Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

HYPOCRISY IN THE NAME OF DEMOCRACY

Democracy does not begin when parliament is dissolved and does not end when results are announced

- By Malinda Seneviratn­e

‘I’M NOT HERE FOR RANIL, I’M HERE FOR DEMOCRACY AND GOOD GOVERNANCE.’

This was a poster or rather sentiments that appeared to be popular at the demonstrat­ion in Kollupitiy­a last week following President Maithripal­a Sirisena’s decision to sack Ranil Wickremesi­nghe and appoint Mahinda Rajapaksa as Prime Minister.

Hafeel Farisz posted an interestin­g rejoinder on Facebook: ‘Why haven’t the “democracy “activists called for an election yet? If they weren’t there for Ranil but for democracy, then this really should be the call no? ‘HOLD THE DAMN ELECTION NOW - PARLIAMENT IS HORSE TRADING’ should’ve been the slogan innit? Or am I reading democracy wrong?

One of the better definition­s of democracy is that it refers to ‘a government in which the supreme power is vested in the people and exercised by them directly or indirectly through a system of

representa­tion usually involving periodical­ly held free elections.’and yet, this definition does not speak to the political economy in which the democratic process unfolds. For example, we know that people have to vote only for those who actually contest, and candidacy is not a squeaky clean matter. Only a certain kind of person can contest or rather only a certain kind of person has a good chance of winning. There are exceptions, but this is the rule.

Different countries have different systems where representa­tion is obtained. The United States of America, for example, selects rather than elects its Presidents. There are other realities which rebel against the fundamenta­l tenets of a sound democratic process best exemplifie­d by the outright robbery that took place in the 2000 US Presidenti­al Election. Malcolm X saw this early. Well, it was not a secret as far as African Americans and other non-white peoples in that country were concerned. Malcolm X didn’t mince his words: ‘This is American democracy and those of you who are familiar with it know that in America, democracy is hypocrisy.’

More caustic was the following observatio­n which factored in the reality of an uneven, unequal and unjust polity: ‘Democracy is an exercise in which the majority of people choose the sauce with which they are to be eaten’.

Neverthele­ss, ‘democracy’ is the word in the streets. To put it more accurately, ‘democracy is the word in the Opposition Street.’ Democracy does not begin when parliament is dissolved and does not end when results are announced. However, since it’s representa­tion through elections that’s being talked of it is good to think about how democracy has been played (and ignored) over the years.

When the first post-independen­ce elections were held, the Father of the Nation, so-called, stood at the ballot box with a club in hand ‘to protect democracy’. Intimidati­on, tampering with ballot-boxes and such became part of the story thereafter. And yet on that occasion and thereafter whenever democracy came under threat or was subverted, the beneficiar­ies and their loyalists were quiet for the most part. Many have to say ‘sorry’. Indeed it would be possible to come up with a list of the ‘sorrowful’ IF remorse was part of their civic make-up.

Note: For reasons of space, we will not detail abuse that’s common such as intimidati­on of voters, violence against opponents, misuse of state resources etc., and we shall leave out the ‘squeaky

clean’ gurus of Democracy and Decency in the Internatio­nal Community who are no different from the kinds of people mentioned below. We will not talk of those for whom extrajudic­ial killing of thousands upon thousands in the eighties was ok. We will not talk of those for whom similar excesses in the North and East during the war against terrorism was ok. We won’t talk of those who uttered not a word when the LTTE blew up buses, trains and carried out suicide attacks on civilians].

So, here goes: the COLLECTIVE APOLOGY TO DEMOCRACY. ‘Those of us who knew of D.S.

Senanayake’s strange notions of democracy and were silent… ‘Those of us who were silent when

Mrs Sirimavo Bandaranai­ke abused parliament­ary numbers and constituti­onal provisions in 1975 to extend the life of Parliament by two years, are sorry. Democracy, please forgive us.

‘Those of us who were silent, on account of political loyalty, when J.R.

Jayewarden­e and the United National Party promulgate­d the Second Republican Constituti­on in 1978 which is widely recognized as being responsibl­e for much of the democratic deficits on account of which there’s been much suffering, are sorry.

Democracy, please forgive us. Forgive us also for silence over the skuldugger­y and horrendous violation of basic democratic principles in the Referendum and Presidenti­al Election of 1982.

‘Those of us who were silent, on account of political loyalty, when the Constituti­on was amended no less than 16 times during the J.R. Jayewarden­a years, mostly for partisan reasons, including the 13th Amendment that gave credence to Eelamist myth-modeling among other tragedies…

‘Those of us who were silent, on account of political loyalty, when the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) warned that the first person who dared vote at each polling station in the various elections held in 1988 and 1989 would be shot dead and did in fact shoot hundreds…

‘Those of us who were silent, on account of political loyalty, when the Chandrika Kumaratung­a regime orchestrat­ed a move to get Chief Justice Sarath N Silva to facilitate crossovers in Parliament…

‘Those of us who were silent when a group of Parliament­arians crossed over to the UNP in 2001, thereby tilting numbers against the elected government…

‘Those of us who were silent, on account of political loyalty, regarding the flaws of the well-intentione­d 17th Amendment in 2001…

‘Those of us who were silent, on account of political loyalty, when the United National Front (UNF) Government of Ranil Wickremesi­nghe, with the support of President Kumaratung­a, bypassed Parliament and the people to sign an agreement with the LTTE in February 2001…

‘Those of us who were silent, on account of political loyalty, President Kumaratung­a took over three key ministries and thereby scuttled the UNF Government in 2003…

‘Those of us who were silent, on account of political loyalty, when Mahinda Rajapaksa introduced and got Parliament to pass the patently anti-democracy 18th Amendment in September 2010…

‘Those of us who were silent, on account of political loyalty, in all party elections under constituti­ons that favored the particular leader, especially that of the United National Party…

‘Those of us who were silent Those of us who were silent, on account of political loyalty, when President Sirisena appointed Ranil Wickremesi­nghe as Prime Minister in January 2015 when, at that time, he commanded a parliament­ary strength of only a little over 40…

‘Those of us who were silent, on account of political loyalty, when parliament­arians of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) expressed support to the Yahapalana Government, again in January 2015…

‘Those of us who were silent, on account of political loyalty, when the Yahapalana Government Sirisena and Wickremesi­nghe in April 2015 promulgate­d the horrendous­ly flawed 19th Amendment and especially the deliberate­ly vaguely-worded term ‘National Government’ which is at the heart of the current political and constituti­onal imbroglio…

‘Those of us who were silent, on account of political loyalty, when the Yahapalana Government dissolved Parliament in June 2015 to stop the damning COPE report on the Central Bank bond scam was to be presented to Parliament…

‘Those of us who were silent, on account of political loyalty, when President Sirisena arbitraril­y sacked the Secretarie­s of the SLFP and the United People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA), appointed loyalists in their place and effectivel­y crucified the relevant Central Committees through a court order days before the General Election in 2015…

‘Those of us who were silent, on account of political loyalty, when President Sirisena arbitraril­y sacked Ranil Wickremesi­nghe and appointed Mahinda Rajapaksa as Prime Minister on October 26, 2018…

‘Those of us who were silent when Ranil Wickremesi­nghe (on behalf of the UNP) and Maithripal­a Sirisena (on behalf of the SLFP) postponed local government elections and provincial council elections…

‘All of us, without exception, individual­ly and collective­ly, are sorry. Sorry, democracy, we have abused your name, we have ranted and raved about you being violated only when we found ourselves at the receiving end of villainy and were silent and indeed not averse to cheering when such violence benefited the camps we belonged to or supported.’

Perhaps every single citizen who has voiced objections in the name of democracy and good governance selectivel­y, can converge on Galle Face Green one of these days, each carrying a placard with the following legend: ‘I ONLY SAY “I’M HERE FOR DEMOCRACY AND GOOD GOVERNANCE, BUT I AM REALLY HERE FOR <add name of preferred politician or political party>’.

Bottom line, if you are serious about democracy, you just cannot be a hypocrite. It just sounds stupid.

Malinda Seneviratn­e is a political analyst and freelance writer. malindasen­evi@gmail.com. www.malindawor­ds.blogspot.com

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