{"id":75343,"date":"2018-03-06T13:58:11","date_gmt":"2018-03-06T20:58:11","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/?p=75343"},"modified":"2018-03-06T13:58:11","modified_gmt":"2018-03-06T20:58:11","slug":"jvp-at-a-crossroads","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/2018\/03\/06\/jvp-at-a-crossroads\/","title":{"rendered":"JVP at a crossroads"},"content":{"rendered":"<h2><span style=\"color: #0000ff;\"><em>By Rohana R. Wasala Courtesy The Island<\/em><\/span><\/h2>\n<p>From the commonsense point of view of the average voter in Sri Lanka, there are four broad political groupings or blocs that contest elections with a view to taking part in democratic government. These\u00a0 are: (1)the neoconservatives (or neoliberals) usually represented by the UNP that is committed to free market capitalism and allows interventionist Western influence, (2) nationalists principally organized under the SLFP (currently being reincarnated in the SLPP) who value political independence, full national sovereignty within the country, (3) the regional or communal minority groups organized in the form of Tamil and Muslim parties, and Sinhalese Buddhist\u00a0 interest groups such as the JHU and its splinter group the\u00a0 PHU, that arose in response to the generally anti-majority mentality of those Tamil and Muslim communal parties, and (4) nondescript leftists or\u00a0 Marxists who are usually opposed to the UNP and the SLFP ideologies and have become members of, or otherwise support, Marxist parties such as the CP, LSSP, and the JVP. Over the past seventy years since independence governmental power has been alternately wielded by the first two, with the other two acting separately either as coalition partners of the government of the day or as partners of the opposition. But, when all is said and done, the smooth running of the country has been perennially baulked by the basic nature\u00a0 and practice of the latter two groups (i.e., the communalist minorities bloc and the class politics based left bloc), with the result that the country has been condemned to stagnate politically as well as economically as a backward nation, despite the relative abundance of natural resources including the human factor. The ethnicity based group is responsible for the artificial ethnic or communal element that has plagued Lankan politics over the past seventy years of independence from Britain. The attempted division of the country on ethnic lines through an arbitrarily imposed constitution making process is not a solution.<\/p>\n<p>The JVP, since the proclamation of Sri Lanka as a republic in 1972 under the SLFP-led United Front government, has twice unsuccessfully tried to capture power through armed rebellion (1971 and 1986-90). Rohana Wijeweera , the founder of the JVP, organized a series of meetings across the island, starting on September 26, 1979 (the significance of which is that prime minister SWRD Bandaranayake, founder of the SLFP, died on the same date in 1959 after being shot by an assassin), on the theme The end of the road for the SLFP\u201d \u2018Gamanaka Avasanaya\u2019( which was also the title of a documentary produced by the Government Film Unit following the tragic death of the popular leader). Wijeweera\u2019s theory was that since the traditional left had by then been virtually written off, the JVP had to attack the SLFP in order to replace it as the main opposition. That immoral opportunistic policy or strategy of the JVP enabled the incumbent UNP government to persecute the previous prime minister and SLFP leader Sirima Bandaranayake (who contributed so much to strengthening the nationalist revolution of 1956 spearheaded by her husband) by depriving her of her civic rights for seven years in 1980. In spite of the tacit help that the JVP extended to the UNP to harass their common victim the SLFP, UNP gangs were used to attack many JVP gatherings, as for example when such meetings were disrupted by goons at Campbell Park, Colombo on September 22, 1978; in Jaffna on September 24, 1978; at Punchi Borella on May 28, 1981; at Gangodagama Junction, Hakmana on August 13, 1981, and at several other places such as Mihintale and Dompe. The incident in Jaffna in which Wijeweera was hit with a stone on his face during his speech was not inspired by Tamil racism, but apparently by UNP saboteurs. The JVP\u2019ers have never been racists. Only the LTTE and others who confuse nationalism with racism have ever called them Sinhalese racist extremists. But they were dedicated to their ultimate goal of a Marxist utopia in a communally harmonious unitary Sri Lanka; they were true nationalists. They unequivocally opposed Indian intervention in the Tamil separatist problem. JVP founder Wijeweera held that separatism and world imperialism were related. As an anti-imperialist party, he believed, the JVP had to oppose both separatism and capitalism. Opposition to separatism was different from the line taken by the traditional left. Wijeweera\u2019s opinion was that the traditional leftists accepted the \u2018right to self-determination of small nations\u2019 which Lenin had advocated and that they sympathized with Tamil separatism; he, however, thought that this principle was inapplicable to Sri Lanka. (For the information used here \u2013 its interpretation is entirely mine \u2013 I am indebted to journalist Dharman Wickremarathne, publisher author of the well researched,878 page book<strong>\u00a0 javipe 2veni kaeraella \u2013 prathama kaandaya\u201d<\/strong> <strong>JVP\u2019s 2<sup>nd<\/sup> Insurrection \u2013 Volume I<\/strong>\u201d [ISBN 978-955-50453-4-6,printed at Jayanath Ranasinghe, R.R. &amp; Sons \u2013 Colombo 12, December 2016], pp. 51-53). Incidentally, the book mentioned in parentheses is dedicated to Sincere brothers and sisters who sacrificed their lives in their struggle in the name of the banner of the unitary status of the Motherland\u201d.\u00a0 The current JVP\u2019s silence about the Tamil racist federalist project is incomprehensible.<\/p>\n<p>But the JVP\u2019s attitude towards the genuine SLFP (now embodied in the SLPP) seems to have hardly changed, though a change looks likely now. In the process of befriending the UNP to attack the nationalist forces it has automatically become the UNP\u2019s ally against the SLPP, which is the new manifestation of the authentic SLFP. No wonder, people need a JVP ascendancy\u00a0 at this critical juncture like a hole in the head. Fortunately, at the recent LG elections, the JVP hasn\u2019t secured the control of a single local body. The debacle of the JVP was a foregone conclusion for the patriotic nationalist majority of Sri Lankans, while it was a shock\u00a0 to many who\u00a0 had been disillusioned with both of the main parties for their alleged corruption . (Though corruption in high places is a crucial issue, the most important issues relate to the very existence of the country as a single sovereign state and to the efficient\u00a0 management of the national economy.\u00a0 National political parties including the JVP must address the latter problems.) In my view, a broad retrospective look at its violent past of the JVP in parallel with the more effectively violent evolution of the Tamil separatist movement, in the context of the former\u2019s present predicament is in place at this juncture.<\/p>\n<p>The left movement in Sri Lanka started very early, in the mid-1930\u2019s, to be more specific. The pioneers of the left movement in Sri Lanka were persons of great personal standing and excellent education. However, as they were far ahead of their time, the popular impact they were able make on national politics was not very great. Their involvement in the labour movement more or less limited their popularity to that sphere.\u00a0 Though they made a powerful showing in the first parliamentary elections in Sri Lanka in 1947 (left parties together won 19 seats against the victorious UNP\u2019s 42 seats). As Marxists, they focused on class politics, not nationalism. Naturally, the leftists fared well on the estates. With the rise of nationalism, they lost their appeal to the masses. The pioneering stalwarts moderated their revolutionary fervor\u00a0 and from time to time formed alliances with the SLFP and the UNP. Their alliance with the SLFP in 1970 gave them the opportunity to enjoy probably the biggest share of power they ever enjoyed. The failed April 1971 insurgency led by the JVP seven years after its origin in the mid 1960s, having severely criticized these pioneers for their alleged reactionary reformist ideologies, proved to be an exercise in futility. However,\u00a0 it indirectly influenced the character of the republican constitution of 1972, which turned the country into the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka from its dominion status under the Soulbury constitution.<\/p>\n<p>The 1971 April insurgency was brutally suppressed, with thousands of young men and women killed by the security forces. The JVP was proscribed by the SLFP-led United Front government of the day as soon as the insurgency was launched. A Criminal Justice Commission was appointed in 1972 to try those implicated in the April \u201871 insurrection. The prosecution of suspects started in August 1972 and ended in November 1976, and the leading insurgents were sent to jail for varying terms of imprisonment. After the aborted rebellion, the JVP was officially re-launched in 1975. When the UNP came back to power in 1977, routing the incumbent SLFP-led government, its Machiavellian leader had the convicted rebel prisoners released and started using the JVP to keep the electorally decimated SLFP at bay. The JVP entered the democratic stream after this. The JVP leader even contested the 1982 presidential elections, though unsuccessfully.<\/p>\n<p>Meanwhile, violent separatism emerged in the north. Armed terrorists ambushed 13 unarmed army soldiers\u00a0 in Jaffna in 1983. The UNP government mishandled the riotous situation that erupted in Colombo when the bodies of the dead soldiers were brought there for burial; Tamils and Tamil businesses in Colombo and in other parts of the south were attacked by mobs; similar attacks by Tamil mobs on innocent Sinhalese in the northern and eastern provinces followed; but the government did little to stop the anarchy. It was charged that the so-called anti-Tamil pogrom was a deliberately engineered one executed through agents provocateurs either by the government to implicate the JVP and other left parties or by the separatists themselves in order to convince the outside world that Tamils were being persecuted and were not safe among the Sinhalese and that separation was the solution. The UNP government blamed the violence on the left parties: the\u00a0 JVP, the CP and the NSLSSP,and banned them,\u00a0 which then went underground. These parties, committed to Marxism, were not racist, but they opposed separatism. All the same, the government and the separatists condemned them as Sinhalese racists, and Sri Lanka earned a bad name, particularly in the West, and this was beneficial for the separatists. So, the 1983 incidents served the interests of both factions. When, under the UNP government, the Sri Lanka army was about to finish off the LTTE, the Indians intervened to persuade the Sri Lankan government to stop its nearly completed military operations. A peace accord was signed under duress. An illegal 13<sup>th<\/sup> Amendment to the constitution was enforced, according to which provincial councils were created. Ironically, the provincial council system was originally enforced in all provinces except the north and the east for which they were primarily intended.<\/p>\n<p>The JVP revived its own terror activities, and the UNP government paid them in the same coin. In the 1986 to 1990 period some 60,000 young men and women (almost totally Sinhalese Buddhist, but some young Tamils also took part in it); a few of them died fighting the government security forces; the others were killed extra judicially merely on suspicion. They did not fight for or against any particular community; they fought for the country on behalf of all its citizens. But the so-called international community never cared. It was Mahinda Rajapaksa, then in the opposition, who went to Geneva to make complaints to the UN human rights agencies. The JVP fought for the country. But the JVP leadership was decimated. Whereas the Tamil separatist terrorist movement grew with foreign help, the JVP terror campaign, though originally suspected of enjoying some foreign sponsorship, didn\u2019t betray any evidence to prove that such was the case.<\/p>\n<p>The JVP rose from its ashes phoenix-like after the end of what opponents of the 1977-1994 government condemned as the 17-year \u2018curse\u2019 of\u00a0 UNP rule. This was during the SLFP-led People\u2019s Alliance days that started in 1994. Ten years later, early in 2004, the JVP helped form a \u2018probationary\u2019 government under a new SLFP-led coalition called the United People\u2019s Freedom Alliance (UPFA), which lasted till June, 2005. The JVP scored its biggest win in a parliamentary election it ever did in the April 2004 general elections, where they won thirty nine seats, and they got some cabinet minister posts. History has shown that the JVP cannot secure parliamentary representation or at least any powerful local government presence without forming an alliance with either of the two major parties it wants to replace at the top of national politics. But the JVP\u2019s struggle from the early 1970s has been focused on ousting the SLFP from its traditional leadership of the nationalist forces and promote itself as the main national force that will finally overcome the UNP. (In the recent local government elections it dreamed of beating the SLPP, the newfound refuge of the betrayed SLFP.) The mature experience of those who have known the JVP\u2019s origins in the mid-60s, its two armed insurrections, and its temporary alliances with the major parties shows that this will never be. If the JVP sticks to its accustomed strategy of confronting those who should be its allies, it will only be successful in shooting itself in the foot as the recently held LG polls has demonstrated.<\/p>\n<p>The JVP must take a good hard look at its wasteful past and subject itself to serious reform as a party. It must get rid of its outdated ideologies and outmoded leaders. It must not condemn the voters as idiots for not voting for them. Most important, the JVP\u2019ers must find political allies with whom they can coexist and serve the nation.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>By Rohana R. Wasala Courtesy The Island From the commonsense point of view of the average voter in Sri Lanka, there are four broad political groupings or blocs that contest elections with a view to taking part in democratic government. These\u00a0 are: (1)the neoconservatives (or neoliberals) usually represented by the UNP that is committed to [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[91],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-75343","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-rohana-r-wasala"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/75343","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=75343"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/75343\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=75343"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=75343"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=75343"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}