Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

We formed Govt. for interim period only-pm

General Election the need of the hour, not Presidenti­al polls

-

Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa said yesterday that his party did not form a government to continuous­ly administer the country and that a General Election was the most appropriat­e election to be held at present.

He said President Maithripal­a Sirisena explained in his address to the nation that he appointed him as the Prime Minister only after things reached a stage where he had absolutely no other option.

“When the government is entrusted to me under such circumstan­ces, I cannot, in all fairness, shun the responsibi­lity. this was not a question of political power. The fate of our country and the futures of our younger generation was at stake,” he said.

In my speech in Parliament on November 15, I proposed to all political parties that we come to an understand­ing to hold a general election to enable the people to exercise their sovereign right to elect a government of their choice. The JVP agreed to this but the UNP has been evasive, insisting that a presidenti­al election be held instead.the problems that have cropped up are in Parliament. Hence there is no need to hold a presidenti­al election at this stage. No party obtained a clear majority at the general election held in August 2015. The UNP obtained 106 seats, the UPFA obtained 96. The difference was just 10 seats.

A Unp-led government was formed only on the basis of an agreement entered into with a group of UPFA Parliament­arians. This group left the government on October 26.Thereafter several UNP Parliament­arians also joined our ranks. Today, I am the leader of the largest group of MPS in Parliament. After the parliament­ary elections of 1994, 2001 and 2004, Presidents D.b.wijetunga and Chandrika Kumaratung­a who held office at that time, invited the largest group in Parliament to form a government. On that basis, government­s were formed by the People’s Alliance in 1994, the UNP in 2001 and the UPFA in 2004.

What we did on October 26 was to form an interim government that would have lasted only until the conclusion of the general election that has already been declared, but temporaril­y put on hold by the courts. We never had any intention of running an administra­tion through the government that has been formed at present. The whole country can see that only a few members of the joint opposition hold office in this government. That is because this is only an interim arrangemen­t. I have been stressing ever since I took oaths as Prime Minister that our foremost aim was to go for an election in order to establish a stable government. However the objective of the other side is to revive the previous government and to rule the country for as long as possible without holding any election at all. That is the reason for the present political situation in the country,” he said.

He said,“the President dissolved Parliament and paved the way for a general election. But the UNP filed action in courts and got elections postponed. If things had gone according to the gazette notificati­on issued by the President, by now the elections authoritie­s would have started accepting nomination­s. The UNP will continue to engage in disruptive politics until the Supreme Court decides whether anyone’s fundamenta­l rights had been infringed by the declaratio­n of a general election.

The former finance minister claims that the economy is on a downward trend because of the change of government.the President invited me to take over the government precisely because of the collapse of the economy as a result of the policies of the previous government. Under these circumstan­ces, what any democratic country would do is to hold a general election and have a new government elected to power. Because the President was earlier a part of our government he knows how we handled difficult situations. We managed to find the money to fight the war. We managed to complete a large number of developmen­t projects that no previous government had been able to get off the ground. We did not allow the people to feel the effects of the 2007 world food crisis. Even though the worst global economic recession since the 1930s took place in 2008, the people of Sri Lanka were not even aware that there was a worldwide recession.

Even though the world price of crude oil rose to levels never seen before or since during those years, we managed to minimise the fallout from the global oil crisis as well. Within a period of nine years, my government increased the US Dollar per capita income of the country threefold. The average economic growth rate during those years was 7.4%. The exchange rate was Rs. 131 to the US Dollar. The debt to GDP ratio was 70%. On January 9, 2015 we handed an economical­ly stable country over to the new UNP government. Within a period of four years however the country is facing its worst crisis yet. The most serious aspect of the economic crisis facing this country today is the foreign currency debt burden.

When I assumed office as President for the first time in 2005, there was a war in the country. However the economy was not in such a bad state as it is now. At that time too, the debt to GDP ratio was 90% but the proportion of foreign currency debt was not as high as at present. I made it a point to inform the people from time to time in writing, of the foreign currency loans that the UNP government was taking through various sources such as Sri Lanka Developmen­t Bonds, Sovereign Bonds, Syndicated Loans, Currency swaps etc, because I knew that once we were back in power, this debt burden would be the biggest problem that we would have to face. Within a period of about three and a half years, the ‘Yahapalana’ government had taken a total of more than USD 20.7 billion in foreign currency loans alone. Due to this debt burden it will take a while to turn things around. It should be plain to everyone that those who are trying to revive the previous government and rule without holding elections, are incapable of turning this country around. It was they who destroyed the stable economy that we had created. This is why they are so reluctant to hold elections.

In 2006, after the war with the LTTE resumed, the people of this country, the trade unions, consumers, profession­als, businessme­n and all sections of the population made it a point to refrain from doing anything that would disrupt the war effort. It is because of that public support that we were able to end the war that no one else was able to bring to an end. I wish to request the people to extend to us the kind of support they gave us during the war, in order to get this country out of the economic crisis it is in now. This is the last opportunit­y we have. If our efforts fail, this country will end up a failed State, like Greece.

We will have to work on the assumption that there is a situation of national calamity with regard to the economy. We will have to put a stop to burdening the people with taxes on the one hand and lavish spending on importing vehicles for ministers, spending money on ceremonies and excessive amounts on foreign travel as the UNP government was wont to do. I have to make it clear that after the next general election, we will have to appoint a suitable number of ministers so as to be able to have a stable government. Before everything else, this country has to have a stable government. However that new government will have to keep expenditur­e under strict control.

The President and the people of this country know that only we can extricate this country from the crisis it is in.after we assumed power in November 2005, we had to face many challenges. When we obtained a loan of USD 500 million from the HSBC in 2007 at the height of the war, the UNP surrounded the bank and told them not to give us that loan and if they did, the money would not be repaid under a UNP government. In April 2009 when the war was in its final stages, an IMF loan which was due to us as a member state was delayed. At that stage, I spoke

When the government is entrusted to me under such circumstan­ces, I cannot, in all fairness, shun the responsibi­lity. This was not a question of political power. The fate of our country and the futures of our younger generation was at stake,

The President dissolved Parliament and paved the way for a general election. But the UNP filed action in courts and got elections postponed. If things had gone according to the gazette notificati­on issued by the President, by now the elections authoritie­s would have started accepting nomination­s

to a friendly Middle Eastern country and obtained a pledge of USD 500 million and we were able to work around that obstacle. Soon afterwards, Prabhakara­n was killed and the IMF released the loan due to us and we didn’t need to take the USD 500 million that had been pledged by the friendly Middle Eastern country.the former finance minister says that credit ratings agency Moodys has downgraded Sri Lanka in its ratings. It would have been surprising if they didn’t. In 2015 when we handed the country over to the UNP, all those ratings were going up.they started coming down only afterwards .

I have to say that there is a subtle political element in these ratings as well. In 2009, immediatel­y after the war when our credit ratings should have gone up, we were downgraded. But the markets had complete confidence in our government and no one took any notice of the downgrade.

The President entrusted the country to us because he knows that we have the capacity to meet such challenges as well. The UNP too is well aware of that fact - which is why they speak to foreign journalist­s and diplomats on a daily basis in a campaign to convince the outside world that it is undemocrat­ic to hold a general election. They know that if a general election was held and a government led by us comes into power, we will solve all these problems. The government that we will form together with the President will be powerful and people oriented,” he said.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka