How to Secure Sri Lanka from Becoming a Casualty of the “Great Game”of Super Power Rivalry

By

N Sathiya Moorthy

Reports and denials about Sri Lanka procuring Chinese-made JF-17 fighter aircraft notwithstanding, there is the larger question of securing South Asia as a region, from within and without. The responsibility for the same, if and if only the nations of the region so desire, has to fall on all of them, given that it’s not about just the size and shape of their landmass and economies, but relates more to issues of sovereignty, security perceptions and consequent prescriptions.

The JF-17 Thunder is a lightweight, single-engine, multi-role combat aircraft developed jointly by the Pakistan Aeronautical Complex and the Chengdu Aircraft Corporation of China. According to Taiwan-based ‘Want China Times’, which first reported the purported sale, the “fighter is deployed for aerial reconnaissance, ground attack and aircraft interception. Its designation ‘JF-17’ by Pakistan is short for ‘Joint Fighter-17’ and its alias ‘FC-1 Xiaolong’ in Chinese stands for ‘Fighter China-1 Fierce Dragon’

The ‘Want China Times’ reported that “Sri Lanka will become the first foreign country to acquire the JF-17” and that the “order will be for around 18-24 aircraft”, confirming claims made at the 51st Paris Air Show last week that the first contract for the sale of the JF-17 had been signed with “an Asian country”. The Pakistan Air Force announced that they will begin delivery of the JF-17 to Sri Lanka from 2017, adding that its Pakistani and Chinese developers will continue efforts to promote the aircraft to other countries.

Continue reading ‘How to Secure Sri Lanka from Becoming a Casualty of the “Great Game”of Super Power Rivalry’ »

UPFA Gen Secy Premajayantha Admitted to Nawaloka Hospital After Closed Door Meeting with Mahinda Rajapaksa at Ex-Minister Felix Perera’s House


By
Kamal Jayamanna

A major drama took place at former Minister Felix Perera’s house at Keppetipola Mawatha, Colombo, on Sunday night, over some UPFA politicians whose applications for nominations were turned down by the party.

Former President Mahinda Rajapaksa had visited Perera’s house on Sunday night where a meeting was scheduled to take place between Rajapaksa and some members of the nominations committee, including UPFA General Secretary Susil Premajayantha. Former Parliamentarian Sudarshini Fernandopulle and several other provincial level politicians of the UPFA had also been present at Perera’s house by the time the former President had arrived.

Soon after his arrival at Perera’s residence, Rajapaksa had said he needed a serene place for the meeting. The first floor of the former minister’s house was arranged for the meeting and Rajapaksa held a closed door meeting with the UPFA General Secretary and nomination committee members over candidates’ lists in Colombo and Gampaha.

Perera, Fernandopulle and other provincial council members waited on the ground floor until the end of the meeting.

Continue reading ‘UPFA Gen Secy Premajayantha Admitted to Nawaloka Hospital After Closed Door Meeting with Mahinda Rajapaksa at Ex-Minister Felix Perera’s House’ »

SLFP/UPFA Camp will have to Rely on Appeal of Mahinda Rajapaksa Alone in Election Campaign


By

Ranga Jayasuriya

It was quite evident from the very beginning that the campaign by a group of Mahinda Rajapaksa acolytes to nominate the ex-president as the Prime Ministerial candidate of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party/United People’s Freedom Alliance was self-seeking and opportunistic.

It was a campaign that sought to draw on from the Rajapaksa cult that the ex-president carefully cultivated during his tenure. Wimal Weerawansa, Vasudeva and et al bolstered by generous financing by a coterie of nouveau rich businessmen, who made their fortune thanks to their association with the ex- president and the then first family believed that the return of the ex-president was the only way that would guarantee their political survival and, of course, the security of their ill-gotten wealth.

They cared little about what Mr. Rajapaksa’s comeback would mean for the SLFP and its political legitimacy. The new President, Maithripala Sirisena capitulated to the pressure, fearing the prospects of a split within the party.

Despite his initial protestations against granting nomination to his predecessor, President Sirisena finally gave in.

Of course, he did not nominate Rajapaksa as the Prime Ministerial candidate, but should the SLFP win the general elections, Rajapaksa’s accession to the Prime Ministership would be a mere formality.

Continue reading ‘SLFP/UPFA Camp will have to Rely on Appeal of Mahinda Rajapaksa Alone in Election Campaign’ »

Guilt Ridden UNP Leadership on Mission to Cover Up Gigantic Treasury Bond Scam Perpetrated by Central Bank High Officials

By

K.K.S.Perera

Did Maithripala Sirisena disappoint the 6.2 million voters by letting MR contest under the SLFP tag?

Some call it a great betrayal; while others think it a democratic option or burying the hatchet for mutual survival. In the meantime, the government and PM makes a strenuous effort to brainwash citizens in a well calculated and masterly cover-up agenda to save offenders involved in CB Bond scam. Why are they doing this if the government politicos are not involved in the scandal?

Can the PM assure the public that no such loss has taken place under the issue, or if there was a scam then who is responsible, instead of attempting to whitewash his nominee for the plum post?

Continue reading ‘Guilt Ridden UNP Leadership on Mission to Cover Up Gigantic Treasury Bond Scam Perpetrated by Central Bank High Officials’ »

Nominations for August 17 Elections Close with 6151 Candidates Competing for 196 Seats in 225 Member Parliament


By
Dharisha Bastians

The 17 August Parliamentary election officially kicked off after nominations closed at noon yesterday, with all major political parties throwing their hat in the ring to win seats in Sri Lanka’s 15th Parliament.

According to the nomination lists handed over at the district secretariats by noon yesterday, 6,151 candidates will compete for 196 seats in the country’s 225-member Legislature next month.

Battle lines have been drawn in what promises to be a tightly-fought election, with former President Mahinda Rajapaksa ready to make a major political comeback and a newly-energised United National Party and the broad alliance it leads promising to defeat him for the second time this year.

In an unprecedented development, the retired President will seek a seat in Parliament, leading the UPFA’s Kurunegala District list.

Rajapaksa loyalists in the UPFA have already pledged to campaign for his election as prime minister, even though President Maithripala Sirisena on 30 June ruled out nominating him as the party’s prime ministerial hopeful.

“I promise to work to root out corruption and deceit, create a peaceful society and prioritise national security,” the former President told supporters in Kurunegala yesterday.
Rajapaksa told Reuters by telephone yesterday that he and President Sirisena would be “leading” the UPFA polls campaign.

“Today, people want change. I am leading the campaign with President Sirisena as the Chairman of the party to form a Sri Lanka Freedom Party-led Government,” the former President told Reuters after he handed in nomination papers.

Continue reading ‘Nominations for August 17 Elections Close with 6151 Candidates Competing for 196 Seats in 225 Member Parliament’ »

Political “Cut out Culture” Continues Under Ranil Wickremesinghe as it was under Mahinda Rajapaksa

By

Malinda Seneviratne

Someone said that Ranil Wickremesinghe had ordered his ‘cut-outs’ to be dismantled. I haven’t seen any RW cut-outs. So if an order had been issued it must have been on the following lines: ‘Make sure there are no cut-outs of me!’

Whether any of this happened we do not know. One thing is certain: a Ranil Wickremesinghe larger-than-life would not attract. If a move was made, it was wise. If a move hasn’t been made, that’s wise too.

What’s disappointing is that RW hasn’t rapped the knuckles of the cut-out heroes in his party. It is disappointing because these very same worthies were howling not too long ago about Mahinda Rajapaksa’s cut-outs.

Some of them said that cut-outs take away from the city’s beauty, never mind that they didn’t attribute the ‘beauty’ part of it to the very regime they vilified. But they were right. Beautification is no license for subsequent desecration.

Continue reading ‘Political “Cut out Culture” Continues Under Ranil Wickremesinghe as it was under Mahinda Rajapaksa’ »

Mahinda Rajapaksa Being Portrayed as Latter Day “Dutu Gemunu”not Enough to Ensure Political Comeback.


By

Col R Hariharan

Unfazed by his surprise defeat in the last presidential polls, Sri Lanka’s Mahinda Rajapaksa appears to be back with a bang on the nation’s political centre stage with the United Peoples Freedom Alliance (UPFA) coalition nominating him to contest the August 17 parliamentary election. as a candidate. Six months ago, when Rajapaksa went into a sulk after his defeat, nobody would have imagined that he would bounce back so soon and so strongly with the support of UPFA.

His nomination ended weeks of suspense, as his bête noire President Maithripala Sirisena, chief of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP), tried to persuade the party, the UPFA coalition and even Mahinda to prevent the latter’s comeback. But Rajapaksa seems to have made up his mind, well before political manoevures began, to contest the election with or without SLFP support as the anti-corruption bodies were making life miserable for him and his siblings. But no one, probably not even Mahinda, was certain of the UPFA nominating him.

Sirisena is reported to have confessed to his loyalists that he could not carry the UPFA coalition with him to prevent Rajapaksa’s nomination. Civil society leaders and political leaders who put their faith in him to clean up the administration and ensure Mahinda does not reincarnate called Maithripala’s decision a betrayal of the 8 January mandate.

Continue reading ‘Mahinda Rajapaksa Being Portrayed as Latter Day “Dutu Gemunu”not Enough to Ensure Political Comeback.’ »

Jan 8 “Rainbow” Coalition Re-unites as UNFGG To Prevent Return of Rajapaksa to Power

By

Dharisha Bastians

The threat of Mahinda Rajapaksa’s political re-emergence has unified the fractured rainbow coalition that swept President Maithripala Sirisena to victory on 8 January, with several parties signing agreements yesterday to contest parliamentary elections under a single banner.
The United National Front for Good Governance (UNFGG) was inaugurated at Temple Trees yesterday, with several parties that backed the Sirisena ‘common candidacy’ in January regrouping to contest against the UPFA.

Twenty-four hours ahead of the close of nominations for the 17 August poll, President Sirisena’s bid to consolidate his position within the SLFP appeared to have failed and the defeated President Rajapaksa is likely to be the de facto leader and presumptive premier of the UPFA.
During their 160 days in Government, the election alliance showed signs of cracking with SLFP members and the JHU, which backed President Sirisena, strongly critical of the UNP.

With the rainbow coalition rebanding, the 8 January battle lines have been drawn again, with Rajapaksa likely to canvass hard on a nationalist platform, while the alliance pledges good governance and reconciliation between communities in the island.

Continue reading ‘Jan 8 “Rainbow” Coalition Re-unites as UNFGG To Prevent Return of Rajapaksa to Power’ »

Ranil Wickremesinghe Vows to Wipe Out “Rajapaksa Regime” at the August 17 Parliamentary Polls

By Shamindra Ferdinando

Reiterating his commitment to protect what he called the January 8 revolution which brought Maithripala Sirisena to power, Premier Ranil Wickremesinghe yesterday vowed to wipe out ‘Rajapaksa regime’ at the August 17 parliamentary polls.

Premier Wickremesinghe compared the Rajapaksa era with that of South Indian invasion led by Kalinga Maga in 1214 A.D.

The Premier was addressing the media at Temple Trees after having reached an agreement with Eksath Jathika Yahapalana Peramuna (formerly JHU) and a breakaway faction of the SLFP (Democratic National Movement) to contest the parliamentary polls on the UNP ticket The SLMC, too, contests on the UNP ticket in all districts except Vanni and Batticaloa.

Health Minister Dr. Rajitha Senaratne functions as the leader of the rebel SLFP faction.

Premier Wickremesinghe stressed the need for a new political alliance to guarantee the implementation of promises given at the January 8 presidential election.

The new alliance is named the United National Front for Good Governance (UNFGG).

Continue reading ‘Ranil Wickremesinghe Vows to Wipe Out “Rajapaksa Regime” at the August 17 Parliamentary Polls’ »

“Indian Imperialist” Project of Constructing Bridge to Sri Lanka will Lead to Destruction of our Country

By

K Godage

Some new Indian imperialists, dreaming of India as a Super Power, and in the mould of Pannikar (who suggested the Lanka and Burma be a part of greater India; and had India seize Sikkim and transform Bhutan into a vassal State, have suggested that a bridge be built across the Palk Strait to physically link our two countries.

Such a bridge to physically connect us to India will end our being an island since time immemorial. Some well meaning people in our country would no doubt be thinking of the economic benefits that would accrue and of how trade would grow and investment would increase, but when one thinks long term and of our very existence as a separate country these economic benefits pale into insignificance.

Continue reading ‘“Indian Imperialist” Project of Constructing Bridge to Sri Lanka will Lead to Destruction of our Country’ »

Ranil Wickremesinghe Tirade Against COPE and DEW Gunasekara Shows he too is a Politician and not a Statesman

By

Malinda Seneviratne

Ranil Wickremesinghe is a politician. Yes, not a statesman. A politician, let us reiterate. The next election and not the next generation is what fascinates him. Like other politicians from other parties of course, leaders included. Yes, like Mahinda Rajapaksa and Maithripala Sirisena.

Ranil Wickremesinghe is a lawyer. He is not just a politician but a seasoned one. So when he says that D.E.W. Gunasekera, then Chairman of COPE, was out of order in releasing a draft of the COPE Report on the Central Bank bond issue, we have to take note.

Wickremesinghe’s argument is that after Parliament was dissolved, COPE ceased to exist and therefore has no legal standing. Consequently nothing that ‘DEW’ or anyone else in COPE says about any ‘COPE affairs’ is incompetent and irrelevant. DEW, for his part, has promised to respond.

Wickremesinghe claims that it’s not only DEW who is guilty of the ‘contravention of the Parliament Powers and Privileges Act’ but newspapers and other media that had published sections or the entirety of the ‘draft report’. His argument, apart from COPE ceasing to exist, is that some COPE members were not present when COPE deliberated because they were busy politicking.

Continue reading ‘Ranil Wickremesinghe Tirade Against COPE and DEW Gunasekara Shows he too is a Politician and not a Statesman’ »

How Maithripala Sirisena Helped Mahinda Rajapaksa to Split the Sri Lanka Freedom Party

By

Rasika Jayakody

Soon after President Maithripala Sirisena assumed duties as the SLFP Chairman, his close associates, including former President Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga, called on him to introduce drastic reforms to ‘clean up’ the party. For obscure reasons, such calls fell on deaf ears and no tangible action was taken to bring about meaningful party reforms. He even retained the General Secretaries of the SLFP and the UPFA who had been appointed by former President Mahinda Rajapaksa. Due to his failure to reform, President Sirisena had a political party that was a kind of a ‘monster’ beyond his control.

The nomination process of the UPFA was, therefore, entirely handled by its General Secretary Susil Premajayantha and President Sirisena’s internal battle for good governance in the party suffered a serious setback.

When he realized that he was not in a position to prevent Rajapaksa from becoming a candidate, President Sirisena laid down certain conditions to allay the fears of those who were concerned about Rajapaksa’s return to politics.

The President insisted that Rajapaksa should not be appointed as the prime ministerial candidate of the UPFA. He also added that the former President would not be appointed as the leader of the UPFA group contesting the election. Another stated condition was that Rajapaksa should only contest from the Hambantota district, his traditional stronghold. President Sirisena also opposed giving nominations to nearly 20 ex-MPs of the UPFA who faced bribery, corruption and criminal charges. The large majority of them were staunch supporters of the former President.

The Rajapaksa group, despite all their bravado, had to bow to certain conditions including the one preventing Rajapaksa’s prime ministerial candidacy. At the same time, they circumvented certain conditions by exerting pressure on the President. For instance, UPFA seniors, including the party General Secretary, stressed that the former President should contest from the Kurunegala district to make way for his son, Namal Rajapaksa, to enter the new Parliament with ease.

Continue reading ‘How Maithripala Sirisena Helped Mahinda Rajapaksa to Split the Sri Lanka Freedom Party’ »

Mahinda Rajapaksa will Protect Maithripala Sirisena from Those who Accuse President of Betraying the Nation

By

By W.K. Prasad Manju

Former President Mahinda Rajapaksa is prepared to protect President Maithripala Sirisena from those who claim that he had betrayed the people’s mandate given to him at the presidential election, by giving nomination to Rajapaksa, reliable political sources said.

Rajapaksa had already discussed this issue with seniors in the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) and the United People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA), sources added.

The party leaders in the Alliance had pointed out to Rajapaksa that President Sirisena gave him nomination due to the request made by the majority of the people in the country who wanted Rajapaksa as the prime ministerial candidate, sources claimed.

Continue reading ‘Mahinda Rajapaksa will Protect Maithripala Sirisena from Those who Accuse President of Betraying the Nation’ »

Sirisena Changed Course Because of Pressure from the SLFP Members Who did not want their Party to be made the UNP’s tail.

By

C. A. Chandraprema

To say that last week was full of tension would be an understatement. Political futures and fates of individuals were being decided on the run. A day, an hour or even a minute was becoming a long time in politics. The weekend will see frantic last minute horse trading and the nomination lists on both sides of the political divide may be different on Monday. The mere fact that Mahinda Rajapaksa has signed the UPFA nomination papers had stood the entire political system on its head.

Supporters of the yahapalana coalition are literally incandescent with rage at the fact that MR had finally been granted UPFA nominations. The pro-UNP website Lanka e News even accused Sirisena of having accepted a bribe running into millions of USD to give nominations to Mahinda and they have pledged to publish evidence to this effect. Street demonstrations have been held by NGO activists to express displeasure at President Maithripala Sirisena for having given Mahinda Rajapaksa nominations.

There is nothing surprising in MS caving in to pressure from within the SLFP and the UPFA to field Mahinda as a candidate at this election as the same kind of pressure was applied by a group within the UNP to force Ranil Wickremesinghe to stand down and allow a common candidate to contest against Mahinda Rajapaksa. If RW could not withstand pressure coming from a minority within just one political party, how was Sirisena expected to withstand pressure coming from the vast majority of a whole coalition of political parties? Besides, nobody was accusing RW of wanting to create a split in the UNP, but Sirisena had to face that kind of blackmail as well and it’s not surprising that he finally gave in.

The pro-UNP website Lanka e News was right in saying that it was Sirisena who placed himself in this position by taking over the SLFP leadership. That certainly was not a part of the yahapalana agenda. Those who are now blaming MS for giving nominations to Mahinda should have registered their protest at the outset when MS became SLFP leader without so much as a by your leave from the people who brought him into power. Instead of confronting him at that stage, RW was laughing and poking fun at the cowed and intimidated UPFA members in parliament saying that if they do not behave, he will ‘report’ them to the president and have them given knocks on the head (toku) if they do not fall in line with the yahapalana government. Well it’s the UNP that has ended up receiving ‘toku’ in the end.

Continue reading ‘Sirisena Changed Course Because of Pressure from the SLFP Members Who did not want their Party to be made the UNP’s tail.’ »

Sinhalese Sports Club Denies Membership to Ex – Sports Minister Mahindananda Aluthgamage

He may have been the all-powerful Sports Minister of yesteryear, but the prestigious Sinhalese Sports Club (SSC) doesn’t think he is fit and proper to be made one of its members. Ex-Minister Mahindananda Aluthgamage has been ‘black-balled’ from becoming a member and entering the hallowed portals of one of the country’s oldest clubs at Maitland Place in Colombo.

In a dramatic turn of events at this week’s Executive Committee meeting of the SSC, the former Minister’s name had come up for membership. His name had been proposed by two former senior Sri Lanka Cricket officials, who are members of the club.

Continue reading ‘Sinhalese Sports Club Denies Membership to Ex – Sports Minister Mahindananda Aluthgamage’ »

“Bad Influence ” Exerted by Jathika Hela Urumaya on Maithripala Sirisena Led to Current Crisis


By Upul Kumarapperuma

The Roman Empire was plagued by coups, conspiracies and wars nevertheless it was the most formidable Empire in Europe.

Julius Caesar became one of the most decorated war heroes after defeating the slave leader Spartacus and his slave army that had caused much humiliation to the Roman Empire, and was later on crowned as the Empire of Rome.

Caesar formed a political alliance with Crassus and Pompey which dominated Roman politics for several years. However, there was opposition to their political alliance by the conservative ruling class within the Roman Senate. During this period the Roman Empire was extended up to the English Channel and the lands beyond the river Rhine, which caused Caesar to gain enormous military might.

The Roman Senate was perturbed by the political authority acquired by Caesar, which authority was capable enough to veto the Senate.

The resentment between Caesar and the Senate developed like a cancer day by day and it went beyond the point of no return. There was a conspiracy hatched to assassinate Caesar. His best buddy Mark Antony felt the danger and came to know the modus operandi of the enemy, but it was too late; the conspirators led by Brutus who was a politician of the Roman republic won the battle by killing Caesar.

This is not a comparison of Caesar and Maithripala Sirisena, but even in the present context, characters identical to those in the Roman Empire are engaged in similar roles in Sri Lanka’s current political circle. These characters have been instrument in causing great debacles in the country as well as ruin the political careers of certain individuals.

Continue reading ‘“Bad Influence ” Exerted by Jathika Hela Urumaya on Maithripala Sirisena Led to Current Crisis’ »

President Sirisena Must Explain to the Nation as to why he Placed his Party Before his Country.

By

Don Manu

‘You cannot make an omelette without breaking an egg’ would have been the adage staring in the face of Maithripala Sirisena when he rose at the New Town Hall meeting last November 21st to announce his intention to contest the presidential election and vowed to the nation that he would usher in a new maithri era and root out all the junk in the Rajapaksa trunk in order to do so.

Prefacing his political bombshell with a quotation from the Dhammapada that emphasised that revenge was not his mission, he declared that he had come forward from the ministerial ranks of the ruling party to take on the challenge of toppling the then invincible Mahinda Rajapaksa from his monarchical pedestal, to end rampant corruption, to bring the perfidious rogues to justice, to restore law and order, to offer good governance with greater transparency; and to be the harbinger of a resplendent dawn where old cherished values of fairness, equality and justice dance in the rays of the sunlit morn.

Raising the hopes of millions that at long last a new David had arrived to slay the Goliath, he had declared, “Thuggery, embezzlement, crime, drug mafia, nepotism and corruption have institutionalised under the Executive. The entire socioeconomic and political systems of this country have been taken over by one family. They have ruined this country that is now engulfed in corruption and blatant abuse of power. It is against this that I am coming forward as the common candidate of the opposition”.

But the thugs were in the SLFP barracks, the rogues were in the SLFP cave, the druggies were in the SLFP den and the nepotists were in the SLFP family. Reality demanded, common sense dictated that no new civilised era based on democratic values of the sort Maithripala promised to usher would ever see the light of day without turning to rubble the said institutionalised scourge of our times and evicting its squatters, banishing them far beyond the pale of return.

Maithripala Sirisena would have known then, even he should know now, that he could not and cannot usher in his promised dawn for a new Lanka without first cleaning his party stables or make a spiffy Lankan omelette without cracking the rotten SLFP eggshell.

Continue reading ‘President Sirisena Must Explain to the Nation as to why he Placed his Party Before his Country.’ »

US State Dept Tells Northern CM Wigneswaran to Tone Down “Genocide” Rhetoric and Cooperate with Colombo Govt in Reconcilation and Development Matters

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Northern Province Chief Minister C.V. Wigneswaran received “tough tuition” from the US State Department during talks last Thursday, the Sunday Times learns. He was asked to soften his ‘genocide’ rhetoric and instead work with the Central Government in matters relating to reconciliation and the development of the province.

The Chief Minister is on a tour of the United States and Britain. He had, however, obtained permission from President Maithripala Sirisena for the visit and informed the Ministry of Foreign Affairs as protocol demanded.

His office deemed it as a private visit on the invitation of the Federation of Tamil Sangams (organisations) in North America.

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In the US, Chief Minister Wigneswaran had met Assistant Secretary of State Nisha Biswal. It is learnt that he had been told to work towards reconciliation, reconstruction and rehabilitation of the Northern Province rather than up his rhetoric on genocide charges. He had been told that it was the best chance for him to work with the Sirisena-Ranil Wickremesinghe Government.
Continue reading ‘US State Dept Tells Northern CM Wigneswaran to Tone Down “Genocide” Rhetoric and Cooperate with Colombo Govt in Reconcilation and Development Matters’ »

Egypt Born Actor Omar Sharif of “Dr.Zhivago” and “Lawrence of Arabia” Fame Dies in Cairo at the age of 83


Actor Omar Sharif, best known for his roles in classic films Lawrence of Arabia and Doctor Zhivago, has died aged 83.

Egypt-born Sharif won two Golden Globe awards and an Oscar nomination for his role as Sherif Ali in David Lean’s 1962 epic Lawrence of Arabia.

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He won a further Golden Globe three years later for Doctor Zhivago.

Earlier this year, his agent confirmed he had been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease.

His agent Steve Kenis said: “He suffered a heart attack this afternoon in a hospital in Cairo.”

Continue reading ‘Egypt Born Actor Omar Sharif of “Dr.Zhivago” and “Lawrence of Arabia” Fame Dies in Cairo at the age of 83’ »

Coalition that Replaced Mahinda with Maithripala now Rallying Around UNP After Sirisena Betrayal

By

Dharisha Bastians

Talks began in earnest yesterday to re-forge the broad opposition coalition that ousted President Mahinda Rajapaksa in January, with the United National Party in the lead and several top SLFP members, the Jathika Hela Urumaya and Sarath Fonseka’s Democratic Party also tipped to join.

Former cricket skipper and Ports Minister Arjuna Ranatunga said negotiations were on to contest as an alliance called the Yahapalanaya Sandhavu Eksath Jathika Peramuna (the United National Front for Good Governance) that would unite the political parties and ministers that contributed to President Maithripala Sirisena’s victory on 8 January.

Ranatunga told BBC Sinhala that Ministers Rajitha Senaratne, Champika Ranawaka and several others were expected to join the alliance.

Continue reading ‘Coalition that Replaced Mahinda with Maithripala now Rallying Around UNP After Sirisena Betrayal’ »

Rajitha,Champika,Arjuna,SB,MKDS,Sudharshini,Sarath,Reginald,Hirunika and Several Others to Join UNP in Anti – Mahinda Front

By

Disna Mudalige and Buddhika Imbulana

Several UPFA stalwarts decided to join the UNP yesterday to form a broad political front for the forthcoming Parliamentary election with the aim of protecting the ‘January 8″ mandate. Several ex-Parliamentarians of the UPFA, including Patali Champika Ranawaka and Rajitha Senaratne, had held discussions with the UNP in this regard,informed political sources told the Daily News.

The group will join the UNP as the “United Font for Good Governance” with the symbol ‘diamond’. They will however contest the election under the United National Party ticket, the Daily News learns UPFA stalwarts namely Rajitha Senaratne, Patali Champika Ranawaka, Arjuna Ranatunga, S.B. Dissanayake, M.K.D.S Gunawardena, Piyasena Gamage, Sarath Amunugama, Reginald Cooray, Sudharshini Fernandopulle, Neomal Perera, Ven. Athuraliye Rathana Thera and Hirunika Premachandra are likely to join the front, political sources said. Some of the ex-MPs who took part in the discussion have already signed nomination papers to contest from the UPFA. “They will have to withdraw their signatures before joining the new front,” a Parliamentarian involved in the discussions told the Daily News.

Meanwhile, former President Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga too is expected to returtn to Sri Lanka next week. Sources close to the former President said she would make a special statement next week, explaining her position on the Parliamentary election.

Continue reading ‘Rajitha,Champika,Arjuna,SB,MKDS,Sudharshini,Sarath,Reginald,Hirunika and Several Others to Join UNP in Anti – Mahinda Front’ »

UNP Under Leadership of Ranil Holds Special Party Convention in Upbeat Mood to Devise Strategy for August 17th Elections

By

Rasika Somarathna

The United National Party (UNP) is expected to make several important announcements related to the upcoming Parliamentary election at today’s Special Party Convention held under the leadership of Prime Minister and Party Leader Ranil Wickremesinghe at Campbell Park, Colombo.

The party leadership will place several proposals related to the election before the convention, party sources said.

The UNP has also invited a number of other political parties to attend the event.

The special convention will focus on the party’s election campaignn and strategies for the August 17 Parliamentary poll.

Continue reading ‘UNP Under Leadership of Ranil Holds Special Party Convention in Upbeat Mood to Devise Strategy for August 17th Elections’ »

Sri Lanka Muslim Congress to contest polls with United National Party


by

Nushka Nafeel

Sri Lanka Muslim Congress (SLMC) Leader Rauf Hakeem announced that the party will contest the upcoming general election with the United National Party.

“The SLMC intends to protect the mandate given to the people on January 8 to assure good governance through a coalition of several parties,” he said.

Hakeem was addressing a press briefing at the SLMC party headquarters.

“The SLMC would contest alone from the Batticaloa and Vanni districts under the Tree symbol, while it would contest the Ampara, Puttalam, Kurunegala, Kalutara, Kandy and Gampaha districts with the UNP under the Elephant symbol,” Hakeem added.

Continue reading ‘Sri Lanka Muslim Congress to contest polls with United National Party’ »

Maithripala Sirisena Betrays the Jan 8 Democratic Revolution and Turns Himself From Hero to Zero.

By

Dharisha Bastians


When you play a game of thrones, you either win or you die

– A Song of Ice and Fire, George R.R. Martin

On 8 January 2015, once he had cast his vote in Polonnaruwa, Maithripala Sirisena and his family made their way to remote coconut estate in Kurunegala. The movement occurred at dusk, when the waning light helped to hide the small convoy of vehicles carrying the future first family to their refuge for election night. When he made the decision to contest Mahinda Rajapaksa for the presidency, Sirisena knew he had placed his life and the lives of his family in the gravest danger.

When he stepped out of the Rajapaksa Government and announced his candidacy in November 2014, Sirisena spoke poignant words at New Town Hall about how his children had wept when he had told them his decision. The broken state of Sri Lanka’s democracy, battered by nine years of Rajapaksa rule ensured that any direct challenger of President Rajapaksa’s tight grip on power, even in an election he himself had called, was dancing with death.

The Sirisena family’s retirement to a remote corner of the Kurunegala District on election night was tacit acknowledgement of this terrible threat. The time it would take to locate the family the morning after could well have meant the crucial hours between life, death or incarceration for Maithripala Sirisena and his immediate family.

So it was that when Sobitha Thero spoke ominous words last weekend, about the consequences of giving Mahinda Rajapaksa the political space to enter Parliament and stake a claim for the presidency, President Sirisena, better than anyone, knew exactly what he meant.

“You are fighting to try and protect your party. But remember this. If you make this decision, the rest of us will have to battle to save our lives,” said the Thero to President Sirisena. It was these words that had visibly shaken the President, sources who were present at the meeting told Daily FT. “Please ape hamuduruwane, don’t upset yourself. Please wait two or three days and all these things will be sorted out,” Sirisena assured the monk who had fought hard to win him the presidency.

Continue reading ‘Maithripala Sirisena Betrays the Jan 8 Democratic Revolution and Turns Himself From Hero to Zero.’ »

Ranil Wickremesinghe’ s Political Conduct Compelled Maithripala Sirisena to Re-align Himself with Mahinda Rajapaksa

BY DR. DAYAN JAYATILLEKA

Who was it who narrowed the gap between President Sirisena and ex-President Rajapaksa?

Whose efforts were strong and effective enough to override the wishes of the external consortium that backed the peaceful ‘regime change’ of January 8th?

Was it the SLFP Establishment, i.e. its top bureaucrats and old warhorses?

Was it Basil Rajapaksa?

Was it the Buddhist Sangha?

Or could it have been the Chinese?

Not really!

It was Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, whose political behavior in the short period in which he held office was so polarizing that President Sirisena felt the ground shifting beneath him and was forced to act to re-stabilize the situation.

Continue reading ‘Ranil Wickremesinghe’ s Political Conduct Compelled Maithripala Sirisena to Re-align Himself with Mahinda Rajapaksa’ »

Key Civil Society Members who Helped Elect President Sirisena Feel Cheated and Betrayed by his Turnaround now


By

Rasika Jayakody

Key civil society members, who were instrumental in the election victory of President Maithripala Sirisena in January, have expressed disappointment over the nomination process of the UPFA during a meeting held with the President on Wednesday night.

They informed the President that the civil society felt “betrayed” and “cheated” after the UPFA agreed to give nomination to former President Mahinda Rajapaksa to contest the Parliamentary election from the UPFA.

National Movement for Social Justice Convener Ven. Maduluwawe Sobhitha Thera turned down the request to take part in the meeting on the grounds that there was no room for any discussion as the nominations had already been finals.

However, Gamini Viyangoda, Professor Sarath Wijesuriya, Dr. Nirmal Ranjith Dewasiri, Dambara Amila Thera, Saman Rathnapriya, Dharmasiri Bandaranayake, Joseph Stalin, Ravi Jayawardena and Keerthi Tennakoon attended the meeting held at the Presidential Secretariat on Wednesday night.

Continue reading ‘Key Civil Society Members who Helped Elect President Sirisena Feel Cheated and Betrayed by his Turnaround now’ »

President Sirisena Fires Political Torpedo Shattering Triumphal Mood in Mahinda Rajapaksa Camp


In what appears to be a bold tactical manoeuvre calculated to thwart Ex- President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s hopes of making a successful comeback, Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena has conveyed a terse message to the Medamulana camp that has transformed the current political climate drastically. The message amounting to a political torpedo now threatens to sink the ambitious ship in which Mahinda and his loyalist coterie of supporters hoped to sail to power smoothly.

It is learnt that President Sirisena who agreed to nomination being given to former President Rajapaksa to contest the forthcoming parliamentary elections as a United Peoples Freedom Alliance (UPFA) candidate has now stipulated certain conditions regarding such nomination.

President Sirisena has stated at the outset that Mahinda Rajapaksa would not be appointed as prime minister. Also Mahinda must not contest in any district other than his native Hambantota district. He has also emphasised that the former President would not be permitted to spearhead the election propaganda campaign of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) which is the chief constituent of the UPFA. Furthermore he has stressed that Mahinda himself will have to contest only under the betel symbol of UPFA. Emphasising further President Sirisena has said that Mahinda Rajapaksa has got only UPFA nomination and not SLFP nomination.He would not be allowed the hand symbol of the SLFP in case the UPFA and SLFP contest separately if the necessity arises. President Sirisena has indicated that he is contemplating the pulling out of the SLFP from the UPFA and contesting independently if circumstances warrant it.

Continue reading ‘President Sirisena Fires Political Torpedo Shattering Triumphal Mood in Mahinda Rajapaksa Camp’ »

Under the Guise of Protecting Human Rights and Establishing Democracy: US Intervention in Sri Lanka

By

Jamili Natasha Gooneratne

SLUSA82013
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The paper argues that strong US intervention in Sri Lanka after the end of the island’s armed conflict in 2009 is not based on altruistic efforts to protect human rights as presented in mainstream sources, but stems from deepening US geopolitical and ideological interests in the Indian Ocean region. Keywords: Sri Lanka-US relations, US foreign policy, North-South relations, Neoliberal policy, interventionism, Indian Ocean, US-China relations
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Introduction

The discourse regarding Sri Lanka within international media has intensified since 2009, when the then government of president Mahinda Rajapaksa announced that it had defeated terrorism in the form of the armed non-state group known as the Liberation Tamil Tigers of Eelam (LTTE) [recognized as an international terrorist organisation by the US in 1997], that Sri Lanka had been in armed conflict with since the early 80s. Sri Lanka’s announcement prompted widespread reports of humanitarian law violations, and human rights abuses by both sides. A week after the announcement, on May 26th, the UN Human Rights Council held a special two-day session on the situation in Sri Lanka, concluding in the adoption of a resolution commending the state for the policies it had adopted. The resolution passed with 29 votes in favor, 12 against, and 6 abstentions.

The United States was not a member of the UNHRC at the time, but would begin its term in June that same year. During its statement as an observer, the US permanent Mission’s Charge d’Affaires, Mark C. Storella noted that ‘This is an important moment in the life of the Sri Lankan nation, and we should all recognize that the Sri Lankan people are emerging from terrible conflict against the LTTE, an implacable foe[1].’ In retrospect, the statement was if anything supportive of the Sri Lankan state and even went as far to draw attention to the joint statement concluded by the government of Sri Lanka and UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon, that international human rights advocacy groups had criticized for being too complacent toward the state.

But in a space of 5 years US-Sri Lankan relations would alter dramatically, with the US bringing in a country-specific HRC resolution against Sri Lanka in 2012 which was adopted by vote. By the time the UNP, the Sri Lankan liberal political party, led government replaces the former Rajapaksa government in 2015, US Secretary of State John Kerry publicly refers to the Sri Lankan conflict as the ‘…30 years of war with the Tamils…’[2] and not the LTTE. In the space after the conflict ended, numerous international media would portray Sri Lanka as an authoritarian led melting pot of human rights abuses and the country would receive far more publicized attention than it had received during the entire 30 years of its conflict. This paper begins by asking the question, why?

Continue reading ‘Under the Guise of Protecting Human Rights and Establishing Democracy: US Intervention in Sri Lanka’ »

Tony Ranasinghe, the Greatest Character Actor and Romantic Lover in Sinhala Cinema

By

D.B.S. Jeyaraj

“Tony as an actor is the best character-based actor not even witnessed in the Indian screen. He has an actor within himself who emerges at the correct moment. Tony Ranasinghe is the best character actor in Asia” – Gamini Fonseka.

Tony Ranasinghe

Tony Ranasinghe

“Tony Aiya was a well-read man of wisdom. Not only as his co-star, but also as an outsider, I tremendously enjoyed watching Tony Aiya on the screen and to date I find him the most romantic lover we’ve had in our films. There will never be another Tony” Malani Fonseka.

Sinhala cinema began moving away from Indian “masala” influence and started coming into its own in the sixties and seventies of the last century. Four great male actors made their mark in that golden phase of Sinhala moviedom. They were, in alphabetical order – Joe Abeywickrama, Gamini Fonseka, Vijaya Kumaratunga and Tony Ranasinghe. Alas! All four famous thespians are no more now.

TR YT

The first to depart was the youngest of them all, Vijaya Kumaratunga, who was born in 1945. His life was brutally snatched away in 1988. Vijaya who had begun engaging effectively in politics was assassinated. Gamini Fonseka, born in 1936, passed away in his sleep in 2004. Veteran Joe Abeywickrama, who was born in 1927, died four years ago in 2011. The last of the legendary four – Tony Ranasinghe – bade farewell to his numerous fans a few weeks ago on 16 June. He was born on 31 July 1937.
Continue reading ‘Tony Ranasinghe, the Greatest Character Actor and Romantic Lover in Sinhala Cinema’ »

“Maithripala and Mahinda Factions Within SLFPHave Sunk Their Differences” say Premjayantha and Priyadarshana Yapa.

by Shamindra Ferdinando

UPFA Gen. Secretary Susil Premjayantha and SLFP Gen. Secretary Anura Priyadarshana Yapa yesterday said that rival factions within the former ruling party had sunk their differences and were ready for the August 17 general election.

The SLFP had been able to avert a post-January 8 presidential poll split, though some issues remained to be resolved, they said.

The party called the media briefing yesterday in the wake of further turmoil consequent to Premjayantha’s announcement last Friday that President Maithripala Sirisena was agreeable to accommodate Mahinda Rajapaksa.

Former MP Yapa said that the main constituent of the UPFA had identified its weaknesses that had led to their defeat at the January polls and was in the process of tackling disputes.

Yapa emphasised that the SLFP was a modern political organisation capable of facing challenges. The former minister underscored the political significance of President Maithripala Sirisena taking over the leadership of the SLFP and having a dialogue with former President Mahinda Rajapaksa.

Acknowledging the difficulties experienced during negotiations, Yapa said that their effort wasn’t meant to strengthen the positin of any individual but to clear hurdles in the opposition’s path.

Continue reading ‘“Maithripala and Mahinda Factions Within SLFPHave Sunk Their Differences” say Premjayantha and Priyadarshana Yapa.’ »

Maithripala Maintains Baffling Public Silence While Mahinda Prepares to Contest from Kurunegala District.

By Dharisha Bastians

As the United People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA) and its leading constituent party, the SLFP, made conflicting claims regarding nominations for ex-President Mahinda Rajapaksa on the alliance list, President Maithripala Sirisena’s public silence on the controversial issue continued to baffle loyalists and supporters of his presidential bid in January.

With nominations scheduled to close at 12 noon next Monday (13), the UPFA is racing against the clock to finalise its candidate lists and iron out differences between its Rajapaksa and Sirisena factions ahead of the deadline.

Reports emerged on Tuesday that President Sirisena had imposed strict conditions on Rajapaksa’s candidacy, including that the former President would have to contest in his home district of Hambantota and nowhere else and that he would not be permitted to lead the UPFA campaign.

But Opposition Leader Nimal Siripala De Silva dropped a bombshell in Welimada yesterday, when he told a meeting in Uva-Paranagama that the former President would be signing nomination papers tomorrow (10).
“We asked President Rajapaksa which district he wanted, he is going to contest from Kurunegala, that is certain,” De Silva told the meeting.

Continue reading ‘Maithripala Maintains Baffling Public Silence While Mahinda Prepares to Contest from Kurunegala District.’ »

Ranil’s Attack on COPE Chairman Gunasekera is an Assault on the Parliamentary System Itself says Prof GL Peiris.

By Shamindra Ferdinando

Former External Affairs Minister Prof. G. L. Peiris yesterday alleged that Premier Ranil Wickremesinghe’s attack on former Chairman of the Committee on Public Enterprises (COPE) D.E.W. Gunasekera was nothing but an assault on the parliamentary system itself.

Prof. Peiris was responding to Premier Wickremesinghe accusing General Secretary of the Communist Party Gunasekara of misleading Parliament as well as the country as regards investigations undertaken by a 13-member subcommittee of the COPE into the alleged Central Bank bond scam.

The SLFPer said that Gunasekera had earned the wrath of the UNP in the wake of COPE revelations. Prof. Peiris pointed out that all six reports submitted by the former COPE chief during 2010-2014 period had been acceptable to the UNP and no one questioned the veteran politician’s integrity until he intervened in the Central Bank affair.

Continue reading ‘Ranil’s Attack on COPE Chairman Gunasekera is an Assault on the Parliamentary System Itself says Prof GL Peiris.’ »

Special Media Briefing by Ranil Amounts to a Confession on Treasury Bonds Issue Charges SLFP

By Chamodi Gunawardana

The Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) yesterday charged that Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe had essentially made a confession over the Central Bank Treasury bond issue by organising a special media briefing at Sirikotha on Tuesday.

SLFP General Secretary Anura Priyadarshana Yapa told the media that Prime Minister Wickremesinghe had insulted one of the county’s most respected people, Committee on Public Enterprises (COPE) Subcommittee Chairman and former senior minister D.E.W. Gunasekara, by issuing false statements over the Treasury bond issue.

Continue reading ‘Special Media Briefing by Ranil Amounts to a Confession on Treasury Bonds Issue Charges SLFP’ »

What Maithripala Sirisena said About Mahinda Rajapaksa and his Corruption Earlier – Newspaper Report Excerpts

By

Upul Joseph Fernando

President Maithripala Sirisena in the run up to the last January presidential election put the country and the people before party politics. Today we reproduce important contents of his speeches made during that period and published in our sister paper Mawbima for an analysis to ascertain whether he had truly put the country before party politics after occupying the presidency of this country over the past six months as a general election has been fixed for 17 August. This upcoming election has caused confusion in the manner most confounded within the UPFA and the SLFP with Maithripala’s predecessor Mahinda Rajapaksa reportedly offered nominations by Sirisena’s UPFA.

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“After giving nominations at the Elections Commissioner’s office Mahinda tried his best to shake hands with me. I never give my clean hands and he attempted many times to grab it. As a true Sinhala Buddhist I greeted him in the traditional clasping of both palms in a firm manner”. (Maithri addresses UNP Lawyers Meeting- Mawbima report on 10-12-2014)

Comment – How could Maithri who stated like that give nominations with his clean hands to Mahinda? How can he board the same platform with Mahinda? People raise such questions. Following is what Maithri said during the last presidential election. We do not know whether he remembers what he told then.

Continue reading ‘What Maithripala Sirisena said About Mahinda Rajapaksa and his Corruption Earlier – Newspaper Report Excerpts’ »

Ranil Wickremesinghe Blasts D.E.W.Gunesekera Over Releasing Documents Relating to COPE Probe on Treasury Bonds Issue

By Dharisha Bastians

Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe yesterday slammed former Committee on Public Enterprises (COPE) Chairman and MP D.E.W. Gunesekera for violating the Parliamentary Powers and Privileges Act and using his position as head of the legislative oversight committee to gain political advantage.

Wickremesinghe has already written to the Secretary General of Parliament and the Speaker saying MP Gunesekera was in contravention of Section 22 of the Parliamentary Powers and Privileges Act by his conduct last week to make public documents under the purview of the COPE subcommittee probing the Central Bank bond issue.

“The Act prohibits the publication of any proceedings in any Committee of Parliament before they report to the House and also guilty of publishing a false and perverted report of the proceedings of a Committee of Parliament and punishable under Section 22 of the Parliament (Powers and Privileges) Act,” Wickremesinghe told the Speaker in his letter.

Wickremesinghe told reporters yesterday that with the dissolution of Parliament, Gunesekera had ceased to be a MP. “The only three positions still active and authorised to deal with Parliamentary matters are the Prime Minister, the Speaker and the Opposition Leader,” he explained. “Other than these three, no one else has the authority to release documents pertaining to Parliamentary matters,” Wickremesinghe said.

He said the documents released by the former COPE Chairman were put forward by Gunesekera himself, and were not official COPE reports.

Continue reading ‘Ranil Wickremesinghe Blasts D.E.W.Gunesekera Over Releasing Documents Relating to COPE Probe on Treasury Bonds Issue’ »

Western Provincial Councillor Hirunika Premachandra Marries TV Presenter/Model Hiran Yatovita with Maithripala and Rajitha as Witnesses.

facebook.com/pages/Hirunika-Premachandra

facebook.com/pages/Hirunika-Premachandra

Western Provincial Councillor Hirunika Eranjali Premachandra married TV presenter/model Hiran Yattovita today July 6th 2015 at a private function attended by only a handful of guests.

facebook.com/pages/Hirunika-Premachandra

facebook.com/pages/Hirunika-Premachandra

President Maithripala Sirisena and Health Minister Rajitha Senarathne signed as witnesses.

Continue reading ‘Western Provincial Councillor Hirunika Premachandra Marries TV Presenter/Model Hiran Yatovita with Maithripala and Rajitha as Witnesses.’ »

President Sirisena Pondering Whether to Pull SLFP out of UPFA and Contest Independently Without Mahinda and his Loyalists

By
Dharisha Bastians

President Maithripala Sirisena, beleaguered and facing strong criticism about his decision to grant nominations to his predecessor Mahinda Rajapaksa, has asked confidants for a 48-hour grace period ending tomorrow, Daily FT learns.

President Sirisena, who has maintained a stony public silence on the issue of nominations for the defeated President, has sought privately to calm the fears of some of the leaders of the opposition movement that supported his candidacy in the January election, highly-placed sources told Daily FT.

Over the weekend, President Sirisena met with several key political and civil society leaders involved with the common candidacy platform at the presidential election, where he was at the receiving end of strong criticism from senior figures who encouraged his presidential bid, Daily FT learns.

On Sunday night, President Sirisena also met with the anti-Mahinda group of the SLFP, which walked out of the Rajapaksa Government in November last year to support his candidacy from the common opposition.

Continue reading ‘President Sirisena Pondering Whether to Pull SLFP out of UPFA and Contest Independently Without Mahinda and his Loyalists’ »

“President Sirisena Must tell the Country Whether he is Standing with Mahinda or not” – Purawesi Balaya.

An alliance of civil society organisations that strongly backed Maithripala Sirisena’s bid for the presidency in January this year, demanded that the President address the nation and clarify his position with regard to granting nominations from the UPFA to his defeated predecessor, Mahinda Rajapaksa.

Purawesi Balaya (Citizens’ Power) held a news conference yesterday, strongly criticising the moves to bring Rajapaksa back into power through Parliament and said the President was now facing a crisis of credibility.

Convenor of the movement, senior journalist and academic Gamini Viyangoda told reporters that 6.2 million people had voted for Maithripala Sirisena at the January election, not because of his 40-year political history, but because of his anti-Rajapaksa stand.

Viyangoda said it did not matter what the President said to rationalise the decision, whether it was to protect the SLFP or the implement the Bandaranaike policies in the country.

“None of these excuses are sufficient to justify bringing Mahinda Rajapaksa back into Parliament,” he charged.

Continue reading ‘“President Sirisena Must tell the Country Whether he is Standing with Mahinda or not” – Purawesi Balaya.’ »

After Giving Nomination to Mahinda now Maithripala set to Form Anti – Rajapaksa Alliance with Ranil and Chandrika

By

P.K. Balachandran

Following the granting of the United Peoples’ Freedom Alliance (UPFA) parliamentary election ticket to former Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa, his rival and serving President Maithripala Sirisena is set to form an anti-Rajapaksa alliance with UNP leader Ranil Wickremesinghe and former President Chandrika Kumaratunga.

This was evident on Sunday when Sirisena and Wickremesinghe attended Kumaratunga’s 70th birthday celebrations and spoke about Kumaratunga’s contribution to Sri Lanka in glowing terms. While the function was attended by key supporters of Sirisena and Wickremesinghe, supporters of Rajapaksa were conspicuously absent.

Speaking on the occasion, Sirisena praised Kumaratunga for not being corrupt and for promoting ethnic reconciliation when she was Lankan President from 1995 to 2005. He was indirectly contrasting her with Rajapaksa, who had become known for being corrupt and being against ethnic reconciliation.

Continue reading ‘After Giving Nomination to Mahinda now Maithripala set to Form Anti – Rajapaksa Alliance with Ranil and Chandrika’ »

Victorious “Rainbow”Coalition Begins to Crack After President Sirisena Capitulates to Mahinda Rajapaksa.

By Dharisha Bastians

Sri Lanka’s victorious ‘rainbow’ coalition that came together in November 2014 to support the common opposition candidacy splintered by the end of the weekend, after President Maithripala Sirisena capitulated and agreed to allow his predecessor Mahinda Rajapaksa to contest on the UPFA ticket.

The Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU), a small but key ally that strongly backed the Sirisena candidacy for the 8 January election, formally broke with the UPFA coalition led by President Sirisena, and announced it will contest independently at the 17 August parliamentary poll.

Continue reading ‘Victorious “Rainbow”Coalition Begins to Crack After President Sirisena Capitulates to Mahinda Rajapaksa.’ »

Maithripala and Mahinda are like the Mongoose and Cobra Afloat on the Same log in a Flood

(Text of Editorial Appearing in “The Island” of July 6th 2015)

Nothing is so certain as the unexpected in politics. President Maithripala Sirisena has finally agreed to nominate his bête noire, Mahinda Rajapaksa, to contest the August 17 polls. Both of them have made compromises; the former said he would never field Rajapaksa on the UPFA ticket and the latter spared no pains to be named the UPFA’s prime ministerial candidate. Now, it has been left to the UPFA parliamentary group to decide who should be the Prime Minister in case of an SLFP-led government being formed.

Rajapaksa underestimated Sirisena before the last presidential election and lost the presidency. Thereafter, the latter made the mistake of trying to write off the former and was faced with the prospect of the SLFP losing the next election. Obviously, there is no love lost between the two leaders and they have had to bury the hatchet for their mutual survival. What we have just witnessed is another political marriage of convenience.

Continue reading ‘Maithripala and Mahinda are like the Mongoose and Cobra Afloat on the Same log in a Flood’ »

Maithripala Avoids Answering Question in Public by Ranil Whether Jan 8 Revolution is still on track

President Maithripala Sirisena, Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe and a host of other political leaders participated in an event to honour former President Chandrika Kumaratunga, on the occasion of her 70th birthday which fell on 29 June.

The event took place amid serious turmoil on the political front, after President Sirisena agreed to grant his predecessor Mahinda Rajapaksa a nomination on the UPFA ticket last Friday.

During his speech Prime Minister Wickremesinghe asked President Sirisena light-heartedly to let everyone know if the 8 January revolution and their plan of work were still on track.

Continue reading ‘Maithripala Avoids Answering Question in Public by Ranil Whether Jan 8 Revolution is still on track’ »

Anti-Rajapaksa Camp Bitterly Alleges now that President Sirisena has Betrayed the Country


By

Ranga Jayasuriya

Now that the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) has decided to grant nomination to ex-President Mahinda Rajapaksa to contest the forthcoming general elections, a sense of gloom has dawned on certain quarters of the public who genuinely loath the long-term effects of the ex-President’s political comeback. Such sentiments are quite understandable. A sizable portion of the total 6.2 million people who voted against the authoritarian ex-President now fear that he would roll back democratic reforms that were introduced by the new administration.

Even if he fails to reverse democratic reforms which have already been implemented, chances are that, should he ever win and be appointed the Prime Minister, he would stall any new measures aimed at democratization. That would mean, among other things; the much awaited Right to Information Act risks becoming a non-starter; the UNP, for the second time, has killed the initiative through its procrastination. During the short-lived Ranil Wickremesinghe administration of 2003-2004, the Bill had been entered into the order paper when President Kumaratunga dissolved the then Parliament.

And the bitterness of the anti-Rajapaksa camp has now been directed towards President Maithripala Sirisena, whom, they alleged, has ‘betrayed’ the January 8 revolution. Those feelings born out from the sense of frustration are understandable given the high expectations the public had placed in the President. However, the problem is while the sky is the limit for election promises, it is not humanely, or constitutionally possibly to achieve all that (unless, of course, the new President opts to emulate his authoritarian predecessor).

There is frustration at the slow progress in the investigations into allegations of corruption levelled against the former first family and their cronies. That may be the case. However, the wheel of justice has been moving even though slowly and investigations have proved to be time-consuming. The alternative to that would have been the Rajapaksa model: Get your faithful female High Court Judge to jail your presidential contender on trumped-up charges (ex: Sarath Fonseka) or set up a Kangaroo Court under the euphemism of a court martial.

President Sirisena did not choose that path; nor did Sri Lankans vote him to power to emulate the autocratic tactics of his predecessor. The partial paralysis in our institutions, which has for long been subjected to political manipulations, has partially helped Rajapaksa’s political comeback. However, by not interfering with the judicial process, the new administration has set a precedent on judicial independence and facilitated an organic growth of those independent institutions. One can only hope that MR, if he ever lands in the office of Prime Minister, would not reverse that process.

Continue reading ‘Anti-Rajapaksa Camp Bitterly Alleges now that President Sirisena has Betrayed the Country’ »

Maithripala Sirisena Waves White Flag and Capitulates to Mahinda Rajapaksa

(Text of Editorial Appearing in the Colombo “Sunday Times” of July 5th 2015)

And so, former President Mahinda Rajapaksa threw his hat into the ring for the forthcoming Parliamentary elections with some pressure politics this week, the culmination of a long drawn-out, well-orchestrated campaign that saw his successor, President Maithripala Sirisena, eventually capitulate.

The timing of Mr. Rajapaksa’s announcement from his hometown of Tangalla on Adhi Esala full moon poya day was carefully crafted. It is unlikely he would have declared his candidature without a tacit understanding already reached that he was not going to be snubbed. He also got a jibe in; “Unlike others,” he said, “I never left the party”. The message was meant to resonate with faithful followers of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP), whose current leader is Mr. Sirisena.

For months, the country has had nothing better to do than witness Mr. Rajapaksa stirring the pot; pulling strings within not just his own SLFP, but the broader coalition United People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA). He was able to garner their support with his presence and his perseverance.

Continue reading ‘Maithripala Sirisena Waves White Flag and Capitulates to Mahinda Rajapaksa’ »

Battle Lines Drawn for 2015 General Elections Between Ranil Wickremesinghe and Mahinda Rajapaksa

General elections 2015: MR’s nomination ups the ante

By Lasanda Kurukulasuriya

The chips are down – the battle lines for the 2015 general election have been drawn between two key political personalities – Ranil Wickremesinghe, UNP leader and the party’s prime ministerial candidate, and Mahinda Rajapaksa, the former president whose nomination from the UPFA was confirmed by that coalition’s leadership at the eleventh hour, without naming him as prime ministerial candidate. Just how the innumerable variables in this contest will shift, combine and coalesce to produce a new parliament, will be the stuff of public debate and political movement in the two months ahead.

On Friday evening UPFA General Secretary Susil Premajayantha issued a brief statement announcing the decision made at a party leaders’ meeting presided over by UPFA leader, President Maithripala Sirisena, where it was agreed that Rajapaksa would be given nomination. The surprise announcement was followed by a press conference at Abhayaramaya, Narahenpita, addressed by some of the former president’s main supporters including former MPs Dinesh Gunewardena (MEP), Vasudeva Nanayakkara (DLF), Wimal Weerawansa (NFF) and Tissa Vitarana (LSSP) along with former SLFP MPs G L Peiris and Dulles Alahaperuma.

The stalwarts behind the ‘bring-back-Mahinda’ project described the moment as a milestone in their long campaign to have Rajapaksa lead the UPFA to victory in the upcoming election. They evaded a journalist’s question as to whether he will be given the top spot in parliament in the event of a UPFA victory, referring instead to a remark by Sirisena that if the UPFA won, the choice of prime minister would be made by the elected MPs.

Continue reading ‘Battle Lines Drawn for 2015 General Elections Between Ranil Wickremesinghe and Mahinda Rajapaksa’ »

UNP in Trouble as 19 Page COPE Report Makes “Charges” Against Arjuna Mahendran and his son in law Arjun Joseph Aloysius



UPFA leaders are busy preparing outlines for their polls campaign. As reported earlier, among the main issues they claim are “threats to national security.” This is the result of the Government’s talks with the Global Tamil Forum in London and related issues.

Another is the Central Banks Treasury Bond scandal. Details of this scandal have entered the public domain.

Here is how the issue played out in the past days. In the hours before dissolution of Parliament on Friday June 30, Communist Party leader D.E.W. Gunasekera, Chairman of the Committee on Public Enterprises (COPE), was very busy. He wanted to lay before the public the details of the issue at the Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) over the Treasury Bonds. Gunasekera had worked on the interim report by a Subcommittee which he had chaired. The draft was being finalised on Thursday night (June 30) for presentation to Parliament the next day, Friday (June 31).

Continue reading ‘UNP in Trouble as 19 Page COPE Report Makes “Charges” Against Arjuna Mahendran and his son in law Arjun Joseph Aloysius’ »

Maithripala’s Capitulation, Mahinda’s Brinkmanship and and Ranil’s Consternation

By

C.A. Chandraprema

The announcement on Friday evening by UPFA General Secretary Susil Premajayanth to the effect that President Maithripala Sirisena has agreed to grant nominations to former president Mahinda Rajapaksa was greeted with anguish and fury by the yahapalana types. Much of the anger may stem from the suspicion that had been rankling in the minds of some following the secret meeting held between Sirisena and Rajapaksa just before Parliament was dissolved. In any event, after Rajapaksa announced from Medamulana on July 1 that he would be contesting the forthcoming election, President Sirisena was faced with two choices. He could either field Mahinda and ensure that the UPFA puts up a good showing or he could force MR to contest separately and risk falling to a poor third.

Some weeks ago, President Sirisena tried his best to prevent the Mahinda group from having a separate May Day but he failed. To make things worse, he went ahead with his own May Day rally in Hyde Park which was a complete fiasco as described in this column at the time. If the SLFP/UPFA contested the parliamentary election without Mahinda, the result may have resembled the May Day outcome. As last week drew to an end, Sirisena may have seen signs of which way things would go if he did not allow MR to contest on the UPFA ticket. By Thursday, individuals who had been seen as middle of the roaders were openly declaring themselves for Mahinda.

One example was Chandima Weerakkody the former deputy speaker of parliament. Though he attended some of the bring-Mahinda-back rallies, his rhetoric was that of uniting CBK, Mahinda and Maithri and contesting the election together. He in fact spoke out against those who said that they will even follow MR out of the SLFP. But last Thursday, Weerakkody took a different stand and he said that they will make every effort towards maintaining unity but if that is not possible, he will opt to go with Mahinda.

Another seeming middle of the roader was Duminda Silva who was generally maintaining a low profile without openly identifying with Mahinda. So far as this writer can recall, he was not seen at any of the bring Mahinda back rallies. Furthermore, it was largely Duminda Silva who saved President Sirisena’s self respect last May Day. Duminda brought with him a large crowd which occupied the space available inside the Hyde Park grounds and remained at the meeting without disappearing. The crowds brought by other organizers simply walked off without even looking at the stage. Even with Duminda’s crowd in the grounds, the Hyde Park meeting was a fiasco, but without Duminda the speakers would have been addressing an empty playground.

Continue reading ‘Maithripala’s Capitulation, Mahinda’s Brinkmanship and and Ranil’s Consternation’ »

After Giving Nomination to Mahinda , Maithripala Keeps away from Birthday Celebration for Chandrika to Avoid her and Ranil

Six months ago they were political arch enemies. Like the saying goes, politics makes strange bedfellows. So it was.

Last Friday, President Maithripala Sirisena agreed to allow his predecessor Mahinda Rajapaksa to contest the August 17 parliamentary elections.

Now, they appear to be not only chummy, but concerned of each other.

After the official announcement of Rajapaksa’s candidature, UPFA leaders, with the exception of Sirisena, met on Friday night at the official residence of Western Provincial Council Chief Minister Prasanna Ranatunga. It will be recalled that on an earlier occasion, it was he who floated the idea if the leadership of the SLFP itself should be called into question.

For moments the gathering took a formal air. They adopted a unanimous resolution thanking UPFA and SLFP leader President Maithripala Sirisena for nominating Rajapaksa as a candidate. They resolved that no statements detrimental to him (President Sirisena) should be made by any member of the Alliance. Then the mood took a festive air.

Continue reading ‘After Giving Nomination to Mahinda , Maithripala Keeps away from Birthday Celebration for Chandrika to Avoid her and Ranil’ »

President Maithripala Sirisena Surrenders to Ex – President Mahinda Rajapaksa by Giving him Nomination

Six months after being voted out of the presidency, Percy Mahendra Rajapaksa has bounced back to become a candidate for the United People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA) at the August 17 parliamentary elections. He will choose from three different districts — Gampaha, Kurunegala or Ratnapura.

“I was willing to agree to anything that would not divide our party. We will ensure a victory and protect our country,” Rajapaksa told the Sunday Times. His successor, President Maithripala Sirisena, had earlier ruled out any role for him at the polls. The doors of the UPFA were thrown wide open to him on Friday. His close allies are now striving hard to persuade Sirisena to let Rajapaksa lead the campaign, though he has refused to name Rajapaksa as the prime ministerial candidate. They believe that is an issue to be tackled after the polls.

These developments saw dark clouds swallowing up the ‘rainbow coalition’ that emerged after the presidential election of January 8. Some 40 political parties and civil society organisations had led a turbo-charged campaign to ensconce Sirisena as the sixth Executive President of Sri Lanka. To say they were disappointed would be an understatement. They were livid. “It is unbelievable that such a thing could happen. In politics, nothing is impossible. We will have to wait and see,” said a shocked Minister Lakshman Kiriella, Leader of the House and Senior Vice President of the United National Party (UNP), after the UPFA decision was announced.

Continue reading ‘President Maithripala Sirisena Surrenders to Ex – President Mahinda Rajapaksa by Giving him Nomination’ »

Maithripala Sirisena has his way but Mahinda Rajapaksa wins the day……….

There are no permanent friends or foes in politics, it is said. The centre stage of politics wonders what’s happening behind the screen. Mahinda Rajapaksa loyalists did not give up the battle to seek nomination to Mahinda. While the centre stage was kept in suspense about the issue, Susil Premajayantha on Friday issued a letter stating that the United People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA) has decided to give nomination to Mahinda and that the decision was taken at a meet presided over by President Maithripala Sirisena, the previous night. As it stands, the contents of this letter quoting Maithri had not been denied so far by him.

It stated that Mahinda would get UPFA nomination and there was no reference to the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP). Mahinda is a Patron of the SLFP and the SLFP is the main constituent of the UPFA. Therefore, Mahinda would certainly have to get nomination from the SLFP to contest the elections as the SLFP does not give nominations to the constituent parties in the Aliance. The SLFP General Secretary, Anura Priyadarshana Yapa is yet to issue a statement endorsing Premajayantha’s letter which stated that the UPFA had decided to give nomination to Mahinda.

Mahinda loyalists had done hard work to ensure that Mahinda gets nomination. The team led by Dinesh Gunawardene, Vasudeva Nanayakkara, Kumara Welgama and Wimal Weerawansa worked round the clock to convince the SLFP leadership towards achieving that task. As it stands now, they’ve been successful as Mahinda has won the day. In the recent days several moves took place regarding the issue of nomination to Mahinda. The initial move was to name Mahinda as the prime ministerial candidate of the UPFA.

Continue reading ‘Maithripala Sirisena has his way but Mahinda Rajapaksa wins the day……….’ »

Will Return of Mahinda Rajapaksa Change Sri Lankan Politics Again?


By COL R. HARIHARAN

Former Sri Lanka president Mahinda Rajapaksa announced that he would accept his loyal supporters demand to contest the forthcoming parliamentary election to be held on August 17. According to media reports, thousands of supporters who had gathered at his home ground in Medamulana cheered him when he said “I am not ready to reject the appeal you are all making.” He indicated that he would be rallying his supporters across all parties “for the sake of the country, for the sake of mother land, we must contest the upcoming parliamentary election.

Earlier president Maithripala Sirisena dissolved the parliament and set the date for the election. The announcements of both the incumbent and former presidents were not unexpected. Time was running out for Sirisena after he failed to hammer out a consensus within the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) on rejecting the loyalists’ demand for nominating Rajapaksa as the party candidate for prime minister. According to Sri Lanka columnists, President Sirisena’s secret talks with the former president also failed to persuade Rajapaksa not to contest the election to avoid a split in the party.

There were other compulsions for President Sirisena to dissolve the parliament. Already, Rajapaksa loyalists’s within the United People Freedom Alliance (UPFA) parliamentary party ranks had swelled to 80 plus. Any further delay could have not only eroded President Sirisena’s support within the party while enlarging Rajapaksa’s support base, but it would also help his detractors to push through the no confidence motion against Sirirsena’s political ally ruling alliance partner Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe pending before the parliament. Wickremesinghe leads the United National Party (UNP) traditional opponents of SLFP. With Rajapaksa loyalists bent upon splitting the SLFP votes, President Sirisena needs the UNP as an electoral ally to prevent Rajapaksa from coming back to power.

Continue reading ‘Will Return of Mahinda Rajapaksa Change Sri Lankan Politics Again?’ »

President Sirisena “Betrays” Jan 8 Mandate by Aligning with Former Rival Mahinda for Parliamentary Elections ?


By

Dharisha Bastians

The pro-Rajapaksa faction of the United Peoples’ Freedom Alliance claimed a major victory with the announcement yesterday that Mahinda Rajapaksa would receive a nomination on the coalition ticket, but there was radio silence from the President’s Office about the decision.

At about 3.30 p.m. yesterday, UPFA General Secretary Susil Premajayantha issued a press statement announcing the decision to grant the former President a nomination on the party ticket.

“Based on the UPFA party leaders’ meeting chaired by President Maithripala Sirisena on 2 July, as discussed it has been decided to grant former President Mahinda Rajapaksa a nomination for the forthcoming parliamentary elections,” the release which was signed by Premajayantha said.

There is still no official reaction to the announcement by the UPFA General Secretary from President Sirisena’s office or his aides at the time of going to press. The Sri Lanka Freedom Party Central Committee is yet to make a final decision on the nomination for the ex-President, Daily FT learns.

President Sirisena also holds the title of UPFA Chairman and could still exercise his powers to withhold the nomination, highly placed sources told Daily FT.

But pro-Rajapaksa UPFA leaders, holding a press briefing at the Abhayaramaya Temple in Narahenpita shortly after Premajayantha released the statement, hailed President Sirisena for his decision.

Continue reading ‘President Sirisena “Betrays” Jan 8 Mandate by Aligning with Former Rival Mahinda for Parliamentary Elections ?’ »

UPFA Announces it will Nominate Ex- President Mahinda Rajapaksa as a Candidate at the Forthcoming Parliamentary Elections.

By

Dasun Edirisinghe

The UPFA yesterday announced that it had decided to field former President Mahinda Rajapaksa at the forthcoming general election. Addressing a packed media audience at Abhayaramaya yesterday, former minister Dinesh Gunawardena said that the district where the former President Rajapaksa would enter the fray would be announced shortly.

Gunawardena said that UPFA General Secretary Susil Premajayantha had issued a statement yesterday afternoon that the party had decided to nominate Rajapaksa to contest the upcoming polls.

The MEP leader said that the struggle they had launched from Nugegoda had reached fruition as the UPFA leadership had realised that the SLFP had to stay united to defeat the UNP. “We welcome the UPFA decision and thank President Maithripala Sirisena for his decision,” Gunawardena said, adding that they would now start the journey proper to defeat the corrupt UNP government.

Asked whether former President Rajapaksa would lead the UPFA campaign, Gunawardena said that it would be announced after handing over of nominations on July 13.

Continue reading ‘UPFA Announces it will Nominate Ex- President Mahinda Rajapaksa as a Candidate at the Forthcoming Parliamentary Elections.’ »

Maithripala Sirisena is now a Presidential Prop and Pin Up Boy.

By

Malinda Seneviratne

We don’t know if everyone who voted for Maithripala actually believed that Parliament would be dissolved in late April, i.e. when the much talked of and now hardly ever mentioned ‘100 Days’ came to an end. We don’t know if everyone who voted for Maithripala thought that he was capable of or interested in seeing electoral reform through (and, the Right to Information Act, Code of Conduct for MPs and other things that would have actually meant ‘real change’). We do know now that politicians of all hue knew that there would be elections, even if Parliament was not dissolved on the schedule printed in Maithripala’s manifesto.

This is why we’ve seen many worthies who ridiculed Mahinda Rajapaksa for his in-your-face, laughing-at-us cut-outs shedding all embarrassment to emulate that poster boy. Nominations have not closed. The parties haven’t picked candidates. But it looks like many have picked themselves as worthy of nomination and election.

Walls, poster-free for a long time, are tasting paapppa once again. And once again we have faces laughing at us at every turn. Some are known names. Some have been in Parliament or have been elected to lesser office. Some haven’t been elected but have contested often enough to enjoy some name-face recognition. Some are known in other circles. Some are unknown.

Continue reading ‘Maithripala Sirisena is now a Presidential Prop and Pin Up Boy.’ »

Removing the Ban on Some Tamil Diaspora Organizations Listed as ” Foreign Terrorist”

By D.B.S.Jeyaraj

Sri Lanka’s ebullient Foreign minister Mangala Samaraweera is currently in the forefront of a move to review and possibly remove the ban imposed on certain Sri Lankan Tamil Diaspora organizations and individuals designated as “terrorist” under provisions of the United Nations Act No 45 of 1968. The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam(LTTE) and 15 other organizations functioning on foreign soil were proscribed as foreign terrorist organizations by Gazette Extraordinary 1856/41 of March 21st 2014. Apart from these 16 entities , a further 424 individuals with suspected LTTE links who were living in 19 countries including Sri Lanka were also listed.

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Foreign minister Mangala Samaraweera

The Gazette proclamation listing designated persons,groups and entities was done according to sub-paragraph (2) of paragraph (4) of the United Nations Regulations No. 1 of 2012 that was published in the Gazette Extraordinary No. 1758/19 of May 15, 2012.The designated Competent authority for establishing and maintaining the list with respect to natural persons, legal, persons, groups and entities was Mr. Gotabaya Rajapaksa who was then the Secretary, Defence and Urban Development ministry.
Continue reading ‘Removing the Ban on Some Tamil Diaspora Organizations Listed as ” Foreign Terrorist”’ »

“I will form a Govt that will take Forward the Development that has Stalled now” – Mahinda Rajapaksa

(Full text of former President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s speech at Medamulana on July 1st 2015)

It is with immense gratitude that I acknowledge your unwavering support for me and the national agenda I represent despite all the threats and intimidation in the period after the last presidential election. I warmly welcome all of you who have come here today to my home in my village. Today is Adhi Esala Poya day, the day on which the Buddha preached the Dhamma for the first time to his erstwhile companions the five ascetics. You have come here to invite me to contest the forthcoming parliamentary election. I left Temple Trees even before the Elections Commissioner had declared the final result.

Before I accept or reject your invitation, there is something that I have to say. After the last presidential election, I bowed my head to the verdict of the majority of the people. By taking that decision, what I proved was that I who entered the supreme legislature for the first time in 1970 as the youngest MP in that parliament and later served as a minister, leader of the opposition, prime minister and finally as president, have the highest regard for the principles of democracy. Many people who came to Tangalle have told me that many people in the country were surprised to see Mahinda Rajapaksa who had been labelled a dictator setting an exemplary democratic precedent in that manner.

The day after I came home, I summoned all our party leaders to Tangalle. I asked them about the fate of our party. They told me that with the release of the election results, our party members have had to face severe harassment at the hands of members of the United National Party. At that stage some were trying to set up an alternative Sri Lanka Freedom Party. On the 12th of January, I summoned our Central Committee and told them that in this crucial hour, we must safeguard our party. Thereafter at the request of the present executive president, I met him personally and handed over to him the leadership of the party. I handed over the party within seven days of the election. The party leadership has never changed hands earlier in that manner. After winning the presidential election of 2005, I had to wait for seven months to become leader of the party. I call upon the people to take note of the political significance of the decision I made to hand over the leadership of the party to the new president within seven days.

Continue reading ‘“I will form a Govt that will take Forward the Development that has Stalled now” – Mahinda Rajapaksa’ »

Second Coming of Mahinda!Can Mahinda from Medamulana Rise Again?

By Dharisha Bastians in Medamulana

The monk’s voice booms through rustling coconut fronds, carrying on the soft breezes over lotus ponds and endlessly green fields of paddy.

“What is this title ‘former’ president? Is that how we refer to our ancient kings?”

On Esala full moon Poya day, the sleepy southern village of Medamulana is buzzing with activity, its narrow rural roads choked with traffic as people turnout in van and busloads, travelling through the night from Ratnapura, Divulapitiya and other far-off places. On every vehicle, stickers and banners feature a moustachioed man, wearing a wide grin and signature red shawl.

Ode to a moustache

As the final stragglers wend their way into the rambling gardens of the Medamulana Mahagedara , Mahinda Rajapaksa’s ancestral property in the Hambantota District, the monk breaks into a brief ode to this ‘jet-black’ moustache.

“When people are defeated, usually their physical appearance is also diminished. But look at you, you are looking better than ever. Look at that black moustache, how it adds to your strong personality!” the Buddhist priest waxed from within the house, his words carrying out to large crowds gathered under marquees set up in the garden and across the village roads on a public address system.

Continue reading ‘Second Coming of Mahinda!Can Mahinda from Medamulana Rise Again?’ »

Maithripala Sirisena has a Moral Obligation to see that his Promises are Delivered.


By

Malinda Seneviratne

President Maithripala Sirisena has reason to be grateful to Ranil Wickremesinghe and the UNP. True, gratitude-reason is a two-way street, but we are talking of the President, what he owes and to whom. He might owe something to former President Chandrika Kumaratunga too but probably not as much as the lady believes. Rajitha Senaratne also helped.

If getting things moving and getting message across count then he also owes a lot to Rev Athureliye Rathana Thero and Champika Ranawaka, and of course Rev Maduluwave Sobitha Thero. What checks were associated with this ‘support,’ their value, whether or not they were cashed and if cashed (in kind) what the benefits were only the transactors would know.

What we know is that gratitude is a virtue. The downside is that it is also associated with obligations, sometimes sanitized with the word ‘moral’.

If the President feels that he owes the UNP something (and he does!) he might have felt obliged to save that party and the august behinds of some of the top rankers. He might think that the morally upright thing to do is to use executive powers (not directly but by the threat of deployment in other context) and his position as the head of the SLFP to scuttle the no-confidence motions against Ravi Karunanayake and Ranil Wickremesinghe. He could have done that and stopped there instead of dissolving Parliament. He dissolved. He decided, the people and history will judge.

Continue reading ‘Maithripala Sirisena has a Moral Obligation to see that his Promises are Delivered.’ »

“News 1st”to Launch new Political Show in the Mornings Hosted by Bandula Jayasekara and Chamika Roshan

Your mornings will never be the same again!

News 1st will launch a fresh, hard-hitting Morning Political Show ‘PRESS RELEASE’, hosted by former Diplomat , Editor and Presidential Spokesman Bandula Jayasekara and Chamika Roshan. The show will be aired every weekday morning at 6, on Sirasa TV. ‘PRESS RELEASE’will focus on the morning headlines, but also the main issues of the day. A viewer can expect an explosion of news, views and interviews!

Mahinda Rajapaksa Sets the Stage at his Hometown Medamulana for a Major Political Comeback

By

Dharisha Bastians in Medamulana

Former President Mahinda Rajapaksa, ousted from office in January, set the stage for a major political comeback in his hometown of Medamulana yesterday, with the announcement that he would lead a faction of the SLFP to contest in the 17 August parliamentary election.

A low drum-roll of firecrackers sounded in the distance, as thousands of supporters gathered in the leafy gardens of Mahinda Rajapaksa’s Carlton House shortly before noon yesterday to hear the former President’s ‘special announcement’ about his role in the upcoming elections.

“I am not ready to reject the appeal you are all making,” he boomed, reading from a teleprompter in the sweltering midday heat, as supporters, about 6,000 strong, cheered madly at the sight of him.

“For the sake of this country, for the sake of the motherland, we must contest in the upcoming parliamentary elections,” Rajapaksa announced.

Continue reading ‘Mahinda Rajapaksa Sets the Stage at his Hometown Medamulana for a Major Political Comeback’ »

“I will Contest General Election” Declares Ex-President Mahinda Rajapaksa in Medamulana

Ending days of speculation, former President Mahinda Rajapaksa today formally announced that he will contest the upcoming General Election.

Addressing a large crowd of supporters today at his home in Medamulana, the former President said he did not have the right to refuse the request made by them to stand for election again.

Continue reading ‘“I will Contest General Election” Declares Ex-President Mahinda Rajapaksa in Medamulana’ »

“We will Contest at the Upcoming General Election for the Sake of the Party and Country” Announces Mahinda Rajapaksa

By

Lakna Paranamanna

Former President Mahinda Rajapaksa addressing a gathering at Medamulana this morning revealed that he would contest the upcoming general election.

“I will not ignore the requests that have been made to me by the people – I accept it wholeheartedly. . . Therefore we will move forward at the upcoming general election with this force of people – we have made preparations to move forward . . . We will contest at the upcoming general elections for the sake of the party and the country.”

Continue reading ‘“We will Contest at the Upcoming General Election for the Sake of the Party and Country” Announces Mahinda Rajapaksa’ »

If Maithripala Surrenders to Mahinda Faction Another Bloc of 36 MP’s Backed by Chandrika May Split from SLFP


By

Rasika Jayakody

What President Maithripala Sirisena faces right now is nothing short of a conundrum. The President has come under serious pressure not only from the party rank and file, but also from the senior office bearers of the party to give nominations to former President Rajapaksa to contest the election under the SLFP ticket. It is still not entirely clear whether President Sirisena will be able to withstand this pressure for two more weeks, at least until the end of the nomination period.

The pro-Rajapaksa camp, which is keen on getting nomination from the UPFA, has already made alternate plans to contest separately fearing that President Sirisena may reject nomination at the last moment. Even the senior-most parliamentarians representing the party are confused over the present state of affairs in the SLFP.

There were various negotiations over the weekend to get President Sirisena’s consent to give nomination to the former President. The committee appointed by President Sirisena to promote cooperation in the party also held several rounds of discussion to recommend necessary measures to strengthen unity in the party. They met President Sirisena and former President Rajapaksa separately and obtained their viewpoints on the matter.

The committee has recommended that the former President should be ‘actively involved’ in the political campaign of the party at the forthcoming election. According to a member of the committee, the term ‘active involvement’ amounts to accommodating him at least as a mere candidate in the SLFP list.

Sources close to Presidents Sirisena told the Daily News on Monday night that the President had still not digressed from his position over granting nomination to Rajapaksa. He had expressed willingness to offer him a ‘distinguished position’ in the party and to give him a prominent post in the government. The prominent post however, is not the position of the Prime Minister. This is somewhat similar to the position held by former Singaporean President Lee Kuan Yew and former US President Bill Clinton after their retirement from office. But, many political observers, including several senior politicians, told the Daily News that President Sirisena was being pushed to the wall.

Continue reading ‘If Maithripala Surrenders to Mahinda Faction Another Bloc of 36 MP’s Backed by Chandrika May Split from SLFP’ »

Current Sri Lankan Political Situation is like the Kerensky Period in Russia After the 1917 Revolution

By

Dr.Vickramabahu Karunaratne

If we go by orthodox Marxist analysis we may classify the political stage we are going through as a Kerenskyan period. In Russia when the Czarist regime was overthrown in 1917 February there was a dual power situation. On one side imperial state was trying to survive by reforms, headed by liberal bourgeoisie; on the other hand masses were demanding full freedom and democracy; and they were represented by people’s assemblies formed throughout the country. Kerensky was the most important liberal leader who tried to secure parliamentary democracy by integrating the leadership of the mass assemblies with the reformed state structure.

CZMR

He was a member of the Provisional Committee of the State Duma and was elected vice-chairman of the Petrograd Soviet, and simultaneously became the first Minister of Justice in the newly formed Provisional government. When the Soviet passed a resolution prohibiting its leaders from joining the government, Kerensky delivered a stirring speech at a Soviet meeting. Although the decision was never formalized, he was granted a de facto exemption and continued acting in both capacities. Thus he personally took steps to bridge the gap between the state and the soviet system of workers and peasants assemblies.

Continue reading ‘Current Sri Lankan Political Situation is like the Kerensky Period in Russia After the 1917 Revolution’ »

Maithripala Offers “Conditional Nomination” to Mahinda but Refuses to Announce him as Party’s Prime Minister Candidate

By

Dharisha Bastians

The Sri Lanka Freedom Party, the main constituent in political coalitions that have ruled the country for the better part of 20 years looked poised to suffer a major split yesterday, as hopes for compromise between the Maithripala and Mahinda factions appeared to fade after hectic rounds of talks yesterday.

A great game of wits between feuding factions of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party reached crescendo, when President Maithripala Sirisena firmly refused to name his predecessor as the party’s prime ministerial nominee in a public statement, hours ahead of a major announcement scheduled by Mahinda Rajapaksa in Medamulana.

“Please be informed President Maithripala Sirisena has not accepted or declared former President Mahinda Rajapaksa to be the prime minister candidate of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party,” a statement from the Presidential Media Division released last evening read.

The statement noted that a decision on the appointment of the Prime Minister will be made in consultations with elected MPs in the event the SLFP-led UPFA wins the election.

Continue reading ‘Maithripala Offers “Conditional Nomination” to Mahinda but Refuses to Announce him as Party’s Prime Minister Candidate’ »

If Defeated Ex-President Mahinda Wants to be Prime Minister then Undefeated Ex- President Chandrika will also Contest Polls

Not to be outdone by the antics of her presidential successor, former President Chandrika Kumaratunga threw her hat into the ring yesterday, vowing to contest in the 17 August parliamentary poll as the SLFP prime ministerial candidate.

Private Secretary to Kumaratunga, P. Dissanayake issuing a statement, said the former President would contest from the SLFP or the UPFA from the Gampaha District.

Continue reading ‘If Defeated Ex-President Mahinda Wants to be Prime Minister then Undefeated Ex- President Chandrika will also Contest Polls’ »

Uva Province UNP Chief Minister Harin Fernando Accuses President Sirisena of “Harbouring a Secret Agenda”

A Major strain in the relations between the United National Party (UNP) and President Maithripala Sirisena started to show yesterday when Uva Chief Minister Harin Fernando expressed doubts about the
President’s bona fides and accused him of harbouring ‘secret political agendas’.

Addressing a press briefing held at Sirikotha, Fernando asserted that UNP had obtained information about secret meetings held between President Sirisena and former President Mahinda Rajapaksa.

“President Sirisena and former President Rajapaksa said that once they met in Speaker’s house. However we believe that they have met in another secret place. Therefore the UNP has doubts about President Sirisena’s behaviour. If he did that, he should be ashamed of himself,” Fernando claimed.

Commenting further he alleged that if President Sirisena was trying to promote the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) for the upcoming election, UNP members would be deeply disappointed.

Continue reading ‘Uva Province UNP Chief Minister Harin Fernando Accuses President Sirisena of “Harbouring a Secret Agenda”’ »

If Maithripala wants to Stop Mahinda he will have to give Nomination to “Rogues” in the SLFP

By

Upul Joseph Fernando

When the election results were announced in the 1994 general elections, Chandrika Kumaratunge was in hiding at a secret location. She felt there were threats on her life. Only her confidantes were permitted to visit her. Those confidantes who were with her when the results were announced saw tears in her eyes. “See, having done such a massive campaign and the people’s swing towards us we’ve got only 105 seats in Parliament,” she lamented with deep pain of mind. She only wanted 113 seats to form a strong Parliament. She was then forced to seek the support of the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress (SLMC).

In 2001, Ranil Wickremesinghe spearheaded a massive campaign against Chandrika’s Government countrywide. He managed to grab many stalwarts in Chandrika’s Government that included SLFP General Secretary, S.B. Dissanayake. But when the election results were announced, Ranil was shocked as he obtained only 109 seats though he planned to get 113 seats. He too sought the support of the SLMC to form a government.

Chandrika toppled Ranil’s Government in 2004 with the support of the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) having labelled Ranil as a LTTE (Tiger) supporter. Together with the JVP and Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU), Chandrika launched a patriotic campaign against Ranil. With the sudden demise of Ven. Soma Thera the campaign turned out to be a Sinhala Buddhist campaign. However, Chandrika and the JVP could manage only 105 seats and Chandrika was forced to break up the SLMC to form a government.

In that backdrop of the pattern of elections under the proportionate representation system, how could the UNP dream of obtaining 113 seats in Parliament? Truly, the UNP obtained only 60 seats in 2010. It needs a further 53 to get the required 113 seats.

Continue reading ‘If Maithripala wants to Stop Mahinda he will have to give Nomination to “Rogues” in the SLFP’ »

36 MP’s from SLFP Tell President Sirisena it is Better to Lose with Honour Rather Than Contest along with Mahinda and Win

In the backdrop of frantic negotiations to unite warring factions of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP), 36 MPs loyal to the incumbent President have strongly urged him to refrain from joining forces with his predecessor Mahinda Rajapaksa at the forthcoming parliamentary poll.

Daily FT learns that the group, many of whom hold ministerial portfolios in the now caretaker Government established after the presidential election in January, met President Maithripala Sirisena last Friday (26) to put their case across.

The group included several SLFP members who had crossed over to join the Common Candidate movement with President Sirisena as soon as presidential elections were declared in November last year.

The group of 36 strongly opposed the SLFP allowing the former President to contest on the party’s ticket at the upcoming election, highly placed sources told Daily FT.

Continue reading ‘36 MP’s from SLFP Tell President Sirisena it is Better to Lose with Honour Rather Than Contest along with Mahinda and Win’ »

A House in Jaffna for the Sri Lanka Archive of Contemporary Art, Architecture and Design

by

Smriti Daniel

Vimila Velthas lays out lunch on the table in the courtyard.

She has prepared a traditional Jaffna meal – yam, coloured orange with the heat of chillies and cooked till creamy, a spicy fish and eggplant curry served with fat grains of red rice. Velthas presses her guests to eat more and scoffs gently at the modest size of their servings.

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In the job she has held for the last six months, the 60 year old’s many loves – books, theatre, art, food and people – are combined. Velthas is the librarian at the Sri Lanka Archive of Contemporary Art, Architecture & Design, and also supervises the running of the house in which it is lodged.

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The place, I believe, is like no other in Sri Lanka. This is in part due to the focus of the collection (contemporary art, architecture and design) and in part due to the space it has carved out for critical discourse in a country recovering from 30 years of war.
Its location alone marks it out – there are few art galleries in the northern city of Jaffna. Those who want to peruse or purchase artwork usually travel to the southern capital Colombo, eight hours away by train.
Continue reading ‘A House in Jaffna for the Sri Lanka Archive of Contemporary Art, Architecture and Design’ »

GL Peiris Makes Insinuations Against Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe and Gets Lambasted by Central Bank Governor Arjuna Mahendran.

By

Shamindra Ferdinando

The Opposition yesterday alleged that the Governor of the Central Bank Arjuna Mahendran had received instructions from Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe as regards change of established procedures in the run-up to the controversial bond issue and such interventions were contrary to existing regulations.

Prof. Peiris told The Island that CB Governor himself had admitted premier Wickremesinghe’s intervention when he appeared before the special parliamentary committee tasked to investigate the controversial bond issue. The former External Affairs Minister alleged that significant changes had been made in the established procedures in contravention of monetary regulations. He said that the Governor couldn’t have received instructions or advise as regards the bond issue, though the PM as the line minister in charge of CB had the authority to give directives pertaining to specific matters.

Prof. Peiris said PM Wickremesinghe had pushed for the dissolution of parliament to thwart release of parliamentary investigation report.

Continue reading ‘GL Peiris Makes Insinuations Against Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe and Gets Lambasted by Central Bank Governor Arjuna Mahendran.’ »

President Sirisena can Uphold or Betray Trust Placed in him by Us With Decision on Mahinda Rajapaksa – Arjuna Ranatunga

By
Dharisha Bastians

President Maithripala Sirisena is expected to make a crucial decision today as to whether he will offer his predecessor Mahinda Rajapaksa a slot on the SLFP ticket, and allow his party to contest with other constituent parties in the former ruling alliance that have been staunch critics of his six-month-old administration.

The SLFP Committee of Six, tasked with uniting the two warring factions of the SLFP, submitted its report to President Sirisena yesterday with their observations and recommendations.

President Sirisena also met with leftist parties and several other groups that made representations to him on the issue.

The Committee of Six was keen to get a compromise on a national list seat or elder statesman position for the former President in the absence of a nomination on the SLFP list, Daily FT learns.

Continue reading ‘President Sirisena can Uphold or Betray Trust Placed in him by Us With Decision on Mahinda Rajapaksa – Arjuna Ranatunga’ »

If Mahinda Rajapaksa Becomes Prime Minister then he is only “One Gunshot”away from Becoming President Again

By

Thisuri Wanniarachchi

I first met President Rajapaksa when I was 11 years old. I had won a national short story competition and the Ministry of Cultural Affairs had taken me and several other winners to Temple Trees to see the President. He was a rare and skilled politician. He knew the game and he played it very well. He had a clever way of making people feel comfortable around him. He patted our heads spoke to us for a long time; asked us about school and home. We were infatuated. He had us hooked.

The other kids and I would go home and tell our friends and family what a great man he was. He was simple, loving, almost god-like. “He’s like a father, not a President,” the kid from Mahiyangana who was the winner of the Sinhala short story category said on our way out. Little did we know, that was all politics. Politics was all PR and propaganda; and Rajapaksa knew this very well.

I met him again when I was sixteen, when I won the State Award for the Best Novel of the year. By then I had read many books on democracy and governance, and I was starting to realize what Rajapaksa was up to. He was playing us. He was satisfying his electorates in every way he could, and ignoring the rest of his duties. By 2012 at least 30% of the people had noticed this, with the way he treated General Fonseka and his supporters, and by 2013 40% of the people were talking about the growing nepotism.

By 2014, he had resorted to creating internal conflict within religious communities to distract the people from the economic menace that the country was in due to mishandling of state resources; bad move on his part, and his opposition grew to 50-55%. His propaganda was no longer effective and come 2015 elections, he is defeated.

Continue reading ‘If Mahinda Rajapaksa Becomes Prime Minister then he is only “One Gunshot”away from Becoming President Again’ »

Will President Sirisena Nominate Mahinda Rajapaksa as the SLFP Prime Ministerial Candidate?

By

Dharisha Bastians

Forty-eight hours after President Maithripala Sirisena dissolved Parliament paving the way for fresh elections, the question of whether he will grant his predecessor a nomination continues to dominate in political circles.

The Sri Lanka Freedom Party chaired by President Sirisena will have swift decisions to make ahead of a 13 July deadline for nominations, regarding a spot for former President Mahinda Rajapaksa in the party’s nominations list.

Former Transport Minister and Rajapaksa loyalist Kumara Welgama insisted yesterday that President Rajapaksa would definitely contest the 17 August Parliamentary election.

He said a decision would be made by Tuesday as to which party the former President would be contesting under.

Continue reading ‘Will President Sirisena Nominate Mahinda Rajapaksa as the SLFP Prime Ministerial Candidate?’ »

Reflecting on Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga and her Politics of Peace

By Harim Peiris

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In 1994, Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga, at the age of 49 years, was elected the youngest and first ever female President of Sri Lanka. Twenty one years later, in June 2015, as she celebrates her 70th birthday, it is appropriate to look back at the legacy of this amazing lady, who has so significantly impacted and helped shape the contemporary history of our nation.

Epilogue

The epilogue to the politics of President CBK, is surely her single-handed leadership in crafting the politics and creating the rainbow coalition of the National Democratic Front, which defeated her successor and one time Prime Minister, Mahinda Rajapaksa, in his bid for an unprecedented third term, in January 2015.

As President Rajapaksa changed the Constitution via the 18th Amendment to run for unlimited terms of office and prepared to call early elections on the advice of his astrologers, diviners and magicians, CBK realised that defeating Rajapaksa’s dynastic and dictatorial political project required a divided government and a unified Opposition. Both seemed impossible at that time. Mahinda Rajapaksa was firmly entrenched with an iron grip on power and the political Opposition deeply divided, both within the UNP and amongst the other smaller opposition political parties. It was the unique political trust that all anti Rajapaksa forces reposed in CBK, from the factions of the UNP, to the JVP, including General Fonseka, the SLMC and the TNA, which enabled the winning formulae of the Common Candidate, President Maithripala Sirisena. Her political credibility two decades after leaving office, was epic in proportion and history changing in impact.

Continue reading ‘Reflecting on Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga and her Politics of Peace’ »

Gotabaya Rajapaksa Rejuvenated Colombo by Clearing City of Street Vendors


By

Ranga Jayasuriya

That the current administration is sacrificing the economic future of the country for party political considerations is not just an allegation; it is increasingly becoming a fact.

There is enough evidence to this effect in the suspended mega development projects and their adverse economic fallout, as evident in the downgrading of this year’s economic growth forecasts (From 8 per cent to 6.9 per cent).

Given this context, one would not have expected the government to give more ammunition to its critics and, worse still, to undo one of the most visible achievements of the former regime: ban on pavement hawking.

Though Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s move to ban street vendors would appear a trivial matter for an uninitiated, it was a decision taken at an immense political cost. It was a decision that none of the predecessors of Mahinda Rajapaksa had the guts to take, given its potential adverse political fallout. It was also a decision that signified a long-term vision for the city and a political will to work decisively to achieve that end.

However, UNP Mayor of Colombo A.J.M Muzammil, who last week allowed pavement hawkers back on city streets, in a decision which he himself has admitted was taken due to ‘political considerations’, has now threatened to reverse that progress.

Continue reading ‘Gotabaya Rajapaksa Rejuvenated Colombo by Clearing City of Street Vendors’ »

Absence of Vanity is one of the Greatest Attributes of Chandrika Kumaratunga

By Prof Carlo Fonseka, Chairman, Wijaya Kumaratunga Memorial Hospital, Seeduwa

According to the Christian Prayer Book, “the days of our age are three score years and ten” but on the 29th of June 2015, President Chandrika Kumaratunga transcends that limit with a bang. Physically, she is as fit as a fiddle. And her mind is like a razor’s edge. Upanishadic wisdom is that “the sharp edge of the razor is difficult to pass over”. So it has been proved in President Kumaratunga’s mind.

Pedigree

By birth, Chandrika, daughter of SWRD and Sirimavo Bandaranaike, both Prime Ministers of the country, inherited the best known Sinhala family name the world over. In 1962, Prime Minister Sirimavo Bandaranaike, a leading light in the Non-Aligned Movement, made a signal contribution to the settlement of a Sino-Indian border conflict. World renowned philosopher Bertrand Russell also intervened in the conflict by addressing letters directly to Mr Chou-En-Lai and Mr Jawaharlal Nehru.

In Russell’s book Unarmed Victory (a Penguin Special, published in 1963), he says that “…the efforts of the conference in Colombo and Mrs Bandaranaike’s mission to both the Indian and Chinese governments may soften the present impasse…” (page 102). To my knowledge, Mrs SB is the only leader of our country, if not the only Sinhalese, that Bertrand Russell has referred to by name, in his vast body of writings on all matters under the sun. This makes Bandaranaike the globally best known Sinhala family name.

In 1978, on marrying the film idol and charismatic politician Wijaya Kumaratunga, when CB chose to change her illustrious and famous family name for Kumaratunga, she demonstrated that absence of vanity is one of her attributes. I recall that Nelson Mandela believed that “absence of vanity” is an important attribute of a great politician.

Continue reading ‘Absence of Vanity is one of the Greatest Attributes of Chandrika Kumaratunga’ »

UNP Rejects COPE Report Finding Central Bank Governor Arjuna Mahendran “Guilty” as Biased and Seriously Flawed

By Shamindra Ferdinando

Alleging that Chairman of Committee on Public Enterprises (COPE) D. E. W. Gunasekera, had unfairly used unsubstantiated information available to a Special Parliamentary Investigation Committee that probed alleged insider trading and favouritism in a recent mega treasury bond issue to undermine the UNP, Deputy Justice Minister Sujeewa Senasinghe insisted the report couldn’t be presented in Parliament for want of a unanimous agreement.

Colombo District MP Senasinghe, who represented the UNP in the 13-member committee, said that he had strongly objected to the tabling of the report due to serious flaws therein.

Polls Chief Mahinda Deshapriya yesterday said that those who held portfolios retained them in spite of the dissolution of Parliament.

Continue reading ‘UNP Rejects COPE Report Finding Central Bank Governor Arjuna Mahendran “Guilty” as Biased and Seriously Flawed’ »

“The Ten Years I Worked with President Chandrika Kumaratunga was an Enjoyable Period”.

By

Chandra Wickramasinghe

(Former Prime Minister and President Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga who was born on June 29th 2015 Celebrates her 70th Birthday today)

My very first encounter with President Chandrika Kumaratunga, (which was somewhat fortuitous) goes back to the early 1970s when she was functioning as Additional Director, Youth Employment.

Fresh from her studies at Science Po at Sorbonne, her mother who was the Prime Minister at the time, may have thought it best to initially put her daughter through her paces in the public service by getting her to work with a veteran administrator like K.H.J.Wijeyadasa who was functioning during this period as Land Reform Commission chairman.

I happened to drop in to see my good friend Wije and could not help noticing this vivacious young lady occupying a table in a corner of his room.

While chatting with me Wije, asked me slyly, whether I knew who the nice looking lady was. I said that although I had not met her before, I could guess who she was.

I enquired from Wije whether it caused him any embarrassment to have the Prime Minister’s daughter sitting and working in a corner of his room. While replying in the negative,Wije said that she never attempted to throw her weight around but was on the other hand shy and self –effacing in her demeanour.

Wije said she was a real busy body, always on the move visiting the numerous youth camps islandwide. He said she leaves early in the morning and returns late in the evening looking quite tired and worn out. She goes home and gets her sleep and is off again, like a prayer, the next morning on her islandwide circuits.

Wije asked me whether I had noticed the out sized satchel which was on her table. It was of course there, for all to see. He said it was a rather cavernous bag where she put all her knick-knacks and paraphernalia and had it slung on her shoulder whenever she went out. I looked at her closely and thought that she looked demure and composed, answering exactly to Wije’s description of her.

Wije then asked me whether he should introduce me to her, but before he could get up, I stood up and left receiving from her a dazzling smile,while passing her table. My first impressions of her could not have therefore, possibly been anything other than, most favourable!

Continue reading ‘“The Ten Years I Worked with President Chandrika Kumaratunga was an Enjoyable Period”.’ »

“Secret” Meeting Between Maithripala and Mahinda Took Place at the Official Residence of the President on Wijerama Mawatte

The latest Sirisena-Rajapaksa talks are the outcome of a committee of six named at a meeting of SLFP parliamentarians, provincial councillors and local councillors on June 16. They were tasked to bring about peace within the party. The committee urged Sirisena to take Rajapaksa on board. Instead Sirisena, as revealed in these columns last week, offered a “Sambhavaneeya Thanathurak” or a distinguished position.

The committee conveyed this to Rajapaksa on Wednesday, but the former President rejected the offer. He declared that it was a move to take him away from the people. The task of conveying Rajapaksa’s response to Sirisena fell on the Chairman of the Committee, Ratnapura District parliamentarian John Seneviratne. He continued the dialogue with Sirisena. It had culminated on the need for another meeting.

This meeting on Thursday night, it turned out, was to coincide with another event. Western Province Chief Minister Prasanna Ranatunga was playing host at a working dinner to all UPFA MPs with the exception of those holding portfolios in the Government. That was at his Green Path official residence. The event had earlier been planned at Water’s Edge in Battaramula. When the management learnt Rajapaksa was going to address an event at the venue, it turned down the booking.

This is the same way those in the Rajapaksa administration did when they were in power. Eighty seven UPFA parliamentarians turned up. Rajapaksa, who made a brief speech, noted that he was used to winning and losing elections. President Sirisena had sought the leadership of the SLFP and he had readily heeded the request.

Continue reading ‘“Secret” Meeting Between Maithripala and Mahinda Took Place at the Official Residence of the President on Wijerama Mawatte’ »

Power Moves by Political Parties as Country Gets Ready for Another Parliamentary Election

By

Rasika Jayakody

It was on Friday afternoon that President Maithripala Sirisena signed the much awaited gazette notification with regard to dissolution of Parliament, ending weeks of speculation. By order of the President, the gazette was issued by Secretary to the President, P.B. Abeykoon,. Shortly after signing, the gazette was sent to the Government Printer for immediate issuance.

The gazette notification, however, was unusual for one reason. In addition to dissolution of Parliament, it also referred to the period of nomination, the exact date of the Parliamentary election and the date to convene the new Parliament. The gazette said,

“a) Dissolve Parliament, with effect from midnight today and summon the new Parliament to meet on the first day of September, two thousand and fifteen.

b) Fix the seventeenth day of August, two thousand and fifteen as the date for the election of Members of Parliament:

c) Specify the period beginning from the sixth day of July two thousand and fifteen and ending at twelve noon on the thirteenth day of July two thousand fifteen as the nomination period during which nomination papers shall be received by the returning officers”

While the United National Party was eagerly waiting for the dissolution of Parliament, the SLFP group supporting President Maithripala Sirisena and the Jathika Hela Urumaya attempted their best to delay it, citing the importance of passing the 20th Amendment. Lengthy negotiations took place between President Maithripala Sirisena and his non-UNP supporters such as Rajitha Senaratne and Patali Champika Ranawaka on dissolution and the passage of the 20th Amendment in Parliament.

Continue reading ‘Power Moves by Political Parties as Country Gets Ready for Another Parliamentary Election’ »

Dissolution of Parliament at this time is Third Greatest Betrayal by Maithripala Sirisena.

By

C.A.Chandraprema

The long awaited dissolution of parliament has taken place at last. After the executive presidency was established, parliamentary elections generally lost their importance and became the legislative extension of the presidential election. Since 1978, it was always the presidential election that would determine which side has won and would be calling the shots. An exception to this was the parliamentary election of August 1994 which ended the 17 year rule of the UNP. That was the only occasion in which a parliamentary election determined which way the cookie would crumble. However, even the August 1994 parliamentary election was only a stepping stone to the presidency a couple of months later and CBK ruled the country as president.

The 2001 December parliamentary election also saw political power changing hands but, unlike in 1994, the change of government of December 2001 did not translate into a stable UNP government. Even though the UNP did form a government in December 2001, they lost the parliamentary election of April 2004. So what we had was a 30-month blip in the two decade long rule of the PA and UPFA. Thus we may say that with the single exception of 1994, a parliamentary election has never resulted in a decisive shift of power from one party to another after the executive residency was installed. The parliamentary election that has now been announced however may well be the most important parliamentary election since 1977. Even though the executive presidency has not been abolished, for the first time since 1978, the prime minister has a defined role in the constitution.

According to the 19th Amendment, the cabinet of ministers will be charged with the direction and control of the government. When deciding on the subjects to be assigned to the various ministers, the president may, if he deems it necessary, consult the prime minister. Once the ministries have been decided on, the president will have to appoint parliamentarians to those ministries on the advice of the prime minister. The word used here is ‘shall’ which denotes a mandatory requirement. The president may at anytime change the assignment of functions to ministers (which is to say that he can reshuffle the cabinet that he appoints on the advice of the prime minister.) These provisions may not amount to much, but earlier, the prime minister did not have any role at all. And in the event that the president and prime minister are from different political parties, these provisions will be very useful to the party that holds parliamentary power.

What makes this election the most important parliamentary election since 1977 is that whoever gets a majority in parliament this time will rule the country. Maithripala Sirisena was not elected by the people as a president to rule the country. He was supposed to be the president who ends the executive presidency and hands over power to the prime minister and cabinet and then steps down. After being elected into power, however he changed his mind and tried to consolidate himself by taking over the SLFP (which was offered unsolicited to him by MR and the party hierarchy) but that attempt failed miserably. Thus we have a president who is nominally the head of the SLFP but who does not have the allegiance of his party. In fact the only visible opposition to the government formed by Sirisena comes from within the party which he is supposed to be leading. It is this clearly visible but still unnamed opposition force and the UNP led coalition that will be battling it out for supremacy in parliament.

Continue reading ‘Dissolution of Parliament at this time is Third Greatest Betrayal by Maithripala Sirisena.’ »

Large Number of SLFP Parliamentarians Likely to Join Mahinda Rajapaksa Camp After Susil Premajayantha Crosses Over

by Uditha Kumarasinghe

UPFA General Secretary Susil Premajayantha is expected to join the pro -Rajapaksa group tomorrow, the Sunday Observer reliably learns. Party insiders worry that this expected move by a party stalwart could precipitate a wholesale shift by a number of parliamentarians to the Rajapaksa camp thereby creating a major split in the party.

The UPFA General Secretary, who left the country before the dissolution of Parliament, is presently in the US. Premajayantha is expected to return to the country tomorrow. Immediately after his return, Premajayantha is expected to align himself with the campaign supporting former President Rajapaksa.

This development comes as the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) grapples with the role it could give to former strongman Mahinda Rajapaksa for upcoming general elections. The party leadership is divided whether to offer nominations to Rajapaksa to contest the forthcoming parliamentary. In doing so, the party also must decide whether or not to recognize him as the party’s Prime Ministerial candidate, party senior vice president W.D.J. Seneviratne told the Sunday Observer.

Continue reading ‘Large Number of SLFP Parliamentarians Likely to Join Mahinda Rajapaksa Camp After Susil Premajayantha Crosses Over’ »

“Disgraceful” 14th Parliament of Sri Lanka is Dissolved Unlamented and Unsung


By

Kishali Pinto Jayawardene

As agonizing suspense finally ends with the dissolving of the 14th Parliament of Sri Lanka, unlamented and unsung as well it ought to be, a palpable sigh of relief palpitates through the land.


Hypocrisy at its height

This was a House that had far outlived its time, even as school children nervously balked from visiting its galleries with unprecedentedly crude verbiage echoing in its chambers. This was moreover an assembly where a majority stamped its infamy by insulting a sitting Chief Justice in thinly veiled filth during a farcical impeachment process.

Heinously, this Parliament willingly oversaw its own decline with its groveling subservience to the Rajapaksa Presidency. Financial oversight and legislative leadership was thrown to the wayside. Instead, we had the 18th Amendment, manifestly Sri Lanka’s most obscene post-independence constitutional amendment with a compliant Court obediently approving it.

This was under the direction of the very judge who later, as that wrongly impeached Chief Justice, had to face the ugliness which surfaces when judges play games of political chance. Now we endure an erstwhile Professor of Law turned Minister turned agile political opportunist who once applauded that process preaching on the Rule of Law from the opposition benches.

This is hypocrisy at its height, equaled only by the antics of ‘yahapalanaya’ advocates who have unflinchingly profited in the post January 2015 government, regardless of compromising the struggle itself. We saw this sorry spectacle in 1994 when the members of the democracy movement who swept Chandrika Kumaratunga into power were co-opted into office thus losing their credibility and (more importantly) leaving a dangerous vacuum when the Kumaratunga Presidency lost its way.


Caught like a nut between two crackers

But this is to digress. All in all, very few Sri Lankans would be sorry to see the end of this particular legislative assembly. Yet what will its successor be like? The possibilities are dolorous. From the South comes the Rajapaksa force once again, capitalizing on the mistakes made by its opponents, fiercely embittered at its humiliation and with little genuine contrition for the grievous harm that it has done to the country. Instead, there is only determination to take back power by hook or by crook, even if it means stirring up racial and communal hatreds, the hallmarks of that Presidency.

On the other side, there are the voluble peacocks of the current government, basking in the reflected glory of the Sirisena win. Caught like the proverbial nut between these two crackers, (the apposite Sinhala idiom not lending itself very well to translation), the majority electorate need to have little doubt about its option of choice, warts and all. Certainly to bring back the Rajapaksas so soon after their defeat and with so much yet undone would be the makings of a disaster, let us be clear about that.

Correcting the post January 2015 missteps

But there will not be a repetition of that same rapturous enthusiasm which captured the national mood in the Presidential election where the son of a Polonnaruwa farmer, ridiculed as being unremarkable and mediocre, unseated the Medamulana family cabal gone mad with power.

There was a clean edge to that opposition campaign and a quiet resolve about the challenger which was impressive precisely because it was understated and in complete contrast to the strutting arrogance of the then incumbent. That gloss has worn off, not so much in a personal sense as the new President has tripped over himself only infrequently though this criticism may become more unforgiving as time lapses. Yet the same cannot be said about the immediate missteps of the partner United National Party Government and the tinsel performances of its once strident good governance voices.

The latest frivolity is the ad hoc appointing of committees to probe irregularities of the previous regimes. Thus must be distinguished from the appointment of Commissions of Inquiry under a particular law with specific guarantees of fairness in inquiry. These are not idle safeguards. For example, disappearances commissions of the 1990s referred the names of those implicated under confidential cover to the government for further investigation without subjecting them to media trials. That nothing happened thereafter spoke to the absence of political will, not to the absence of legal legitimacy of those bodies.

A small measure of justice

This week, two legal victories are celebrated. First is the sentencing of the murderers of Gerald Perera, an unassuming cook at the Colombo Dockyard who was arrested by the police after being mistaken for a known thief and subjected to torture. Angered thereafter by a successful legal battle in the Supreme Court, which had not yet undergone the terrible convulsions that would grip it in later years, the perpetrators then killed him days before he was due to give evidence at the High Court trial under the Anti-Torture Act. This columnist was personally involved with the legal struggle to bring Gerald Perera’s murderers to account and must acknowledge the jubilation that arises at this outcome.

Second was the conviction and death sentence given to a Sinhala soldier for the brutal killing of Tamil civilians in Mirusovil fifteen years ago. In both instances, while the result is a small measure of justice, the process is testimony of the frailty of our Rule of Law systems. This is a question that will be dealt with in more detail later in these column spaces, given its fundamental importance.

For now, it needs to be said that the proper working of the investigative, the prosecutorial and the judicial agencies should have been the first task of the new government. Failure to do this has remained its most spectacular lapse. For instance, what has happened to the findings of the investigation by the Criminal Investigation Department into that alleged constitutional coup in January 2015? We are told that this has been referred to the Department of the Attorney General but the silence on the matter is deafening.

Undoubtedly these are questions that will be exploited to the full in the coming election campaign even as the unprepossessing circus of panting hopefuls impatiently waiting for their chance in the political sun comes to town again.


Courtesy:Sunday Times

COPE Parliamentary Committee Finds CB Governor Arjuna Mahendran “Guilty”of Direct Intervention on Behalf of Son-in – Law Aloysius in Treasury Bond Issue

by Shamindra Ferdinando

A Special Parliamentary Investigation Committee that probed the alleged insider trading and favoritism in a recent mega treasury bond issue has established Central Bank Governor Arjuna Mahendran’s direct intervention on behalf of his son-in-law Arjun Aloysius owned Perpetual Treasuries, sources familiar with the COPE process said yesterday.

The 13-member Committee named by Speaker Chamal Rajapaksa has obtained direct, documentary as well as circumstantial evidence to prove Mahendran’s role in the flawed process. The entire investigation took place in the presence of the Auditor General to ensure legitimacy to the process at the highest level these sources said.

The Auditor General is expected to prepare his own report on the parliamentary investigation.

The subject of the probe was a 30-year bond auction for Rs.1 billion on February 27. The CB received 36 offers amounting to Rs. 20 billion, it has been found. This enabled the Central Bank Governor to accept Rs. 10 billion. Earlier CB officials had given an indicative rate that interest rates of 9.5 per cent would be taken into consideration with such pre-auction advice being the usual practice.

Continue reading ‘COPE Parliamentary Committee Finds CB Governor Arjuna Mahendran “Guilty”of Direct Intervention on Behalf of Son-in – Law Aloysius in Treasury Bond Issue’ »

Central Bank Governor Arjuna Mahendran Reveals the Art of “Treasury Bondage”

by Maheen Senanayake

Central Bank Governor Arjuna Mahendran Friday detailed the mechanics of artificial price depression and how bonds, private placements and artificial interest rate manipulation alleging that these are all linked to the previous government’s efforts at economic control.

The Governor, who has been accused by the opposition of having made a bad call with respect to a Treasury Bond auction in February said, ” There are two allegations – one that I unnecessarily raised Rs. 10 bn. Instead of the advertised Rs. 1 bn. on February 27 as a result of which I purportedly raised interest rates in the country resulting in a loss to the government. The second is that my son-in-law was given priority.”

Mahendran insisted that his son-in-law had resigned from his company even though he retained a shareholder position when Mahendran took up office as Central Bank Governor and said that Arjun Aloysius (the son-in-law) was not involved in operations of the company.

Continue reading ‘Central Bank Governor Arjuna Mahendran Reveals the Art of “Treasury Bondage”’ »

European Union to send Election Observation Mission to Sri Lanka after ten years


By Lasanda Kurukulasuriya

The European Union has indicated it is keen to send an Election Observation Mission to monitor the August 17 parliamentary election. Ambassador and Head of the Delegation of the European Union to Sri Lanka David Daly met Elections Commissioner Mahinda Deshapriya at the Elections Secretariat in Rajagiriya for discussions in this regard on Saturday (27). The Extraordinary Gazette notification announcing the dissolution of parliament and the date of the 2015 parliamentary election was released on Friday (26).

The EU team will be deployed at the EU’s own expense according to informed sources. At a forum with election authorities in April Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera had expressed interest in inviting the EU to send an election observation team for the upcoming election, it is learnt. The international election observers invited by the Elections Commissioner are, the Forum of Election Management Bodies of South Asia (FEMBOSA), Association of Asian Election Authorities (AAEA) and the Commonwealth’s election monitoring team. These are the same international groups that monitored the January 8th presidential election. The EU team however will monitor the August election at its own cost and submit a report, sources said.

Continue reading ‘European Union to send Election Observation Mission to Sri Lanka after ten years’ »

Parliament Dissolved;Elections on Aug 17;Nominations – July 6-15;New Parliament Meets on Sep 1


By

Dharisha Bastians

Ending months of uncertainty and political deadlock, President Maithripala Sirisena issued a proclamation dissolving Parliament last night, paving the way for fresh elections that will be a tightly-fought contest between his SLFP and the minority Government led by the UNP.

The life of Sri Lanka’s 14th Parliament came to an abrupt end at midnight yesterday, after a term of five years and two months, with the presidential proclamation declaring snap elections on 17 August reaching the Government Printer last evening.

According to the Gazette Notification effective from midnight, nominations for the 2015 Parliamentary poll will be held from 6-15 July. The new Parliament will convene on 1 September, fulfilling a pledge made by President Sirisena to media personnel and international partners that a new Government would be installed by September this year.

The dissolution comes two months after President Sirisena’s self-imposed deadline based on his presidential election manifesto which expired on 23 April. His 100-day Government, ushered in after the 8 January election in which he defeated President Mahinda Rajapaksa, was originally established to push through key constitutional reforms to curb presidential powers and grant the public an economic relief package. Its term was to have ended once the crucial 19th Amendment was enacted by the House.

Continue reading ‘Parliament Dissolved;Elections on Aug 17;Nominations – July 6-15;New Parliament Meets on Sep 1’ »

President Maithripala Sirisena and Ex-President Mahinda Rajapaksa Hold Secret Meeting

By

Dharisha Bastians

In a bid to unite warring factions of the SLFP ahead of elections, President Maithripala Sirisena met with his predecessor Mahinda Rajapaksa late Thursday, although the President’s office denied the meeting.

Authoritative sources told Daily FT that the pair met at President Sirisena’s residence at Wijerama Mawatha, Colombo 07 on Thursday night.

The move is aimed at uniting the Mahinda and Maithripala factions of the SLFP, to ensure the UNP does not gain an electoral advantage from the split, the sources said.

Continue reading ‘President Maithripala Sirisena and Ex-President Mahinda Rajapaksa Hold Secret Meeting’ »

Tamil Progressive Alliance and the Tamils Living Outside the North-East

By D.B.S.Jeyaraj

An event of great significance occurred within the sphere of minority community politics in Sri Lanka on June 3rd 2015. Three political parties representing sections of the Tamil people living outside the Tamil dominated Northern province and Tamil majority Eastern Province announced at a media conference held at the Taj Samudra Hotel in Colombo that they had forged a new configuration called the Tamil Progressive Alliance(TPA).The new alliance comprises the Democratic Peoples Front (DPF)National Union of Workers(NUW) and Up Country Peoples Front(UCPF)led by Mano Ganesan, Palany Thigambaram and Velusamy Radhakrishnan respectively. The TPA’s name in Tamil is “Tamil Mutpoakku Kootani”.

pic via: facebook.com/mano.ganesan.3

pic via: facebook.com/mano.ganesan.3

DPF leader Manoharan Ganesan known popularly as Mano Ganesan will function as the leader of the TPA.Palany Thigambaram of NUW and Velusamy Radhakrishnan of UCPF will be the joint deputy leaders of the new alliance.A.Lawrence , the UPFA Secretary has been appointed as the General Secretary of the TPA. A special advisory committee will be set up to aid the new alliance. A memorandum of understanding was also signed by the Ganesan-Thigambaram – Radhakrishnan triumvirate.
Continue reading ‘Tamil Progressive Alliance and the Tamils Living Outside the North-East’ »

President Sirisena Ready to Ditch UNP and Break his Election Pledges to Prevent Return of Mahinda Rajapaksa


By

Dharisha Bastians

After a disastrous meeting at the Parliamentary Complex in early May, President Maithripala Sirisena and his predecessor Mahinda Rajapaksa had a chance encounter last week, under less official, slightly pleasanter circumstances.

High-profile Kahawatte Gem Merchant W. Vinil invited both politicians to sign as witnesses when his daughter was married at a lavish ceremony at the Cinnamon Grand Hotel in Colombo last Thursday (18).

Both men arrived in their customary national suit, but the ex-President wore a cream-coloured silk version and completed his outfit with emerald studded cuff-links and his signature red shawl. President Sirisena, who arrived a few minutes after his predecessor, wore his regular white tunic and sarong with simple slippers, looking as ordinary and inconspicuous as ever.

But not even the happy occasion and chance social meeting could break the ice between the incumbent and his predecessor, as political tensions continue to simmer six months after Sirisena ousted the Rajapaksa administration in a major election upset.

The two leaders barely acknowledged each other. Video of the registration ceremony showed them sitting across each other and avoiding eye contact. President Rajapaksa was twirling his golden talisman anxiously and repeatedly in his hand. More popularly known as the ex-President’s ‘vashee bole’, the ritual object Mahinda Rajapaksa is always pictured grasping is a vajra, weapon of the God Indra in Hindu mythology, said to symbolise indestructibility and irresistible force.

Soon after the signing ceremony, both politicians posed for a quick picture with the couple and their families at the hotel, before President Sirisena rushed off since he had a second wedding to sign at 20 minutes later. President Rajapaksa mingled for about 40 minutes, posed for selfies with several eager supporters before leaving the function.

Continue reading ‘President Sirisena Ready to Ditch UNP and Break his Election Pledges to Prevent Return of Mahinda Rajapaksa’ »

US Report About LTTE Global Network is Cause for Concern for both Sri Lanka and India.

By

N. Sathiya Moorthy

The American acknowledgement and confirmation of the continued existence of LTTE’s global network of sympathisers and finances should be a cause for concern as much for neighbouring India as much for Sri Lanka. In ways, it should also be a source of concern and embarrassment for Western nations, including the US.

“The LTTE used its international contacts and the large Tamil diaspora in North America, Europe, and Asia to procure weapons, communications, funding, and other needed supplies,” the 2014 annual report of the US State Department’s Counter-terrorism Bureau said. Whoever rules from Colombo – and administers Jaffna – and whatever the domestic political conditions and electoral compulsions, Sri Lanka cannot be silent after the US has referred to the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) procuring weapons.

If ‘2+2’ can only be ‘4’, then weapons procurment indicates the continued existence of the LTTE despite the hopes and assurances to the contrary, both within and outside Sri Lanka. The US report itself says in plain lanugage that the LTTE is still around. What Sri Lanka is going to do about it, and how the world is going to help Sri Lanka in the matter is however a matter of distress and dispute at the same time.

Continue reading ‘US Report About LTTE Global Network is Cause for Concern for both Sri Lanka and India.’ »

Mangala Samaraweera is Wrong in Embracing the Anti-Sri Lankan Element of the Tamil Diaspora.

BY DR. DAYAN JAYATILLEKA

As usual Sri Lanka’s cosmopolitan liberals have it wrong and that includes its most prominent personality, Minister of External affairs Mangala Samaraweera. His embrace of the Diaspora is wrong, not because the Diaspora is diabolical but because Mr. Samaraweera’s embrace is indiscriminate.

Sri Lanka must welcome its Diaspora or Diasporas (plural). This is true of us as a country as well as of the Government of Sri Lanka. But the Diaspora is not a homogenous entity. I do not mean that the Sinhala Diaspora is good and the Tamil one is bad. What I do mean is that there are extremists in both the Tamil and Sinhala Diasporas, just as there are moderates. The Government and the country should open its doors and roll out the red carpet for the moderate, enlightened currents of both Tamil and Sinhala Diasporas.

The Government should go beyond that and strive to promote a truly Sri Lankan, i.e. Tamil and Sinhala Diaspora, by building bridges between the moderates, the progressives, of both sides. (Indeed this is the policy I practiced with some success when I represented Sri Lanka in France.) Instead, what Mr. Samarawera has done is to embrace the anti-Sri Lankan element of the Tamil Diaspora.

Continue reading ‘Mangala Samaraweera is Wrong in Embracing the Anti-Sri Lankan Element of the Tamil Diaspora.’ »

JVP Today is like the Wagging Tail of the UNP Dog and the Echo of Ranil’s Voice

By

Malinda Seneviratne

First there was the Left. It was still ‘Left’ even though those bunched at that end of the political spectrum disagreed vehemently and took turns at calling each other Running Dogs of Imperialism and other lovely names. Then came the JVP.

Originally the product of a split, the JVP dis/relocated itself in ideological and methodological ways that made common lumping tough. Sure, they too were called bad names from others who considered themselves ‘Left’ but the JVP was also called ‘CIA agents’ and their politics described as ‘an infantile disorder’.

One thing is agreed upon by all. The JVP was different. It was so different than an adjective was required to differentiate the party from the Communist Party or rather ‘parties,’ the LSSP and the other claimants to be the Sri Lankan branch of the ‘4th International’. That’s how we got the broad separation ‘Old’ and ‘New’. The JVP was ‘New’. The rest were ‘Old’. In time the ‘new’ was dropped, but the ‘old’ remained. The JVP, since it was never categories with those other left parties was not considered part of the ‘Old Left’. So there was the Old Left and there was the JVP.

Continue reading ‘JVP Today is like the Wagging Tail of the UNP Dog and the Echo of Ranil’s Voice’ »

Spectacular display of dispersing clouds at Sundown

Colours of and patterns of nature are never the same and they don’t repeat.

Such a spectacular sundown display of dispersing golden clouds after a torrential downpour amidst the steamy evening rush hours of Tuesday June 23rd, trended the timelines of media spaces for several hours after.

West Windsor, NJ-June 23, 2015

West Windsor, NJ-June 23, 2015

The sky with golden clouds  and the earth down below felt like in dome of orange flood lights

The sky with golden clouds and the earth down below felt like inside a dome filled with orange flood lights

Pictures were taken along Route 1 in West Windsor, New Jersey. (Pics: K. Thirukumaran)

“Sending Former President Mahinda Rajapaksa Home was a Great Mistake”-Rauff Hakeem Drops Bombshell in Parliament

By

Sandasen Marasinghe, Irangika Range and Disna Mudalige

Urban Development Minister Rauff Hakeem yesterday said in Parliament that there was a dictatorship of a small group within the Cabinet of Ministers that prevails against minor and minority parties.

Participating in a debate on electoral reforms taken at the time of adjournment of the House, the Minister said the country was being run by a ‘Kitchen Cabinet’ of close associates of the President.
The small group is led by a minister aspiring to become the President of this country.

“That group does not permit our voice in the Cabinet. Despite many wrong doings in the Mahinda Rajapaksa regime, such heavy handedness of individual ministers did not prevail in the Cabinet. The former President permitted us to express our opinions. Today the situation has changed,” he said.

Continue reading ‘“Sending Former President Mahinda Rajapaksa Home was a Great Mistake”-Rauff Hakeem Drops Bombshell in Parliament’ »

Maithripala Sends Message Through JHU That he is Ready to “Save” Gotabhaya and Mahinda from Corruption and War Crimes Charges IF…………….


By
Upul Joseph Fernando

Like how the activities of the diplomatic missions of the West during the Sri Lanka presidential election on 8 January burgeoned, at the presidential elections in the Maldives in 2008, the activities of the diplomatic missions here in charge of the Maldives and Sri Lanka too intensified.

It is the western countries that united the split opposition when the presidential election was held in the Maldives in 2008 which restored democracy in that country. At that time the Diplomatic Mission of the West here in charge of the Maldives nursed great hopes of a political change in the Maldives. Nasheed, the common presidential candidate of the Maldives also visited Sri Lanka frequently at that time with a view to securing assistance of the diplomatic missions of the West.

It is following the 30 years rule of Abdul Gayoom, Nasheed became the President of Maldives in 2008.That marked the victory of democracy for the Maldives. The main contributors to that victory were the western countries led by America. However, within a short period, the Government of Nasheed was plunged in crises, with one or two of his ministers tendering their resignations eventually leading to the resignation of Nasheed.

Continue reading ‘Maithripala Sends Message Through JHU That he is Ready to “Save” Gotabhaya and Mahinda from Corruption and War Crimes Charges IF…………….’ »

Prof G.L.Peiris Concerned Over Pronouncements by DM Swaminathan,CV WigneswaranWijeyakala Maheswaran and MA Sumanthiran

By Shamindra Ferdinando

Former External Affairs Minister Prof. G.L. Peiris has urged what he called the minority UNP government to explain its stand on a recent US State Department report that dealt with post-war fund raising activities undertaken by the LTTE as well as several other contentious statements attributed to Rehabilitation Minister D.M. Swaminathan, Northern Province Chief Minister C.V. Wigneswaran, Deputy Minister Wijeyakala Maheswaran, UN human rights chief Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein and TNA Parliamentarian M.A. Sumanthiran.

Prof. Peiris said that post-war stability and prosperity had been at stake due to the new administration’s failure to take tangible measures to counter the threat posed by the LTTE rump.

Quoting the Country Report on Terrorism released by the US Counter terrorism Bureau, the State Department alleged last Friday that the LTTE’s financial network of support had continued to operate throughout 2014 in spite of its battlefield defeat in May 2009.

The lawmaker accused the government of dismantling post-war counter terrorism structure built by the then Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa.

Continue reading ‘Prof G.L.Peiris Concerned Over Pronouncements by DM Swaminathan,CV WigneswaranWijeyakala Maheswaran and MA Sumanthiran’ »

“Dilly –Dallying” Maithripala Gets Increasingly Alienated From Chandrika and UNP

By

Rasika Jayakody

There was a time when President Maithripala Sirisena appeared as if he would make himself eligible for the Nobel peace prize this year. There were several international groups who were willing to nominate President Sirisena for the Nobel Prize for changing the trajectory of a country that was gradually leaning towards dictatorship. Sirisena came to power in the garbs of a national leader who would stay above day-to-day mundane ‘politics’ and take the country towards a new phase of development in terms of freedom, democracy, good governance and human rights. Many dubbed him as a leader who had the potential of becoming the Sri Lankan equivalent of Nelson Mandela or Abraham Lincoln.

Today, four months down the line, President Sirisena is drifting away from his status as the non-partisan national leader of the country. He is working laboriously to resolve the internecine power struggle within the SLFP, which emerged as a result of pro-Rajapaksa “tendencies” among certain sections of the party. It looks as if President Sirisena is hell-bent on drawing the support of the SLFP group who have already aligned themselves with the former President. The SLFP has also given strong indications that it is not willing to go for Parliamentary election with a section of party MPs and grassroots level activists campaigning on behalf of the Rajapaksas.

As President Sirisena assumed duties, there was a solid platform for him to consolidate his power in the SLFP. The President and the UNP had a tacit agreement to work together at least for two years within the framework of a national unity government. The President had a plan to bring about party reforms within this interim period while freeing the party from the specters of the Rajapaksa rule. As there was an agreement for a national unity government, the SLFP, under Maithripala Sirisena, was going to remain as a stakeholder of the ruling coalition for two years, without confining itself to the ‘opposition’. An arrangement of that nature would not have allowed anybody to claim that Maithripala Sirisena plunged the SLFP into the opposition.

Continue reading ‘“Dilly –Dallying” Maithripala Gets Increasingly Alienated From Chandrika and UNP’ »

UNP Severely Castigates SLFP and Issues Ultimatum to Withdraw No Confidence Motions Against Ranil and Ravi

By

Dharisha Bastians

The United National Party, main stakeholder in the present minority Government, made its position on the 20th Amendment to the Constitution on electoral reform official, with a blistering statement from its General Secretary Kabir Hashim in Parliament.

Hashim, also the Minister of Highways in President Sirisena’s cabinet, launched a scathing attack on Opposition Leader Nimal Siripala De Silva and the rest of the SLFP, which he said was suddenly very enthusiastic about electoral reform.

“Yet it stuns me that despite this avid interest, it stuns me that the present opposition leader and his party men who were in the Governing party for 20 years never brought up the 20th Amendment. An electoral reform act was not introduced to this House even when his party had a two thirds majority,” Hashim charged during his statement before the House during an Adjournment Debate on 20A which began yesterday.

Continue reading ‘UNP Severely Castigates SLFP and Issues Ultimatum to Withdraw No Confidence Motions Against Ranil and Ravi’ »

Jaffna St. Johns College Principal C.E. Anandarajan: Reflections of a Son 30 Years After his Father’s Death

by

Rev.Dev Anandarajan

It is 30 years since the death of my beloved father who was killed by the LTTE on June 26th 1985.

Many things have happened since then and I hope we can contemplate on the violent path taken by the LTTE and the unconditional support given by most of the Tamils to address their grievances against the Sri Lankan state.

C.E. Anandarajah (January 31, 1932 - June 26, 1985)

C.E.Anandarajan (January 31, 1931 – June 26, 1985)

I wonder if we have a collective maturity as citizens of Sri Lanka (Tamils, Sinhalese, Muslims, Burghers and other minorities) and Sri Lankan Diaspora to learn the lessons from the violent path from both sides and what that has led us to.
Continue reading ‘Jaffna St. Johns College Principal C.E. Anandarajan: Reflections of a Son 30 Years After his Father’s Death’ »

Mangala and Ranil Deviate From “Kadirgamar Doctrine”of Continuity,Engagement and Change Towards China,India and US Led West

By

DR DAYAN JAYATILLEKA

The title of the news story which broke in the Japanese media last week was entitled “FM: Sri Lanka to dilute dependence on China.” Any credible, substantive contradiction of the content of this report (and not just its title) by our Foreign Ministry must not take the form of remarks to the local press but a formal contradiction/correction seeking publicity in the (respected) Japanese media giant, the NHK, which carried the original story. The story says:

“Sri Lanka’s foreign minister says the country will review its China-dependent foreign policy and boost ties with other nations. Mangala Samaraweera held an interview with NHK on Thursday. He is visiting Japan for the first time since the current government was launched under the new president, Maithripala Sirisena.

Sirisena won a presidential election in January by defeating the incumbent, Mahinda Rajapaksa. Rajapaksa promoted a foreign policy that relies on China. Foreign Minister Samaraweera referred to Sri Lanka’s relations with China. China overtook Japan as Sri Lanka’s biggest source of assistance in 2009.

He indicated that Chinese aid led to rampant corruption under the previous government. He said the Sri Lankan government has suspended a project to improve port facilities in the nation’s largest city, Colombo, and is now reviewing it. He added the project may not have followed appropriate procedures…” (http://www3.nhk.or.jp/nhkworld/english/news/20150619_09.html)

Going by their pronouncements during the election campaign and in office, Messrs. Wickremasinghe and Samaraweera are clearly unaware of or incapable of understanding, among other things, the difference between “dependent” and “reliant” i.e. between a satellite and an ally. If Sri Lanka tilted to China rather than the US or India, Mr. Samaraweera must know why that was, when it took place or began, and who the architect of that policy was. He must realize that such a reliance or ‘tilt’ was consonant with Sri Lanka’s vital national interests. He obviously does not know any of this.

Continue reading ‘Mangala and Ranil Deviate From “Kadirgamar Doctrine”of Continuity,Engagement and Change Towards China,India and US Led West’ »

“Foreign Ministry Lied About Me” Says Udayanga Weeratunga – Former Sri Lankan Ambassador to Russia


By

Lasanda Kurukulasuriya

Breaking his silence over allegations that he supplied weapons to pro-Russian separatist rebels in Ukraine, Sri Lanka’s former ambassador to Russia Udayanga Weeratunga has said the story that President Petro Poroshenko’s government had complained to the Sri Lankan Foreign Ministry about him is a ‘complete lie.’

Udayanga Weeratunga-pic: courtesy of The Hindu

Udayanga Weeratunga-pic: courtesy of The Hindu

Weeratunga said on Sunday that he had a certificate from Ukrainian authorities proving that he was not under investigation for any crime in Ukraine. He further asserted that the Ukrainian Ambassador to India (who is also accredited to Sri Lanka) has informed the Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera and Foreign Secretary Chitranganie Wagiswara that the allegations against him are false.

“I live at present in Kiev the capital of Ukraine and if I had been supplying arms to rebels fighting the Ukrainian government I would not be able to live there” he said in a press release. Alleging that members of the government he served were being subjected to ‘harassment and victimisation’ by the present government, Weeratunga said he has no intention of returning to Sri Lanka at this time.

Continue reading ‘“Foreign Ministry Lied About Me” Says Udayanga Weeratunga – Former Sri Lankan Ambassador to Russia’ »

BENDING OBLIGINGLY:THE WESTERN-ORIENTED ELITE & INTELLIGENTSIA

By MERVYN DE SILVA

16th Death Anniversary of Mervyn de Silva – June 22


(Excerpted from the multi-part ‘Politics Today’ think-piece “1956: The Cultural Revolution That Shook the Left” and “The Left Awakens from Romance to Reality”, full-page articles published in the Ceylon Observer Magazine Edition, May 16th & 23rd, 1967, Mervyn de Silva’s essay was a retrospective of 1956, a prefiguration of the broad anti-UNP center-left Opposition front of 1968 and a prospective signal of the fall of the rightwing pro-western government in 1970, three years after its publication. A critical reconsideration of postcolonial society, it was also a pioneering auto-critique of the Westernized elite and English-educated cosmopolitan intelligentsia of the Right and Left by one of the most discerning intellects and striking personalities of that milieu. It contained the suggestion of a possible synthesis, a third politico-cultural and intellectual sensibility and stance. At the time, Mervyn was 37 years old.—D.J.]

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In the national process, 1956 is the crucial turning point. What was the historical nature and content of this event? The 1956 movement, spearheaded by the rural middle classes and the Sinhala Buddhist intelligentsia was an anti-privilege impulse directed against the English educated establishment. It had a dual character: culturally revivalist (languages, religion, customs, dress, etc.) and economically radical, or it is loosely termed now, “socialist’. An historical oddity, it did not come as in many other colonial countries as an integral part of an independence or national liberation struggle.

The singular characteristic of a genuine mass movement is not only that it becomes the physical expression of the mass mind in action but that the popular will continuously impresses itself on the leadership, pushing and patterning it to the often inarticulate though feverish needs of the masses. In India there was such an active commerce between the people and their leaders; a constant flow of sympathy between the masses and the upper classes which provided leadership; a unity forged on the anvil of mass action.

Continue reading ‘BENDING OBLIGINGLY:THE WESTERN-ORIENTED ELITE & INTELLIGENTSIA’ »

Mahinda Rajapaksa Refuses President Sirisena’s Offer to give him a “Distinguished Office” if Ex-President Quit Politics.


Former President Mahinda Rajapaksa has rejected an offer by his successor Maithripala Sirisena to appoint him to a ‘distinguished office’ if he quits politics.The offer was made by President Sirisena to a six-member Committee of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) on Friday.

The committee, named at the SLFP’s National Executive Council meeting chaired by Mr Sirisena on Tuesday, was to evolve ways and means of bringing about unity in the party. The same night the six-member Committee met in Colombo and decided to ask Mr Sirisena to take Rajapaksa on board for the parliamentary election campaign among other matters.

They conveyed their decision to Sirisena on Friday afternoon. The President said Rajapaksa would not be made the Prime Ministerial candidate nor appointed on the National List. He said he would offer him a Sambhavaneeya Thanathurak or a distinguished office. When the message was conveyed to Rajapaksa by the Committee members, Rajapaksa rejected the offer and declared that the people wanted him to serve them. He is expected to issue a detailed statement.

Continue reading ‘Mahinda Rajapaksa Refuses President Sirisena’s Offer to give him a “Distinguished Office” if Ex-President Quit Politics.’ »

Why is Chief Minister Wigneswaran who Never Blamed Mahinda Rajapaksa in the Past now Severely Criticising Maithripala Sirisena?

by Kumar David

An editorial in the Tamil newspaper Valampuri of 6 June said in translation: “We observe recent speeches of the CM are unusual . . . he has a habit of severely criticising President Maithiripala Sirisena . . . the CM has already spoilt his relationship with Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe . . . why does the Chief Minister, who never blamed former President Mahinda Rajapaksa in this way, blame President Maithiripala Sirisena? Is this stand for the purpose of supporting Vasudeva Nanayakara, who wants to bring back Mahinda Rajapaksa?” The CM in question is CV Wigneswaran (CV for short), Chief Minister of the Northern Province elected by a hefty majority, and co-father-in-law with Nanayakara – their two children are married but this is of no political significance. I do however agree that both want to undermine the Sirisena-Ranil (S&R) administration and incite racial animosity; with Nanayakkara it is deliberate design, in CV’s case it supplements complex ambitions discussed below.

Why do I doubt CV’s motives? His actions are irrational (what good will it do Tamils to bring back Rajapaksa?) and there are goings-on in the TNA that add credence to negative interpretations. Here is a paragraph from a recent e-mail typical of what many are saying: “I have been concerned by CV’s behaviour of late. I gather he is interested in succeeding Sampanthan as TNA leader on the latter’s retirement. Sampanthan wants to hand over to the younger and more dynamic Sumanthiran, but CV and diehard sections in Jaffna are bad-mouthing Sumanthiran as Colombo-based-and-born, and a Christian to boot! This is the primordial and tribal gibberish that mars our national and regional outlook”. Add to this personal jealousy of Sumanthiran – he is a very good lawyer, speaks Sinhalese and is growing internationally alongside Sampanthan. Tiger-rump websites are also publishing material to the effect that TNA MPs (but not CV and his supporters are massively on the UNP payroll). CV too has nurtured a good reputation in the past, so it is disturbing that when good men fall: “Oh, what a fall was there my countrymen! Then I, and you, and all of us fell down”.

Continue reading ‘Why is Chief Minister Wigneswaran who Never Blamed Mahinda Rajapaksa in the Past now Severely Criticising Maithripala Sirisena?’ »

President Sirisena Tells SLFP Senior Leaders that he will not Nominate Mahinda Rajapaksa as Prime Ministerial Candidate

by Zacki Jabbar

President Maithripala Sirisena, breaking his silence for the first time, has told SLFP seniors that former President Mahinda Rajapaksa cannot be nominated as the UPFA’s prime ministerial candidate because he had been rejected by the people for running  a lawless and corrupt government.

“How do you expect me to nominate Mahinda as our prime ministerial candidate when the vast majority of people have voted against him for not adhering to good governance, rule of law and the unprecedented corruption that prevailed under his rule,” the president had asked Rajapaksa loyalists pushing the “Bring Back Mahinda” line, informed sources said yesterday.

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Northern Chief Minister Wigneswaran Wants TNA Parliamentarians who got Money from Govt to Admit their “Guilt ” Openly.


By

Shamindra Ferdinando

Northern Province Chief Minister C.V. Wigneswaran is on a collision course with four-party Tamil National Alliance (TNA) leadership for allowing some of its parliamentarians to receive government funding for projects in the NP, thus bypassing his administration.

The TNA secured 14 seats, including one on the National List at the last general election in April 2010. One of them subsequently, switched his allegiance to the SLFP-led UPFA.

Retired Supreme Court judge Wigneswaran has alleged that some members of the TNA parliamentary group had been receiving funds directly from the Maithripala Sirisena-Wickremesinghe administration.

Well informed sources told The Island that Wigneswaran had called for an immediate end to the practice and for those who had received funds to admit their guilt publicly.

Sources said that the situation had deteriorated further since Illankai Thamil Arasu Kadchi (ITAK) leader Mavai S. Senathiraja, MP, seeking an explanation from CM Wigneswaran as regards his accusations.

Continue reading ‘Northern Chief Minister Wigneswaran Wants TNA Parliamentarians who got Money from Govt to Admit their “Guilt ” Openly.’ »

Appeasement of LTTE Diaspora by Maithri-Ranil Govt Paving the way for a Tiger Awakening.


By

Udaya P. Gammanpila

Minister of Rehabilitation and Reconstruction, D.M. Swaminathan had tabled a wonderful Cabinet paper at the last Cabinet meeting. He had sought Cabinet approval to pay compensation for terrorists who died and injured during the war. If the proposal was approved, it would be a bad precedence in encouraging terrorist activities. No nation has paid compensation for terrorists. The USA did not pay compensation for the Al Qaeda terrorist who attacked the World Trade Centre in New York in 2001. Similarly, India did not pay compensation for Kashmir Guerillas who blasted bombs in Mumbai in 2008.

Compensation typically means payment of money as a recompense for loss, injury or suffering. It contains an element of admission of guilt. The government pays compensation for victims of a bomb blast as they suffered as a result of government’s failure to provide security for the general public. Have we committed any crime on the terrorists to pay them compensation using our tax money? Although terrorists have committed crimes against us, we have done no wrong to them. Hence, the government must release all prisoners in prisons before payment of compensation for the terrorists as nobody has committed grave crimes worse than those of terrorists.

Meanwhile, Minister of Foreign Affairs, Mangala Samaraweera met leaders of Global Tamil Forum (GTF) including Fr Emmanuel and Suren Surendran in London. S. Sumanthiran of the TNA, Eric Solheim, special peace envoy of Norway and representatives of South African government joined him in the discussion. According to unofficial sources, the subjects of the discussion were introduction of a federal model and investment of funds of Tamil separatists in Sri Lanka.

Continue reading ‘Appeasement of LTTE Diaspora by Maithri-Ranil Govt Paving the way for a Tiger Awakening.’ »

Northern CM Wigneswaran Accuses TNA Parliamentarians of Procuring Funds Directly from Colombo Govt

By Manekshaw

Northern Provincial Council (NPC) Chief Minister C.V. Wigneswaran is currently up in arms over the allocation of funds to the Northern Tamil National Alliance Parliamentarians from the Central Government.

Wigneswaran’s accusation of Tamil National Alliance (TNA) Parliamentarians from the Northern Province obtaining funds from the Central Government and on the negligence of the Central Government in allocating adequate funds for the Northern Provincial Council has turned into a prime issue in the Northern political scene in recent days.

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Tony Ranasinghe Played Monumental Role in Sinhala Film Industry with his Unique Acting Talent

by

Prasad Gunewardene

Gentleman actor, Tony Ranasinghe is no more. When I had a long chat with him over the phone, a few weeks ago, Tony was relaxing and I never dreamt that his exit would occur so early though he continued to suffer from a spine ailment over a period of time. The death of Tony brings the curtain down on the legendary trio of the golden era in the Sinhala film industry: Gamini Fonseka, Joe Abeywickreme …and Tony Ranasinghe. Gamini and Tony were bookworms. Their knowledge on many subjects other than the film industry was outstanding.

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I associated with Tony closely to exchange views on many subjects. I educated myself much on the local and international film industry talking to my uncle Gamini Fonseka and Tony Ranasinghe. After Gamini’s demise, it was Tony who at times spent over an hour with me over the phone to enlighten me on the present pathetic state of the Sinhala film industry. He would in his own inimitable style dragging the words to say, “You know Prasad… the root cause of all evil in our society is dirty politics”. He was very forthright and never feared to tell the truth. That was why he was the most trusted lieutenant of film doyen Gamini Fonseka.

Continue reading ‘Tony Ranasinghe Played Monumental Role in Sinhala Film Industry with his Unique Acting Talent’ »