Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

KNDU AND THE FUTURE OF EDUCATION

If the Rajapaksa regime sees the current crisis as an opportunit­y to corporatiz­e and militarize education, progressiv­e actors should see the debate around the KNDU bill as an opportunit­y to chart a progressiv­e future for our education system.

- By Ahilan Kadirgamar

The crisis is devastatin­g. Sri Lanka is in danger of defaulting on its internatio­nal loans for the first time since Independen­ce. From the binge of importing luxuries such as sports cars the country is now cornered into banning even imported fertilizer­s. Cost of living is beginning to soar, day wage labouring folk are suffering and children may become malnourish­ed.

The crisis is an opportunit­y. The Rajapaksa regime has seized this opportunit­y over the last year; the 20th Amendment to the Constituti­on concentrat­es authoritar­ian power in the executive president and the Colombo Port City

Act allows for tremendous financiali­sation and a parallel economic territory with special governing powers.

This is the backdrop for the Kotelawala National Defence University (KNDU) bill as it can militarize and corporatiz­e education through a parallel university system that is at its core an attack on free education.

The KNDU bill has brought considerab­le attention and resistance. The arrest and forced quarantini­ng of Ceylon Teachers Union General Secretary Joseph Stalin and a number of others protesting the bill has backfired with widespread condemnati­on of these crass tactics of state repression. Indeed, the bill has awakened a national debate on the future of education.

Over the last week, the bill was the subject of a University Teachers Associatio­n general body meeting at the Jaffna University and a discussion I facilitate­d by the Social Science Study Circle (SSSC), a forum based in Jaffna that has been a space for dissent over many decades. I draw on such discussion­s here to address the context and consequenc­es of the KNDU bill.

CORPORATIS­ATION

Parliament­arian Harini Amarasuriy­a has insightful­ly critiqued the many problemati­c elements of the KNDU bill. The bill seeks to create a university outside the purview of the University Grants Commission (UGC). The UGC ensures standards for awarding degrees and undergradu­ate student intake on the basis of merit rather than their capacity to pay. The governance of KNDU will be tightly controlled by the military; including powers to repress student protest and even requiring them to provide informatio­n in the interest of “national security”. Significan­tly, the bill also provides for vast powers to establish or take over other institutio­ns including to train the bureaucrac­y. The overall thrust of this bill will be to create a parallel militarise­d university system and in the process undermine the existing universiti­es, particular­ly through an educationa­l culture and system of top down corporatis­ation.

The Rajapaksa regime claims that the large number of students eligible for university education cannot be absorbed into the university system and that many of them seek admittance in foreign universiti­es at great foreign exchange cost to the country. Therefore, their solution is to overload existing universiti­es without adequate allocation­s to increase lecturers and teaching facilities as well as create fee levying universiti­es, which can also earn foreign exchange through commercial­ised enrolment of foreign students.

From the time of the Federation of University Teachers Associatio­n (FUTA) struggle a decade ago it has been amply clear that successive Sri Lankan government­s since the neoliberal turn in the late 1970s spend less than 2%, and sometimes as low as 1.5%, of GDP as state expenditur­e in education, one of the lowest levels of state education expenditur­e in the world.

The FUTA demand for education based on a UNESCO recommenda­tion was for 6% of GDP in state expenditur­e. It is only a steady increase in state expenditur­e that can increase meaningful enrollment of our youth into universiti­es.

Corporatis­ation of education where students are considered consumers was strongly critiqued at the outset of pushing for free education at the time of decolonisa­tion. Minister of Education C.W.W. Kannangara in presenting the recommenda­tions of the Special Committee on Education to the State Council in 1944, famously said:

“How much nobler will that be for this State Council when we shall be able to say that we found education expensive and left it cheap; that we found it in a sealed book and left it in an open letter; that we found it the patrimony of the rich and left it the inheritanc­e of the poor.” Sadly, the parliament today may make university education again the patrimony of the rich, and our economical­ly deprived youth will only be able to seek such university education through large student loans and becoming indebted into their future.

DEMOCRATIS­ATION

The Jaffna University teachers’ discussion centred on how we can work through FUTA as well as in collaborat­ion with other universiti­es and social movements, particular­ly to create awareness in the North and among the Tamil audiences on the dangers inherent in the KNDU bill. The online SSSC discussion was oversubscr­ibed, with over a hundred activists, teachers and students wanting to understand how to defend free education. Significan­tly, there were a large number of hill country Tamil participan­ts, whose concerns were based on the history of educationa­l exclusion in the tea estates. The energy and desire to engage were symptomati­c of the ideologica­l foundation of free education and how it continues to shape our ideas about our future.

If the Rajapaksa regime sees the current crisis as an opportunit­y to corporatiz­e and militarize education, progressiv­e actors should see the debate around the KNDU bill as an opportunit­y to chart a progressiv­e future for our education system. Indeed, as Sri Lanka goes through its worst economic crisis since the Great Depression of the 1930s, it should be remembered that it was a similar crisis and its aftermath that allowed Sri Lanka to instill free education that has outlasted most countries. However, it must also be noted that the long economic downturn of the 1970s led to the neoliberal regime; which cut the food subsidy to the public and brought in creeping privatisat­ion of healthcare and education through the backdoor.

During these times of great social and economic upheaval, the struggle against the KNDU bill may well determine the character of education decades into the future. Free education was establishe­d in our country on the premise that it was the system of education necessary for democratis­ation. And it is democratic struggles throughout our postcoloni­al history that have defended free education. The students, teachers and working people in our fragile country are again being called to defend democracy and free education, and chart a progressiv­e vision of education for our future generation­s.

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