I think, realistically, there's no chance of serious decentralization. I guess the test case will be what happens with respect to the 13th amendment, which is a constitutional amendment creating provincial councils that has never been fully implemented. It's been on the books for a very long time. There's some talk and action that's being taken in a very limited degree.
The resistance to seriously contemplating the dispersion of the power of the state on the part of the Sinhalese majority—and the government tends to be composed of heavy representation from them—is so fierce that I think the closest Sri Lanka came to that was when it actually had, for a brief period of time, a significantly powerful interlocutor on the other side of the table, the LTTE, during the peace talks. Now you have nobody on the other side of the table. In fact, once they're defeated, there is no table. In that context, the notion that there will be significant decentralization of the power of the state is not in the cards.