Of late, however, there is something odd going on in this island of ours. `We don`t want it, but we want it.` `We don`t need your preaching, but give us the moolah,` we have been telling the West. Ditto with the IMF: `No conditions please we are
Sri Lanka, so just dole out the 2.5 billion.` To the US: `Put your house in order before lecturing us.` And then we go and ask these very people for favours. How intelligent is that?
Just a couple of weeks ago we had a chorus led by the likes of
Central Bank Governor Nivard Cabraal stating to anyone willing to lend an ear that Sri Lanka can do jolly well without the EU`s GSP+ concession, which in any event was to be a temporary measure, granted following the 2004 tsunami. We can do without it.
However, this stance was reversed the very next week when another batch from our world record cabinet of ministers started crying that without GSP+ poor Sri Lanka will be kaput.
Intriguingly enough, the high and mighty in government have kept their distance from this slandering cum pleading match, preferring to play goody goody as and when the requirement arose. However, that ended on the last campaign date in the south when the Chief Executive himself went on record to say that the cost/benefit of GSP+ was the equivalent of the Hambantota Port, so if the country can build the port it can also build alternatives to GSP+.
Last week, the main alliance partner of the government, the
JHU, began a signature campaign against the US. One wonders how many of the signatories realise the fact that over one-third of our apparel exports are shipped to that very country. The loss of that market share apparently does not figure in the political equation. What benefit does this stance bring to the country? If the US wanted financial aid from Sri Lanka, then the strategy would be spot on.
It is time the `give it if you want, be damned if you don`t` strategy is seriously evaluated by the warriors in government purely on its financial merits. The strategy is fine if the audience is the Southern Province of Sri Lanka. Unfortunately, it isn`t so. The average man from the EU or US doesn`t differentiate between the information intended for Hambantota, in the deep south of Sri Lanka, and Washington D.C. in the US. Everything that happens in the world is reported in real time. The world is wired, and what you want to know is right there waiting to be read on some electronic device. If what you want to know is whether criteria has been fulfilled for GSP + well, go on and click. Which is what the West is busy doing.
Though the strategy of staggered provincial polls has produced the desired results for the government, the years-long campaign has been nothing short of a nightmare on the public relations front. Details of campaign-talk are being reported and accessed from all over the world. It seems our politicians are yet to come to terms with the wired world they live in, even though the most hi-tech communication devices are an essential part of their get-up.
Although targeted to the local audience, the government`s West-bashing has effectively antagonized the West unlike ever before, without the government even realising it. Politicians in Sri Lanka seem to think that the whole world operates on their terms. It is not so. For the rest of the world, a friend is a friend and a foe is a foe. The foe by day/friend by night policy of our politicians is not the way of the world.
Meanwhile, the chorus will go on: `No sir, no sir, but give us three bags full.`