When I went past Lipton Circus around 2.55 pm on Tuesday January
28, 2014, I noticed a few pockets of protestors. There were some near the entrance to the old
Accident Ward. There were some near the
church. I called a UNP Working Committee
member and he said he was at Hyde Park with two friends. He said he had heard that ‘the general had
brought quite a crowd’ (there were supposed to be three processions that
afternoon.
When I came back a few hours later I saw people in that’s-done
mode, making their way home, I assumed. I
heard that ‘the general’ had his own party and did not exactly commune with the
‘joint opposition’. I went past Hyde
Park around 6.15pm. Didn’t run into
crowds. Saw some posters though, and
among them one that stood out purely for reasons of gumption.
Niroshan Padukka is considered a young and energetic
organizer. He handles the Homagama
electorate for the UNP. He didn’t make
it to Parliament but few would claim that his political future, at least within
the party, is anything but bright. The
poster had too many elements in it and looked a bit crude. He was piggybacking
on the MTV ‘News First’ logo to begin with.
Bad move, if he wants to tap non-party voters. There was another pig that he probably
thought would take him a couple of miles along the road to political
success. It was (yet another) spin on
the catchy signature line of a popular song featured in a popular film and
here, please note, we don’t intend to insult pigs, lyricist or filmmaker.
The following is the original: ‘Mata mage novena magema aadarayak thibuna’ (I once had a love that
was mine and mine alone and yet did not belong to me – watch Samanala
Sandviniya or ‘Butterfly Symphony’ if you want to get a hang of that line). Niroshan’s spin went this way: Mata mage novena apema pakshayak thibuna. Here’s the translation: ‘There was once a
party that was ours and ours alone but which did not belong to me’.
And right there, intended or otherwise, Niroshan Padukka
captured the overall identity crisis of the United National Party. Many, like Padukka, see the UNP as their
party. They identify with party color,
symbol and name. And yet they don’t feel
belonged. They are alienated. It is as though the leadership has called all
members and supporters to turn up at a rally but forgot to arrange a meeting
place. It is as though there’s a massive
stage capable of holding tens of thousands of people but so solidly guarded by
killer dogs, a moat with crocodiles and a thick wall lined with cut-glass.
Perhaps Niroshan should have made the point somewhere else
and in some other way. Maybe he should
not have gone public with his discontent.
Maybe he has tried to reason and failed.
Maybe it’s just his frustrations that are getting splashed on the walls.
Maybe he is confident that the party needs him too badly to discipline him for
airing dirty linen. Maybe he thinks the
Leadership Council would forgive and forget.
The ‘maybes’ don’t really matter.
He has hit the point and that’s what counts. And that is as good a starting point as
any. As the wise say, you begin by
identifying problem. Padukka has. I am not sure if anyone in the UNP cheered
him, but someone ought to pat him on the back.
For the guts, if not anything else.
Some true words were spoken by Padukka. The question is, did Colombo 7 hear them?
1 comments:
Colombo 7 will never hear him!!! It's a mercy that atleast an innovative mind like yours has captured Padukka's spirit!
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