Sri Lankan parliamentary election, 1994

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Sri Lanka

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The Sri Lankan parliamentary election of 1994 marked the decisive end of 17 years of UNP rule and a revival of Sri Lankan democracy.

[edit] Background

Democracy in Sri Lanka had seemed doomed as the presidencies of J.R. Jayewardene and Ranasinghe Premadasa arbitrarily banned opposition parties, severely muzzled the media, and routinely used death squads, torture, and kidnappings in the two civil conflicts against the LTTE and JVP. The UNP had simply cancelled the 1983 parliamentary elections; its control of the media led it to victory in the 1988 and 1989 elections.

The population was increasingly tired of war and repression, worn out with jingoistic Sinhalese nationalism, and wanted a return to freedom, peace, and democracy. Chandrika Kumaratunga, leader of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party, formed a coalition with small leftists parties called the People's Alliance. This was in some ways a revival of her mother's coalition from the 1970s, but this time campaigning for rapprochement with the Tamils rather than their marginalization.

[edit] Results

The PA did not win a majority, but was able to govern with the support of the smaller parties.


[discuss] – [edit]
Summary of the 1994 Sri Lankan parliamentary election
Parties Votes  % Seats
Constituency Party list Total
People's Alliance 3,887,823 48.94 91 14 105
United National Party 3,498,370 44.04 81 13 94
Eelam People's Democratic Party 10,744 0.01 9 0 9
Sri Lanka Muslim Congress 143,307 1.80 6 1 7
Tamil United Liberation Front 132,461 1.60 4 1 5
Democratic People's Liberation Front 11,567 0.01 3 0 3
Sri Lanka Progressive Front 90,078 1.13 1 0 1
Others 169,356 2.13 1 0 1
Totals 7,943,706 100.00 196 29 225

[edit] Legacy

The 1994 election did not live up to its great hopes. The PA government was unable to come to an agreement with the LTTE, and ended up prosecuting war just as brutally as its UNP predecessor. The Executive Presidency, which Kumaratunga had promised to abolish, remains as powerful as ever.