An election was held.
Someone won and someone lost.
Accordingly, those who voted for the winner would consider themselves
shareholders of the victory and those who backed the loser would partake of the
defeat.
On the other hand, the winners do not automatically become special
and the losers lesser citizens.
Maithripala Sirisena is the President of the entire country, never mind
the fact that almost 6 million did not vote for him, of which 5.7 actually
voted for other candidates. Preferences
change over time and this translates into reward or punishment when people get
to vote again.
Winners typically transfer victory-credit and bragging
rights to ‘the people’. Typically also,
the people and their votes recede to some cobwebbed corner of the political
victors and remain there until the next election comes around. Let us hope this will not happen.
The new President has pledged in manifesto and platform (and
reiterated the fact in his speech following induction) to correct
constitutional and institutional flaw to ensure better governance. For this he is applauded. He will receive greater accolades once word
turns into deed. To his credit,
Maithripala Sirisena has locked himself to the pledged agenda in two ways.
First, he announced that he will not be sworn in as
President again. In other words, either
the Executive Presidency will be abolished during his tenure or else he will
not seek re-election. More importantly,
by promising a maithree paalanaya (A government of compassion or
compassionate governance), his every act will have to be underlined by this
attribute. Compassion. That’s a tough ask. Some might say that it is promising the
impossible, but it is a laudable standard to set oneself. If there is honesty in effort, errors and
frailties will be forgiven. Indeed,
anything better in the matter of governance compared to the previous regime
will be applauded by what is fortunately or unfortunately an electorate ever ready
to forget and forgive.
The nation won and not for reasons we’ve heard the victors
utter over the last few days. This
country proved to all its detractors (let’s not fool ourselves that the
venomous sections of the international community wanted Mahinda Rajapaksa out
because they loved the people of this country) that we can do the needful on
our own, thank you very much.
We got ‘regime-change’.
At our own pace. The way we
wanted it. This is something those who
have been hauling Sri Lanka over the coals in international forums should take
note of. No coups. No ‘Gaddafying’ of Mahinda Rajapaksa. No pound of flesh, no blood flowing in the
streets of Colombo.
Both the newly elected President and the Prime Minister he
appointed immediately after being inducted, have clearly acknowledged the
immense services rendered to the nation by Mahinda Rajapaksa. He recovered the nation for the citizenry,
including those who voted against him.
He made a tomorrow possible. That
he forfeited the right to guide the country to other tomorrows is another
matter.
He went with grace*.
As someone pointed out, that should not deserve extra applause. That’s what he has to do. The reason why it is applauded is perhaps
because there was so much hype about ‘The Rajapaksas’ not going out without a
fight. That hype was created clearly by those who do not know Mahinda Rajapaksa
and worse, underestimate the democratic spirit of the citizens and their sense
of timing. Mahinda Rajapaksa knew this
better than most.
In any event, the signal to the country’s enemies is clear:
do not interfere, we don’t need your help, we know what we want and don’t want
and we will do what is best in our interests in a manner of our choosing.
To the new President, we say the following:
‘Congratulations and may you be true to the promise to be
compassionate, and may your compassion be coupled with wisdom. You have set yourself some tasks and they are
all people-friendly. We will watch, we
will cheer when you deserve applause and will critique where necessary. But Mr President, you also have unfinished
tasks. Even as you get moving on your
100-day program, you cannot postpone two important concerns close to your
heart: the National Drug Policy and the
fight against the tobacco industry.
Finish what you started, Your Excellency. That will give us confidence that you have
indeed put the nation above all else.’
6 comments:
Do you really believe that....
1. MS really have a lot of say in the whole thing? Before and after the election? Do you really think it is MS who has the vision and not CBK or the other MS (Mangala S) and those who are behind the 2.
2. the Nation won? Not the plan of CBK, MS2 and Ranil backed by the West.
3. That you got a regime change at your own pace? Not through any interferences?
Will you start believing otherwise, if wikileaks leaks the US/UK plan in a few years time?
or did you forget to put the note *** In another parallel universe :)
1. Yes (before election), yes (after the election, if he secures enough support from the UPFA parliamentary group), and 'no' CBK was sidelined a long time ago.
2. In a relative sense, most definitely the nation won. Outcome preferences may converge at times, but this Western Conspiracy is just an imagination-figment.
3. Yes, at our own pace.
I am no clairvoyant to know what will happen years from now. Are you?
Finally, no, not in a parallel universe.
Quite agree with what you've said. However, there are many other issues in a broader context. I will send you a detiailed analysis and would appreciate if you publish in your web with your own comments.
will do
After couple of weeks with the new leaders, do you still believe 1, 2 and 3?
:)
yes....but the word would come out of my mouth slower. ;)
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