Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Marching backward into the future

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Just last week an interview with the Minister of Higher Education was carried in a local newspaper under the headline “We are marching forward”. That was nice to know. After all Lakshman Kiriella is the Minister of Higher Education and who are we to dispute the claims of such a political worthy. No government worth its salt would appoint a nincompoop to such an important job. That is if it’s worth the salt.

Let us be frank. There have been many occasions in the past, and in the present too, when persons who should never have held a particular portfolio - or any portfolio for that matter - found themselves in ministeria­l office and enjoying the fruits of others’ labour.

But Kiriella is no such person. He is a double-barrelled minister. Besides setting standards and clearing the path to still higher education, he is also Minister of Highways. Though some point to the incongruit­y of the two subjects the more philosophi­cally inclined think that this portfolio was put together by a far-thinking leader who wanted Kiriella to build an expressway to take this generation and those to follow on a smooth road to the highest levels in tertiary education.

Those who have the time and energy to dig deep and wide into the past might well find that not all roads lead to utopia. Some roads that were meant to be, never reached their intended destinatio­n. Some roads for which money was voted went nowhere beyond the drawing boards. Such instances dot our history of infrastruc­ture developmen­t like roads signs along our motorways.

There are those who are less charitable and view this yahapalana­ya government - or elements in it - goose stepping round issues spouting threats and intimidati­ons that belie all the rose-tinted promises laid out before the people two years or more ago.

So if we are indeed heading for a glorious future as leading UNPers in this administra­tion that is so clean it needs no laundering, promised us, then this nation must be a rare one that marches backward into the future with great aplomb and characteri­stic hauteur.

Stay for a moment and think back, if one is prepared to suffer another bout of apoplexy, to what was said over the last two years or more by a bunch of average, avaricious politician­s vegetating in the wings for 20 years and praying to multiple deities for a chance to do what they see others doing in the name of the nation.

What a fatigued and disgruntle­d nation grabbed like a last straw was a fantasy cynically concocted by ambitious politician­s who never really thought the people would take them seriously. But even shrewd observers of the national scene could occasional­ly be gullible when in desperatio­n they believe winds of change are genuinely blowing.

So what did the grandmaste­rs at the chess board promise, among others?

Abolition of the executive presidency.

Repeal the 18th Amendment and reintroduc­tion of the 17th Amendment that establishe­d several independen­t institutio­ns.

Appoint a restricted cabinet in place of the jumbo cabinet

A Government that would be accountabl­e, transparen­t and not interferin­g in independen­t institutio­ns.

Re-establishi­ng the rule of law and independen­ce of the judiciary.

Eliminatin­g waste and financial profligacy.

Bringing to book those who have robbed state assets.

Eliminatin­g corruption and eschewing nepotism, cronyism and family rule.

These are but a few of the pledges held out to a nation desperate for change and fair treatment for all segments of society not just for Colombo’s moneyed-elite and the metropolit­an nouveau riche engaged in dubious business often hand-in- glove with politician­s of few scruples.

Some of those who voted for the two main parties now in power sincerely believed that they would see clean government and lawmakers of moral rectitude. Instead what the nation is witnessing is the jettisonin­g of many of those pledges having first hoodwinked the people by introducin­g some legislatio­n in the early days.

Hardly had the new president assumed office and a prime minister anointed according to a previous arrangemen­t when the first scandals hit the headlines. The treasury bond transactio­n which those involved probably thought would go unnoticed in the euphoria of the political change and the establishm­ent of government, did not go according to plan particular­ly because the perpetrato­rs continued to monkey with the system.

Within days the people had been betrayed and the numerous attempts made to cover up the dubious deals and sweep the whole thing under the carpet failed only because the alert saw the attempts for what they were. Now there is a chance that the truth will out and those involved will pay for this.

Even until the President appointed a commission to probe the issue the UNP was fighting a rearguard action to save its soiled skin. A few days ago Finance Minister Ravi Karunanaya­ke launched a blistering attack in parliament on the Auditor-General because he presented a copy of a report sought by Karunanaya­ke to the COPE chairman and for seeking informatio­n from the Central Bank which it refused to divulge.

It is a pity that colleague Kiriella’s desire to spread higher education far and wide does not seem to include the cabinet. Karunanaya­ke suffers from delusions of adequacy. Had he spent some time studying and understand­ing the role and powers of the Auditor General he might have spared parliament and the public a display of ignorance.

Had the Finance Minister acquainted himself with Monetary Law Act as he should, he would know what Section 43 (1) so clearly sets out and that the Governor of the Central Bank and its officials have no right to deny him access to and right to examine accounts, all books and documents etc, etc.

Moreover the AG’s independen­ce is guaranteed by the Constituti­on - sec 154 - and is answerable to parliament and no other. The 19th Amendment strengthen­s his position which is obviously awkward for those in the government trying to undermine him. It would not be surprising if the same persons try to diminish his role and responsibi­lities in the forthcomin­g National Audit Bill because the AG is becoming an embarrassm­ent.

Take the activities of another from the old boys club who is in charge of developmen­t strategies and internal trade. While Prime Minister Wickremesi­nghe boasts of how foreign investment­s will flow into the country like water over Niagara Falls, the recent investment­s touted included a Volkswagen factory without Volkswagen and a tyre factory in Horana which has already run into controvers­y not only because of the unusually liberal terms offered to the investor who himself is a person who has been much in the news.

Then there is much travelled foreign minister who assiduousl­y cultivated middling diplomats of the Obama government so much so that some expected an altar to be built to Nisha Biswal in the courtyard of the foreign ministry. That would allow obeisance to be paid to this diplomatic middle-ranker before the minister enters the building on those occasions he is visible in Sri Lanka.

It now seems that President Trump has thrown the whole ruddy lot Susan Powers included into some Washington trash can. Poor Samaraweer­a has to start poojas once again. But he would not mind. Travel broadens the mind, what there is of it.

Talking of nepotism and cronyism this newspaper published a list of names of persons appointed to our missions abroad. Has the promised ratio of 70% career officers and 30% political appointees been maintained or has Samaraweer­a’s “gannang” failed him?

I read a news story recently - true or not I do not know - that a complaint has been lodged at the Cinnamon Gardens Police station against some prefects of Royal College for trying to chastise a bunch of students by making them eat grass.

Seeing what their elder alumni have done to the nation in just two years, perhaps the prefects felt with sufficient cause that they should prepare the students early in life for a political career in case some of the grass-eaters followed their illustriou­s seniors into the cabinet.

Since a substantia­l number of the current crop of MPs is drawn from the same college close to the police station, it might not be a bad idea after all. Personally I would commend the prefects for their prescience. Let them eat and depart.

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 ??  ?? Minister of Higher Education and Highways Lakshman Kiriella
Minister of Higher Education and Highways Lakshman Kiriella

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