Close X
Monday, September 23, 2024
ADVT 
International

Sirisena: A Former Rebel Who Will Now Rule Sri Lanka

Darpan News Desk IANS, 09 Jan, 2015 02:04 PM
    Maithripala Sirisena, elected to govern Sri Lanka, was once jailed for alleged links to leftwing Sinhalese rebels who almost ousted the government in 1971. He remained in prison for 15 months.
     
    And if luck had not been on his side, Sirisena might have been assassinated by the Tamil Tigers who attacked his convoy in a suburb here in 2008, leaving one person dead.
     
    A devout Buddhist from the majority Sinhalese community, Sirisena, 63, was for long a loyalist of outgoing president Mahinda Rajapaksa until he dramatically defected to the opposition in November.
     
    That one act -- a night after he shared a meal of "hoppers" (rice pancakes) with the president -- undid whatever hopes Rajapaksa might have had of winning Thursday's election.
     
    Once Sirisena became the joint opposition candidate, he turned Rajapaksa's most vocal and bitter critic, accusing the man he had stood by for years of promoting "family rule" in Sri Lanka.
     
    When the Rajapaksa regime militarily crushed the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in May 2009, Sirisena was the defence minister. But the glory of vanquishing the Tigers went to Rajapaksa.
     
    When Rajapaksa did not make him the prime minister, Sirisena began to hold a grudge -- one that spurred his defection in November.
     
    Like many in Rajapaksa's Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) to which he belonged until last year, Sirisena's political thoughts make him hang the pictures of Buddha, Marx, Lenin and Mahatma Gandhi at his home.
     
    Yet he espouses no particular ideology. A family man, he is passionately opposed to smoking and liquor. 
     
    Although he earned the backing of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA), the main Tamil party in parliament, Sirisena has refused to dismantle military camps in the north and east -- the former war zone.
     
    But he says he will be happy to do business with Tamils who have embraced democracy -- whatever their past.
     
    Like Rajapaksa once did, Sirisena appeals to the ordinary Sinhalese, most of whom are Buddhists although some are Christians too.
     
    In his first comments after Rajapaksa conceded defeat Friday, Sirisena pledged to promote Buddhism, the state religion. He also promised not to take "revenge" against political foes.
     
    Unlike Rajapaksa, Sirisena attracted the support of Muslims in the Thursday battle due to rising attacks on them by hardline Buddhists linked to the Rajapaksa regime.
     
    Most Tamils, sullen and bitter since thousands died in the war on the LTTE, also appear to have thrown their lot with Sirisena simply because of their dislike of Rajapaksa.
     
    When he announced his candidacy in November, he said that Sri Lanka was heading towards a dictatorship.
     
    "The entire economy and every aspect of society is controlled by one family," he thundered. 
     
    Rajapaksa later complained publicly that Sirisena defected after having a meal of "hoppers" with him.
     
    Sirisena, Rajapaksa said, "eats hoppers in the night and then stabs you in the back in the morning".
     
    The majority of Sri Lankans did not agree with Rajapaksa's assessment. 

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Luxottica Founder Takes Over Ceo Role As Stock Tanks Amid Turmoil

    Luxottica Founder Takes Over Ceo Role As Stock Tanks Amid Turmoil
    MILAN - The founder of the Luxottica luxury eyewear maker has taken over temporarily as CEO amid management turmoil that has tanked the company's stock.

    Luxottica Founder Takes Over Ceo Role As Stock Tanks Amid Turmoil

    Campaign for making marijuana legal in US

    Campaign for making marijuana legal in US
    US groups in favour of the legal use of marijuana have intensified their campaign to have Alaska, Oregon and the District of Columbia approve the recreational...

    Campaign for making marijuana legal in US

    Bilawal Bhutto Zardari faces threats to his life

    Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) Chairperson Bilawal Bhutto Zardari faces threats to his life from the Jundallah militant organisation, media reported Tuesday....

    Bilawal Bhutto Zardari faces threats to his life

    U.S. Midterms: Stage may be set for a big vote on Keystone XL pipeline

    U.S. Midterms: Stage may be set for a big vote on Keystone XL pipeline
    WASHINGTON - A certain Canadian pipeline appears poised to spring back to the top of the American political agenda, with the upcoming congressional elections setting the stage for a vote on the long-delayed Keystone XL project.

    U.S. Midterms: Stage may be set for a big vote on Keystone XL pipeline

    School opens in Haiti in honour of Canadian Mountie killed in earthquake

    A vocational school is set to open Monday in Haiti in honour of a respected Mountie from New Brunswick killed almost five years ago in a devastating earthquake while he was on an educational mission in the Caribbean country.

    School opens in Haiti in honour of Canadian Mountie killed in earthquake

    Key question: How did Dallas health worker caring for Ebola patient catch the disease herself?

    Key question: How did Dallas health worker caring for Ebola patient catch the disease herself?
    How did it happen? That's the big question as federal health officials investigate the case of a Dallas health worker who treated an Ebola patient and ended up with the disease herself.

    Key question: How did Dallas health worker caring for Ebola patient catch the disease herself?