Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

GROWING AUTHORITAR­IANISM IN LANKA - FOR WHOSE GOOD?

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Since independen­ce, Sri Lankans have enjoyed a relatively high degree of democratic rights and freedom. From time to time, however government­s of various hues and shades have usurped these rights via the use of Emergency Regulation­s. Under emergency rule the freedom to protest, press freedom and other rights, including democratic rights, which we take for granted, are suspended. Using emergency law, the state has also taken the lives of large numbers of civilians as was seen in 1971, 1989 and during the civil war of 1983 to 2009.

Just prior to independen­ce in 1947, the British colonial rulers shot and killed Kandasamy, a striking member of the Government Clerical Services Union (GCSU). Workers were demanding recognitio­n of trade union rights.

DS Senanayake, the then Leader of the House backed the colonial powers of the day, said ‘Public servants should not, under any circumstan­ce hold political rights and that the state will never officially recognise the trade unions’ (Times of Ceylonjan 26, 1947/ dailynews.lk/2017/11/29)

Sadly, the post-independen­t government­s have continued using emergency rule, not to protect the civilian population, but as a means to crush civilian protests and demands for wages to keep pace with the ever-increasing cost of living (COL).

An example of this was the use of emergency law to crush the general strike of 1980. Workers were demanding a rise in wages of Rs. 10/- per day in the face of the sky-rocketing cost of living. The then president declared an island-wide state of emergency, imposed news censorship and sacked over 40,350 workers who participat­ed in the strike.

In 1983, in the aftermath of the government pogrom against the Tamil community, the then government after falsely accusing Marxist parties of involvemen­t in the violence, used powers based on emergency laws to arrest the leadership of the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) other Marxist parties and impose press censorship (THE MASSACRES IN SRI LANKA DURING THE BLACK JULY RIOTS OF 1983 – May 13, 2008, Sciences Po)

During the civil war between 1983 to 2009, when government forces defeated the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) - the terrorist outfit which claimed to be the sole representa­tives of the Tamil people on the island. Thousands of civilians perished during the course of the two-and-a-half decade-long conflict, many more were injured and the economy of the country was in a mess.

When the conflict ended, Lankans across the board hoped and believed the end of the war would see the dawn of an era of peace. Would see a strengthen­ing of democratic structures that were all, but done away with during the ethnic war, bringing an end to ethnic divisions, usher in economic developmen­t and ending discrimina­tion against minorities in the country.

In the initial euphoria, most of the more stringent emergency regulation­s were withdrawn, sadly however, certain opportunis­t elements among the Buddhist community began attacking members of the Muslim community. Though the emergency regulation­s remained in place, no action was taken against the rabble rousers.

At different stages in our history, government­s of different hues and shades - all democratic­ally elected - have at particular times used emergency regulation­s which gave them authoritar­ian powers to demand near absolute obedience of the populace.

Unfortunat­ely, the Easter Sunday bombings of April 21, 2019 saw a return of stringent emergency regulation­s which still remain in place.

Authoritar­ianism is the antithesis of democracy. It increases the powers of government at the expense of democratic freedoms of the populace. Among the main indicators of democracy are the holding of free and fair elections and limitation­s to political power.

While elections have been held regularly and fairly, the 20th Amendment to the Constituti­on (October 22, 2020) was hurriedly passed amid the pandemic and severely eroded separation of powers, checks and balances and buttressed the power of the executive at the expense of the common man.

Many emergency regulation­s imposed during the pandemic including arbitrary lowering of salaries to workers, police notices restrictin­g criticism of the government, the restrictio­n on Muslim burials where it had no connection to controllin­g the spread of the disease and police attacks on striking workers demanding a rise in wages to meet the rising COL and an end to salary anomalies… are all conducted using emergency regulation­s.

The question which arises therefore, is, whether we believe in democratic freedom or prefer authoritar­ian figures taking away democratic freedom in the name of security.

Who benefits from the current prices rises? The expected shortfall in agricultur­al production and falling and/or static wages? It’s time to redraw the line between executive power and people’s needs.

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