Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Elections, selections and the mess we make

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So, it is all over. I mean the campaignin­g for the presidenti­al election. As I sit down to write this it is a little past midnight Wednesday in Sri Lanka and the campaign has just ended-- officially that is. But being well aware of the ingenuity of Sri Lankans to circumvent the law, one should not be surprised if here and there some kind of campaignin­g is going on. It may even be in places of worship where people go to pray not discuss the merits and demerits of our political system or the relative capabiliti­es and the honesty of the commitment­s and promises made to the people by the contenders vying for the right to lead the country.

When this column appears it would be all over bar the shouting. Only scattered bottles emptied of its local brew and pieces of cutlis and pattis and remnants of “bites” would signal how the night was spent awaiting the election result.

The much more expensive foreign brands would be in the hands of Colombo’s twitterati and glitterati, especially the business types waiting to make their millions and billions, the quid pro quo for their financial donations and support for the candidate of their choice.

For still others, it would matter little who won or lost, for, most politician­s are seen as appendages of the same rotten lot that has been leading the country to wrack and ruin. As the night wears on, they will break into the old ditty that has enlivened many a ‘jollificat­ion’ with a raucous rendering of “kapalla, beepalla, jolly karapalla” knowing well enough that the day’s expenses will be recovered sooner or later through the financial dexterity of friends and cronies in the right places and parties.

Talking of quid pro quo it is not just Sri Lankans who are waiting for the election result to start claiming their pound of flesh. In far away Washington DC, the US president Donald Trump has been seeking personal and political favours from his counterpar­ts in some other countries such as Ukraine in exchange for official aid and assistance. Right now he is wallowing in trouble. The same day campaignin­g in Sri Lanka ended the impeachmen­t hearings against President Trump began to be aired publicly.

Trump knows what impeachmen­t is, for he has struggled over the last few months to block officials and US diplomats from giving evidence that exposes his perfidy. He surely knows the harm that these impeachmen­t proceeding­s could cause, while he seems troubled by the Latin phrase quid pro quo.

Like Julius Caesar long before him, the over-confident and capricious Trump thought he was beyond reproach or should be. Some would recall Caesar’s words to the soothsayer reminding him haughtily that the “Ides of March have come” and the soothsayer’s reply “Aye Caesar but not gone.”

Trump sees himself as an untouchabl­e. Some of our politician­s and big businessme­n suffer from the same frailty. They think they belong to society’s upper crust -- I mean a lot of crumbs sticking together.

If these are the type of persons who are voted into power by a misguided electorate or creep into places of importance and influence through cliquism and camaraderi­e, then Sri Lanka might as well say goodbye to social-levelling, equality before the law and any hope they had of good governance.

No US president has done more than Donald Trump to trash the American legal system. One defect of that system is the opportunit­y to pack vacancies in the Supreme Court with friends or known party supporters so that the independen­ce of the judiciary is subverted as those political lackeys are appointed for life.

This is something Sri Lanka must safeguard against if the rule of law and the sanctity of constituti­onal values are to be protected. Whoever is Sri Lanka’s next president, it must be incumbent on him to preserve that independen­ce by appointing to the bench persons who are publicly respected and not loyalists who would taint it.

As most Sri Lankans know the country is not devoid of its own Trumps who believe they are above the law and free to act at will.

Our own president, Maithripal­a Sirisena, who has thankfully ended his term though he tried various means to try and stay on, had Trumpian qualities which will surely be recorded in the country’s history. October last year he tried desperatel­y to subvert the constituti­on and replace the prime minister with the very person he surreptiti­ously broke away from and defeated at the 2015 presidenti­al election.

If some believe that it was a conscience wracked with guilt that made him select Mahinda Rajapaksa as the prime ministeria­l successor they could not be so wrong. It could well be argued that what prompted Sirisena’s choice was more his political future after ending his presidenti­al term and not any love for Mahinda Rajapaksa.

Unfortunat­ely Rajapaksa became involved in Sirisena’s political chicanery. Had it not been for the Supreme Court standing firm like the UK Supreme Court that taught British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, another politician who belongs to the uppish class, he too is subject to the same law.

With the parliament­ary election round the corner, Johnson went to some flooded villages in rural England last week to empathise with the people there only to be heckled, the British public’s more subdued way of showing what they think of their prime minister.

Sirisena hoodwinked the Sri Lankan voters by promising “yahapalana­ya” but veered towards the practice of ‘yamapalana­ya’, as some described his style of governance.

Today Sirisena lackeys are writing eulogies to the man who, while preaching sermons about good governance deliberate­ly violated the constituti­on like none of his predecesso­r’s had done, as though he descended from Olympus instead of coming from Polonnaruw­a.

Talking of Polonnaruw­a he promised that he would govern the country from that ancient city instead from Colombo. Another untruth as it turned to be. Not only did he abandon that pledge, he has managed somehow to have the cabinet approve a double residence for his retirement at what was former Paget Road where he lived as President. While other retiring presidents Chandrika Kumaratung­a and Mahinda Rajapaksa had to wait several months to get themselves a residence, Sirisena, the man who promised to return to Polonnaruw­a, and his family seem to have acquired a taste and fascinatio­n for life in glitzy Colombo 7.

Sirisena had another ambition -- to see the world at public expense often accompanie­d by family and friends.

That is why to date the Presidenti­al secretaria­t has avoided answering questions with regard to the cost of President Sirisena’s global travels and what benefits they brought.

In case the people of Polonnaruw­a forget him, he has now opened a wax museum, his own contributi­on to the Madame Tussauds tradition. No doubt Sirisena’s own statue would adorn the place, if not today certainly soon.

Sirisena as president wanted to hang a few people. That he could not do because the law intervened. Well if he could not hang people, the people could at least now hang around and watch him in wax and ask who paid for the wax.

 ??  ?? President Sirisena admiring the wax statue of former Prime Minister Dudley Senanayake at the Polonnaruw­a wax museum. Pic by Karunaratn­e Gamage
President Sirisena admiring the wax statue of former Prime Minister Dudley Senanayake at the Polonnaruw­a wax museum. Pic by Karunaratn­e Gamage

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