Sunday Dec 07, 2025
Thursday, 22 January 2015 00:00 - - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}
Many obstacles ahead
There are still many obstacles ahead and the promises and the expectations may never be fulfilled. In addition, the discourse and rhetoric of fear, rumour, darkness and hatred is still trying to make a comeback.
It is true that the minorities did make a difference in this election but we must also ask why the former incumbent’s share of the Sinhala vote dropped from 65% to 55% – that is what made him lose the election since the minorities have always voted against his policies. It is the split in the Sinhala vote more than the minority vote that delivered this election to Maithripala Sirisena. To see it as anything else is to deliberately obfuscate the issues.
We have also not resolved the ethnic issue and a lot of political landmines remain in that area. Yet we must ask: “How can the terrorists and violent rebellion ever come back?” There is no leader, the people of Jaffna have no stomach for violence and even the irresponsible and self-absorbed diaspora are strangely talking about Mahatma Gandhi. The Western countries and India, especially after this election, will not tolerate fund raising or clandestine mobilisation.
Where is this threat? The issue is not military – it is political; how do we find a political solution, how do we win hearts and minds, develop the economy and livelihoods and treat people with respect and empathy? The appointment of a civilian governor to the Northern Province with familiarity on these issues is a step in the right direction.
100-day promises
We still do not know if any of the pledges of the Coalition will be fulfilled in the next 100 days. We have two active, political parties – the JHU and the JVP – as well as a reinvigorated civil society that will now have the freedom to be vigilant to make sure it happens. If the pledges are implemented, we will have fundamental transformation in our political system and our rule of law institutions – hopefully they will ensure that democracy is entrenched no matter what happens after April.
At this time we must also remember all those who are not with us who would have also savoured this moment – among them my mentor Neelan Tiruchelvam and his wife Sithie, Charlie Abeyesekere, his daughter Sunila and her son Sanjay, R.K.W. Goonesekere, and also, though we had very divergent political views especially on the ethnic question, H.L. de Silva and S.L. Gunesekere who in their lifetime fought very hard for democracy and the rule of law.
As Sunila’s daughter Subha wrote in a moving piece, “So you see, democracy is not just a system, a structure. It is also a feeling. It is a feeling within each one of us; a desire to be led by the things we believe in and the people we see those things in. It is a desire to stand up, to feel powerful in our own way, to wield that power in the face of despair and frustration. It is a feeling that inspires other feelings; it gives us courage, it gives us hope”.
The arrival of the most popular religious figure in the world the day after the appointment of the Cabinet of Ministers seals this moment we can savour. We may not all be of the same religion or even religious at all but this is the Pope who has said that religion and religious institutions are not all that matters – it is one’s own spirituality and doing what is right that is the most important. May his blessings entrench our gains, help us transform hope into reality and vengeance into justice with mercy.