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Major
constitutional changes next week Hakeem disrupts UNP honeymoon with Rajapaksa
SLMC support will enable easy
passage for third term and to change 17th Amendment UNP continues to slide as conflicts
within conflicts continue There were two persons in Sri Lanka
who could not contest presidential elections, declared President Mahinda Rajapaksa to a United
National Party (UNP) delegation which met him at 'Temple Trees' last Monday. One was himself and the other was
former President, Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga,
he said. Both are debarred from going for a third term under existing
provisions of the Constitution. "Do you want to give her nomination,"
asked UNP leader Ranil Wickremesinghe
somewhat jocularly at the reference to Ms. Kumarartunga.
Not to be outdone, shot back Rajapaksa, "I
thought you all are looking for a candidate." That light-hearted banter came when
the UPFA and UNP leaders talked about the proposed constitutional changes. In
addition, present was Sri Lanka Muslim Congress leader Rauff
Hakeem, who has already held two rounds of one-on-one talks with Rajapaksa in Kandy. He also met Rajapaksa
when he visited Parliament on August 19. This is besides his talks with
Economic Development Minister Basil Rajapaksa. For Hakeem, there is a big dilemma.
At least three of his parliamentarians want to support the constitutional
changes and are in favour of joining the government.
Does he let them go or does he decide together with them and support the
government on the constitutional changes? Just before Iftar
(breaking fast after sunset in the holy month of Ramazan),
the party's high command decided they will en masse support the government.
They met at 'Darussalam', their headquarters at Kompanna
Veediya on Friday. Hakeem later addressed a news
conference. He said: The High Command met today
and decided to vote in support of the proposed constitutional amendments. Some
of the media have reported that we will be joining the government. That is not
correct. We have no such idea. I had discussions with the President early this
week in Kandy. It was after that, I discussed the matter with the High Command.
Our Party has resolved to support the constitutional amendments which were
discussed with the President two days back. This is particularly the
restriction imposed on a candidate who has been the president twice. The
particular provision is to be removed by the constitutional amendment. The
other was the alternative scheme instead of the current constitutional council.
We have decided to support the amendments. That would mean eight members of the
SLMC will vote in support of the amendments. How will you work in the future? We will protect the identity of our
party. We will protect this identity while taking such important decisions. On
various issues, we will take a stand. This would not be a problem to take our
own stand. Even in future, it will depend on the situation. During the recent
discussions, we have seen this. We do not expect the government to seek our
support frequently to obtain the two-thirds majority. What are the proposals, which were
discussed? Proposals have been put forward by
the President on the constitutional amendments. I discussed these with the High
Command. Even on devolution of power he (President) has an idea. Regarding the
17th Amendment he has submitted some proposals. Your party opposed the Executive
Presidential system? It is not only us. Some parties
which supported the government also wanted to scrap the Executive Presidential
system. In that context, these amendments are contrary to the mandate given by
the people. What about the progress of the
opposition (UNP) talks with the President? We do not see any progress in these
talks. If there was some progress in those talks we would have been happy. It
would have been good if decisions could be taken collectively. However,
politically we have now taken this decision because of the current situation. This development has come as acute
embarrassment and even an indictment on UNP leader Ranil
Wickremesinghe. Hakeem and his five elected MPs were
given nominations to contest the April parliamentary elections on the UNP
ticket. In addition, Wickemesinghe named two SLMC
members on the UNP National List. The recent Reforms Committee of the party
also drew its attention to the UNP's alliances with minority parties at the
expense of its own vote base and said that any coalition pacts with such
parties would in future require the approval of the Working Committee. Minority
Tamils and Muslims within the UNP, especially the Muslims now are seething with
the SLMC riding on the UNP truck to enter Parliament and then supporting the
government after getting elected. Now, the party whip will not apply
to a group who are technically UNP parliamentarians. Naturally, other UNP MPs
could take the cue, vote in favour of the government
and defend themselves quite justifiably. They could easily say what is good for
Hakeem is good for them too. Others from the UNP who took part in
talks with Rajapaksa were General Secretary Tissa Attanayake, Joseph Michael Perera and Lakshman Kiriella. Deputy Leader Karu Jayasuriya was away in Kandy and party Chairman Gamini Jayawickrema Perera was in Somawathiya. Kabir Hashim, who was to take part was addressing a seminar. Ministers Basil Rajapaksa, G.L Peris and Susil Premajayantha were
associated with the President on behalf of the UPFA. Rajapaksa was to confirm that he has decided to amend constitutional
provisions to contest another term. The Sunday Times of August 15 reported
exclusively that the Government was likely to continue with the existing
Executive Presidential system instead of creating an Executive Prime Minister.
The report said that the change in thinking was the result of advice given by
Attorney General Mohan Peiris. He had opined that a
change from the executive presidency to an executive prime minister would require
a national referendum. Rajapaksa told last Monday's meeting with UNP leaders that government
parliamentarians wanted the existing system to continue. Basil Rjapaksa explained the background including the workshop
for parliamentarians and ministers held in Beruwala
early this month. On this occasion, most had wanted Rajapaksa
to contest further terms for the presidency and give leadership to the country.
Thus, they were not in favour of an office of
Executive Prime Minister. "The President should not be a lame duck," Rajapaksa noted. Earlier, both President Rajapaksa and UNP leader Wickremesinghe
had agreed in principle to create an office of Executive Prime Minister. In
fact, Wickremesinghe gave Rajapaksa
a six-point note on a proposed Executive Prime Minister system. This is how Wickremesinghe wanted it done: The executive power of the people
including the defence of Sri Lanka shall be exercised
by the Prime Minister elected by the people through the Cabinet of Ministers. 2. The Prime Minister shall be
elected at the General Election concurrently with the Parliament. 6. The present Parliamentary
election has ensured a stable majority for the government. The new system that
has been discussed will also ensure a stable government. Therefore, the
problems of the Israeli system will not apply to Sri Lanka. In an explanatory note, Wickremasinghe agreed that the Israeli model was not the
answer. In 1992 Israel changed its Basic Law to require a direct election of
the Prime Minister to be held concurrently with balloting for the Knesset
(Parliament). Both elections, he said, were held on the same day. He added:
"Article 3 (b) of the Basic Law: The Government: "The Prime Minister
serves by virtue of his being elected in the national general elections, to be
conducted on a direct, equal and secret basis in compliance with The Election
Law (The Knesset and the Prime Minister). Article 13(a) The
elected Prime Minister will be the candidate receiving more than half of the
valid votes, provided that he is also a Knesset Member. (b)
if no one of the candidates receives the number of votes prescribed in Section
(a), repeat elections will be held." Wickremesinghe noted that the direct election of the Prime Minister was
introduced to have a strong government. However, he said "up to date no
party has received enough MPs to form a government by itself. The entire
country, he pointed out, constitutes one electorate and the members are elected
on the PR list system." While the Prime Ministerial candidates won with
large majorities in the direct election, weak coalition governments were formed
to obtain majority in the Knesset (Parliament)," he said. He added,
"Unfortunately, the Parliamentary election system did not provide a stable
2/3 party system. Neither were the small parties
willing to change the Parliamentary system to bring about a stable government.
As a result the experiment was abandoned in 2002." During talks earlier, Rajapaksa had pointed out that in countries like Israel, a strong government was not possible due to the
executive prime ministerial system. Hence, constitutional amendments are to be
made to delete article 31 (2) which states: "No person who has been twice
elected to the office of the President by the People shall be qualified
thereafter to be elected to such office by the People." The deletion of
this provision will enable a candidate at a presidential election to contest
any number of times. The UNP had wanted a four-member
team comprising the President, Prime Minister, Leader of the Opposition and the
Speaker. The Speaker was to use his vote only during situations where there is
a deadlock. Joseph Michael Perera, a former Speaker,
was to urge Rajapaksa to give in writing the
government's proposals once they are approved by the Cabinet. In terms of existing provisions of
the Constitution, (Article 41A), the Constitutional Council consists of the
Prime Minister; the Speaker; the Leader of the Opposition in Parliament; one
person appointed by the President on the nomination of both the Prime Minister
and the Leader of the Opposition; one person nominated upon agreement by the
majority of the Members of Parliament belonging to political parties or
independent groups other than the respective political parties or independent
groups to which the Prime Minister and the Leader of the Opposition belongs and
appointed by the President. Rajapaksa was livid about a strongly-worded statement Karu Jayasuriya had issued last
week calling upon opposition parties to unite. Jayasuriya
said, "I believe that the time is opportune for all Sri Lanka's political
forces who are opposed to the tyrannical course the present regime has set for
this country to come together to preserve the future of this nation. That Sri
Lanka is in the midst of a crisis is now well understood, by politician and
public alike. The euphoria of the war victory can no longer overshadow the
grave economic peril, the lawlessness and obvious power hunger of a single
family - all direct results of unfettered, unchecked Rajapaksa
rule." Rajapaksa said Jayasuriya, who was in his
cabinet and quit thereafter, was going around saying that he (the President)
had used bad language against him. He had claimed that was why he quit.
However, the President said the reason was different. He had given 3,000 Grama Sevaka appointments, when
he was Minister of Home Affairs and Public Administration in his cabinet, to
UNP supporters. He had raised this matter with the Secretary to the Ministry. Jayasuriya, he said, had been miffed by this. The query was
raised because UPFA parliamentarians had complained to him. Wickremesinghe was elated when Rajapaksa
mentioned, "you can't have people throwing out leaders once they are
elected." He cited the case of former Australian Prime Minister, Kevin Rudd.
ickremesinghe was to
hurriedly add, "yes, yes, they could not even form a government
thereafter. See what happened." Basil Rajapaksa
was to observe that the UNP lost over 1.5 million votes because of fielding
former General Sarath Fonseka.
"Oba thumaa thamai vediya arang
thiyenney. Eka api piligannawa" (You have
gained the highest number of votes. We accept that). He was alluding to the
presidential election where Fonseka polled much less
than Wickremesinghe during the 2005 poll. Changes are also to be made in the
appointment of other independent bodies including the Elections Commission, the
National Police Commission and the Permanent Commission to Investigate
Allegations of Bribery or Corruption. The only area where there has been some
accord during UNP-UPFA talks is on election reforms, particularly with regard
to polls to local bodies. All sides have reached agreement in
principle on the re-creation of ward systems in local authority areas. Whilst
there will be no preference votes, elections will be a mix of proportional
representation and the old British style, the first past-the-post system, which
we had earlier. President Rajapaksa told the cabinet
at the re-scheduled meeting on Thursday evening, copies of the draft proposals
about changes in local authority polls will be circulated to MPs and Ministers. He said his criteria were to
continue to win elections and build public confidence in the UPFA. He called
upon them to study these proposals and consult grassroots level organisations to determine their thinking and take into
account their suggestions. He has assured that copies would also be given to
the UNP for study and observations. Last Monday's one-hour long talks
between the UPFA-UNP leaders had effectively brought the curtain down on their
dialogue. In the final audit, it becomes clear that the UNP gained little and
literally groped in the dark. Rajapaksa came out the
winner since he could not be accused of not consulting the opposition,
however sham a consultation it turned out to be. Wickremesinghe's talks on replacing the Executive Presidency with an
Executive Prime Minister have come a cropper. The party's deputy leader, Karu Jayasuriya was able to have
only one round of talks on changes to the 17th Amendment. That too,
with only Minister Peiris. At the end, they have been able to see eye to eye with the
UPFA only on a relatively less important issue, the conduct of local government
polls. In this backdrop, Wickremesinghe on Friday
named a seven-member committee to plan the party's strategy for the upcoming
local government elections. Headed by Karu Jayasuriya it includes Joesph
Michael Perera, Kabeer Hashim, Sajith Premadasa, Vajira Abeywardena, P.Yogarajan and Rosy
Senanayake. The futility of the UNP's exercise is
highlighted by its inability to urge the UPFA to place its proposals in
advance. This would have helped it not only place the party's views but also
provoke a public discussion. At Thursday evening's re-scheduled
cabinet meeting, Ministers approved a memorandum by Local Government Minister
A.L.M. Athaullah. That was an acceptance of the main
outlines of the proposed changes in the local government laws. A detailed
document, as Rajapaksa told ministers, is to be
circulated. President Rajapaksa
has summoned a special cabinet meeting for Monday. The proposed constitutional
changes, which the government wants to seek passage in Parliament as urgent
legislation, will be taken up for discussion. Upon approval, it will go before
the Supreme Court for scrutiny on whether the new provisions are consistent
with the existing provisions of the Constitution. The Government proposes to
table the Constitutional amendments in Parliament on Septmeber
8 and take a vote on them the next day. This week, Rajapaksa
will also undertake an official tour of the Ratnapura
and Badulla districts. With the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress
(SLMC) MPs deciding en masse to support the constitutional amendments, the
government would have a comfortable two-thirds majority. The cross-over of two
MPs who contested on the UNP ticket, Palani Digambaram (Nuwara Eliya District) and Prabha Ganeshan (Colombo Distrct) has
swelled the government ranks to 146. Of this number, 144 MPs were elected
during the April parliamentary elections. In addition, UNP's Kandy District
parliamentarian Abdul Cader is expected to vote in favour. Last Tuesday, Cader
arranged an iftar at his Gampola
residence. Rajapaksa attended it and was escorted
later by Cader to a nearby three-storied mosque where
over 2,500 Muslims had gathered for iftar. The
President came in for praise after he mingled with the Muslims chatting to them
on various matters. Eight votes from the SLMC, which is veering towards
supporting the government and Cader's own vote would
bring the UPFA strength to 154, (with the exclusion of the Speaker), four more
than the two thirds required. The talks began on a serious note
after Premadasa accused his leader Wickremesinghe of leaking information to the Political
Editor of the Sunday Times. He charged it was Wickremesinghe
who had given an account about the one-on-one between the two. Wickremesinghe was quick to say, "We all know who
leaked it" and looked at the faces of those present. It prompted party
Chairman Gamini Jayawickrema
Perera to name a Premadasa
loyalist. Both were engaged in a guessing game and neither was right. Even more
importantly, the debate was not over the facts reported but who was the cause
for it. There was laughter all round. Premadasa appeared incensed over reportage that he sought
the post of deputy leader of the party. As revealed in these columns last week,
he told Wickremesinghe that he was more popular than
him (Wickremesinghe) at the grassroots level.
However, he would accept his leadership and would work as a deputy leader, Premadasa had said. During that discussion, it has now
come to light that Jayasuriya offered to resign his
post as Deputy Leader and make way for Premadasa.
However, Wickremesinghe has held the view that Jayasuriya need not step down. Later, Premadasa
was quoted in sections of the media as saying he would not seek any office now
and accused the party leader of leaking information. Premadasa
had earlier declared publicly that he would not meet Wickremesinghe
alone for a one-on-one meeting. Yet, he chose to do just the opposite when he
met him to discuss issues that included an official position for him. On the
other hand, Ravi Karunanayake (Colombo North) had
insisted that whatever is given to Premadasa should
also be given to him. At last Monday's discussions, Premadasa insisted that his proposal to enable UNP
provincial councillors and local authority members to
vote when selecting a leader and other senior positions in the party should be
accepted. Wickremesinghe left the meeting before it
ended. Now, a section backing Premadasa has come up
with yet another proposal to make Wickremsinghe the
opposition leader, Jayasuriya the UNP leader and Premadasa as the deputy leader. Wickremesinghe this week named Mangala Samaraweera (Matara District) to
chair a new Message Committee of the UNP. The committee, yet to be named, will
be responsible for the party's propaganda activities and evolving strategy to
win the support of those at the grassroots level. This week's events should come as another bitter lesson for the UNP leadership. They are unable to resolve their internecine problems. Even worse, their short honeymoon with the UPFA is over. Their role as a worthy opposition is way short of the people's expectations. And yet, will there be any lessons learnt. (The Sunday Times) |
உனக்கு
நாடு இல்லை என்றவனைவிட
நமக்கு நாடே இல்லை
என்றவனால்தான்
நான் எனது நாட்டை
விட்டு விரட்டப்பட்டேன்.......
ராஜினி
திரணகம MBBS(Srilanka) Phd(Liverpool,
UK) 'அதிர்ச்சி
ஏற்படுத்தும்
சாமர்த்தியம்
விடுதலைப்புலிகளின்
வலிமை மிகுந்த
ஆயுதமாகும்.’ விடுதலைப்புலிகளுடன்
நட்பு பூணுவது
என்பது வினோதமான
சுய தம்பட்டம்
அடிக்கும் விவகாரமே.
விடுதலைப்புலிகளின்
அழைப்பிற்கு உடனே
செவிமடுத்து, மாதக்கணக்கில்
அவர்களின் குழுக்களில்
இருந்து ஆலோசனை
வழங்கி, கடிதங்கள்
வரைந்து, கூட்டங்களில்
பேசித்திரிந்து,
அவர்களுக்கு அடிவருடிகளாக
இருந்தவர்கள்மீது
கூட சூசகமான எச்சரிக்கைகள்,
காலப்போக்கில்
அவர்கள்மீது சந்தேகம்
கொண்டு விடப்பட்டன.........' (முறிந்த
பனை நூலில் இருந்து) (இந்
நூலை எழுதிய ராஜினி
திரணகம விடுதலைப்
புலிகளின் புலனாய்வுப்
பிரிவின் முக்கிய
உறுப்பினரான பொஸ்கோ
என்பவரால் 21-9-1989 அன்று
யாழ் பல்கலைக்கழக
வாசலில் வைத்து
சுட்டு கொல்லப்பட்டார்) Its
capacity to shock was one of the L.T.T.E. smost potent weapons. Friendship with
the L.T.T.E. was a strange and
self-flattering affair.In the course of the coming days dire hints were dropped
for the benefit of several old friends who had for months sat on committees,
given advice, drafted latters, addressed meetings and had placed themselves at
the L.T.T.E.’s beck and call. From: Broken Palmyra வடபுலத்
தலமையின் வடஅமெரிக்க
விஜயம் (சாகரன்) புலிகளின்
முக்கிய புள்ளி
ஒருவரின் வாக்கு
மூலம் பிரபாகரனுடன் இறுதி வரை இருந்து முள்ளிவாய்கால் இறுதி சங்காரத்தில் தப்பியவரின் வாக்குமூலம் திமுக, அதிமுக, தமிழக மக்கள் இவர்களில் வெல்லப் போவது யார்? (சாகரன்) தங்கி நிற்க தனி மரம் தேவை! தோப்பு அல்ல!! (சாகரன்) (சாகரன்) வெல்லப்போவது
யார்.....? பாராளுமன்றத்
தேர்தல் 2010 (சாகரன்) பாராளுமன்றத்
தேர்தல் 2010 தேர்தல்
விஞ்ஞாபனம் - பத்மநாபா
ஈழமக்கள் புரட்சிகர
விடுதலை முன்னணி 1990
முதல் 2009 வரை அட்டைகளின்
(புலிகளின்) ஆட்சியில்...... (fpNwrpad;> ehthe;Jiw) சமரனின்
ஒரு கைதியின் வரலாறு 'ஆயுதங்கள்
மேல் காதல் கொண்ட
மனநோயாளிகள்.'
வெகு விரைவில்... மீசை
வைச்ச சிங்களவனும்
ஆசை வைச்ச தமிழனும் (சாகரன்) இலங்கையில் 'இராணுவ'
ஆட்சி வேண்டி நிற்கும்
மேற்குலகம், துணை செய்யக்
காத்திருக்கும்;
சரத் பொன்சேகா
கூட்டம் (சாகரன்) எமது தெரிவு
எவ்வாறு அமைய வேண்டும்? பத்மநாபா
ஈபிஆர்எல்எவ் ஜனாதிபதித்
தேர்தல் ஆணை இட்ட
அதிபர் 'கை', வேட்டு
வைத்த ஜெனரல்
'துப்பாக்கி' ..... யார் வெல்வார்கள்?
(சாகரன்) சம்பந்தரே!
உங்களிடம் சில
சந்தேகங்கள் (சேகர்) (m. tujuh[g;ngUkhs;) தொடரும்
60 வருடகால காட்டிக்
கொடுப்பு ஜனாதிபதித்
தேர்தலில் தமிழ்
மக்கள் பாடம் புகட்டுவார்களா? (சாகரன்) ஜனவரி இருபத்தாறு! விரும்பியோ
விரும்பாமலோ இரு
கட்சிகளுக்குள்
ஒன்றை தமிழ் பேசும்
மக்கள் தேர்ந்தெடுக்க
வேண்டும்.....? (மோகன்) 2009 விடைபெறுகின்றது!
2010 வரவேற்கின்றது!! 'ஈழத் தமிழ்
பேசும் மக்கள்
மத்தியில் பாசிசத்தின்
உதிர்வும், ஜனநாயகத்தின்
எழுச்சியும்' (சாகரன்) மகிந்த ராஜபக்ஷ
& சரத் பொன்சேகா. (யஹியா
வாஸித்) கூத்தமைப்பு
கூத்தாடிகளும்
மாற்று தமிழ் அரசியல்
தலைமைகளும்! (சதா. ஜீ.) தமிழ்
பேசும் மக்களின்
புதிய அரசியல்
தலைமை மீண்டும்
திரும்பும் 35 வருடகால
அரசியல் சுழற்சி!
தமிழ் பேசும் மக்களுக்கு
விடிவு கிட்டுமா? (சாகரன்) கப்பலோட்டிய
தமிழனும், அகதி
(கப்பல்) தமிழனும் (சாகரன்) சூரிச்
மகாநாடு (பூட்டிய)
இருட்டு அறையில்
கறுப்பு பூனையை
தேடும் முயற்சி (சாகரன்) பிரிவோம்!
சந்திப்போம்!!
மீண்டும் சந்திப்போம்!
பிரிவோம்!! (மோகன்) தமிழ்
தேசிய கூட்டமைப்புடன்
உறவு பாம்புக்கு
பால் வார்க்கும்
பழிச் செயல் (சாகரன்) இலங்கை
அரசின் முதல் கோணல்
முற்றும் கோணலாக
மாறும் அபாயம் (சாகரன்) ஈழ விடுலைப்
போராட்டமும், ஊடகத்துறை
தர்மமும் (சாகரன்) (அ.வரதராஜப்பெருமாள்) மலையகம்
தந்த பாடம் வடக்கு
கிழக்கு மக்கள்
கற்றுக்கொள்வார்களா? (சாகரன்) ஒரு பிரளயம்
கடந்து ஒரு யுகம்
முடிந்தது போல்
சம்பவங்கள் நடந்து
முடிந்துள்ளன.! (அ.வரதராஜப்பெருமாள்)
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