Kumaratunga's crisis leadership may win votes
By Feizal Samath
COLOMBO - Preoccupied with a bloody conflict with rebels in Sri Lanka's
northern region, President Chandrika Kumaratunga has little time to think
of an upcoming national battle with political rivals.
There is no imminent end in sight to the contest between government troops
and Tamil Tiger rebels for the control of northern Jaffna peninsula, in
this Indian Ocean island nation. The Tigers are battling for a separate
homeland for Sri Lanka's minority Tamils, alleging discrimination by the
majority Sinhalese community. Recent stunning advances by the rebels have
dented the government's image with voters.
However, political analysts think that Kumaratunga's People's Alliance
(PA) has the edge over its main rival in the upcoming parliament polls,
notwithstanding the crisis and unpopular price hikes of essential goods
that have angered consumers.
Sri Lankans will elect a new parliament sometime after August when the
present house completes its tenure. Kumaratunga, in a media interview,
denied that the election, due between August and November, would be put
off because of the Jaffna crisis.
''She (Kumaratunga) has the edge. She could pull it off,'' said Jehan
Perera, media director of the National Peace Council and a political
commentator. He said the main opposition United National Party (UNP) had
not been effective enough in mobilizing the masses against the PA.
Kumaratunga was elected for a second six-year term in last December's
presidential poll. A UNP win at the parliament election would result in a
PA president and a parliament led by the UNP, which most analysts think is
unlikely to happen despite the PA's unpopularity at the moment. ''The UNP
is no better, otherwise it should have won the presidential poll,'' noted
an independent media commentator. Ranil Wickremasinghe, the UNP chief, who
challenged Kumaratunga in the presidential poll, is grappling with
internal problems in the party. Several members have accused him of weak
and ineffective leadership and criticized him for replacing key stalwarts
in top party positions with his cronies.
Opposition parties are worried the government could use draconian
emergency regulations, introduced last month, to either postpone national
polls or make it difficult for parties to campaign. ''The government could
resort to emergency measures to stall its opponents' campaign. The PA,
however, appears to have the edge because voters would prefer to look for
strong leadership in times of crisis and may feel there shouldn't be a
division of power between the president and parliament,'' argued Perera.
Last month, Kumaratunga also clamped censorship on local and foreign media
and banned political rallies, protests and trade union activity, citing
the Jaffna crisis. The president said she was compelled to impose
censorship due to the anti-national behavior of a few television stations
and newspapers. But there are signs that the government is becoming
confident about the situation in Jaffna. Last week, the government lifted
the ban on political activity, then eased censorship on foreign
journalists.
However, the ruling alliance has reason for worry in the intense public
anger against the sharp rise in gas, electricity and telephone prices this
month, which followed a diesel price hike earlier this year. Water rates
are also set to rise in the next few weeks. Yielding to public pressure,
the government Monday offered a subsidy on gas prices for low-income
families.
However, a section of political observers think that Kumaratunga's
tactics, however unpopular, may have paid off.
When Tamil rebels launched the Jaffna offensive in April and captured two
strategic army bases, the government was tottering. Kumaratunga was abroad
for medical treatment with her ministers unsure how to handle the
situation. Morale was low in the military. On her return, Kumaratunga put
the country on a war footing, dispatched new commanders to the north and
gave more money to the military even as Colombo shopped abroad for new and
more sophisticated weapons.
Kumaratunga is also trying to put back on track the peace process and
wants to push through constitutional reforms in parliament by late June.
She wants this to form the basis for a political solution to the
17-year-old ethnic crisis. But analysts believe a political solution to
the conflict with or without the support of the rebels, is still a long
way off, notwithstanding a multilateral mediation bid by Norway, India and
the United States. The government would prefer to hold peace talks with
the Tigers only after the military has retaken at least some of the
territory it lost in the north last month, they said.
Moreover, a constitutional reforms package, being worked out between the
PA and the UNP during discussions that began in March, has been watered
down so much that both moderate Tamils and the rebels are bound to reject
it, said constitutional affairs expert Rohan Edrisinha. ''It is a dilution
of the government's October 1997 draft constitution,'' noted Edrisinha, a
director at the Center for Policy Alternatives. The new proposals have
diluted the sweeping autonomy provisions in Kumaratunga's initial
devolution package for the provinces: ''Several safety measures to protect
provinces from powers being usurped by the center are not there in the new
proposals,'' he said.
However, Sinhalese nationalists, who oppose devolution of power to the
north and the east where most of the Tamil community lives, have offered
unconditional backing to the government's war effort. ''She (Kumaratunga)
is unlikely to push through reforms and alienate nationalists when she has
their support right now,'' analyst Perera said.