Ilankai Thamil Arasuk Katchi (ITAK) Decides to Back Sajith Premadasa at Presidential Poll; ITAK Will ask Party stalwart P. Ariyanethiran to Withdraw from Contesting as the “Common Tamil Candidate”

By

Meera Srinivasan

The Ilankai Tamil Arasu Katchi (ITAK), a prominent political party representing Tamils of Sri Lanka’s north and east, on Sunday (September 1) pledged support for presidential aspirant Sajith Premadasa in the September 21 election.

The move, which reflects one significant position within the island nation’s fragmented Tamil polity, comes even as the ITAK’s former coalition partners — along with other political groups — back former parliamentarian and ITAK member P. Ariyanethiran as a “common Tamil candidate” in the presidential race, in which incumbent President Ranil Wickremesinghe, Mr. Premadasa, and opposition politician Anura Kumara Dissanayake have emerged as key contenders.

The central committee of ITAK met on Sunday and decided the party will not back Mr. Ariyanethiran, instead announcing its support for Mr. Premadasa, who Tamils voted for in large numbers in the 2019 presidential election, principally to reject Gotabaya Rajapaksa. Further, ITAK sources said the party would request Mr. Ariyanethiran to withdraw from the race, to arrest the apparent divisions within the Tamil electorate.

Continue reading ‘Ilankai Thamil Arasuk Katchi (ITAK) Decides to Back Sajith Premadasa at Presidential Poll; ITAK Will ask Party stalwart P. Ariyanethiran to Withdraw from Contesting as the “Common Tamil Candidate”’ »

2024 Presidential Election Divides Muslim Political Parties with Leaders Backing Sajith and Some MPs Supporting Ranil.


By

D.B.S.Jeyaraj

Nominations have closed for the long awaited 2024 presidential election. 39 candidates are in the fray.It is widely acknowledged by the press and public that the chief presidential contenders are incumbent president Ranil Wickremesinghe,leader of the opposition Sajith Premadasa and JVP/NPP leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake. Two others expected to make a mark are Namal Rajapaksa and Dilith Jayaweera.

However the icing on the winning candidate’s cake would be the minority vote. In a keenly contested poll that is likely to trifurcate the Sinhala vote in near equal proportion, the minority community vote could very well provide the necessary numbers to clinch victory. In such a situation the voting pattern of the premier numerical minorities assumes crucial importance.

Sri Lanka’s last official census was taken in 2012. According to that census, Sri Lanka’s majority ethnic community the Sinhalese comprises 74.9 % of the island nation’s population. Numerically, the second largest ethnicity is the Sri Lankan Tamils who are 11.1% of the population. The third largest ethnicity is the Sri Lankan Muslims or Moors who comprise 9.3% of the population. The fourth largest ethnic group is the Tamils of Indian origin known as “Malaiyagath Thamizhar” (Hill Country Tamils) who are 4.1%.

The three numerical minorities namely the Sri Lankan Tamils, Muslims and Indian Tamils together are 25.5% of the population. Since the people of all districts vote together in the Presidential elections, the entire island is transformed into a “single” constituency with a 74.9% Sinhala majority and 25.5 % non – Sinhala minorities.

It is against this backdrop that this week’s column examines the impact of the 2024 presidential election on Sri Lankan Muslim politics. The focus of this two-part article would be on the three Muslim political parties represented in Parliament and their response towards the presidential poll. The roles played by Tamil political parties would be discussed in future articles.

Continue reading ‘2024 Presidential Election Divides Muslim Political Parties with Leaders Backing Sajith and Some MPs Supporting Ranil.’ »

Saumiyamoorthy Thondaman was the shrewdest tactician and sagacious strategist among Tamil political leaders in recent times.


By

D.B.S.Jeyaraj

Saumiyamoorthy (spelled sometimes as Saumyamoorthy or Saumiamoorthy) Thondaman was the legendary co-founder and long-time leader of the Ceylon Workers Congress (CWC). Thonda, as he was widely known, played a prominent role in the country’s post-independence politics for many decades.

His political life was intertwined with the vicissitudes of the Indian Tamil people of Sri Lanka, who still form the most deprived section of Sri Lankan society. He was a latter-day Moses whose goal was to emancipate his people from the wretched plight they were in owing to the historical injustice of being de-citizenised and disenfranchised. Although he could not fully realise these aspirations during his lifetime, it cannot be denied that the pragmatic leadership of Thondaman helped the people he represented to better their circumstances from the dire position they were in after the dawn of Sri Lanka’s independence.

In my opinion, Saumiyamoorthy Thondaman was the shrewdest tactician and sagacious strategist among Tamil political leaders in recent times. He was a pragmatic realist who grasped in essence that politics is the art of the possible. Applying Chanakyan methods in a practical sense, this larger than life leader of Sri Lanka’s Tamils of recent Indian origin – known as “Indian Tamils” – helped usher in a period of political empowerment and renaissance to his community. I have often wistfully compared and contrasted Thondaman with the leaders thrown up by the Sri Lankan Tamils of the Northern and Eastern Provinces and bemoaned the fact that there were and are no leaders of Thonda’s acumen, sagacity and experience amongst them.

Saumiyamoorthy Thondaman was born in Munapudoor in what was then the Madras Presidency of India during British rule on 30 August 1913. He died of a myocardial infarction at the Sri Jayewardenepura Hospital in Colombo on 30 October 1999. This article is to commemorate his 111th birth anniversary on 30 August 2024.

Continue reading ‘Saumiyamoorthy Thondaman was the shrewdest tactician and sagacious strategist among Tamil political leaders in recent times.’ »

National People’s Power Presidential Candidate Anura Kumara Dissanayake officially Releases the NPP’s Presidential election manifesto titled “A Prosperous Nation, A Beautiful Life” .

National People’s Power (NPP) Presidential Candidate Anura Kumara Dissanayake officially unveiled the NPP’s Presidential election manifesto titled “A Prosperous Nation, A Beautiful Life” in Sri JayawardenepuraKotte yesterday.

Addressing the gathering of NPP Executive Council members, professionals, academics, artists, and others, Dissanayake highlighted that the manifesto is the party’s response to disinformation disseminated by its political rivals.

Dissanayake recalled that recently, various rival politicians have presented programs to the public, claiming they are NPP’s own. “Even today, others frequently discuss our economic policies and governance plans. However, we often choose not to respond. We avoid engaging in unnecessary discussions and conflicts,” he said.

He said that through the Presidential election manifesto, the NPP has provided a strong response to the false and distorted information spread against it. “This manifesto, titled ‘A Prosperous Nation, A Beautiful Life,’ is our response. While others choose to spread false or distorted information, we choose to respond with clarity and integrity,” he said.

Continue reading ‘National People’s Power Presidential Candidate Anura Kumara Dissanayake officially Releases the NPP’s Presidential election manifesto titled “A Prosperous Nation, A Beautiful Life” .’ »

Sajith Premadasa does not seem to have the experience or intellectual fortitude to lead the country out of economic trouble. As Thalatha fears,it may be a repetition of Gotabaya,if Sajith Wins.


By

Ranga Jayasuriya

A rhetorical question: What difference would it have made if Sajith Premadasa delivered the speech Thalatha Athukorala did last week?

First and foremost, the difference would have been between a mature democracy and one driven by petty personal greed; the latter is a hallmark of politics in this part of the world.

Take for instance, France, where political parties of the Centre and Left regularly join ranks to stop the far-right from taking power, notwithstanding the major policy differences between the two sides. Still, the common agenda is to save the fabric of the Fifth Republic.

The latest rapport came after the first round of national polls gave Marine Le Pen’s National Rally the most votes and projected seats. Not limited to France, tactical voting and alliance between traditional foes is a big winner in much of E

urope, where the newly resurgent far-right is making inroads to power.

Continue reading ‘Sajith Premadasa does not seem to have the experience or intellectual fortitude to lead the country out of economic trouble. As Thalatha fears,it may be a repetition of Gotabaya,if Sajith Wins.’ »

Supreme Court ruling that President Ranil Wickremesinghe’s defiant action in postponing Local Government polls in 2023 had violated the fundamental right to equality and the right to vote of citizens,should come as no surprise


By

Kishali Pinto – Jayawardene

Sri Lanka’s Supreme Court ruling this week that President Ranil Wickremesinghe’s defiant action in postponing Local Government polls in 2023, citing a purported lack of funds in the wake of the country’s bankruptcy, had violated the fundamental right to equality and the right to vote of citizens, raises several interesting issues.

The ‘thundering’ of the President in response

In fact, this decision should come as no surprise. There was little choice but to hold as the Bench did, relying on several precedents which have firmly established the predominant principle that, exercising the right of franchise is an inviolable right of citizens, it is a collective as well as an individual right. The Court found the President (also as Minister of Finance) responsible along with the luckless Elections Commission.

True to form, the President thundered in the days following the Court ruling that, ‘I do not regret the decision, adding that these were crucial few months where the single-minded focus was to ensure, ‘the people’s right to life and in maintaining their safety.’ But when the President posits the choice as between the ‘economy’ and the ‘elections’, he invents a false narrative that must be strongly refuted.

President Wickremesinghe‘s impassioned rhetoric to his support base was that, ‘we needed every month, every week, every day, every hour…’ to accomplish our task and ‘what country has managed to recover from economic devastation so quickly in two years?’

He also seems to draw a constitutionally non-viable distinction between the (insignificant?) Local Government elections and the presidential/parliamentary elections, declaring that the latter is an exercise of the people’s right to vote which he had/has no intention of denying.

Continue reading ‘Supreme Court ruling that President Ranil Wickremesinghe’s defiant action in postponing Local Government polls in 2023 had violated the fundamental right to equality and the right to vote of citizens,should come as no surprise’ »

“The current president has proven his abilities. He single handedly brought the situation of the country under control. I know not everyone is happy, and we have some way to go, but we can get there together” -Thalatha Atukorale.


By Chandani Kirinde

Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) Ratnapura District MP Thalatha Atukorale, who resigned from her seat in parliament on Wednesday, said she is yet undecided on supporting any of the presidential candidates, but she could no longer remain in the SJB given the manner in which the party is being run.

“There are many reasons why I chose to quit, but I don’t want to say much as we are in the middle of an election campaign. From the beginning, I had the feeling that the leader (SJB leader Sajith Premadasa) was not listening to whatever we told him, and we were not appreciated. There is also no proper plan for the party. In addition to that, there were some issues involving my district,” Ms. Atukorale told the Sunday Times.

After resigning from parliament on Wednesday, the former MP travelled to Ratnapura, where she hopes to speak to her supporters and gauge their views on her decision. “This decision was taken on my own. Some of my voters may not agree with it. Those who agree will stay with me, and then the others might take another path,” she said.

Continue reading ‘“The current president has proven his abilities. He single handedly brought the situation of the country under control. I know not everyone is happy, and we have some way to go, but we can get there together” -Thalatha Atukorale.’ »

Sajith and Anura Promise to Abolish the Executive Presidency if they come to Powe; Reality is that people are not going to trust politicians who make such promises again.

By

Veeragathy Thanabalasingham

There was a period when the abolition of the executive presidential system was a key issue at Presidential Elections. However, such a situation cannot be expected to arise again.

The politicians who promised to abolish the executive presidency have not only failed to do so after winning the election and assuming office as president, but have also taken action to increase their powers. Therefore, the reality is that people are not going to trust politicians who make such promises again.

However, now that the Presidential Election campaigns are heating up, talks of the abolition of the executive presidency have resumed. Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) Leader Sajith Premadasa and National People’s Power (NPP) Leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake have promised on election platforms last week that if they win the Presidential Election and come to power, they will abolish the presidential system and bring back the parliamentary system.

Pointing out that Premadasa had announced the abolition of the executive presidency the day after they made such a promise, NPP politicians claimed that they were the trendsetters of Sri Lankan politics.

Continue reading ‘Sajith and Anura Promise to Abolish the Executive Presidency if they come to Powe; Reality is that people are not going to trust politicians who make such promises again.’ »

Will Rajitha Senaratne’s Crossover Trigger More Defections of MPs From SJB to Ranil’s Side?


By

D.B.S.Jeyaraj

Nambukara Helambage Rajitha Harischandra Senaratne known as Rajitha Senaratne is the latest among well-known politicians to throw in their lot with incumbent president Ranil Wickremesinghe. The Samagi Jana Balawegaya(SJB) MP for Kalutara district met with the president at the Gangaramaya temple in Colombo on 13 August and signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) pledging unconditional support to Wickremesinghe in the forthcoming Presidential election scheduled for 21 September 2024.Dr. Senaratne is a dentist turned politician who has served as cabinet minister for many years in the past.

Speaking after the signing of the MOU at Gangaramaya , Senaratne described Wickremesinghe as a “man of our time” who altered Sri Lanka’s trajectory by rescuing it from a dire situation. According to newspaper reports, Senaratne had stated this motivated him into supporting Wickremesinghe’s candidacy.

Speaking further he said if Wickremesinghe is defeated, and the recent achievements are lost, people may only realise too late what he (Wickremesinghe) had accomplished. He said by then, it would be too late for both Wickremesinghe and the country

Senaratne claimed he had no personal conflict with SJB leader Sajith Premadasa, his wife Jalani Premadasa or other leaders of the party. Senaratne disclosed d that Premadasa urged him to remain supportive and not leave the fold. He also claimed that Premadasa promised a national list seat for his son, Chathura Senaratne, in exchange for his continued support. “He assured me that Chathura would be given one of the top three slots,” Senaratne said.

Senaratne said he held several rounds of discussions with Wickremesinghe and the MoU has no conditions which would personally benefit him. He said they were all for the benefit of the country.

After welcoming the Kalutara MP, President Ranil Wickremesinghe said that for Sri Lanka to move forward, it was essential not only to revive the economy but also reform the political framework. He mentioned that, like himself, Senaratne has radical ideas for transforming society, which is why he extended an invitation for Senaratne to join him in this effort.

Continue reading ‘Will Rajitha Senaratne’s Crossover Trigger More Defections of MPs From SJB to Ranil’s Side?’ »

SJB Ratnapura District MP Thalatha Athukorale Announces her Resignation from Parliament;Delivers Scathing Attack on Sajith Premadasa questioning his leadership qualities and suitability to lead the country at this critical time. Asks if Premadasa is attempting to act out Part II of Gotabaya Rajapaksa fiasco

Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) Ratnapura District MP Thalatha Athukorala yesterday announced her resignation from Parliament delivering a scathing critique of party’s Presidential hopeful Sajith Premadasa before stepping down.

During a special address in Parliament, Thalatha Athukorala, who entered Parliament in 2004 after the untimely passing of her brother, United National Party (UNP) stalwart Gamini Athukorala, questioned Sajith Premadasa’s leadership qualities and his suitability to lead the country at this critical time.

She also underscored the importance of honesty and patience in politics, stating her belief that this was not the right time for Sajith Premadasa to pursue the Presidency of Sri Lanka.

A visibly emotional Athukoarala expressed deep regret over the division of the UNP and the recent failure of the UNP and the SJB to unite ahead of the Presidential election.

Continue reading ‘SJB Ratnapura District MP Thalatha Athukorale Announces her Resignation from Parliament;Delivers Scathing Attack on Sajith Premadasa questioning his leadership qualities and suitability to lead the country at this critical time. Asks if Premadasa is attempting to act out Part II of Gotabaya Rajapaksa fiasco’ »

Sajith Premadasa’s churlish refusal to shake the proffered hand of Ranil Wickremesinghe his political opponent is a reminder of the danger of a system where governance and character are symbiotically connected.


By

Tisaranee Gunasekara

“…who’s the fairest of them all?” Grimm Brothers (Snow White)

The most iconic moment at Nelson Mandela’s star studded memorial service was a handshake.

As US President Barack Obama ran up to the podium under a light drizzle, a CNN reporter was droning about the extra security arrangements. Suddenly, the excited voice of Christiane Amanpour cut in, shouting, “Castro, he’s shaking hands with Raul Castro.” Mr Obama had paused to shake the hand of the Cuban leader and to share a few words with him.

That simple sign of civility had its decriers, especially on the right wing of the Republican Party. Mr. Obama was accused of being a traitor, of pandering to the enemy, of endangering democracy and American security.

Perhaps Sajith Premadasa has a few similar minded advisors.

Mingling with one’s opponents on nomination day has become a Sri Lankan norm. 2024 was no exception. President Ranil Wickremesinghe and Sirithunga Jayasuriya, ideological antipodes of long standing, chatted together amiably.

Political opponents Namal Rajapaksa and Anura Kumara Dissanayake exchanged greetings and broad smiles. Sajith Premadasa seemed the only outlier in that polite crowd. Not only did he refuse to shake Ranil Wickremesinghe’s hand; instead of mingling and making friendly overtures he remained in his seat, assiduous courtiers in attendance, already a king.

The seemingly trivial incident matters because of the nature of Sri Lankan presidency. The US presidency was created as a democratic alternative to the only form of government available during the late 18th century – monarchy.

The Sri Lankan presidency was created with the opposing intent of turning a democratically elected leader into a de facto monarch. While the provisions of the 1978 Constitution might have been informed by US and French presidential systems, its ethos was rooted in our own monarchic past of absolutist rulers who were the state.

Continue reading ‘Sajith Premadasa’s churlish refusal to shake the proffered hand of Ranil Wickremesinghe his political opponent is a reminder of the danger of a system where governance and character are symbiotically connected.’ »

President Wickremesinghe points out that other main presidential candidates are not opposed to the agreement with the IMF and that they have openly said they will continue with it.

By

Veeragathy Thanabalasingham

A total of 39 candidates are contesting in Sri Lanka’s ninth Presidential Election scheduled to be held on 21 September. This is a record number of candidates contesting in an election in the history of Presidential Elections of the country.

Until now, the Presidential Election has been a direct contest between candidates of two main political parties or alliances led by them. But this time the election will be a three-way contest between incumbent President Ranil Wickremesinghe, Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) Leader Sajith Premadasa, and National People’s Power (NPP) Leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake.
Some political observers are maki

ng disturbing comments, questioning whether there is a chance of a change in the scenario of a three-way contest after the entry of Namal Rajapaksa, the National Organiser of the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) and the eldest son and political heir of former President Mahinda Rajapaksa into the fray.

This time, the Presidential Election is taking place in an entirely different situation. Two years ago the severe economic crisis during the reign of the Rajapaksas sparked an unprecedented popular uprising in Sri Lanka’s history. Sri Lankan voters are going to get the opportunity to exercise their right to vote for the first time since the uprising that ousted the Rajapaksas from power. If there has been any perceptible change in the political thinking of the people as a result of the uprising, this election should definitely reflect that.
Unlike the previous Presidential Elections, this time the campaigns started several months before the formal announcement of the election by the Election Commission. Premadasa and Dissanayake announced their candidature last year and started campaigning vigorously.


Ranil’s independent candidacy

As for President Wickremesinghe, he announced late last month that he would contest the election. With his United National Party (UNP) severely weakened, he had to focus on building a broader alliance that could support him in the election.

He is contesting not as a candidate of his party but as an independent candidate with the support of a peculiar alliance comprising defectors from various political parties. An agreement on the alliance comprising 32 political parties and groups was signed on Friday (16).

This is the first-ever time that a leader of a main political party in Sri Lanka is running as an independent candidate at a national election.

After the Rajapaksas decided to field a separate candidate on behalf of the SLPP, most of the parliamentarians of that party abandoned them and came to the side of the President. Therefore, even if the President is happy about the developments, he needs to really think about the number of votes each of them can bring him.

Some observers say that because of the growing support for the President among the people in their constituencies, those Members of Parliament (MPs) are abandoning the Rajapaksas and scrambling to support him. Even politicians who were staunch Rajapaksa loyalists say publicly that they have decided to back Wickremesinghe at the behest of their supporters who are increasingly turning towards him.

A different strategy

It seems that the President is conducting his campaign with an entirely different strategy, declaring that he will campaign among the people by promoting the nation and not himself. He says that he is not contesting the election against anyone and, unlike other candidates, he is not contesting for his own political future but for the future of the country. He has announced that he is ready to work with all parties if he wins the election.

“Earlier I invited Premadasa and Anura Kumara to come forward to work with me. But they turned it down. They may be worried about that now. Next time, I will bring them into the Government without any objection. Not only them but also Namal Rajapaksa, the candidate of the SLPP,” he told newspaper editors and heads of media houses last week.

It seems certain that he is not going to attack any candidate on the election platform. Saying that the agreement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) is the only way to bring Sri Lanka out of the economic crisis and lead it towards prosperity, he asks the people to give him a mandate for the next five years to continue with the economic restructuring measures that his Government has been taking forward for the last two years.

The President also points out that the other main presidential candidates are also not opposed to the agreement with the IMF and that they have openly said they will continue with it. He is not making any new promises and is seeking the mandate of the people to continue the same economic restructuring programme.

In addition, Wickremesinghe, who has presented himself as an independent candidate who can be supported by all parties without showing interest in party politics like in the past, portrays himself as a new ‘avatar’ beyond party politics. If he wins, perhaps he may be the first non-party president in Sri Lanka. An important question is what impact the President’s current approach will have on Sri Lankan society, which has a political culture characterised by deep party political rivalries and ethnic animosity.

Pledges by RW, SP and AKD

After submitting their nomination papers at the Election Commission office last Thursday (15), the three main candidates made remarks to supporters and media.

“I seek the people’s mandate to create a bright future for the people of Sri Lanka. We took charge of the country and brought stability. You now have access to food, fuel, and other essentials.
“This is just the beginning. There is a lot of work to be done to make Sri Lanka a stable nation. I request people to give me a mandate to carry out these tasks. When asked to take charge of the country at a time of crisis, members of the Opposition ran away. Decide whether you are going to hand over the country to such people or not,” the President said.

SJB Leader Premadasa said that he would usher in an era of the common masses in the style of his father, late President Ranasinghe Premadasa. “I promise to create an era of the common masses. I will create a situation where everyone living in the country can enjoy the benefits of development. I call upon the people to rally behind me,” he stated.

NPP Leader Dissanayake said that the people needed a change and that only their camp had the ability to bring about such a change. “Despite the number of elections held in the past, the people suffered untold hardships for years. We can win this election. People want a change in the situation of suffering. We can turn this election to rescue people and the country from hardships. Only our camp can achieve that goal.”


Enter Namal Rajapaksa

For Namal Rajapaksa, he is contesting the Presidential Election as an attempt to rebuild the SLPP with his political future in mind. A significant aspect of Namal’s entry is that a prominent member of the Rajapaksa family has entered the electoral fray after a popular uprising ousted it from power.

No member of the Rajapaksa family had any intention of contesting the Presidential Election this time. At one point it was widely believed that supporting President Wickremesinghe was their best option. But after the President flatly refused to comply with their demands and conditions to secure their future political prospects, they decided to field a separate candidate on behalf of their party.
Before falling out with the President, it seemed that the Rajapaksas were subtly intimidating the President with the prospect of nominating casino owner and leading businessman Dhammika Perera as their party’s potential candidate. The Rajapaksas’ attempt to use Perera and his money as a touchstone to test their current support among the people ultimately proved futile. Perera announced at the last minute that he did not want to contest the election due to personal reasons.

Therefore, the Rajapaksas were forced to field Namal without any other option. Fearing that the SLPP’s vote base would be scattered if they did not contest the election, the Rajapaksas have nominated Namal to protect the party. But are the people going to vote to elect a new president or are they going to vote to protect the Rajapaksas’ party?

The Rajapaksas have a perverse idea that the Sinhalese people should be forever loyal to them regardless of their mistakes for ending the war.

At the same time, there is no doubt that the Rajapaksas will be inclined to repeat majoritarian mobilisation against the political rights and aspirations of minority communities in order to garner as many votes as possible. But while all three main candidates, though may be for electoral purposes, are interested in reaching out to minority communities, it seems that the Rajapaksas’ communal rhetoric is unlikely to gain much traction with the Sinhalese this time around.

If Namal, a young political leader who is nursing an ambition to lead the country in the future chooses a non-communal path, unlike the elders of his family, it will augur well for him. Will he be willing to change himself? At least he can show a change in the thinking on ethnic relations by announcing in his election manifesto a progressive stance on the implementation of the 13th Amendment to the Constitution.

Other candidates in the fray

Candidates of 23 political parties and 16 independent candidates are contesting the Presidential Election. Among them are leading politicians like former Army Chief Sarath Fonseka and former Justice Minister Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe. There is no doubt that they are contesting for other purposes than to be elected as president. The same is the case with most of the independent candidates.
It is also noteworthy that Nuwan Bopage, a lawyer, is contesting the Presidential Election on behalf of the People’s Struggle Alliance, a movement formed by a faction of activists who were at the forefront of the ‘Aragalaya’ people’s uprising.

Fundamental issues

Meanwhile, some of the fundamental issues that usually dominate Presidential Elections seem unlikely to get the attention of the main candidates this time around. In particular, it is not known whether the long-standing popular demand to abolish the executive presidential system will find a place in their election manifestos.
Regarding the national problem, nothing else can be expected in the manifestos of the main candidates except for the declarations on implementing the 13th Amendment to the Constitution with vague positions on important powers such as Police and land.

There are also politicians in the north who say that they can consider supporting any candidate from the south if they promise that they are ready to accept the Sri Lankan Tamil people’s right to self-determination and find a solution to the national ethnic problem based on a federal system. So much is their understanding of today’s political situation around them.

On the north and east political front, Pakkiyaselvam Ariyanethiran, a former Batticaloa District MP of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA), is contesting as a common Tamil candidate in the Presidential Election on behalf of some Tamil parties and a newly formed civil society, the Tamil National General Council.

His appointment was contrary to all the criteria defined by the Tamil National General Council from the beginning for a person who can be appointed as a Tamil common candidate.

Those who nominated Ariyanethiran say that he is nothing more than a symbol of Tamil nationalistic political aspirations. He also says that his symbolic duty will end on election day. So, there is no point in talking about him here. It seems that hereafter, the Tamil people will not have leaders but only symbols if and when elections come.

Courtesy:Sunday Morning

Namal Rajapaksa’s Entry Impacts Political Dynamics of 2024 Presidential Election.

By

D.B.S.Jeyaraj

From the time Ranil Wickremesinghe returned to the seat of power as Prime Minister and later as President, false narratives have been concocted and circulated e by his opponents, adeversaries, critics and detractors about him. One was that Wickremesinghe was afraid to face a presidential election and that he would put off the poll through unorthodox measures.

This falsehood was exposed when the date of the presidential poll was gazetted by the Election Commission. Wickremesinghe was the first to pay his election deposit as an independent candidate. Unable to confront this reality,Ranil’s foes now comfort themselves saying “wait and see will you,he will do something before the election”.

Another and comparatively more effective false narrative was about the Ranil -Rajapaka relationship. It is certainly true that Ranil was first appointed Prime minister and then acting president by President Gotabaya Rajapaksa. After Gota resigned, Ranil was elected president by 134 of 225 MPs. The majority of these MPs were from the Rajapaksa-led Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP). Ranil’s cabinet consists of a very large number of SLPP parliamentarians. The budgets and other legislation presented by the Wickremesinghe Govt were passed by Parliament mainly due to support extended by Pohottuwa MPs.

Despite this perceived dependence on the Rajapaksa-led SLPP, President Wickremesinghe has always been his own man. While maintaining cordial relations with the Rajapaksas and accommodating a few of their requests, Ranil remained firmly independent of them.

Wickremesinghe has in tandem with the Central Bank , chartered an economic policy independent of the Rajapaksas. Many of Wickremesinghe’s economic measures are not to the liking of the Rajapaksas but they have gone along reluctantly. This is because the Rajapaksas needed Ranil as much as he needed them. The dependence is not one-sided but mutual inter-dependence.

Continue reading ‘Namal Rajapaksa’s Entry Impacts Political Dynamics of 2024 Presidential Election.’ »

34 Political Parties and Alliances Endorse Support for President Ranil Wickremesinghe’s Candidacy at “Puluwan Sri Lanka”Convention in Colombo.

President Ranil Wickremesinghe yesterday highlighted the significance of the newly signed ‘Puluwan Sri Lanka’ (Sri Lanka Can) agreement, stressing that it is not intended to form a new political party but rather to unite the nation and build a brighter future.

The agreement, endorsed by 34 political parties and alliances, symbolises a collective commitment to overcoming the country’s challenges and rebuilding for the future.

The ‘Puluwan Sri Lanka’ agreement, according to the President, represents a new force in Sri Lankan politics, aiming to unite all communities and ensure long-term progress for the nation. He said the country has emerged as a new force, uniting when the country’s political parties were in disarray, and it is essential to continue this program for another five years, during which a new leadership would have been born in this country, one that the country has not seen in recent times.

Continue reading ‘34 Political Parties and Alliances Endorse Support for President Ranil Wickremesinghe’s Candidacy at “Puluwan Sri Lanka”Convention in Colombo.’ »

Hardnosed businessman with the softest heartbeat Harry Jayawardena Celebrates 82nd Birthday on on 17th August 2024

By Krishantha Prasad Cooray

Almost twenty years ago, I received a call from Don Harold Stassen Jayawardena. Of course, at the time I knew him as ‘Harry Jayawardena’ as did many Sri Lankans, especially in business circles. I was in England, veritably forced into exile by political circumstances which included the abduction and torture of the deputy editor of ‘The Nation,’ a newspaper published by Rivira Media Corporation, of which I was at the time the Managing Director, and a brutal attack on Upali Tennakoon, the editor of our sister newspaper in Sinhala. These attacks came just after my friend Lasantha Wickramatunge implored me to leave the country and not too long before he himself was killed. It was a time not just of exile but abandonment; for reasons of convenience or fear almost all those I considered friends avoided me. There were a handful who didn’t give a damn about possible consequences or cared enough to be supportive. I didn’t count Harry among them.

I knew him as a prominent businessman who had personal relationships with many who walked the corridors of power. Such men take care not only to please those in power or those who may one day be in power. His mocking tone didn’t surprise me, therefore. He teased me about having to leave Sri Lanka. In the same gloating tone, he referred to a not very complimentary full page article about him that was published in ‘The Nation.’ He told me that he was quite used to his rivals using the media as puppets to attack him. He did everything, it seemed to me, to reaffirm that he was exactly the image I had of him – a ruthless business tycoon.

Then it all changed. The tone of booming mockery gave way to a more grave, measured cadence. He told me that in all his inquiries, he was surprised at how many people defended me to him privately and told him that he had the wrong impression of me. He reminded me that he had known my father’s family well. He assured me that he held no grudge, implored me to be safe, and suggested that we meet when I returned to Sri Lanka.

I do not know who spoke to him about me or what exactly he was told, but owe these people a tremendous debt of gratitude, for facilitating one of the most unique and enduring friendships I have ever had.

Continue reading ‘Hardnosed businessman with the softest heartbeat Harry Jayawardena Celebrates 82nd Birthday on on 17th August 2024’ »

39 Candidates Contesting in Sri Lanka’s Presidential Election Scheduled for 21 September;Incumbent President Ranil Wickremesinghe, Opposition Leader Sajith Premadasa and JVP/NPP Leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake are top Contenders

By

Meera Srinivasan

As many as 39 presidential aspirants will contest a crucial poll in Sri Lanka on September 21, the Election Commission said on Thursday (August 15, 2024), after closing nominations.

Incumbent President Ranil Wickremesinghe, who rose to the top office through a parliamentary vote during the island nation’s 2022 crisis, is seeking a mandate to take forward his government’s economic reform agenda.

Mr. Wickremesinghe, 75, is contesting as an independent candidate on a “stability”plank, while his main challengers Opposition Leader Sajith Premadasa, who broke away from Mr. Wickremesinghe’s United National Party following political differences, and Anura Kumara Dissanayake, who leads the centre-left National People’s Power alliance, are promising change.

Continue reading ‘39 Candidates Contesting in Sri Lanka’s Presidential Election Scheduled for 21 September;Incumbent President Ranil Wickremesinghe, Opposition Leader Sajith Premadasa and JVP/NPP Leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake are top Contenders’ »

நாமல் ராஜபக்சவின் பிரவேசம் 2024 ஜனாதிபதி தேர்தல் களச் சூழலில் ஏற்படுத்தும் தாக்கம்

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டி.பி.எஸ். ஜெயராஜ்

ரணில் விக்கிரமசிங்க முதலில் பிரதமராகவும் பிறகு ஜனாதிபதியாகவும் அதிகாரத்துக்கு வந்த நேரம் தொடக்கம் எதிரிகளும் விமர்சகர்களும் அவரைப்பற்றி பல தவறான கதைகளை கட்டிவிடுவதில் ஈடுபட்டு வந்திருக்கிறார்கள். ஜனாதிபதி தேர்தலுக்கு முகங்கொடுப்பதற்கு அஞ்சுகிறார் என்பதும் அவர் வழமைக்கு மாறான நடவடிக்கைகள் மூலமாக தேர்தலைப் ஒத்திவைப்பார் என்பதும் அந்த்கதைகளில் ஒன்று.

இந்த போலிக்கதை தேர்தல்கள் ஆணைக்குழு ஜனாதிபதி தேர்தல் திகதியை வர்த்தமானியில் வெளியிட்டபோது அம்பலமானது. விக்கிரமசிங்கவே ஒரு சுயேச்சை வேட்பாளராக முதலில் தனது கட்டுப்பணத்தையும் செலுத்தினார். இந்த உண்மை முகங்கொடுக்க இயலாத அவரது எதிரிகள் தற்போது ” பொறுத்திருந்து பாருங்கள். தேர்தலுக்கு முன்னர் அவர் எதையாவது செய்வார் ” என்று கூறி ஆறுதல் அடைகிறார்கள்.

இன்னொரு தவறான கதை ரணிலுக்கும் ராஜபக்சாக்களுக்கும் இடையிலான உறவைப் பற்றியது. ரணில் முதலில் பிரதமராகவும் பிறகு பதில் ஜனாதிபதியாகவும் அன்றைய ஜனாதிபதி கோட்டாபய ராஜபக்சவினால் நியமிக்கப்பட்டார் என்பது நிச்சயமாக உண்மை. கோட்டா பதவியைத் துறந்த பிறகு பாராளுமன்றத்தின் 225 உறுப்பினர்களில் 134 பேரினால் ஜனாதிபதியாக தெரிவானார். இவர்களில் பெரும்பான்மையானவர்கள் ராஜபக்ச தலைமையிலான ஸ்ரீலங்கா பொதுஜன பெரமுனவை சேர்ந்தவர்கள். ரணிலின் அமைச்சரவையின் மிகவும் பெரும் எண்ணிக்கையான உறுப்பினர்கள் பொதுஜன பெரமுன பாராளுமன்ற உறுப்பினர்களே. பிரதானமாக தாமரை மொட்டு கட்சியின் பாராளுமன்ற உறுப்பினர்கள் வழங்கிய ஆதரவின் விளைவாகவே பட்ஜெட்டுகளும் சட்டமூலங்களும் சபையில் நி றவேறின.

ராஜபக்ச தலைமையிலான பொதுஜன பெரமுனவில் தங்கியிருப்பவராக கருதப்பட்ட போதிலும், ஜனாதிபதி விக்கிரமசிங்க எப்போதும் தனது எண்ணப்படி செயற்படுபவராகவே இருந்துவருகிறார். ராஜபக்சாக்களுடன் சுமுகமான உறவுகளை பேணியதுடன் அவர்களின் வேண்டுகோள்களில் சிலவற்றுக்கு விட்டுக்கொடுத்த அதேவேளை, அவர்களிடம் இருந்து ரணில் மிகவும உறுதியாக சுதந்திரமானவராகவே இருந்துவந்தார்.

இலங்கை மத்திய வங்கியுடன் இணைந்து விக்கிரமசிங்க ராஜபக்சாக்களிடம் இருந்து சுதந்திரமான பொருளாதார பொருளாதார கொள்கை ஒன்றை வகுத்துச் செயற்பட்டார். அவரின் பொருளாதார நடவடிக்கைகளில் பலவற்றை ராஜபக்சாக்கள் விரும்பவில்லை. ஆனால், அவர்கள் தயக்கத்துடன் ஒத்துப்போனார்கள். ராஜபக்சாக்களுக்கு ரணில் எந்தளவுக்கு தேவையோ அதேயளவுக்கு ரணிலுக்கு ராஜபக்சாக்கள் தேவைப்பட்டதே இதற்கு காரணமாகும்.

Continue reading ‘நாமல் ராஜபக்சவின் பிரவேசம் 2024 ஜனாதிபதி தேர்தல் களச் சூழலில் ஏற்படுத்தும் தாக்கம்’ »

The two Chief similarities between Sri Lanka’s 2022 ‘youth aragalaya’ and Bangladesh’s youth uprising in 2024


By

Kishali Pinto-Jayawardene

Those who unwisely murmur ‘Bangladeshi people power a la Sri Lanka’ in assessing the ‘second liberation’ of Bangladesh following the jubilant toppling of fifteen year one-party rule by former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina by thousands of youth earlier this month, must restrain their enthusiasm in no small part.
A lesson to all despots

The 2022 youth protests in Sri Lanka precipitating the flight of former President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and the collapse of his Government has led to significantly different outcomes in this country as compared to evolving – and still volatile – developments in Bangladesh.

In essence, there are only two similarities. First, both Hasina and Rajapaksa, consumed by their monstrous political egos, refused to believe that the ‘hordes’ were literally at the door of their respective ‘palaces’ until the eleventh hour.

Thus do all despots believe would probably be the lesson that these inglorious spectacles teach us. Their enforced departures with scarcely the clothes on their backs when personal security could no longer be guaranteed against the (literal) battering on their gates by the frenzied populace were as ignominious as appeals to various countries to ‘grant asylum.’

Continue reading ‘The two Chief similarities between Sri Lanka’s 2022 ‘youth aragalaya’ and Bangladesh’s youth uprising in 2024’ »

Rajapaksas Backstabbing Ranil Over the Presidential Candidacy Issue Backfire on the SLPP.


By

D.B.S.Jeyaraj

President Ranil Wickremesinghe was cruelly bamboozled by the Rajapaksas early this week. The incumbent president was given false promises that the Medamulana clan-led “pohottuwa”party was firmly behind him in his bid to contest the forthcoming presidential poll. The note of discord struck by Namal Rajapaksa was lightly dismissed as being of very little consequence. The message conveyed was that Wickremesinghe should formally seek the suppo rt of the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna(SLPP) for his candidacy and that it would be accepted and approved by the SLPP as a matter of course. But when Ranil did so, the carpet was yanked from under his feet.

The SLPP did not back his Presidential Candidacy. Ranil was backstabbed by the Rajapaksas. Supporting or not supporting Wickremesinghe was a decision for the SLPP to take. It was that party’s choice. What has left a bad taste in this instance is how the Rajapaksas (except Namal)went about this. They deceived Ranul into thinking that he would be supported and made him seek their endorsement formally. Thereafter they humiliated Ranil by rejecting him.

What had happened earlier was this. Even as the 2024 presidential election drew close, the SLPP founder and former national organiser Basil Rajapaksa wanted Ranil to contest as the SLPP’s presidential candidate. Ranil refused saying he would be contesting as an independent non-party candidate. An alliance would be formed to support his candidacy. The SLPP could be part of that alliance.

Basil was seemingly willing to cooperate but other members of the envisaged alliance especially the SLPP breakaway group led by MPs Nimal Lanza and Anura Priyadarshana Yapa were opposed to it. Basil too withdrew in a huff saying if the SLPP was rejected once, he would reject the alliance 100 times.

These differences were patched up due to efforts by Ranil and other SLPP members who were supportive of the president. Some of the SLPP ministers and MPs backing Wickremesinghe exerted pressure on their leadership to support the incumbent president. Ranil himself had several rounds of discussions with Mahinda and Basil Rajapaksa. An agreement was arrived at. Ranil was to seek SLPP support formally after he declared his candidacy. Thereafter the SLPP would go through the motions of considering his request and approve it formally.

Continue reading ‘Rajapaksas Backstabbing Ranil Over the Presidential Candidacy Issue Backfire on the SLPP.’ »

Tourism Minister Harin Fernando and Labour Minister Manusha Nanayakkara Lose Their MP Seats Following Two Rulings by Three Judge Bench of Supreme Court Upholding Expulsion of Both by SJB Party as Valid

By

Lakmal Sooriyagoda

The Supreme Court, in two landmark judgments today, determined that the Samagi Jana Balawegaya’s (SJB) decision to expel Ministers Harin Fernando and Manusha Nanayakkara from the party is legally valid.

As a result of this Supreme Court judgment, the expulsion of Harin Fernando and Manusha Nanayakkara will lead to the loss of their parliamentary seats and Ministerial portfolios.

Continue reading ‘Tourism Minister Harin Fernando and Labour Minister Manusha Nanayakkara Lose Their MP Seats Following Two Rulings by Three Judge Bench of Supreme Court Upholding Expulsion of Both by SJB Party as Valid’ »

Former Batticaloa District TNA Parliamentarian P. Ariyanendran to Contest 2024 Presidential Poll as the Common Tamil Presidential Candidate.

The ‘Tamil National Common Structure’, an alliance of Tamil political parties, has announced its decision to nominate former
Batticaloa District TNA Parliamentarian P. Ariyanenthiran as their common candidate for the upcoming Presidential Election.

Several Tamil political parties and a group of civil society representatives had reached an agreement to nominate a common candidate for the forthcoming Presidential Election.

Continue reading ‘Former Batticaloa District TNA Parliamentarian P. Ariyanendran to Contest 2024 Presidential Poll as the Common Tamil Presidential Candidate.’ »

The ‘Samagi Jana Sandanaya (SJS)’, political alliance led by the Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB), officially launched under the Leadership of Sajith Premadasa with the signing of agreements with several parties.

The ‘Samagi Jana Sandanaya (SJS)’, a broad political alliance led by the main Parliamentary Opposition, the Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB), was officially unveiled yesterday (8) under the Leadership of SJB and Opposition Leader and Presidential candidate Sajith Premadasa and with the signing of agreements with several parties.

Continue reading ‘The ‘Samagi Jana Sandanaya (SJS)’, political alliance led by the Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB), officially launched under the Leadership of Sajith Premadasa with the signing of agreements with several parties.’ »

ராஜபக்சாக்கள் ரணிலுக்கு செய்த வஞ்சனை திரும்பிவந்து பொதுஜன பெரமுனவை தாக்குகிறது

டி.பி.எஸ். ஜெயராஜ்

ஜனாதிபதி ரணில் விக்கிரமசிங்க கடந்தவார முற்பகுதியில் ராஜபக்சாக்களினால் கொடுமையான முறையில் ஏமாற்றப்பட்டார். எதிர்வரும் ஜனாதிபதி தேர்தலில் மெதமுலான குடும்பம் தலைமையிலான’ தாமரை மொட்டு ‘ கட்சி விக்கிரமசிங்கவுக்கு பின்னால் உறுதியாக நிற்கும் என்று அவருக்கு பொய்யான உறுதிமொழிகள் வழங்கப்பட்டன.நாமல் ராஜபக்சவினால் தெரிவிக்கப்பட்ட மாறுபாடான கருத்தை பொருட்படுத்தத் தேவையில்லை என்றும் கூறப்பட்டது.

பொதுஜன பெரமுன ஜனாதிபதி தேர்தலில் ரணிலை ஆதரிப்பதில்லை என்று முடிவெடுத்திருக்கிறது. ராஜபக்சாக்கள் அவரின் முதுகில் குத்திவிட்டார்கள். விக்கிரமசிங்கவை ஆதரிப்பதா இல்லையா என்று தீர்மானிப்பது பொதுஜன பெரமுனவைப் பொறுத்தது. அது கட்சியின் தெரிவுக்குரியது. இந்த விவகாரத்தில் ராஜபக்சாக்கள் ( நாமலைத் தவிர ) நடந்துகொண்ட முறை மிகவும் அருவருக்கத்தக்கதாகும். தன்னை ராஜபக்சாக்கள் ஆதரிப்பார்கள் என்று ரணிலை நம்பவைத்து ஏமாற்றி தங்களின் ஆதரவை முறைப்படி நாடச் செய்தார்கள். அதற்குப் பிறகு அவரை நிராகரித்ததன் மூலம் அவமதிப்புக்குள்ளாக்கிவிட்டார்கள்.

ஜனாதிபதி தேர்தலில் தனக்கு ஸ்ரீலங்கா பொதுஜன பெரமுன ஆதரவு அளிக்கவேண்டும் என்று விக்கிரமசிங்க முறைப்படி கேட்கவேண்டும் என்றும் அதற்கு பிறகு கட்சி அந்த வேண்டுகோளை ஏற்று அங்கீகரிக்கும் என்ற செய்தியே அவருக்கு தெரிவிக்கப்பட்டது. அவர் அவ்வாறு செய்தார். ஆனால், இறுதியில் அவருக்கு ஏமாற்றமே கிடைத்தது.

முன்னதாக நடந்தது என்னவென்று பார்ப்போம். 2024 ஜனாதிபதி தேர்தல் நெருங்கிக்கொண்டிருந்த வேளை ரணில் பொதுஜன பெரமுனவின் வேட்பாளராகப் போட்டியிடவேண்டும் என்று அந்த கட்சியின் தாபகரும் முன்னாள் தேசிய அமைப்பாளருமான பசில் ராஜபக்ச விரும்பினார். ஆனால், அதற்கு மறுப்புத் தெரிவித்த ரணில் எந்த கட்சியையும் சாராத சுயேச்சை வேட்பாளராக தான் போட்டியிடப் போவதாகக் கூறினார். தன்னை ஆதரிப்பதற்கு பரந்த ஒரு கூட்டணி அமைக்கப்படும் என்றும் அதில் ஒரு அங்கமாக பொதுஜன பெரமுன இருக்கலாம் என்றும் அவர் கூறினார்.

பசில் அதற்கு ஒத்துழைப்பதற்கு தயாராக இருந்தார் போன்று தோன்றியது. ஆனால், உத்தேச கூட்டணியின் ஏனைய உறுப்பினர்கள் குறிப்பாக, பாராளுமன்ற உறுப்பினர்கள் நிமால் லான்சா மற்றும் அநுரா பிரியதர்சன யாப்பா தலைமையில் பொதுஜன பெரமுனவில் இருந்து பிரிந்துவந்த குழு அதற்கு எதிர்ப்பு தெரிவித்தது. ஆத்திரமடைந்த பசில் பொதுஜன பெரமுனவை ஒரு தடவை நிராகரித்தால் நாம் கூட்டணியை ஒரு 100 தடவைகள் நிராகரிப்போம் என்று கூறி விலகிக்கொண்டார்.

ரணிலும் அவருக்கு ஆதரவாக இருக்கும் பொதுஜன பெரமுன உறுப்பினர்களும் மேற்கொண்ட முயற்சிகளின் விளைவாக இந்த வேறபாடுகள் சரிப்படுத்தப்பட்டன. விக்கிரமசிங்கவை ஆதரிக்கும் பொதுஜன பெரமுன அமைச்சர்களும் பாராளுமன்ற உறுப்பினர்கள் கட்சி அவரையே ஆதரிக்க வேண்டும் என்று தலைமைத்துவத்துக்கு நெருக்குதல் கொடுத்தனர். மகிந்த ராஜபக்சவுடனும் பசிலுடனும் ரணில் பல சுற்றுப் பேச்சுவார்த்தைகளை நடத்தினார். ஒரு உடன்பாடு எட்டப்பட்டது.

ஜனாதிபதி தேர்தலில் போட்டியிடப்போவதாக ரணில் அறிவித்த பிறகு அவர் முறைப்படி பொதுஜன பெரமுனவின் ஆதரவைக் கோரவேண்டும் என்றும் அதற்கு பிறகு அந்த வேண்டுகோளை பரிசீலித்து பொதுஜன பெரமுனவும் முறைப்படி அங்கீகாரத்தை வழங்கும் என்பதே அந்த உடன்பாடு.

Continue reading ‘ராஜபக்சாக்கள் ரணிலுக்கு செய்த வஞ்சனை திரும்பிவந்து பொதுஜன பெரமுனவை தாக்குகிறது’ »

Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna National Organizer Namal Rajapaksa to Contest Presidential Poll as Business Magnate Dhammika Perera Withdraws from Presidential Election as SLPP Candidate


The ruling Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) is set to announce its Presidential candidate today. Earlier in the week, party General Secretary Sagara Kariyawasam confirmed that the announcement would be made by SLPP leader Mahinda Rajapaksa at 7:30 a.m. at the SLPP head office on Nelum Mawatha.

While the event was initially scheduled to take place at the foyer of the Nelum Pokuna Mahinda Rajapaksa Theatre, the venue was later changed to the party office for unexplained reasons. When asked about the change, Kariyawasam said the party felt the head office was the best venue to make such an announcement.

Continue reading ‘Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna National Organizer Namal Rajapaksa to Contest Presidential Poll as Business Magnate Dhammika Perera Withdraws from Presidential Election as SLPP Candidate’ »

Ranil Rajapaksa was an Opposition-made myth. The Rajapaksas have nothing to gain from a Ranil Wickremesinghe victory. He was never a Rajapaksa creature.

By Tisaranee Gunasekara

“The king is dead, long live the king” (Traditional proclamation made following the death of a monarch indicating the continuity of the monarchy)

Mahinda Rajapaksa’s second presidential investiture was held two days after his 65th birthday, the twin occasions marked by grandiose displays of Rajapaksa power. The highlights of this political spectacle included a shipload of Buddhist monks voyaging from Galle to the Hambantota Rajapaksa Port, chanting the ‘Sagara Piritha’, and the cooking of world’s largest milk-rice weighting 4,000 kg by 300+ chefs (relayed live on TV). Tuition-guru turned Education Minister Bandula Gunwardane ordered all school children to listen to President Rajapaksa’s ‘Address to the Nation’.

The past is indeed a foreign country.

Most of the courtiers who pledged eternal fealty to High King Mahinda during that spectacular week in 2010 are unlikely to grace his 79th birthday in 2024.

Ambitious politicians (and would-be politicians) stayed with the Rajapaksas for the sake of furthering their own careers and lining their own nests.

Whenever Rajapaksa power was seriously challenged, an out-migration from the Rajapaksa fief resulted. This happened twice in the past – in the context of the 2015 presidential and parliamentary elections and during the 2022 Aragalaya. The ongoing exodus is the third – and the largest, ignited by the SLPP’s obvious inability to win the upcoming Presidential election.

Ranil Wickremesinghe’s path to victory might be a footpath, but it is still larger than that of the Rajapaksas’ chosen candidate, Dhammika Perera (he is the candidate precisely because he won’t win).

Continue reading ‘Ranil Rajapaksa was an Opposition-made myth. The Rajapaksas have nothing to gain from a Ranil Wickremesinghe victory. He was never a Rajapaksa creature.’ »

Sri Lanka whose former President was ousted by a citizen’s uprising two years ago expresses solidarity with the people of Bangladesh after Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina Quit and Fled the Country after Mass Protests

By

Meera Srinivasan

Hours after Bangladesh Prime MinisterSheikh Hasina quit and fled the country on Monday following mass protests, Sri Lanka — whose former President was ousted by a citizen’s uprising two years ago — expressed solidarity with the people of Bangladesh.

“Our hearts are with the people of #Bangladesh during these incredibly challenging times. The recent events have led to significant unrest and, tragically, the loss of many lives. We extend our deepest sympathies to the families of those affected and to all who are suffering during this difficult period,” said Foreign Minister Ali Sabry in a message on social media platform ‘X’ Monday, August 5, 2024 night.

Continue reading ‘Sri Lanka whose former President was ousted by a citizen’s uprising two years ago expresses solidarity with the people of Bangladesh after Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina Quit and Fled the Country after Mass Protests’ »

Sri Lanka’s Supreme court issues interim order suspending the govt’s new visa scheme run by a consortium that sparked controversy over allegations of corruption totalling 1.4 billion dollars.SC orders restoration of previously used online visa system..

By

Meera Srinivasan

Sri Lanka’s Supreme court on August 2 issued an interim order suspending the government’s new visa scheme, run by a consortium including an Indian company, that earlier sparked controversy over allegations of corruption totalling over a billion dollars. The Supreme Court ordered that the previously used online visa system be restored.

In April this year, Sri Lanka’s Department of Immigration and Emigration switched to a new visa portal, roping in a consortium of GBS Technology Services, the India-registered IVS Global Services, and VFS Global. The formerly used Electronic Travel Authorisation system, operated by the state-run telecom provider Mobitel, was scrapped, despite the service’s widely acknowledged speed and efficiency. While both, GBS Technology and IVS Global Services partner India’s Ministry of External Affairs, authenticating and processing documents for many Indian missions, IVS also processes Indian visa applications of Sri Lankans.

Continue reading ‘Sri Lanka’s Supreme court issues interim order suspending the govt’s new visa scheme run by a consortium that sparked controversy over allegations of corruption totalling 1.4 billion dollars.SC orders restoration of previously used online visa system..’ »

The Supreme Court has consistently upheld the principle that a govt servant is empowered to refuse to obey an ‘illegal’ order by his or her superior resulting in the use of state assets for a particular political party or candidate.

By

Kishali Pinto-Jayawardene

If the glittering promise of the ‘Jathika Jana Balavegaya’ (NPP) is supposed to offer a better, brighter Sri Lanka to put an end to the ’76 year old curse’ of its political rivals, it is time that NPP Presidential candidate Anura Kumara Dissanayake refrains from justifying his actions during the run-up to the September 21st Presidential elections on the basis that, ‘others are doing it, why not me?’

Resisting transparency by the NPP?

That absurd justification is increasingly being used by the NPP to the extent that this (logically) defeats its own argument of being ‘different’ to the others. Earlier, the NPP Presidential candidate announced on a recent visit overseas to meet his ‘supporters’ that he will declare the cost of his (frequent) travels and the sources of that (private) funding only if President Ranil Wickremesinghe together with his Minister of Sports and Minister of Labour/Foreign Employment discloses the same information regarding their (state) travels.

Admittedly, the NPP candidate did not travel on state funds. As such, the duty that arises is different to presidential or ministerial travel. That being said, transparency regarding the sources of that funding establishes financial accountability in the functioning of the NPP.

That also conveys the powerful message that easy words in opposition will translate to action if political power shifts. It is hardly reassuring therefore that non-disclosure is shrugged away by referencing the conduct of ruling politicians who have to be coerced to release those details much like extracting water from stone.

In other words, that same dangerous intransigence to party transparency seems to apply to the NPP while in the opposition. No doubt, the Regulation of Elections Expenditure Act aims to limit the spending by political parties, impose a duty to declare donations given to political parties and independent candidates and ban contributions by state bodies, foreign governments et al. Even so, those restrictions will come into force by gazette issued by the Elections Commission after five days have passed following the conclusion of the nominations period.

Continue reading ‘The Supreme Court has consistently upheld the principle that a govt servant is empowered to refuse to obey an ‘illegal’ order by his or her superior resulting in the use of state assets for a particular political party or candidate.’ »

Dramatic changes in the political landscape make strange bedfellows. We will see more such additions in the coming days.


By

Veeragathy Thanabalasingham

It has long been a common perception that none of the main candidates will be able to receive more than 50% of the popular vote in the upcoming Presidential Election.

For the last few days, since the announcement of the Presidential Election by the Election Commission, many newspapers have been publishing details of the procedures on how the next round of vote counting will be conducted to elect a president if any candidate fails to get 50%+1 of the votes in the first round.

At the same time, the moves to forge new political alliances that have started several months back have now intensified.

Political alliances

The two main political parties that alternated in power in the last century, the United National Party (UNP) and the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP), are now shadows of their former selves. Recently a prominent political analyst humorously wrote that the UNP was the Grand Old Party, but the ‘grand’ part of it was no longer valid.
The Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) formed by the Rajapaksas after abandoning the SLFP emerged as the most powerful political party in the country and came to power in a very short period of time, but it too lost its influence following the unprecedented popular uprising that ousted it two years ago.

The UNP could not win even a single seat at the last Parliamentary Elections except for a National List seat. The same fate would have befallen the SLFP under former President Maithripala Sirisena, if it had not contested with the SLPP. The UNP’s vote bank is currently with the Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB), which was formed by Opposition Leader Sajith Premadasa four years ago after falling out with President Ranil Wickremesinghe in a battle for the leadership.

Continue reading ‘Dramatic changes in the political landscape make strange bedfellows. We will see more such additions in the coming days.’ »

When Sarath Fonseka Challenged Mahinda Rajapaksa For The Presidency in 2010.

By

D.B.S.Jeyaraj

Gardihewa Sarath Chandralal Fonseka known generally as Sarath Fonseka has thrown his hat into the presidential poll ring again . The former army commander who is Sri Lanka’s one and only Field Marshal has stated in a post on “X”(Twitter) that he would be a contender at the forthcoming presidential election. The following is Fonseka’s formal announcement –

“I wish to announce my Presidential Candidacy to the people of Sri Lanka. For 76 years, we have been led by an inept political group that has led us to bankruptcy. For Sri Lanka to grow, we need to #Crush Corruption We need to leverage our natural resources to boost income generation. This is my formal and official announcement as the presidential candidate of Sri Lanka for the 2024 Presidential Election. I invite every Sri Lankan to join me to take Sri Lanka forward.”

Field Marshal Fonseka’s declaration that he is contesting the presidency evokes a sense of déjà vu. Fonseka made history in 2010 by contesting the presidential election. He was the first Sri Lankan army chief to do so. However the honour of being the first military officer to become executive president went to Sarath Fonseka’s friend turned foe Gotabaya Rajapaksa who was elected in 2019.

It is too early at this point of time to analyze or assess how Fonseka’s presidential election campaign is going to unfold.In fact the possibility of the ex-army chief changing his mind and pulling out of the presidential stakes cannot be ruled out either. Against this backdrop , this column intends this week to wander down memory lane with the aid of my earlier writings and re-visit the background and circumstances which led to Fonseka’s previous foray into the presidential election of 2010.

Continue reading ‘When Sarath Fonseka Challenged Mahinda Rajapaksa For The Presidency in 2010.’ »

மீண்டும் ஜனாதிபதி தேர்தலி்ல் களமிறங்கும் பீல்ட் மார்ஷல் சரத் பொன்சேகா மீண்டும் கவனத்தை ஈர்த்திருக்கிறார்.


டி.பி.எஸ். ஜெயராஜ்

சரத் பொன்சேகா என்று பொதுவாக அறியப்படும் கார்திஹேவா சரத் சந்திரபால் பொன்சேகா மீண்டும் ஜனாதிபதி தேர்தலில் களமிறக்கப்போவதாக அறிவித்திருக்கிறார். இலங்கையின் ஒரேயெரு பீல்ட் மார்ஷலான முன்னாள் இராணுவத் தளபதி எதிர்வரும் ஜனாதிபதி தேர்தலில் ஒரு போட்டியாளராக இருப்பேன் என்று ‘எக்ஸ் ‘ (ருவிற்றர்) சமூக ஊடகத்தில் பதிவொன்றைச் செய்திருக்கிறார்.

அவரின் முறைப்படியான அறிவிப்பு வருமாறு ; ஜனாதிபதி வேட்பாளராக போட்டியிடப்போவதை இலங்கை மக்களுக்கு அறிவிக்க விரும்புகிறேன். எம்மை வங்குரோத்து நிலைக்கு கொண்டவந்த திறமையற்ற ஒரு அரசியல் குழுவினால் 76 வருடங்களாக நாம் ஆட்சி செய்யப்பட்டிருக்கிறோம். இலங்கை வளர்ச்சியடைய வேண்டுமானால் ஊழலை நசுக்கவேண்டியது அவசியமாகும். வருமானப் பெருக்கத்தை மேம்படுத்த எமது வளங்களை நாம் முறையாகப் பயன்படுத்தவேண்டியது அவசியமாகும். இதுை இலங்கையின் 2024 ஜனாதிபதி தேர்தலில் நான் போட்டியிடப்போவது தொடர்பிலான உத்தியோகபூர்வமானதும் முறைப்படியானதுமான எனது அறிவிப்பாகும். இலங்கையை முன்னோக்கி வழிநடத்திச்செல்ல என்னுடன் இணையுமாறு சகல இலங்கையர்களையும் அழைக்கிறேன்.”

பீல்ட் மார்ஷல் பொன்சேகாவின் இந்த பிரகடனம் பழைய நினைவுகளை எமக்கு கொண்டுவருகிறது. ஜனாதிபதி தேர்தலில் போட்டியிட்டதன் மூலம் 2010 ஆம் ஆண்டில் வரலாறு படைத்தார். அவ்வாறு செய்த முதன் முதலான இலங்கை இராணுவத்தளபதி அவரே. ஆனால், நிறைவேற்று அதிகாரியாக வந்த முதல் இராணுவ அதிகாரி என்ற கௌரவம் சரத் பொன்சேகாவின் நண்பனாக இருந்து பிறகு எதிரியாக மாறிய கோட்டாபய ராஜபக்சவுக்கே கிடைத்தது. அவர் 2019 நவம்பர் ஜனாதிபதி தேர்தலில் போட்டியிட்டு வெற்றிபெற்றார்.

சரத் பொன்சேகாவின் ஜனாதிபதி தேர்தல் எவ்வாறு முன்னெடுக்கப்படப் போகிறது என்பதை ஆராய்வதற்கோ அல்லது மதிப்பிடுவதற்கோ இது பொருத்தமான நேரம் அல்ல. முன்னாள் இராணுவத்தளபதி தனது மனதை மாற்றி போட்டியில் இருந்து விலகுவதற்கான வாய்ப்பை நிராகரிப்பதற்கும் இல்லை. இத்தகைய பின்புலத்தில், முன்னதாக 2010 ஜனாதிபதி தேர்தலில் பொன்சேகாவை போட்டியிடவைத்த சூழ்நிலைகளை நினைவுமீட்டிப் பார்ப்பது பொருத்தமானதாக இருக்கும்.

Continue reading ‘மீண்டும் ஜனாதிபதி தேர்தலி்ல் களமிறங்கும் பீல்ட் மார்ஷல் சரத் பொன்சேகா மீண்டும் கவனத்தை ஈர்த்திருக்கிறார்.’ »

SLPP Deciding not to Support Ranil is a Blessing in Disguise for him because Wickremesinghe would be better off without the endorsement of the Rajapaksas.

By

Ranga Jayasuriya

Monday (July 29) night, the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) finally parted ways with Ranil Wickremesinghe, announcing plans to field its own candidate at the presidential election. The move effectively split the Pohottuwa and saw President Wickremesinghe affiliated SLPP MPs, 11 of them, leaving the party’s central committee meeting and assembling at the UNP headquarters to endorse the candidacy of Wickremesinghe.

Pohottuwa’s split was predictable, and so was its plan to field a separate candidate in a desperate bid to hold onto the eroding Rajapaksa stranglehold. The move is not necessarily an election winner for the Pohottuwa, nor is it even designed to address the electoral calculations of the forthcoming presidential election.

If it ever plays out, it would be in the long term, preserving the Pohottuwa as a Rajapaksa fiefdom for Namal Rajapaksa to re-launch his political ambitions much later. Ranil has co-opted much of the competent parliamentarians of the Pohottuwa, and the Rajapaksas finally decided enough is enough.

That the Rajapaksa acolytes could now conduct politics freely, without the fear of being thrown into the Beira Lake by the angry youth, might have also helped the decision. That sense of political normalisation for the Pohottuwa is the primary gain it elicited from its backing of Ranil Wickremesinghe’s presidency.

Continue reading ‘SLPP Deciding not to Support Ranil is a Blessing in Disguise for him because Wickremesinghe would be better off without the endorsement of the Rajapaksas.’ »

Rajapaksa led SLPP Decides Not to Back Ranil Wickremesinghe in the 2024 Presidential Election. Despite Withdrawal of Support by SLPP, 92 out of 225 MPs Pledge Support to Wickremesinghe says President’s Office


By

Meera Srinivasan

The Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP or People’s Front) — led by the once-powerful Rajapaksa clan which was deposed from power in 2022 — has said it will not back President Ranil Wickremesinghe in the presidential polls in September.

The decision, announced after the party’s central committee’s meeting on Monday, marks the withdrawal of the Rajapaksas’ support to Mr. Wickremesinghe, two years after they helped him rise to the country’s most powerful office. He replaced former President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, who resigned in July 2022, in the wake of a mass uprising that blamed him chiefly for the country’s dramatic economic crash.

In 2021, Mr. Wickremesinghe was the United National Party’s (UNP) lone MP in parliament, following his party’s poll debacle in the 2020 general election. In May 2022, Mr. Gotabaya appointed him Prime Minister, in place of Mr. Mahinda, who resigned amid the surging protests. After Mr. Gotabaya stepped down in July 2022, Mr. Wickremesinghe won an urgent parliamentary vote with the SLPP’s support, and has since relied on it to pass several legislations.

While Mr. Wickremesinghe earned praise from some for taking over the country’s leadership at a critical time, and “stabilising” its battered economy, his dependence on and association with the Rajapaksas have drawn criticism from those who sought a clean break from the Rajapaksa administration tainted by allegations of corruption and mismanagement.

In November 2023, Sri Lanka’s Supreme Court ruled that the Rajapaksa brothers (Mr. Mahinda, Mr. Gotabaya and Mr. Basil), along with other top officials in their government [2019 to 2022] “demonstrably contributed to” the country’s devastating economic crisis and violated “public trust”, but they faced no consequence.

On their party’s poll-time decision, SLPP General Secretary Sagara Kariyawasam said Mr. Wickremesinghe’s policies were not agreeable to members. “For instance, our party has a position on whether and how to go about privatising national assets. But the President does not care about national assets or the underprivileged people of this country,” he told The Hindu on Tuesday.

Asked about the candidate the party would field, Mr. Kariyawasam said: “That decision has not been taken as yet,” amid wide speculation that a non-Rajapaksa may be nominated for the first time.

Meanwhile, some SLPP members, especially those who are part of Mr. Wickremesinghe’s Cabinet, are expected to stay with him in the coming election, signalling a virtual split in the SLPP.
Namal Rajapaksa, son of former President Mahinda Rajapaksa and the party’s national organiser, has blamed Mr. Wickremesinghe for dividing the party that backed him over the last two years.

Following Monday’s decision, Mr. Namal, a parliamentarian from the southern Hambantota district, said on the social media platform ‘X’: “With our decision to field our own candidate, we acknowledge past challenges and commit to unity, economic stability, and restoring trust.”

For now, this leaves Mr. Wickremesinghe with what remains of his UNP —its breakaway faction, the Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB or United People’s Force), is the main opposition party — a faction of the SLPP, and certain other backers, including from parties representing the island nation’s minority Tamils, Muslims, and Malaiyaha (hill country) Tamils.

Contesting this election as an independent candidate, Mr. Wickremesinghe faces at least two strong challengers in Leader of Opposition Sajith Premadasa, and Anura Kumara Dissanayake, who leads the opposition National People’s Power (NPP) alliance.
In a media statement on Tuesday evening, the President’s office said 92 legislators, of the 225-member House, pledged their support to him.

Courtesy:The Hindu

“If Presidential Candidates are serious about their promises to eradicate corruption, will they be willing to face tough questions on these issues at a public forum we are prepared to host?-ITAK MPs Sumanthiran and Shanakiyan

(Texr of Media Release Issued by Jaffna District Parliamentarian M.A. Sumanthiran and Batticaloa District MP Shanakiyan Rasamanickam n 26 July 2024)

The country is at cross-roads at the moment; A crucial pivotal point in our post-independence history. We were an economy with a surplus and an example for other to follow; even a model for Singapore’s Lee Kuan Yew.

We could afford to deliver free education up to tertiary level and free health services to all citizen, which is unmatched anywhere in the world. From such a lofty and healthy position, we have fallen into deep debt and have declared ourselves officially bankrupt.

We have also fought a civil war for three decades and are still struggling to recover from its after-effects and achieve meaningful reconciliation. Corruption levels are one of the worst in the whole world that has pulled us down further.

As a result of all these, two years ago, the citizens of this country revolted and took to the streets. They called for a total system change and brought about unimaginable changes relatively without violence.

The finance minister of the country and the prime minister had to resign, and the president who was elected with a popular vote three years previously had to flee the country and then resign. Those changes were brought about not through conventional methods of election etc., but by popular uprising. Since then it is only now that the citizens will get an opportunity to express themselves democratically by casting their votes.

At this pivotal moment we have thought it necessary to place before the people a few crucial issues that need to be addressed radically if the country is to turn around and achieve peace and prosperity. We are members of Parliament elected from the Northern and Eastern provinces of this country, coming from the districts of Jaffna and Batticaloa, which are predominantly or almost totally inhabited by Tamil Speaking People, who are numerically the minority in the country.

We represent a People who are yet struggling to achieve equal citizenship status and who at one time wanted to form a separate state and live independently for that very reason.

Continue reading ‘“If Presidential Candidates are serious about their promises to eradicate corruption, will they be willing to face tough questions on these issues at a public forum we are prepared to host?-ITAK MPs Sumanthiran and Shanakiyan’ »

My Family’s “Black July” Experience: A Personal Memoir.

By

D.B.S.Jeyaraj

The anti-Tamil pogrom of July 1983 is an unforgettable chapter in the post-independence history of Sri Lanka. The catastrophic events of that dark month drastically affected the lives of large numbers of Tamils in Sri Lanka.

As a Sri Lankan Tamil journalist, Black July did have an effect on me in both personal and professional capacities. Furthermore my family – like thousands of other Tamil families – was also affected and displaced during those turbulent times.

Although I have been writing extensively about Black July in the past, I did not write about those happenings from a personal perspective for many,many years.

I refrained for a long time from writing about the impact of Black July on our family for two reasons. Firstly I was spared the full blast of that violence because I was not in Colombo then. I was on assignment to cover the Tamil United Liberation Front (TULF) party convention in Mannar.

Secondly my family members though affected were fortunate in not having to undergo suffering or suffer losses on the scale of what some other Tamil families underwent then.

My family was forced to abandon home in Ratmalana and hide among bushes in a marsh infested by kabaragoyas and snakes to avoid a mob. Both my father and brother were caught up in a mob on the infamous “Tiger Friday” on 29 July 1983 and escaped miraculously. My mother and two sisters were compelled to relocate to Jaffna.

Nevertheless our family felt blessed in the sense that none of us were killed or physically hurt. As such I never wrote about July 1983 from a personal angle because I thought my family’s experience did not warrant it. Also I did not want to revive those painful memories.

For nearly four decades I never wrote about Black July from a personal perspective. However I did write about my family’s black July experience in our sister paper “Daily FT” last year to denote the 40th anniversary of black July. Much of what I wrote then was from what I had heard from my family members about their ordeal This week’s column is a modified version of that article.

Continue reading ‘My Family’s “Black July” Experience: A Personal Memoir.’ »

Sri Lanka’s Presidential Elections to be held on 21st September 2024; Incumbent President Ranil Wickremesinghe among the first to pay Cash deposit to Contest as an Independent Candidate

By

Meera Srinivasan

Sri Lanka’s presidential polls will be held on September 21, the Election Commission said on Friday. Some 17 million voters will have their first chance of electing the country’s leader, after a mass people’s uprising ousted former President Gotabaya Rajapaksa two years ago.

President Ranil Wickremesinghe was among the first to formally get into the fray. His office announced making a cash deposit at the Commission for his candidacy as an independent, although he has relied on the Rajapaksas’ Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP or People’s Front) since his rise to Presidency through an urgent parliamentary vote, after Mr. Gotabaya’s resignation amid the 2022 economic downturn.

During his two years in office, Mr. Wickremesinghe has vowed to rebuild the country’s economy with an International Monetary Fund-led austerity and reform programme.

Continue reading ‘Sri Lanka’s Presidential Elections to be held on 21st September 2024; Incumbent President Ranil Wickremesinghe among the first to pay Cash deposit to Contest as an Independent Candidate’ »

Ranil, Sajith and Anura Kumara must convince Sri Lankan Voters that they should not give up on hope and that they should not look elsewhere for a leader.

by Krishantha Prasad Cooray

There’s a political poster that’s been splashed on the walls of Colombo. Black letters on a yellow background mean that the author or the party cannot be identified. It is obviously a teaser campaign. It comes with a promise, which of course is the bread and butter of all politicians. Apparently, ‘the lie will come to an end,’ and on the 29th, the name of the messiah who will take all Sri Lankans to some yet-to-be-named promised land will be revealed.

This is the season for that kind of thing, so the timing is not bad at all. After all, people are talking about elections these days. They are wondering if elections will be held soon and, if so, whether it would be a presidential or parliamentary election. They talk about candidates, those who have announced their intentions and those who might very soon.

An election there will be, that much is certain. Will it be to elect a president or 225 parliamentarians? Let’s first consider the second option, which at this point is something that the president can decide upon.

A general election will tell us the relative strengths of the various parties and, of course, the temper of the electorate. As things stand, two political groups stand to gain: the Samagi Jana Balavegaya (SJB) and the National People’s Jathika Jana Balavegaya, better known as the NPP, which is made up of the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) and a scattering of individuals of varying stature and more or less nondescript organisations.

The Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna, or the ‘Pohottuwa’, would benefit only in the sense that a few would get elected, whereas they would probably fare even worse if a presidential election comes first; the winner and the winner’s party would gain enough edge to shove the Pohottuwa closer to the dustbin of history. In any event, they wouldn’t even get king-making numbers. The Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) is where the United National Party was after Gotabhaya Rajapaksa won the presidential election in 2019. The SLFP might secure a few seats in an alliance but would be an also-ran if it opts to contest alone.

How about the NPP? Today, the NPP is being considered by people who would not have a few years or even a few months ago. They say, ‘let’s try these people out.’ That’s the slogan of the desperate, dispossessed, and maybe the hopeful. Nevertheless, that ‘default option’ might work in their favour, although anything less than an absolute majority would make the ‘we can and we will win’ mantra they’ve been marketing sound a bit hollow.

The UNP was the Grand Old Party, but the ‘grand’ part of it is no longer valid. They have a president, but the question is, ‘where are his people?’ Some may answer, ‘with Sajith’, while others might think that in a season of shifting alliances, prominent stalwarts may gravitate back to the political walawwa. In a word, unlikely, especially if a parliamentary election is held first.

Why should the President risk it all by going for a general election when he may be able to cobble together a workable alliance should he run for President and win? He is risk-averse, as he clearly showed in 2010 and 2019 when the stars were aligned against him. In 2015, he worked out the arithmetic: Maithripala Sirisena had a better chance, and the premiership was a decent consolation prize.

It’s a presidential election that’s on the cards. This forces us to consider the contenders: as of now, Ranil Wickremesinghe (UNP, with or without the support of ex-UNPers), Sajith Premadasa (SJB sans Sarath Fonseka and Champika Ranawaka from his 2019 team), and Anura Kumara Dissanayake (JVP plus all those who have to utter the prayer ‘We are NPP and not JVP’ to convince themselves that they are not gullible).

We could delve into the histories of the relevant parties, ideologies espoused and amended, and track records, but that would only produce dirty and bloodied hands. Sri Lanka and Sri Lankans are realists; they go for the ‘best of the bad lot’ simply because it’s their names that are on ballot papers. In a presidential election, they look at candidates more than parties, personalities more than ideology or party history. So let’s consider these three because the others are still peripheral to the case: Ranil Wickremesinghe (RW for convenience), Sajith Premadasa (SP), and Anura Kumara Dissanayake (AKD).

RW is the most experienced politician in the country. He’s either been a cabinet minister, the Leader of the Opposition, Prime Minister, or the President since the age of 28, except for a few months between Gotabhaya’s rise and fall. His detractors may say that he was a pin-chance president, but in all sobriety, it has to be acknowledged that when everyone was ready to slash and burn, only he undertook the unenviable task of dousing a nation that had been set on fire. Chest-beaters and braggarts ranted and raved, but RW brought about some semblance of stability. We are not out of the woods, as he often says, but he has made it possible for people who believe that they will not be lost in the wilderness forever.

The question is, ‘RW with whom?’ He simply doesn’t have a team that’s worth talking about. He has depended on the same set of people whose one and only character trait is self-interest, in other words, keeping RW in power so they could exercise power. Their blemishes are many. Let’s leave it at that.

A few weeks ago, at an event marking Rohitha ‘Raththaran’ Abeygunawardena’s 27 years in politics, Pohottuwa strongman Basil Rajapaksa took a not-so-veiled dig at the President, ‘Nayath nae, bayath nae (we are not in debt to you, and neither do we fear you).’

That was one of many moments where RW could have shed the Pohottuwa baggage. After all, at this point, the Pohottuwa needs RW more than he needs the Pohottuwa. He could have spoken about debts owed by the Rajapaksas, not just to him but to every citizen of this country and those yet unborn.

He could have spoken about fear. He could have said, for example, that it’s quite alright for anyone not to fear him, but that he knows how terrified Basil was during the last days of the Aragalaya, where he took refuge and who offered him protection. He didn’t say anything, which begs the question, ‘if a man is not willing to stand up for himself, will he stand up for you?’

In the end, RW continues to stand with the debtors and the arsonists. Why then should anyone believe he would abandon them at any point?

Speaking of standing up, we can also talk about SP. Just the other day, party stalwart Hirunika Premachandra was arrested. Now Hirunika, without a doubt, is a brave woman. She stood up to the supposedly invincible Rajapaksas all by herself. Indeed, the events she set off helped RW, SP, and AKD; this too must be mentioned.

This is not to say she’s a paragon of virtue and can do no wrong. She took the law into her hands, albeit on behalf of a victim. No one says that SP should have criticised the judges in this case, but he could have talked about Hirunika’s courage or simply offered a word of support in her moment of distress. He did not. In a country where thugs get away scot-free and politicians pamper them no end, this was the least he could do. He did nothing. If he doesn’t have a kind word for someone like Hirunika, would he care about the trials and tribulations of the ordinary citizen?

SP is no ‘fresh face’ in politics. He’s been in Parliament for 24 years. He’s been a cabinet minister and the Leader of the Opposition. He adds to this the half a century of his father’s political life, almost at every turn. He thereby lays claim to President Premadasa’s legacy but forgets that it was not untainted.

To his credit, he has a team or rather has so far managed to make them toe his line. That says a lot about his team, though. The SJB was launched in opposition to RW, RW’s dictatorial ways, and the UNP’s lack of internal democracy. Today, SP is no better than RW when it comes to giving leadership to a party. It’s his way or the highway. He has arrogated upon himself all decision-making powers. The stalwarts say nothing. Are they fascinated with navel-gazing, one must ask.

RW is the leader of the party of which SP was the deputy leader for a long time. So, the UNP’s one-time leader and deputy are the President and Leader of the Opposition, respectively. Ironically, they have no ideological differences. They are actually very much alike in the way they lead their parties. However, even to save the country or defeat a common enemy, these two just can’t come together. Their egos and self-interest are bigger than all that.

RW is around 20 years older than SP. SP didn’t realise that he doesn’t lose if RW wins. RW didn’t realise that it is not a disgrace to go out of his way to talk SP into returning to the UNP. Is self-interest and ego what’s most important to these two? If so, it disqualifies both of them. They are not the leaders most suited to face the challenges of the next five years.

What about AKD? AKD, like SP, came to Parliament in 2000. He too was a cabinet minister. He was very vocal when the JVP backed President Chandrika Kumaratunga, Mahinda Rajapaksa, and Sarath Fonseka. He was the leader of the party when the JVP backed Maithripala Sirisena. He cannot wash away the sins he was party to, even if today’s JVP talks and acts as though political life in Sri Lanka began after 1988-89.

The JVP, for all their rhetoric, still seems to be a confused political entity. They simply cannot go beyond populist slogans. There’s a glaring lack of coherence and clarity in the statements issued by party stalwarts. Their concerns about governance are legitimate, and one might even believe that they are serious about fixing the flaws. Indeed, AKD must at some point understand that the make-or-break matter is finance and governance, not only governance. We are simply too close to the brink to have the luxury of a system-fix first. As of now, they are in “dennam-kaasi” mode, or ‘we will fix this, we will do that, etc.’ Nothing of the ‘how.’ Ask them a question about policies and processes, and the NPP boys and girls get hot under the collar, shower invective on the well-meaning questioner and their political rivals. That’s been the JVP’s history. The NPP is no better.

Despite some inconsistencies by certain members of the NPP regarding policy issues, AKD comes out as a man of sincerity. He does not belong to some political family and, as such, does not carry dynastic baggage. Most importantly, he undoubtedly has empathy for the people who bear the brunt of all the manufacturing defects of the system and the additional burdens created by the major political parties when in power.

So where do we stand? Does Sri Lanka need RW’s experience? Should Sri Lanka be wary of his isolationist tendency and an unelected inner circle who has his ear and, worse, may be controlling his mind? Can Sri Lanka afford not to have SP’s team? Should Sri Lanka worry about a team that may waive intellect, reason, and integrity in favour of a clearly self-absorbed leader, a man who tends to be about ‘I, me and myself’? Can Sri Lanka afford AKD’s idealism in a party that has the word but not the wisdom?

We need a candidate who thinks, feels, and acts like a leader. We need a candidate who understands that he may not have the answers but has the wisdom and humility to seek out those who may have them and embrace them regardless of what’s happened in the past. We need a candidate who has the fortitude to see beyond presidential powers and fortunes of party and loyalists. We need the candidate who least fears talent, ability, and vision in political rivals or non-political actors. We need, above all, a candidate who respects the independence of the judiciary to a fault and follows the rule of law.

None of the above three could be described in the above manner right now. They could move in those directions and perhaps offer some hope so that people may vote for someone who can unify the country, face challenges, and deliver.

RW, SP, and AKD have a task: convince the electorate that they should not give up on hope and that they should not look elsewhere for a leader.

*****************************************************

Field Marshal Sarath Fonseka Will Contest for President at Forthcoming Election; EX-Army chief says “This is my formal and official announcement as the presidential candidate of Sri Lanka for the 2024 Presidential Election” in Message Posted on “X”(twitter)

Ex-army chief Sarath Fonseka has announced his intention to contest at Sri Lanka’s upcoming presidential election in a pre-dawn X (twitter) message.“I wish to announce my Presidential Candidacy to the people of Sri Lanka”

“For 76 years, we have been led by an inept political group that has led us to bankruptcy.”

“This is my formal and official announcement as the presidential candidate of Sri Lanka for the 2024 Presidential Election.

“I invite every Sri Lankan to join me to take Sri Lanka forward.”
The former Army chief said for Sri Lanka to grow, “we need to #CrushCorruption,” and “We need to leverage our natural resources to boost income generation,” echoing the oft-repeated slogans of some other political parties.

Continue reading ‘Field Marshal Sarath Fonseka Will Contest for President at Forthcoming Election; EX-Army chief says “This is my formal and official announcement as the presidential candidate of Sri Lanka for the 2024 Presidential Election” in Message Posted on “X”(twitter)’ »

Justice, Prison Affairs and Constitutional Reforms Minister Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe announced he will Contest for President in the upcoming presidential election; says “I am coming forward as a candidate for the victory of Sri Lanka state and its people,”

Sri Lanka’s Justice, Prison Affairs and Constitutional Reforms Minister Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe announced he will be running for president at the upcoming presidential election.

“I am coming forward as a candidate for the victory of Sri Lanka state and its people,” Rajapakshe told reporters at the Independence Arcade on Thursday.

Rajapakshe said short sighted policies led to an economic crisis and poverty.

Continue reading ‘Justice, Prison Affairs and Constitutional Reforms Minister Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe announced he will Contest for President in the upcoming presidential election; says “I am coming forward as a candidate for the victory of Sri Lanka state and its people,”’ »

Three Judge Bench of Supreme Court Issues Interim Order Restraining Deshabandu Tennakoon from Functioning as Inspector -General of Police Until Final Determination of Nine Fundamental rights Petitions Challenging his Appointment as IGP

By

Lakmal Sooriyagoda

The Supreme Court today issued an interim order restraining Deshabandu Tennakoon from functioning as the Inspector General of Police.

The order will be effective until the final determination of nine Fundamental Rights Applications filed challenging his appointment as IGP.

The order was issued by a three-judge-bench which comprised Justice Yasantha Kodagoda, Justice Achala Wengappuli and Justice Mahinda Samayawardena following nine Fundamental Rights petitions filed challenging the appointment of Deshabandu Tennakoon as the Inspector General of Police was today taken up for order.

Continue reading ‘Three Judge Bench of Supreme Court Issues Interim Order Restraining Deshabandu Tennakoon from Functioning as Inspector -General of Police Until Final Determination of Nine Fundamental rights Petitions Challenging his Appointment as IGP’ »

Sri Lanka Apologizes for the Gotabaya Rajapaksa Administration Enforcing a “Cremation Only” Policy for Victims of Covid 19 Pandemic that Hurt Muslim Religious Sentiments


By

Meera Srinivasan

Sri Lanka on Tuesday apologised for enforcing a “cremations only” policy during the Covid-19 pandemic, going against the religious sentiments of Muslims, as well as expert views that burials were safe.

Issuing a statement on Tuesday, the government said the Cabinet approved a joint proposal from a group of ministers “to plead an apology on behalf of the government”, from all communities affected by the compulsory cremation policy during the pandemic, when President Gotabaya Rajapaksa was in office.

The government cited two studies it commissioned later that showed burying the bodies of Covid-19 victims presented no risk of the virus spreading through the water table – the claim that authorities based their policy decision on.

Continue reading ‘Sri Lanka Apologizes for the Gotabaya Rajapaksa Administration Enforcing a “Cremation Only” Policy for Victims of Covid 19 Pandemic that Hurt Muslim Religious Sentiments’ »

கறுப்பு ஜூலையில் ‘ ஒரு தமிழ்ப் பத்திரிகையாளர் குடும்பத்தின் அனுபவம்

டி.பி.எஸ். ஜெயராஜ்

1983 ஜூலையில் தமிழ் மக்களுக்கு எதிராக கட்டவிழ்த்துவிடப்பட்ட கொடூரமான வன்முறை சுதந்திரத்துக்கு பின்னரான இலங்கையின் வரலாற்றில் மறக்கமுடியாத ஒரு அத்தியாயம். அந்த இருண்ட மாதத்தின் பெருங்கேடான நிகழ்வுகள் இலங்கையில் பெரும் எண்ணிக்கையிலான தமிழர்களின் வாழ்வை கடுமையாகப் பாதித்தன.

இலங்கையின் ஒரு தமிழ்ப் பத்திரிகையாளன் என்ற வகையில், கறுப்பு ஜூலை என்னை தனிப்பட்ட முறையிலும் தொழில்சார் அடிப்படையிலும் பாதித்தது. மேலும், ஆயிரக்கணக்கான ஏனைய தமிழ்க் குடும்பங்களைப் போன்று எனது குடும்பமும் கொந்தளிப்பான அந்த நாட்களில் பாதிக்கப்பட்டு இடம்பெயர்ந்தது.

அப்போது நான் வடக்கில் மன்னார் சென்றிருந்ததால் அந்த வன்முறையின் முழுத் தாக்கத்தையும் நான் அனுபவிக்கவில்லை. மனானாரில் நடைபெற்ற தமிழர் ஐக்கிய விடுதலை கூட்டணியின் மகாநாட்டு செய்திகளை சேகரிக்கும் பணிக்காக நான் மன்னாருக்கு அனுப்பிவைக்கப்பட்டேன். எனது குடும்ப உறுப்பினர்கள் பாதிக்கப்பட்டிருந்தாலும், வேறு சில தமிழ்க் குடும்பங்கள் அனுபவித்ததைப் போன்ற கொடூரங்களையும் அவலங்களையும் அவர்கள் அதிர்ஷ்டவசமாக அனுபவிக்கவில்லை. எமது குடும்பத்தில் எவரும் கொல்லப்படவோ அல்லது காயமடையவோ இல்லை. அந்த வகையில் ஏதோ ஆசீர்வதிக்கப்பட்டவர்களாக இருந்தோம்.

சுமார் நான்கு தசாப்தங்களாக கறுப்பு ஜூலை குறித்து தனிப்பட்ட நோக்கில் நான் ஒருபோதும் எழுதவில்லை. வேதனையான நிகழ்வுகளை மீட்டிப்பார்க்க நான் விரும்பவில்லை.ஆனால் கறுப்பு ஜூலையின் 40 வது வருடாந்த நினைவாக கடந்த வருடம் எழுதியிருந்தேன். தங்களுக்கு நேர்ந்த சோதனைகள் பற்றி எனது குடும்பத்தவர்கள் கூறியவற்றின் அடிப்படையில் இதை எழுதுகிறேன்.

Continue reading ‘கறுப்பு ஜூலையில் ‘ ஒரு தமிழ்ப் பத்திரிகையாளர் குடும்பத்தின் அனுபவம்’ »

Failure to find a political solution is a bigger shame than Black July


By

Veeragathy Thanabalasingham

After the death of veteran Tamil political leader Rajavarothayam Sampanthan recently, a communist leader from Tamil Nadu contacted me and asked about the remarkable role the late leader played in Sri Lankan Tamil politics.

I began by recounting Sampanthan’s contributions to the negotiations that led to the signing of the Indo-Lanka Peace Accord after the 1983 Black July anti-Tamil pogrom. He immediately interrupted and asked me what happened in July 1983. I was very much disappointed that there was a Leftist leader in neighbouring Tamil Nadu who did not know that the brutal ethnic violence against Tamils all over the country led to the civil war that lasted almost three decades.
He is not too young to know what happened in Sri Lanka at that time. I wondered if he had not even considered why Sri Lankan Tamil refugees had been staying in Tamil Nadu camps for more than four decades.

Sampanthan’s demise and this Tamil Nadu politician’s questioning three weeks ahead of the 41st anniversary of Black July, though coincidental, have provided me with an opportunity to write about the ethnic violence that marked a watershed in ethnic relations in Sri Lanka.

Continue reading ‘Failure to find a political solution is a bigger shame than Black July’ »

Captain Miller’s Suicide Attack in Nelliaddy on 5 July 1987 Gave Birth to the “Karumpuligal” ( Black Tigers)

By

D.B.S.Jeyaraj

Vallipuram Vasanthan alias “Captain Miller” the first Suicide bumber of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam(LTTE) is the focus of this two -part article. A brief description of the pioneering “Black Tiger” or “Karumpuli” and events leading to the first Black Tiger operation on 5 July 1987 was outlined in the first part published last week. Details of the LTTE attack on the military camp at the Nelliaddy MMV school premises would be related in this second and concluding part.

As stated earlier the Sri Lankan Armed forces had re-taken control of the Vadamaratchi sector in the Northern Jaffna peninsula through “Operation Liberation” launched on 27 May 1987. The army may have continued with the military push and attempted to seize control of Jaffna town but for Indian intervention.

India conducted “Operation Poomaalai” on June 4th 1987. What India did was to air drop food supplies in various parts of the peninsula through Indian Air Force planes. It was claimed that Jaffna was undergoing a severe food shortage bordering on starvation due to the military operation. Therefore India was conducting a humanitarian operation to deliver food to the people of Jaffna. Even though the ostensible purpose of “Operation Poomaalai” was to deliver food, the implicit political message to Colombo was to suspend all military operations. Colombo was indirectly warned to stay away from Jaffna. “Thus far and no further” was the Lakshmana Rekha drawn by New Delhi.

The Sri Lankan armed forces therefore dug into the new areas they had retaken from LTTE control and consolidated their positions. Plans to advance further on ground were put on hold. An uneasy calm prevailed in the North but the LTTE ousted from Vadamaratchy was exceedingly bitter and angry

As mentioned earlier , the military setback was a big blow to the LTTE as the Vadamaratchy division was considered to be the impregnable fortress of the tigers then. The LTTE referred to the Vadamaratchy region as “California” then. A host of LTTE leaders including Prabakharan, Mahathaya ,Kittu, Johnny, Vaasu and Soosai hailed from the Vadamaratchy area. So the fall of Vadamaratchy was a prestige issue for the tigers. Vadamaratchy cadres like Miller were under emotional strain because of this.

More importantly the fall of Vadamaratchy had also diminished the confidence the people had in the LTTE. The people of Jaffna had believed that the tigers would confine the army to the barracks thereby keeping most areas in Jaffna devoid of a military presence. If Vadamaratchy the LTTE citadel could be re- captured then the rest of Jaffna too could be captured by the army felt the people.

Continue reading ‘Captain Miller’s Suicide Attack in Nelliaddy on 5 July 1987 Gave Birth to the “Karumpuligal” ( Black Tigers)’ »

Rajavarothayam Sampanthan: The Political Journey of a “Perunthalaiver” (Great Leader) – Part 2.

By

D.B.S.Jeyaraj

The funeral of veteran Tamil political leader Rajavarothayam Sampanthan took place in Trincomalee on 7th July 2024.Large crowds bade farewell to the Nonagenarian Trincomalee Parliamentarian who had served as MP for 32 years. Among those who paid homage to Sampanthan in Trinco was Sri Lankan President Ranil Wickremesinghe. Earlier the President along with first lady Dr.Maithree Wickremesinghe had paid their respects in Colombo when the senior Tamil leader’s mortal remains were kept for viewing at the AF Raymonds funeral parlour.

Leader of the opposition Sajith Premadasa in his message described the demise of Rajavarothayam Sampanthan as the “end of an era”. Sampanthan’s political journey spanning more than seven decades covered an eventful period in the contemporary history of the Sri Lankan Tamils. The first of this two part article published last week briefly traced the early stages of Sampanthan’s political journey. The later phases of his political journey will be outlined in this second and final part.

As mentioned earlier , it was the respected Leader of the Tamil United Liberation Front(TULF) S.J.V.Chelvanayakam who wanted Rajavarothayam Sampanthan to contest the Trincomalee electorate in the 1977 elections. In a private meeting held some months before the poll with Sampanthan and Appapillai Amirthalingam, Chelva had finalised this arrangement for Trinco. Chelvanayakam passed away in April 1977. Amirthalingam held the reins when elections were announced for July 1977.

Continue reading ‘Rajavarothayam Sampanthan: The Political Journey of a “Perunthalaiver” (Great Leader) – Part 2.’ »

If Incumbent President Ranil Wickremesinghe thinks he could win because he salvaged the economy from a free fall, he might be overly optimistic. Perhaps he has to rethink his campaign message to make it more palatable to the grassroots. Possibly, he can ask Mahinda Rajapaksa how to do that!

By

Ranga Jayasuriya

When the country ran out of foreign reserves and fuel queues sprang up, Sri Lankans stormed the President’s House and ousted Gotabaya Rajapaksa. That may be an extreme case, but that was not the first time the street protestors toppled governments when the going got tough.

Dudley Senanayake, the second prime minister, was the first victim of the populist outrage after he increased the price of a measure of rice’ from subsidised 25 cents to 70 cents when it transpired rice subsidy was consuming one-third of all government revenue. Senanayake resigned after the police firing killed a couple of rioters during a mass hartal organised by the left.

However, do Sri Lankans also reward the governments that deliver, or at least make a conscious effort to generate, higher economic growth? History tells no.

That unique Sri Lankan psyche might haunt Ranil Wickremesinghe, who thinks the economic recovery would serve his luck. That might also explain why not a single government in the past opted to implement far-reaching liberal economic reforms to turbo-charge the underperforming Sri Lankan economy. Because, that was a thankless job, which might get you voted out at the next election.

Continue reading ‘If Incumbent President Ranil Wickremesinghe thinks he could win because he salvaged the economy from a free fall, he might be overly optimistic. Perhaps he has to rethink his campaign message to make it more palatable to the grassroots. Possibly, he can ask Mahinda Rajapaksa how to do that!’ »

President Ranil Wickreme-singhe challenges Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) leader Sajith Premadasa to disclose the source of funding for the party’s ongoing school bus donation program.; says he will collaborate with SJB to combat corruption if it reveals source of funding behind school bus donations


President Ranil Wickreme-singhe has challenged Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) leader Sajith Premadasa to disclose the source of funding for the party’s ongoing school bus donation program.

Addressing another public meeting in Kandy under the “Ekwa Jayagamu” (Let’s Win Together) series of rallies over the weekend, President Ranil Wickremesinghe set a condition for joining the Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) led by Sajith Premadasa.

The President said he is ready to collaborate with the SJB to combat corruption, but only if Premadasa discloses the source of funding for the school bus donation program.

Continue reading ‘President Ranil Wickreme-singhe challenges Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) leader Sajith Premadasa to disclose the source of funding for the party’s ongoing school bus donation program.; says he will collaborate with SJB to combat corruption if it reveals source of funding behind school bus donations’ »

“Captain Miller” the LTTE’s First Black Tiger (Karumpuli) Suicide Bomber.


By

D.B.S. Jeyaraj

“Captain Miller” is the name of an Indian film released on 12 January 2024. The block buster Tamil Movie had popular actor Dhanush acting in the lead titular role of Captain Miller. The film was a fictional tale about a heroic rebel who fought against British colonial rule. Reports state that the film is the highest ever grossing film starring Dhanush.

One reason for the film’s success was it’s title which evoked much interest and curiosity. “Captain Miller”was the nom de guerre of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam(LTTE) suicide bomber who drove an explosive laden truck into an army camp in the north on 5 July 1987. This was the first time the LTTE had deployed a suicide bomber called “Black Tiger”or “Karumpuli” in a military attack. The name of Capt Miller the first “Black tiger” strikes a responsive chord among many Tamils. July 5th was annually observed as Black tigers day by the LTTE till May 2009.

It is against this backdrop that this column focuses this week in a two -part article on the first ever black tiger attack launched by the LTTE. The LTTE is no more and Black Tigers day fades into memory nowadays. Nevertheless the birth and growth of the black tigers is an important element in the military annals of guerilla warfare in general and the military campaign history of the LTTE in particular. I shall begin with a brief outline of the first black tiger operation.


Vallipuram Vasanthan

Continue reading ‘“Captain Miller” the LTTE’s First Black Tiger (Karumpuli) Suicide Bomber.’ »

இலங்கை தமிழர் அரசியலின் சமகால வரலாற்றில் தீர்க்கமான நிகழ்வுகள் நிறைந்த காலகட்டத்தை உள்ளடக்கிய இராஜவரோதயம் சம்பந்தனின் அரசியல் பயணம்


டி.பி.எஸ். ஜெயராஜ்

முதுபெரும் தமிழ் அரசியல் தலைவர் இராஜவரோதயம் சம்பந்தனின் இறுதிச் சடங்குகள் திருகோணமலையில் 2024 ஜூலை 7 ஞாயிற்றுக்கிழமை நடைபெற்றன. 32 வருடங்களாக திருகோணமலையின் பாராளுமன்ற உறுப்பினராக இருந்த தலைவருக்கு பெருந்திரளான மக்கள் பிரியாவிடை கொடுத்தனர். ஜனாதிபதி ரணில் விக்கிரமசிங்கவும் திருகோணமலைக்கு சென்று இறுதிசடங்குகளில் கலந்துகொண்டார். முன்னதாக கொழும்பு பொரளை றேமண்ட் மலர்ச்சாலையில் சம்பந்தனின் பூதவுடல் அஞ்சலிக்காக வைக்கப்பட்டிருந்தபோது ஜனாதிபதி தனது மனைவி மைத்ரி விக்கிரமசிங்க சகிதம் சென்று தனது இறுதி மரியாதையைச் செலுத்தினார்.

இராஜவரோதயம் சம்பந்தனின் மறைவு ‘ ஒரு யுகத்தின் முடிவு ‘ என்று எதிர்க்கட்சி தலைவர் சஜித் பிரேமதாச தனது அனுதாபச் செய்தியில் வர்ணித்திருந்தார். ஏழு தசாப்தங்களுக்கும் அதிகமான கால நீட்சியைக்கொண்ட சம்பந்தனின் அரசியல் பயணம் இலங்கை தமிழர்களின் சமகால அரசியல் வரலாற்றில் தீர்க்கமான நிகழ்வுகள் நிறைந்த ஒரு காலகட்டத்தை தழுவியதாக அமைந்தது. கடந்தவாரம் வெளியான இந்த கட்டுரையின் முதற்பகுதி அவரின் அரசியல் பயணத்தின் முதல் கட்டங்களை சுருக்கமாக கூறியது.இரண்டாவதும் இறுதியுமான இந்த பகுதி அவரின் பிற்கால அரசியல் பயணத்தை எடுத்தியம்புகிறது.

ஏற்கெனவே குறிப்பிடப்பட்டதைப் போன்று தமிழர் ஐக்கிய விடுதலை கூட்டணியின் மதிப்புக்குரிய தலைவர் எஸ்.ஜே.வி. செல்வநாயகமே 1977 பொதுத் தேர்தலில் சம்பந்தன் திருகோணமலை தொகுதியில் போட்டியிடவேண்டும் என்று விரும்பினார். தேர்தலுக்கு சில மாதங்கள் முன்னதாக சம்பந்தனுடனும் அப்பாபிள்ளை அமிர்தலிங்கத்துடனும் நடத்திய ஒரு சந்திப்பில் செல்வநாயகம் திருகோணமலைக்கான இந்த ஏற்பாட்டை பூர்த்தி செய்தார். அவர் 1977 ஏப்ரிலில் காலமானார். 1977 ஜூலைக்கான பொதுத்தேர்தல் அறிவிக்கப்பட்டபோது அமிர்தலிங்கமே தலைமைப் பொறுப்பை ஏற்றிருந்தார்.

Continue reading ‘இலங்கை தமிழர் அரசியலின் சமகால வரலாற்றில் தீர்க்கமான நிகழ்வுகள் நிறைந்த காலகட்டத்தை உள்ளடக்கிய இராஜவரோதயம் சம்பந்தனின் அரசியல் பயணம்’ »

Murder Most Foul: Assassination of Appapillai Amirthalingam 35 Years ago


By

D.B.S. Jeyaraj

(Renowned Tamil Political leader Appapillai Amirthalingam was shot dead in Colombo along with Former Jaffna MP V.Yogeswaran on 13 July 1989. This article about the foul murder was published in the “Daily Mirror” in 2019. It is re-posted here without any changes to denote the 35th anniversary of the Amirthalingam Assassination)

The cruelly tragic killing of five Tamil students by members of the security forces thirteen years ago in the Trincomalee town was revisited in these columns last week. This week’s column seeks to revive memories about a murder most foul perpetrated by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in Colombo exactly thirty years ago. It was on the fateful day of July 13, 1989 that foremost Sri Lankan Tamil political leader and former opposition leader Appapillai Amirthalingam along with ex-Jaffna MP Vettivelu Yogeswaran was gunned down by the LTTE. Ex-Nallur MP Murugesu Sivasithamparam was shot and wounded in the same incident. All three Tiger assassins involved were shot dead by police officers in the ensuing gun battle. I have written extensively about the assassination of Appapillai Amirthalingam on earlier occasions. However, I intend re-relating some of the details concerning these killings on the 30th anniversary of the murders relying to a great extent upon my earlier writings.

Hailing from Pannaaham in Jaffna, Appapillai Amirthalingam was born on August 26, 1927. He was a charismatic and dynamic politician who served for many years as the chief lieutenant of the respected Tamil leader S.J.V. Chelvanayagam known as the Gandhi of Eelam. Amirthalingam was a lawyer by profession and had been the Illankai Thamil Arasu Katchi (ITAK) MP for Vaddukoddai from 1956 to 1970 and the Tamil United Liberation Front (TULF) MP for Kankesanthurai from 1977 to 1983. He held office as opposition leader from 1977 to 1983. In 1989, he was appointed MP on the TULF National List.

Some background details about the political situation prevailing at that time are necessary to understand the context in which the assassination of Amirthalingam took place. The Indo-Lanka Accord inked on July 29, 1987 by former Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi and Sri Lankan President Junius Richard Jayewardene had resulted in the induction of the Indian army into the North and East of Sri Lanka as peacekeepers. War had erupted between the Indian army designated as the Indian Peacekeeping Force (IPKF) and the LTTE.
According to military analysts, the hard-pressed Tigers were reportedly “gasping for oxygen” at that time. The presence of the Indian army in Sri Lanka caused much resentment among Sinhala nationalists who perceived it as a violation of sovereignty. The United National Party’s (UNP) Premadasa had been elected President in 1988 with a narrow majority. Premadasa had pledged he would send away the Indian army if elected.

HAND OF FRIENDSHIP

A campaign of violence was being spearheaded by the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP). It was at this point that the unorthodox Premadasa stretched out his “hand of friendship” to both the JVP and LTTE. While the JVP spurned the offer, the struggling LTTE grasped it. Talks in Colombo started between the government and LTTE while the Indian army kept battling the Tigers in the North and East. President Premadasa and the LTTE had a common objective. They both wanted the Indian army out for different reasons. Citing the commencement of political discourse with the LTTE, President Premadasa began demanding that a deadline be set for the Indian army to leave Sri Lanka permanently.

For both sides, the perceived fly in the ointment was former opposition leader Appapillai Amirthalingam. The Tamil United Liberation Front (TULF) Secretary-General was a firm supporter of the Indo-Lanka Accord and the Indian army presence in Sri Lanka. Although the LTTE had acquired a certain status through its violence and destructive capacity, it was the opinion of non–violent political leader Amirthalingam that carried greater clout internationally due to his political credentials and stature. The fears of the government and the LTTE were partially realised in June 1989 when Amirthalingam eloquently argued that the Indian army should not be sent away from Sri Lanka at that juncture.

Continue reading ‘Murder Most Foul: Assassination of Appapillai Amirthalingam 35 Years ago’ »

From Subaltern Status to the Pinnacle of Power: Ranasinghe Premadasa’s Remarkable Rise.


By
D.B.S.Jeyaraj

Ranasinghe Premadasa, Sri Lanka’s one and only non-Govigama Prime Minister and President is the focus of this two part article commemorating his birth centenary.The first part published last week traced in brief the early phases of Premadasa’s political journey . This second and final part -written with the aid of earlier writings – will record the remarkable rise to power of Ranasinghe Premadasa.

As stated last week, the United National Party(UNP)was down in the doldrums after the general elections of 1970. The party was in a state of disarray after the poll in which the UNP got only 17 seats in a Parliament of 157 MPs. The United Front(UF)Govt headed by Prime Minister Sirimavo Bandaranaike had 116 seats.

The despondent UNP was further demoralised due to internal differences.Party leader Dudley Senanayake and Leader of the Opposition JR Jayewardene were at loggerheads with each other. Both got embroiled in legal proceedings. On another level Ranasinghe Premadasa, the opposition chief whip revolted against Dudley and formed his own outfit the “Purawesi Peramuna”(Citizens Front), Though defiant Premadasa continued to be within the UNP. With these intra-party tensions, it appeared that the weakened UNP would either break-up or be politically-paralysed with a bleak future.

The Premadasa revolt against Senanayake along with the Dudley-JR divide may have resulted then in a three-way split of the grand-old-party, but for an unexpected development. Both Dudley and JR pulled back from the brink, resolved their differences and buried the hatchet. On May 30, 1972, both Dudley and JR met at the residence of G.J. Paris Perera, the then UNP Parliamentarian from Ja-Ela. After a frank, heart-to-heart discussion, both leaders agreed to reconcile and work together for the betterment of the party and country.

The unity forged by Dudley and JR lifted up the flagging spirits of the UNP. Dudley and JR went around the country addressing mass meetings. Massive crowds turned up. Premadasa sulking from the snubbing at Dudley’s hands continued to remain aloof.

The realignment of Dudley Senanayake and J.R. Jayewardene began paying dividends for the UNP politically, but the prickly Premadasa issue was yet unsolved. Dudley, and to some extent JR, treated Premadasa condescendingly like a recalcitrant child. Initially, they were tolerant of the Citizens Front too as it mobilised opposition to the SLFP-LSSP-CP Government and did not directly confront the UNP in any way.

Continue reading ‘From Subaltern Status to the Pinnacle of Power: Ranasinghe Premadasa’s Remarkable Rise.’ »

The SJB and UNP should join ranks and field a unified candidate. That ideally should be Ranil Wickremesinghe, given his proven track record during the last two years. That might even make Sajith Premadasa the prime minister of the next government.


By

Ranga Jayasuriya

The French experience at the concluded election offers an important lesson of political commonsense and the bare minimum of altruism for the common good

Early this week, with the far-right knocking at the gates of government power, France pulled off a miraculous comeback to defend the Fifth Republic.

After the far-right and anti-immigrant National Rally won the first round, with projected votes of 260-280 seats, a tad shy of the absolute majority of 579 members of the National Assembly, the usually bickering political parties of the left, right, and centre joined ranks to stop the formation of the first far- right since the World War II.

In order to prevent the split of the Republican vote in a three-way race, hundreds of candidates who came third in the first round withdrew from the contest to allow the better-placed anti-far right candidate to win the race.

(According to Le Monde, all but 33 candidates who came third withdrew). Tactical withdrawals turned the race upside down. The leftist New Popular Front (NFP), a loose group of parties of the far left, moderate socialists and Greens, emerged as the largest party, winning 182 seats, followed by Macron’s Centrist Ensemble with 163. Marine Le Pen’s National Rally won 143 seats, a far cry from the first-round projections.

Continue reading ‘The SJB and UNP should join ranks and field a unified candidate. That ideally should be Ranil Wickremesinghe, given his proven track record during the last two years. That might even make Sajith Premadasa the prime minister of the next government.’ »

Political Journey of Tamil “Perunthalaiver” (Great Leader) Rajavarothayam Sampanthan.

By

D.B.S.Jeyaraj

Veteran Tamil political leader and senior Trincomalee district MP,Rajavarothayam Sampanthan passed away peacefully in Colombo on 30 June 2024. The nonagenarian Sampanthan who had been ailing for some time was listening after dinner to an audio tape of “Kanthasashti Kavasam”verses sung by the Soolaman Sisters Rajalakshmi and Jeyalakshmi when he collapsed with a groan. Sampanthan was immediately taken to Lanka Hospital where he breathed his last around 11 PM.

The Kanthasashti Kavasam composed by Balan Devaraya Swamigal consist of devotional verses praising Lord Murugan or Skandha. Muruga the second son of Lord Shiva and Parvathy is regarded as the “Thamizhkkadavul” or God of Tamils. Passing away peacefully while listening to Kandha Sashti Kavasam verses is indeed a blessed death for devout hindus. Sampanthan was a deeply religious person whose family deity is the Pathrakali Amman of Trincomalee.

Born on 5 February 1933, 91 year old Sampanthan was the senior most Parliamentarian in terms of age among current MPs. He was also the Parliamentary group leader of the Ilankai Thamil Arasuk Katchi(ITAK) known as the Federal Party(FP) in English.Earlier Sampanthan was the Parliamentary group leader of the configuration known as the Tamil National Alliance(TNA) of which the ITAK was the chief constituent.

Rajavarothayam Sampanthan a lawyer by profession served as MP for the Trincomalee electorate from 1977 to 1983. Later on he was Trincomalee district MP from 1997 to 2000 and from 2001 to date. Altogether the veteran leader was an MP for 32 years. He was also the leader of the opposition in Parliament from 2015 to 2019.

Sampanthan was in full control of his mental faculties until the last. His physical condition however had deteriorated due to age and infirmity. His mobility was restricted being confined to a wheel chair. His parliamentary attendance was rather low. He had been unable to visit his constituency Trincomalee for quite a while. Some weeks ago, Sampanthan obtained three months leave from Parliament citing ill-health. He sustained breathing difficulties a few weeks ago and was admitted to Lanka Hospital. Sampanthan’s condition improved and was discharged. His death occurred a few days after he returned home.

Continue reading ‘Political Journey of Tamil “Perunthalaiver” (Great Leader) Rajavarothayam Sampanthan.’ »

“பெருந்தலைவர்’ இராஜவரோதயம் சம்பந்தனின் அரசியல் பயணம்


டி.பி.எஸ். ஜெயராஜ்

முதுபெரும் தமிழ் அரசியல் தலைவரும் திருகோணமலை மாவட்டத்தின் நீண்டகால பாராளுமன்ற உறுப்பினருமான இராஜவரோதயம் சம்பந்தன் 2024 ஜூன் 30 கொழும்பில் அமைதியாக இயற்கை எய்தினார். 90 வயதைக் கடந்த அவர் அண்மைக்காலமாக சுகவீனமுற்றிருந்தார். இராப்போசனத்துக்கு பிறகு சூலமங்கலம் சகோதரிகள் இராஜலக்சுமியும் ஜெயலக்சுமியும் பாடிய ‘ கந்தசஷ்டி கவசம் ‘ பக்திப்பாடலை ஒலிநாடாவில் கேட்டுக்கொண்டிருந்தபோது ஒரு வேதனை முனகலுடன் சம்பந்தன் நிலைகுலைந்தார். உடனடியாக லங்கா வைத்தியசாலைக்கு கூட்டிச்செல்லப்பட்ட அவர் அங்கு இரவு 11 மணியளவில் தனது இறுதி மூச்சைவிட்டார்.

பாலன் தேவராய சுவாமிகளினால் இயற்றப்பட்ட கந்தசஷ்டி கவசம் முருகப்பெருமானைப் போற்றும் பாடல்களைக் கொண்டது. சிவபெருமான் — பார்வதியின் இரண்டாவது மகனான முருகன் ‘ தமிழ்க்கடவுள் ‘ என்று போற்றப்படுகிறார். கந்தசஷ்டி கவசத்தைக் கேட்டுக்கொண்டிருந்தபோது அமைதியாக மரணமடைவது ஒரு இந்து பக்தனைப் பொறுத்தவரை உண்மையில் ஆசீர்வதிக்கப்பட்ட ஒரு மரணமாகும். மிகவும் ஆழமான மதநம்பிக்கையுடைய சம்பந்தனின் குலதெய்வம் திருகோணமலை பத்திரகாளி அம்மன்.

1933 ஆம் ஆண்டு பெப்ரவரி 5 ஆம் திகதி பிறந்த 91 வயதான சம்பந்தன் தற்போதைய பாராளுமன்ற உறுப்பினர்கள் மத்தியில் வயதில் மிகவும் மூத்தவராவார். இலங்கை தமிழரசு கட்சியின் பாராளுமன்றக் குழுவின் தலைவராகவும் சம்பந்தன் இருந்தார். முன்னதாக அவர் தமிழரசு கட்சியை பிரதான உறுப்புரிமைக் கட்சியாகக் கொண்ட தமிழ் தேசிய கூட்டமைப்பின் பாராளுமன்ற குழுவின் தலைவராக இருந்தார்.

ஒரு சட்டத்தரணியான இராஜவரோதயம் சம்பந்தன் 1977 — 1983 காலப்பகுதியில் திருகோணமலை தொகுதியை பாராளுமன்றத்தில் பிரதிநிதித்துவப்படுத்தினார். பிறகு அவர் 1997 ஆம் ஆண்டு தொடக்கம் 2000 ஆம் ஆண்டு வரையும் அடுத்து 2001 ஆம் ஆண்டு தொடக்கம் இறக்கும்வரை திருகோணமலை மாவட்ட பாராளுமன்ற உறுப்பினராக பதவி வகித்தார். மொத்தமாக 32 வருடங்கள் அவர் பாராளுமன்ற உறுப்பினராக இருந்தார். 2015 — 2019 காலப்பகுதியில் பாராளுமன்றத்தில் எதிர்க்கட்சி தலைவராகவும் சம்பந்தன் பதவி வகித்தார்.

இறுதிவரையும் சம்பந்தன் முழுமையான நினைவாற்றலைக் கொண்டிருந்தார். வயது மூப்பு மற்றும் பலக்குறைவு காரணமாக அவரது உடல்நிலை மோசமடைந்தது. அவரது நடமாட்டம் கட்டுப்படுத்தப்பட்டு ஒரு சக்கரநாற்காலியை பயன்படுத்தியே இயங்கினார். அவரது பாராளுமன்ற வரவு மிகவும் குறைவானதாகவே இருந்தது. ஒரு கணிசமான காலமாக அவரால் தனது தொகுதியான திருகோணமலைக்கு செல்லக்கூடியதாக இருக்கவில்லை. சில வாரங்களுக்கு முன்னர் சுகவீனம் காரணமாக அவர் பாராளுமன்றத்தில் இருந்து மூன்று மாத விடுமுறையைப் பெற்றுக்கொண்டார். ஒரு சில வாரங்களுக்கு முன்னர் மூச்சுத்திணறல் காரணமாக கொழும்பு லங்கா வைத்தியசாலையில் அனுமதிக்கப்பட்ட சம்பந்தனின் உடல்நிலையில் முன்னேற்றம் காணப்பட்டதை அடுத்து அங்கிருந்து வெளியேறினார். வீடு திரும்பிய ஒரு சில தினங்களில் மரணம் சம்பவித்தது.

Continue reading ‘“பெருந்தலைவர்’ இராஜவரோதயம் சம்பந்தனின் அரசியல் பயணம்’ »

Will the Economic “Good News” From Paris and Beijing Help Ranil Win the 2024 Presidential Poll in Sri Lanka?

By

D.B.S.Jeyaraj

Ranil Wickremesinghe was appointed Prime Minister on 12 May 2022 by the then president Gotabaya Rajapaksa. Sri Lanka was in the grip of a debilitating economic crisis then. The “Aragalaya”(struggle) protest movement was raging. The new premier addressed the nation through a special statement on 16 May 2022. In that Wickremesinghe referred to Bertolt Brecht’s play “The Caucasian Chalk Circle”. This is what he said then –

“I am undertaking a dangerous challenge. In the Caucasian Chalk Circle, Grusha crossed the broken rope bridge carrying a child that was not her own. This is an even more difficult undertaking. The precipice is deep and its bottom cannot be seen. The bridge is made of thin glass and there is no handrail. I am wearing shoes with sharp nails that cannot be removed. My task is to safely take the child to the other side………I am accepting this challenge for our nation. My goal and dedication is not to save an individual, a family, or a party. My objective is to save all the people of this country and the future of our younger generation.”

Even as Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe tried to steer the ship of state amidst choppy waters to a safe haven, the “Gota Go Hope”protests escalated. This resulted in President Gotabaya Rajapaksa fleeing the country and resigning the presidency from abroad. Ranil became acting president. On 20 July 2022 Wickremesinghe was elected President by members of Parliament. 134 out of 225 MPs voted for him. He was sworn in as Executive President on 21 July.

The new president restored law and order thereby stabilising a volatile situation. Thereafter with the support of some ministers and state ministers ,President Wickremesinghe began tackling the economic situation in tandem with the Central Bank. Considerable progress was made. Opposition politicians and sections of the intelligentsia and media failed to acknowledge this. Instead they engaged in constant criticism. The Ranil Wickremesinghe caravan however kept moving on despite barking dogs.

Continue reading ‘Will the Economic “Good News” From Paris and Beijing Help Ranil Win the 2024 Presidential Poll in Sri Lanka?’ »

பொருளாதார ” நற்செய்தி ” 2024 தேர்தலில் ரணிலுக்கு உதவுமா?


டி.பி.எஸ். ஜெயராஜ்

ரணில் விக்கிரமசிங்க 2022 மே 12 ஆம் திகதி அன்றைய ஜனாதிபதி கோட்டாபய ராஜபக்சவினால் பிரதமராக நியமிக்கப்பட்டார். அப்போது இலங்கை படுமோசமான பொருளாதார நெருக்கடியில் சிக்கியிருந்தது.’ அறகலய போராட்டம் தீவிரமடைந்து கொண்டிருந்தது. புதிய பிரதமர் 2022 மே 16 ஆம் திகதி நாட்டு மக்களுக்கு விசேட உரையொன்றை ஆற்றினார். அந்த உரையில் விக்கிரமசிங்க ஜேர்மன் நாடகாசிரியர் பேரொல்ற் பிறெற்றின் ‘ கோகேசியன் ஷோக் சேர்க்கிள் ‘ ( Caucasian Chalk Circle) என்ற நாடகம் பற்றி குறிப்பிட்டார்.

” நான் ஆபத்தான் ஒரு சவாலை ஏற்கிறேன். கோகேசியன் ஷோக் சேர்க்கிள் நாடகத்தில் குரூஷா என்ற இளம் பெண் ஒரு குழந்தையைச் சுமந்துகொண்டு பழுதடைந்த கயிற்றுப் பாலத்தைக் கடந்தாள். அந்த குழந்தை அவளுடையதும் அல்ல. நான் பொறுப்பேற்றபது அதைவிடவும் சிக்கலான ஒரு பணி. பாறையின் செங்குத்தான பக்கம் மிகவும் ஆழமானது. அடிப்பகுதியைக் காணமுடியாது. பாலம் மெல்லிய கண்ணாடியினால் அமைக்கப்பட்டது. அதில் கைப்பிடிக் கிராதியும் கிடையாது. அகற்றப்படமுடியாத கூர்மையான ஆணிகள் பொருத்தப்பட்ட சப்பாத்துக்களை நான் அணிந்திருக்கிறேன். குழந்தையை தூக்கிக்கொண்டு அடுத்த கரையில் சேர்க்கவேண்டியதே எனது பணி. எமது நாட்டுக்காக இந்த சவாலை நான் ஏற்கிறேன். தனிப்பட்ட ஒருவரை, ஒரு குடும்பத்தை அல்லது ஒரு கட்சியை பாதுகாப்பது அல்ல எனது இலக்கு. இந்த நாட்டின் சகல மக்களையும் எமது இளம் சந்ததியின் எதிர்காலத்தையும் பாதுகாப்பதே எனது குறிக்கோள்” என்று விக்கிரமசிங்க கூறினார்.

Continue reading ‘பொருளாதார ” நற்செய்தி ” 2024 தேர்தலில் ரணிலுக்கு உதவுமா?’ »

“My decisions are not driven by political power or popularity. They are made solely for the country’s benefit. Every decision has been aimed at national progress, not personal gain”- President Ranil Wickremesinghe in Special Statement to Parliament

Full Text of Special statement delivered by President Ranil Wickremesinghe in Parliament on 2 July 2024)

Honourable Speaker,

Last week, we were able to achieve another significant milestone in the challenging journey of restoring economic stability to a country that defaulted on its debts in 2022.

On June 26, we reached an agreement with our official creditors regarding the repayment of the loan. Representing our country, officials authorized by the Cabinet signed these agreements and contracts. That same night, I addressed the nation through electronic media to share these developments.

From the beginning of this arduous journey to rebuild the economy, I have consistently presented updates to Parliament. Initially, we outlined our plans before Parliament, and subsequently, we reported on the progress we have made.

Therefore, I would like to present the information about the current situation to the Parliament today.

Honourable Speaker,

About two years ago, after accepting the challenge of restructuring the country’s economy, I presented our four-step work plan to this Parliament:

1. Obtain extended credit facilities in consultation with the International Monetary Fund and establish financial discipline in the country.

2. Collaborate with international financial and legal experts Lazard and Clifford Chance to prepare the debt stabilization plan in coordination with the IMF and reach an agreement with the creditors.

3. Establish policies, rules, and programs to secure foreign investment, strengthen the export economy, and create a digital green economy. Prepare and present the necessary reforms to promote the country’s economy.

4. Achieve developed country status through a debt-free economy by 2048 through this program.

Since then, we have embarked on a challenging journey, knowing that success was achievable step by step. We forged ahead step by step. The 2023 and 2024 budgets further strengthened our program.

Continue reading ‘“My decisions are not driven by political power or popularity. They are made solely for the country’s benefit. Every decision has been aimed at national progress, not personal gain”- President Ranil Wickremesinghe in Special Statement to Parliament’ »

Bhikku politics is a key causative factor of the national malaise and no system-change for the better is possible if political monks continue to propose and dispose.


By Tisaranee Gunasekara

“The night is an open book.

But the world beyond the night remains a mystery.”

– Louise Gluck (Before the Storm)

Sri Lanka always ranks low in the World Happiness Index; 128 out of 148 in 2024 (we rank 48 in Global Militarisation Index though, and possess the 17th largest military in the world). We are also a gloomy lot in terms of how we see the country’s future.

According to a new Institute of Health Policy (IHP) poll, in May 2024, 80% of Lankan adults thought the country was heading in the wrong direction. Just 4% thought the country was on the right path; a slight improvement compared to February 2024 when 0% felt the country was on the correct track (https://ihp.lk/research-updates/number-sri-lankans-thinking-country-heading-wrong-direction-continues-increase).

So feelings. In actual terms, we are in a better place than we were two years ago, in that calamitous and momentous July 2022. In June 2022, only 1% of Lankan adults felt that the country was headed in the right direction; 80% thought the country was headed the wrong way. Understandable, given the total collapse of everyday life. There are no mile-long queues now, or crippling shortages, yet the feel-bad factor remains.

Lankan economy began to record positive growth in the last two quarters of 2023. The upward trend continued in the first quarter of 2024, with a growth rate of 5.3%. The economy has grown over three consecutive quarters; not a fluke then, but a welcome sign of recovery. No mean achievement, given where we were in that historic July two years ago.

2024 first quarter growth occurred across multiple sectors, from agriculture and industry to construction and services. Yet, the areas of contraction are concerning, especially information and communication (which includes the IT sector) and education, human health, and social welfare activities.

Continue reading ‘Bhikku politics is a key causative factor of the national malaise and no system-change for the better is possible if political monks continue to propose and dispose.’ »

“We can no longer afford to revert to old politics. The choices we make today profoundly impact our future. Can we afford to return to the days of long queues and traditional politics? We must decisively choose our course.”- President Ranil Wickremesinghe in Matara.


(Text of Address Delivered by President Ranil Wickremesinghe at the “Victory through Unity” (Ekwa Jayagamu) Held at the Matara Fort Grounds on 30 June 2024)

“I have safely brought the Titanic, entrusted to me, to port. While other captains fled from the iceberg, we faced a critical decision: sink or navigate to safety. Now that we’ve reached port, the question is what to do next with this ship. We must decide whether to refurbish it for the next 50-100 years or hand it over in its current state to a fleeing captain.

When I arrived here today, memories of the hardships faced by the Matara people flooded back. I vividly recall spending the Sinhala New Year 2022 in Kamburupitiya, where a filling station near my hotel was constantly crowded with long queues of vehicles. Witnessing the people’s suffering and frustration, I resolved that such scenes must not recur in our country.

Prior discussions with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and exchanges with the World Bank underscored the urgency. Despite multiple notifications to former President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, ultimately, I had to assume leadership of the country.

I took charge of the country in an unprecedented manner in world history. When everyone else fled, I stepped up to lead. Constitutionally, when the President resigns and the ruling party fails to act, it falls upon the opposition to step in. Yet, everyone evaded responsibility. Our economic and political systems were shattered.

Continue reading ‘“We can no longer afford to revert to old politics. The choices we make today profoundly impact our future. Can we afford to return to the days of long queues and traditional politics? We must decisively choose our course.”- President Ranil Wickremesinghe in Matara.’ »

Veteran Tamil Political Leader Rajavarothayam Sampanthan’s Funeral to be held in Trincomalee on Sunday 7th July

Funeral Arrangements of Hon. R. Sampanthan M.P. Tamil National Alliance (T.N.A) MP Hon. R. Sampanthan’s mortal remains will Lie at the A.F. Raymonds funeral parlour for viewing from 9.00 a.m. today (02nd July 2024) till noon tomorrow (03rd July 2024).

Thereafter his mortal remains will Lie in State in Parliament from 2.00 pm – 4.00 pm on Wednesday (03rd July 2024)

Mr. Sampanthan’s body will be kept for public viewing at his residence at post office road, Trincomalee from 9.00 a.m. on Friday the 05th of July 2024, Saturday the 06th of July 2024 till the funeral rites on Sunday the 07th of July 2024 in Trincomalee.

M.A. Sumanthiran
Member of Parliament –

Ranasinghe Premadasa: Sri Lanka’s Solitary non-Govigama Prime Minister and President

By
D.B.S.Jeyaraj

India, the world’s biggest democracy, held Parliamentary elections this year in seven phases from 19 April to 1 June. 642 million persons voted in the poll. Results were announced on 4 June. The incumbent Prime Minister Narendra Modi was re-elected PM for the third time. His party the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) won 240 of 572 Lok Sabha or Parliament seats. Together with allied parties the BJP led National Democratic Alliance (NDA) obtained 293 seats in Parliament.

The election results have been continuously analysed and commented upon from the time of the poll. A significant aspect of these analyses and commentaries is the “caste factor”. Indian analysts and commentators are not “shy” about discussing caste openly when dissecting poll results. It is an acknowledged fact in India that caste plays a very influential role in determining the outcome of elections in many electorates, regions or states. Many Indians delve into the “caste in elections” topic without any inhibitions.

It is not so in Sri Lanka even though caste is an existential reality in the Island. Though not as conspicuous as in the sub-continent, the caste factor does play a part in Sri Lankan politics too. It was Roland Edirisinghe former correspondent of “The Economist” in Sri Lanka who enlightened me about the role of caste in Lankan politics. He knew the areas where specific castes were concentrated and the caste identity of most politicians. Hence listening to him on this topic was a fascinatingly educative experience. But that’s another story.

I know it is distasteful to discuss caste in public, but in Sri Lanka as in India, the “caste” factor cannot be ignored as far as politics and arranged marriages are concerned. The element of caste cannot be overlooked or glossed over in Sinhala or Tamil politics in Sri Lanka. So let us look at this issue with more honesty and less hypocrisy.

Continue reading ‘Ranasinghe Premadasa: Sri Lanka’s Solitary non-Govigama Prime Minister and President’ »

Veteran Sri Lankan Tamil Political leader Rajavarothayam Sampanthan passes away in Colombo at the age of 91. He dedicated his political life to pursuing a just solution to Sri Lanka’s Tamil question

By
Meera Srinivasan

Veteran Sri Lankan Tamil leader Rajavarothiam Sampanthan, who dedicated his political life to pursuing a just solution to the island nation’s Tamil question, passed away in Colombo late on Sunday. He was 91.

Mr. Sampanthan, of the Ilankai Tamil Arasu Katchi (ITAK), was a sitting MP from the eastern Trincomalee district, and led the Tamil National Alliance, the main grouping representing Tamils of Sri Lanka’s war-hit north and east. He was Leader of the Opposition between 2015 and 2018.

A parliamentarian for nearly half a century, Mr. Sampanthan was a bold and relentless voice in the House. Since the end of the civil war in 2009, he tirelessly demanded equal rights for Tamils, within a ‘united, undivided, indivisible’ country. Trained as a lawyer, he based his arguments for a political solution on Sri Lanka’s constitutional history and the many promises that the southern Sinhalese establishment made in the past but failed to keep.

Continue reading ‘Veteran Sri Lankan Tamil Political leader Rajavarothayam Sampanthan passes away in Colombo at the age of 91. He dedicated his political life to pursuing a just solution to Sri Lanka’s Tamil question’ »

Do the Tamil Critics of the 13th Constitutional Amendment have the Political Strength to Force a Future Govt to Introduce a Devolution Scheme better than what is Available in the Provincial Councils?

By

Veeragathy Thanabalasingham

Sri Lankan Tamil politics has become more complicated due to contradictions among Tamil political parties regarding what position northern and eastern Tamils should take in the upcoming Presidential Election.

It makes no sense to expect Tamil parties to be inclined to act unitedly or to come to a unified position to find a solution to the national ethnic problem.

The idea of fielding a Tamil common candidate at the Presidential Election has occupied Tamil politics in recent times.
Though the Democratic Tamil National Alliance (DTNA), consisting of a few Tamil parties whose leaders formerly were prominent members of armed militant groups, have decided to support the attempts to field a common Tamil candidate, the initial enthusiasm among some Tamil parties is now absent in this regard.

There are conflicting views not only between parties but also within each party regarding the common candidate.

Seminars were first organised by a civil society organisation called ‘Makkal Manu’ (People’s Petition) to mobilise support for the idea of fielding a Tamil common candidate. At present, a new civil society organisation called ‘Tamil Makkal Boduchabai’ (Tamil People’s General Assembly) is vigorously spearheading that campaign.

It seems that prominent members of the Tamil People’s General Assembly believe that if they can get the broad support of the Tamil people in the north and the east, they will be able to exert pressure on the Tamil parties to support a common candidate.

Continue reading ‘Do the Tamil Critics of the 13th Constitutional Amendment have the Political Strength to Force a Future Govt to Introduce a Devolution Scheme better than what is Available in the Provincial Councils?’ »

Colombo High Court Finds Hirunika Premachandra Guilty of 18 Charges Including the Abduction, Assault and Intimidation of a Youth at Dematagoda in 2015 and Sentences Former Colombo MP to 3 Years Rigorous Imprisonment ;Will Seek Bail on Monday says her Lawyer

By

Lakmal Sooriyagoda

Colombo High Court Judge Amal Ranaraja sentenced Hirunika Premachandra to three years imprisonment after she was found guilty of 18 counts, including conspiring and aiding in the abduction of the victim, threatening, assaulting, and intimidating victim Amila Priyankara after the abduction in Dematagoda. Hirunika Premachandra is the ninth accused in the case, and criminal charges against her proceeded as she pleaded not guilty.

Meanwhile, the court further imposed a fine of Rs. 20,000 on the accused for each charge and warned that she could face a six-month imprisonment in default of the said fine.

Deputy Solicitor General Janaka Bandara, appearing for the Attorney General, highlighted the seriousness of the offence, noting that the accused committed this crime while serving as a Member of Parliament. He observed that it is not appropriate to impose a suspended imprisonment sentence on the accused due to the severity of the offence

Continue reading ‘Colombo High Court Finds Hirunika Premachandra Guilty of 18 Charges Including the Abduction, Assault and Intimidation of a Youth at Dematagoda in 2015 and Sentences Former Colombo MP to 3 Years Rigorous Imprisonment ;Will Seek Bail on Monday says her Lawyer’ »

“The people must determine whether to move forward with me, as I truly comprehend the challenges facing the country, provide practical solutions, and demonstrate tangible results, or align with groups that have yet to grasp the issues and are blindly seeking power” – President Ranil Wickremesinghe

(Text of special statement delivered by President Ranil Wickremesinghe on 26 June 2024)

Today marks a significant milestone in the recent history of our country, a special juncture reflecting the hard work and dedication of our efforts. Our country is now reaping the positive results of our persistent endeavours over the past years.

This morning in Paris, Sri Lanka reached a final agreement with our official bilateral creditors. Similarly, we signed another agreement with China’s Exim Bank today in Beijing. This is indeed encouraging news for those who genuinely care about our country’s welfare.

Sri Lanka won….!!

Over the past two years, we have worked diligently to reach agreements with our bilateral creditors, engaging in extensive discussions. The economic progress we have achieved has provided us with considerable strength in these negotiations.

I extend my gratitude to our creditors, including China and Exim Bank of China, India, Japan, and France, who co-chair the Official Creditors Committee. I also thank the other members of the committee and the Paris Club Secretariat for their support in making these negotiations successful.

Additionally, I would like to acknowledge the representatives of Sri Lanka and other countries who participated in these discussions, as well as the officials from Lazard and Clifford Chance for their valuable advice.

With these agreements, we will be able to defer all bilateral loan instalment payments until 2028. Furthermore, we will have the opportunity to repay all the loans on concessional terms, with an extended period until 2043.

Continue reading ‘“The people must determine whether to move forward with me, as I truly comprehend the challenges facing the country, provide practical solutions, and demonstrate tangible results, or align with groups that have yet to grasp the issues and are blindly seeking power” – President Ranil Wickremesinghe’ »

Sri Lanka Finalizes Comprehensive Debt Re-structuring Agreements with the Official Creditor Committee Co-chaired by France,Japan and India and China Exim Bank to the Combined Value of US $ 10 Billion.


(Textr of Press Release issued by the President’s Media Division on 26 June 2024)

In a significant milestone for Sri Lanka’s economic revitalization efforts, the nation has successfully finalized comprehensive debt restructuring agreements with key bilateral creditors. On June 26, 2024, Sri Lanka concluded negotiations with the Official Creditor Committee (OCC) and China Exim Bank, marking pivotal strides towards stabilizing its financial footing amid recent economic challenges.

The agreements, valued at a combined USD 10 billion, encompass restructuring arrangements with major bilateral lenders under the auspices of the OCC, co-chaired by Japan, India, and France. Notable members of the committee include Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Germany, Hungary, Korea, the Netherlands, Russia, Spain, Sweden, the United Kingdom, and the United States of America.

During the recent economic downturn, Sri Lanka faced severe foreign exchange constraints, necessitating urgent measures to address its mounting external debt. Failure to restructure would have precluded Sri Lanka from accessing crucial IMF support, essential for economic recovery amidst unsustainable debt levels.

Continue reading ‘Sri Lanka Finalizes Comprehensive Debt Re-structuring Agreements with the Official Creditor Committee Co-chaired by France,Japan and India and China Exim Bank to the Combined Value of US $ 10 Billion.’ »

Indian Fishermen Poaching in Sri Lankan Waters “Aggressively Resist”Arresr and Seizure of Trawler by Lankan Navy; Sailor from Navy Special Boat Squadron Injured in Clash dies in Jaffna Hospital


By

Meera Srinivasan and R.Rajaram

A sailor from the Sri Lankan Navy was killed in an operation targeting Indian fishermen and their fishing vessel in the early hours of Tuesday, June 25, 2024, according to Sri Lankan authorities.

As many as 10 Indian fishermen, seven from Nagapattinam, one from Cuddalore in Tamil Nadu and two others from Andhra Pradesh were arrested on charges of illegal fishing in Sri Lankan waters, off Kankesanthurai in Jaffna peninsula. The bottom trawler they used was also apprehended.

Following this, Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M.K. Stalin wrote to Union Minister for External Affairs S. Jaishankar requesting that he convene the Joint Working Group to secure the release of all the fishermen and their fishing boats from Lankan custody. He also insisted on measures to be taken to prevent such arrests in the future.

Continue reading ‘Indian Fishermen Poaching in Sri Lankan Waters “Aggressively Resist”Arresr and Seizure of Trawler by Lankan Navy; Sailor from Navy Special Boat Squadron Injured in Clash dies in Jaffna Hospital’ »

The Tamil Doctor who Gave Medical Aid to Injured Tigers.


By

D.B.S. Jeyaraj

“Captain Blood:His Odyssey”was an Adventure novel authored by well-known writer Rafael Sabatini in 1922. Sabatini had a flair for creating fictional characters set against the backdrop of true,historical events.This blend of fiction and fact was received well by readers, The Captain Blood novel became a best-seller then. The basic story line was about a physician who suffered greatly because he provided medical treatment to injured persons branded as enemies of the state.

Captain Blood became an immensely popular novel and several films based on the book were made in different languages over the years.The block buster Tamil movie “Aayirathil Oruvan”(One in a thousand) starring MG Ramachandran (MGR) released in 1965 was an adaptation of the Captain blood novel. In the film, MGR plays Manimaran a physician who is victimised for giving medical treatment to people injured in a rebellion against the ruling dictator.

Sabatini;s novel was linked to the Monmouth rebellion. In British history , James Scott the first Duke of Monmouth led a rebellion against King James the second in 1685.The revolt was crushed and many of the rebels were sent to Barbados as slaves. Sabatini’s novel is set against this historical background.

Sabatini’s protagonist in the novel is the fictional character Dr.Peter Blood a physician residing in the County of Somerset. He plays no part in the Monmouth rebellion but as a medical practitioner provides medical aid to rebels injured in the fighting. This humanitarian act of kindness is condemned as treason and Dr. Blood is sent off as a slave to Barbados. Subsequently he escapes and gets embroiled with pirates in a series of adventures before returning home to resume his “old”life.

Rafael Sabatini based his Dr.Blood character loosely on the life of Dr.Henry Pitman, an English Surgeon, who gave succour to the wounded Monmouth rebels and was sent to Barbados as a slave. He escaped and eventually returned to England. Pitman wrote an account of his experiences which was utilised by Sabatini to write his novel.


Sri Lanka Physician

In an uncanny example of “ life imitating art”,there was a physician in Sri Lanka who suffered in real life,the fate of Pitman.Blood and Manimaran.

The lengthy history of the war between the Sri Lankan armed forces and the armed Tamil militant groups is replete with interesting incidents .One of those instances is the narrative of a Tamil medical doctor in the north who underwent an experience very similar to that of the historical Henry Pitman and fictional Peter Blood.

This Tamil Doctor was arrested and detained for treating injured members of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam(LTTE) in 1982. He survived the Welikade jail massacre of prisoners during “Black July” in 1983 by physically battling against the murderous mob of Sinhala prisoners. This doctor was transferred to the Batticaloa prison from where he escaped along with other Tamil political prisoners and crossed over to India clandestinely by boat. He returned from Tamil Nadu to Sri Lanka after the Indo-Lanka accord of July 1987. He received an Amnesty in terms of the Indo-Lanka accord and resumed his medical doctor life again in northern Sri Lanka and ultimately retired as a regional director of health services(RDHS)

The Tamil medical doctor I am referring to is Dr. Thurairajah William Jeyakularajah who passed away peacefully last week on 16 June at the age of 81 in the district of Mullaitheevu. This column focuses on the interesting and eventful life of Dr.Jeyakularaja this week. Several readers have written to me wanting to know more about this unique larger than life personality.Incidentally “Jeyam Uncle” married my Mother’s first cousin Christina(Baba Aunty). He was however a relative even before this marriage.

Thirukkovil

Dr.TW Jeyakularajah was born on 8th February 1943 in Thirukkovil as the eldest in a family of six children. His mother Rose Manonmani was then teaching there. She hailed from Thaniootru in the Mullaitheevu district of the Northern province. Jeyakularajah’s father Edward Thurairajah was from Thirukkovil in the Amparai District of the Eastern province.

Jeyakularajah was educated at the Thirukkovil Methodist Tamil school, Kalmunai Wesley High School, Batticaloa Central College and St.Johns College,Jaffna where he was in the school hostel. Jeyakularajah was a keen sportsman during his schooldays excelling in Athletics, Badminton and Table Tennis.

He entered the Medical faculty in Colombo in the mid- sixties of the 20th century and passed out as a doctor. After a period of internship under Dr. Muthuthamby and Dr.Attygalle, Dr.Jeyakularajah took up duties at the Trincomalee Hospital in 1971. He got married to his cousin Christina Gnanathilakaranee in Trinco in 1972.

Pulmoddai

Thereafter he quit Govt service and assumed duties as a doctor at the Mineral Sands Corporation in Pulmoddai in the Trinco district. After some years at Pulmoddai, the Jeyakularajahs relocated to Jaffna. The intention was to educate their only son Daniel Jason at St.Johns College,Jaffna . It was in Jaffna in 1982 that Jeyakularajah’s life changed utterly.

Puthur

Both Jeyakularajah and his wife are protestant Christians belonging the Methodist Church. After moving to Jaffna, Jeyakularajah worked at the St.Lukes Hospital run by the Methodist Church in Puthur. The family resided at the medical quarters near the hospital. Jeyakularajah’s brother Rev.Jeyathilakarajah was the Pastor at the Achchelu Methodist Church in Jaffna,

Sri Lanka’s ethnic crisis had escalated after the United National Party(UNP) Govt headed by President JR Jayewardene came into power in 1977. Several armed Tamil militant groups fighting for a separate Tamil state were active in Jaffna. Chief among them was the LTTE or tigers.

Chavakachcheri Attack

The LTTE launched an attack on the Chavakachcheri Police station in October 1982 and escaped with a cache of arms after killing some policemen. Three of the tigers, Seelan, Ragu and Pulendhiran sustained injuries in the shoot out. They required urgent medical treatment.

An LTTE member who had some contact with Rev.Jeyathilakarajah approached the Methodist pastor. He in turn went to his elder brother Dr.Jeyakularajah and told him about the matter. After thinking a while Jeyakularajah accompanied his brother to the safe house where the injured tigers were and provided medical aid. He followed up with other visits before the wounded tigers were moved across the sea to India.. Had it not been for Jeyakularajah’s medical care one of the trio may have succumbed to his injuries. This was the first time the tigers had incurred injuries in combat.

Years later in a heart to heart conversation with him in Chennai, I asked Dr. Jeyakularajah why he risked danger by treating the injured tigers. His response was that as a medical doctor ,he was bound by the principles enunciated in the Hippocratic oath. He further said that he would have provided medical aid to any injured person in a situation like that. “ Even if an injured person was a Policeman or soldier or JVP activist or even a criminal shot by the cops,I would have treated them.In this case the injured boys were not criminals but idealistic young men fighting for the rights of Tamils”he replied

The State cracked down hard and conducted an intensive search throughout the peninsula. The security authorities allegedly stumbled upon some evidence incriminating a well known Catholic priest when they conducted a search of a Catholic Monastery in Colombothurai,Jaffna.

On 25 March,1981 a van carrying bank funds was robbed at Neervely in Jaffna. It resulted in the deaths of two cops. Rs 81 Lakhs of rupees was robbed. . The Neervely bank robbery was an operation of the Tamil Eelam Liberation Organization (TELO) led by Thangathurai and Kuttimani. However some LTTE members including tiger supremo Prabhakaran also collaborated in this Neervely heist. It was alleged that some of the money from the Neervely robbery was in the possession of Fr. Aabaranam Singarayer acting as a safekeeper.

Initially the Police and army raided the Colombothurai Monastery and searched Fr. Singarayer’s room due to the Chavakachcheri Police station attack. Since some tigers had been injured the security authorities were on the look out for possible attempts to provide medical care.

One of the security measures adopted was to monitor pharmacies and medical stores to ascertain whether medical purchases of a suspicious nature took place. The security authorities received a tip off that Fr. Singarayer had bought an unusually large amount of medicine and bandages. That led to the priest being targeted.

Arrests

Fr. Singarayer was arrested and interrogated in November 1982.Fr. Singarayer’s arrest was followed by the arrest of Fr. Anton Sinnarasa the then Neduntheevu parish priest. It was then said that the arrest of Fr. Sinnarasa and consequent interrogation led to a breakthrough in the Chavakachcheri Police station attack probe.

Even though the actual tigers who were involved in the Chavakachcheri Police station attack were not apprehended, the security authorities were able to arrest people suspected of helping the LTTE cadres injured in the attack. Jaffna University lecturer. M. Nithianandan, his wife Nirmala a teacher at Chundikuli girls high school, Rev. Jeyathilakarajajah and Dr.Jeyakularajah were taken into custody and detained at the Gurunagar army camp.

The arrests of two catholic priests, a protestant pastor, a varsity lecturer, a medical doctor and a teacher sent shock waves among Tamils in particular and the Country in general. Until then armed Tamil militancy was perceived as a project of Tamil youths only. The arrests of the priests and professionals indicated that the armed struggle had wider and deeper support. Before these arrests, a doctor (Rajasuntharam) and an architect (David) involved with the “Gandhiyam”organization had been arrested. Another retired medical doctor (Tharmalingam) heading the Tamil Eelam Liberation Front”(TELF) and the “Suthanthiran”paper editor(Koavai Mahesan) had also been arrested. The ethnic divide was further sharpened by these arrests.

Cyril Ranatunga

Meanwhile Jaffna erupted into a series of protest demonstrations over the arrests. I was then a staff reporter at “The Island”newspaper. The then editor Vijitha Yapa sent me to Jaffna to cover the arrests and protests. The Jaffna district army commander then was Brigadier Cyril Ranatunga who later became army commander. His chief deputies were Lt. Col Daya Wijeysekera and Major Saliya Kulatunga.

Responding to requests made by me on behalf of northern journalists. Brig.Ranatunga(later Lt.Gen) held a press conference at Gurunagar. Apart from Jeyakularajah and Jeyathilakarajah another of the arrested persons was also known to me. This was Nirmala Nithianandan nee Rajasingham , a contemporary of mine at Jaffna College,Vaddukkoddai.

Rumour mills were working overtime in Jaffna about the physical safety of Nirmala in army custody. At the press conference , I raised questions about the safety of Nirmala. After teasing me for a while, the army top brass got down Nirmala and “displayed”her to the media to show that she was all right. The newspapers reported the appearance of Nirmala in detail thereby dispelling rumours.

Saliya Kulatunga

Maj. Saliya Kulatunga (later Maj-Gen)was the military officer who liaised with the media then. He was a good friend. I kept pressing him about Dr.Jeyakularajah saying he was my favourite uncle. Saliya with the tacit consent of Brig. Ranatunga arranged a private one on one meeting with Dr.Jeyakularajah at Gurunagar. We spoke for an hour without any hinderance. I remember meeting my aunt in Puthur and telling her about the meeting and allaying her concerns and anxiety to some extent.

Dr. Jeyakularajah and others arrested along with him were subsequently brought down to Colombo and held at the Panagoda army cantonment. Unlike at Gurunagar, there was a lot of torture under the pretext of questioning. Later they were charged under the draconian prevention of terrorism act(PTA) that was introduced in 1979 as a supposedly temporary measure and made permanent law three years later in 1982.

Welikade Jail

Jeyakularajah and others charged under the PTA were detained at the Welikade prison. Most Tamils being charged or detained under the PTA were treated as koti or tigers then. I visited him once at Welikade. Journalists were not allowed to meet PTA detenues then. I conceraled the fact that I was a journalist and used used my old national identity card in which my name was “DJB Sabapathy”I (David Jeyaraj Buell Sabapathy) nstead of “DBS Jeyaraj” (David Buell Sabapathy Jeyaraj) and truthfully claimed I was a nephew. Jeyakularajah was very happy to see me but was rather worried over the “Identity card” risk I had taken.

Prison Massacres

Events began to overtake. A terrible anti -Tamil pogrom described as “Black July” took place in 1983. The Tamil political prisoners at Welikade too were targeted. There were 72 in all. On Monday 25 July, 35 Tamil prisoners were massacred by Sinhala prisoners. It was alleged that killers from outside had been brought to lead the attack. Several jailors aided and abetted the massacre. The army detachment at Welikade assigned to maintain security for PTA detenues did nothing. Among those killed were TELO leaders Thangathurai,Kuttimani and Jegan.

Worse still was the second massacre on Wednesday July 27. The remaining prisoners had been transferred to another block supposedly for their protection. They were attacked again. The Tamil prisoners fought back but 18 were killed. Only 11 escaped death in that block. Among these was EPDP Leader and Cabinet minister Douglas Devananda. The victims in both massacres numbering 53 were mainly youths.

Miraculous Escape

“Seniors” like Jeyakularajah and the other professionals escaped death miraculously. Nine prisoners had been taken to an upstairs dormitory after the July 25 attack. They were Fr. Singarayer, Fr. Sinnarasa, Rev.Jeyathilakarajah, Dr.Rajasuntharam, Dr.(retd) Tharmalingam,Dr.Jeyakularajah, editor Koavai Mahesan,Lecturer Nithianandan and Architect David. There was only a narrow staircase to access the dormitory.

When the mob assembled , Dr. Rajasuntharam of the “Gandhiyam” organization who was an ardent devotee of Mahatma Gandhi naively suggested “ we will reason out things with them and resolve this problem” When Rajasuntharam went down the stairs and tried to converse with the mob in Sinhala, he was brutally clubbed on the head and hacked to death.

Table Leg Weapons

The comparatively younger prisoners then resolved to resist the mob. The priests had been provided a small table to observe mass. The table was broken and four persons namely Fr. Sinnarasa,Rev.Jeyathilakarajah, Dr.Jeyakularajah and Mr. Nithianandan armed themselves with a table leg each. Since the staircase was narrow only one or two could climb up at a time. Thus the four Tamil prisoners with their table leg weapons managed to defend themselves and prevent the mob from killing them. Mercifully their terrible ordeal ended after about half an hour when the authorities dispersed the mob.

Of the original 72 Tamil prisoners at Welikade only 19 survived the twin massacres. They were transferred to Batticaloa on Friday 29 July the infamous “Koti Dawasa”. The prisoners were bundled into a truck and taken by road to Ratmalana airport.. Initially they were kept at Galle face for many hours. The handcuffed prisoners were taken to Batticaloa by plane without being allowed to even ease themselves at the airports. All of them were detained at the Batticaloa prison.


Batticaloa Jailbreak

Dr.Jeyakularajah related his harrowing experiences in detail to me at Maambalam in Chennai, Tamil Nadu many years ago. I spent many hours that day listening to the long tale After being taken to Batticaloa, the Tamil political prisoners including Dr. Jeyakularajah escaped in the Batticaloa jail break of September 1983. Thereafter they evaded re-capture and crossed over clandestinely by boat to India. This and other related matters will be related in a forthcoming article.

D.B.S.Jeyaraj can be reached at dbsjeyaraj@yahoo.com

This article appears in the “DBS Jeyaraj Column”of the “Daily Mirror”dated 22 June 2024.It can be accessed here -

https://www.dailymirror.lk/opinion/The-Tamil-Doctor-who-Gave-Medical-Aid-to-Injured-Tigers/172-285460

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President Ranasinghe Premadasa Belived that asting unity – be it national or social – could be built only by effecting tangible improvements in the living-conditions of all the poor, Sinhala, Tamil, and Muslim.


By Tisaranee Gunasekera

“All theory is grey… But forever green is the tree of life.
Goethe (Faust)

For three months in late 1990’s, American author and political activist Barbara Ehrenreich lived the life of a low-wage worker. She wanted to discover, first hand, how President Bill Clinton’s welfare reforms were impacting on the lives of the working poor. Her experiences gave birth to her most celebrated book, Nickle and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America. In it, she focuses on the phenomenon of employed-homeless, workers who often do more than one job but are still unable to afford a roof over their heads. The conjunction of low wages and high rents create poverty traps from which few workers escape, Ehrenreich notes.

Almost 20 years later, sociologist Matthew Desmond in his book, Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City, demonstrated the cardinal role played by housing (or the lack of it) in perpetuating and exacerbating poverty in America. “Fewer and fewer families can afford a roof over their head. This is among the most urgent and pressing issues facing America today… We have failed to fully appreciate how deeply housing is implicated in the creation of poverty.”

According to Jan-Feb 2024 Household Pulse Survey, homelessness in America increased by 48% since 2015; and an estimated 37% of tenants say they are very or somewhat likely to be evicted in the next two months. The European condition is no better. “Unaffordable rent and property prices are turning into a political battleground,” The Guardian warned in May. The only exception is Vienna. 60% of Viennese live in subsidised housing. The city builds 6,000-7,000 subsidised housing units each year funded by a 1% tax on all salaries.

The Viennese exception is a legacy of Red Vienna (1918-1934 – when the Austrian capital was controlled by the Social Democratic Party) which was defined largely by its housing policy; the city built more than 60,000 new housing units. Sri Lanka, in 1979, embarked on a journey even more ambitious, to build 100,000 houses in three years. When Ranasinghe Premadasa unveiled his inaugural housing programme, it was ridiculed by the Opposition, stonewalled by the UNP cabinet, and criticised by the World Bank and the IMF. The mere thought of building 100,000 housing units in three years, and for the poor, was dismissed as a waste, an inflation-creator, and delusional.

But Premadasa would not be stopped. Like other top leaders of the UNP, he was eyeing the presidency and housing was going to be his ‘qualifier’ for the top job. Those politico-electoral imperatives apart, he understood the nexus between homelessness and politico-social and familial stability. During his tenure as a Colombo Municipal Councillor, he had spearheaded the building of flats in Saunders Place as part of a slum-clearance programme. As the Junior Minister of Housing in the 1965-70 government, he had built the Maligawatte Housing Scheme. As he put it, “Shelter is not charity. It is a necessity.”

Continue reading ‘President Ranasinghe Premadasa Belived that asting unity – be it national or social – could be built only by effecting tangible improvements in the living-conditions of all the poor, Sinhala, Tamil, and Muslim.’ »

President Wickremesinghe used the authority and the privilege of Parliament to accuse the Supreme Court of judicial cannibalism when the Special Determination in issue could have been soberly critiqued.


By

Kishali Pinto – Jayawardene

President Ranil Wickremesinghe’s call to Parliament that Special Determination 54-55/2024 on the Gender Equality Bill violates the powers of the House under Article 4 of the Constitution and that a Select Committee should be appointed to ‘look into it,’ is tantamount to gravely undermining the authority of the Supreme Court, never mind the President’s casual sop thrown to the gallery that, ‘we need not summon the judges.’

Understanding constitutional fetters

Quite apart from his amusing rider that the majority of members of the Select Committee so appointed should be from the Women’s Caucus in Parliament, the larger point is his injunction ‘not to follow’ the Determination labelled as ‘perverse,’ has repercussions beyond the instant Bill.

This is an election period when hugely contested issues of law and rights will invariably come before the Court. If Parliament is called upon ‘not to follow’ judicial rulings in each and every instance that finds disfavour in the eyes of the President, we may as well dispense with the Supreme Court once and for all.

The obvious being said, a semblance of common sense must be brought to this unholy fuss over the Gender Equality Bill hitherto dominated by rude vulgarities.

First, let us be clear that the fault lies with the Government and the Bill’s drafters in not having the wit or the legal acumen to understand that a Bill which posits the ‘elimination of gender disparity’ and protecting and promoting ‘gender identity/equality’ as its objectives will not bring all the creepy crawlies out of the woodwork protesting on the basis of preserving ‘Sri Lankan culture.’

That being evident, special care should have been taken to ensure that the Bill rigidly adheres in all respects to constitutional propriety.

This is in order not to allow lunatic fringe elements to ‘capture’ the debate and further expose an already exceedingly vulnerable LBGTQ minority in Sri Lanka. But that caution is not borne out by a reading of the Bill.

In fact, even its preamble problematically grafts an addition to Article 12(4) of the Constitution by stating that this Article allows special provision to be made by law, subordinate legislation or executive action for the advancement of women ‘in order to eliminate gender disparity.’ But the reference to the ‘elimination of gender disparity’ is nowhere stated in Article 12(4).

Continue reading ‘President Wickremesinghe used the authority and the privilege of Parliament to accuse the Supreme Court of judicial cannibalism when the Special Determination in issue could have been soberly critiqued.’ »

India’s Iconic Author Arundathie Roy is being charged with promoting terrorism under the draconian Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act. Ms. Roy is being targeted both for who she is and as a message to those opponents and dissenters Against Narendra Modi’s BJP Regime


By
Tisaranee Gunasekara

“We are accused of terrorismIf we dare to write about the remains of a homeland….About a homeland where birds are not allowed to sing…..About a homeland where writers must use invisible ink….” Nizar Qabbani (We are accused of terrorism)

Had writer V.V. Ganeshananthan lived in Jaffna instead of New York, she would have been summoned by Sri Lanka’s Counter Terrorism Investigative Division (CTID) and grilled for a couple of hours over her second book, Brotherless Night, as the Vavuniya CTID did with Pradeepan Deepachelvan. a young Tamil writer, over his first book, Nadugal (translated into Sinhala by P.P. Sarath Ananda as Smaraka Shilavatha). He was questioned for over two hours on such matters as whether he is trying revive the LTTE.

“I recently sent a letter to a terrorist I used to know.” With such self-incrimination begins Ms. Ganeshananthan’s book. So much in that one line to keep the CTID busy for a year. The author admits she knows a terrorist which, in all probability, means she is one too (once a terrorist, always a terrorist).

Later on the same page, she talks about the first terrorist she knew, meaning she knows more than one. She probably knows their addresses too and may even be writing to all of them. If that doesn’t count as an attempt to revive terrorism, separatism and the Tigers, what would?

Of course, Brotherless Night is a novel, a work of fiction. But then so is Mr. Deepachelvan’s book, reportedly the first novel written in the North post-war. Yet the CTID wanted to know who the character Maran is where he is now!

In 2011, at the Royal College Prize Giving, President Mahinda Rajapaksa proclaimed that “Songs disgracing the country could help those who want to divide the motherland”. The antithesis of patriotic songs has to be traitorous songs. Thirteen years on, that Rajapaksa worldview continues to animate our police in general and the CTID in particular.

Continue reading ‘India’s Iconic Author Arundathie Roy is being charged with promoting terrorism under the draconian Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act. Ms. Roy is being targeted both for who she is and as a message to those opponents and dissenters Against Narendra Modi’s BJP Regime’ »

Former Cabinet Minister Nissanka Wijeyeratne was a Versatile and Multi-Faceted Personality.

By

D.B.S. Jeyaraj


“And one man in his time plays many parts”
,stated William Shakespeare in his play “As you like it”. The above mentioned observation by the Bard of Avon is quite appropriate in describing the life and work of Dr.Nissanka Wijeyeratne whose 100th birth anniversary was celebrated on June 14.

Nissanka Parakrama Wijeyeratne known popularly as Nissanka was a military officer ,scholar, poet, Government Agent, Permanent secretary, ),Parliamentarian, Cabinet Minister, Ambassador and above all the Diyawadane Nilame of the Sri Dalada Maligawa in a productive life spanning eight decades. This article is to commemorate the birth centenary of this versatile, multi-faceted personality who rendered yeoman service to his motherland.

Nissanka Parakrama hailing from a prominent Sabaragamuwa province family was born in Colombo on 14 June 1924. He was the second son of Sir Edwin (EAP) and Lady Leela Wijeyeratne of Buddhenipola Walauwa,Kegalle. Sir Edwin Wijeyeratne served as Home Minister in the first post-independence Cabinet of Prime Minister D.S. Senanayake and was later Colombo’s envoy to London and New Delhi.Nissanka’s elder brother Tissa was a barrister and diplomat who also wrote fiery articles in newspapers under the pseudonym “Sinhaputra”.Younger brother Cuda was a medical doctor and consultant psychiatrist.

Continue reading ‘Former Cabinet Minister Nissanka Wijeyeratne was a Versatile and Multi-Faceted Personality.’ »

President Wickremesinghe Flays Supreme Court for Allegedly Engaging in “Judicial Cannibalism”; President says SC Ruling on Gender Equality Bill Violates Parliament’s powers and a Select Committee must be Appointed to Look into the Matter

President Ranil Wickremesinghe yesterday in Parliament raised a point of order that the Supreme Court determination on Gender Equality Bill violates the powers of the House and a Parliamentary select Committee must be appointed to look into the matter.

Following are excerpts from the President’s statement in Parliament.

“First and foremost the bill says, what the national policy on gender equality and empowerment of women is referred to in this bill. At the least it’s hard to find out. It’s not specific as there is no reference in the bill. There has been a national policy on women’s empowerment and gender equality since 2011. These are obligations of the Government under the Sustainable Development Goals 5 and a number of women’s conventions and agreements that we have signed.

Continue reading ‘President Wickremesinghe Flays Supreme Court for Allegedly Engaging in “Judicial Cannibalism”; President says SC Ruling on Gender Equality Bill Violates Parliament’s powers and a Select Committee must be Appointed to Look into the Matter’ »

1961ம் ஆண்டு தமிழர் சத்தியாக்கிரகப் போராட்ட காலத்தில் அன்றைய யாழ்ப்பாண அரசாங்க அதிபர் நிசங்க விஜெயரத்ன‌வின் அனுபவங்கள்


டி.பி.எஸ். ஜெயராஜ்


” ஒரு மனிதன் தான் வாழும் காலத்தில் பல பாத்திரங்களை வகிக்கிறான்”
என்று வில்லியம் சேக்ஸ்பியர் தனது ” நீங்கள் விரும்பிய வண்ணம் ” (As you like it ) என்ற நாடகத்தில் கூறினார். அவரது அந்த அவதானிப்பு கலாநிதி நிசங்க விஜேரத்னவின் வாழ்வையும் பணியையும் வர்ணிப்பதற்கு மிகவும் கச்சிதமாகப் பொருந்துகிறது.

நிசங்க என்று பிரபல்யமாக அறியப்பட்ட நிசங்க பராக்கிரம விஜேரத்னவின் 100 வது பிறந்ததினம் ஜூன் 14 ஆம் திகதியாகும். ஒரு இராணுவ அதிகாரியாக, கல்வியாளராக, கவிஞராக, அரசாங்க அதிபராக, நிரந்தர செயலாளராக, பாராளுமன்ற உறுப்பினராக, கபினெட் அமைச்சராக, தூதுவராக …. இவை எல்லாவற்றுக்கும் மேலாக ஸ்ரீதலதா மாளிகையின் தியவதன நிலாமையாக பயனுறுதியுடைய தனது எட்டு தசாப்தகால வாழ்வில் விஜேரத்ன பல பதவிகளை வகித்தார்.

தாய்நாட்டுக்கு பெருஞ்சேவையாற்றிய பல்திறப்புலமையும் பன்முக ஆற்றலும் கொண்ட அவரின் பிறந்ததின நூற்றாண்டை முன்னிட்டு இந்த கட்டுரை எழுதப்படுகிறது.

சப்ரகமுவ மாகாணத்தின் பிரபலமான குடும்பம் ஒன்றைச் சேர்ந்த நிசங்க பராக்கிரம 2024 ஜூன் 14 ஆம் திகதி கொழும்பில் பிறந்தார். அவர் கேகாலை புத்தெனிபொல வளவ்வவின் சேர் எட்வின் மற்றும் சீமாட்டி லீலா விஜேரத்ன தம்பதியின் இரண்டாவது புதல்வர். சுதந்திரத்துக்கு பின்னர் பிரதமர் டி.எஸ். சேனநாயக்க தலைமையில் அமைந்த முதலாவது அமைச்சரவையில் சேர் எட்வின் விஜேரத்ன உள்நாட்டு அலுவல்கள் அமைச்சராக பதவி வகித்தார். பிறகு அவர் லண்டனிலும் புதுடில்லியிலும் இலங்கையின் தூதுவராக பணியாற்றினார். நிசங்கவின் மூத்த சுகாதரர் திஸ்ஸ ஒரு பாரிஸ்டரும் இராஜதந்திரியுமாவார். ‘ பத்திரிகைகளில் சிங்கபுத்ர ‘ என்ற புனைபெயரில் திஸ்ஸ வீறுமிகு கட்டுரைகளை எழுதினார் நிசங்கவின் இளைய சகோதரர் குடா ஒரு மனநல மருத்துவர்.

இளம் நிசங்க தனது ஆரம்ப மற்றும் இரண்டாம் நிலைக் கல்வியை கொழும்பு றோயல் கல்லூரியில் பெற்றார். மூன்றாம் நிலைக்கல்வியை அவர் அன்றைய இலங்கை பல்கலைக்கழகத்தில் பெற்று வரலாற்றுத்துறையில் பி.ஏ. சிறப்பு பட்டதாரியானார். பல்கலைக்கழக படிப்புக்கு பிறகு ஒரு குறுகிய காலம் இலங்கை இராணுவத்தின் பீரங்கிப் படைப்பிரிவில் ஒரு அதிகாரியாக (இரண்டாவது லெப்டினண்ட்) நிசங்க பணியாற்றினார்.

இலங்கை சிவில் சேவை

அதற்கு பிறகு அவர் பெருமைமிக்க இலங்கை சிவில் சேவைப் பரீட்சைக்கு தோற்றி அதில் சித்தியடைந்து சிவில் சேவையில் இணைந்தார். இரு தசாப்தங்களுக்கும் அதிகமான கால தனது நிருவாக சேவையில் புத்தளம், காலி மாவட்டங்களின் உதவி அரசாங்க அதிபராக, பிறகு அநுராதபுரம்,மன்னார் மற்றும் யாழ்ப்பாணம் மாவட்டங்களின் அரசாங்க அதிபராக, போக்குவரத்து, கலாசார அலுவல்கள், தகவல் மற்றும் ஒலிபரப்பு அமைச்சுக்களின் நிரந்தரச் செயலாளராக அவர் பல்வேறு பதிவிகளை வகித்தார்.

Continue reading ‘1961ம் ஆண்டு தமிழர் சத்தியாக்கிரகப் போராட்ட காலத்தில் அன்றைய யாழ்ப்பாண அரசாங்க அதிபர் நிசங்க விஜெயரத்ன‌வின் அனுபவங்கள்’ »

Australian Titanium Sands Limited (TSL) Company’s Multi-billion Mineral Sands Extracting Project In Mannar Island Meets with Protests of People Due to Existential Concerns Over Environmental Consequences

By Mimi Alphonsus and S. Rubatheesan

For over a decade, an Australian company has tried to secure mining licences to extract heavy mineral sands from the ecologically rich region of Mannar Island—the fourth largest ilmenite deposit in the world—with little success.

Renewed attempts to push the project further were met with protests by locals over land usage and severe existential concerns about the environmental consequences.

The Australian company, Titanium Sands Limited (TSL), along with their local subsidiaries, have engaged in exploration activities covering vast swathes of Mannar Island.

Its preliminary scientific studies found key minerals such as ilmenite, rutile, zircon and garnet. According to data from the Geological Survey and Mines Bureau (GSMB), Mannar Island has 53 million metric tonnes of mineral soil.

The company has secured land access agreements for mining on 296 acres, according to the company’s responses to the “Basic Information Questionnaire” (BIQ) submitted to the Central Environmental Authority (CEA). The Sunday Times obtained a copy through a Right to Information (RTI) request.

TSL is currently in discussions with GSMB to secure a mining licence with a pending environmental impact assessment (EIA), which is yet to be finalised due to protests by local communities.

Continue reading ‘Australian Titanium Sands Limited (TSL) Company’s Multi-billion Mineral Sands Extracting Project In Mannar Island Meets with Protests of People Due to Existential Concerns Over Environmental Consequences’ »

Mannar Catholic Bishop and Three Prominent Environmentalists Petition Supreme Court in the Public Interest against the proposed 250 MW Mannar Wind Power Project by Adani Green Energy.

The Bishop of the Diocese of Mannar and three prominent environmentalists this week petitioned the Supreme Court in the public interest against the proposed 250 MW Mannar Wind Power Project by Adani Green Energy.

Rev. Dr. Fidelis Lionel Emmanuel Fernando along with Rohan Pethiyagoda, Prof. Nimal Gunatilleke and Prof. Sarath Kotagama have challenged the procurement process and proposed construction of the project by Adani Green Energy PTE Ltd and/or Adani Green Energy S L Limited.

The case names 67 respondents including the Cabinet of Ministers, the Sri Lanka Sustainable Energy Authority (SLSEA), the Central Environmental Authority (CEA), the Board of Investment, the Ceylon Electricity Board, the Public Utilities Commission Sri Lanka and the Attorney General, among others.

Continue reading ‘Mannar Catholic Bishop and Three Prominent Environmentalists Petition Supreme Court in the Public Interest against the proposed 250 MW Mannar Wind Power Project by Adani Green Energy.’ »

Stand up comedienne Nathasha Edirisooriya and SL VLOG Youtube channel owner Bruno Diwakara released by the Fort Magistrates Court from the case filed against them under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) Act.


Stand up comedienne Nathasha Edirisooriya and SL VLOG Youtube channel owner Bruno Diwakara were released yesterday by the Fort Magistrates Court from the case filed against them under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) Act.

The Police arrested Edirisooriya on 28 May 2023 for allegedly making controversial statements on Buddhism during her segment at a stand-up comedy show in Colombo.

She was detained by the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) at Bandaranaike International Airport (BIA) in Katunayake as she prepared to leave the country.

Continue reading ‘Stand up comedienne Nathasha Edirisooriya and SL VLOG Youtube channel owner Bruno Diwakara released by the Fort Magistrates Court from the case filed against them under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) Act.’ »

Indian External Affairs Minister S.Jaishankar to Visit Sri Lanka on 20 June “ to review progress in projects in various sectors such as renewable energy and connectivity” ;two cases filed in Lankan Supreme Court against $ 442-million wind energy project of Adani Green in North.

By

Meera Srinivasan

External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar will arrive in Colombo on June 20, in his official first visit to a neighbouring country since the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA)’s coalition government assumed charge in India earlier this month.

Confirming his Indian counterpart’s visit, Sri Lanka’s Foreign Minister Ali Sabry told The Hindu on Tuesday that projects that India and Sri Lanka have agreed to jointly implement will be reviewed.

“We will review progress in projects in various sectors such as renewable energy and connectivity, and look at ways to expedite them,” Mr. Sabry said. Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s possible visit to Sri Lanka this year will also be discussed, he said.

Continue reading ‘Indian External Affairs Minister S.Jaishankar to Visit Sri Lanka on 20 June “ to review progress in projects in various sectors such as renewable energy and connectivity” ;two cases filed in Lankan Supreme Court against $ 442-million wind energy project of Adani Green in North.’ »

“The present time is opportune for a pledge to be taken together by the prospective candidates at the presidential election to support the implementation of the 13th Amendment and take forward the larger reconciliation process”- National Peace Council

(Text of Media Release issued by the National Peace Council of Sri Lanka on 14 June 2024)

Sri Lanka is witnessing a positive transformation of electoral politics in relation to its long standing ethnic conflict that commenced with the economic collapse of 2022. The notion that the country required a “system change” was promoted by the student-led protest movement that publicly eschewed racism and upheld the rights of equal citizenship in their slogans.

In a manner inconceivable in the past, the three main candidates for the presidential election in October appear to be outbidding each other in support of the 13th Amendment to the constitution and devolution of power to the provinces.

This is an aspect of the change that has taken place in contrast to the politics of the past when narrow ethnic nationalism was used to foment violence and harvest votes.

Continue reading ‘“The present time is opportune for a pledge to be taken together by the prospective candidates at the presidential election to support the implementation of the 13th Amendment and take forward the larger reconciliation process”- National Peace Council’ »

Will the current positions taken by Sajith Premadasa and Anura Dissanayake Regarding the 13th Amendment help bring about a positive change in the misconceptions among Sinhalese society about devolution of power?

By Veeragathy Thanabalasingham

Although many amendments have been brought to the Sri Lankan Constitution during a period of more than four-and-a-half decades, which were detrimental to democratic governance, no major controversy has been raised against them.

However, the 13th Amendment (13A), which has a relatively democratic dimension, has been in the Constitution for more than three-and-a-half decades but has been controversial for a long time.
The 13A, introduced following the July 1987 Indo-Sri Lanka Peace Accord to introduce the system of Provincial Councils (PCs) has not been properly implemented by any government in office so far. Political controversies arise from time to time regarding that amendment. As the country looks ahead to the Presidential Election, there is another possibility of controversy raging regarding the 13A.

Last week in Jaffna, the two main candidates in the upcoming Presidential Election, Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) Leader Sajith Premadasa and Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP)-led National People’s Power (NPP) Leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake, announced that their future governments would implement the 13A.

Continue reading ‘Will the current positions taken by Sajith Premadasa and Anura Dissanayake Regarding the 13th Amendment help bring about a positive change in the misconceptions among Sinhalese society about devolution of power?’ »

The proposal by President Ranil Wickremesinghe to grant a six months extension to Sri Lanka’s Attorney General has put the hapless holder of that office in the centre of a vicious political whirlwind


By

Kishali Pinto – Jayawardene

The proposal by President Ranil Wickremesinghe to grant a six months service extension to Sri Lanka’s Attorney General has put the hapless holder of that office in the centre of a vicious political whirlwind that further damages the already badly battered public reputation of the chief law officer of the land.

A red hot political coal

This must be said clearly and categorically. Absent that extension, the incumbent Attorney General will retire later this month. This controversial proposal has been placed with his customary aplomb by the President before the Constitutional Council (CC) sans any reflection on the grievous impact that this may have on constitutional propriety.

That proposal is now being tossed like a red hot coal by the CC from one week to the next. All this hot air comes in the backdrop of a looming national poll (presidential or parliamentary as the case may be) and in the wake of the President’s favourites in the United National Party (UNP) declaring that polls should be postponed.

This does not augur well for the health of the nation’s constitutional democracy, to put it gently. To add insult to injury, the President has reportedly justified this move by claiming that the incumbent Attorney General has been engaged in constant discussions with the Catholic Church regarding ongoing prosecutions related to the 2019 Easter Sunday attacks by home-grown jihadists.

He has also cited close involvement of the state law office in legal proceedings relating to claims of compensation over the enormous marine destruction caused by the sinking of the fire engulfed X-Press Pearl ship.

First, the President and his advisors need to be educated on the doctrine of the continuity of state responsibilities in office irrespective of the change of individual officers in that seat. If reasons of ‘close engagement’ in ongoing prosecutions (the sum and substance of the duties of the Attorney General) had been advanced in the past to justify extending the terms of Attorneys Generals, the holders of those posts would have had to die standing up in their shoes as it were, in order for their successors to be fortunate enough to come into office.

Continue reading ‘The proposal by President Ranil Wickremesinghe to grant a six months extension to Sri Lanka’s Attorney General has put the hapless holder of that office in the centre of a vicious political whirlwind’ »

Range Bandara’s “Loud Thinking” about Election Postponement Damages Ranil’s Election Campaign in the Short Term.


By

D.B.S.Jeyaraj

Sri Lanka’s political stage was enlivened last week by the solo performance of United National Party (UNP) general -secretary Palitha Range Bandara. Addressing a media briefing on 28 May, the policeman turned politician came out with a suggestion that the presidential election due this year and the Parliamentary election scheduled for next year should be postponed while the terms of office for both should be extended by two more years. The former Puttalam district and ex-state minister wanted a resolution passed by Parliament to that effect and ratified by the people at a referendum.

The essence of what Palitha Range Bandara proposed was this -. Ranil Wickremesinghe took over the country’s leadership at a time of a great economic crisis. Considerable progress has been achieved by the Wickremesinghe Govt to remedy the situation. A degree of economic stability has been established but more time is needed to ensure greater economic stability.

Presidential elections are due this year and parliamentary polls next year. These elections along with the election campaigns could affect the current momentum of economic recovery. The steady progress of economic growth could be disrupted. As such both elections should be postponed so as to continue with the journey towards greater economic stability and growth.

The current terms of office of the President and Parliament should be extended by two more years for both. A proposal to this effect should be presented in Parliament as a resolution and passed by all political parties together and followed up by a referendum to get the people’s support and endorsement. Thus the president and Govt could continue unfettered for two more years and achieve economic stability for Sri Lanka.


Non-Starter

The above in essence was Range Bandara’s suggestion as revealed to the media. Whatever the merits or otherwise of the proposal, it was obvious from the start that Palitha’s project was a non -starter. In the first place, it was unclear as to whether the envisaged postponements and extensions of the terms of office were constitutionally feasible. Even if it were so, gaining two-thirds support in Parliament was hardly possible. Furthermore obtaining the people’s endorsement at a referendum was virtually impossible.

Continue reading ‘Range Bandara’s “Loud Thinking” about Election Postponement Damages Ranil’s Election Campaign in the Short Term.’ »

The Economic Transformation Bill offers imaginary solutions to real problems. The Bill is not a blueprint for efficiency but its antithesis.

By Tisaranee Gunasekara

“The silence is a danger in itself”

Seamus Heaney (The Burial at Thebes)

Ten years: that was how long three State institutions didn’t pay EPF and ETF monies to their retired and deceased employees.

Most victims of this act of criminal injustice suffered and died in silence. A few (about 2,000) filed court cases. The larger society, including the media, political parties and the labour movement, didn’t know, didn’t care.

This injustice happened in the only place it could have been perpetrated with legal, political, and societal impunity: the plantation sector. The culprits were the three State-owned plantation companies. The excuse was that these companies made losses. How many state-owned enterprises make profits? Do the loss-making ones (which include CEB, CPC, and Air Lanka) deny their employees EPF and ETF payments? What would happen if they even tried?

Two weeks ago, the cabinet approved a proposal by President Wickremesinghe to set aside Rs. 5 billion to pay these long overdue monies. The Deputy Minister of Finance “… highlighted the severe difficulties faced by a large number of employees due to non-payment of their provident and trust fund contributions…” (FT – 1.6.2024).

Such impunity is possible because an absolute majority of victims are the most discriminated against people in Sri Lanka: Upcountry Tamils.

Transporting Indians as indentured labour across the British empire began in 1834 and continued till 1917. Many were lied to, some even kidnapped. The first Indian Tamils were brought to Ceylon to pick coffee. They stayed to pluck tea. More were brought because most Sinhalese shunned the work as too onerous and too demeaning. They still do. Now, Up-country Tamils too are moving away from an industry which treats them as less than human, and less than citizens.

Continue reading ‘The Economic Transformation Bill offers imaginary solutions to real problems. The Bill is not a blueprint for efficiency but its antithesis.’ »

International Tribunal Comprising Three Former Judges from India,Nepal and Sri Lanka States it is “horrified by the stark realities” of the lives of Sri Lanka’s tea and rubber plantation workers,

By
Meera Srinivasan

An international tribunal of former judges from the region said it was “horrified by the stark realities” of the lives of Sri Lanka’s tea and rubber plantation workers, after hearing testimonies from workers and trade unions.

Hailing from the island nation’s Malaiyaha Tamil community, tens of thousands of workers are engaged in tea and rubber production. They earn vital foreign exchange for the country that is struggling to rebuild its economy after the dramatic meltdown of 2022. Last year, Sri Lanka’s revenue from tea exports totalled $1.3 billion, while rubber-based exports fetched $930 million, according to the Export Development Board.

However, the workers who toil in the country’s plantations continue to work and live in abysmal conditions. “It has shocked the conscience of the Tribunal that such practices could continue unabated in the modern civilised world,” members said in their findings, echoing concerns that trade unions, local activists, and UN experts have flagged in the past.

Continue reading ‘International Tribunal Comprising Three Former Judges from India,Nepal and Sri Lanka States it is “horrified by the stark realities” of the lives of Sri Lanka’s tea and rubber plantation workers,’ »

India voted emphatically for political, social, and economic inclusion, for a more consultative government, and for the sanctity of the Constitution.


By

Nirupama Subramanian

Emphatic. An election result that throws up no outright winners would not be normally described as that. But this was no normal election. It was an election for the democratic heart and soul of India. And, in this sense, the results of the 2024 Lok Sabha election, which left the BJP with less than a majority, were emphatic.

An emphatic rejection of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s creeping authoritarianism, his and Home Minister Amit Shah’s two-man regime, and their divisive politics, anti-federal tendencies, and idea of “development” that lined the pockets of crony capitalists without improving the lives of the common people. An emphatic vote for political, social, and economic inclusion, for a more consultative government, and for the sanctity of the Constitution and the guarantees and protections written into it for all citizens.

One could describe the verdict as Modi’s India-not-shining moment, similar to the shock defeat in 2004 of the Atal Bihari Vajpayee government. But it would not be out of place to go back even further and draw a parallel to the 1977 election. The last 10 years often evoked comparisons to the 1975-77 Emergency, with the Modi government’s reign of fear, his crackdown on political rivals, dissidents, and the media using Central law enforcement agencies and military grade surveillance, and the centralisation of power. This is why this verdict is as historic as the punishment by voters to Indira Gandhi in 1977 for the Emergency.

Unlike Indira Gandhi, Modi has not been voted out. The BJP is still the single largest party, with wins in 240 constituencies. It made headway in some new ground even as it lost some old. It won 36.57 per cent of the vote share, a drop of only 0.73 percentage points from last time’s 37.3 per cent. The party will form the government with the help of its allies, the Telugu Desam Party (TDP), the Janata Dal (United), or JD(U), the Shiv Sena, the Nationalist Congress Party (NCP), the JanaSena Party, the Janata Dal (Secular), the Lok Janshakti Party (Ram Vilas), and other smaller parties. Together, the combine has 293 seats in the Lok Sabha. Modi is all set to be Prime Minister for a third term.

Continue reading ‘India voted emphatically for political, social, and economic inclusion, for a more consultative government, and for the sanctity of the Constitution.’ »

Dr Siri Kannangara was a rheumatologist, best known by Sri Lankans for the immense services he rendered in sports medicine.

By

Krishantha Prasad Cooray

Lord Buddha, elaborating on the notion of sorrow (dukkha) in the first sermon he delivered after attaining Enlightenment, observed that having to associate with those who are repugnant is sorrowful and being apart from those who are loved is also sorrowful — appiyehi sampayogo dukkho, piyehi vippayogo dukkho. So, we choose to avoid and insulate ourselves from the distasteful while we seek the company of people we find agreeable. When they leave, we are saddened. When they depart, never to return, we are distraught.

A few days ago, I realised that while any kind of separation from someone who is likeable is never a happy thing, there are instances when it is devastating. I had just received a text from my friend Prof Arjuna De Silva, and he wanted to know ‘if the story about Dr Siri was true.’ I called two of Dr Siri’s closest friends, Ranjith Page and Dr Harindu. Both confirmed that he had passed away in Dubai. I am shocked and saddened beyond belief.

Dr Siri Kannangara was a rheumatologist, best known by Sri Lankans for the immense services he rendered in sports medicine. To me, he was either ‘Doc’ or ‘Siri’. But I know for a fact that this was how almost all Sri Lankans, whether patients or otherwise, addressed or referred to him. He was a physician who made his patients believe that he was a friend. He was always self-effacing and treated all Sri Lankans as though they were close relatives in an immense extended family.

Continue reading ‘Dr Siri Kannangara was a rheumatologist, best known by Sri Lankans for the immense services he rendered in sports medicine.’ »

Sajith-Anura Televised Debate on ITN Fizzles out Due to SJB Leader Premadasa not Turning up at Studio;JVP leader AK Dissanayake Participates in ITN’s “Tulawa”Hosted by Sudarman Radaliyagoda Instead

Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) leader Sajith Premadasa did not attend the scheduled televised debate with National People’s Power (NPP) leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake on the Independent Television Network (ITN) last night (June 6).

While Premadasa was absent, Dissanayake participated in the Thulawa political program, which was hosted by veteran broadcaster Sudarman Radaliyagoda.

Earlier in the day SJB MP Nalin Bandara voiced the party’s dissatisfaction with the ITN regarding its organisation of the debate between the SJB and the rival NPP. MP Bandara conveyed the party’s concerns in a letter to the state broadcaster, highlighting discrepancies in the planning process.

Continue reading ‘Sajith-Anura Televised Debate on ITN Fizzles out Due to SJB Leader Premadasa not Turning up at Studio;JVP leader AK Dissanayake Participates in ITN’s “Tulawa”Hosted by Sudarman Radaliyagoda Instead’ »

President Ranil Wickremesinghe Opens New Political Office in Colombo on Sir Ernest de Silva Mawatte to Coordinate and Direct Future Operations Regarding Presidential Elections

(Text of Press Release Issued by the President’s Media Division on 6 June 2024)

President Ranil Wickremesinghe inaugurated his new political office in Colombo today (06) at an auspicious moment. The office, located on Sir Ernest de Silva Mawatha, will serve as the center for future political operations.

Continue reading ‘President Ranil Wickremesinghe Opens New Political Office in Colombo on Sir Ernest de Silva Mawatte to Coordinate and Direct Future Operations Regarding Presidential Elections’ »

How did Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) Appoint Diana Gamage as a National List MP when she was not a Sri Lankan Citizen? Colombo Addl Magistrate Orders CID to Investigate the Matter and Report Back to Court.

By Kumudu Upul Shantha

Colombo Additional Magistrate Manjula Rathnayake issued an order, yesterday (5), directing the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) to submit a report to the Court regarding an alleged error made by Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) General Secretary Ranjith Maddumabandara. This pertains to the inclusion of former MP Diana Gamage’s name in the SJB’s National List in 2020, despite her not holding citizenship in the country.

Following a complaint lodged with the CID by a resident of Magampitiya (South), Dompe named Y.A. Saman Nishantha, the Court took action to address the matter.

Continue reading ‘How did Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) Appoint Diana Gamage as a National List MP when she was not a Sri Lankan Citizen? Colombo Addl Magistrate Orders CID to Investigate the Matter and Report Back to Court.’ »

UNP Re-structures Party Leadership to Face Elections. Harin Fernando appointed National Elections Organizer ; Ravi Karunanayake and Ronald Perera to Serve as Secretary and Deputy Secretary of Elections

The United National Party (UNP) made key appointments for its upcoming election campaign at a meeting held at Sirikotha on Sunday June 2nd.

At the meeting chaired by Party Leader Ranil Wickremesinghe, several key positions were filled to strengthen the party’s election strategy.

Harin Fernando was appointed as the National Election organiser while Ravi Karunanayake was named the National Secretary, and Ronald Perera will serve as the Deputy General Secretary of elections.

Continue reading ‘UNP Re-structures Party Leadership to Face Elections. Harin Fernando appointed National Elections Organizer ; Ravi Karunanayake and Ronald Perera to Serve as Secretary and Deputy Secretary of Elections’ »

Defying Doomsday Predictions of Exit polls the Congress -led INDIA -Bloc of Opposition Parties Shock the Ruling BJP in vital states, thereby resetting India’s political landscape.


By Yashraj Sharma

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) lost its national majority after suffering major losses in key states, marking a dramatic shift in a political landscape it has dominated for the past decade.

The BJP emerged, comfortably, as the country’s single-largest party in the Lok Sabha, the lower house of India’s parliament. But with most votes counted after India’s six-week-long election on Tuesday, the BJP was well short of its performances from 2014 and 2019.
Unlike both those elections, when the BJP won clear majorities on its own in a house of 543 seats, it was poised to end up with 240 seats this time around. The halfway mark is 272 seats.

By contrast, the opposition INDIA alliance, led by the Congress party, was projected to win more than 200 seats, significantly higher than exit polls had predicted. Released on June 1 after the final phase of India’s election cycle, the exit polls had suggested that the BJP would outdo its 2019 tally of 303 seats.

Modi and his party are still likely to be able to form India’s next government — but will be dependent on a clutch of allies whose support they will need to cross the 272-seat mark. The BJP with its allies, in a coalition known as the National Democratic Alliance (NDA), was projected to win around 282 seats.

“India will likely have an NDA government, where the BJP does not have a majority on their own, and coalition politics will come into real play,” said Sandeep Shastri, the national coordinator of the Lokniti Network, a research programme at the New Delhi-based Centre for the Study of Developing Societies (CSDS).
On Tuesday evening, Modi claimed, in his first comments after the results were declared, victory for his NDA coalition. “We will form the next government,” he said, speaking to thousands of supporters gathered at the BJP’s party headquarters in New Delhi.

Continue reading ‘Defying Doomsday Predictions of Exit polls the Congress -led INDIA -Bloc of Opposition Parties Shock the Ruling BJP in vital states, thereby resetting India’s political landscape.’ »

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi wins third term in Elections; BJP led NDA gets 291 seats while the Congress -led INDIA Bloc wins 234 seats

BY VARGHESE K. GEORGE ,NISTULA HEBBAR

Prime Minister Narendra Modi won a third term in power on June 4, but he will be dependent on allies as the BJP fell almost 32 short of the halfway mark of 272 seats in the Lok Sabha. The BJP-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA) won 291 seats against the Congress-led INDIA bloc’s 234 seats. The Congress won 99 seats compared to 52 in 2019.

The BJP faced setbacks in strongholds and ended up with lower tallies in Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan, while its southern foray yielded only marginal returns. Its hopes of expanding in West Bengal were dashed. However, Odisha went according to the BJP’s script where it rose to power for the first time and posted wins in 19 out of 21 Lok Sabha seats.

The Congress’s unprecedented outreach to OBC voters in alliance with the Samajwadi Party paid rich dividends in Uttar Pradesh, where the alliance won 44 seats, bringing the BJP tally down to 35 from its earlier tally of 62 seats in 2019, in the battleground State. In Bihar, the Congress-RJD alliance on the same plank failed to enthuse the voters and the NDA alliance held its own.

Continue reading ‘Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi wins third term in Elections; BJP led NDA gets 291 seats while the Congress -led INDIA Bloc wins 234 seats’ »

Stunning Election Results Humble India’s Strongman Prime Minister Narendra Modi who is Forced to Form Coaition Govt with Alliance Partners – “The Economist”

Ahead of the general election that concluded on June 1st Narendra Modi, India’s prime minister, was expected to romp home. His charisma, combined with an emphasis on infrastructure development, welfare payments to the poorest and a polarising Hindu nationalism, looked unbeatable. Mr Modi exuded a confidence that matched those predictions. He claimed that his Bharatiya Janata Party (bjp) and its allies would win upwards of 400 seats in the 543-seat parliament.

Early results from the vote count on June 4th appeared to put that target out of reach. After more than 50% of the votes had been counted, Mr Modi’s alliance still looked headed for victory, with the bjp and its allies ahead in 290 seats, compared with the opposition’s 235. Yet the bjp itself appeared to be on course to lose more than 60 seats compared with the last election in 2019, with results mid-afternoon putting its tally at 238, down from 303 in 2019.

Crucially, that means that it will rely on its alliance partners to control parliament (272 seats are needed for a majority). Final results are expected late on Tuesday or early on Wednesday. The spectacle of the Modi machine faltering has shocked the public, the political world and financial markets: the country’s benchmark share index fell by 6%.

The electoral surprise follows a deeply divisive campaign. From the start, opposition politicians and other critics had bemoaned the lack of a level playing field in the election. Opposition politicians were jailed on corruption charges that they called politically motivated. Congress, the main opposition party, said its bank accounts were frozen, hindering campaigning. Meanwhile Mr Modi used at times stridently anti-Muslim campaign rhetoric. All of this may have been motivated by worries about diminishing support for the bjp.

Continue reading ‘Stunning Election Results Humble India’s Strongman Prime Minister Narendra Modi who is Forced to Form Coaition Govt with Alliance Partners – “The Economist”’ »

ரங்க பண்டாரவின் உரத்த சிந்தனையும் ரணிலின் தேர்தல் பிரசாரமும்

டி.பி.எஸ். ஜெயராஜ்

ஐக்கிய தேசிய கட்சியின் பொதுச்செயலாளர் பாலித ரங்க பண்டாரவின் ஓரங்க நாடகத்தினால் இலங்கை அரசியல் அரங்கு கடந்தவாரம் சுறுசுறுப்படைந்தது. பொலிஸ்காரராக இருந்து அரசியல்வாதியாக மாறிய அவர் மே 28 கொழும்பில்
செய்தியாளர்கள் மகாநாடொன்றில் உரையாற்றியபோது இவ்வருடம் நடைபெறவிருக்கும் ஜனாதிபதி தேர்தலும் அடுத்த வருடம் நடத்தப்பட வேண்டியிருக்கும் பாராளுமன்ற தேர்தலும் ஒத்திவைக்கப்படவேண்டும் என்கிற அதேவேளை ஜனாதிபதியினதும் பாராளுமன்றத்தினதும் பதவிக்காலங்கள் இரு வருடங்களினால் நீடிக்கப்படவேண்டும் என்று யோசனையை முன்வைத்தார். அதற்காக பாராளுமன்றத்தில் தீர்மானம் ஒன்று நிறைவேற்றப்படவேண்டும் என்றும் மக்களின் அங்கீகாரத்தைப் பெறுவதற்கு சர்வஜன வாக்கெடுப்பு ஒன்று நடத்தப்படவேண்டும் என்றும் முன்னாள் புத்தளம் மாவட்ட பாராளுமன்ற உறுப்பினரும் இராஜாங்க அமைச்சருமான அவர் கூறினார்.

பாலித ரங்க பண்டார முன்வைத்த யோசனையின் சாராம்சம் இதுதான் ;

“ நாடு பாரிய பொருளாதார நெருக்கடி ஒன்றை எதிர்நோக்கிய ஒரு நேரத்தில் ரணில் விக்கிரமசிங்க நாட்டின் தலைமைத்துவத்தைப் பொறுப்பேற்றார். நிலைவரத்தை சீராக்க விக்கிரசிங்க அரசாங்கம் மேற்கொண்ட நடவடிக்கைகளின் விளைவாக கணிசமான முன்னேற்றம் ஏற்பட்டிருக்கிறது. ஓரளவு பொருாதார உறுதிப்பாடும் ஏற்படுத்தப்பட்டது. ஆனால் பெருமளவு பொருளாதார உறுதிப்பாட்டை உத்தரவாதப்படுத்துவதற்கு மேலும் கால அவகாசம் தேவை.

இவ்வருடம் ஜனாதிபதி தேர்தலும் அடுத்த வருடம் பாராளுமன்ற தேர்தலும் வருகின்றன. இந்த தேர்தல்களும் அவற்றுக்கான பிரசாரங்களும் தற்போதைய பொருளாதார மீட்சிப்போக்கை பாதிக்கக்கூடும். சீரான பொருளாதார வளர்ச்சிப் போக்கு சீர்குலைக்கப்படலாம். அதனால் பாரிய பொருளாதார உறுதிப்பாட்டையும் வளர்ச்சியையும் நோக்கிய பயணத்தை தொடருவதற்கு வசதியாக இரு தேர்தல்களும் ஒத்திவைக்கப்பட வேண்டும்.

தற்போதைய ஜனாதிபதியின் பதவிக்காலமும் பாராளுமன்றத்தின் பதவிக்காலமும் இரு வருடங்களினால் நீடிக்கப்படவேண்டும். இது தொடர்பிலான யோசனை ஒரு தீர்மானமாக பாராளுமன்றத்துக்கு கொண்டுவரப்பட்டு சகல கட்சிகளினதும் ஆதரவுடன் நிறைவேற்றப்பட வேண்டும். மக்களின் ஆதரவையும் அங்கீகாரத்தையும் பெறுவதற்கு சர்வஜன வாக்கெடுப்பு ஒன்று நடத்தப்படவேண்டும். இதன் மூலமாக ஜனாதிபதியும் அரசாங்கமும் மேலும் இரு வருடங்களுக்கு பதவியில் இருந்து பொருளாதார உறுதிப்பாட்டைச் சாதிக்கக்கூடியதாக இருக்கும்.”

ரங்க பண்டாரவின் யோசனையின் சாதகங்களும் பாதகங்களும் எவ்வாறிருந்தாலும், அதற்கு ஆதரவு கிடைக்கக்கூடிய வாய்ப்பு இருக்கவில்லை. முதலாவதாக, உத்தேச தேர்தல்கள் ஒத்திவைப்பும் பதவிக்காலங்கள் நீடிப்பும் அரசியலமைப்பு ரீதியாக சாத்தியமாகுமா என்பது தெளிவில்லை. அவ்வாறு இருந்தாலும் கூட பாராளுமன்றத்தில் மூன்றில் இரண்டு பெரும்பான்மை ஆதரவைப் பெறுவது பெறுவது சாத்தியமில்லை. மேலும் சர்வஜன வாக்கெடுப்பு ஒன்றில் மக்களின் அங்கீகாரத்தைப் பெறுவது அறவே சாத்தியமில்லை.

Continue reading ‘ரங்க பண்டாரவின் உரத்த சிந்தனையும் ரணிலின் தேர்தல் பிரசாரமும்’ »

The Six Face(t)s of CWC Chief Arumugan “Thamby” Thondaman


By

D.B.S.Jeyaraj

Former Cabinet Minister,Nuwara Eliya district Parliamentarian and Ceylon Workers Congress (CWC) leader Arumugan Thondaman would have celebrated his 60th birthday on 29 May,if he were alive today. Thondaman passed away due to a cardiac arrest four days before his 56th birthday four years ago on 26 May 2020. He was serving as a Minister in the cabinet of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa at the time of his death. This week’s “political pulse” – with the aid of my previous writings – focuses on Arumugan Thondaman to denote his 60th birth anniversary.

Let me begin with two points about his name and pet name. Thondaman’s first name Arumugan is spelled with an N at the end. However it is frequently misspelled by the media as Arumugam with an M instead of N. I too have been guilty of this error at times. I remember his illustrious grandfather Saumiyamoorthy Thondaman gently admonishing me once “ He is Arumugan not Arumugam”.

One reason for this mistake is due to both names having more or less the same meaning. They both refer to Lord Muruga the God with six faces in the Hindu Pantheon. “Arumugam” means six faces while “Arumugan” means six-faced.

The second point is about Arumugan’s pet name- He was called “Thamby” which means younger brother in Tamil. Thamby is used widely as a pet name for male kids in many Tamil households. In many instances the pet name Thamby remains in use even after the children mature into adults.

In Arumugan’s case ,he was the fourth of five children. He was also the only boy among the children. Arumugan’s three elder sisters called him Thamby. The pet name stuck and extended beyond the family circle.

Arumugan himself encouraged people to call him Thamby. I can recall my first conversation with him via telephone more than twenty-five years ago.. When I addressed him as “Mr.Thondaman” he simply said “Thambynnae Sollunga” (just say Thamby).

Continue reading ‘The Six Face(t)s of CWC Chief Arumugan “Thamby” Thondaman’ »

“Operation Sajaba” Intends to Deplete SJB Through Large Scale Crossover of MPs to Ranil Wickremesingh’s Side..

By

D.B.S.Jeyaraj

Sri Lanka’s United National Party (UNP) suffered a humiliating electoral defeat in the 2020 Parliamentary elections. Electoral debacles were nothing new to the UNP which is referred to by some as the grand old party. In 1956 the UNP got only eight seats in a Parliament of 101 MPs. In 1970 the party won 17 seats in a Parliament of 157 MPs.2020 was distinctly different. For the first time in its history ,the UNP failed to get even a single MP elected to Parliament. Mercifully the UNP polling 249,435 (2.15%) votes was entitled to a national list MP. Thus the UNP had a single MP in a Parliament of 225 MPs.

UNP leader and former prime minister Ranil Wickremesinghe had been a MP continuously for 43 years since 1977. In the 2015 elections, Wickremesinghe topped the list of Colombo district candidates with over 500,000 preference votes. Yet Ranil too was buried in the 2020 avalanche of defeat. Ranil whose detractors used to ridicule him in the past as “Mr.Bean” and ‘serial loser” was virtually written off. It was said that Ranil Wickremesinghe’s political career had ended.

Yet, Ranil like the mythological phoenix rose from the ashes. After being absent from the House for 10 months,Ranil Wickremesinghe re-entered Parliament on 23 June 2021 as UNP national list MP. The advent of the “Aragalaya” protest resulted in the then Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa resigning. Former President Gotabaya Rajapaksa appointed Ranil Wickremesinghe as Prime Minister on 12 May 2022. Earlier Gota had offered the post to Opposition leader Sajith Premadasa and Field Marshall Sarath Fonseka. Both were reluctant to take up the challenge.

The Aragalaya had been launched with the demand “Gota go home” or “Go Home Gota”. This objective was realised in July 2022. Gotabaya Rajapaksa fled the country and resigned from abroad as President.Ranil took over as acting president on 14 July 2022. On 20 July 2022, Wickremesinghe was elected by Parliament as executive president. 134 out of 225 MPs voted for him. Ranil Wickremesinghe was sworn in as Sri Lanka’s eighth executive president on 21 July 2022.

In the early days after he assumed office Ranil Wickremesinghe engaged in efforts to entice MPs from the parties in opposition to the side of the treasury benches. His intention was two-fold. Firstly he wanted the Government to be broadly representative as possible. Secondly he wanted to reduce his dependence on the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna(SLPP) as much as possible.

Continue reading ‘“Operation Sajaba” Intends to Deplete SJB Through Large Scale Crossover of MPs to Ranil Wickremesingh’s Side..’ »

♬ P. Leela, ‘Forgotten’ Singer Who Sang Unforgettable Songs In Tamil Cinema ♥

by D.B.S. Jeyaraj

(P. Leela was the uncrowned queen of song in the realm of Tamil films during the fifties and sixties of the last century.Born in 1934, Leela passed away in 2005.This Article written in 2015 is re-posted here without any changes to denote Leela’s 90th Birthdy on May 19)

I was pleasantly surprised this week when a South Indian journal asked me to revise an article I had written earlier about the singer Porayathu Leela – popularly known as P. Leela. The request for an article to denote Leela’s birthday was most unexpected as she had passed away 10 years ago on October 31st 2005.Her once successful career as a Play back singer of film songs in Tamil cinema had virtually ended decades before her demise. Leela, born on 19 May 1934, was ethnically a Malayalee who resided and died in the Tamil Nadu state capital of Chennai.

Porayathu Leela (P. Leela)

♥♬ Porayathu Leela (P. Leela) ♬♥

The present generation of film song fans may have never heard her or even heard of P. Leela. She was the uncrowned queen of song in the realm of Tamil films during the fifties and sixties of the last century. P. Leela has sung about 5,000 film songs in South Indian languages such as Tamil, Malayalam, Telugu, Kannada and even in Bengalee and Sinhala. Her Tamil renditions may number around 1,000. She was a household name in those days.
Continue reading ‘♬ P. Leela, ‘Forgotten’ Singer Who Sang Unforgettable Songs In Tamil Cinema ♥’ »

Can Ranil Wickremesinghe Regain the Support of Tamil and Muslim Voters at the 2024 Presidential Elections?


By

D.B.S.Jeyaraj

Sri Lanka’s last official census was taken in 2012. According to that census, Sri Lanka’s majority ethnic community the Sinhalese comprises 74.9 % of the island nation’s population. Numerically, the second largest ethnicity is the Sri Lankan Tamils who are 11.1% of the population. The third largest ethnicity is the Sri Lankan Muslims or Moors who comprise 9.3% of the population. The fourth largest ethnic group is the Tamils of Indian origin known as “Malaiyagath Thamizhar” (Hill Country Tamils) who are 4.1%.

The three numerical minorities namely the Sri Lankan Tamils, Muslims and Indian Tamils together are 25.5% of the population. These three ethnic groups form the majority in some Sri Lankan districts. In other districts they are a substantive segment of the population. Since the people of all districts vote together in the Presidential elections, the entire island is transformed into a “single” constituency with a 74.9% Sinhala majority and 25.5 % non – Sinhala minorities.

Therefore the three ethnic minorities have played a significant role in presidential elections from the time the executive presidency was introduced. The voting pattern of the Tamil and Muslim communities in previous presidential elections was discussed in detail by this column last week.

The focus of this series of articles has been on incumbent President Ranil Wickremesinghe’s strategy and plans about contesting the 2024 presidential polls. As such this week’s article would try and assess the plus and minus points of President Wickremesinghe vis a vis the Tamil and Muslim voters.

Ranil Wickremesinghe as mentioned earlier has generally been popular among the Tamil and Muslim voters of Sri Lanka. The bulk of Tamil and Muslim voters supported him in 1999 and 2005 when he directly contested the presidential elections. The three minority ethnicities also strongly supported the presidential candidates backed by Ranil in 2010, 2015 and 2019 namely Sarath Fonseka, Maithripala Sirisena and Sajith Premadasa.

Continue reading ‘Can Ranil Wickremesinghe Regain the Support of Tamil and Muslim Voters at the 2024 Presidential Elections?’ »

Gnanasara Thera was able to say and do anything without fear of the law during the Rajapaksa regime. During the reign of the Rajapaksas, Gnanasara Thera criticised Ranil Wickremesinghe in words that are Unmentionable.The Thera was so useful to the Rajapaksas that he was appointed head of a Presidential Task Force.


By

Veeragathy Thanabalasingham

When the Colombo High Court sent Bodu Bala Sena (BBS) General Secretary Ven. Galagoda Aththe Gnanasara Thera to prison two months ago, it was not unexpected that intense efforts would be made to get him out as soon as possible.

The Chief Prelates of Sri Lanka’s three main Buddhist chapters have jointly written to President Ranil Wickremesinghe to pardon and release him on the occasion of the Vesak festival. The day after this news was published, it was also reported that Gnanasara Thera’s name was not in the list of prisoners to be released on the occasion of Vesak. So it doesn’t seem possible for him to come out soon.

If someone else had been the president, perhaps Gnanasara Thera would have been released from prison last week. But it seems unlikely that the current President will show any urgency in this matter. During the reign of the Rajapaksas, Gnanasara Thera criticised Wickremesinghe in words that cannot be put in writing.

Earlier, a request for a pardon and release of Gnanasara Thera was made by a State Minister within days of his imprisonment. However, his appeal did not receive much attention in the public domain.

It can be hoped that many people would not have failed to consider the views expressed by the Mahanayaka Theras about Gnanasara Thera in the letter written to the President in the context of public opinion about him.

The Mahanayaka Theras mentioned in the letter that Gnanasara Thera had raised his voice for the Sinhalese Buddhist nationality and had taken steps to inform the security forces of important information regarding the activities of extremists in the country.

“He acted as the Chairman of the Presidential Task Force set up to draft an act to implement a common legal system under the ‘One Country, One Law’ concept. He presented valuable recommendations to the Government and worked with a good understanding of national unity. He played an important role in certain Sinhalese nationalist organisations and worked to win the hearts of society and strive for social cohesion,” the Chief Prelates said in the letter.

Continue reading ‘Gnanasara Thera was able to say and do anything without fear of the law during the Rajapaksa regime. During the reign of the Rajapaksas, Gnanasara Thera criticised Ranil Wickremesinghe in words that are Unmentionable.The Thera was so useful to the Rajapaksas that he was appointed head of a Presidential Task Force.’ »

Be it the ethnic conflict or the attempts to overthrow the government, innocents paid with their lives. Under the guise of national security, many who had no involvement in either of the conflicts were also killed.


By

Kshama Ranawana

Each year in May, since the military defeat of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in 2009, Tamils gather together to remember their dead. And every time they are harassed by the police, even to the point of being arrested.

It was no different this month; media reports stated that four Tamils, of whom three were women were arrested in the Trincomalee area for sharing Kanji, in remembrance of their dead.

In Colombo human rights activists and some members of the Tamil community gathered on a beach to remember lives lost in the 3o year ethnic conflict, and to share a bowl of kanji.

Ultra Sinhala nationalists attempted to disrupt the gathering, but this time aroud at least. the police turned them away.

Continue reading ‘Be it the ethnic conflict or the attempts to overthrow the government, innocents paid with their lives. Under the guise of national security, many who had no involvement in either of the conflicts were also killed.’ »

The dubious record of our police is primarily for arresting Tamil women cooking porridge or dragging away a Sinhalese comedian or a Muslim) poet on the basis of advocating national, racial or religious hatred


By

Kishali Pinto-Jayawardene

Amidst the not-so-happy transformation of Vesak from the serene marking of an incomparably sacred event in the Buddhist calendar to an indulgent if not excessive race to compete with the ‘biggest pandal’ or the largest ‘dansal’ (generous gifting of food to the public), President Ranil Wickremesinghe has sublimely remarked that the long lines of Sri Lankans patiently waiting for free food means that ‘life is returning to normal.’

Vesak contradictions and political excess

There are, of course, multiple interpretations to these (unprecedented) numbers crowding ‘dansal’ tents across the country. Another reason that may have escaped the President’s sunny mind is that crowds jostle for free food in the backdrop of large swathes of the rural populace and daily wage earners in cities being hit by (unprecedented) levels of poverty in the wake of the eruption of Sri Lanka’s economic crisis in 2022.

This has particularly affected mothers and children suffering from acute malnutrition leading to aid agencies tripling their efforts in remote regions.

These unfortunates live a world apart from the city-elite that the President typically surrounds himself with. But in the spirit of loving kindness to all beings, let us refrain from being too acerbic about Presidential optimism in that regard.

Certainly, it gladdened the spiritual heart to see the hosting of interfaith Vesak ‘dansals’ as well as the gifting of free vegetables to the poor in slum communities and the charitable feeding of animals to mark the birth, enlightenment and passing away of the Gautama Buddha.

That is more in keeping with the philosophy of the middle path that the Buddha taught rather than ostentatious displays of garishly festooned pandals with flashing green, red and blue neon lights and electronic television channels vulgarly trying to rival with each other to put on the best ‘Vesak show.’

Indeed, Vesak ‘dansals’ of ‘kanji’ (porridge) should have been organised across the North and the East. That would have been a fitting lesson to the colossal imprudence of the police who had arrested Tamil women communally partaking of ‘kanji’ just a week before.

Continue reading ‘The dubious record of our police is primarily for arresting Tamil women cooking porridge or dragging away a Sinhalese comedian or a Muslim) poet on the basis of advocating national, racial or religious hatred’ »

2024 ஜனாதிபதி தேர்தலில் தமிழ், முஸ்லிம் வாக்காளர்களின் ஆதரவை ரணிலால் மீண்டும் பெறமுடியுமா?

டி.பி.எஸ். ஜெயராஜ்

இலங்கையில் உத்தியோகபூர்வ சனத்தொகை கணக்கெடுப்பு 2012 ஆம் ஆண்டில் மேற்கொள்ளப்பட்டது. அந்த கணக்கெடுப்பின் பிரகாரம் இலங்கையின் பெரும்பான்மை இனத்தவர்களான சிங்களவர்கள் சனத்தொகையில் 74.9 சதவீதத்தினராக இருந்தனர். எண்ணிக்கையில் இரண்டாவது பெரிய இனத்தவர்களான இலங்கைத் தமிழர்கள் 11.1சதவீதத்தினராக இருந்தனர். மூன்றாவது பெரிய இனத்தவர்களான இலங்கை முஸ்லிம்கள் 9.3 சதவீதத்தினராகவும் நான்காவது பெரிய இனத்தவர்களான ‘ மலையகத் தமிழர்கள் ‘ என்று அறியப்படும் இந்திய வம்சாவளித் தமிழர்கள் 4.1 சதவீதத்தினராகவும் இருந்தனர்.

எண்ணிக்கையில் சிறுபான்மை இனத்தவர்களான இலங்கைத் தமிழர்களும் முஸ்லிம்களும் இந்திய தமிழர்களும் சனத்தொகையில் 25.5 சதவீதத்தினராக விளங்கினர். இந்த மூன்று இனத்தவர்களும் இலங்கையின் சில மாவட்டங்களில் பெரும்பான்மையானவர்களாக விளங்குகிறார்கள். ஏனைய மாவட்டங்களில் இவர்கள் சனத்தொகையில் கணிசமான பிரிவினராக இருக்கிறார்கள். ஜனாதிபதி தேர்தலில் சகல மாவட்டங்களிலும் உள்ள மக்களும் ஒன்றாக வாக்களிப்பதால் முழு இலங்கையுமே ‘ ஒரு தனித் தொகுதியாக ‘ மாற்றப்படுகிறது. அதில் பெரும்பான்மை இனத்தவர்களான சிங்களவர்கள் 74.9 சதவீதத்தினராகவும் சிங்களவர்கள் அல்லாத ஏனைய இனத்தவர்கள் 25.5 சதவீதத்தினராகவும் அமைகின்றனர்.

அதனால் நிறைவேற்று அதிகார ஜனாதிபதி ஆட்சிமுறை அறிமுகப்படுத்தப்பட்ட நாட்களில் இருந்து மூன்று சிறுபான்மை இனத்தவர்களும் ஜனாதிபதி தேர்தல்களில் குறிப்பிடத்தக்க பாத்திரத்தை வகித்திருக்கிறார்கள். முன்னைய ஜனாதிபதி தேர்தல்களில் தமிழர்களும் முஸ்லிம்களும் வகித்த பாத்திரத்தை பற்றி விரிவாக எனது முன்னைய கட்டுரையில் எழுதியிருந்தேன்.நான் அண்மைய வாரங்களாக தொடர்ச்சியாக எழுதிவந்த கட்டுரைகளில் 2024 ஜனாதிபதி தேர்தலில் போட்டியிடுவதற்கான தற்போதைய ஜனாதிபதி ரணில் விக்கிரமசிங்கவின் தந்திரோபாயங்கள், திட்டங்கள் தொடர்பில் கவனம் செலுத்தினேன். அதனால் இன்றைய கட்டுரையில் தமிழ், முஸ்லிம் வாக்காளர்கள் தொடர்பில் ஜனாதிபதி ரணிலுக்கு இருக்கக்கூடிய சாதக பாதகங்களை ஆராய்கிறேன்.

ஏற்கெனவே குறிப்பிட்டவாறு ரணில் இலங்கை தமிழ் வாக்காளர்கள் மத்தியிலும் முஸ்லிம் வாக்காளர்கள் மத்தியிலும் பொதுவில் செல்வாக்குடையவராக இருந்து வந்திருக்கிறார். அவர் நேரடியாகப் போட்டியிட்ட 1999 ஜனாதிபதி தேர்தலிலும் 2005 ஜனாதிபதி தேர்தலிலும் தமிழ், முஸ்லிம் வாக்காளர்கள் அவருக்கு பருமளவில் வாக்களித்தார்கள். 2010, 2015, 2019 ஜனாதிபதி தேர்தல்களில் அவர் ஆதரித்த வேட்பாளர்களான சரத் பொன்சேகா, மைத்திரிபால சிறிசேன, சஜித் பிரேமதாச ஆகியோரை மூன்று சிறுபான்மை இனச்சமூகங்களும் உறுதியாக ஆதரித்தன.

Continue reading ‘2024 ஜனாதிபதி தேர்தலில் தமிழ், முஸ்லிம் வாக்காளர்களின் ஆதரவை ரணிலால் மீண்டும் பெறமுடியுமா?’ »

Poverty of Hope Among Sri Lankan Tamils due to Widespread Economic Misery Compounded by the 2022 Financial Crisis and a Fractured Tamil Polity

BY

MEERA SRINIVASAN

When Antony Jesurathnam Mariapushparani, 62, recalls the horrific final days of Sri Lanka’s civil war in striking detail, it is hard to believe it has been 15 years since its end.

“That is where we prepared and had the kanji (porridge); that is where we headed to cross the Vattuvagal bridge; that is where we waited,” she says breathlessly, showing once-bloody spots in Mullivaikkal, a village in Mullaitivu district on the north-eastern coast. Many Tamil civilians had crossed the bridge in May 2009, hoping that moving into government-controlled territory on the other side would be safer.

Today the village looks calm, with large, empty plots of land. Palmyra trees line the roads and the fields are lush after recent showers. “You will not know the desperation we experienced or the tears we shed here. I saw the destruction with my own eyes,” she says of the time when tens of thousands of Tamils, including women, children, and infants, were killed in the Sri Lankan armed forces’ final offensive, even in areas declared a “no fire zone”. Some in Sri Lanka and beyond have likened this bloodbath to Israel’s ongoing deadly war in Gaza.

As survivor accounts like Mariapushparani’s make evident, memories don’t die. “That is where bodies were heaped,” she says finally, pointing ahead. It is the site of carnage in Mullivaikkal, where Tamil families assemble every May 18, the last day of the final battle between the Sri Lankan military and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), to pay homage to relatives.

After the remembrance ceremony, where those assembled lit lamps and offered flowers to photographs of their relatives, Mariapushparani sits under the lone neem tree in the barren, sandy ground, for some respite from the scorching sun.

Hailing from Mullaitivu, she moved to Mullivaikkal village after the Indian Ocean tsunami of 2004, unaware of the next wave of destruction she would witness in barely five years. Having endured staggering losses and hardships like virtually every family in the district — her son has been missing since 2010 — she has one word to describe the current situation of Tamils: “Varumai (poverty)”.

Continue reading ‘Poverty of Hope Among Sri Lankan Tamils due to Widespread Economic Misery Compounded by the 2022 Financial Crisis and a Fractured Tamil Polity’ »

Sudath Mahadivulwewa’s “My Red Comrade” is an excellent film, with fine direction, a masterful script, skilful use of sound and lighting and impeccable performance from the leads.It is a commendable and brave experimentation in filmmaking.


By

Lionel Bopage

Sudath Mahadivulwewa’s latest film, now in cinemas, is openly political and experimental. A major aspect of the film is a debate between the old view of revolution and a more modern one
Sudath Mahadivulwewa, the producer of the film ‘My Red Comrade’, is well-known for his various feature films, documentaries, theatre work and social awareness campaigns, in Sri Lanka.

His latest film is openly political and experimental. A major aspect of the film is a debate between the old view of revolution and a more modern one which is construed to be more inclusive. The film conveys a message “think simple as a child, and do not make things more complicated than necessary”.

To demonstrate this, the film uses a Native American fable about a wolf. How the wolf gets into us from the environment we are brought in; an environment in which we receive our education, the media we are exposed to and the conscious choices we make:

The moral of the tale being what wolf to feed and what wolf we must reject. It appears to have been used as a metaphor for capitalism which has destructively transformed the extraction and exploitation of the environment and human beings.

Considering the environment the vast majority of people labour under, what are the political social issues springing from that inequitable and destructive system that the protagonists of the film debate on?

The title of the film itself denotes that it will be about the Left. The very first scene confronts us with the repressive state apparatus and its victims. Without overwhelming us, the scene expertly draws our attention to think about these issues.

Continue reading ‘Sudath Mahadivulwewa’s “My Red Comrade” is an excellent film, with fine direction, a masterful script, skilful use of sound and lighting and impeccable performance from the leads.It is a commendable and brave experimentation in filmmaking.’ »

‘In Sri Lanka of 2024, kanji is a four letter word.By criminalising kanji making, another generation of Tamils is being told that even such a simple act of mourning can turn you into a criminal. Your dead have less value your grief less legitimacy because of your ethnicity.”


By

Tisaranee Gunasekara

“A state of permanent war…where violence pervades all spheres of life, where the rich flourish and the poor live in misery; a state that will be deserted by the best of its children?” Yuri Avnery (Countercurrents)

In Sri Lanka of 2024, kanji is a four letter word.

During the long Eelam war, all sides committed horrendous atrocities. Sri Lankan forces, the LTTE and anti-Tiger Tamil groups all were guilty to varying degree of every conceivable crime, murder downwards.

The war was never jus ad bellum or jus in bello. The path to it and the path through it were lined with avoidable errors and unnecessary crimes. During the second and third Eelam wars, the LTTE committed more crimes than did the Sri Lankan forces including, and especially, against its own people (think of child soldiers for starters).

This would change with the advent of Rajapaksa rule. As Prof. Rajan Hoole pointed out, “From 2006 the government began to do what would have been unthinkable after 1987. Intense shelling and deliberate displacement of Tamil populations became integral to its military strategy…” (Himal, February 2009).

The LTTE never cared how many Tamils it killed to “liberate” them from the Sri Lankan state. The Rajapaksa regime too didn’t care how many Tamils it killed to “liberate” them from Tiger Eelam. The Rajapaksas justified every excess and every atrocity in the name of Sri Lanka, just as the LTTE did in the name of Eelam. Anything goes was the perception on both sides. Our crimes were kosher. Only their crimes were crimes.

Continue reading ‘‘In Sri Lanka of 2024, kanji is a four letter word.By criminalising kanji making, another generation of Tamils is being told that even such a simple act of mourning can turn you into a criminal. Your dead have less value your grief less legitimacy because of your ethnicity.”’ »

Tamil and Muslim Voting Trends in Past Presidential Elections.


By

D.B.S.Jeyaraj

This is the fourth article in a series focusing on Sri Lankan President Ranil Wickremesinghe and his evolving strategy to contest the forthcoming 2024 Presidential elections. In a political climate where deliberate attempts are being made to mislead people about Wickremesinghe’s presidential election plans and prospects, the objective of this series is to analyse in detail the game plan and stratagems adopted by Ranil to face the 2024 presidential hustings. Since Ranil Wickremesinghe is the incumbent president, priority is being given to him. However after this series is concluded, I do intend writing about other presidential aspirants and their election campaigns also in the future.

The Sri Lanka Election Commission aannounced last week that the 2024 Presidential Elections would be held on a date between September 17 and October 16 this year. The Election Commission was reiterating what was already known. Though a specific date has not been announced, it is speculated widely that the poll is likely to be held in late September or early October.

As in the past, there would be many contenders for the presidency. Some have openly declared their intention to contest while media reports mention names of other potential contestants. However, only three persons are likely to be the main candidates with winning potential. They are the incumbent President Ranil Wickremesinghe, Leader of the Opposition Sajith Premadasa and Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP)/National People’s Power (NPP) Leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake.

Triangular Tussle

Continue reading ‘Tamil and Muslim Voting Trends in Past Presidential Elections.’ »

Thousands of Tamils Converge at Mullivaaikkaal On Mullaitheevu district coast to remember their Kith and Kin were killed 15 years ago in the Final phase of the war in May 2009

By

Meera Srinivasan

Thousands of Tamils on May 18 converged in Mullaivaikkal, along Sri Lanka’s north-eastern coast, to pay homage to their relatives killed in May 2009, in the final battle of the island’s protracted civil war.

As the war escalated before its gruesome end, lakhs of Tamil civilians were pushed to this narrow strip of land, declared a ‘No Fire Zone’ by the government. Tens of thousands, including women and children, died in the indiscriminate shelling of the armed forces, while scores were seriously injured.

Families gathered at the venue on Saturday and placed photographs of their loved ones in the sandy ground near the sea, offered prayers with flowers, food, and by lighting lamps. Antony Jesurathnam Mariapushparani, a Mullaitivu resident, has vivid images from May 18, fifteen years ago.

“Only those of us who were here know how many children died, how many senior citizens died. I saw how they just stacked up bodies in tractors and dropped them here,” she said. Pointing to the main road adjacent to the venue, she said, “it was there that we had our last kanji (porridge).”

Continue reading ‘Thousands of Tamils Converge at Mullivaaikkaal On Mullaitheevu district coast to remember their Kith and Kin were killed 15 years ago in the Final phase of the war in May 2009’ »

Is s it too much to allow the North and the East to remember lives of their loved ones felled in the conflict as much as the Sinhala-South remembers their fallen soldiers?


By

Kishali Pinto -Jayawardene

If the Sri Lankan State tried with all its might and main to look ridiculous in the eyes of the world, it could not do better than the preposterous performance of law enforcement agencies in the North and East during the formal remembrance of those who died during the ending of Sri Lanka’s decades-old ethnic conflict on May 18th each year.

Manifest absurdities in the North and East.

Fifteen years after that inexpressibly sad phrase of the country’s turbulent history with images of emaciated men, women and children of the Wanni emerging out of the blood soaked sands of Mullivaikkal with haunted eyes, we have state agents performing miserable antics that only play into global anti-Sri Lanka propaganda machines with gusto. This is the result of police panjandrums acting to the directive of an Inspector General of Police whose record stands in abrupt contrast even when compared to his less than perfect immediate predecessors and his patron, the Minister of Public Security whose own record is no better.

Perhaps if they and their subordinates employ a smidgen of common sense rather than strut their stuff in the former war theatre, we would not have to witness these manifest absurdities. This year, we have the farcical spectacle of Tamil civilians who tried to mark that period with the partaking of the traditional ‘kanji’ (porridge or rice gruel) being summarily arrested. The humble porridge is of enormous significance as this was all that many of those caught in the defeat of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) by Sri Lankan state forces, had to eat at that time.

So at what point does the communal consumption of ‘porridge’ become a national security threat to the State? On that same logic, when the South ate milk rice with celebratory crackers when former President Ranasinghe Premadasa was assassinated by the LTTE (though we had other nonsensical versions spun by those with vested ambitions), the police should have gone around arresting all and sundry?

This time, the grounds advanced to prevent the consumption of porridge in public spaces were variously that this was for ‘health reasons’, to prevent discord in the multi-ethnic East and as they amounted to ‘commemorating’ the LTTE and calling for its revival.

Continue reading ‘Is s it too much to allow the North and the East to remember lives of their loved ones felled in the conflict as much as the Sinhala-South remembers their fallen soldiers?’ »

If the Current situation continues, there is a danger that Sri Lankan Tamils will become a group of people that the world does not pay attention to and Tamil politicians will become a group of people who make impractical political slogans and only crow within the confines of the peninsula.


By

Veeragathy Thanabalasingham

Fifteen years have passed since the end of Sri Lanka’s brutal civil war, which lasted for about 30 years. None of the main political problems have been resolved. The country is not progressing economically either. Instead, we saw that all the problems worsened and the country reached a state of chaos and bankruptcy.

A large part of the southern Sinhalese polity does not seem to think that there is a pressing need to find a negotiated political solution to the national ethnic problem that has torn the country apart. In these 15 years, the country has not moved an inch towards finding a political compromise that would fulfil the legitimate political aspirations of the minority communities.

Even the implementation of the 13th Amendment (13A), which has been a part of the Constitution for more than three decades, has finally become impossible. In no other country in the world do we see political forces taking to the streets to protest against the implementation of a constitutional provision.

Former President Mahinda Rajapaksa, who never failed to claim credit for providing what he called courageous political leadership to defeat the Tamil Tigers militarily in war, had the rare historical opportunity to find a political solution to the ethnic problem with the support of the Sinhalese people 15 years ago.

However, he deliberately ignored that opportunity and pursued more aggressive ethnic majoritarian politics with the dream of ruling Sri Lanka for a long period. He liberally used the war victory to divert the attention of the Sinhalese people from the main issues affecting them. That regressive strategy helped him and his family to stay in power for a few more years but did nothing good for the Sinhalese people.

It did not take long for the truth to be exposed that the ethnic majoritarian mobilisation was essentially a cover-up for misrule and corruption. However, the south still does not seem to have learnt a proper lesson from it.

Continue reading ‘If the Current situation continues, there is a danger that Sri Lankan Tamils will become a group of people that the world does not pay attention to and Tamil politicians will become a group of people who make impractical political slogans and only crow within the confines of the peninsula.’ »

Diana Gamage’s speech, body language and behaviour in parliament often outdid unruly behaviour usually associated with bullies and thugs.


By

Kshama Ranawana

It’s high time Diana Gamage took a hard look at herself in the mirror!

When the Supreme Court ruled in favour of petitioner Oshala Herath, that Diana Gamage is not a citizen of Sri Lanka, she told a media conference that she does not accept the ruling. She also went on to say that the ruling wronged all Sri Lankan women.

Now that is rich, coming from her.

Her foray into parliament was through the Samagi Jana Balawegaya as one of their national list candidates. But she lost no time in switching loyalities, when she broke ranks to vote in favour of then President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s 20th amendment to the Constitution.

Since then she has been at logger heads with the SJB, never losing an opportunity to browbeat their members during parliamentary debates. Despite switching party loyalties, Gotabaya did not return the favour, but current president Ranil Wikcremasinghe did, when he appointed her State Minister for Tourism.

From facts presented to the courts, and now discussed openly in the public arena, it seems that Diana employed devious methods to enter politics and parliament.

Continue reading ‘Diana Gamage’s speech, body language and behaviour in parliament often outdid unruly behaviour usually associated with bullies and thugs.’ »