Citizens held hostage in the name of ‘Nationalism’

Desperation for my Paradise Isle had turned to appreciation this time around when the plane landed in Katunayake. I quietly celebrated that sense of relief and relaxation that spreads through my whole body when in the motherland. Even after over 10 hours of flying in a cramped, fart filled plane my heart overflowed. By reason of other travel elsewhere this time around was the longest I had been away from my Paradise Isle, 18 months too long.

I was still caught by surprise when all the Paradisians who were on the plane pushed and jostled past me in a hurry to deplane. Still in a buoyant mood I generally got out of everyone’s way, spent a minute thanking the stewardess Marize for always smilingly obliging me whenever I went to the flight kitchen and asked her for innumerable cups of tea and the unprompted sandwiches. A lengthy wait in line for immigration still did not spoil my mood. The two gay boys from Brighton behind me kept me entertained with their questions as first time travellers to Paradise. Umpteen purchases of duty free booze and the quick arrival of bags meant that I was out in quick time to meet the minder who had arrived for my airport pick up.

It was Christmas morning and I thought a simple task awaited me. To make it to my friends brothers house in Dickwella for Christmas lunch. The time in the Paradise Island then said 8am. Paradisian traffic however meant that after a quick stop at a siblings home, meal in Hikks that I got into Dickwella only around 3pm. Fortunately the Christmas lunch had now all but turned into bacchanalia and dinner!

Two nights there and it was then onwards to Kataragama, one night with my gods, Udawalawe and finally Colombo via Ratnapura. Although this holiday was only for ten days my usual keenness to do as much as possible ensured that I was out and about Colombo in various forms of conveyance from walking, scooter taxi’s, 588’s to rides in various cars of mates.

So obviously I was privy to all sorts of conversations about the latest and only topic of note in Paradise Isle – The Presidential Elections. Most of these conversations were initiated by your truly. So obviously yes, although I did promise a good friend and relative I shall not write about the elections, the information I got was so forthcoming, discretion has now proved to be not one of my finer points. To avoid confusion and boredom creeping in, I illustrate some key points.

At an eating-house down south I spooked a young waiter by asking him who he will vote for this election. The fact that my minder is well over six feet tall and we were in a black jeep may have contributed to his discomfort. However he came back in about five minutes with this answer:

“We must give Mahinda Mahattaya one more chance. After all he won the war. This is it, last chance, but we owe it to him”.

He also avoided any other conversation with us during the meal and did not even acknowledge it when I asked him for his name.

A scooter taxi driver from Crescat drew me into conversation. He believes that Sarath Fonseka will emerge the clear winner.

A moneychanger in Negombo believes that Mahinda Rajapakse will lose only in Colombo, Kalutara and Negombo and it will be a clear Mahinda victory.

A 588 driver froze when I asked him the key question, whom do you think will win? He did not want to be engaged in any conversation pertaining to the elections.

Amongst my peers no one really wants or likes to talk about it. The conversations were many, talk about elections were not encouraged.

The army officers just went ape shit pulling my friend and I over on a lazy Sunday evening. Simply because of our casual attitude and that my friend just popped open the trunk of his car and got back in the drivers seat. We argued back as it was irrelevant what our attitude was. As long as we had proper ID and were not rude my getting out of the car to present ID was not an issue. Peace reigned only when they realised my friend was ex-forces too. While this was an extreme instance, the armed forces usually chilled out at checkpoints were now in our face.

When I visited 18 months ago and I spoke to friends or any Paradisian, Mahinda Rajapakse was akin to God. He was a king; he was President Mahinda Rajapkase the greatest Paradisian ever. No one dared speak one word against him. He was the great saviour of Paradisians and my Paradise Isle.

This time around amongst the masses he is ‘Mahinda Mahattaya’. For the Sinhala pundits you must know how the word ‘Mahattaya’ can be pronounced in many ways, sometimes complementary and other times a wee bit iffy.

The hoi polloi in Colombo quietly (sometimes in a whisper) now refer to the President as Mahinda.

There is quiet hope. To say nay aloud makes one a traitor to their motherland. But everywhere suddenly everyone knows that things have gone a bit too far. The stick wielded too much. Too much dissonance from both sides of the political spectrum. But a firm hope. Agreement perhaps that winning the war is not enough.

The JVP cross over a huge hope as the JVP have a voice among the masses that is believed.

The wise voter in Paradise, 90% literate is realising that all that glitters is not gold. The breakaway politicians have reached them and they are listening. No one dares say it loud, but it is whispered amongst many. When the voter reaches the privacy of the polling booth, they may or may not cast the cross against whom they say they may vote for!

This election will not be won by the rural masses and whom they vote for, it will be hard fought and fearful, and it will be decided amongst those who are brave enough to vote in the urban and suburban boroughs throughout of my Paradise Isle.

Of this I am sure. I am glad that I don’t have to make that decision. The Paradisian voter is faced with an enviable task.

This is it. Please do vote, be heard.

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10 Comments

  1. I like how you seem to dislike nationalism, yet you seem keen on calling us Sri Lankans ‘paradisians’, amazing. See, SL may have been a paradise at some point or another but it wont stay that way all the time even though there is a lot wrong (now I do still love my country). Its the same assumption that freedom doesnt cost anything. Were Sri Lankan, not some gaudy group who like to call ourselves anything more, you shouldnt need any other title if you love your country.

  2. Well my casual polling has led me to one conclusion. This all goes back to old party allegiances. During the Ranil reign even the most hard core UNPers were embarrassed to vote for him. Now they have a candidate that they can vote for & save face. So the ol UNP block isn’t 2 minded any more. Which is the edge SF is having, and that is in Colombo. SF doesn’t even try properly to vie for the rural vote.
    No doubt Colombo as usual will go to the coalition. Northern Tamil vote will go to coalition (UNP) as well. Even though JVP is in bed with UNP, the charismatic guy, WImal Weerawansa is with the SLFP. And JVP voter base despises the UNP. So the scattered JVP vote is now split.
    65% of the South imo will vote for the Sanvedi Nayakaya including about 60% East. I predict an MR win with about 150,000 minimum votes gap. Let’s check back after the 26th hey?

  3. The writer says: “This election will not be won by the rural masses and whom they vote for, it will be hard fought and fearful, and it will be decided amongst those who are brave enough to vote in the urban and suburban boroughs …”

    Now this may or may not be so, and may or may not be a good thing, but I see neither evidence nor argumentation in support of this statement.

    A trifle premature I would think. So let’s wait for the morning after, eh?

  4. The writer has experianced personally the climate of uncertainity and fear in expressing the choice between the two presidential candidates.Now lankans fear to express views on choices for governance of the nation.
    He has also experianced the superior lordly attitude of the military who now think that they are the ‘masters’ and that the ordinary citizens are their serfs.
    No motorist dares to overtake a militay vehicle on the highway as this is considered as an insult – his car is swiftly overtaken,blocked and the motorist is berated/threatened for daring to overtake a military vehicle. It happened to me.
    This election may well l be decided by subterfuges including voter intimidation, ballot stuffing, prevention of voters from travelling to polling booths and hijacking of ballot boxes.
    As a public servant, i served as Senior Presiding Officer in two elections and as Assistant Returning Officer in one, in the sixties. There was no violence,the polling agents did their duty properly, & the polling booth staff adhered strictly to guidelines given them in printed directives a month before election dates.
    Candidates or their supporters never entered polling booths.As SPO, I releived one Assistant Officer of his duties for violating the guideline a second time.I do not know whether these things happen now.

  5. Judging by the steadily increasing incidents of polls related violence, I can say that it is going to be heavily rigged. The MR brothers obviously are alarmed at their fast dwindling popularity and the other matters that keep coming to haunt them like the war crimes issues, Tsunami aid fraud, corruption etc. It is up to the people to be ever vigilant here because these are people who have found politics to be very profitable.

  6. Given the increasing number of Sarath Fonseka “vote begging” going on here, I think your confidence is still premature Randy Mathew!

  7. Presidential election 2010 heating up, Many killed. They know MR re-elects. JVP makes sure violence exist to leave reasons to coverup embarassment. Though MR govt corrupted or not it produced tangible results. SF corrupted or not unknown but based on realised promises of MR’s 2005 Manifesto and patriotic leadership than former 4 Executive presidents, MR is a far better choice for next presidential election 2010. SF, a believeable change is trapped in a Western conspiracy to bring back Eelam separatism. All Sri Lankans should vote for MR to avoid 5th Eelam War for the simple reason that MR has layed foundation for Sri Lanka to be independent from West and therefore West cant use economical sanctions/donations as a tool of leverage to push Sri Lanka for negotiations with separatists. If SF comes it will happen defenitely and Eelam Separatism will rise up again.

    NoEalamInSL

  8. Hey DD, they weren’t officers — lance corp and a sarge. And the lancer who made the fuss was a [Edited out] Service Corps RAMF anyway. You noticed the Gemunu Watch sarge didn’t seem too fussed. And the Sinha security cutoff didn’t even wanna know. It’s always the non-combat buggers who wanna strut about.

    Justitia, that’s [nonsense]. I overtake Army vehicles all the time, and they’ve never given me any trouble other than trying to outrun me.

  9. We must also note that MR is also vote begging. For example he went to Jaffna to canvass for re-election which is OK but I find it the height of disgrace that his wife went to Jaffna begging for votes.

  10. Davy thank you. You obviously was much more alert to the situation than I ever can be. I am old now. It’s good too know that my friends do look out for me!

    Dayan, honestly with no offense meant I believe that what ails the motherland amongst many other ailments is our laid back lets wait and see attitude. My brain tells me that SF has a rats chance of winning. My gut lead by my heart has a stirring of hope for him. In reality either way we have a dictatorship, this may not be so bad. For the masses anyway!

    In hindsight, MR winning may not be all that bad when you look at the combination of SF, RW, SA and the minority leaders.

    I do hope that people will cast their vote, which was the original thought behind the writing of the original post.

    I may live to eat my words after all, eh?

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Located at the Centre for Policy Alternatives in Colombo, Sri Lanka, Groundviews is a citizen journalism website that uses a range of genres and media to highlight critical perspectives on governance, reconciliation, human rights, the arts and literature, democracy and other issues. The site has won two international awards, including the prestigious Manthan Award South Asia in 2009. The grand jury's evaluation of the site noted, "What no media dares to report, Groundviews publicly exposes. It's a new age media for a new Sri Lanka... Free media at it's very best!"

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