Editorial
New beginning?
Friday 10th November, 2023
Parliament yesterday unanimously resolved to remove the current office-bearers of Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC). It was a rare moment of unity among the warring MPs. A section of the government, however, argued that if the International Cricket Council (ICC) decided to impose a ban on SLC by any chance due to the resolution in question, all 225 MPs should take responsibility for such an eventuality.
This line of reasoning is puzzling. Sri Lanka has had several interim committees to run SLC, and cricket gained under all of them; the ICC did not impose bans. Other countries such as South Africa and Pakistan have appointed interim committees, but the ICC has not banned their membership. It was under an interim committee that Sri Lanka won the cricket Parliament .
The aforesaid argument could be considered an affront to the ICC in that it implies that the international governing body for cricket is against action being taken to rid SLC of corruption. There is no reason why the ICC, which is also combating corruption, should oppose such a course of action, which will benefit cricket. Above all, neither SLC nor any other institution should be allowed to leverage its international connections to place itself above the law of the land. The Constitution of the Republic has been amended several times to curtail the powers of the executive presidency, and therefore SLC cannot be allowed to enjoy unbridled powers.
Former President Maithripala Sirisena, taking part in yesterday’s parliamentary debate, said corruption in cricket administration was not of recent origin. His argument is tenable, but the situation has taken a turn for the worse with the cricket administrators going so far as to undermine the State in furthering their own interests. Drastic action therefore had to be taken to control them.
New anti-corruption laws that the government is flaunting provide for legal action against corruption in the private sector as well. So, there is no way even those who maintain that SLC is not a public entity can claim that Parliament is not empowered to take action to tackle corruption in the cricket administration.
Such laws are in keeping with international best practices. One may recall that the Council of the European Union has, through a Framework Decision, made both active and passive corruption in the private sector criminal offences in all member states.
The vast majority of legislators representing both the government and the Opposition have unwaveringly rallied behind Sports Minister Roshan Ranasinghe, who has courageously taken on the corrupt responsible for ruining cricket, but the sympathies of some of President Ranil Wickremesinghe’s close allies seem to lie elsewhere.
President Wickremesinghe has proved that he can take care of his enemies, but he is in need of divine help to save himself from some of his friends!
The MPs of both sides of the House have demonstrated their responsiveness to public opinion and willingness to join forces to serve the interests of the country. It is hoped that they will cooperate similarly in respect of other national issues as well. One can only hope that what one has just witnessed in Parliament is a harbinger of a new beginning, and it will not turn out to be another false dawn.
Editorial
Cost-cutting and hypocrisy
Wednesday 22nd January, 2025
Former President Mahinda Rajapaksa (MR) is willing to vacate his official residence if the government makes a written request to that effect, his eldest son, Namal, has said. This has been MR’s response to President Anura Kumara Dissanayake’s recent statement that the former Presidents would be asked to pay monthly rentals determined by the Government Valuation Department for their official residences or vacate them immediately. He said MR would have to pay about Rs. 4.6 million a month as rent! Cabinet Spokesman Dr. Nalinda Jayatissa has said the government will make no such request, but MR should leave that house.
President Dissanayake is of the view that the official residences of all ex-Presidents and their imputed rents will be assessed so that the public will know how much they spend to maintain the former leaders. Similarly, the people have a right to know the total value of the vehicle fleets at the disposal of the President, the Prime Minister and the Ministers, and the imputed rentals for the President’s House, Temple Trees, the parliamentary complex, etc. Why can’t parliament be moved back to its original location by the sea? Most of all, the MPs’ housing scheme at Madiwela must be turned into a university hostel complex, as the NPP promised before last year’s elections.
Meanwhile, all losses politicians and their parties have caused to the state must also be estimated and recovered. Maithripala Sirisena, whom the JVP backed to the hilt, during his successful presidential election campaign in 2015, has said the JVP burnt down about 240 Agrarian Service Centres together with paddy storage facilities in the late 1980s. Besides, the JVP destroyed hundreds of buses, over a dozen trains and countless transformers and other such assets of the Ceylon Electricity Board.
President Dissanayake has made an issue of public funds spent on providing security to the former Presidents. No one in his or her proper senses will demand that the VIP security divisions be downsized; the President and the Prime Minister must be given maximum possible protection, but the public should be informed of how much it costs the state coffers to protect the incumbent government leaders.
The JVP-led NPP government has also pledged to recover Sri Lanka’s stolen assets. That will be a great service to this country, which is desperate for funds. The ill-gotten wealth of former government leaders and their kith and kin may not be in Uganda; it must be in some other countries. The government must redouble its effort to fulfil its promise to trace those illegal assets stashed away overseas and bring them back. A probe must also be launched to trace and recover vast amounts of gold and cash robbed by the JVP from banks, pawning centres, and members of the public during its second uprising.
How much does it cost the public to provide subsidised food and beverages to the MPs? We suggest that the parliament restaurants be privatised. The MPs must not be given official vehicles. If the lawmakers in affluent countries such as Sweden travel in buses and trains to attend the parliament, why can’t their counterparts in a bankrupt country like Sri Lanka do so? In Sweden, only the Prime Minister is given an official car and all others including the Speaker get only bus and train passes from the state. Now that the government has reportedly decided to use the official residences of ministers for tourism-related purposes to boost the economy, the Speaker’s House near the Parliamentary complex should be turned into a boutique hotel.
Most of all, since the government is in a cost-cutting mode, will it reveal whether it will scrap the Provincial Councils (PCs), which are a drain on the state coffers? The JVP went on a killing spree in the late 1980s to torpedo the PC system, albeit in vain. The PCs, which the JVP has publicly condemned as a white elephant, obviously cost the country much more than the former President’s official residences and security contingents, don’t they?
We are also burdened with a bloated public service with a state employee for every 14 citizens. There are about 1.5 million public workers whereas the actual need is for only about half of them. Will the government reduce the burgeoning public service to save state funds?
Editorial
Comrades see red
Tuesday 21st January, 2025
A string of defeats in cooperative society elections during the past few weeks, indicating a sharp decline in the JVP-led NPP’s approval rating, and growing public disillusionment with the incumbent dispensation, has jolted the NPP leaders into making a determined bid to turn things around with the next Local Government (LG) elections slated for April. They are however labouring under the misconception that their pre-election tactics will help boost their popularity as a government. So, instead of carrying out their duties and functions diligently and living up to the people’s expectations, they have chosen to bash their political rivals. They endeared themselves to the public by being magnanimous in victory, but the problem with magnanimity of Sri Lankan politicians is that it falls by the wayside when the worm shows signs of turning.
The JVP/NPP has launched a series of public rallies to shore up its support base ahead of the upcoming LG polls. Interestingly, at these events the government leaders mostly repeat what they said during their presidential and general election campaigns. If they say anything new, it invariably runs counter to their promises. What President Anura Kumara Dissanayake has said about the Trinco oil tank farm is a case in point. Over the weekend, he said Sri Lanka needed about 24 out of the 99 tanks; about 61 tanks would be developed as a joint venture between Sri Lanka and India, and the Indian Oil Company would utilise the others. When the Gotabaya Rajapaksa government proposed to do so, the JVP/NPP condemned it as a total sell-out. During its reign of terror in the late 1980s, the JVP murdered many of those who defied its ban on Indian goods and services; its sparrow units even killed traders who sold ‘Bombay onions’, which the then UNP government had to dub ‘Lanka big onions’ to save lives! Today, the JVP in the NPP’s clothing is sharing the Trinco oil tanks with India! It is heartening that sobering economic reality has had a mellowing effect on the JVP’s hidebound ideological shibboleths which plunged the country into a bloodbath about three and a half decades ago, but shouldn’t the JVP leaders tender an apology to the public for the heinous crimes their party committed in the name of a campaign to defeat what it called Indian expansionism?
President Dissanayake went ballistic at a rally in Katukurunda, Kalutara, on Sunday. Tearing into former Presidents of Sri Lanka, he repeated his campaign rhetoric. Claiming that former President Mahinda Rajapaksa was occupying a state-owned house, whose imputed rent was Rs. 4.6 million a month, President Dissanayake said Rajapaksa would be asked to pay that amount as rent or vacate the house and collect the housing allowance (Rs. 30,000) the latter was entitled to. Was it an instance of a subconscious motivation manifesting itself? The government is under pressure to introduce an imputed rental income tax as part of the ongoing IMF programme.
The former Presidents of this country are not without private residences, and therefore it defies comprehension why they should be given state-owned houses. However, the question is why President Dissanayake, who takes on the former Presidents with might and main, has baulked at dealing with the large-scale rice millers and private bus mudalalis, with a firm hand despite their exploitative practices. His efforts to strip the former Presidents of their ‘undue entitlements’ may strike a responsive chord with the public, but such action will not help assuage the people’s resentment at the government, which has failed to fulfil its main election promises, and cannot even make rice freely available at affordable prices.
It will be a big mistake for the government to reduce security provided to the former Presidents, especially those who were instrumental in defeating terrorism. Equally, one may recall that in 2020, while being detained in the Boossa Prison, three notorious criminals, Podi Lassi, Kosgoda Tharaka and Pitigala Keuma, threatened to harm the then President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, Defence Secretary General Kamal Gunaratne, and some senior prison officers. Such is the power of the underworld. The government insists that security provided to the former Presidents has been reduced on the basis of proper threat assessments. But something that President Dissanayake said in Katukurunda on Sunday makes one doubt the veracity of that claim. Declaring that the number of security personnel assigned to former President Mahinda Rajapaksa had been reduced to 60, Dissanayake declared that if ‘whingeing’ persisted, those 60 personnel too would be removed. The subtext of his statement is that the controversial decision to reduce security provided to Mahinda Rajapaksa was not devoid of politics, and the government would not hesitate to strip him of security completely if he offends it further.
A government that raises public expectations but fails to live up to them loses its popularity. Popular support cannot be regained by means of rhetoric, threats, warnings, scapegoating or rows with the media. The NPP must understand this if it is to avoid a crippling midterm electoral setback.
Editorial
Hobson’s choice, swings and roundabouts
Monday 20th January, 2025
The Public Utilities Commission of Sri Lanka (PUCSL) has endeared itself to the people immensely by directing the Ceylon Electricity Board (CEB) to lower the power tariffs by an average of 20%. It was a case of Hobson’s choice for the NPP government, which insisted that a substantial electricity price reduction would not be possible within the next three years although it promised, before last year’s elections, to slash power tariffs by as much as 30% ‘in the near future’. The Opposition has mockingly asked whether ‘the near future’ is equal to three years.
The Opposition and some consumer rights groups have claimed the credit for the power tariff reduction. If they consider themselves so influential as to have power tariffs lowered, will they explain why they failed to have petroleum prices reduced?
True, the government only made a virtue of necessity by allowing the CEB to carry out the PUCSL decision on power tariff revision. If it had opted to do otherwise, the Opposition would have taken to the streets with the people joining it. But the fact remains that the NPP did not seek to railroad the PUCSL into doing its bidding. One may recall that the Rajapaksa-Wickremesinghe government prevented a downward power tariff revision by scuttling the PUCSL; it had some of the PUCSL members resign and removed its chairman by securing the passage of a motion in Parliament to that effect. The current administration did not do so despite having a two-thirds parliamentary majority. The Opposition says the government will strike back and smoke out the PUCSL members. It is hoped that the NPP will act prudently without providing its rivals with another rallying point.
The argument that the CEB should not be making profits at the expense of its consumers is tenable. The CEB has made huge profits. However, it has to repay its debts, and a fine balance needs to be struck between tariff reductions and debt repayment. Otherwise, it will be swings and roundabouts for electricity consumers, for the government will pass the cost of servicing the CEB’s debt on to the public in the form of tax increases. The proponents of power tariff reductions have chosen to gloss over this aspect of the issue for political reasons.
The NPP government finds itself in an unenviable position despite its mammoth electoral victory two months ago. The problem with raising the people’s expectations excessively is that a political party that captures power by doing so finds it extremely difficult to live up to them. The NPP resorted to sloganeering and made a host of promises as it was desperate to savour power. Its pre-election slogans, promises and demands are now boomeranging.
During their opposition days, the NPP/JVP leaders made fiery speeches tearing their political rivals to shreds and asking the SLPP-UNP government to slash taxes and tariffs and halve fuel prices forthwith; they insisted that all it would take to make rice freely available at affordable prices was a single stroke of the presidential pen; they condemned the Port City project as an environmental disaster sans any economic benefits to Sri Lanka; the NPP election manifesto promised biannual pay hikes for state employees among other things; it pledged to renegotiate the IMF programme, especially the Debt Sustainability Analysis; some former military officers who jumped on the NPP bandwagon promised to neutralise the netherworld of crime and narcotics in less than two months, and the NPP made a solemn pledge to have all the thieves of state assets thrown behind bars and recover the stolen funds posthaste.
Today, the NPP’s slogans, demands and unfulfilled promises, which are legion, have become grist for the Opposition’s mill. The government is dogged by its broken promises, which are likely to be its nemesis. Unfortunately, its confusion and incompetence have enabled a bunch of rogues who enriched themselves, ruined the economy and lost elections or skipped them for fear of defeat to crawl out of the woodwork and claw their way up.
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