- This is an economic crisis brought on by mal-governance. Therefore, governance reform and economic reform must go hand in hand. They must be based on a shared set of values
- The long term sustainable path out of the crises depends on human development and that should be central to any recovery plan and reform exercise
- Sri Lanka’s ethnic, geographical, gender, religious, and economic diversity must be taken into account in any recovery programme. A “one size fits all” approach will not suit
- Except for clear and justifiable reasons, decision making in the realm of governance and policy making (including economic policy) must be transparent and consultative
- The appointment of experts (domestic and international) must be a transparent and reasoned process. Expertise must be justified by any public authority. “Expertise” cannot be a smokescreen for loyalty to a political party or friendship and should not be to serve as a mere rubber stamp
- Democratic space, constitutional order, and the rule of law must be maintained throughout the transition and beyond
- Appointing a credible team of economic and legal advisors to negotiate with lenders and empowering them to negotiate on debt restructuring with lenders and with the IMF. Any such negotiations must be on the basis of agreed upon principles and should reflect a people-centered recovery plan to be developed and endorsed by the Parliament
- Putting in place an independent communication mechanism and sharing the economy related developments transparently with the public – a dedicated media and communication unit that is based out of the Central Bank and the Finance Ministry that is independent of the propaganda machinery of the Government
- A mechanism for listening and consultation – where different viewpoints could be articulated, particularly of those who will be disproportionately affected by the decisions – which should inform policy formulation and revisions based on the real life impact throughout the recovery period
- An agreement on the key parameters of a preliminary economic recovery plan between the political actors, taking into consideration the inevitability of some hard decisions and the requirement for strong safeguards to protect vulnerable groups
- More specific economic mechanisms to be covered in a different note dedicated to economic processes
- Any political arrangement that has the incumbent Executive President and Prime Minister at the helm in the current manner cannot be part of the solution – that goes against the basis of the ongoing peoples’ struggle and will not pass muster in the current context. Resolving the impasse between the Government that is, for the most part, responsible for the current devastation, and the voices on the streets of the suffering masses require this step
- Any political arrangement should be established within the current Constitutional parameters – going outside the Constitution, even in the current context of overwhelming public displeasure, is a bad and dangerous precedent. While we have great disillusionment with the political class expressed in the streets and against the agglomeration of power in one position and one family, it certainly does not lend itself to be interpreted as a revolutionary moment to jettison the prevailing Constitutional order in toto. The consequences of such a course of action would not be good. While the people have created the space for radical re-imagination, an orderly pathway towards any change should run through the Constitutional order
- Any transition arrangement should have a clear end point to seek the peoples’ mandate at the earliest possible time (eg. an election no later than in one year’s time, etc). While one may imbue the protests with different meanings, legitimacy for any formation in a democracy cannot be established without elections. Elections, Parliamentary and Provincial, should not be delayed any longer than necessary
- Any technical experts should be appointed as advisors that the political decision makers should consult with, rather than be brought into the Cabinet and the Government. Under exceptional circumstances, two or three may be brought in through the National List, after first being appointed as MPs. While technical expertise could be sourced by political decision makers, political leadership and responsibility cannot be delegated to technical experts in a democracy, particularly not in a situation where the economic recovery journey that we are embarking on will require the decision makers to make some hard calls of a political nature right through the process. These do not have ready-made technical solutions and solutions to many of these are necessarily a political bargain between competing and at times, inter temporal interests. Weighing up the trade-offs is an inherently political process given how the forces are aligned
- The first step should be the resignation of the President and the stepping down of the Premier. Sri Lanka is experiencing an unprecedented peoples’ movement. The message of this movement is clear – the President, the Prime Minister, and the Rajapaksa family should step away. This is a public message that no one can ignore. This is the preferred course of action in response to the calls for #GotaGoHome and to have a fresh start to shore up internal and international confidence. The Prime Minister’s legitimacy is dependent on the majority in Parliament. In a way, the legitimacy of the President too is currently tied to maintaining the majority in Parliament. As the streets hold strong on #GoHomeGota, testing the majority through no confidence motions will be the way to go if the incumbents are reluctant to leave on their own accord. The longer they stay, the greater the opposition is bound to grow. Hence, the critical constituencies internally – key players in the Government, the Ruling Party, senior civil servants, the civil society, business leaders, etc. – should rally around with the protesters and make their views known. The international pressure – currently muted and limited to statements on allowing peaceful protests and democratic space – is also bound to play a part in this regard. If the President resigns, the Parliament should elect a suitable candidate among its Members for the position
- Take immediate measures to abolish the Executive Presidency. The issue of a referendum may arise. While that is a matter for the Supreme Court to decide, this reform is central to any transition plan. It should also be noted that a referendum, if required, can and should be carried out. The people will, no doubt, welcome the opportunity to participate in this effort at reform. Abolishing the Executive Presidency can no longer be postponed. In the past, Sri Lanka’s elected representatives, having promised to do so, have gone back on this reform on several occasions. They have obtained the peoples’ mandate for this reform but failed to implement it. The people are suffering due to this failure and Sri Lanka is unable to move forward with urgently required reforms due to this office. This is not a reform measure that can be postponed any longer, and therefore, the minimum condition should be to set in motion an irreversible process for the abolition of the Presidency
- Immediately roll back the 20th Amendment to the Constitution and bring back a modified 19th Amendment to the Constitution by way of a 21st Amendment to the Constitution. In the short run, this step should be far reaching enough to make the Executive President subordinate as much as legally possible, in practice, to Parliament. And this should be done simultaneously with measures to abolish the Presidency, which conceivably could take longer
- The next step will be to appoint an interim or caretaker or unity government. While it could take any of the mentioned forms depending on the agreement between the parties in Parliament, it should preferably take office after passing a no-confidence motion against the current Government or on the voluntary resignation of the current Prime Minister
- Working on necessary legislation for campaign finance, asset declaration, women and youth quota in nominations, etc, that improves electoral systems
- Working on necessary legislation on proceeds of crimes, stolen asset recovery, etc., and strengthening anti corruption investigative and prosecution mechanisms to hold perpetrators accountable
- Working on the repeal of the Prevention of Terrorism (Temporary Provisions) Act
- Working on Constitutional reform, independent commissions, and the reform of the Attorney General’s Department
- Working on a special oversight and accountability mechanism on the investigation of large scale corruption and the abuse of power
- Working on a narrow set of legislation that provides limits to State power and confers more power to the people and increases the accountability of the Government (more laws like the Human Rights Commission, the Right To Information, and the Right to Privacy)