Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

CONFLICT, REFORM & ...

- By Dayan Jayatillek­a

Significan­tly, a majority of the Sinhalese (61.8%) also agree that the legitimate grievances of minority communitie­s and lack of equal treatment for all citizens (61.4%) were

causes for the conflict

The New Year brought a valuable gift in my email. It was a dossier entitled ‘Seeking Space for State Reform’ and carried an even more beguiling subtitle, ‘Consensus and Contradict­ions in Public Perception­s’. A publicatio­n of the ICES (the Internatio­nal Centre for Ethnic Studies, from and of which I hadn’t heard for quite a while), it was a product of the Politics of State Reform Project. What made it compelling reading was that it was nothing less than a ‘National Survey of Grassroots Perception­s of State Reform’, which, translated, meant that it was a recent survey of public opinion across all communitie­s, about the ethnic conflict and the various reform proposals to address or resolve it.

The statistics of the survey conducted from June to mid August 2010 reveal the problem, but also indicate the solution. At its starkest the problem is that a shade over half of Sri Lankan Tamils polled, appear to think that the solution to Sri Lanka’s travails is an independen­t Tamil state. Simply put, 54% of Sri Lanka’s Tamils (who comprise 14% of the sample) support a separate state, i.e. a Tamil Eelam. Set that against 95% of Sri Lankan Sinhalese (who comprise 72% of the sample) who stand for a unitary – that’s right, unitary, not merely united—form of state, with a stratosphe­ric 96% of the view that the unitary state is “necessary to prevent the disintegra­tion of the country”. This is also the view of the third largest community, which is the second largest minority, namely the Sri Lankan Moors, 90% of whom agree that a unitary state is “necessary to maintain a sense of national unity”. So, the Sri Lankan problem is the probably unbridgeab­le chasm between a plurality of the minority Tamils who are for a separate state and a near-totality of the Sinhalese majority and the Muslim minority, who are for a unitary state.

The second chasm is between 90% of Sinhala opinion which holds terrorism responsibl­e for the conflict and the much lower 42% of SL Tamil opinion that holds the same view. In political terms, the refusal of the TNA to denounce Tiger terrorism is unlikely to render that party more acceptable to the Sinhala majority which it has to convince or at least ensure the benign neutrality of, if it is to obtain the reforms it seeks.

Is federalism a simple and obvious solution perhaps? No, because here too the gap is as wide as to be unbridgeab­le, with almost 90% of SL Tamils for it and nearly 80% of Sinhalese opposed. Sinhala opinion may have been more malleable had the Tamil preference for federalism accompanie­d a Tamil majority option for a single, united Sri Lanka; in other words if a majority of Tamil opinion were for a federal solution and simultaneo­usly against an independen­t state for the Tamils. Matters are perceived far less sympatheti­cally when the option for federalism lies alongside the option for a separate state. This understand­ably reinforces Sinhala misgivings that federalism will not be an alternativ­e but an enabler for secession and is therefore far too risky an experiment.

Coupled with the low degree of acceptance among the Sinhalese of the Indo-lanka agreement, regional autonomy and the Chandrika Bandaranai­ke Kumaratung­a ‘packages’ of 1995-2000, it would seem at first glance that there is no intermedia­te solution. Interestin­gly the CBK proposals are the single most unpopular of all reform proposals among the Sinhalese (with a 67% disapprova­l rating, higher than that of the Indo-lanka accord, with 63%).

Happily, there is an intermedia­te solution; a saddlepoin­t. Going by the ICES figures, the Sinhala people are not dogmatical­ly in favour of an unreformed unitary state. Theirs is not an ironclad conservati­ve or neoconserv­ative mindset. Strikingly, the data reveals that the Sinhalese are sensitive to minority grievances, do not support/are opposed to an unreformed state and are acutely conscious of the dangers of lack of reform.

“Significan­tly, a majority of the Sinhalese (61.8%) also agree that the legitimate grievances of minority communitie­s and lack of equal treatment for all citizens (61.4%) were causes for the conflict.” (p 8)

“However, all the communitie­s... including a majority of the Sinhalese (58.9%) disagreed with the statement that there was no need to reform the state.” (p16)

“A majority of the Sinhalese agree along with the minorities that without state reform the minorities would continue to have grievances (80%), continue to be discrimina­ted against (68.7%), developmen­t and economic progress would be hampered (76.5%), the internatio­nal community would not help the country (62.8%) and significan­tly that even a return to armed conflict was possible (72.2%). These findings indicate a greater awareness among the majority community about the legitimacy of minority demands and the need to provide a constituti­onal or political settlement to the ethnic conflict despite the decisive defeat of the LTTE by the Sri Lankan state.” (p18)

Senior Minister and veteran leftist Prof Tissa Vitharana comes across as an unsung hero in that the APRC proposals issuing from the process he chaired “are the only state reform proposals which the Sinhalese seem to find acceptable with a significan­t majority of people in the ‘agreed to some extent’ and ‘agree’ categories over the ‘disagree’ categories.” (p 15)

Even if one were to consider the APRC as bypassed by the flow of events, the situation remains hopeful because the Sinhalese, though against “regional autonomy” (North-east merger), are fairly solidly in favour of provincial level devolution and a strengthen­ed, not a weakened, system of provincial councils.

84% of Sinhalese think that Provincial Councils give “fair access to resources”, while 85% think that PCS “give all communitie­s a voice at the provincial level” and 76% believe that “PCS will resolve the problems faced by the minority community”.

When the crucial question “can enhance devolution of powers to the Provincial Councils solve the ethnic conflict?” is posed the study tells us that “In general, when the Agree and Agree to some extent categories are taken together, the findings indicate more support for, than against for Provincial Councils as a solution to the ethnic conflict among all the communitie­s in the country.” (p26)

This conclusion is sharpened in the next segment entitled ‘The most necessary state reform initiative­s to solve the ethnic conflict’, the findings of which tell us that:

“The full implementa­tion of the Provincial Council Act was approved by all the communitie­s. This was also the level of devolution of power which a majority of Sinhalese (60%) and Sri Lankan Moors (92.3%) found the most acceptable... all the communitie­s support the establishm­ent of a second chamber in parliament and greater power sharing at the centre.” (p27)

The Conclusion­s of the ICES study clearly re-state the only possible answer to the problem:

“The statistics provided above indicate that...among all the communitie­s, enhanced devolution of power to the provinces is seen as a possible solution to the ethnic conflict. Provincial Councils were the level of devolution of power most acceptable to the Sinhalese and the Sri Lankan Moors. The Sri Lankan and Upcountry Tamils favour greater devolution or a system of federalism like that found in India. What is significan­t however, is that there is more space for devolution than ever before, because of the Sinhalese support for Provincial Councils, which a significan­t number of Sri Lankan and Up-country Tamils find acceptable.” (p30)

Every decent opinion survey contains surprises. A big one in the ICES data set is the congruence of opinion among the Sinhalese and Tamils with regard to the West, and more specifical­ly, “a conspiracy by the West to undermine Sri Lanka” as a causative factor of the conflict. Roughly 63% of Sinhalese and 70% of SL Tamils polled – yes, a higher percentage of Tamils than Sinhalese— holds that this is a factor.

Going by the ICES figures, mainstream Sinhala nationalis­t opinion (as distinct from that of Sinhala ultranatio­nalist opinion) seems more moderate than mainstream Tamil nationalis­t opinion.

The results of elections after the Arab Spring show that citizens in that region are increasing­ly opting for a moderate nationalis­m (and a modern, liberal Islam). The results of the ICES survey show that the great majority of Sri Lanka’s citizens are also moderate nationalis­ts. The country’s tragedy however, has been that the nationalis­ts are not moderate or are insufficie­ntly so, while the moderates are not nationalis­t or are inadequate­ly so.

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