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This is
the
first
time in
the
61-year-old
history
of
independent
Sri
Lanka
that a
mainstream
effort
is being
made to
politicise
the
military,
which
has
unswervingly
stuck to
its job
unlike
some of
its
counterparts
in the
region.
The more
serious
question
is what
kind of
political
and
ideological
message
the
United
National
Party,
the
Janatha
Vimukthi
Peramuna,
and the
Sri
Lanka
Freedom
Party (Mahajana
wing)
are
sending
to the
people,
the
Sinhalese,
the
Tamils,
and the
other
ethnic
groups.
Is this
an
invitation
to yet
another
South
Asian
variant
of
Bonapartism?,
states
the
Hindu,
in its
editorial
comment
on the
Sri
Lankan
Presidential
Election
yesterday
( Dec
1).
Here
is the
text of
the
editorial:
To say
that the
decision
by Sri
Lanka's
major
opposition
parties
to field
Sarath
Fonseka,
the
prematurely
retired
general,
as their
consensus
candidate
in the
January
26
presidential
election
against
the
incumbent
President
Mahinda
Rajapaksa
is
opportunist
is to
state
the
obvious.
The more
serious
question
is what
kind of
political
and
ideological
message
the
United
National
Party,
the
Janatha
Vimukthi
Peramuna,
and the
Sri
Lanka
Freedom
Party (Mahajana
wing)
are
sending
to the
people,
the
Sinhalese,
the
Tamils,
and the
other
ethnic
groups.
Is this
an
invitation
to yet
another
South
Asian
variant
of
Bonapartism?
This is
the
first
time in
the
61-year-old
history
of
independent
Sri
Lanka
that a
mainstream
effort
is being
made to
politicise
the
military,
which
has
unswervingly
stuck to
its job
unlike
some of
its
counterparts
in the
region.
The
island
nation
stands
at a
crossroads
of
history
following
the
comprehensive
military
defeat
of the
Liberation
Tigers
of Tamil
Eelam.
There is
a new
opportunity
to
redefine
and
settle
the
terms of
unstable
relationship
between
the 75
per cent
Sinhalese
majority
and the
Tamil
and
Muslim
minorities
on the
basis of
genuine
devolution,
equality,
and
justice.
President
Rajapaksa,
who has
remained
cool and
confident
in the
thick of
this
drama,
says he
chose to
advance
the
presidential
election
by two
years in
order to
restore
to the
people
of the
Northern
Province
the
right to
a free
vote
that was
snatched
away by
the
Tigers.
There is
absolutely
no
reason
for any
one to
grudge
him the
sentiment.
Opposition
parties
have a
lawful
right to
go for
their
best
shot at
the top
political
job,
especially
when the
odds
seem
stacked
against
them.
Moreover,
the
combined
Sri
Lankan
opposition
can be
given
some
credit
for
placing
on the
agenda
the
issue of
the
long-promised
abolition,
or at
least
whittling
down of
the
powers,
of the
executive
presidency.
To be
fair,
Army
Chief
Fonseka
commanded
the
respect
of his
men and
had a
reputation
for
professionalism
as long
as he
stayed a
soldier.
The
problem
was
that,
from
time to
time, he
crossed
the
lines
and
betrayed
quirkiness,
triumphalism,
chauvinism,
and
hints of
political
ambition.
At the
height
of the
Eelam
War IV
(August
2006 to
May
2009),
he went
on
record
with
assertions
like I
strongly
believe
that
this
country
belongs
to the
Sinhalese
and that
the
minority
communities
can live
in this
country
with us
but they
must not
try to,
under
the
pretext
of being
a
minority,
demand
undue
things.
Immediately
after
the
final
victory
over the
Tigers,
he went
completely
over the
top
publicly
demanding
a 50 per
cent
increase
in the
Army's
numerical
strength
for the
peacetime
challenge!
Nor were
the
general's
political
transgressions
confined
to
domestic
issues.
He
caused
diplomatic
embarrassment
to the
government
he
served
by
characterising
sections
of Tamil
Nadu
political
leaders
as a
bunch of
jokers.
His most
recent
political
pronouncement
that the
13th
Amendment,
which
provides
for
devolution
of
powers
to the
provinces,
needs a
re-look
in the
present
context
has
mystified
political
observers.
Ironically,
Fonseka-in-uniform
was
waging a
parallel
war with
his
current
political
sponsors,
some of
whom
dubbed
him a
racist
and went
so far
as to
accuse
him of
manipulating
the data
on Tiger
cadres
killed
in the
fighting
to
bolster
the
sagging
morale
of the
Army.
Opportunism
maybe
the norm
in
piquant
situations
such as
the one
that has
arisen
in Sri
Lanka.
But for
the
combined
forces
of the
Opposition
to be
essaying
into
political
adventurism,
with a
maverick
and
unpredictable
retired
general
(in
fancy
dress)
at their
head, is
to court
humiliation
and
possibly
trouble.
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