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The Left turn in Sri Lanka

Anura Kumar Dissanayake’s win in presidential polls is in the spirit of the anti-establishment sentiment that marked the 2022 civic unrest

Published on: Sept 23, 2024 09:04 pm IST
By HT Editorial, HT Editorial
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The election of Anura Kumar Dissanayake, the leader of Janata Vimukti Perumuna (People’s Liberation Front), an outfit with Marxist leanings, as the ninth President of Sri Lanka, marks a new chapter in the island nation’s politics. In a way, the ascent of the JVP, which led two violent insurrections in 1971 and during 1987-89, and its eclipsing of the three mainstream parties that have monopolised power in Colombo, completes a political cycle that started with the massive civic unrest in 2022, which forced the then president, Gotabaya Rajapaksa, to quit office and flee the country. The civic protests (Aragalaya) were unprecedented in their scale of mobilisation and remarkable for the way they articulated popular disaffection with the political establishment and the economic collapse that the Rajapaksas, once celebrated as heroes for their role in defeating the LTTE and ending the war in the Tamil-majority areas, presided over. Dissanayake was a prominent voice during Aragalaya, which helped the JVP to offer itself as an alternative. That the JVP never held office in Colombo — Dissanayake, though, was a minister in the Chandrika Kumaratunge government some years ago when JVP was her ally — has helped the coalition it led to win the mandate in an election defined by voter antipathy towards the establishment.

Colombo: Anura Kumara Dissanayake takes oath as Sri Lanka's new president during a ceremony, in Colombo, Sri Lanka, Monday, Sept. 23, 2024. (PTI Photo) (PTI)

Dissanayake will need to be pragmatic in his policies to reconcile the compulsions of managing a country, which is yet to recover from the economic crisis of 2022 and is dependent on a $2.9 billion IMF bailout, with popular expectations for less taxes and more welfare. He has promised to renegotiate the IMF package with its stringent austerity measures which was a major reason for the anti-incumbency against the outgoing president, Ranil Wickremesinghe, who, after replacing Rajapaksa, had to seek help from the international community to tide over the currency crisis and stabilise the economy and the country. Dissanayake may have to soften his party’s populist pitch and explore a middle path to ensure that the economy doesn’t slide into chaos once again.

 
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