{"id":45311,"date":"2015-07-06T11:23:33","date_gmt":"2015-07-06T17:23:33","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/?p=45311"},"modified":"2015-07-05T15:47:11","modified_gmt":"2015-07-05T22:47:11","slug":"ranils-days-including-100-plus-are-over","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/2015\/07\/06\/ranils-days-including-100-plus-are-over\/","title":{"rendered":"Ranil\u2019s days \u2013 including 100 plus \u2013 are over"},"content":{"rendered":"<h2><span style=\"color: #0000ff;\"><em><strong style=\"line-height: 1.5;\">H. L. D. Mahindapala<\/strong><\/em><\/span><\/h2>\n<p>Ranil Wickremesinghe\u2019s brief honeymoon with his prot\u00e9g\u00e9 \/ protector, Maithripala Sirizena, has come to an unexpected and abrupt end. They were indispensable to each other during the 100 days\u201d which, of course, ran into six months, violating the mandate of January 8<sup>th<\/sup>, 2015.\u00a0 It was a symbiotic relationship in which the roles reversed between the two before and after the election. Before the presidential election of January 8<sup>th<\/sup>, 2015 Sirisena was dependent on Wickremesinghe. After the election Wickremesinghe was dependent on Sirisena to protect him and save him from a Parliamentary defeat.<\/p>\n<p>Wickremesinghe was bloated with power as long as he had Sirisena in his pocket.. But this bubble\u00a0 burst\u00a0 on July 3 when Sirisena did to Wickremesinghe what he did to Mahinda Rajapakse : he dumped him. He brought back Mahinda Rajapakse and gave him the electoral gift of a united SLFP. The reconciliation of the Sirisena-Mahinda factions within the SLFP is a prime necessity for the SLFP-Left&#8211;wing forces battling to regain and consolidate the historic achievements won at Nandikadal. This is what Wickremesinghe dreaded most. His dream run\u00a0with Sirisena has ended in a nightmare.<\/p>\n<p>Undoubtedly, this new development throws Wickremesinghe back to the doldrums in which he began. Losing Sirisena is like losing\u00a0 all his teeth : he has no bite. It was Sirisena\u2019s illegitimate pen and not the legitimate majority in the Parliament that made Wickremesinghe the Prime Minister. With that appointment Sirisena paid back his debt to Wickremesinghe. But even with Sirisena\u2019s backing, Wickremesinghe was leading a precarious existence as prime minister not knowing when he would be booted out by the SLFP majority. Sirisena protected him as\u00a0 much as he could purely out of gratitude for delivering the UNP votes to make him the president. But the political contract ended at the conclusion of 100 days. Sirisena\u2019s promise \/ contract had no validity beyond 100 days. If one is to go by the power of mandates Sirisena got a mandate\u201d to make Wickremesinghe Prime Minister only for 100 days, though it ran into six months. In fairness to Sirisena it can be argued that he honored his word given to Wickremesinghe for the period of 100 days and there was no mandate beyond that to keep the SLFP divided for the UNP to win the election.<\/p>\n<p>So it is inevitable that both should go their separate ways at the end of 100 days\u201d. Wickremesinghe-CBK expectation was to\u00a0 keep it going beyond\u00a0 the 100-days with the sole intention of keeping Mahinda Rajapakse out. It was on this high expectation that Wickremesinghe was boasting to bury the Rakapakse3s\u201d. He was also floating the fiction of running a National Government which had no takers. This was a ploy to rope in Sirisena-CBK and other minor parties to transform\u00a0 his illegitimate minority rule into a permanent majority, with him as the Prime Minister.<\/p>\n<p>The twists and turns of politics at the top in the 100 days\u201d was spinning out of control with no one in charge. President Sirisena who was in command of the majority of the Parliamentarians \u2013 mostly his party members \u2013 was in a quandary not knowing how to be with\u00a0 Wickremesinghe without abandoning his political base in the SLFP. It was a contradiction which he was trying to ignore, pretending that he need not worry about rising force of the Nugegoda Man.<\/p>\n<p>Only he could resolve this contradiction. But he was hoping to re-enact\u00a0 the futile role of King Canute who failed to roll back the waves of the sea. When he finally realized that the rising waves were going to sweep the board, whether he likes it or not, he yielded to the inevitable. He joined Nugegoda Man and decided to bring back Mahinda into the fold. This was a crushing blow to Wickremesinghe and his kissing political cousin, Chandrika Kumaratunga. It marked the end of the Revolution of the Soda Bottle\u201d which never took off. It fizzled out in\u00a0 the bottle itself within the first weeks of January 8.<\/p>\n<p>Sirisena-Wickremesinghe gang fancied that this was another 1956\u201d \u2013 the landmark cultural revolution that defined the nation and its identity for the future generations. But\u00a0 no one takes them seriously. Though late, they have to concede that the next revolution began in Nugegoda and is on its way to storm the corrupt Bastilles of the Bond Market manipulated by the Central Bank and Financial Criminal Investigating Division \u2013 two of Wickremesinghe creations to keep him in power. In short, Wickremesinghe was dependent solely on CBK-Sirisena wing to divide the SLFP votes and give him the break that he needs desperately to win a majority in the coming election. But\u00a0 the unexpected volte-face of Sirisena to bring Mahinda Rajapakse back has put an end to Wickremesinghe\u2019s chances of surviving beyond the 100 days\u201d plus.<\/p>\n<p>Wickremesinghe, of course, contributed to\u00a0 his own downfall. With his usual arrogant attitude of a know-all pundit, far superior to his inferior underlings in the backbenchers, he went all out to prove that he is the maestro manager of macro and micro economics.He imported two of his two old catchers\u201d\u00a0 \u2013 Arjuna Mahendran from Singapore and R. Paskaralingam from UK \u2013 to run the economy. As subsequent events proved neither of them made a positive contribution to boost the economy, nor did they inspire new investors to come in droves to fill the national coffers. On the contrary, Wickremesinghe\u2019s prot\u00e9g\u00e9, Mahendran, did the dirty and dragged the nation and the economy to the lowest depths. According to sources monitoring the economy growth has ceased with the economy is going down precipitously to critical levels.<\/p>\n<p>The antics and blunders of Wickremesinghe made Sirisena look like a mindless puppet going along with the corrupt and incompetent UNPers. His vaunted <em>Yahapalanaya<\/em> was reduced by Wickremesinghe to another corrupt regime within 100 days. More than that, Wickremesinghe used the powers of the state to establish a fascist instrument of persecuting his political opponents. Neither Sirisena nor Wickremesinghe will ever be able to live down the crimes they committed with the sale of bonds through the Central Bank and the establishment of a\u00a0 persecution chamber, called the Financial Crimes Investigating Division, a.k.a, Fascist Centre for Indicting Dissidents. According to financial experts the people will have to pay for the stupidities of Wickremesinghe for the next thirty years. Arjuna Mahendran and Paskaraliingam will fly away on the eve of the coming election to their safe havens in Singapore and UK respectively. It is the taxpaying voters who will have to pay through their noses for the crimes committed by the <em>Yahapalana-yakos<\/em> who presided over the plunder of the nation\u2019s economy.<\/p>\n<p>The unbearable burden of scandals exploding\u00a0 under the UNP-led regime was embarrassing to Sirisena in particular because Wickremesinghe had betrayed the trust he placed in him so blindly. He gave Wickremesinghe all the powers he needed and in the end Sirisena was left holding the biggest scandal ever. Sirisena\u2019s response was silence, pretending that he had created the promised ideal society\u201d, as stated in his manifesto. As stated earlier, his biggest blunder was in handing over power to Wickremesinghe and Kumaratunga &#8212; two of the most incorrigible failures both at the political and economic levels. Their record confirms that together they could not even organize the preparation of simple dish of a <em>pol sambol<\/em> in the kitchen. Leaving\u00a0 aside their corrupt financial deals, their political failures (particularly CFA and P-TOMS) condemn them as the worst traitors since Don Juan Dharmapala handed over the nation to the Portuguese. Parliament should move jointly to pass the 21<sup>st<\/sup> Amendment to keep them out of national politics forever.<\/p>\n<p>Wickremesinghe\u2019s unredeemable failures were pushing President Sirisena into a Hamletian dilemma. Besides, the mounting public and party pressures were forcing him to choose between Wickremesinghe or Mahinda Rajapakse. Much against his will he was pushed to accept Mahinda Rajapakse back into the fold. This stunned Wickremesinghe who\u00a0 was hoping to piggy back on the Sinhala-Buddhist credentials of\u00a0 Sirisena. Without Sirisena to hold his hand, not all the other 49 minority political agents, including CIA, RAW and NGOs, can put this UNP Humpty-Dumpty together again.<\/p>\n<p>Sirisena has, well and truly, put an end to the brief glory of Wickremesinghe. Sirisena\u2019s decision to dump Wickremesinghe has given Mahinda Rajapakse that extra bit that is needed to bounce back with a reinvigorated vigour. The battle lines too have been redrawn to make field very clear. The new field is familiar territory to Mahinda Rajapakse. At all times he was\u00a0 confident of taking Wickremesinghe head-on in this electoral arena. To Wickremesinghe this is his worst nightmare. He ran away from this straight contest in two successive\u00a0 Presidential elections \u2013 1. 2010 by hiding behind Field Marshall Sarath Fonseka and 2. 2015 &#8212; Maithripala Sirisena. Whether he likes it or not\u00a0 he has to face him now in the coming parliamentary election. Had Sirisena refused to back Mahinda Rajapakse and divided the SLFP it would have been a cake walk for Wickremesinghe. Now that Sirisena has given the blessings to Mahinda Rajapakse, though reluctantly, Wickremesinghe will have to fall back on the usual suspects in the anti-national camps to fight for his life. He has now to fight without the nationalist oxygen given by Sirisena to save him the last time. .<\/p>\n<p>It is also clear that the political alignments in the coming election will polarize the nation into two competing ethnic entities. The battle for parliamentary seats will be fought primarily in the Sinhala-Buddhist south. Power comes out of these seats in Sri Lanka. The most critical issue will be the threats to the national security. The main political objective of the Wickremesinghe-Kumaratunga combo has been and will be to take the nation back to either the CFA or P-TOMS. They will, of course, deny this and will not declare openly their aim to reverse the gains of Nandikadal. Now that Sirisena has tipped the scales in favour of Mahinda Rajapakse both Wickremesinghe and Kumaratunga will have to fight on the territory defined by the Nugegoda Man. The manifesto was declared at Nugegoda and the rising Nugegoda Man will be a decisive factor in the coming election. The solidification of the SLFP into one formidable bloc, together the Bring Back Mahinda wave\u201d sweeping the nation, can be considered as a force whose time has come.<\/p>\n<p>It must also be noted that in backing Mahinda Rajapakse wiser counsel has triumphed within the divided hierarchy of the SLFP. In siding with the pro-Mahinda wing of the SLFP, abandoning both Wickremesinghe and Chandrika Bandaranaike, Sirisena saved not only the SLFP but also himself. If he stuck to his earlier decision of not giving nomination to Mahinda Rajapakse he would have, no doubt, divided the SLFP into the Mahinda-wing and anti-national CBK wing \u2013 a faction that has no traction at the grass roots. Sirisena\u2019s decision to back Mahinda Rajapakse saved his standing among the numerically strong\u00a0 SLFPers who were with Mahinda Rajapakse both in Parliament and in the electorate. Sirisena can now retire at the end of his first term, as promised, with his head held high knowing that he had done the right thing by the SLFP. The numerical realities in the Parliament and the electorate, driven by the rising Nugegoda Man, could not be ignored by any political realist either. Sirisena proved to be that realist who had acknowledged the forces gathering momentum outside the perimeters of his Presidential office. The power building beyond his presidential realms was far greater than all the powers he was holding. As realist he conceded to the forces that were beyond his control. That was inevitable.<\/p>\n<p>Bringing back Mahinda Rajapakse can be considered as the best move he\u00a0 had made to stabilize the nation floundering in a very confused state.. With this far-reaching decision\u00a0 Sirisena liberated himself from the UNP yoke and returned to his home base, surprising once again all those who\u00a0 expected him to stand by Wickremesinghe. Sirisena also wiped out all speculations, resisted all pressures, both international and national, and threw his weight behind Mahinda Rajapakse, though reluctantly, abandoning Wickremesinghe. UNPers will consider\u00a0 it as the unkindest cut of all. It is now clear that Wickremesinghe has ended up as the loser, once again. It has proved for the umpteenth time that Wickremesinghe has never been\u00a0 a long\u00a0 distance runner. His short sprints had seldom lasted beyond 100 miserable days.<\/p>\n<p>It also exposed that Wickremesinghe was never a force that had his roots in the people. He was always dependent on foreign forces, NGOs and by and large the anti-national forces. The very fact that he had to piggy back on Sirisena proves, if proof is necessary, that he is dependent either on the likes of undependable Rauf Hakeem or opportunistic TNA, or breakaway groups of the SLFP to get anywhere near seats of power. He never stood out as a charismatic figure like Dudley Senanayake or Mahinda Rajapakse. Both could stand on their own against all political forces even\u00a0 when they were out\u00a0 of power. The greatness of iconic\u00a0 figures like these two is that, despite all their human infirmities, they can carry the people with them. And the people too are willing\u00a0 to identify themselves with these leaders go along with them. They had carved their image indelibly in the hearts and minds of\u00a0 the people with their services to the people.<\/p>\n<p>Not all the flak thrown at them has dented their mass appeal. They represent the irremovable, indispensable and irreversible historic forces which no politician aspiring for power can ignore. They represent the grass root forces that spring\u00a0 back, time and again, particularly in times of crisis, to regain and reassert their lost power and place. At a time like this when the very identity of the nation\u00a0 is under siege by foreign and local enemies, the logic\u00a0 of overwhelming history will invariably drive the emerging forces to align with nationalist Mahinda Rajapakse. In some electorates pockets of\u00a0 minority voters too are likely to stand by Mahinda Rajapakse.\u00a0 The prevailing political ambience and the fervor that drives it indicate that it is bound to reject pseudo-intellectuals faking a revolutionary\u201d political orgasm. Wickremesinghe goes around screaming\u00a0 about his January 8<sup>th<\/sup> Revolution\u201d.\u00a0 This must be the only Revolution\u201d that is running desperately in search of followers to hail the Right-wing Lenin of Sri Lanka, aligned to IDU!.<\/p>\n<p>Clearly, Mahinda Rajapakse has scored his first victory in the coming battle against Wickremesinghe. Plain citizen Mahinda Rajapakse has proved that he is a force far greater than Wickremesinghe holding the Prime Minister\u2019s post. Mahinda Rajapakse has proved that\u00a0 power lies not in the seats of the\u00a0 Cabinet, or in the links to Delhi and Washington,\u00a0 but in the highways and byways which leads all the way to Medamulana. The election results may confirm that he has successfully broken through all political impediments\u00a0 that stood in his way, including NGOs, CIA, and RAW.<\/p>\n<p>This then is the only way out of the Soda Bottle Revolution\u201d that was dead in water at birth on January 8, 2015<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>H. L. D. Mahindapala Ranil Wickremesinghe\u2019s brief honeymoon with his prot\u00e9g\u00e9 \/ protector, Maithripala Sirizena, has come to an unexpected and abrupt end. They were indispensable to each other during the 100 days\u201d which, of course, ran into six months, violating the mandate of January 8th, 2015.\u00a0 It was a symbiotic relationship in which the [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[18],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-45311","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-h-l-d-mahindapala"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/45311","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=45311"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/45311\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=45311"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=45311"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=45311"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}