Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

The Land of the Blind and Dumb

- Hly Mu nt si o n M

I was reminded this month about that old Sinhala saying ‘In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is king’ – and musing about the fact that this observatio­n is so true in our own country today.

It is not that we citizens of Sri Lanka are simply blind – we are blind as well as dumb. We see what is happening around us and yet we do not see. Even if we see, we just accept the sad state of affairs and don’t say anything.

When Gotabaya Rajapaksa was elected president in November 2019, we citizens felt relieved that we would finally see an end to the internecin­e strife that was taking place between Maithripal­a Sirisena and Ranil Wickremesi­nghe. Our country could ill afford the political mismanagem­ent and gross lack of responsibl­e governance that went by the name of Yahapalana­ya. Rajapaksa promised us ‘a safer country’ and was going to ‘usher in a new journey for Sri Lanka -acknowledg­ing that all Sri Lankans are part of this journey’.

Sadly, the enthusiast­ic voters who elected him to office and subsequent­ly provided him with a two-thirds majority in parliament, have come to realise that the political situation in our country is even worse than it was during the impotence of Yahapalana­ya. Today we see that the vast majority of politician­s in power tend to place self and family before country and not country before self and kin. Pistolpack­ing behaviour last month was a clear example of this use of political office for personal aggrandize­ment.

Today, politician­s disregard the dignity of us ordinary citizens and show scant respect for the rule of law in this country. Many seem to be following the philosophy attributed to one of our former prime ministers many years ago who advised his supporters “As long as the spoon is in your hand, keep on serving yourself !”

Our current president served in the army where he rose to be a battalion commander and retired after an illustriou­s military career. He developed a reputation of being able to get the job done, effectivel­y implementi­ng his commander’s intent during the time that his brother was Commander-in-chief.

As a battalion commander, he would have selected capable subordinat­es from the trained and experience­d junior officers under his command – but as president he seems to be selecting the people he needs to perform responsibl­e jobs from a different short list. This is a pool of unscrupulo­us political manipulato­rs and unqualifie­d torch bearers.

For someone who epitomised the popular American saying ‘When the going gets tough the tough get going’ – or even the motto of the commando regiment (Nothing is Impossible) - this former army officer.

I myself can remember 1952, when the US elected as its president Dwight Eisenhower -- the famous ‘General Ike’ who led the Allied armies to victory over Germany during the Second World War. Ike was a popular president who had no time for political manipulati­on. Ike left politics to his wily vice president Richard Nixon while did the job of President. Not being beholden to the political establishm­ent, Eisenhower was able to fill the senior ranks of his administra­tion with people who had achieved distinctio­n in such fields as the military, business, law and education. Almost all his cabinet ministers were quite affluent – rich enough in their own right to afford to be honest.

Eisenhower felt that government would be well served by successful men -because failure to utilise such capable people, he later wrote in his diary, would result in him having to appoint as members of his administra­tion only ‘business failures, political hacks and brief-less lawyers’.

B a y lv CitizenSi

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka