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coalition partners
This is whilst military strongman and Minister Sarath Fonseka, who was away in
Indonesia, was widely touted to hold the position. Upon his return, he anxiously
began looking for staff for the new ministry. When he met Wickremesinghe on
Tuesday, the Premier, who was backing his appointment, explained that top
level Police officers were opposed to his appointment. An angry Fonseka was to
accuse some of them, DIGs, as smugglers and drug peddlers who should be in
jail.
The next day (Wednesday), Fonseka met the President to discuss his
appointment. Sirisena made clear it was not possible to appoint him. Once
again, Fonseka was angry. Outside the President’s residence at Paget Road, he
told those present that he was seeking the post not for himself but to do a
service to the country. He had wanted to clean up the Police Department and
deal with those who were corrupt.
The Fonseka saga is not over. Wickremesinghe has so far written five letters to
Sirisena. He is to now tell the President that his United National Party (UNP) and
“the public at large” want Fonseka in that job. This is whilst politicians of
different hues and organisations are speaking out in Fonseka’s support. During
meetings with Sirisena after the reshuffle, accompanied by UNP General
Secretary Minister Kabir Hashim, the Premier raised issue again. Kalpana karala
balamu or let us think about it, was Sirisena’s reply. The meeting was to discuss
how to move forward with the Government now that they have chosen to go it
together. However, it is extremely unlikely that Sirisena would agree. “He has
made up his mind not to have Fonseka as the Law and Order Minister,” a high
ranking official source said. Yet, a change of mind, as demonstrated many a time
during recent political events, leaves some serious doubt. He may relent under
pressure, said a distraught SLFP Minister who did not wish to be named.
Sirisena gave no explanation to the bemused SLFP audience last Sunday why the
much awaited ‘major’ Cabinet reshuffle ended in just a ‘minor’ shake-up. It was
like the proverbial mountain labouring to bring forth a mouse. In this instance a
tiny one. Ironically, there were rewards to those whom Sirisena warned he
would deal with. The public who had expected Sirisena to carry out his
assertions for change made in different rallies for the local polls were
disappointed.
Yet, Sirisena’s about-turn and the remarks he made to SLFP Ministers, Deputy
Ministers and MPs bared his uneasy predicament. His local polls campaign
centred on fighting corruption. Days before the event, he vowed he would not
work with those corrupt. Even to the most dim-witted, it was clear the
reference was to frontliners of the United National Party (UNP). What made him
change from fighting them to joining hands with rewards to work together
again? The once confident Sirisena, who wanted to exercise powers of the
executive presidency, and use a ‘sword’ in the execution of his promise, has
morphed into a weaker position and projected an even weaker image. The exact
reasons for the sudden shift may not be known, not even to political analysts.
However, the backdrop in which events unfolded gives a glimpse into his actions
and food for thought.
In the light of this, the Government has been making hurried preparations. A
seven member Office of Missing Persons (OMP) has been appointed with
attorney-at-law Saliya Peiris as chairman. The choice was made by Sirisena.
Foreign Minister Tilak Marapana ordered the cancellation of a transfer order
sent by a top Foreign Ministry official asking Sri Lanka’s Permanent
Representative to the UN in Geneva, Ravinatha Aryasinha to return to Colombo.
This was on a directive from an angry President Sirisena who was told that the
recall was when the UNHRC sessions were to take place. Minister Marapana
also spoke on the telephone to Aryasinha in Geneva to ask him to ignore the
recall order and stay behind.
Heart burns in reshuffle
If last Sunday’s episode and the events that followed were the close of a
chapter barring some changes due, there was another opening. Pro-Sirisena
SLFP members continued their on-off dialogue with a group of Sri Lanka
Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) members on forming a new Government under
President Sirisena. At issue were a number conditions from the SLPP. Most of
these centred on economic policy where the SLPP sought a shift from the UNP
Government’s liberalisation programmes. One such issue was what the SLPP
called the sale of public assets. As the dialogue went on, President Sirisena
himself had been keen this week to seek the help of Basil Rajapaksa, the
principal strategist for SLPP to hurriedly expedite matters.
Telephone calls from both Sirisena and his brother Dudley to Basil Rajapaksa
went unanswered. Rajapaksa told a leading Buddhist prelate that he was all in
favour of forming a Government. However, he said, he had not wanted to
answer the phone calls since the Government formation would have to be
handled by the ‘Joint Opposition’ and the SLFP. “The SLPP technically has no
representation in Parliament. This was by no means a discourtesy (towards the
President and other SLFPers),” he told the prelate. Rajapaksa is also now being
wooed by Colombo’s diplomatic community. This week, he had a two hour long
meeting with the new Chinese Ambassador Cheng Xueyuan.
Sirisena’s volte face has painted himself to a corner. Earlier efforts, both
formally and informally, to re-unite with the rival factions in the SLFP have not
borne fruit. To make it worse, his Minister Susil Premjayantha, who was the
front runner to form an SLFP Government found there were not enough
numbers of MPs for the overthrow of the UNP-dominated Government. He
claimed he was able to muster only 102 names though his colleagues flatly
disputed the figure. While some UNP MPs are possible cross-over candidates,
the UNP seemed certain it will not be one-way traffic. And now, contrary to his
previous boastful stance, Premjayantha continues eating humble pie as Minister
of Science, Technology and Research. Pay and perks are too good for any
minister to just dump his or her position though contradictory public statements
have become a hallmark of such politicians. The diplomatic caution that was
delivered and the other added developments seem to have taken a toll. So
Sirisena, with no choice, not only relented but seems to have taken a step
backwards. He now waits until his arch enemies before February 10 decide
whether or not to help him. Help would mean another move to oust Premier
Wickremesinghe whilst no help would amount to further isolation and working
with the UNP.
In the past three weeks, the political goings-on have been shrouded in mystery.
Sirisena, who pledged transparency during his election campaign, neither
summoned his customary news conference nor address the nation. He
continued the practice of a blanket secrecy by asking his staff not to allow the
media to cover live the swearing-in either. The media coverage of the 35-minute
ceremony together with a ten-minute speech by Sirisena, was limited to official
television footage and still photographs that were only released after the event.
Periodic news releases containing the names of one or two ministers then
sworn-in were the sop for media coverage of such a public event. Being a
Sunday, a larger number of Sri Lankans who wanted to see it live on television
were disappointed.
She had said she would take any one of those but her original request, she
complained, had been ignored. The Ministry of Foreign Employment was placed
under Harin Fernando who is Minister of Telecommunications and Digital
Infrastructure as well. He had said prior to the local council elections that he
was certain of defeat in his district because he was unable to give employment
to anyone in the three years they were in office. Athukorale is to receive
another portfolio in addition to Justice though it has not been decided what it
would be.
Here again, it reflects the thirst for politicians wanting portfolios where jobs can
be given and the Government’s indecisiveness.
There was a similar situation when two UNPers were sworn-in as State
Ministers. This was after it was found that they could not hold positions as non-
Cabinet rank ministers in accordance with the Constitution. They had earlier
been told they would hold such ranks. Harsha de Silva, who once sought the
replacement of his leader, was appointed State Minister for National Policies
and Economic Affairs. Ajith P. Perera was sworn in as State Minister for Prison
Reforms and Rehabilitation.
In the midst of a Cabinet reshuffle, Sirisena had some bad news for
Wickremesinghe at Tuesday’s weekly ministerial meeting. He said the Cabinet
Committee on Economic Management (CCEM) should be wound up. The CCEM
set up on September 23, 2015, meets every Wednesday at Temple Trees and is
chaired by the Premier. All matters related to economic development including
foreign investment are discussed and decided upon by it. Thereafter, only the
minutes of the CCEM decisions, which are sketchy and brief, are forwarded to
the Cabinet for endorsement. They often contained only “the decisions taken”
and did not give fuller details. This prompted SLFP Ministers to dub the CCEM as
a parallel cabinet. More often than not, ministers approved the CCEM decisions
without knowing fuller details or by glossing over material before them.
One such case took place on July 5 last year when the decisions taken at the
74th meeting of the CCEM were submitted by Premier Wickremesinghe for
endorsement by the ministers. A document titled Updates to the National
Physical Plan June 2017 was among those tabled. This contained the National
Physical Planning Policy. Dealing with major infrastructure projects, particularly
road networks, the document included a map of China’s One Belt One Road
project but carried no comment. It is not clear from the document whether the
intention was to link China’s OBOR to Sri Lanka’s road network. OBOR is
development strategy proposed by the Chinese Government and it focuses on
connectivity and cooperation between Eurasian countries.
“The next was how we reduce the time taken to make decisions. There were
two suggestions: One was to scrap the CCEM and send all memoranda to the
Cabinet and thereafter if necessary appoint a Cabinet Sub Committee. By this,
delays could be avoided. The other proposal was to take all national level major
projects to that Committee and bring the smaller decisions directly to the
Cabinet. The Prime Minister too agreed to this. What happens now is that all
projects go to that Committee and only thereafter come to the cabinet. It takes
time. There was agreement on this. However, a decision will be taken in future
as to what the major projects are.”
As Minister Senaratne points out, in the past many decades, the Cabinet of
Ministers only forwarded memoranda for discussion at the weekly meeting. On
issues which were considered complex, ministers decided on a Sub Committee
comprising some of them. Such a body studied the issues involved and reported
back to the Cabinet for final approval. A departure came under the
yahapalanaya (good governance) Government when a Cabinet Committee on
Economic Matters (CCEM) was established, of course with the approval of the
ministers. Sirisena now wants it disbanded. Either he has realised three years
into his office that it has become a parallel Government by itself or he wants to
clip Wickremesinghe’s wings.
One of the two key players involved in the CCEM exercise is R. Paskaralingam, a
former bureaucrat who was invited back from London to take the job. The
octogenarian was a right hand man of late President Ranasinghe Premadasa and
was his Finance Ministry Secretary. The other is Charitha Ratwatte, a close
associate of Wickremesinghe who functions as Economic Advisor, also a former
Treasury Secretary (2001-2004). Some of the procedures followed by the CCEM
also came in for criticism. In one such instance, it was the CCEM that invited
former Chinese Ambassador Xi Xianliang and urged him to ask companies in his
country to bid for the Hambantota Port. The result has been a new deal with
China. The previous one was under the Rajapaksa administration when loans
were obtained from China for the project — a move that forced the
Government to incur vast amounts as huge loan repayments. Though the new
project has led to the generation of foreign exchange, the process that denied
bidders from other countries has remained an issue.
Range-Bandara episode
It is in this backdrop that there is uneasiness for Wickremesinghe too in his own
United National Party (UNP). Palitha Range Bandara (UNP – Puttalam District)
declared that he would move a vote of no-confidence against Wickremesinghe
as the leader of the UNP. The move appears to be a futile ill-informed exercise.
Firstly, there is no provision in the UNP Constitution (2010) to remove the
leader. There is, however, provision, to deal with “any member or officer who
acts in contravention” of the party constitution. In such an instance, it is the
party’s Working Committee which is required to appoint a committee not
exceeding ten members “for the purpose of attending to all disciplinary
matters.” The Working Committee is appointed by the party leader, in this
instance Wickremesinghe, and has a majority of his staunch backers. With those
statements Range Bandara has opened himself for disciplinary action from his
party. He was avoiding the media yesterday. His grouse appears to be non-
elevation to the rank of a minister. He told television channels that the Districts
of Puttalam, Polonnaruwa and the Chilaw electorate had no UNP minister
represented in the Cabinet. Yet, moves by a section of the SLFP to win over a
group of UNPers are causing much concern at the highest levels of the UNP.
There are fears of an unidentified number veering away.
Despite the political pressures on him, Premier Wickremesinghe has, contrary to
the report on this page last week, won conditional approval for “awarding the
contract for the construction of Central Expressway Section 3 (CEP III) from
Potuhera to Galagedera via Rambukkana.” The move coincides with a visit to
Japan by President Sirisena next week. According to the minutes for the
ministerial meeting on February 20, the Cabinet noted that “the construction of
the Central Expressway is an acutely felt need.” The approval is subject to
adherence to stipulations laid down by the Ministry of Highways. Among other
matters the ministers examined “further clarifications by the Prime Minister
and Minister of Highways and Higher Education at this meeting” and views
“expressed by the Minister of Megapolis and Western Development and several
other members of the Cabinet.” In terms of the minutes the contract will be
awarded to Taisei Corporation of Japan pending the signing of the loan
negotiated. It also decided to commence “necessary preparatory works for the
immediate implementation.”
It must be borne in mind that the cost of the road project is 100 billion Japanese
Yen or more than US 936 million. The cost of the entire Mattala Rajapaksa
International Airport was US$ 270 million. This makes clear three such airports
could be built with the money involved. In stating this, the idea is not to down
grade road development in congested Kandy area but to demonstrate the
enormous costs involved and to point out that it would add to the country’s
debt burden. The other, which was raised at the ministerial meeting, was how
the project was placed in terms of national priorities and whether it was an ad
hoc move. The same argument was brought forth by members of the ruling
party over the Hambantota Port Development project.
With a reshuffle of SLFP ministers due and a few changes to those made last
Sunday, the woes do not seem to be over for either President Sirisena or
Premier Wickremesinghe. Sirisena has to now take a final decision on whether
the CCEM would continue and on what basis it will be allowed to do so.
Wickremesinghe who has resisted moves so far to oust him as Prime Minister
will continue with his pleas to have Sarath Fonseka installed as the Law and
Order Minister. That he (Fonseka) is an archenemy of the Rajapaksas, who jailed
him, is not lost on Fonseka. If appointed, unlike Minister Sagala Ratnayake, he
would put military-style pressure on the Police over pending investigations. And
that would further distance Sirisena whose party members are still talking to
Rajapaksa loyalists about forming a new Government. It would further isolate
the President who remains cornered. Thus, the ding-dong battles between the
two coalition partners will continue as they claim to rule as a yahapalanaya
Unity Government. The more Cabinet reshuffles are made, the more they
remain the same.
Posted by Thavam