Sri Lankan citizens bid for end to poll
violence
By Feizal Samath
COLOMBO - Basnayake Chandrawathie will never forget that January day a
year ago in a northern Sri Lankan village, something she had been too
embarrassed to talk about till now.
However, putting aside inhibitions, the 52-year-old political worker
narrated her traumatic experience before a weekend gathering of Sri Lankan
politicians, academics, former senior government officials and rights
activists. ''That was the day they almost snatched my dignity away,'' she
recalled, describing in graphic detail how she was stripped of her clothes
by armed political rivals during a provincial poll campaign in the north
central region.
A senior village level political worker of Sri Lanka's main opposition
United National Party (UNP), Chandrawathie was the only woman in the group
of 10 party campaigners that was stopped by supporters of a rival
politician who were carrying guns and sticks. ''They ordered us to stop
campaigning and to leave the area. We refused. After a few blows, they
ordered the men to strip at gunpoint,'' she said. They beat her up and
removed her outergarments, but she sat on the ground and successfully
foiled their bid to strip her naked.
The January 1999 provincial polls, won by President Chandrika
Kumaratunge's People's Alliance (PA), were slammed by independent poll
monitors and civic groups as one of the worst in the country because of
large-scale ballot-fixing and physical violence, allegedly by PA
supporters.
Worried by worsening poll violence since then, citizens, political leaders
and rights groups have come together to find ways of making Sri Lankan
democracy cleaner. The National Convention Against Political Violence
followed international appeals to Sri Lanka to ensure free and fair
elections. The European Union has written to both the PA and the UNP,
expressing concern over poll irregularities. The EU's concern, like the
convention, was inspired by the forthcoming parliamentary elections due
later this year. The EU said it would closely monitor the poll and also
offered to provide the National Election Commission with foreign monitors.
The use of muscle power during polls is not new to Sri Lanka, but the once
rare incidents have become increasingly common and more violent in recent
years. Political observers have blamed the Tamil Tiger ethnic conflict for
this. According to lawywer Javid Yusuf, a former member of the state set
up Human Rights Commission, the Tamil insurgency has encouraged the use of
firearms by political cadres. ''Too many arms in the hands of the people
is the cause of this malady,'' he said, adding that the prevalence of the
''gun culture'' was keeping well-meaning people away from public life.
Even last December's presidential election which returned Kumaratunga to
office, has been criticized by two top poll monitors. In a joint report
released recently, the watchdogs noting that the election was ''seriously
flawed''. The monitors - the People's Action for Free and Fair Elections
and the Movement for Free and Fair Elections - used more than 5,000
volunteers to monitor the exercise.
Godfrey Gunatillake, chairman of one of the two and a senior civil rights
activist, told the meeting that the two main political parties must accept
responsibility for the violence. He, however, said it was worrying that
both were accusing each other of having started the violence. ''This
approach only means that both parties would continue using various forms
of force and violence when they come to power and justify it on the
grounds that the other had done worse,'' he added.
The meeting passed a resolution to launch a nationwide campaign against
political violence and initiate a non-partisan dialogue between people,
community leaders and politicians on election violence. Participants also
resolved to initiate a public campaign to exclude candidates who have a
proven record of violence, a public non-partisan agitation for the reform
of political parties, and a code of conduct for politicians.
Karu Jayasuriya, a top UNP provincial leader, admitted that his party was
also to blame. ''I am not absolving my party from its share of
responsibility for the state of affairs in the past. There was an element
of violence during our periods of governance, but violence at recent polls
have exceeded anything we have seen in earlier times,'' he said.
Jayasuriya advised using see-through plastic ballot boxes in place of the
wooden ones used at present to check ballot fraud. He pointed out that
western nations were prepared to fund the supply of such boxes.