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Friday, November 15, 2024

“We have understood the weight of responsibility of this victory,” Silva

Two third majority given by Sri Lanka voters will be used carefully: NPP


Friday November 15, 2024 6:55 pm

ECONOMYNEXT – Sri Lanka’s National People’s Power will not mis-use a two third majority given by voters to carry out its program, Tilvin Silva, General Secretary of the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna, the main party behind the political group said.

Readers Note:

 

“We have understood the weight of responsibility of this victory,” Silva told reporters in Colombo after the landslide win.

“That trust we have to protect. We have got 159 votes, exceeding two thirds. There was opinion in society that there should not be two thirds. 

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Actually, we did not seek it.

“But people have given it. So we have a responsibility to handle this excessive power very carefully.

“Because our leaders have mis-used it in the past to put down the people. They were drunk with power. We will not become bloated with the power. We will be very careful and be responsible.

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There were many challenges ahead of the government, he said.

“We will use the mandate given by the people, not to protect power,” Silva said. “We will use it to rebuild the country, built democracy and end corruption. We know the weight of responsibility.

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“We have taken a fallen country. Due to debt we had to have an agreement with the IMF.

“We have to end rural poverty. We have to have a clean, Sri lanka. We have to revive a fallen economy and help people to live with dignity. We will use this mandate for that.

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The people in the North, East and the hill country have joined hands with NPP thinking like one nation, he said.

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It by defeating, traditional, strong political parties who have reigned for 70 years this victory was bestowed on us. The old, elitist, the hegemonic era (prabhoo, adipathyawadi) has been ended. 

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The power of our country has ended it.

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The era where rulers took on an aura of elitism and used public funds and priviledges had ended, he said.

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“Now the politics of the general public has come. I think this is a great victory,” Silva said. 

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“On the other side, it has defeated nationalism. There were attempts to ethnic and religious division. The, politics where leaders depended on ethnic and religious extremism has ended.

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“For many years, elections were won on nationalism. The Rajapaksa won on Sinhala Bhuddhist nationalism. Other used Tamil and Muslim nationalism. All those parties have been rejected.

 

Readers Note:

 

Landslide win for Sri Lanka’s leftist coalition in snap general elections

ENB News Poster

 Landslide win for Sri Lanka’s leftist coalition in snap general elections

President Dissanayake now has the mandate he needs to tackle corruption and recover stolen assets after financial crash.

Sri Lankan President Anura Kumara Dissanayake’s leftist coalition has achieved a landslide victory in snap parliamentary elections, delivering the self-described Marxist leader a powerful mandate to fight poverty and corruption in the crisis-stricken nation.

The Election Commission of Sri Lanka said on Friday that Dissanayake’s National People’s Power (NPP) coalition secured a two-thirds majority in parliament, winning 159 of 225 seats, a huge lead on opposition alliance Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB), which won 40 seats.

Dissanayake, a 55-year-old veteran politician, was elected president on September 21 with 42 percent of the vote, in a rejection of traditional political parties that have governed the island nation since independence from British rule in 1948.

His party’s victory on Friday vindicated his decision to immediately call elections and secure parliamentary backing for his plans to combat corruption and recover stolen assets, two years after a financial crash led to months-long shortages of food, fuel and essential medicines.

Reporting from Colombo, Al Jazeera’s Minelle Fernandez said voters had said “enough is enough”, voting overwhelmingly “to take a chance on the NPP”.

The vote, she said, marked a rejection of “the same old faces, the same old parties [that] have been hoodwinking us for too long now”.

Change

In July, public anger about the economic crisis culminated in the  storming of then-President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s compound, prompting his resignation and temporary exile.

The Rajapaksa clan’s Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna party, whose cohort of brothers gave the country two presidents during a dozen years in power and had 145 seats in the outgoing legislature, was virtually wiped out in this week’s vote, winning just two seats.

Dissanayake’s pledge to change a “corrupt” political culture had resonated with millions of Sri Lankans struggling to make ends meet following tax hikes and other austerity measures imposed to repair the nation’s finances.

Upon being elected president, he had promised to renegotiate a controversial $2.9bn International Monetary Fund (IMF) bailout secured by his predecessor, but has since maintained the country’s agreement with the lender. However, his party’s newly won majority could see him reopen talks.

While he was in opposition, Dissanayake argued against the enormous powers of the executive presidency and its links to abuse of power. His party’s majority will now allow him to begin the process of abolishing the position, though analysts say this is unlikely to be a priority.

Commenting on the coalition’s majority, Al Jazeera’s Fernandez said: “There are observers who say too much power is something for concern, but the president had said that … voters should fill the parliament with his representatives [who] could give effect to the change that they were promising.”

Electoral shift

Dissanayake, who hails from the Sinhala-majority town of Galewela, had been an MP for nearly 25 years and was briefly an agriculture minister, but his NPP coalition held just three seats in the outgoing assembly.

Marking a major shift in the country’s electoral landscape, his coalition won the Jaffna district, the heartland of ethnic Tamils in the north, who have long been suspicious of Sinhalese leaders.

Ethnic Tamil rebels fought an unsuccessful civil war in 1983-2009 to create a separate homeland, saying they were being marginalized by governments controlled by Sinhalese.

According to conservative United Nations estimates, more than 100,000 people were killed in the conflict.

Voter turnout in this week’s election was estimated at less than 70 percent, below the 80 percent of eligible voters who cast a ballot in September’s presidential polls.

தேர்தல் திணைக்கள அதிகாரபூர்வ 2024 தேர்தல் முடிவுகள்.

 


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