Season for Lampooning |
All
that is conjecture, though. While the
UNF may have suffered because it didn’t have the time to implement its election
pledges and then be subject to fair(er) assessment, there was also the vexed
issue of its approach to the issue of national security. The chosen path was the Ceasefire Agreement
(CFA), a flawed document if ever there was one, and one which demonstrated a
sophomoric understanding of the key protagonist, the LTTE.
The
UNF alienated the Sinhala polity by signing the CFA and worse by offering
puerile justifications. The LTTE was the
LTTE, as always viewing ceasefires, peace talks and such through a military
lens (as acknowledged Lawrence Thilakar, one time international spokesperson of
the LTTE). The Government was naïve (to
be generous in description) and paid for its naiveté. In short, the arrogant, arbitrary and
anti-democratic move of Kumaratunga appeared legitimate simply because the UNF
had played into the President’s hands.
The
Government simply could not sell the CFA to the electorate. At the time, they had the state media as well
as most of the private media on their side.
Even the President, although she was the leader of a party in the
Parliamentary Opposition, was ideologically on the same page as the architects
of the CFA. Apart from her
aforementioned move to subvert the Government, Kumaratunga did not throw any
sand in the wheels of the UNF’s ‘peace process’. The UNF’s communication strategy as far as
the CFA was concerned was a joke, one can conclude in retrospect.
However,
was it just incompetence that wrecked the party? No.
The issue is that even the best advertising campaign cannot sustain
loyalty to an obviously flawed product or brand.
All
of the above is but preamble to a consideration of the current Government’s
woes with respect to communications.
When a longtime critic of the previous regime who was also an ardent
supporter of the CFA urges this Government to ‘talk to the people’, just 15
months after Mahinda Rajapaksa was defeated, one can safely conclude that
things are bad in the communications department. Paikiasothy Saravanamutu discerns ‘a lack of
focus’ the symptoms of which he lists in an article titled ‘Let’s talk in the
new Year; the Government to the People’ thus: ‘a President
more concerned about the leadership of his party, a prime minister who seems to
be firefighting on a number of fronts with ministers in between of varying
degrees of competence and a loquacity approaching the biblical Tower of
Babel’.
Saravanamuttu
wants to Government to dialogue with the people on two broad areas: the ills of
the previous regime and the rationale for change and reform. He correctly points out that ranting and
raving about the past without a single major conviction only feeds
cynicism.
He has not said a word about
this Government being comfortable with nepotism, being ok with partying with by
and large the unsavoury folk who benefited from their friendships with the
Rajapaksas and nothing about the financial scandals and shady practices of this
Government (Central Bank Bond Issue Scandal and the self-serving acts of the
SLT Chairman). Nothing about the 180 degree
turn on the Port City Project. That’s
another aspect of the communication problem.
These things are too large to hide and this Government has not (perhaps
for lack of time and for inheriting ills, to be generous) been able to create a
blanket such as ‘victory over terrorism’ that the previous regime used to great
effect.
With
respect to ‘change and reform’, Saravanamuttu focuses on his bread and butter
issues: constitutional reform, transitional justice ad reconciliation. He does not flesh these out and he need not,
for he has expended enough energy already.
In this regard he is only advocating the repetition of a failed
methodology of imposing upon the majority the will of a bunch of federalists
who cannot get over the fact that separatism and its strongest advocate, the
LTTE, lost out. He wants the report of
the Public Representations Commission on Constitutional Reform’ to be the basis
for ‘change’. If the LLRC was flawed due
to its composition, this body is worse [See 'Scuttling reconciliation from within'].
If the Government wants to market such a report, it will be as difficult
or worse than marketing the CFA.
It’s
about flawed producers and flawed products.
They rarely if at all secure loyalty among consumers.
These
are not the only communication problems that the Government has. The major issue is coherence or rather a
massive coherence deficit. The Prime
Minister and the President have on occasion made contradicting statements. Rajapaksa vilification has supplanted policy
statement as the thrust of the Government’s communications strategy. More than all things it seems that this
government is hell bent on mimicking the previous regime in all the wrongs it
was guilty of. We are not seeing
nepotism and cronyism declining. We are
seeing these openly affirmed.
Politicians and their near and dear are making bucks and ironically some
of the buck-makers used to be quite cozy with the previous regime as well!
There
are and always have been multiple tools and media to communicate, Saravanamuttu
is correct. The problem is, you cannot
communicate if you don’t know what to communicate. To put it bluntly, you can’t communicate
‘Yahapalanaya’ if there’s very little that is ‘yaha’ (good) in your ‘paalanaya’
(governance). You can’t sell rhetoric
when you are in Government, you are required to market delivery. The Government can talk, as Saravanamuttu
urges it to do, until the cows come home, but if you lack coherence, you are
not going to be doing much by way of communication.
The
bottom line, which by the way Saravanamuttu’s alarming ‘call for communication’
is but a symptom, is that the Government has rendered itself speechless (‘kata
uththara nae’) on a number of counts and this just 15 months after Mahinda
Rajapaksa was defeated. The loquacity
that he speaks of, ironically, is an indication of this condition. That is the communications problem in a nutshell.
Malinda Seneviratne is a
freelance writer who writes a weekly column titled 'Subterranean Transcripts' to the Daily Mirror. Email: malindasenevi@gmail.com. Twitter:
malindasene
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