Gotabaya Is Bad, But Pardoning Duminda Silva Has Made Him Evil
By Vishwamithra –JUNE 29, 2021
“If there is something to pardon in everything, there is also something to condemn.” ~ Friedrich Nietzsche
Placed precariously in the annals of contemporary times, Sri Lanka has had to confront many situations which are apparently conspiring to drag it down to a pit where only failed-states inhabit. Her current rulers have unqualifiedly subordinated the national interests to their own greedy and selfish profits. Relegating their own subjects, the voters of the country, to a second or third-hand tier, the President and his Cabinet of Ministers are being held in a choking grip. Sheer political impotence is their invisible badge- a shameful one indeed.
The popular judgment amongst the rural folks is that Sri Lanka is a ‘cursed nation’. The traditional values based on teachings of most scientific and compassionate religious beliefs, also known as Buddhism, discovered, revealed and widely expounded by Siddhartha Gautama Buddha, have all fallen by the wayside. The kings and queens who ruled ancient Ceylon, although they all assumed such high office to rule the country as a ‘one-man-rule’, at least an overwhelming majority of them, were never questioned as to their patriotism and commitment to the rule of law. Examples are many as to their rule and their modus operandi in dealing with multiple crises, economic, military or social, their principles of governance and above all their abiding obligation to law and order are lastingly chronicled in various historical records, including the Mahāvaṃsa, the Great Chronicle.
Historians have fact-checked and recorded these events and incidents carefully. Their painstaking commitment to telling the truth and their verification of the authenticity of the contextual pertinence is beyond question. However, as usual, any historical record of a nation is gravid with exaggerations and when the proverbial flowers are picked out and discarded, what remains as a factual record is palatably digested by the subject generations that followed the real-time citizenry of the country.
Almost all- political pundits, University academics, private sector CEOs, higher echelons of the government service, , rich, poor, the middleclass, Sinhalese, Tamil, Burgher and Muslims, they all knew that Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga was the worst political leader Ceylon produced, at least since Independence. Now she can exhale a sigh of satisfaction that she is no more considered to be occupying that contemptible bottom layer of the ladder anymore. She’s been outdone by the present fellow, Nandasena Gotabaya Rajapaksa. In incompetence, lack of empathy, dishonesty, cynicism, corruption and political impotence, Gotabaya is miles ahead, not a very teeming station to be in, in nation-building or state-governance.
Gotabaya Rajapaksa came into power with a bang. He had built his reputation as a ‘master doer’, a man who could produce results from almost nothingness. His advertising agency did a masterful job of creating and then projecting a colossal image of a modern day ‘Dutu Gemunu’; liberating the country from the manacles of Tamil expansionism was an integral part of his persona so created. Despite the widely-held belief in the country that his family’s rule from 2005 to 20014 was brazenly corrupt, downright dishonest and unyieldingly nepotism-rooted, the gross failure on the part of the Ranil/Maithripala combo government to prosecute the Rajapaksas to a permanent political end ensured the comeback of the same family, this time led by an untested ‘anti-hero’ who ran away from the Northern war when the going got tough. So was written another sad chapter of Sri Lanka’s post-independent history.
The victory at the Parliamentary elections that followed the Presidential elections further tightened the stranglehold the Rajapaksas had on the wretched citizenry of Lanka. This untested ‘anti-hero’ is being tested by mother of all tests. The Covid-19 pandemic is running rampant in the country and its third wave seems to be more threatening and all-encompassing than the dreaded LTTE soldiers. The Covid pandemic is no isolated event; its consequences have generated many effects that in themselves have performed the dubious task of being cataclysmic causes. The cause and effect theory is having its own cycle of life, making a mockery of the Rajapaksa-incompetency and corruption.
The so-called ‘Viyathmaga’ pundits couldn’t foresee nor forecast the resultant economic debacle that followed. Viyathmaga is supposed to be an assembly of men and women, well-educated, placed in high offices in both public and private sectors and equally well-versed in contemporary events and futuristic phenomena. Yet when their real knowledge, experience, skills and competence were put to a crunching test, all that knowledge, experience, skill and competence seemed to have flown out the window. They are as impotent, weak and incapable as an ordinary street vendor. At least a street vendor is equipped with that rare quality of street-smartness and common sense and above all undiluted patriotism. A street vendor would not barter his love for the country for a quick buck.
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