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If anyone tries to get photos of the ballot paper, they will be banned from parliament for 7 yrs

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Speaker Mahinda Yapa Abeywardena says that there are provisions in the constitution to ban parliament for 7 years if anyone tries to get photos of the ballot paper used to elect the president.

He mentioned this while starting the parliamentary proceedings today and informing the MPs about the voting process.

The speaker requested the MPs to hand over the mobile phone they have at the time of marking the vote to the concerned officials as no member of parliament can take his mobile phone to the polling place and if anyone has their mobile phone, two special officials will be kept to hand it over.

The General Secretary of the Parliament is acting as the Electoral Officer of this poll and he is currently informing the MPs about how the poll will be conducted.

The parliamentary session for the voting to elect a new president commenced

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The parliamentary session has started for the voting to elect a new president.

Dallas has a clear majority – Tissa Attanayake

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Tissa Attanayake, Member of Parliament of the Samagi Jana Balavegaya, says that Dallas Alahapperuma has a clear majority by now and that he will definitely win in today’s presidential elections.

Attanayake mentioned that the people are waiting for a change and that change can only be achieved through Sajith-Dallas unity.

Maithri’s personal issues are not relevant to us. 9 of us from SLFP will vote for Ranil – Chamara

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Although the Sri Lanka Freedom Party has officially declared its support for Dallas Alahapperuma, 9 of its 14 MPs are ready to support Ranil Wickramasinghe, said Chamara Sampath Dasanayake, the member of parliament of that party.

Chamara Sampath Dasanayake said this while speaking with a radio channel.

A revolt that could turn into a revolution

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Without a new social contract, there could be unrestrained conflict with the working people in Sri Lanka

The great revolt of the masses has overthrown an authoritarian president in Sri Lanka, but it has not abolished the executive presidency. Indeed, on July 18, within days of assuming office as acting President, Ranil Wickremesinghe declared an Emergency, to supposedly ensure the safety of parliamentarians who are to vote for a President on July 20.

A new social contract

Such executive overreach has been the bane of problems in Sri Lanka. There has been no moment in the last four decades more opportune than this to rid the country of this undemocratic institution. Then why are the liberal reformers and lawmakers so reluctant to move on abolishing the executive presidency? It is because the office of the executive president is being projected as the custodian of law, order and property in these tumultuous times. Sri Lanka is in a great moment of revolt, but it is far from a revolution, for a revolution would entail changing our fundamental social relations including property relations. Nevertheless, a radical consciousness is emerging among the masses, who are protesting on the streets and occupying the highest offices of the state.

Such power of the people has unnerved the liberal quarters and international actors who are quick to warn of anarchy, lawlessness and destruction of property. Indeed, the people’s struggle could escalate to occupying private property and demands for redistribution. However, through the many months of the crisis, the government and the Opposition in Parliament have avoided discussing redistribution. They cannot even stomach higher direct taxes, let alone a wealth tax. Instead, their energies go into begging international donors for funds and pushing the country into further debt.

It is these dynamics that are at play when the entrenched liberal political establishment, determined to preserve the neoliberal economic status quo, begins retreating into the constitutionality of the political process. Haven’t the very foundations of our political system been shaken by the greatest protests in Sri Lankan history? This is a moment when the social contract between state and society must be reconstructed. Without a new social contract, there is likely to be a no-holds-barred conflict with the working people.

Factors for political survival

At every moment in the last four months, parliamentary manoeuvres have undermined the protests and attempted to deflect people’s opposition. But those manoeuvres — whether it was the resignation of Cabinet Ministers in April, the appointment of Mr. Wickremesinghe as Prime Minister in May, or the attempts to pass a watered-down Amendment on the Executive Presidency in June — have eventually been confronted by the people’s movement. Similar dynamics are going to be at play when Parliament seeks to elect a President to complete the term of Gotabaya Rajapaksa. This time around, it is Mr. Wickremesinghe who has come to symbolise order and preservation of the status quo. His self-interest and the interests of some powerful political and global actors coincide in making him the front-runner for the post of interim President, who will be elected by Parliament. After all, it is clear that in a presidential election requiring the support of a popular majority, he would not stand a chance. He could not even win his seat in Parliament in the last election and only came into Parliament on the sole seat of his United National Party that suffered a terrible defeat.

Mr. Wickremesinghe lacks the social and political base to lead the country. He has no political credibility to speak of, or moral authority, after openly backing the country’s most discredited regime. However, his political survival depends on the support of three significant constituencies. First, the Rajapaksas and their party, the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP), whose social base has been wiped out with mass opposition to their rule. The party is now in desperate need of someone at the helm of state power to protect it. Second, the top brass of the military, whose commander-in-chief and so-called war hero has fled the country, while international sanctions unnerve some in the military leadership. Third, international actors who would like to see their geopolitical interests served in Sri Lanka. Therein lies the great danger for the country.

What was considered a ‘political deal’ between the Rajapaksas and Mr. Wickremesinghe when he was appointed Prime Minister has now come into the open with the SLPP supporting his candidacy. Mr. Wickremesinghe will defend the Rajapaksas and further their interests, as he is dependent on their political base, corrupting politics to the hilt.

Next, he needs the military to suppress the protests as much as the military needs him to protect them. This quid pro quo creates the danger of authoritarian rule through further militarisation. As acting President last week, Mr. Wickremesinghe issued a gazette notification to include more subjects under the purview of the Ministry of Defence, including the Board of Investment, necessary for his authoritarian neoliberal project. Such militarisation will mount under his presidency, in addition to neoliberal policies of dispossession.

And as for international actors, a Wickremesinghe presidency with authoritarian stability will converge with their interests. A leader without a social and political base dependent on them will not just sing but also dance to their tunes, and sell the strategic assets of the country for a song.

First as tragedy, then as farce

In The 18th Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte, Karl Marx wrote these opening lines about the failed French revolution of 1848: “Hegel remarks somewhere that all facts and personages of great importance in world history occur, as it were, twice. He forgot to add: the first time as tragedy, the second time as farce.” Marx was referring to the tragedy of Napoleon’s adventurous capture of state power and then the farce of his nephew Louis Bonaparte’s claim to be a similar leader many decades later. In Sri Lanka, J.R. Jayewardene’s ascendance to power in 1977, the creation of the executive presidency, the initiation of neoliberal policies, his alignment with the U.S. amidst the Cold War, and the repression of organised labour and the Tamil minority culminating in the civil war, was a devastating tragedy. Now, Mr. Wickremesinghe , Jayewardene’s nephew, has grand ambitions of capturing the presidency, repressing the people’s movement and taking forward the neoliberal project. It is a farce from every angle. Mr. Wickremesinghe has neither the social nor political base of Jayewardene. The people’s movement has become far more politically conscious with the nationwide protests. And the global neoliberal project itself is in crisis now.

Even if Mr. Wickremesinghe were to be elected, his tenure will remain contested, and may last only till the next wave of protests. But it would polarise society, generate a xenophobic backlash against the external actors who back him and ravage the economic lives of people.

Through the manoeuvres of those in power, the people are being pushed to continue on the path from revolt to revolution. If state power is brought to serve a class project in the figure of Mr. Wickremesinghe, the political crisis will aggravate. Who is ready for this wager?

Ahilan Kadirgamar is a political economist and Senior Lecturer, University of Jaffna, Sri Lanka

Ahilan Kadirgamar

TNA decides to support Dallas

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The Tamil National Alliance has decided to support Dallas Alahapperuma in the polling held today (20) in Parliament to elect the new President.

It is stated that this decision was reached after the MPs of that party met with Dallas Alahapperuma and Sajith Premadasa yesterday.

If Ranil becomes the President, will Basil be appointed as the PM?

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According to political sources, if Ranil Wickramasinghe wins the polls held today (20) and becomes the President, Basil Rajapaksa will become the Prime Minister in the future.

Sources said that this will not happen at once but gradually.

Ranil Wickramasinghe has only one vote in the Parliament as the United National Party and currently the entire government party mechanism is led by Basil Rajapaksa, National Organizer of the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna. The election campaign to appoint Ranil Wickramasinghe to the office of President is also managed by Basil Rajapaksa and with the announcement that Dallas-Sajith will contest together, there was a backlash in many people, but Basil did not back down.

Also, through the 22nd constitutional amendment that Ranil Wickramasinghe presented to the Parliament while he was the Prime Minister, the powers of the executive presidency are to be reduced to a certain extent and sources said that Basil Rajapaksa will come forward for the position of Prime Minister, which will be strengthened by it, at the right time.

Sri Lanka’s tea farmers struggling to survive

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Leaves from the lush green tea estates covering the hills of central Sri Lanka end up in cups across the world.

Tea is the island’s biggest export, normally bringing in more than $1bn a year, but the industry is being hard hit by the unprecedented economic crisis.

Most of Sri Lanka’s tea is grown by smaller farmers, like Rohan Tilak Gurusinghe, who owns two acres of land close to the village of Kadugunnawa.

But he’s still reeling from the impact of a sudden, poorly thought-out government decision to ban chemical fertiliser last year.

“I’m losing money,” he tells the BBC despondently. “Without fertiliser or fuel, I can’t even think about the future of my business.”

The ban, ordered to try to protect the country’s dwindling foreign reserves, was one of a number of disastrous policy decisions implemented by the now-ousted President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, with agricultural output falling significantly.

It was later reversed, but fertiliser has shot up in price and is still difficult to source, while the government is now unable to afford to import adequate supplies of petrol and diesel.

For farmers like Mr Gurusinghe, reliant on trucks transporting tea leaves from his fields to factories for processing, it means delays which can lead to the leaves drying out and reducing in quality.

“Our leaders are not bothered about providing us with the basic necessities,” he tells the BBC.

“They’re the ones who have put us in debt: by stealing dollars and spending them however they want. Right now, Sri Lanka is like a ship stranded at sea.”

The huge queues of vehicles waiting in line for fuel aren’t just in Sri Lanka’s capital, Colombo, but across the island.

Public anger at the crisis, which is also rooted in the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on the island’s tourist industry, has led to the resignation of President Rajapaksa.

Protesters have also indicated they won’t accept Ranil Wickremesinghe, the politician looking most likely to be nominated by parliament as Mr Rajapaksa’s successor.

Mr Wickremesinghe is seen by critics as too close to the Rajapaksa dynasty. As a former six-time prime minister, he doesn’t represent the change demonstrators have called for.

Further political instability, however, will make resolving the economic crisis even more challenging.

Among tea factory owners, there is deep frustration. Tea exports are a valuable source of dollars and the industry employs some two million people, but production levels have dropped.

Meezan Mohideen heads a large estate and factory in Ancoombra. “Without the fuel, we are finding it very, very difficult. If this goes on, we might have to shut down all factories,” he told the BBC.

“Normally, about 20 lorries are running for us. Now we are running eight lorries. And with the power cuts, there are factories which have closed down – working three, four days a week.”

Mr Mohideen’s factory had drastically cut down the number of days it was operating until, because of its size, it managed to source fuel through a private importer.

Other, smaller factories are struggling even more. But it’s the poorest who are suffering the most in this crisis.

Tea pluckers, working in the fields, picking out the tender tea leaves and placing them in large sacks tied around their waists, are generally paid little more than the minimum wage.

But food prices in Sri Lanka have been soaring. Inflation in June, compared with the same period last year, was more than 50%.

While carrying the sacks of leaves to be weighed, close to the colonial era “line houses” where they live, tea pluckers from Mr Mohideen’s estate complained of how much more difficult everyday life had become.

“In the past, we could get by, but now prices have more than doubled,” says Nageshwri. “Whatever we earn in a day, we’re spending to eat.”

“We don’t eat lunch any more,” adds Panchawarni, “we eat once around 10:00, and then again in the evening.”

The Sri Lankan government is in the process of sourcing more fuel and is also in talks with the International Monetary Fund, but for now, whoever takes charge of the country, the hardship looks set to continue.

BBC News

Rohan Tilak Gurusinghe says the high price of fertiliser is killing his business
Meezan Mohideen’s tea factory has seen production levels fall

Collateral damage: China, Sri Lanka and a developing debt crisis

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There is nothing new about nations collapsing under the weight of their debts. But Sri Lanka’s awful predicament highlights three new aspects of our world.

It’s a sign of our times, first, because Sri Lanka’s debt crisis is not a one-off but likely the first in a new wave of national sovereign debt disasters.

Second, while China has been the biggest lender to many poor countries for years now, this is the first major, uncontrolled collapse where China is a dominant lender.

This throws open big questions about how it handles its new power over the fates of nations when they’re at their most vulnerable.

Third is that, for all its size, China is starting to run into debt problems of its own. Can it continue to be the major source of loans to the developing world?

When Sri Lanka’s President Gotabaya Rajapaksa abandoned his palace to rampaging protesters last week and fled abroad – emailing his resignation from Singapore in a contemporary twist – it brought the political crisis to a head. A parliamentary vote for a new president is expected this week.

But the economic suffering goes on. About a quarter of its 22 million people aren’t getting enough to eat as a result of government incompetence, according to the World Food Program. Lacking the foreign exchange to pay for imports, the country survives on bare subsistence.

Sri Lanka’s government should have gone to the global emergency lender – the International Monetary Fund – for help when the pandemic first hit and its foreign exchange earnings from tourism evaporated.

But, instead, it went to Beijing, the so-called ATM of the developing world. China has more money on loan to the world’s poor countries than the combined lending of the 22 rich nations that make up the Paris Club of creditor countries, according to the World Bank.

Beijing loaned Sri Lanka an extra $US3 billion. But without a debt restructure on its existing $US35 billion or a policy correction, this money was soon gone too.

The International Crisis Group’s Alan Keenan faults Beijing on two grounds. One, it encouraged expensive infrastructure projects that failed to produce major economic returns.

“Equally important has been their active political support for the ruling Rajapaksa family and its policies,” says Keenan. “These political failures are at the heart of Sri Lanka’s economic collapse.”

Sri Lanka has since turned to the IMF for emergency credit but the Washington-based lender can’t negotiate with a country that has no leader.

The island nation was the most exuberantly reckless, but it’s one of many countries carrying more debt than it can afford.

Before the pandemic, the IMF was supporting about 20 countries. Today it supports 90. COVID cost countries everywhere a fortune.

Now there is a new drama. The US is raising interest rates in an effort to curb inflation. But higher American interest rates are a magnet for investors’ capital as it is drawn to higher returns.

Capital has started rushing out of the rest of the world and gushing into the US. As a result, the greenback is surging against other currencies, even reaching parity with the euro for the first time in 20 years.

This just makes it even harder for poor countries to pay for their imports and service their foreign debts. In fact, most of the world’s poor countries – 60 per cent of them – are now in debt distress or at high risk, according to the World Bank.

“Countries with high debt levels and limited policy space will face additional strains,” said IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva on Saturday. “Look no further than Sri Lanka as a warning sign.”

Others high on the danger list include Laos, Pakistan, Bangladesh and the Maldives. And guess who has been a big lender to all of them? Their friendly neighbourhood ATM, China. As one commentator put it, “China’s Belt and Road program has hit a major pothole”.

Even worse for Beijing, China has been lending prodigious sums to Russia in recent years – $US125 billion. In fact, Beijing is Russia’s biggest creditor, says the World Bank. But with Moscow groaning under economic sanctions as it tries to pay for a war, Vladimir Putin is hardly a good credit risk.

SMH

The Rajapaska brothers: Mahinda Rajapaksa, Gotabaya and Basil, photographed in April, have dominated Sri Lankan politics for a decade. They also have strong ties to Beijing. AP
IMF managing director Kristalina Georgieva: “Look no further than Sri Lanka for a warning sign.” BLOOMBERG

Sri Lanka opposition leader quits presidential run in bid to stymie Wickremesinghe

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Sri Lanka’s main opposition leader, Sajith Premadasa, has withdrawn from the presidential race and thrown his support behind a rival candidate, presenting a significant challenge to prime minister Ranil Wickremesinghe’s bid for the executive role.

In an announcement made on Tuesday morning, Premadasa said that “for the greater good of my country that I love and the people I cherish, I hereby withdraw my candidacy for the position of president”.

Premadasa instead pledged his support for Dullas Alahapperuma, the candidate from a breakaway group of the ruling Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna party (SLPP).

The decision to withdraw from the presidential race is believed to be driven in part by the tough political future that any president who takes on the role now faces. The new government, which is proposed to be a cross-party unity government, is likely to only last six to eight months until the country can afford to go to parliamentary elections. Presidential elections are not due till November 2024.

Premadasa’s support brings with it all the votes from his opposition Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) party. It significantly improves Alahapperuma’s chances of beating Wickremesinghe, the prime minister and acting president who will run as the SLPP’s official candidate in the secret ballot, which takes place in parliament on Wednesday.

It will now be a three-way vote between Alahapperuma, Wickremesinghe and leftist leader Anura Dissanayake, who were all formally nominated by legislators in a brief parliamentary session on Tuesday morning.

Both Wickremesinghe and Alahapperuma are considered controversial presidential candidates by the public, due to their close association to former president Gotabaya Rajapaksa, who was forced to flee the country and step down last week after mass protests.

It is likely to be a right race. Wickremesinghe has the backing of the majority of the ruling SLPP, who have the most seats in parliament. However, according to those close to Alahapperuma who spoke to the Guardian, the support of the SJB – and other opposition parties likely to follow – means they now believe they are assured of enough votes to beat Wickremesinghe.

Those close to Alahapperuma said that a deal had been struck whereby Premadasa would be prime minister, and SJB MP Harsha da Silva, who is an economist, would be finance minister in a unity government, under Alahapperuma as president.

Alahapperuma served as the minister of mass media in Rajapaksa’s cabinet for over two years, and was part of the SLPP government that is held responsible for driving the country into its worst economic crisis since independence.

Public protests against Wickremesinghe have been particularly vociferous. A six-time prime minister, he took over as a caretaker prime minister in May and was swiftly accused of propping up and protecting the Rajapaksa family, and, after the president resigned, taking on presidential duties without any legitimacy. His private residence was burned down and his prime ministerial home and offices were taken over by protesters last week demanding he step down.

Wickremesinghe caused further outrage by using his powers as acting president to declare a state of emergency on Sunday night “in the interests of public security”.

Meanwhile, Sri Lanka’s economic situation continues to worsen, with a lack of fuel and cooking gas and more food shortages likely in the future. The new president would also have to oversee a government composed of usually opposing political parties, and will be ruling at a time of political turmoil for the country, with a mass protest movement – known as the aragalaya – mobilised on the streets and calling for political accountability.

On Tuesday, across the commercial capital of Colombo, mass protests demanding Wickremesinge’s resignation were planned by students and protest groups.

TheGuardian