Tamil businessman floats ‘Sri Lanka BJP’ aimed at socio-economic development of all Lankans
By P.K. Balachandran
COLOMBO – A Colombo-based Tamil hotelier of Indian Origin, Velusamy Muthuswamy, has announced the formation of a political party called Ilankai Bharatiya Janatha Katchi (IBJK) to further socio-economic development of all Sri Lankans, especially the Tamils in the plantation areas and the war-torn Northern and Eastern Provinces.
Muthuswamy, who made the announcement in Jaffna in Northern Sri Lanka on Saturday (6), said the party will promote education, multiple language skills, sports and entrepreneurship.
He told the Jaffna media radio journalist M. Indrajith will be the party General Secretary and V. Dilan, a businessman, will be the Treasurer. The party would be known in English as Sri Lanka Bharathiya Janatha Party (SLBJP) and in Sinhala as Sri Lanka Bharathiya Janatha Paksaya (SLBJP).
Releasing the party’s manifesto Muthuswamy said the IBJP will be a trans-ethnic and trans-religious party, would be open to all ethnic and religious groups and work for the welfare of the downtrodden in all communities.
Muthuswamy told this correspondent that the IBJK will not take a confrontational path to achieve its aims but will seek the help of the Sri Lankan government and foreign governments to fulfil it aims.
“Confrontation with the government has not yielded results in Sri Lanka. Cooperation is the only way forward. This was acknowledged even by R. Chanakayan, an MP belonging to the Tamil National Alliance, in a recent interview,” he pointed out.
The IBJP’s aim will be to uplift educational standards among Indian Origin Tamils and the Tamils in the war-affected Northern and Eastern Provinces, he said.
“Educational standards are poor among the Indian Origin Tamils in the plantation areas and have fallen steeply in Jaffna. The Ilankai Bharatiya Janata Party hopes to seek and provide facilities to teach English and also Sinhala as these two languages are essential to get employment. I will also get businessmen to teach entrepreneurship.”
He pointed out that the Tamils are nowhere in Sri Lankan sports. “This is because there are no facilities for sports development in the areas they live in or the schools they go to. I consider sports a necessary appendage of education,” he said.
It is his family background which has made him focus on education. “I am 73. Three generations ago my family was in the plantations as workers. But I broke away from servitude by setting up a hotel (eatery) and a bar and followed these up with a travel agency. I utilized my earnings to educate my nine children, four of whom are now doctors. At the request of my educated children I closed the bar and kept the hotel. I opened a ticketing agency, which has world-wide connections. I want other Tamils to follow my example,” the entrepreneur said.
Asked why form a political party to achieve non-political aims like education and sports, Muthuswamy said governments and foreign missions will open their doors to his organization more readily if it is a political party with political potential.
He denied that the IBJK has anything to do with the Indian BJP. “There is no link with India’s BJP so far. But I admire Mr. Modi. His schemes are progressive and he is achieving results.”
Some months back, the Chief Organizer of the ruling Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP), Basil Rajapaksa, had told the media that he would like to organize the SLPP on the lines of the BJP in India and the Communist Party of China, apparently to instil discipline and ideological consistency in the cadres of the SLPP to ensure political success. However, the SLPP has not established any link with either the BJP or the CPC.
Later, the Tripura Chief Minister Biplab Kumar Deb raised the hackles in Sri Lanka (and Nepal too) by saying that India’s Home Minister and BJP honcho Amit Shah had told him that the BJP would one day rule Sri Lanka and Nepal.
While Nepal formally protested, the Sri Lankan government did not react officially but it let it be known unofficially that there is no provision in Sri Lankan election law to register foreign political parties.
Subsequently, Tripura Chief Minister Deb put the lid on the controversy by saying that Amit Shah had made the remark only jokingly.
-ENCL