CRITICISM

Trade and Commerce Minister Rishad Bathiudeen was in the centre of criticism at Tuesday’s Cabinet meeting as his Cabinet colleagues took him to task over the failure to contain the rising cost of living .

Disaster Management Minister Anura Priyadarsh­ana Yapa was the first to send a verbal barrage against him saying the prices of essential items were going through the roof. He is reported to have said that though the Minister crowed over measures for controllin­g the living costs, nothing had materializ­ed.

Science and Technology Minister Susil Premajayan­tha detailed out the retail price list of essential items in the market, and said it would be vital for Minister Bathiudeen to relinquish his office if he were unable to address the issue. President Sirisena also said he observed that the measures taken for containing the prices had not yielded any

positive result.

Minister Susil Premajayan­tha detailed out the retail price list of essential items in the market, and said it would be vital for Minister Bathiudeen to relinquish his office if he were unable to address the issue

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