Harim Peiris
For the Rajapaksa Administration which pushed through the 18th  Amendment to the constitution with barely a squeak of protest from society, the  furor over the Divineguma bill must be hard to comprehend. The Bill is  challenged in Court, the ruling is a defeat for the government and there is now  a serious public debate over the issues concerned, with trade unions joining  with protests and opposition to the Bill.
The timing of the furore over the Divineguma Bill comes  at a fairly bad time for the government, faced as it is with serious  confrontations with the judiciary, protests by FUTA and university students and  a general increase in discontent in society. Such discontent is not easily  quelled, especially from an administration, loath to make any real policy  concessions or governance changes to accommodate dissent or diversity of  opinion. The cosmetic time buying exercises merely postpone relatively briefly  the day of reckoning.
Now the Rajapaksa administration is fairly well entrenched and  the current spate of protests, court challenges and other societal push back on  the regime is in no way a threat to its political survival. This is certainly  not the beginning of the end for what is still a government which has the  consent of the majority of the governed. But, while it is not the beginning of  the end, it is certainly the "end of the beginning". The Rajapaksa political  honeymoon with the public, post the 2010 national elections are over. No longer  is there unquestioning and uncritical acceptance of what this administration,  from its apex to its media apparatus says and seeks to do. There is increased  public skepticism, criticism and protests.
The 13th Amendment and the PSC
The opposition over the Divineguma Bill is obviously hard for  the government to either understand or stomach. Hence, the knee-jerk reactions  such as let’s do away with the 13th Amendment to the Constitution. If such  statements were made from the political fringe, they could be easily dismissed.  But when such statements are made by presidential sibling and Defence Secretary,  arguably the second most powerful person in the country, next to the president  himself, they take on a seriousness in indicating, if not policy positions, then  the thinking and likely future direction of the administration.
At a time when the government is calling upon the Tamil National  Alliance and the other opposition political parties to come to a Parliamentary  Select Committee (PSC) to discuss devolution of power and other issues of  concern to ethnic minorities in the country, using to some extent the existing  devolution provisions in the Constitution, through the 13th amendment,  statements such as those made by the Defence Secretary only add credence to the  skepticism expressed by TNA leaders, such as by Sampanthan’s in his interview  with The Sunday Island of 14th October that the PSC joins a long list of  Rajapaksa Administration’s own processes, such as the All Party Conference (APC),  the All Parties Representative Committee (APRC), the Indian initiated structured  dialogue with the TNA and most recently the final report of the LLRC, which are  all unilaterally shelved by the administration, after they have outlived their  original and real purpose of wasting time and avoiding the need for any remedial  action.
Dayan and Sathiyamoorthy
Some respected pro-government political analysts and columnists  such as Ambassador Dr. Dayan Jayatilake and Indian analyst Sathiyamoorthy from  Chennai, made much of Sampanthan’s address to the ITAK party congress in April,  where he expressed in short, his deep reservations and skepticism regarding the  Rajapaksa government’s political will and desire to provide any post war  reconciliation or political solution to the problems of minority communities in  the Country. Dayan went so far as to state that with such views expressed a  Northern Provincial Council election, which the TNA is guaranteed to win, cannot  be held. Notwithstanding the promise in the Mahinda Chinthanya Idiri Dekma  itself that the NPC election will be held at the earliest. However, such  columnists who generally write at length about the TNA’s policy positions and  actions, (though the TNA is very much a deal taker and not a deal maker in the  post war political landscape) should address their minds and writings to the  pronouncements of Sri Lankasecond most powerful personality and the person who  commands the troops and armed forces that effectively run the post war North,  that no devolution is necessary and such devolution as remains in our basic law  must be overturned. If that is the agenda, then of what purpose is the PSC? Do  these sentiments have the concurrence of the President? If not, why have they  not been either clarified, retracted or contradicted? When the international  community in multilateral forums and in bi lateral relations indicates their own  skepticism of the government’s intent and direction of post war policy, it  should be recognised that contradictory statements and lengthy periods of  inaction coupled with little or no real progress is rather like shooting oneself  in the foot and is self defeating.
