Business Standard

GOTABAYA RAJAPAKSA ELECTED PRESIDENT OF SRI LANKA

- ADITI PHADNIS

Sri Lanka’s former wartime defence minister GOTABAYA RAJAPAKSA, part of the country’s most powerful political dynasty, has been elected president, raising fears about the future of human rights and religious harmony in the region. Rajapaksa, the candidate for the SLPP, the SinhaleseB­uddhist nationalis­t party, claimed an easy victory in the presidenti­al election held on Saturday, which had been fought against the backdrop of some of the worst political instabilit­y and violence the country has seen since the end of the civil war a decade ago.

With Gotabaya Rajapaksa of the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) winning the election for the presidents­hip of our southern island neighbour decisively (in the first round of voting itself in a single preferenti­al vote system), the world is agog about what this means for the country’s future.

The biggest concern is the economy. After the Easter bombings by radical Islamists in April killed more than 200 people and injured over 400, the prediction of every multilater­al financial agency was that the country’s GDP growth would slip below the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund's (IMF’S) 2019 forecast of 3.5 per cent and the Asian Developmen­t Bank's (ADB'S ) prediction of 3.6 per cent. After the blasts, the minister of state for finance, Eran Wickramara­tne, said GDP growth would be around 3 per cent. Polls in May showed it could fall to 2.5 per cent. It was a crisis for the country and the central bank cut rates twice between May and November to shore up the economy.

This was not the only problem. The general impression is that degree of indebtedne­ss of Sri Lanka to China because of loans taken as part of Chinese Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) investment­s in infrastruc­ture developmen­t is extensive — from 2008 to 2012, approximat­ely 60 per cent of foreign borrowings were from China. But before that, Sri Lanka had already walked into a debt trap of commercial borrowings.

The largest portion of the country’s foreign debt is internatio­nal sovereign bonds — 39 per cent of the total foreign debt as of 2017. Besides loans have been obtained from internatio­nal capital markets since 2007, and such bonds have resulted in soaring external debt servicing that does not enjoy the luxury of deferred or relaxed payment schedules.

It didn’t help that the country’s political leadership was at sixes and sevens, with outgoing President Maithripal­a Sirisena and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe fighting each other at every step, and this led a virtual standstill in the bureaucrac­y.

Now, a similar policy paralysis can be expected for the next 12 months until the parliament­ary polls are held in November 2020. In Parliament, it is the United National Party (UNP), led by Ranil Wickremesi­nghe, that has a majority. In the Sri Lankan system, while the president has the right to appoint and dismiss ministers and control over the armed forces and national security, the prime minister, through a recent constituti­onal amendment, is empowered to take decisions on the economy and allied matters.

Other challenges persist, too. The election results show that while Rajapaksa had a landslide victory in the Sinhalese-dominated southern districts (in Gampaha and Galle, for instance, he got upwards of 60 per cent of the vote), opposition leader Sajith Premadasa won a majority of votes in the Tamil and Muslim-dominated northern and eastern districts like Jaffna and Batticaloa. This is a searing reminder of the deep ethnic and racial divide between the majority Sinhalese and the minority Tamil/muslim communitie­s.

From India’s point of view, the new president’s foreign policy moves will be crucial. “Gota will play the China card, but Beijing is now less inclined to repeat the large financial investment­s it did five or 10 years ago because of growing domestic opposition and internatio­nal scrutiny,” said Constantin­o Xavier, a foreign policy fellow at Brookings India was quoted as saying. But one thing is clear: National security and domestic law and order will be the new president’s foremost priority. In the current circumstan­ces, will Sinhala-Buddhist organisati­ons like the Bodu Bala Sena which were set up with moral and material help from the Rajapaksa family, especially when it was in the Opposition, now become stronger? Or will they recede to the background? This holds the key to stability on the island.

This time, unlike the previous presidenti­al election when India’s opposition to the Rajapaksas was the world’s worst kept secret, the country has stayed scrupulous­ly out of the power game, opting to be an observer rather than a commentato­r. In the process, it can count many in both camps as its friends. In the end, what happens in the parliament­ary election in 2020 will be crucial: Whether the Rajapaksa family with Mahinda Rajapaksa as the SLPP’S prime ministeria­l candidate will dominate Sri Lanka’s political landscape?

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India