20 Jul 2012 - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}
The advent of elections to the Eastern Provincial Council has caused the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress (SLMC) to come under media spotlight during the past week. There was much interest and speculation over the course of action to be adopted (or not adopted) by the premier political party of the Sri Lankan Muslim people.
It was however the Muslim Congress that was of pivotal importance in the UNP led front. The SLMC played for high stakes in the provincial poker game and raised the ante considerably high by fielding its top trio at the hustings. Muslim Congress leader Rauf Hakeem, Secretary MT Hasen Ali and chairman Basheer Segu Dawood resigned their parliamentary seats and threw their hats into the provincial poll ring.
It is against this backdrop that the Eastern provincial poll has to be viewed. Given their numerical strength and the fact that a Tamil was CM earlier, the Muslim community feels (and rightfully so) that the chief minister of the Eastern province has to be a Muslim this time. This feeling is shared to a very great extent by Muslims with different political leanings.For this the community must either form a majority or be the major, defining force in the Provincial council.
With the LTTE out of the picture and the North –East merger defunct the major irritants of the Muslim people vis a vis the Tamils are removed.The Eastern Muslims have also made vast strides in the fields of Education and socio-economic development which in turn has contributed greatly to the betterment of the community.Moreover both the Muslims and Tamils of the East have common problems relating to language, lands and religious intolerance. Thus there has been a slow and steady improvement in Tamil –Muslim relations in the East.
In spite of this, the community does not perceive itself as being “Tamil” but “Muslim”. The Muslim self-perception is based on ethno-religious and not ethno-linguistic lines. This socio-cultural reality has acquired sharp political dimensions in recent times.
The interesting feature this time was the depth of feelings among the Muslim congress membership and supporter base that the party was not being faithful to the policies of Ashraff by its alignment with the Government. In a situation where one would have expected the party to contest with or as part of the UPFA since SLMC leaders were holding ministerial and deputy ministerial portfolios, the opinion at grass root level was firmly against it.
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