Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Part I Kingdom and Colony: The Mythology of Race (Pre-history to 1948)
- Part II Dominion to Republic: The Politics of Language (1948–1977)
- Part III The New Monarch: Jayewardene in Control (1977–1983)
- Part IV The New Dominion: India in the Driving Seat (1983–1987)
- Part V Changing the Guard: Premadasa's Emergence (1987–1989)
- Chapter 9 The Accord in Action
- Chapter 10 The Façade Cracks
- Chapter 11 The Last Hurrah
- Part VI Using the Executive Presidency: Premadasa in Action (1989–1993)
- Part VII Using the Spoon: Wijetunge as President (1993–1994)
- Part VIII The Procrastination of a Princess: Kumaratunga in charge (1994–2001)
- Part IX The Baby without the Bathwater: Wickremesinghe as Prime Minister (2001–2004)
- Part X Guarding the Change: Rajapakse's Emergence (2004–2006)
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Chapter 10 - The Façade Cracks
from Part V - Changing the Guard: Premadasa's Emergence (1987–1989)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Part I Kingdom and Colony: The Mythology of Race (Pre-history to 1948)
- Part II Dominion to Republic: The Politics of Language (1948–1977)
- Part III The New Monarch: Jayewardene in Control (1977–1983)
- Part IV The New Dominion: India in the Driving Seat (1983–1987)
- Part V Changing the Guard: Premadasa's Emergence (1987–1989)
- Chapter 9 The Accord in Action
- Chapter 10 The Façade Cracks
- Chapter 11 The Last Hurrah
- Part VI Using the Executive Presidency: Premadasa in Action (1989–1993)
- Part VII Using the Spoon: Wijetunge as President (1993–1994)
- Part VIII The Procrastination of a Princess: Kumaratunga in charge (1994–2001)
- Part IX The Baby without the Bathwater: Wickremesinghe as Prime Minister (2001–2004)
- Part X Guarding the Change: Rajapakse's Emergence (2004–2006)
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Summary
The assassination of Vijaya Kumaranatunga
In this context of increasing violence, on 16 February 1988 Vijaya Kumaranatunga was assassinated. The JVP, functioning through the DJV, was widely believed responsible. Kumaranatunga was the lynchpin of the alliance between his own SLMP and the old left. They had welcomed the Indo-Lankan Accord and had just the week before been recognized by the Elections Commissioner under the title of the United Socialist Alliance (to be known, ironically, as the USA). The new party had made clear its intention of putting forward candidates for the elections to Provincial Councils that were now thought to be imminent.
Such a stance was bound to weaken the position opposition parties had jointly adopted earlier, of agitating for a general election as a prerequisite for the restoration of normalcy. But the USA could not refrain from contesting the Provincial Council elections since they had welcomed the Accord as a just solution that could, through substantial devolution, satisfy the grievances of Tamils.
Had the USA meant only the parties of the old left it would not have been so significant as they had little public support. The charismatic matinee idol Kumaranatunga however, married to Chandrika Bandaranaike who was held to embody the radical tradition of that family, would clearly provide a source of electoral strength. The following week the USA was due to sign a joint programme which might have been seen as filling the gap caused by the drift of the SLFP to the right.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Declining Sri LankaTerrorism and Ethnic Conlict, the Legacy of J. R. Jayewardene, pp. 131 - 140Publisher: Foundation BooksPrint publication year: 2007