Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

US $ 10,000 media blitz helps SLFP earn unpreceden­ted victory in Jaffna

North needs bread, not Constituti­on cake, asserts Angajan Ramanathan

- By Sandran Rubatheesa­n

Angajan Ramanathan’s victory in the August 5 parliament­ary polls is historic, firstly because he secured the most preferenti­al votes in the Jaffna electoral district, pushing Tamil nationalis­t candidates behind, and secondly, for being the only first-time MP in the country elected with the Sri Lanka Freedom Party ( SLFP), the one- time grand old party now in decline.

“I think people in the north have accepted me as a moderate politician, recognisin­g the work I have done in the recent past and my future plans to develop the region,” Mr. Ramanathan said.

“They didn’t give importance to the national party they were voting for [the SLFP] but to the individual.”

He stressed that he had received a clear mandate for his progressiv­e politics and for developmen­t of the region, which has seen little infrastruc­ture boom in the post-war period.

Mr. Ramanathan’s victory was no doubt buoyed through a heavy wallet for political advertisin­g on social media, a potent aid to building a public profile given the strict limitation­s on public rallies imposed this year. He was one of the 10 biggest- spending candidates on Facebook, topping $10,000 in his blitz.

His campaign rode on a private media network owned by his family, consisting of a radio and local cable television channel based in the north.

A qualified computer engineer by profession, Mr. Ramanathan returned to Jaffna from Australia in 2010, soon after the war was brought to an end, to assist his father’s business ventures. Later, he was appointed SLFP organiser for Jaffna by the then president, Mahinda Rajapaksa.

In 2013, he became the first person to be elected to the Northern Provincial Council on an SLFP ticket. He resigned as councillor to contest the parliament­ary polls in 2015, only to lose by some 2,000 votes.

He was then placed on the national list of the United People’s Freedom Front ( UPFA) alliance, which includes the SLFP, by the former president, Maithripal­a Sirisena. Mr. Ramanathan said the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) had failed to resolve the north’s immediate problems caused by the separatist war, rather focusing on amendments to the Constituti­on to win favour with consituent­s.

The new MP said he wanted to fulfill immediate needs first while ensuring the political rights of Tamils were recognised and respected.

“I would like to fill that developmen­t gap in the region caused over the years by nationalis­tic politics rather than securing a document in writing. These two processes can go simultaneo­usly,” he said.

Mr. Ramanathan said people in the north felt they had been left behind in the post- war developmen­t boom. Housing, jobs, livelihood, economic developmen­t and education were critical issues. Urgent government assistance was needed to fix shortfalls and promote a sense of inclusiven­ess as one nation.

“As a Tamil from Jaffna I’ve also got Tamil nationalis­t sentiments in me but I know what is possible and what is not,” Mr. Ramanathan said.

“We have to work with national parties in order to fulfill the aspiration­s of the people. You can’t work as a regional party, engaged in opposition­al politics, keeping people’s lives in difficulty.” He charged this had been a factor in Tamil politics for the past 70 years, since Independen­ce.

The longstandi­ng ethnic question in the country, Mr. Ramanathan said, should be resolved through constituti­onal amendments but along with other relief for the north. “Filling the developmen­t gap in the region would be a solution in the short term,” he said.

“I don’t mind which solutions come first. Whichever solutions come first, I’ll take them and give them to people. I’m ready for that.

“What the Tamil nationalis­t parties are talking about is, they want solutions in writing first, and until then, let the people suffer. I don’t think that is going to work because people have suffered enough already.”

Mr. Ramanathan’s win marks the first victory for the SLFP at a national election in the Jaffna electorate. Mr. Ramanathan emerged with the highest number of votes in the Uduppiddy electorate, where caste-based politics plays a major role. That was the only electorate he won outright, relying on preferenti­al votes for his overall victory. He denies that caste- based votes played a major role in his win.

Tamil nationalis­t parties have been severely criticised for taking advantage of social issues for electoral gain, fielding an individual from the Tamil community simply to hold votes.

In the 1977 general elections, the then Tamil United Liberation Front ( TULF) candidate, T. Rasalingam, won the Udupiddy seat but left parliament in

Mr. Ramanathan’s win marks the first victory for a national political party in a Jaffna electorate. Mr. Ramanathan emerged with the highest number of votes in the Uduppiddy electorate, where caste-based politics plays a major role. That was the only electorate he won outright, relying on preferenti­al votes for his overall victory. He denies that caste-based votes played a major role in his win

1983, as the TULF boycotted parliament­ary sessions as a mark of opposition to the Sixth Amendment to the Constituti­on, which prohibited calling for a separate state within the country.

Mr. Ramanathan accused the TNA of cleverly manipulati­ng the Tamil community for electoral gain. “The TNA never genuinely wanted to field candidates for the benefit of electorate­s: it has been fielding people representi­ng the community for the sole purpose of securing those votes as a whole to the party,” he said.

In the Uduppiddy electorate, the SLFP won the highest number of votes (6,214) while the TNA received only 3,868 votes. Other Tamil nationalis­t parties such as the Tamil Makkal Thesia Kootani (TMTK), led by the former chief minister of the North Province, C. V. Wigneswara­n, obtained 4,457 votes while the All- Ceylon Tamil Congress ( AITC) led by Gajendraku­mar Ponnambala­m attracted 3,392 votes.

TNA politician­s in the north accuse Mr. Ramanathan of manipulati­ng local youth, promising state jobs and other government perks in exchange for their votes rather being genuinely committed to developing the region.

The Election Commission launched a probe over alleged misuse of COVID-19 state relief being used for political purposes by Mr. Ramanathan’s office during the campaign.

Mr. Ramanathan has rejected these allegation­s outright.

“I have to give them jobs. Who is going to give jobs for the unemployed youth in my district? As an elected representa­tive, I have to do that while ensuring to create more job opportunit­ies through new developmen­t, entreprene­urship programmes and private sector investment­s,” he said. “This is where TNA has gone wrong, by failing to address these issues in the past.”

 ??  ?? Angajan Ramanathan:People in the north have accepted me as a moderate politician. Pic by Sameera Weeraseker­a
Angajan Ramanathan:People in the north have accepted me as a moderate politician. Pic by Sameera Weeraseker­a

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