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PA's campaign lacklustre without Chandrika
By Nirupama Subramanian
COLOMBO, OCT. 4. When the Sri Lankan President, Mrs. Chandrika
Kumaratunga, left on a private visit to London late last week, it
might have been out of sheer confidence that her party, the
People's Alliance (PA) coalition, was so sure of victory in the
October 10 parliamentary elections that her guidance was not
required in the final crucial days of the campaign.
But surveys published over the weekend have indicated that the
two major Sri Lankan political groups, the PA and the United
National Party (UNP), are in a dead heat.
Even that is good news to the politicians of the ruling coalition
who are battling to retain power for a second term through a
campaign that has so far been totally lacklustre. Even in its
traditional strongholds in central Sri Lanka and the districts in
the deep south, the PA's campaign has nowhere reached the tempo
it had in 1994.
One reason is that Mrs. Kumaratunga, the PA's main star, was
confined to the security of her home, Temple Trees, through most
of the campaign. Though she attempted to contribute to it by
meeting select groups of people from various sections of society
at home, the effort was led mainly by the newly-appointed Prime
Minister, Mr. Ratnasiri Wickramanayke, who is singularly lacking
in charisma.
In 1994, when there was a massive wave in favour of changing the
UNP Government, the PA only scraped through to forming the
Government. This time, PA campaign managers are nervously looking
at the possibility of an even bleaker result.
For any political party that has spent six years in power, to
suffer some erosion of support is natural, and this is quite true
of the PA today.
Voted to power on a mandate for peace, the PA's first term in
office was dominated by war after the failure of peace talks with
the LTTE in April 1995.
Although there was tremendous support in the majority Sinhala
community for Mrs. Kumaratunga's two-pronged plan to defeat the
LTTE militarily, and simultaneously isolate it politically by
ushering in a new Constitution that would address minority
aspirations, the PA lost ground on both counts.
After the initial success and euphoria following the wresting of
Jaffna from the LTTE, the Opposition alleges that badly conceived
and ill-planned military operations allowed the Tigers to almost
recapture the peninsula from the army.
More important than the loss of territory, heavy casualties for
the security forces after every failed operation by it, or a big
attack by the LTTE, have not helped.
The PA's image took another beating with the new Constitution
Bill, which the Government had to withdraw after tabling, when it
could not find the required number of parliamentarians to support
it. In the process, its alleged attempts to buy over MPs and
confrontational attitude towards the country's Buddhist clergy,
only lost it more friends.
As a result, the PA manifesto has had to tone down its earlier
stand on the Bill and repeat almost exactly what the UNP has been
saying: that the party will consult all sections of society,
including all political parties and religious groups, to
introduce a new Constitution aimed at resolving the ethnic
conflict.
Mr. Wickramanayake has suggested that the Bill had lapsed with
the dissolution of the last Parliament, and that another one
would be formulated only in consultation with the Buddhist
Mahasangha.
But more than all this, it has been the escalation in the cost of
living that is giving the PA most grief in this campaign. The
intensification of the war in April this year contributed to the
inflation, but the sharp hike in the prices of essential
commodities such as diesel and cooking gas has been partly due to
trends in the world economy, not in the control of the Sri Lankan
Government. But for the UNP, it has proved a handy stick with
which to beat the PA.
Unlike in the presidential election, the PA's attempts to link
the UNP and its leader, Mr. Ranil Wickremesinghe, with the LTTE
have not yet had the required effect. Its other strategy to link
him with torture and killings of suspected JVP sympathisers when
he was a Minister in the Premadasa Government has also fizzled
out.
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