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Fonseka Will Do Things Differently

Posted by admin on Nov 29th, 2009 and filed under Business. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback to this entry from your site

With military dictators in the region ending up as failures, General Sarath Fonseka, the Opposition’s common candidate to face President Mahinda Rajapaksa in the January 26 poll, however said that he would do things differently.

His was a reply to a question this reporter asked him on Tuesday, that military leaders from this part of the region made poor leaders of their countries.

Fonseka said that he believed that the private sector was the engine of growth in the economy. He however didn’t comment when asked what his thinking was in regard to state run utilities.

This took place at the annual conference of the Institute of Certified Professional Managers (C.P.M.) where Fonseka was the chief guest. The theme of the conference was the “can do” approach.

Speaking at the event, he said that if teachers and grama sevaka niladharis could be engaged in politics, there was nothing wrong in a soldier taking up to politics.

Giving an inkling in regard to the plans he has for the country, he said that centres of excellence covering health and education at the secondary and tertiary levels, including the building of student hostels islandwide were a need to tackle youth unrest.

Fonseka said that he was able to finish off the war in two years and nine months because he led from the front. The fact that he had also been attacked by a suicide bomber gave his men the added confidence on him.

Five thousand two hundred soldiers were killed and another 23,000 injured in this war.
Describing the intensity of the fighting, he said it was like fighting the Third World War, with heavy fighting raging day and night.

He said that another reason for the war win was that he attacked the enemy at his strong points. “This way I was able to kill not 10-15 terrorists, but hundreds,” said Fonseka. They also took the enemy off the beaten track, gaining the element of surprise.
“No vehicle could traverse and no helicopter could land and sometimes casualties had to be carried for eight kilometres, in such diversions,” he said.

Another reason for the victory was promotions being made on merit. Some 2,000 corporals and sergeants were promoted to the rank of second lieutenant this way, while “friends”  in the army who couldn’t perform, were overlooked for promotions.
He also took the blame for debacles, like in the case of trying to break through the Muhamalai defence lines twice, that led to the deaths of 210 soldiers and kept the army free from corruption.

He blamed weak military leadership in the past and not due to the weakness in political leadership, that kept the L.T.T.E. going for so long.

He said that in 1999 as a young Major General, he had told the then President Chandrika Kumaratunga in reply to a question that the war could be finished off in four years. Another Major General who was also present at this occasion said eight years, a third, who was commanding the army’s Special Forces said that the war could never be won, while a fourth made his presentation without any comment in regard to deadlines.

All for Major Generals invited by Kumaratunga had made presentations.  The army was modernized during Kumaratunga’s regime with 120 m.m., 130 m.m., 152.7 m.m., m.b.r.l.s and tanks being procured during that period, he said.

Difference

Fonseka also said that the difference between a soldier and a politician is that while the former showed results, the latter was good at talking.
He also said that he was the first army commander who had not been given a promotion on his retirement.

Fonseka had retired from the army, holding the rank of a four star general.
He also alleged that his security entourage had been reduced from 600 to 50.
Foinseka further said that there were still suicide cadres in the city and 1,000 L.T.T.E. cadres were hiding among the i.d.p.s.

And of his other problems, he had been allegedly asked to vacate his quarters, with prospective landlords being threatened not to give their residences to him on rent.

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