16 October 2021
Interpreting the President
Dayan Jayatilleke has interpreted the
Sri Lankan President as follows in his article headed ‘Neither realist head nor humanist heart’:
[The Gajaba regiment seems (at least)
as much the President’s family as the Rajapaksa clan.
Everything they
learned about leadership, they were taught by General Vijaya Wimalaratne, he
said. Those familiar with the quite distinctive approaches of Gen. Denzil
Kobbekaduwa (Sandhurst, RCDS) and Gen. Wimalaratne can read the code. ]
I identify with this through my own
experiences where workplace relatives merge with biological relatives. The
reason is the law being a uniting measure. Beyond that is truth. But Dayan Jayatilleke
goes on to state:
In his Saliyapura
speech President GR declared that next year he would introduce a new Constitution
and electoral system.
Why did he speak
about a new Constitution, electoral changes and agrarian policy, issues not
usually classified under strategy/security/defence, at the Gajaba regiment’s
headquarters rather than at a traditionally civilian-democratic venue and on a
civilian occasion?
The answer is in the following part
of the President’s speech:
[We need to address the
issues that caused terrorism. We should develop those provinces. It is
necessary to raise the living standards of the people in those areas……As I was
ascending the steps to worship the Ruwanwelisaya, a young monk told me that;
“the President said ‘one country one law’ will be introduced and that we were
waiting for it”. I will fulfill that promise within this year.]
The challenge however
is in article 9 which confirms that the Constitution recognises more than one
religion and that Buddha Sasana / law is rendered foremost place. That article
was given birth by Mrs Banadaranaike. Is the President promising improve on
that and recognize Sri Lanka as a Buddhist only state? That seems to be Dayan’s
interpretation:
[The President’s very last card being the military
(especially his old regiment), perhaps he intends to play his penultimate card:
the Constitutional declaration of Sri Lanka as a Sinhala-Buddhist State,
de-coupling from the Indo-Lanka Accord with its “multiethnic” preamble, abolishing
the 13th Amendment, shrinking provincial devolution, and denouncing those who
oppose the new Constitution project as traitors. ]
Tamil leaders need to present to the Parliament their own
preposition to recognize Sri Lanka as a multi-religious nation and confirmation
of the applicability of Customary laws – Kandyan, Muslim and Thesawalamai laws.
If Buddhism is the only law recognised – then all these Customary laws would
need to be repealed first. Thesawalamai in North is essential to maintain traditions
of the North. The communication in the Appendix confirms the belief that such
customary laws empower believers.
If indeed Buddhism becomes the only law Sri Lanka would be an
orphan. If the monk was referring to Secular law being the only law – then article
9 would need to be repealed. That would do away with provincial level
devolution. If Provincial level devolution happens, then all customary laws
become redundant.
Appendix
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