LETTER FROM SOUTH ASIA
The Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna Split
Jayadeva Uyangoda
the charismatic young leader of the Sinhalese nationalists. While being a leading office holder of a party which still calls itself leftist – the English media in Colombo con tinue to call the JVP “reds” and “Marxists” though these labels are quite dubious – Weerawansa in fact
The radical, Sinhalese nationalist Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna has split, the real reasons for which are not yet clear. Among the various possible reasons are the mainstream JVP’s unease with a breakaway faction’s Sinhalese-Buddhist nationalist project and the collision of the Sinhalese nationalist and class struggle lines within the party. It is also a dispute about coalition strategies that has spilled on to the domain of personal relations. For now, the Rajapakse administration is the beneficiary.
Jayadeva Uyangoda (uyangoda@gmail.com) teaches political science at the University of Colombo, Sri Lanka.
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In Sri Lanka, giant monoliths have shown that they are also quite vulnerable, with tendencies to crack under pressure. The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) split in early 2004. The JVP splits in early 2008. The 2004 split cost the LTTE its military command in the eastern province and eventually the control of the entire province. The leader of the LTTE’s breakaway faction was Karuna Amman, LTTE’s military commander in the eastern province and one of the most ruthless and skilful military commanders the LTTE had produced. The JVP’s breakaway faction is led by the party’s propaganda secretary, a brilliant public speaker and founded and led a Sinhalese-Buddhist nationalist movement called the Patriotic National Movement (PNM). Thus this split seems to reflect the main stream JVP’s unease with Weerawansa’s Sinhalese-Buddhist nationalist project.
Although the two factions have openly traded many accusations and counteraccusations during the past two-to-three weeks, the real reasons for the split are not yet clear. It seems that there is a deep sense of bitterness built up over the years between the two groups, and reconciliation between them appears unlikely. The dissidents are even subjected to physical violence. The basic dispute that has generated so much inter-personal bitterness appears to be about the policy towards the present administration of president Mahinda Rajapakse. While the mainstream JVP tried to maintain a critical distance from the Rajapakse regime, Weerawansa and some of his parliamentary colleagues had argued for working closely with the regime. In that sense, it is a dispute about coalition strategies that has spilled onto the domain of personal relations.
Significant Political Body
The JVP is one of the most remarkable political entities to have emerged in Sri Lanka. It has a history of nearly 40 years. An offshoot of the Maoist Communist Party (MCP) of Ceylon, led by N Shanmugathasan, the JVP first emerged as an underground radical movement. That was in 1967-68. Its founder leader, Rohana Wijeweera, began his political career as a youth activist in the MCP in 1965. A dropout medical student from the Patrice Lumumba University of Moscow, Wijeweera was among the many young leftists in Asia, Africa and Latin America at the time to take the revolution seriously as well as a serious political practice. Disillusioned with what was called at the time
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the “reformist”, “revisionist” and “class collaborationist” politics of the “old” left – today these terms sound quite strange and archaic – Wijeweera launched his own revolutionary project. Calling his effort “a creative application of the universal truths of Marxism-Leninism to the specific conditions of the semi-colonial, semicapitalist Ceylon”, Wijeweera worked among the youth and the rural peasants in Sri Lanka’s Sinhalese society. The radicalised and educated youth were attracted to this underground movement. That was the time when the romance of armed struggle and revolution, from Algeria to Zanzibar, Bolivia and Cuba, North Korea and Vietnam, had swept south Asia as well. During this time, the Naxalite movement was also beginning to take shape in eastern India.
The defining feature of the JVP as a radi cal movement has been its serious and uncompromising commitment to capturing state power. The JVP made two attempts to fulfil that objective, first in April 1971 and then in 1987-89. Both ended not just in failure, but in the annihilation of large numbers of its leaders, members, sympathisers and even their family members. The 1971 attempt was a brief affair, spread over a few weeks. Many of the movement’s leaders, including Wijeweera, survived death and prison sentences to re-launch the movement in the early 1980s.
The second JVP “insurgency” of 198789 developed in a new political context. The civil war between the Sri Lankan state and the Tamil secessionist groups had erupted after the anti-Tamil riots of 1983. The Jayewardene regime proscribed the JVP in July 1983, alleging falsely though that the “left” parties were behind the anti-Tamil riots. The JVP, which had been engaged in parliamentary and electoral politics for a few years, went underground again. The Indian involvement in Sri Lanka’s ethnic conflict, particularly through the Indo-Lanka Accord of July 1987, gave a new opportunity for the JVP to re-emerge. And re-emerge the JVP did with a bang. The day Rajiv Gandhi and Junius Jayewardene signed the Accord, on July 27, 1987, there were organised riots in Colombo. Rajiv Gandhi himself escaped possible death at the ceremonial guard of honour when a naval rating attempted to hit Gandhi’s head with the butt of his rifle. Those were the unmistakable signs of the second coming of the JVP’s “revolution”.
A Bloody Crusade
India’s political and military intervention in Sri Lanka in the mid-1980s seems to have redefined the JVP’s political agenda. To capitalise the public anger generated by what many Sri Lankans thought at the time as the high-handed behaviour of the Indian government as well as the fears generated by the huge Indian military presence in the north-east of the island, the JVP launched a “patriotic war” against the “Indian imperialist state” and its “local agents”, the Jayewardene regime. That turned out to be a bloody campaign of violence, directed against the United National Party (UNP) regime, the armed forces and the police and even the left parties who supported the Indo-Lanka Accord and the devolution of power to the Tamils.
Nearly three years of intense violence forced the Sri Lankan government to send the Indian Peace Keeping Force (IPKF) back

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LETTER FROM SOUTH ASIA
home, forge a new alliance with the LTTE and then launch in early March-April 1989 the bloodiest counter-insurgency war Sri Lanka has experienced in such a short time span. It may have killed nearly 30,000 JVP members just in a period of six months. It also resulted in rounding up and coldblooded killing of the entire top JVP leadership, including Wijeweera, with the exception of one politburo member. The man who was lucky to escape from Sri Lanka and save his life was Somawansa Amerasinghe, the JVP’s present leader. Legend has it that he hired a fishing boat off the coast of Negombo and escaped to the Kerala coast to later proceed to Italy. Eventually, he led a life of a political exile in England, until returning to Sri Lanka in 2001 to take up the new and powerful JVP’s leadership.
The remarkable thing about the JVP is that even after the annihilation it suffered at the hands of the state in 1988-89, the movement re-emerged in the early 1990s as a parliamentary party. Amerasinghe and his colleagues, who were exiled in Europe and Japan, kept the red flag flying till a new generation of leaders emerged from among the survivors of the terror of 1988-89. Wimal Weerawansa, the leader of the new dissident group, is one among them. Most of the JVP’s present top leaders are survivors of 1988-89. They also successfully steered the JVP away from the armed struggle and towards parliamentary and electoral politics.
The golden moment of the new JVP began in 2000 when president Chandrika Kumaratunga sought its support to form a parliamentary majority. Interestingly, the JVP did not accept cabinet positions, but supported the Kumaratunga regime from outside, calling the regime a “probationary government”. Then the JVP entered a formal coalition with Kumaratunga’s People’s Alliance (PA) in 2004 to win 39 parliamentary seats and be in a position to dictate terms to the government. Amerasinghe, the exiled leader, had returned in 2000. Quite interestingly, it was the PA-JVP coalition, with its powerful appeal to the Sinhalese nationalist fears and anxieties that largely succeeded in politically undermining the UNP-LTTE peace attempt of 2002-03. Out of power, and therefore in a self-critical mode, ex-president Kumaratunga now admits that she made two fatal mistakes by aligning with the JVP and then pushing out of power the Ranil Wickramasinghe administration, on the JVP’s behest. That was in October-December 2003.
A General Crisis
The JVP’s break-up is probably the manifestation of a general crisis among political parties and movements in Sri Lanka. Interestingly, the JVP has remained the only entity that did not suffer a major internal crisis in recent years. All the others
– the Sri Lanka Freedom Party, the UNP, the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress, the Ceylon Workers’ Congress, the LTTE, the People’s Liberation Organisation of Tamil Eelam, and the Eelam People’s Revolutionary Liberation Front – have suffered splits, leading to the decline of party fortunes, realignment of party loyalties, shifts in the party leadership and even reconfiguration of politico-military balance in the country. The JVP’s split seems to be of considerable political consequences too.
The split also indicates the crisis which the JVP encountered by trying to maintain two faces – Sinhalese nationalism and class politics. The JVP always had these two faces, but it was its radicalism and the politics of class struggle that gave it a niche in the political process. The JVP’s shift to nationalism as a means to state power occurred in the 1980s in the context of the Tamil secessionist insurgency and the Indian intervention in the ethnic conflict. In its post-1989 regeneration, the new leadership has given the nationalist agenda greater emphasis. This mixture of Sinhalese nationalism and radicalism paid the JVP dividends for some time, enabling it to emerge as the third largest party in Sri Lanka’s Parliament in 2004. In the 1994 Parliament, the JVP had only one MP who used to wear a red shirt over white trousers. Subsequently, all the JVP MPs began to wear the politician’s uniform in Sri Lanka, white or black trousers and white, long-sleeved shirts. That is how the Parliament had domesticated the yesterday’s rebels as respectable, “national” and professional politicians.
It appears that the present split is an outcome of the collision of Sinhalese nationalist and class struggle lines within the JVP. The nationalists wanted the party to extend uncritical support to Mahinda Rajapakse’s war against the LTTE and be silent on economic and other issues. But the class politics line, based on trade union constituencies, had a different agenda, to confront the regime on economic and social issues. In the short run the Rajapakse administration is the immediate beneficiary of the JVP’s split. The JVP cannot now mobilise trade unions on the street to protest against the spiralling inflation, rising cost of living, impending food crisis and the transfer of the economic burden of the war on to the poor and the middle classes.

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