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the crackdown known as “the emergency.”
Both Mrs. Gandhi and Rajapaksa “were in for a rude shock,” said Ganguly, a professor at Indiana University. “They thought their population would engage in this kind of mindless adulation, but an odd coalition of people came together to express their discontent. And, given an opportunity, people will use the power of the ballot.”
Voter turnout for Thursday’s election was a record high for Sri Lanka, 81.5%, according to the Election Commission.
Over the weekend, the new Government said it would immediately restore access to a number of websites that had been blocked, like those of the newspaper Colombo Telegraph and Tamilnet, and announced an end to surveillance in the country.
Foggy transition of power
A clearer picture began to emerge of the events that led up to Rajapaksa’s decision to concede the election peacefully on Friday morning, before the vote count was finished. A lawmaker with Sirisena’s team told reporters that Rajapaksa had ordered the army to deploy throughout the country — a tactic some feared would be used to suppress turnout or even annul the vote on security grounds. But the army’s commander refused.
“He kept the troops in the barracks and helped a free and fair election,” said Rajitha Senaratne, a lawmaker.
A spokesman for Rajapaksa, Mohan Samaranayake, said that “there was no such attempt at all,” and that the former president had assessed early counts at 3:30 a.m. and instructed officials to facilitate a smooth transfer of power, according to the news agency Press Trust of India.
Brig. Ruwan Wanigasooriya, a military spokesman, said he was not aware of any such orders.
“I am not aware of such a coup attempt,” he said in comments to Agence France-Presse. “The Army was not involved during any stage of the electoral process.”
Subtle shifts
Although many foreign analysts were taken aback by the election results, subtle shifts had been going on throughout the six-week campaign. Civil servants, for example, began to display flashes of independence.
When one of Sirisena’s rally sites was destroyed in an arson attack in mid-December, a deputy minister and a number of his supporters were arrested. When the suspects were released, the commanding officer of the precinct resigned in protest, telling a local newspaper that he could not perform his duties “because of political pressure.”
Such events indicated that “maybe things were changing,” and rumblings from inside the system became more noticeable as the election grew closer, said Alan Keenan, a senior analyst at the International Crisis Group. A long list of academics, many of them employed at state universities, signed an open letter condemning “the concentration of both political and economic power in the hands of a few.”
“There were a lot of people who had previously been quiet,” Keenan said. “They had a window of opportunity where their voices made a difference, and where, if they didn’t use their voices, they feared they wouldn’t ever have another chance to use them. There was a window, and a lot of people jumped through.”
Freed from oppressive rule
By the weekend, people were already talking about the Rajapaksa era as part of a receding past. Jayadeva Uyangoda, a Colombo political scientist, mused in The Hindu, an Indian newspaper, that “a third term for Rajapaksa would have robbed Sri Lanka’s democracy of whatever little vigour was left in it.”
The new President took the oath of office in a mobbed city square, his words inaudible in the clamour of a disorganised crowd, but no one seemed to mind.
“I wanted this change — we all really wanted it,” said Ruchi Wijisekara, who was in the square. “I feel that we have been freed from really oppressive rule. I think everyone here feels like that. This is why there is a carnival atmosphere.”