The Lanka Academic

 
MARCH 23, 2003 EST, USA
 
A NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED BY LACNET
 
VOL. 3, NO. 351

TLA FEATURE CORNER
Headline Summary
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POLITICS-SRI LANKA: Economic Woes Higher Priority than Peace
IPS, March 24. COLOMBO, Mar 24 (IPS) - New poll results showing that Sri Lankans are most concerned about daily economic woes explain why it is not easy to mobilise more mass movement in support of the peace process, analysts say. This is despite the fact the ethnic war in Sri Lanka has cost 65,000 lives in the past 20 years. A total of 48.2 percent of the people polled in the Peace Confidence Index (PCI), whose results were released Mar. 20, said they believe the rising cost of living is the most important issue of the day, followed by the ethnic conflict (18.8 percent) and unemployment (16.5 percent). The poll, conducted across the island, sought the views of majority Sinhalese, Tamils, Muslims and upcountry Tamils, referring to Tamils of Indian origin working in plantations. It did not say how the respondents were broken down among these groups. These results do not come as a surprise to Sri Lankan political analysts and economists, who say the war is less of an everyday concern for people living outside the north and eastern regions which are most affected by the armed rebellion by Tiger rebels seeking a homeland for minority Tamils there. "The cost of living is still the main issue -- and has been over the years -- for those living outside the northern and eastern regions," says Dr Jehan Perera, director at the National Peace Council (NPC), the country's biggest peace promoter. Perera says this helps explain why it is not easy to have the mass public support to push the peace process the sixth round of talks just finished in Japan on Friday -- harder. Sri Lanka's majority Sinhalese community lives in the southern, western and central regions of the country. Most of the minority Tamil and Muslim communities, who together account for less than 25 percent of the country's 19 million people, live in the north and the east. Among the Tamils, the results of the Peace Confidence Index showed that 30 percent cited the ethnic conflict as the most critical issue for them, followed by a close 27.5 percent who cited cost of living as they main worry. "The terrors of war is faced mostly in the conflict zones (apart from the occasional bombs that go off in the capital)," Perera says, adding that for the Sinhalese, the price of going back to war is not such a big issue for the majority community. But the poll, conducted in January and February 2003 by Social Indicator and financially supported by the Canadian International Development Agency, also showed that an overwhelming majority (83.7 percent) of the 1,400 respondents believed the conflict could be solved through peace talks, not fighting. This shows a sharp increase in this belief from 59.1 percent in May 2001. Social Indicator is the social research unit of the Centre for Policy Alternatives (CPA), a well-known policy think tank in Sri Lanka. The Peace Confidence Index was launched in May 2001 and has been conducted every two to three months since then. SI officials, noting that this was the first time the cost of living issue came up in the questionnaire, said the purpose of this study was to gauge public confidence in the peace process. Peace talks between the government and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), as the Tigers are formally known, have been on since September. A ceasefire between the two sides has held for more than a year now, but has been marred by violations. Still, the current round of talks has been the longest running ever. In recent weeks, the United National Party (UNP) government accused of increasing the people's economic woes - has been forced to turn its attention to the rising cost of living by appointing committees to recommend price stabilisation in essential food items. The People's Liberation Front or JVP, the most strident third political force and former militant group that has proven its skills at organising mass rallies and street protests, has gleefully watched as middle and lower income groups struggle to cope with price hikes. Fuel prices are rising monthly, triggering a chain reaction among prices of essentials across the board. Economic reforms, particularly the removal of subsidies on fuel and wheat, are gradually biting into the pockets of middle-level income earners. Hard times have prodded many of whom to ask the question, through letters-to-the-editor-columns in newspapers, is the government paying too much attention on the peace process and ignoring economic realities? Likewise, growing opposition rallies and protest marches have begun focusing on rising costs and corruption in state tenders, more than antipathy toward peace talks. In short, the peace dividend that everyone expected to placate the Sinhalese-dominated southern parts of the country has not come as quickly as expected. Local and foreign, private investment is slow, as investors wait for a permanent peace package to emerge before taking major decisions. "Clearly an advancement in the living conditions of the people hasn't happened since the peace process began," says Kethish Loganathan, a CPA director and head of its conflict analysis division. "Peace and the economy are inseparable." He said the peace process will not work unless sound planning and management policies are put in place and have a positive impact on larger sections of the people. "People have begun to question as to what has happened to the so-called savings from lower military spending? Why hasn't it being reinvested (to bring down prices, for example)?" he says. Jagath Sumanasekera, a grocer in a Colombo suburb, agrees that the cost of living is the main issue among most Sri Lankans. "Customers who used to buy half a dozen eggs at a time, now buy ones and twos, grumbling about the cost. Invariably the conversation is about the cost of living and how the government has failed to pay enough attention to it." Another question in the Peace Confidence Study sought to find out the impact the peace process has had on living conditions. To this, nearly 34 percent of the respondents said there was no impact, 29 percent said it had a negative impact while 24.1 percent said that there has been a positive impact. (END/IPS/AP/IP/FS/JS/03)
Published: Sun Mar 23 23:36:27 EST 2003

ASK LAKSHMAN!
A Q&A with Sri Lanka's Former Minister of Foreign Affairs
We are pleased to introduce Mr. Lakshman Kadiragamar, former Foreign Minister of Sri Lanka, as the 11th guest in our series of Q&A sessions. Presidents Counsel and Member of Parliament, Mr. Kadiragamar is currently the special adviser on Foreign Affairs to the President of Sri Lanka. Send in your questions to Mr. Kadiragamar and receive his answers here.

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IT'S NOT CRICKET, STUPID, IT'S COMPUTERS, LOVELY COMPUTERS Fulbright Scholar Brings Computers to Urban Disadvantaged Children in Colombo, Sri Lanka.
By Chulie de Silva, Colombo. You would think on a warm Saturday morning, children in Sri Lanka would be watching a cricket match and cheering on their heroes. No, not in Kew Road, Slave Island, a multi-ethnic enclave just five minutes away from the exclusive Trans Asia Hotel in Colombo's central down town area. The cricket match played on at the Malay Cricket Club, on Saturday 25, January but thirty children were flocked round five computers in a little rectangular room of the Vocational Training Center (VTC) run by the Sri Lanka Malay Association's (SLMA) Rupee Fund. [More...]

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Hakeem studies federal system in Malaysia
Bandula Jayasekara in Colombo, SLT 9.45 a.m Monday 24 March. Port Development and Shipping, Eastern Development and Muslim Religious Affairs Minister Rauff Hakeem yesterday (23) had a lengthy session on the Federal System in Malaysia with a group of political and economic experts at the Asia-Europe Institute (AEI) of the University of Malaya according to a foreign ministry release today.During the session, a special emphasis was paid on the economic and constitutional structure of the Federal system in Malaysia which is housed to a number of ethnic groups, religions, nationalities and languages Hakeem suggested that the Sri Lanka Peace Secretariat which is now seriously engaged in a process of studying various modules of Federal structures in the world, should join hands with academic institutions such as AEI for better results. Hakeem was briefed on the federal system in Malaysia by leading academic persons in Kuala Lumpur including AEI Executive Director Prof. Dato' Dr. Shaharil Talib and AEI Reasearch Fellow and former ASEAN Secretary General Tan Sri Dato' Ajit Singh.
Published: Sun Mar 23 22:47:58 EST 2003 Back to the top

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Sri Lankan sports minister wants Jayasuriya to stay on as cricket captain
Associated Press, Sun March 23, 2003 01:43 EST . KRISHAN FRANCIS - Associated Press Writer - COLOMBO, Sri Lanka - (AP) Sri Lanka - 's sports minister said Sunday that he wants Sanath Jayasuriya to continue as the national cricket captain, despite his offer to resign after the team lost to Australia in the World Cup semifinal last week. He said Sri Lanka - had performed far better during the World Cup than during last year's tour to South Africa where they lost the test series 0-2 and the one-day matches 1-4.

Fernando said he preferred that Jayasuriya continue as captain since his resignation will put officials under pressure to find a replacement and prepare for the Sharjah tri-nation tournament against Pakistan and South Africa next month. Jayasuriya was appointed captain after authorities sacked Arjuna Ranatunga over his failure to take his team to the second round of the 1999 World Cup in England.

Jayasuriya has led Sri Lanka - to victory in 18 out of 38 test matches and 65 one-day internationals our of 115.
Published: Sun Mar 23 03:29:25 EST 2003 Back to the top

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Colombo, LTTE for better truce compliance
The Hindu (International), Sunday, Mar 23, 2003. By V.S. Sambandan, COLOMBO MARCH 22. The Sri Lankan Government and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) ended their sixth round of talks in Japan on Friday, with the Tigers sticking to their guns on several issues, including the sensitive one of maintaining the military balance... Back to the top

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