Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

THIS COUNTRY IS NOT THEIRS TO RUIN

- By S.V.D Kesarralal Gunasekera

The events that unfolded on October 26 have led the country towards unpreceden­ted instabilit­y. Almost a month later, we are still awaiting the correct interpreta­tion of the decisions and the credibilit­y of actions while pondering if such changes have been made in the best interest of the country and her people and if the society accepts them with knowledge and understand­ing.

It is no secret that the shock waves that went through the country on October 26 were immense. Usually the appointmen­t of a Prime Minister is a well-planned, laborious and glamorous event, but this one was like a couple eloping in the night. It was a slap on the face of everyone who clearly rejected the previous regime. What led to this sudden appointmen­t of a Prime Minister nobody seems to know. But the fundamenta­l question that is asked from all quarters is whether there was justificat­ion coupled with moral and ethical grounds on which decisions were made.

Our society is more vibrant and vociferous and the effects of this are seen through social media. The messages reach the other end of the earth. So things do not remain contained within the country. The chaos that followed the October 26 swearing in has once again brought discredit to the country.

The Yahapaalan­a Government was establishe­d with much hope by a large majority that was tired of the regime before. The promises were that those who have misused public funds will be brought to book, there will be an end to impunity and the freedom of the press will be restored. To some degree the people believed that the President was keen. But much too soon the bond issue gave ammunition to the MPS within the Opposition to fire at the Good Governance Government. Sadly the advise I gave the President to cancel the famous bond auction immediatel­y was not heeded. As a result, till today no action or a proper inquiry has taken place. In addition the joint opposition did nothing but act as the spanner in the works. They created havoc in many corners to disrupt the Government and the daily life of the citizens.

STEPS IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION

It is obvious that the country lacked systems to address the various financial scandals. When the FCID was set up, many, including some SLFP Ministers in the Government were against it. It was a legitimate process that had to go through a court of law. It was a step in the right direction. Then the fast track/hybrid courts were establishe­d and the same stalwarts were criticisin­g it. Why? Did they think that they will be victims of it?

At the bottom of this, the rulers were divided. So it was a sorry state of affairs.

But the Government did many significan­t things during the past three years. The establishm­ent of a free ambulance service, reduction of medicine prices, regained GSP Plus, bringing in the Right to Informatio­n Act and the right to free speech, re establishi­ng the independen­t commission­s and even bringing the 19th Amendment to the Constituti­on which of course at this juncture seems a mockery according to the ‘legal luminaries’ waxing eloquent on electronic media .

What prompted the President to appoint a new Prime Minister after 3 years and 2 months of a Coalition Government? Many are of the view that having so and so as a premier is a continuati­on of the ailment, but appointing another (the way he did) is not the cure. There is a saying in Sinhala that goes ‘changing the pillow to cure a headache’ which means that without addressing the root cause an ineffectiv­e remedial measure is taken. Once you accept public office you are responsibl­e for your actions and are accountabl­e to the public. One fine day you will have to face the consequenc­es. While we do not know on whose advice the President is taking these actions; right now his actions are being questioned my many . When we look at this new Cabinet what many people say is ‘ Horu allanna aanduwak aawa; eeta passe horu aanduwa alluwa’. Now it appears that no one is steering the ship which is in troubled waters and the President is rearrangin­g the furniture in the ship. What is worrying is that the bureaucrac­y has come to a halt because they are struggling to comprehend what is going on.

What were the reasons behind proroguing parliament? And why not appoint someone as PM from within the coalition government? He claims that he asked a few people individual­ly if they would like to take on the Premiershi­p. But is that the best course of action. While the whole country waits for the Supreme Court decision on the dissolutio­n of Parliament; the question that has arisen is whether it was morally and ethically right for the President to do so? According to the 19th Amendment, the Parliament cannot be dissolved before 4 and a half years. With utmost respect to the Judiciary, the interpreta­tion of the Law has to be based on ‘what the framers of the law had in mind’ when they passed the law . In that context it is abundantly clear on the 4 1/2 year rule .

TERRIFYING DOMINO EFFECT

From the time this article was first penned, so much has happened. The actions of the President has had a terrible and terrifying domino effect and the entire country is in absolute chaos now. Hardly any action is taking place in Government offices. The officials are in a dither as to whose instructio­ns they are to follow. I cannot imagine the stress that the parliament­ary staff and the ministry secretarie­s are experienci­ng during this chaos. There is no Cabinet and it also shows that we do not need one.

The dissolutio­n of parliament in 2003 by President Chandrika Kumaratung­a was a similar decision which she regretted later. Both Mahinda Rajapaksa and Maithripal­a Sirisena became Presidents of this Country thanks to former President Chandrika. But we see no gratitude being shown by either one. What the President has done has indeed given oxygen to the UNP which was in a bad wicket due to the bond scam.

While all this is happening locally, the image of the country in the internatio­nal arena has reached a new low. We are now a good example of a badly managed economy in the Asian region. The president and the law makers do not seem to realize that the world does not accept this. A letter from the Secretary General of the UN has insisted that action be taken as per the Constituti­on. Who we elect as the President should be knowledgea­ble of the constituti­on and the power and the authority that post grant. The people expect that person to act with utmost integrity. If the actions of the President are being widely questioned by the average person on the street to the most learned, then it is time to realise that the President has made a fundamenta­l mistake. If the President was ill advised, it is time to leave aside the egos and take remedial measures. I for a moment do not think that you can bring a ‘no confidence motion against the PM ‘now, simply because he has not served even for 2 weeks. what one can bring is a motion that “the present PM does not command or have the support of the majority in Parliament’.

This country is not theirs to ruin. We owe it to the future generation­s to safeguard this country right now.

 ??  ?? The image of the country in the internatio­nal scene has reached a new low after the unruly behaviour of lawmakers within Parliament
The image of the country in the internatio­nal scene has reached a new low after the unruly behaviour of lawmakers within Parliament

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