By
Vishnuguptha
“Life is a grindstone. Whether it grinds us down or polishes us up depends on us.”– ~Thomas L. Holdcroft
Gamini Dissanayake, one of the patriarchs of Sri Lanka’s modern day politics was a victim of a brutal attack by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Ealam (LTTE).
pic via: facebook.com/mayantha.dissanayake
On October 24, 1994, while he was bidding adieu to a sizeable gathering after a lengthy speech at a Presidential Elections meeting at Thotalanga, a heartbeat away from the city center of Colombo, an LTTE suicide bomber triggered off her explosion device and fifty four (54) people lay scattered, very dead.
Amongst the departed were, the Presidential Candidate of the United National Party, Gamini Dissanayake himself, the firebrand speaker and Kurunegala district MP, G.M. Premachandra, Colombo District MP Weerasinghe Mallimarachchi, Dr. Gamini Wijesekera, the UNP General Secretary, Christie Perera, the UNP Organizer for Colombo North and his daughter. The massacre at Thotalanga left the UNP virtually leaderless- it continues that way to date- taking away one of the most fearless and adored leaders that Sri Lanka produced in recent times. J N Dixit, the controversial one-time Indian High Commissioner in Sri Lanka described Gamini Dissanayake, in his famous book ‘Assignment Colombo’, as a “nation-builder” hinting that he, Dixit, had more perceptive clout about Sri Lanka’s political leaders than most of the local pundits.
Well, that was then, almost twenty years ago. Now in 2013, in the early morning hours of Friday, August 23rd while Gamini Dissanayake’s younger son Mayantha Dissanayake who is a contestant on the UNP ticket in the Maha Nuwara district was on his way to Kandy, just past the sleeping Mawanella town, it was noticed by Mayantha’s chauffeur that a black colored ‘Defender’ vehicle was following their KIA jeep in a most provocative way and trying to overtake them a couple times.
The ‘Defender’-driver was noticed to be not only aggressive but at times appeared to be reckless and belligerent. According to those who were in candidate Dissanayake’s’ vehicle, Mayantha had asked the driver to drive faster in order for them to reach the next closest Police Station which was Kadugannawa. But it was not to be. As soon as it overtook Mayantha’s vehicle, the ‘Defender’ cut across and maneuvered it in such a manner so as to intimidate the KIA jeep and causing it to hit a tree on the side of the main Colombo-Kandy road. If this was not an attempt to cause grievous harm and injury, if not sure death to the passengers of the KIA vehicle, the police would have to find some other employment where reasonable inferences are not accepted as reasonable and fair.
But the question is who did this and why they did what they did. Mayantha is Gamini Dissanayake’s second son who contested the General Elections in 2010 and failed to get into Parliament by a very narrow margin. On the night of that election when the votes were counted, UNP had secured five (5) MPs, but the idiotic General Secretary of the UNP prevailed upon the Elections Commissioner to hold a mini-election for the Nawalapitiya electorate on account of some irregularities recorded there during the Election Day.
When the mini-re-election was over, the UNP was totally swept away in the Maha Nuwara district and the number of MPs allotted to the UNP came down from five to four and Mayantha was the fifth man out- thanks to the foolish electioneering tactics adopted by the General Secretary of the Party. If the General Secretary had an iota of intelligence, he would have realized that once the elections were lost in such a landslide manner as was evident at that time, at the hands of the most formidable political team the United People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA) fielded in the country in the 2010 General Elections, the UNP would stand no chance whatsoever in a re-election scheduled just weeks after that debacle
Whether this tactic was adopted by the UNP General Secretary as he was intent upon keeping another Dissanayake out of Parliament or not, I do not wish to speculate now. This same General Secretary promised Mayantha Dissanayake at the time of his crossover from the Government circles to the UNP – there is more than one witness to this conversation that took place in Ratmalana- that he would be made a Working Committee member soon after the Presidential Elections at which the UNP supported the candidature of none other than General Sarath Fonseka. The General Secretary also promised Mayantha the electorate organizer-ship of the Patha Dumbara electorate which had 78,688 registered votes then but went back on his word and awarded the Udu Dumbara which had only 55,629 registered votes. And the General Secretary and his leader went the extra nine yards to ensure Mayantha would fail to get into Parliament at the following General Elections.
Thus to compound matters, at the instigation of the General Secretary whose original electorate from which he got elected to parliament in 1989 was Udu Dumbara, a Pradesheeya Sabha member who happened to be a relation of the General Secretary from his maternal side, worked full time to dissuade the UNP voters from casting a preferential vote for Mayantha Dissanayake, particularly among his caste members. This is all history but true to the last letter.
One sees an unmistakable pattern on the part of those who hold decision-making positions to prevent Gamini Dissanayake’s second son from entering any elected body in the country. But there is no ostensible reason for the UNP to engage in such daredevil motor maneuvering on a main highway in the country. If one eliminates the UNP and its cohorts from the equation, who else has the motive, means and opportunity to derail Mayantha Dissanayake’s journey to political power?
One would be invariably drawn into the anxieties and anguish that Mrs. Srima Dissanayake, Gamini’s wife, is experiencing right at this moment. She would pray and wish that what happened to her beloved husband would not befall, leave alone her second son, any other politician in this country under any circumstances. There are no words that could pacify or comfort the agony that Srima is going through now. Srima Dissanayake, in her own way, is a very brave lady. After the brutal assassination of her husband and at the request of the Party stalwarts and its grassroots supporters, she stood in her husband’s place for the Presidential Elections in 1994 and still managed to secure more votes than the UNP secured under the present leader in 2010. Here are the statistics:
1994
UNP
2,715,285
PA
4,709,205
2010
UNP
2,357,057
UPFA
4,846,388
Added to this is the increase in the voting population in 2010 from the earlier 10,945,000 to 14,088,000; almost a whopping thirty percent (30%) increase.
Nevertheless, Mayantha Dissanayake and the Maha Nuwara district would respond to this near-debacle with the resilience and courage that is equal to Gamini Dissanayake’s. Politics is a journey; it is not a station and if one treats politics as a station at which perks of rest and recreation are to be gained and spent, then one would lose at the end. If the politician treats politics as a continuous journey, he would not only enjoy the peaks and valleys of the ride with its usual stones and cacti but he would also surely enjoy the fruits of his long run and he would be well-equipped to pass on to the next generation a handful of experiences and anecdotes only the rare-few is privileged to live through and savor.
I am sure Mayantha Dissanayake will continue his late father’s unfinished journey to a finish, a finish worthy of dignity and honor.



