Brothers at odds, but ruling family still holds key to Sri Lanka's
future
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[June 08, 2022]
By Alasdair Pal and Devjyot Ghoshal
COLOMBO (Reuters) - It was the moment when
two brothers who had dominated Sri Lanka's politics for nearly 20 years
finally went their separate ways.
On May 9, when a crowd of ruling party supporters marched towards
activists protesting against a crippling economic crisis, President
Gotabaya Rajapaksa ordered police to stop the pro-government mob,
fearing violence.
"He was screaming at the police to disperse the crowd," said former
media minister Nalaka Godahewa, who said he was with the president at
the time.
Despite the president's order, the demonstrations against inflation,
power blackouts and shortages of essentials turned deadly. Nine people
were killed, hundreds were injured and the property of Rajapaksa
loyalists was attacked.
The violence marked a pivotal point in the crisis. Gotabaya's older
brother, Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa, had addressed the government
supporters earlier in the day. He was sitting down for lunch when he was
shown a video of the violence by an aide, according to a source with
direct knowledge of events at the prime minister's house in the
commercial capital Colombo.
"He knew what he would do next," said the source.
The 76-year-old, one of Sri Lanka's most popular politicians in his
heyday, finished his meal and had a nap, the source said. At 5.02 p.m.,
he announced his resignation as prime minister, making public a rift in
Sri Lanka's ruling dynasty.
The source, who spoke on condition of anonymity to avoid retribution,
said the president had already been pushing the prime minister to resign
since early April as a concession to protesters demanding the ouster of
both men because of their response to the economic crisis enveloping the
island.
"GR (had) told MR to go," said another source close to the family, who
also requested anonymity, referring to the president and the prime
minister by their initials.
Neither Mahinda Rajapaksa nor the president responded to requests for
comment for this story. They have not publicly said anything about their
differences.
After he quit, Mahinda went into hiding at a naval base and stayed under
protection of the armed forces for several days because of the wrath of
the protesters. Gotabaya, 72, continues as president, deeply unpopular
with many Sri Lankans, while political leaders discuss a move to clip
the executive powers of his office.
But the Rajapaksas are not done yet.
A third brother, Basil, wields considerable influence over the country
via his hold over the ruling party that dominates parliament, according
to at least five people who spoke to Reuters, including Godahewa and two
other former ministers.
EVIDENCE OF REFORMS
The new prime minister, Ranil Wickremesinghe, is heavily dependent in
parliament on the ruling Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) party to
pass an interim budget within weeks that will outline measures to mend
public finances. He has also proposed reforms to curb the president's
powers and strengthen parliament in response to demands from protesters.
The International Monetary Fund wants evidence of reforms before
agreeing to a bailout, for which negotiations are ongoing. Sri Lanka
also needs an agreement with bondholders and bilateral creditors to
restructure its debt, and regain access to global financial markets.
Wickremesinghe belongs to a party that controls just one seat in
parliament, while the SLPP and its coalition partners have a comfortable
majority in the 225-seat legislature.
All five sources said the ruling party remains loyal first and foremost
to Basil, 71, who helped rebuild it when the Rajapaksas surprisingly
lost power in a 2015 presidential election. One of the sources, who is
close to Basil, said the former finance minister would support the
president, his elder brother, but not at the cost of the party.
Events in Sri Lanka are being closely watched in neighbouring India,
South Asia's regional heavyweight, and China, which has invested
billions of dollars in infrastructure projects in the past decade as
part of its Belt and Road Initiative linking it to the rest of the
world.
Political scientist Jayadeva Uyangoda said Wickremesinghe faced a
balancing act to meet the demands of the protesters and Sri Lanka's
international creditors, while placating the ruling party with an agenda
that Basil would accept.
"What Basil Rajapaksa wants will be what parliament approves," Uyangoda
said.
Basil, who has not spoken publicly since he resigned in early April
along with the rest of the cabinet, did not respond to requests for
comment.
BROTHERS UNITED
Among the nine Rajapaksa siblings, Mahinda, Gotabaya and Basil were once
a tight-knit political unit.
Mahinda, a lawyer by training, became Sri Lanka's youngest ever
legislator when he entered parliament in 1970. By 2004, using a
combination of political charisma and guile, he rose to become prime
minister. The next year, he was voted president.
The brothers' popularity soared after Mahinda and Gotabaya, a retired
infantry officer who was appointed defence secretary, crushed a
decades-long Tamil insurgency in the north and east of the country in a
brutal government offensive in 2009.
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Sri Lanka's former prime minister Mahinda Rajapaksa (L) and his
brother, President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, are seen in this picture
taken in Colombo, Sri Lanka, August 9, 2020. REUTERS/Dinuka
Liyanawatte
Mahinda won a landslide re-election in 2010,
promising to heal the country's deep divisions. He also drew Sri
Lanka closer to China, inviting heavy investment like the $1.4
billion Hambantota port that irked India, which feared losing
influence over its southern neighbour.
Then, in 2015, a shock defeat for Mahinda in presidential elections
threw the Rajapaksas into disarray.
Basil, a U.S.-Sri Lankan dual citizen who served as a
long-time adviser to Mahinda while he was president, was
instrumental in reshaping a minor political party into the SLPP in
2016, making it the dominant player in Sri Lankan politics.
In 2019, coordinated suicide bombings by Islamist militants that
killed more than 250 people presented the Rajapaksas with an opening
to return to power.
With Basil unwilling to renounce his U.S. citizenship and Mahinda
barred from standing due to term limits, Gotabaya ran for the
presidency and won by a landslide.
Mahinda was named prime minister soon after and Basil became finance
minister in 2021, but things had started unravelling.
DEBATABLE POLICIES, THEN PANDEMIC
The start of Sri Lanka's slide into economic chaos can be traced to
2019, when the Rajapaksas implemented populist tax cuts shortly
after returning to power, shrugging off criticism from some
advisers.
Godahewa, the former minister, said he advised Gotabaya that the
cuts would be a "disaster" because of the already precarious state
of public finances, but was overruled.
Government officials have previously said that the tax cuts were
aimed at resuscitating the economy by putting more money in the
hands of people.
Then the COVID-19 pandemic hit, decimating tourism and with it a
critical source of foreign exchange. Foreign workers' remittances
also dropped.
A manifesto pledge to turn to organic farming and phase out the use
of chemical fertilisers over the next decade was implemented
abruptly in May 2021 by the president, throwing the country's
farming sector into turmoil and leading to food shortages as crop
yields fell.
By then, relations between Mahinda and Gotabaya had deteriorated,
according to four of the sources.
The two brothers differed over the president's fertiliser ban, but a
move by the prime minister in 2021 to reverse the decision was
blocked by Gotabaya's staff, according to the source at the prime
minister's residence.
No such differences between the two have previously been reported.
SPENDING BORROWED CASH
Even when the country's massive debt problems became apparent, the
Rajapaksas dragged their feet about going to the IMF to seek
financial aid. A government official said early this year that
Basil, then finance minister, wanted the local economy to shake off
the effects of the pandemic before going to the IMF.
Shortly after being appointed energy minister in August 2020, former
Rajapaksa coalition partner Udaya Gammanpila began poring over the
accounts of Ceylon Petroleum Corporation (CPC), the country's
biggest public corporation in terms of turnover, and said he was
appalled by what he saw.
CPC was selling petroleum products at a huge discount to consumers,
and had run up a bill of some $4 billion with suppliers, despite not
having adequate income to repay them.
In October 2020, he said he warned a cabinet meeting the country was
heading towards a foreign currency crisis and suggested restricting
non-essential imports and an immediate free-float of the rupee to
avoid a currency black market.
Gammanpila told Reuters he also urged the Rajapaksas to seek the
support of the IMF as early as possible. His suggestions were
rebuffed, he said.
"We can manage the situation," Gammanpila quoted Mahinda as saying.
Gotabaya rarely asserted himself during cabinet meetings, according
to Gammanpila and Godahewa.
Last month, the government said its foreign reserves had dwindled to
almost zero.
But Gammanpila said his chief opponent was Basil.
The two men clashed frequently, with arguments descending into
shouting during at least five cabinet meetings, according to
Gammanpila.
His description of arguments over economic policy was corroborated
by the source close to the family, who said Basil felt he knew what
he was doing and shouted down objections.
"Other countries spent what they earned," Gammanpila said. "We spent
what we borrowed. That was the difference."
(Additional reporting by Uditha Jayasinghe; Editing by Mike Collett-White
and Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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