Interview/ Nuwan S. Bopage, presidential candidate, Aragalaya movement
Lawyer-activist Nuwan Bopage was a pillar of support for those arrested during the 2022 Aragalaya protests. In an exclusive interview, Nuwan talks about his decision to contest the presidential election on behalf of the Aragalaya activists, his opposition to IMF policies and his views on ties with India. Edited excerpts:
Q/ Why did you decide to contest?
A/ This is the first election after the 2022 uprising when the country witnessed people’s power. In the past two years, certain reforms were introduced by the Ranil Wickremesinghe government which were detrimental to the general public. The intervention of the IMF, the activities of India and the US and the expansion of the new liberal policies are all a matter of concern. Those of us who participated in Aragalaya decided that we wanted a solution and I was nominated as presidential candidate.
Q/ What kind of changes do you think you can bring about?
A/ The economy is very unfair. Social disparity is high. A few segments of society control everything. The workers are affected. At the same time, companies have made money. We have to address the social disparity. In the prevailing representative democracy, people would not gain anything after voting. For the next five years, the elected members will act according to their whims and fancies. We are planning to convert the existing system into a participatory democracy where people are more involved in the decision-making process. When there is a political decision affecting farmers, they should be involved. Likewise, every sector of society should participate in policy decisions. Another issue is a national question. Tamil, Muslim and hill country Tamil people should be given the freedom to rule their own areas within one country.
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Q/ You have been against the IMF. What are your plans for economic stability?
A/ Our main slogan is the IMF’s exit. The IMF has got nothing to do with stabilising the economy. It is an institution that grants loans. The IMF has given Sri Lanka $1.5 billion and $2 billion more is coming. But the interest rate is 6.5 per cent. Our debt crisis is deep, we have a debt of $100 billion. The IMF is here only to impose conditions on the people, get maximum taxes and give space to multinational companies. The implementation of the new liberal policy is the IMF’s idea. We don’t want that. We know how to repay our loans, how to collect taxes, how to abolish the concessions to multinational companies and how to make government institutions profitable. We are going to stabilise the fiscal and exchange policies and stabilise the economy.
Q/ You say you are against Indian intervention in Sri Lanka.
A/ We are not anti-India. We are against the Adani and the Ambani groups being allowed to control the geopolitical situation in our country. You would have witnessed the recent Ambani family wedding. Sri Lanka’s debt crisis could have been resolved with that money. Now LNG and drug supplies to Sri Lanka are going to be an Indian monopoly. We have our own state pharmaceutical department. So, in the guise of the crisis, India is trying to exploit us. We are India’s friends. But we are against Modi’s economic concept of invading other countries. Adani and Ambani are the representatives of Modi’s foreign policy. We are against that.