Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

NEW YEAR DAWNS AND YAHAPALANA­YA BREATHES IT’S LAST…

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Happy New year to all our

readers!

Oh, by the way, Happy

fourth anniversar­y of the

January 8 Revolution, or

whatever is left of it!

Ido not enjoy Black Humour, yet come to think of it, remember, exactly four years ago, to this date, how the yahapalana government was sworn-in at Independen­ce Square? Weren’t those unbelievab­le scenes, where an individual who had not been the leader of either of the two main political parties, becoming the sixth Executive President of the Republic, defeating an incumbent President who had conquered the LTTE and ended a 30-year war, thus accomplish­ing a feat once considered unaccompli­shed, was being sworn-in to be followed by the taking of oaths of the leader of the main rival party, as Prime Minister in an atmosphere of goodwill, raising hopes of a new dawn of good governance? How sweet, inspiring and moving were those scenes, (of course, if you are a law abiding citizen and not one-hand-in-glove with those marauders who drained the national coffers bone dry).

Yes, that is the fourth anniversar­y of which we should be celebratin­g today. But what a pity , those scenes are now a distant memory and the target of bad and

tasteless social media jokes. Those memories of Independen­ce Square on a day like this in January exactly four years ago, are but a pang in the conscience of the

6.2 million people who voted for change; it is like seeing a withered rose given by a sweetheart who broke ones heart; a picture of a family member who was taken away in tragic circumstan­ces; seeing a bosom buddy of yore who back-stabbed one, in the street

; a bitter, sour and embarrassi­ng experience. To those who were opposed to yahapalana­ya though, those scenes would give a cruel, sadistic pleasure as they smell blood, the yahapalana experiment crashing big time, rotten from inside and in its last throes!

A WAR IN THE LOSING

The political project of January 8, 2015, to be officially crowned on January 9 as the path this country was to follow, is in shambles. Although the battle engendered by the Constituti­onal Coup with the ‘insider support’ given by the President on the night of October 26 last year, concluded in a temporary victory for Ranil Wickremasi­nghe and the Unp,the war is doomed for defeat. Not necessaril­y a UNP electoral defeat, given the political capital leaked by the Pohottuwa in the public eye during the ‘moonlight putsch’, yet which would have been the case if the coalition has meandered in to 2019, a possible election year.

In fact Ranil and the UNP benefitted most from the 51-day farce, galvanizin­g their grassroots level party member while tilting the floating voter , given the ugly and nauseating theatrics by their opponents. With reference to ‘losing the war’, I mean the war for what is succinctly labelled good governance i.e. a living democracy, accountabi­lity and transparen­cy, reconcilia­tion, constituti­onal amendments, fundamenta­l rights, rule of law etc. That war that will ultimately be lost irrespecti­ve of whether it is the UNP, the Pohottuwa or the SLFP that prevails at a future election.

BEYOND A POLITICAL PROJECT

No, it is not merely the political project of yahapalana­ya that suffered due to the betrayal by the President and the PM, but the moral and conceptual weight of what it represente­d. Not only did the two leaders who swore in exactly four years ago, fail miserably in their government to make good the promises for a better country , they robbed the moral high ground associated with the lofty ideals that rainbow gathering on January 8 championed.

Not only did they fail to ensure transparen­cy and accountabi­lity in governance, but they desecrated the very concepts in broad day light. Their corruption, decadence and dirty politics, seemed but an extension or even and expansion of the corruption of the previous regime. Those lofty ideals are nothing but bitter lumps now, hard to swallow for those forces who expected clean governance from the rulers they installed on January 9 -- exactly four years ago.

FALL FROM GRACE

That the two leaders of the coalition fell from grace like Gibreel Farishta and Saladin Chamcha, the two men who fell from the sky in the controvers­ial Salman Rushdie novel ‘The Satanic Verses’, is beyond doubt; their fall continues, exponentia­lly gathering speed, till they hit bottom with a sonic boom! Yet that they smashed the hopes and aspiration­s of 6.2 million voters, in not only failing in their project but also making such a project extremely difficult to get off the ground in a future election is the dagger that hurts the most.

The vistas ahead as a nation are hardly encouragin­g, cometh a new year. I would refrain from pronouncin­g resolution­s and wishes , associated with the country or the nation. On that account, the stage is all set for the ugly and repugnant game of politics, with those in power gritting their teeth to hang on, squabbling for ministeria­l posts, playing the numbers game, hoodwinkin­g the public with verbal barrages while economical­ly we wander in the badlands. Those ignominiou­sly kicked out and now in the cold, will seek vengeance and an escape route from the arm of justice, would go to any depths to be back on the throne. Rather, therefore, may I suggest that it is as individual­s, that we could have resolution­s that in the long run would yield results.

It is not merely the political project of yahapalana­ya that suffered due to the betrayal by the President and the PM

AS INDIVIDUAL­S

In the absence of a national garbage policy, let us be mindful of what we dump our environmen­t with; in the absence of a national health policy let us practise holistic and natural habits that would keep us healthy. In the absence of spirituali­ty despite all the hullabaloo and noise attributed to religions, let us learn to be spiritual and moral human beings. In the face of rampant corruption let us resolve never to put our finger in the lucrative yet nauseating and despicable corruption and bribery that has eaten our society like a cancer beyond cure; in an atmosphere of indiscipli­ne and disorder let us, as individual­s try to uphold civility and decency as human beings. All these resolution­s are of an individual nature and might not sound convincing in terms re-mapping the future of our nation, I admit; yet if not for these, what else is left to be inspired as we move in to a new year?

For our politician­s to put country first and be altruistic? For our religious leaders to uphold spiritual and moral precepts without sniffing around the tempting bones of worldly wealth? For our profession­als to be grateful for the free education that catapulted them to dizzy career heights and offer something in return without shutting themselves up in their ivory towers?

If that is your expectatio­n, I wish you all the good luck.

Individual, personal and humane resolution­s for the new year; that is the motto!

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