For the first time since Sri Lanka’s independence from British colonial rule, the “Aragalaya” made the country’s politicians cower in fear. That fact, must be distinguished from the political factions which captured the struggle, polluted the core and led to the near extinction of the ‘Aragalaya.’


By

Kishali Pinto – Jayawardene

When there is muttering in some quarters as to, ‘what has the Aragalaya achieved?’, an easy answer comes to mind.

The gains of the “Aragalaya’

Notwithstanding the predictable corruption of that struggle by the political establishment which is a point that I will return to later, this spontaneous eruption of massive public fury for the first time since Sri Lanka’s independence from British colonial rule, made the country’s politicians cower in fear. That fact, in and of itself, must be distinguished from the political factions which captured the struggle, polluted the core and led to the nearextinction of the ‘Aragalaya.’

To be clear, that extinction process was hastened by lawyers who stood on ‘Aragalaya’ platforms loudly proclaiming that the Constitution and the law should be tossed into the dustbin and by tousled youth intoxicated with power who declared that, the nation’s leader must be a person ‘approved’ by them.’ Neither was it edifying to see their comrades storming into the state television studios, demanding that all programmes must be stopped and, only ‘Aragalaya’ news telecast.

Indeed, that thread of immature arrogance reflected, uncannily, the arrogance of the very political rulers who were the target of their anger.

Politicisation of the ‘occupation of Galle Face Green’ came from many quarters, all with political aims and ambitions in mind. Captains of industry linked to the (then) opposition United National Party (UNP) wanted the Rajapaksas out and ‘their man’ put in, thus, ‘funding the struggle in several ways, to fade away when that shift of power took place.

Continue reading ‘For the first time since Sri Lanka’s independence from British colonial rule, the “Aragalaya” made the country’s politicians cower in fear. That fact, must be distinguished from the political factions which captured the struggle, polluted the core and led to the near extinction of the ‘Aragalaya.’’ »

The Sinhalese are generally inclined to think that their ethnic group is the highest or the best of all ethnic groups in the world. At the same time, they tend to look down upon the people who are not from the Govigama caste It is also a feature found in Tamil society as well.

By

Victor Ivan

What is the root cause of the great collapse, failure and bankruptcy of Sri Lanka? The most popular belief has been that it was due to corruption of politicians and the bureaucracy. Dr. Rohan Pethiyagoda, one of Sri Lanka’sm foremost biodiversity experts in his recent speech at the convocation of the Sri Jayewardenepura University, stated that the actions initiated by the Government disregarding common sense is the root cause of the present crisis facing the country.

Printing money in enormous amounts as much as Rs. 2.3 billion in paper by the Central Bank to overcome the balance of payments crisis, change of the agriculture policy overnight and switching from the use of chemical fertilisers to organic fertilisers, promoting Dhammika Paniya as a cure for the COVID-19 pandemic, are three examples cited to show the actions taken disregarding common sense or rather ignoring scientific considerations.

There is a great deal of truth in what Dr. Rohan Pethiyagoda says. But acting without common sense or disregarding science is not something that has fallen all of a sudden from the sky during the regime of Gotabaya; and it can be considered as a weird situation that has been developing in the country over a long time.

Continue reading ‘The Sinhalese are generally inclined to think that their ethnic group is the highest or the best of all ethnic groups in the world. At the same time, they tend to look down upon the people who are not from the Govigama caste It is also a feature found in Tamil society as well.’ »

There are enough Basil Rajapaksa loyalists managed by “His Masters Voice” Sagara Kariyawasam in the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna to create problems if President Ranil Wickremesinghe wants to be his own man.

By Rajasinghe

It all started when Basil Rajapaksa (BR) decided to leave Sri Lanka in a hurry when the Aragalaya had toppled brother Gotabaya Rajapaksa (GR) and driven brother Mahinda Rajapaksa (MR) to Trincomalee under the care of the Navy to hide in a secure camp to escape a lynching.

BR’s attempt to leave Katunayake via an Emirates flight to Dubai and Los Angeles was thwarted by immigration and the airline’s officials. He left a few days later after ensuring that his nominee Ranil Wickremesinghe (RW) was guaranteed safe passage to the presidency with the backing of his Pohottuwa (Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna – SLPP) acolytes. But he left behind a fractured SLPP and a spokesman who is continuously vilified not only by the Opposition but also by his own party members.

Continue reading ‘There are enough Basil Rajapaksa loyalists managed by “His Masters Voice” Sagara Kariyawasam in the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna to create problems if President Ranil Wickremesinghe wants to be his own man.’ »

The Govt had better realise that if it tries to postpone the LG polls again, it will face an even bigger political risk, for the people will pour into the streets demanding a general election. It has a choice between trouble and double trouble!


(Text of Editorial Appearing in “The Island” of 12th November 2022 under the Heading “Govt. can choose between trouble and double trouble”)

Government politicians may pretend that they are not scared of anyone or anything, but all it takes to make them head for the hills is to say, “Election”. Such is these worthies’ fear of facing the people despite their braggadocio.

SLPP leaders recently told a group of their party supporters that local government LG elections would be postponed for two years, dissident SLPP MP Dayasiri Jayasekera has told the media. If his claim is true, then the government is contemplating a blatant violation of the election laws, according to which the Election Commission now has to hold the LG polls before the end of March 2023.

Legal experts inform us that any attempt to put off the LG elections further can be challenged in courts, and it will be an open-and-shut case.

The Opposition has warned that it will be left with no alternative but to take to the streets in case of another poll postponement. So, the government will have more problems to contend with, on both legal and political fronts if it seeks to put off the LG polls once again.

Continue reading ‘The Govt had better realise that if it tries to postpone the LG polls again, it will face an even bigger political risk, for the people will pour into the streets demanding a general election. It has a choice between trouble and double trouble!’ »

Indian Supreme Court Orders Release of the remaining six convicts in the Rajiv Gandhi assassination case- Nalini Sriharan, Santhan alias Raviraj, Murugan, Robert Payas, Jayakumar and Ravichandran alias Ravi. Justices B R Gavai and B V Nagarathna ordered that “the appellants are directed to be set at liberty if not required in any other matter”.

by Ananthakrishnan G

THE SUPREME COURT Friday set free all the six convicts serving life terms for the assassination in 1991 of former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi at Sriperumbudur in Tamil Nadu, extending to them the benefit of its order releasing co-convict A G Perarivalan nearly six months ago.

Hearing pleas by the six convicts, a bench of Justices B R Gavai and B V Nagarathna noted that the death sentence of the applicants had been commuted to life terms earlier on account of delays. “We direct that all the appellants are deemed to have served their sentence. The applicants are thus directed to be released unless required in any other case,” the bench said.

Those who have been allowed premature release are Nalini Sriharan, T Suthendraraja alias Santhan, V Sriharan alias Murugan, Robert Payas, Jayakumar and Ravichandran alias Ravi.

Continue reading ‘Indian Supreme Court Orders Release of the remaining six convicts in the Rajiv Gandhi assassination case- Nalini Sriharan, Santhan alias Raviraj, Murugan, Robert Payas, Jayakumar and Ravichandran alias Ravi. Justices B R Gavai and B V Nagarathna ordered that “the appellants are directed to be set at liberty if not required in any other matter”.’ »

“We Cant help wondering whether some in the Govt ranks Know that they are going to stay for a long time in Prison and so are creating luxurious apartments in prisons beforehand so that when they go there they can live in comfort.”- MA Sumanthiran MP

(Text of Speech made by TNA Jaffna District Parliamentarian M.A. Sumanthiran in Parliament on 10th November 2022)

Thank you Hon. Deputy Speaker for the time given to speak on this very important amendments that have been presented today, I wish to flag just two issues, one is with regard to the amendment to Poisons, Opium and dangerous drug amendment .

There is a concern that the bail application has to now be made through the Court of Appeal instead of High Court. Now this is a very serious issue, this is not a question of making bail stringent. This is a question of access to Justice.

I am saying that because Court of Appeal sits only in Colombo, whereas now with the provincial High Courts you can go to your provincial capital. In lots of instances High Court sit in more than one city or town in a province, and you can make an application.

Now this is very important , this is not a question of being lenient towards a possession of dangerous drugs, this is about anybody who is accused of this offence being able to go to court.

Access to justice must not be denied.

Continue reading ‘“We Cant help wondering whether some in the Govt ranks Know that they are going to stay for a long time in Prison and so are creating luxurious apartments in prisons beforehand so that when they go there they can live in comfort.”- MA Sumanthiran MP’ »

Opposition parties and trade unions intent on killing Tax reforms ,instead of negotiating to better them, are no different from the Rajapaksas who bay for positions, perks, and privileges in a dying country.


By

Tisaranee Gunasekara

“Masons, when they start upon a building,Are careful to test out the scaffolding…” – Seamus Heaney (Scaffolding)

During the Trump presidency, asked whether his extremely popular wife will be the next Democratic nominee, Barack Obama would say that there were only three certitudes in life, death, taxes, and Michelle not contesting the presidency. Just as death is a fact of human condition, taxes, in some form or other, have been a fact of political condition. The first recorded tax goes as far back as 5,000 years to ancient Egypt, a levy on grain harvests paid in grain. The Caesars made full use of both income and wealth taxes. All those roads and aqueducts needed cash.

Cash and its absence; the October report by the IFRC, based on a survey in 11 districts, identifies food insecurity, health, livelihoods, and nutrition as main concerns, followed by deteriorating physical safety and security and violence against women and children. People are “borrowing heavily, eating less food and fewer times per day, pawning valuables and assets,” and using “other survival strategies just to scrape by.” Life turned nasty, brutish, probably shorter, and definitely unbearable. For these vulnerable men, women, and children a more effective safety net is a matter of life and death, in the most literal sense.

Cash again. Of course, one could just print money. As the Rajapaksas did; more than 2 trillion rupees in two and a half years. Asked about it in August 2021, Ajith Nivard Cabraal, then state minister of Money, Capital Markets, and Public Enterprise Reform, called it a ‘drastic treatment’ to a ‘major illness’ (a major illness caused by 2019 Rajapaksa tax cut with an estimated loss around Rs. 700 billion). Cabraal (who would soon become the governor of the Central Bank having changed the law to give himself cabinet status and a hefty pension), said the US printed money, so can we. Since the American dollar happens to be the international reserve currency, that ‘reasoning’ would be as deadly as dashing off to climb Everest in the same clothes one wore to climb Pidurutalagala because both are ‘tallest mountains’.

In the same Daily Mirror interview, Cabraal airily dismissed inflation concerns and assured there was no ‘alarming foreign exchange crisis’. “The torturers sleep soundly,” wrote, Zbigniew Herbert. So do fools.

So here we are, bankrupt, cashless. No way out but taxation. The real question is not to tax or not, but who should bear the burden of new and increased taxes in real terms.

Continue reading ‘Opposition parties and trade unions intent on killing Tax reforms ,instead of negotiating to better them, are no different from the Rajapaksas who bay for positions, perks, and privileges in a dying country.’ »

President Ranil Wickremesinghe Invites all Tamil MPs for Talks Next week to Discuss issues faced by the Tamil people and how to resolve them amicably without any outside interference before the 75th Independence celebrations next year


BY Mirudhula Thambiah

Addressing Parliament yesterday (10), President Ranil Wickremesinghe invited all Tamil MPs for a discussion scheduled next week in regard to issues faced by the Tamil people and to resolve them amicably without any outside interference prior to the 75th Independence celebrations.

President Wickremesinghe said: “We are discussing issues of the Tamil people in the North. For now, we have released a number of prisoners and there are many to be released. For example, there is a writer against whom a case has been filed. When the action is concluded and if he is proven guilty, he too will be given the same support. He had been linked to the Piththala Junction attack. We will discuss this issue with the Minister of Foreign Affairs and the relevant former President. We want to solve this issue.”

He emphasised that the issue of missing persons will also be discussed and noted that so far, 2,000 files relating to their cases have been completed.

Continue reading ‘President Ranil Wickremesinghe Invites all Tamil MPs for Talks Next week to Discuss issues faced by the Tamil people and how to resolve them amicably without any outside interference before the 75th Independence celebrations next year’ »

President Wickremesinghe Tells Parliament that Sri Lanka will Receive Assistance from IMF; “I met Georgieva(IMF Managing Director) and discussed this with her, and she promised to assist us, so do not worry about it.” Says Ranil

BY Kiara Warnasuriya

President Ranil Wickremesinghe, addressing Parliament yesterday (10), assured that Sri Lanka would receive assistance from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), claiming that he was promised the same by IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva at the 27th Conference of the Parties (COP 27) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) held in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt.

“I met Georgieva and discussed this with her, and she promised to assist us, so do not worry about it.”

The President further stated that discussions with China and India regarding their support to Sri Lanka are yet to take place. “I requested both the countries to finalise this before the end of December.”

The President attended the COP27 Conference on Climate Change earlier this week accompanied by Environmental Minister Naseer Ahamed, Presidential Advisor on Climate Change Ruwan Wijewardene and Presidential International Advisor on Climate Change, Maldivian Speaker of Parliament Mohamed Nasheed.

Continue reading ‘President Wickremesinghe Tells Parliament that Sri Lanka will Receive Assistance from IMF; “I met Georgieva(IMF Managing Director) and discussed this with her, and she promised to assist us, so do not worry about it.” Says Ranil’ »

Army Says no LTTE Members Surrendered to them but Family Members of Missing Persons say they personally Handed Over their Loved Ones to the Security Forces and are therefore Joint Witnesses to the Surrender


BY Mirudhula Thambiah

Relatives of missing persons noted on Monday (7) that they themselves are “joint witnesses” of their loved ones surrendering to security forces at the end of the war, and queried how the Army, therefore, could deny the evidence of those who surrendered.
Speaking to The Morning, Association for the Relatives of Enforced Disappearances Secretary Leeladevi Anandanadarajah queried how the Army could claim a lack of evidence regarding those who surrendered thus, when the relatives of the missing are joint witnesses to the same.

“We are the witnesses who saw our relatives and friends surrender. Many of those who surrendered their loved ones at the end of the war are joint witnesses. Everyone had seen other families similarly handing over their loved ones to security forces at the end of the war,” she said, adding: “When my son was being surrendered, I saw him, and the mother who was next to me saw him too. Similarly, I too saw her son being surrendered. Therefore, we are joint witnesses. If it is about one person, they can assume that it is a lie, but we are joint witnesses and this is regarding a number of persons. How can they deny it? We will appeal to the international community.”

Continue reading ‘Army Says no LTTE Members Surrendered to them but Family Members of Missing Persons say they personally Handed Over their Loved Ones to the Security Forces and are therefore Joint Witnesses to the Surrender’ »

Peacocks, monkeys, toque macaques (“rilava”), grizzled giant squirrels (“dadu lena”), porcupines, and wild boars removed from the list of protected animals because they Consume Crops and Coconuts;Elephants remain Protected because they are a Tourist Attraction


BY Safrah Fazal

Peacocks, monkeys, toque macaques (“rilava”), grizzled giant squirrels (“dadu lena”), porcupines, and wild boars have been removed from the list of protected animals, and measures to control the population of these wild animals are being examined, considering the massive crop damage they are causing.

Speaking to The Morning yesterday (10), an official from the Ministry of Agriculture noted that elephants, peacocks, monkeys, toque macaques, grizzled giant squirrels, porcupines, and wild boars have been listed as the wild animals that caused the most significant crop damage.

“Since elephants attract local and foreign tourists, they will remain in the protected list of animals, while the otherd have been taken off the list.”

Continue reading ‘Peacocks, monkeys, toque macaques (“rilava”), grizzled giant squirrels (“dadu lena”), porcupines, and wild boars removed from the list of protected animals because they Consume Crops and Coconuts;Elephants remain Protected because they are a Tourist Attraction’ »

When an Air Force “Giant Bomb” Killed the LTTE’s “Smiling Face” 15 Years ago.

By
D.B.S.Jeyaraj

Fifteen years ago on 2nd November 2007, the former political wing chief of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTEE), Thamilselvan (spelled also as Tamilselvan and Thamilchelvan) was killed along with some other tiger operatives in an airstrike conducted by the Sri Lankan Air Force (SLAF). The incident grabbed worldwide attention when it happened because Thamilselvan was to a very great extent the public and political face of the LTTE in those days.

40-year-old Thamilselvan was killed along with five other tiger cadres in the early hours of the morning on Friday November 2nd 2007. Subsequently another injured tiger also died. Two jet bombers, an Israeli K-fir and a Russian built MIG-27 had engaged in aerial bombardment at first light between 5.55-6.00 a.m. The target area was suburban Thiruvaiyaaru about three km from Kilinochchi town in the Wanni region controlled extensively by the tigers at that time.

Continue reading ‘When an Air Force “Giant Bomb” Killed the LTTE’s “Smiling Face” 15 Years ago.’ »

Speculation Rife that 13 MPs From the Samagi Jana Balavegaya and Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna will Join the United National Party on November 14;Sajith Premadasa says no SJB MP will Join this Rotten Govt


BY Buwanajee Coralage

Amidst speculation that the MPs of several political parties are in discussions to join the United National Party (UNP) and support the new Government in the upcoming Budget, Opposition and Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) Leader Sajith Premadasa claimed that none of the SJB MPs will succumb to the privileges offered to them and join the Government.

Speaking in Parliament yesterday (9), he stated that no amount of incentives could be used to lure MPs from the SJB to the side of the Government, and that no MP from his party is willing or ready to join this “rotten” Government.

Continue reading ‘Speculation Rife that 13 MPs From the Samagi Jana Balavegaya and Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna will Join the United National Party on November 14;Sajith Premadasa says no SJB MP will Join this Rotten Govt’ »

Election Commission Chairman Nimal Punchihewa Acknowledges That the Veddah Community,Women,Youth and Differently Abled persons are Inadequately Represented in Parliament

BY Buddhika Samaraweera

While acknowledging that there is an issue with regard to the representation of certain groups such as the indigenous community (Veddas), women, youth, and the differently-abled in Parliament, the Election Commission (EC) stated that it is Parliament that should study the matter further and take steps to resolve the issue.

Speaking to The Morning, Election Commission Chairman Attorney-at-Law Nimal G. Punchihewa said that there is an issue with regard to the representation of groups such as the indigenous community, women, youth and the differently-abled in Parliament.

He also said that the Commission has pointed this out to the Parliamentary Select Committee that recently looked into appropriate reforms of the election laws and the electoral system.

Continue reading ‘Election Commission Chairman Nimal Punchihewa Acknowledges That the Veddah Community,Women,Youth and Differently Abled persons are Inadequately Represented in Parliament’ »

Construction of the Adani Group-led Terminal Project at the sSrategically Located Colombo Port Officially Commences a year after the Indian company sealed the deal with Sri Lanka Ports Authority (SLPA) and conglomerate John Keells Holdings.


By

Meera Srinivasan

The construction of the Adani Group-led terminal project at the strategically located Colombo Port officially commenced on Wednesday, a year after the Indian company sealed the deal with Sri Lanka Ports Authority (SLPA) and conglomerate John Keells Holdings.

Said to be the largest foreign investment — nearly $700 million — in the island nation’s ports sector, the West Container Terminal (WCT) project was offered as a “compromise” to India after Colombo unilaterally pulled out of an earlier trilateral agreement with India and Japan to jointly develop the East Container Terminal (ECT).

Continue reading ‘Construction of the Adani Group-led Terminal Project at the sSrategically Located Colombo Port Officially Commences a year after the Indian company sealed the deal with Sri Lanka Ports Authority (SLPA) and conglomerate John Keells Holdings.’ »

The Adani Group’s port deal in Sri Lanka;As per the 35 year-long BOT agreement, the Adani Group will have majority, 51%, stakes, while John Keells would hold 34%, and the SLPA, 15%.


BY

Meera Srinivasan

On September 30, 2021, the Gujarat-headquartered Adani Group signed a Build Operate Transfer (BOT) agreement with Sri Lanka’s largest listed company John Keells Holdings and the Sri Lanka Ports Authority (SLPA) to jointly develop the Colombo West International Container Terminal (CWICT) at the strategically advantaged Colombo Port, located amidst one of the busiest shipping routes in the world.

Primarily a container port, the Colombo Port has handled over 5 million TEU of containerised cargo. It has five functional terminals.

As per the 35 year-long BOT agreement inked by the three parties, the Adani Group will have majority, 51%, stakes, while John Keells would hold 34%, and the SLPA, 15%. The more than $700-million investment is said to be the largest foreign investment in the island nation’s port sector.]

Issuing a statement on the deal, the SLPA said, “the massive development” following the agreement, will further enhance the Colombo Port’s “global reputation as an international hub port”.

What is the backstory?

Continue reading ‘The Adani Group’s port deal in Sri Lanka;As per the 35 year-long BOT agreement, the Adani Group will have majority, 51%, stakes, while John Keells would hold 34%, and the SLPA, 15%.’ »

Office of Missing Persons Chair Mahesh Katulanda says there are no persons went missing in Sri Lanka; TPA Leader Mano Ganesan MP asks Justice Minister to Remove OMP chair and queries “ why should he be in the OMP if no one went missing?


BY Mirudhula Thambiah

Tamil Progressive Alliance Leader and Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) Opposition MP Mano Ganesan yesterday (8) said in Parliament that Office on Missing Persons (OMP) Chairman Attorney Mahesh Katulanda should be replaced, and queried as to the reason for the existence of the OMP if its chairman claims that there are no missing persons in this country.

Continue reading ‘Office of Missing Persons Chair Mahesh Katulanda says there are no persons went missing in Sri Lanka; TPA Leader Mano Ganesan MP asks Justice Minister to Remove OMP chair and queries “ why should he be in the OMP if no one went missing?’ »

Swiss Embassy Employee Ms.Francis Submits Writttten Objections to Colombo High Court Stating the Case Against her cannot be Maintained; HC Judge Directs Attorney-General to Respond Within 3 Weeks in Writing

BY Buddhika Samaraweera

Ganier Banister Francis, an employee of the Swiss Embassy in Sri Lanka submitted written objections before the Colombo High Court yesterday (8) claiming that the case against her with regard to the alleged provision of false information to the Criminal Investigations Department (CID), thereby embarrassing the Government, cannot be maintained.

When the relevant case was taken up before Colombo High Court Judge Namal Balalle, President’s Counsel Kalinga Indatissa, appearing for the accused Francis, made the objections.

The Attorney General (AG) was then directed by the Judge to submit the former’s explanations regarding the written objections submitted by the accused in written format within three weeks starting from yesterday.

Continue reading ‘Swiss Embassy Employee Ms.Francis Submits Writttten Objections to Colombo High Court Stating the Case Against her cannot be Maintained; HC Judge Directs Attorney-General to Respond Within 3 Weeks in Writing’ »

Supreme Court Refuses to Grant Leave to Proceed for Two FR Petitions Filed by Muslim Women Challenging challenging Gazette Calling For Aplications only from Muslim males to be considered for appointment as Quazis and as Members of the Board of Quazis


BY Mirudhula Thambiah

The Supreme Court (SC) yesterday (8) refused to grant leave to proceed for two separate Fundamental Rights (FR) petitions filed by a number of Muslim women challenging the Gazette dated 7 October 2022, which called for applications only from Muslim males to be considered for appointment as Quazis and as Members of the Board of Quazis.

Quazis are judges under the Muslim customary/matrimonial/personal legal system, the Muslim Marriage and Divorce Act (MMDA).
Accordingly, the petitioners had wanted the said Gazette notification amended to lift the bar imposed on females to apply.

The court did not provide any reason for the refusal.

Continue reading ‘Supreme Court Refuses to Grant Leave to Proceed for Two FR Petitions Filed by Muslim Women Challenging challenging Gazette Calling For Aplications only from Muslim males to be considered for appointment as Quazis and as Members of the Board of Quazis’ »

Ranil Wickremesinghe proposes setting up International Climate Change University: Sri Lankan President criticises developed nations for reneging on their climate financing contributions

By

Meera Srinivasan

Pointing to the “lack of” capacity as the “biggest obstacle” to the implementation of climate action plans, Sri Lankan President Ranil Wickremesinghe on Tuesday proposed setting up an International Climate Change University in Sri Lanka, with an ancillary institution in the Maldives.

As island nations, Sri Lanka and the Maldives are particularly vulnerable to the adverse impact of climate change, experts have repeatedly warned. “This seat of learning can be a trans-disciplinary global centre for green and blue studies – for scientists, environmentalists, researchers, policymakers, development practitioners, and…students the world over,” Mr. Wickremesinghe said, addressing the COP-27 Climate Change Conference in Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt.

Continue reading ‘Ranil Wickremesinghe proposes setting up International Climate Change University: Sri Lankan President criticises developed nations for reneging on their climate financing contributions’ »

Anura Kumara Dissanayake says JVP Shunned the 2 November Protest held by the SJB and FSP “ because it lacked discipline, co-ordination, and a clear objective”


BY Kiara Warnasuriya

Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) and National People’s Power (NPP) Leader and Opposition MP Anura Kumara Dissanayake said that the reason why the JVP did not join the protest-march-cum-rally led by the main Parliamentary Opposition, the Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB), and the Frontline Socialist Party on 2 November was because it lacked discipline, co-ordination, and a clear objective.

“I received many calls before this protest. People were asking me if the JVP would join the protest, and when I answered no, they asked why not. On 2 November, the answer was given by the organisers,” said Dissanayake while speaking yesterday (7) at the NPP Homagama Assembly.

Continue reading ‘Anura Kumara Dissanayake says JVP Shunned the 2 November Protest held by the SJB and FSP “ because it lacked discipline, co-ordination, and a clear objective”’ »

Crucial Election Lies Ahead for Malaysia ; another opportunity to complete its transformation from a Third World nation to first.


By
Krishantha Prasad Cooray

The world is currently experiencing a moment of transition. This comes after the certainties and stability of the ‘end of history’ — the period spanning the fall of the Berlin Wall and the Global Financial Crisis.

We are witnessing many changes. We have seen the rise of China and to a lesser extent, India. The world is beginning to recover from the Covid-19 pandemic. The crisis in Ukraine has generated uncertainties regarding the global energy and food situations. We have seen the end of cheap credit and also the resurgence of populism, nationalism, parochialism, extremism and fundamentalism across the world, which among other things also reflect uncertainty and anxiety.

It is in such a tense world that Malaysia is set to determine her destiny and her place in a rapidly changing world. In such a moment it is imperative that the implications of global, economic and political processes for South-East Asia in general and Malaysia in particular are examined, assessed and responded to.

It is not all bad news. Opportunity typically is a quieter twin of crises. We should recall, for example, that there are always favourable tailwinds.

Continue reading ‘Crucial Election Lies Ahead for Malaysia ; another opportunity to complete its transformation from a Third World nation to first.’ »

The Unjust Arrest , Detention and Acquittal of Rishad Bathiudeen and the Political Witch-Hunt Launched Against the SLMC Leader by the Rajapaksa Regime.


By Safnee Ahamed

The Leader of All Ceylon Makkal Congress (ACMC) and Vanni District Parliamentarian, Rishad Bathiudeen, is no stranger to controversy in Sri Lankan politics. However, lately it has appeared that much of the controversies involving him are fabricated tales to destroy his repute and standing among the public. Weeks after he was acquitted by Courts of the charge that he had misappropriated State resources to transport voters to Election booths, he has been acquitted by Courts once again. This time he was acquitted of the charges leveled by the then Gotabaya Rajapaksa led regime that he was involved in the Easter Attacks.

At the height of repressive policies against the Muslim community of Sri Lanka, during the holy month of Ramadhan, at midnight a Tweet from the Twitter handle of Rishad Bathiudeen caught the attention of many Sri Lankans. The CID had apparently surrounded his house seeking his arrest without a charge. They had breached the walls of his house in this pursuit. That night, the rain was pouring, and yet his party loyalists and supporters were quick to assemble at his premises. The CID had no reason to provide, but admitted they were present seeking the arrest of Rishad Bathiudeen under provisions of the Prevention of Terrorism (Temporary Provisions) Act, No. 48 of 1979.

That day, the CID did not present a charge, a warrant or the consent of the Speaker of Parliament. Rishad Bathiudeen was not the only person arrested though. His brother Riyaj Bathiudeen was arrested for a second time the previous day on a charge he was previously arrested and already acquitted. It was a clear case of a political betrayal and persecution. The case of oppression against minority communities, especially Tamils and Muslims including political activists, was highlighted in Resolution 46/1 of the 31st Special Session of United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) and also Resolution dated 10th of June, 2021 by the European Union (EU). Given that a Parliamentarian had been arrested without following due process, the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) had also gotten involved.

Continue reading ‘The Unjust Arrest , Detention and Acquittal of Rishad Bathiudeen and the Political Witch-Hunt Launched Against the SLMC Leader by the Rajapaksa Regime.’ »

Mahinda, declares ‘Ranil Dhang apith ekka’ (Ranil is with us now). But Ranil may be saying: ‘They are with me now ‘. The indication he gives is that he will be president till the term of the ‘R-Paksas’ party ends.


By

Gamini Weerakoon


(The writer is a former editor of The Sunday Island, The Island and consultant editor of the Sunday Leader.)

The focus of the nation in recent times has been shifting from the ‘Glorious Uncertainties of cricket’ to inglorious uncertainties of politics and for the search of a square meal a day by the poor.

When our ‘Singha Pattaw’ (lion cubs) were all ga-ga after winning the Asia T-20 Cup, we warned about the uncertainties of the T-20 variety of the game pointing out that it was like our national card game Booruwa where the probabilities were 50-50.

The uncertainty in politics is much greater: a wild card out of the pack turning out to be the trump card. However, what the nation is going through is not a game of cards, cricket or politics. It is one of survival for the majority of the people.

In 2019 ‘Gota Rajapaksa’ polled that much celebrated 52.56 percent in the presidential election and next year the political patriarch of the ‘R-Paksas’, Mahinda, led their party, winning a near two-thirds majority, reducing Ranil Wickremesinghe to zero. Politically he was written off. But right now he is the president calling the shots and ruling the country with an iron fist.

The aging Mahinda, the political patriarch of the R-Paksas, declared two weeks ago, ‘Ranil Dhang apith ekka’ (Ranil is with us now). But the maverick Ranil may be saying: ‘They are with me now ‘. The indication he gives is that he will be president till the term of the ‘R-Paksas’ party ends.

Continue reading ‘Mahinda, declares ‘Ranil Dhang apith ekka’ (Ranil is with us now). But Ranil may be saying: ‘They are with me now ‘. The indication he gives is that he will be president till the term of the ‘R-Paksas’ party ends.’ »

Does the Govt think that mere denials and gagging public servants who speak openly about a matter of deep concern affecting this country’s future generations will make the ‘problem go away’?


By

Kishali Pinto – Jayawardene

The Sri Lanka Government may be preening itself on taking the sting away from a combined political protest against state repression this Wednesday in Colombo. But let it be warned that its rejoicing comes too soon.

‘Stability’ vis a vis protests

Bristling lines of heavily helmeted and gas-mask wearing police officers may hold politically motivated protest marches off. But there is nothing that the tri-services and the police can do if the people collectively take matters into their own hands. This, we saw very well a few months ago where protestors ‘occupied’ high state buildings and forced a President, a Prime Minister and his Cabinet out. Once again, there is a massive surge of public discontent simmering under the surface.

It is a curate’s egg situation, in fact. The Government and business chambers have called for ‘stability’ and to abstain from protests as that may cripple a painfully recovering tourism sector among others. But these pleas are only partly the truth.

When the Government asks the people to endure, it must first lead by example which the motley crowd of politicians in power will not do. Instead all they do is fatten their pockets, still, in the midst of bankruptcy.

Even when they beg for aid, wearing their brightest smiles and posing in the backdrop of relief packages, they see no shame in the part that they played to bring about that disgraceful result.

Continue reading ‘Does the Govt think that mere denials and gagging public servants who speak openly about a matter of deep concern affecting this country’s future generations will make the ‘problem go away’?’ »

“The UNP is a sister party, not our foe. We were a breakaway and we broke away not on party policies, not because we are different in policy programmes. On the economy and the national question, we are the same. There were problems with Ranil about the handling of the party; that was not a main cause for the people.”- SJB MP Dr.Rajitha Senaratne


By Marianne David

The Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) has to rethink its strategies if it is to launch struggles against the Government, says SJB MP Dr. Rajitha Senaratne, who however warns against playing politics at a time when the country has hit rock bottom. “First you have to feed the people,” he asserted, in an interview with The Sunday Morning.

As for opposing President Ranil Wickremesinghe and his Government, he said: “We have to actually oppose his other anti-people actions only, not the economic programme. If we are against the economic programme, then we have to submit alternative proposals.”
In terms of the SJB’s disputed alliances and way forward, Dr. Senaratne said there was no division within the party, but that it had to rethink its alliances.

As things stand in Sri Lanka, the best way forward is to have an all-party government, he emphasised.

Following are excerpts of the interview:

The protest organised on 2 November exposed dissension brewing within the SJB regarding how the party should steer its course amid the current political developments. How do things stand now and what can be expected?

There is no division within the SJB but with the other parties, actually. The other main component was the Frontline Socialist Party (FSP) and we are poles apart. Our policies, our programmes, everything is different to them. They can never understand our feelings. We understand their feelings but they are completely different. Their path of capturing power may be different to ours. When you march together with this type of people, divisions come up. The decisions taken as part of the political process are different between the two parties.

Everybody can be on a joint platform, but when you organise a demonstration like this, the SJB should lead. It should be a demonstration led by the SJB and joined by the others, not that we go and join with those people. That is what is happening now. They have shown that they have no idea about the unity of the forces. They don’t want it. Therefore we have to rethink our strategies if we are to launch struggles against the Government.

Continue reading ‘“The UNP is a sister party, not our foe. We were a breakaway and we broke away not on party policies, not because we are different in policy programmes. On the economy and the national question, we are the same. There were problems with Ranil about the handling of the party; that was not a main cause for the people.”- SJB MP Dr.Rajitha Senaratne’ »

Imran Khan, Pakistan’s ex-prime minister, survives an attempt on his life. Shooting lends credence to the former cricketer’s claims of a conspiracy

HE HAD JUST waved to the crowd from atop his caravan when gunshots broke through the strains of “Allah Hoo”, a famous devotional song, that had been blaring on the speakers alongside. Imran Khan and his associates ducked, but not before he took a bullet in the leg. Others near him were hit, too.

A gunman was quickly overpowered by a member of the crowd that had assembled to watch Mr Khan’s procession pass through the city of Wazirabad, near the river Chenab in the state of Pakistani Punjab. Mr Khan was sped away to hospital and is out of danger. But the shots will echo through the country for weeks, if not months, plunging Pakistan ever deeper into political uncertainty.

Mr Khan, a former prime minister, was removed from power in April after a vote of no confidence. He has made life miserable for the government ever since, pushing wild, unfounded claims that the army had conspired with America to depose him. He constantly demands fresh elections.

Continue reading ‘Imran Khan, Pakistan’s ex-prime minister, survives an attempt on his life. Shooting lends credence to the former cricketer’s claims of a conspiracy’ »

“we have a consensus as far as Russian foreign policy is concerned” States Vladimir Putin in response to a Question Posed by Dr.Dayan Jayatilleka to the Russian President in Moscow


By
Dr.Dayan Jayatilleka

The elder statesman, the Nelson Mandela of the global South’s Left, Lula returns to the world scene – also through BRICS – when humanity is in crisis and the world order in tumultuous transition. He will infuse a measure of hope and reason.

A positive planetary impact is his strongly environmentalist stance on the Amazon, one of the green lungs of the globe, a stance the exact opposite of outgoing right-wing President Bolsonaro who permitted privatisation of the forest and logging by corporates, causing murders, forest fires and the blowback of a (Jesuit-driven) synod on the Amazon by Pope Francis. Catholics voted for Lula; Evangelicals backed Bolsonaro.

Latin America’s politics in the 21st century has been dubbed ‘Fifty Shades of Pink’. The continent recently experienced a cascade of left-wing leaders elected in Brazil, Colombia, Mexico, Argentina, Chile and Peru. Newsweek locates Lula’s victory within “a shift back to the Left now common in major Latin American economies”.

Pink Tides 1.0 and 2.0 prove that for any real progressive to lead a country, it is vastly better to have a nationally, directly elected presidency than merely a parliamentary democracy, because (a) republican popular sovereignty is expressed through the franchise in a more direct, less parochial and fragmented manner and (b) in most societies the majority consists of the economically hard-pressed, not the well-to-do.

With Fidel gone, Lula is the father figure of Latin America’s left. Vincent Bevins reported in the New York Review of Books that Lula kicked off his presidential comeback campaign in January 2022 outside a screening of the movie Marighella, together with its cast.

The film is about Carlos Marighella, dissident Communist leader from Sao Paulo and pioneering urban guerrilla, whose struggle against the military dictatorship of 1964 and subsequent martyrdom sowed the seeds of the spirit of resistance of which Lula’s Workers Party was the democratic harvest.

I was presenting a paper on the Nicaraguan Revolution at the Pugwash Conference in 1985 in Sao Paulo when Lula and his Workers Party (PT) were consolidating as giant factors in his vast industrial home base. I met Lula in Geneva 2009 during his first presidency, and presented him a signed copy of my book on Fidel.

Continue reading ‘“we have a consensus as far as Russian foreign policy is concerned” States Vladimir Putin in response to a Question Posed by Dr.Dayan Jayatilleka to the Russian President in Moscow’ »

As a seasoned politician, President Wickremesinghe is using his Machiavellian skills to use factionalism existing within almost all the parties, to push through legislation to restore the economy.

By

Col R Hariharan

During the month of October , the Sri Lankan government’s preliminary talks with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) on structuring its economic recovery continued. However, debt restructuring continues to be delayed with China due to its preoccupation with the 20th NPC meetings of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). Even negotiations with India and Japan are moving at a slow pace. Perhaps, this is due to their lingering doubts about the Wickremesinghe government’s ability to see through the structural reforms. In this context, President Wickremesinghe must be heartened by the show of solidarity for his actions by the US and some of the EU members, despite the use of high-handed methods to suppress public protests.

Internally, the passing of the 22nd Constitutional Amendment (originally introduced as 21A) to improve executive president’s accountability, the use of the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) to curb Aragalaya activism and the launching of the Rise Together (Ekwa Nagitimu) campaign at the grass roots to recoup the image of the Rajapaksas were key highlights of happenings in October 2022.

Continue reading ‘As a seasoned politician, President Wickremesinghe is using his Machiavellian skills to use factionalism existing within almost all the parties, to push through legislation to restore the economy.’ »

In the absence of institutional change and a new political class, Sri Lanka will alternate between “drift” and “relapse”, but never “take off”. Political incumbents, from the Rajapaksas, Ranil and Sajith down, will defend fortress walls to prevent such change, which would of course threaten their power and privileges.


By Razeen Sally

I have not written in these pages for a few years, not since I was an adviser to Ranil Wickremesinghe’s spectacularly misnamed Yahapalanaya Government until 2018. I was absent from Sri Lanka for over two years due to the pandemic, and watched the beginnings of the present catastrophe from Singapore, where I lived until recently. But I returned in April this year and spent eight weeks travelling in a crisis-ravaged island. What follows are my observations on the causes of this crisis, the present situation, and what might lie ahead.

Three scenarios revisited: Relapse redux

In December 2016 I gave an Advocata lecture on three scenarios of Sri Lanka’s future.

Scenario One I called “Drift”, extrapolating the then present under the Yahapalanaya Government to the future. That Government squandered the golden opportunity that came with regime change in 2015. It was a total shambles. No serious reforms materialised; nepotism and corruption remained rife. It reminded me of Lyn Ludowyk’s characterisation of Sir John Kotelawala’s Government:

The actions of the prime minister and the UNP seemed to be rotating further and further on an axis of their own away from the centre of the country’s strongest emotional interests. In the end, with shows and circuses becoming more prominent as in the Marx Brothers film, the orchestra and conductor drifted farther and farther on the lake where their raft had been moored. The conductor in desperation changed the score, but both orchestra and himself were lost in the distant horizon as events panned out to the general election of April 1956 which routed the UNP and marked the end of nine years of its rule.

Following the Marx Brothers analogy, Sri Lanka would drift aimlessly into the future with a low-growth economy always verging on crisis, a debt mountain, a bloated public sector, an ossified political and business elite, third-rate institutions, simmering ethnic tensions, and overdependence on China. Most Sri Lankans would continue to be undereducated, underskilled, underemployed and underpaid, leading underdeveloped lives they would pass on to their children and grandchildren.

Continue reading ‘In the absence of institutional change and a new political class, Sri Lanka will alternate between “drift” and “relapse”, but never “take off”. Political incumbents, from the Rajapaksas, Ranil and Sajith down, will defend fortress walls to prevent such change, which would of course threaten their power and privileges.’ »

Kandyan Sinhala Leaders Wanted Federalism and North -East Merger Before Lankan Tamil Leaders

By
D.B.S.Jeyaraj

The course of contemporary politics in Sri Lanka has created a situation where federalism or the federal idea is identified with the political aspirations of the Tamils of Sri Lanka. The “IlangathThamizhar”or Lankan Tamils whose areas of historic habitation in the Island are the predominantly Tamil speaking Northern and Eastern provinces have for many decades sought to establish a federal or quasi-federal system of governance in these provinces.This demand has been looked upon with suspicion by the Sinhala people. So much so that federalism has become the “F- word” in Lankan politics.Even devolution is being turned into a “dirty” word by some nowadays.

Against this backdrop it is indeed ironic to note that federalism was first introduced to the political discourse of the country by Sinhala political leaders during British rule when Sri Lanka was known as Ceylon.It may also be interesting to note that when federalism as a form of governance was proposed in the pre – independence period by Sinhala leaders there were no takers for it among Tamils.

Continue reading ‘Kandyan Sinhala Leaders Wanted Federalism and North -East Merger Before Lankan Tamil Leaders’ »

Police Bloch Anti-Govt Protesr near Fort Railway Station; Sajith Premadasa and SJB MP’s retreat from Front to back Instead of Marching Forward and Leave Abandoning the People they led;Hirunika Premachandra Circumvents Police and Reaches Forts Station Via Another Route


BY Buddhika Samaraweera

The much-hyped protest organised by several political parties, including the main Parliamentary Opposition – the Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) – alongside civil organisations and trade unions, fizzled out to an anti-climax amidst protestors arguing with each other about the level of aggression and perseverance that should be employed, as well as the true intent of the MPs leading the protest.

Mainstream political parties and MPs including Opposition and SJB Leader Sajith Premadasa were seen being criticised by the protestors, and the protest ended with the Frontline Socialist Party (FSP), the “aragalaya” activists, the Inter-University Students’ Federation (IUSF), and the Ceylon Teachers’ Union (CTU) warning of another “aragalaya” soon.

The protest was organised by a number of political parties including the SJB, the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP), the FSP, civil organisations and trade unions, including the CTU against President Wickremesinghe and the Government started yesterday evening from near the Elphinstone Theatre in Colombo 10.

It was scheduled to proceed towards the Colombo Fort Railway Station in the form of a protest march. Premadasa and SJB MPs Ranjith Madduma Bandara, Field Marshal Sarath Fonseka, Dr. Harsha de Silva, Hesha Withanage and Mujibur Rahman, SLFP MP Dayasiri Jayasekara, “independent” MPs Patali Champika Ranawaka and Chandima Weerakkody, the Samagi Vanita Balawegaya National Organiser Hirunika Premachandra, Pubudu Jayagoda and Duminda Nagamuwa of the FSP, and CTU General Secretary Joseph Stalin were present when the protest march commenced.

Continue reading ‘Police Bloch Anti-Govt Protesr near Fort Railway Station; Sajith Premadasa and SJB MP’s retreat from Front to back Instead of Marching Forward and Leave Abandoning the People they led;Hirunika Premachandra Circumvents Police and Reaches Forts Station Via Another Route’ »

Wanni District MP and Former Cabinet Minister Rishad Bathiudeen MP Acquitted by Courts of all Charges Pertaining to the Easter Sunday Bombings;SLMC leader says he was Wrongfully Accused Due to Politucal Reasons


BY Buddhika Samaraweera and Buwanajee Coralage

Former Minister, incumbent Samagi Jana Balawegaya Opposition MP and All-Ceylon Makkal Congress Leader Rishad Bathiudeen, who was accused of supporting those who carried out the Easter Sunday terror attacks on 21 April 2019, claimed that he was wrongly accused for political reasons, following his aquittal of all charges by the Colombo Fort Magistrate’s Court yesterday (2).

“I was imprisoned under false accusations directed just to win the Presidential Election, and these accusations also scarred the whole of the Muslim community,” claimed Bathiudeen while commenting to the media yesterday outside the Colombo Fort Magistrate’s Court.

Bathiudeen’s Attorney N.M. Shaheid also claimed that his client was imprisoned for political revenge rather than based on factual evidence, and that this was proven by his acquittal yesterday.

Continue reading ‘Wanni District MP and Former Cabinet Minister Rishad Bathiudeen MP Acquitted by Courts of all Charges Pertaining to the Easter Sunday Bombings;SLMC leader says he was Wrongfully Accused Due to Politucal Reasons’ »

President Ranil Wickremesinghe Instructs Wild;ife and Forest Conversation Minister Mahinda Amaraweera to explore possibilities of setting up a 1,000-acre safari sanctuary in the Northern Province


BY Buddhika Samaraweera

On the instructions of President Ranil Wickremesinghe, the Ministry of Wildlife and Forest Resources Conservation is currently focused on setting up a 1,000-acre safari sanctuary in the Northern Province.

Speaking to The Morning, an official of the ministry said that the President has instructed Minister of Agriculture, Wildlife, and Forest Resources Conservation Mahinda Amaraweera to explore possibilities for suitable land in the Northern Province to set up a 1,000-acre safari sanctuary.

Continue reading ‘President Ranil Wickremesinghe Instructs Wild;ife and Forest Conversation Minister Mahinda Amaraweera to explore possibilities of setting up a 1,000-acre safari sanctuary in the Northern Province’ »

Protesters Urge Sajith Premadasa and SJB Members to Move Past the Human Barricade Set up by Police to Block Protest March but Sajith and SJB Abandon Protest and Climb into their vehicles to leave amidst Jeers


Opposition Leader Sajith Premadasa and several members from the SJB were today seen leaving the anti government protest site after they failed to move past the human barricade set up by the police.

Much to the displeasure of the protestors who were seen urging Premadasa and the SJB members to move past the human barricade, the opposition Leader and opposition members were seen getting into their vehicles and leaving the protest site to maintain calm and non violence.

Continue reading ‘Protesters Urge Sajith Premadasa and SJB Members to Move Past the Human Barricade Set up by Police to Block Protest March but Sajith and SJB Abandon Protest and Climb into their vehicles to leave amidst Jeers’ »

Sri Lankan Police block an anti-government protest march in Colombo from Maradana to Fort , organised by Opposition parties, civic activists and trade unions


By

Meera Srinivasan

The Sri Lanka Police on Wednesday blocked an anti-government protest march organised by Opposition parties, civic activists and trade unions who demanded that the Ranil Wickremesinghe government “stop repression” and address the persisting economic crisis.

Members of Sri Lanka’s main Opposition party Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB or United People’s Force), along with student groups, lawyer and journalist collectives, and worker unions began a march from the busy Maradana locality north of the city centre, and planned to proceed towards Colombo’s Fort area. However, the police who earlier denied permission for the protest — despite many, including Sri Lanka’s Human Rights Commission, issuing statements underscoring citizens’ constitutional right to dissent — blocked participants from proceeding after a point.

Wednesday’s march followed a protest rally organised by trade unions affiliated to the Opposition Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) last week, and points to a potential new wave of protests in Sri Lanka, as citizens reel under hyperinflation — 66 % in October — and food inflation of over 85 %, amid reports of starvation and a growing concern over state repression.

Continue reading ‘Sri Lankan Police block an anti-government protest march in Colombo from Maradana to Fort , organised by Opposition parties, civic activists and trade unions’ »

“The JVP’s core ideology is the political version of katta sambol, which is so hot that it should not be overconsume. So, it is as unwise as making katta sambol a main dish to hand over the reins of government to the JVP.” – The Island

(Text of Editorial appearing in “The Island” of 2nd November 2022 under the heading Reds on high horse)

Cantankerous, holier-than-thou politicians are a dime a dozen in this country, which is badly in need of some honest, capable leaders. So, there is no dearth of braggadocio, and streams of invective on the political front. Many are the self-proclaimed messiahs who offer to deliver the hapless masses from suffering if they are voted into power.

The JVP would have the public believe that it has become popular enough to form the next government. It claims that the main political parties have ruined the country and incurred the wrath of the public; they are not equal to the task of solving the economic crisis, and therefore it is now in a position to capture state power. Hope is said to spring eternal, and anyone is free to dream or cherish delusions.

Continue reading ‘“The JVP’s core ideology is the political version of katta sambol, which is so hot that it should not be overconsume. So, it is as unwise as making katta sambol a main dish to hand over the reins of government to the JVP.” – The Island’ »

The JVP and SJB are battling for dominance in the opposition space which has expanded since the uprising.; each trying to outdo the other by resorting to populist slogans that are not only lacking in nuance but also contradicting their own ideology.

By

Himal Kotelawala

With the likelihood of an electoral collapse of the ruling Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) still reasonably high, the country’s main opposition the Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) and the leftist National People’s Power (NPP) appear to be engaged in a low-intensity turf war over the coveted “system change” mandate.

Though an election has yet to be announced — indeed, opposition parties across the board have expressed fears of an indefinite delay — the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP)-led NPP has been busy organising well-planned and well-attended public events around the country.

The SJB in contrast has been slow to step up, with only a handful of pocket meetings and other events highlighted by the media, apart from the occasional press conference.

The JVP fired the first salvo. Former JVP parliamentarian K D Lal Kantha speaking at an event on Monday October 31 said there are crooks not just in the government but in the opposition benches too.
“Some people think that crooks are only on the government side. No, they’re there in the opposition too. Those who were in government before, held ministries before or were in cabinets before are all in the opposition too,” he said.“The opposition also considers the NPP a challenge.”

Continue reading ‘The JVP and SJB are battling for dominance in the opposition space which has expanded since the uprising.; each trying to outdo the other by resorting to populist slogans that are not only lacking in nuance but also contradicting their own ideology.’ »

Sri Lanka’s Health Care System, Much Praised in the Past, Affected Badly due to Prevailing Economic Crisis; health sector is still short of over 150 essential drugs

By

Meera Srinivasan

Sri Lanka’s painful economic crisis may have let up a little, mainly for those who can afford higher living costs, but shortages continue to affect its noted health care system, according to officials and medical practitioners.

Despite international lending agencies and bilateral partners, especially India, pumping in emergency credit, the health sector is still short of over 150 essential drugs. “We are trying our best to maintain an optimum level of supplies, but there is a shortage,” Dr. D.R.K. Herath, Deputy Director General of the Health Ministry’s Medical Supplies Division told The Hindu.

Compared to the severe shortages of fuel, food items, and medicinesthat Sri Lanka experienced earlier this year, when the government ran out of dollars, supplies have improved now, with the government rationing fuel, repurposing available funds, and obtaining support from bilateral partners, mainly India.

Continue reading ‘Sri Lanka’s Health Care System, Much Praised in the Past, Affected Badly due to Prevailing Economic Crisis; health sector is still short of over 150 essential drugs’ »

Fisheries Minister Douglas Devananda Visits Kurunthoor Malai in Mullaitivu, Vedukkunari Malai in Vavuniya and Gives Assurance that Temple Related Issues in North will be Resolved Positively and Amicably


BY Mirudhula Thambiah

Minister of Fisheries Douglas Devananda yesterday (1) met parties connected to the Kurunthoor Malai temple in Mullaitivu and the Vedukkunari Malai temple in Vavuniya, both in the Northern Province, and assured that a positive and amicable settlement will be reached regarding longstanding temple-related issues.

Speaking to The Morning, Devananda yesterday said that he had met the parties involved in both the Kurunthoor Malai and Vedukkunari Malai temples and assured that the longstanding issues relating to their places of worship will be met with a positive settlement.

Continue reading ‘Fisheries Minister Douglas Devananda Visits Kurunthoor Malai in Mullaitivu, Vedukkunari Malai in Vavuniya and Gives Assurance that Temple Related Issues in North will be Resolved Positively and Amicably’ »

Our Power of People Party MP Athuraliye Rathana Thera Wants Sri Lanka to Follow Independent Strategy of Printing Money like Myanmar,Korea and Cuba Instead of Adhering to International Monetary Fund(IMF) Imposed Conditions


BY Kiara Warnasuriya

Ape Jana Bala Pakshaya (Our Power of People Party) MP Ven. Athuraliye Rathana Thera stated yesterday (1) that the International Monetary Fund (IMF) is not the answer to Sri Lanka’s present crisis, claiming that it has not succeeded in saving a single country over the past few years, and that it will therefore, not succeed in saving Sri Lanka either.

“From 2015 to date, the IMF has not been able to save a single country. The result of dealing with the IMF will be that any independent strategy that is available to Sri Lanka to emerge from this crisis will be blocked.”

The monk observed that one such independent strategy is printing money, and pointed out that the IMF cannot impose any conditions on countries like Myanmar, the Republic of Korea , and Cuba, because they print their own money.

Continue reading ‘Our Power of People Party MP Athuraliye Rathana Thera Wants Sri Lanka to Follow Independent Strategy of Printing Money like Myanmar,Korea and Cuba Instead of Adhering to International Monetary Fund(IMF) Imposed Conditions’ »

President Ranil Wickremesinghe Says his Taking Over a Country that had Declared Bankruptcy was like taking over the Titanic after the ship hit the iceberg.

President Ranil Wickremesinghe on Sunday described his accession to power in crisis-hit Sri Lanka as “taking over the titanic after it hit the iceberg”.

His witty remark was made at the 32nd Annual General Meeting of the Sri Lanka Tea Factory Owners Association at the Water’s Edge Hotel as a response to what Wickremesinghe described as its Chairman Lionel Herath’s ‘tale of woes’.

“He (Lionel Herath) came out with a tale of woes. That is understandable looking at what we have gone through this year. Now, it is my chance to come out with my tale of woes because I have taken over the Titanic after it hit the iceberg. So, you can just imagine where I have to start. Everything was down. We have declared ourselves bankrupt,” President Wickremesinghe said.

“With the bankruptcy that we have declared, our economy has virtually come to a halt. The inflation, the bankruptcy, and everything else that is happening have brought our economy to a grinding halt. How do we restart it? That is what we are engaged in,” the President said in his speech in which he detailed measures taken to restore stability and he also listed various challenges ahead and steps taken and planned to address those.

Continue reading ‘President Ranil Wickremesinghe Says his Taking Over a Country that had Declared Bankruptcy was like taking over the Titanic after the ship hit the iceberg.’ »

All should forget their differences and rally around the government of President Ranil Wickremesinghe to turn the economy around or in the alternative, perish.

By The Outsider

The trend these days has been to bash Ranil left, right and centre. In fact it has now become fashionable to do so; so much so that those with a different point of view have almost become afraid to voice their opinions publicly. It is in this context that I thought of making a few points to be considered with an open mind. I must emphasise at the outset that I am no Ranil sychophant.

1) When Ranil accepted the Premiership unconditionally, I was livid. As most did, I too felt he gave GR a lifeline when he was on the verge of quitting.

2) Eventually it turned out well as GR was anyway compelled to go.

3) Ranil was next appointed acting President and then elected President by a vote in Parliament.

4) We hear arguments that Ranil became President with only 134 votes and thus has no right to be President. I haven’t heard a more illogical argument than that. Ranil became President with 134 out of 225 votes of MPs as provided for in our Constitution. What more could we ask for than a legally and constitutionally appointed President. Even the USA has a constitutional provision for succession if the President dies in office or vacates office.

Continue reading ‘All should forget their differences and rally around the government of President Ranil Wickremesinghe to turn the economy around or in the alternative, perish.’ »

President Ranil Wickremesinghe states that the government will appoint a committee to Facilitate integration of the Hill Country Tamils of Indian Origin further into Sri Lankan society


Sri Lankan President Ranil Wickremesinghe has said he is hopeful of resolving the problems faced by ethnic Tamils in the country, as he announced the appointment of a committee to find ways to integrate the Indian-origin workers in the plantation sector into the society.

Mr. Wickremesinghe’s remarks came on Sunday during an event in Colombo to accept a consignment of medicine donated by the Union Territory of Puducherry at the request of Ceylon Worker’s Congress (CWC), a leading political party representing the Indian-origin Tamils in the Central Province.

“While some of the Tamils of Hill Country origin had integrated successfully into the Sri Lankan society, some have failed and measures would be taken to assist them to do so,” he said.
Mr. Wickremesinghe said that the government will appoint a committee to seek how best to integrate the Tamils of Hill Country origin further into the Sri Lankan society.

Continue reading ‘President Ranil Wickremesinghe states that the government will appoint a committee to Facilitate integration of the Hill Country Tamils of Indian Origin further into Sri Lankan society’ »

The 22nd Amendment to the Constitution Bill that was Passed by Parliament with 174 Votes for and one against comes into force as the 21st Amendment to the Constitution Following the Endorsement of Speaker Mahinda Yapa Abeywardene

Speaker Mahinda Yapa Abeywardana yesterday (31 October) endorsed the certificate on the 22nd Amendment to the Constitution Bill, which was passed by a special majority in Parliament recently.
The 22nd Amendment to the Constitution Bill was presented to Parliament on 10 August 2022 by Minister of Justice, Prisons Affairs, and Constitutional Refor

ms and President’s Counsel (PC) Dr. Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe.
Subsequently, as per the Supreme Court determination related to the petitions against the bill, amendments were made at the Ministerial Consultative Committee on Judicial Affairs and approval was obtained.

The debate on the second reading of the 22nd Amendment to the Constitution Bill was held on 20 and 21 October.

Continue reading ‘The 22nd Amendment to the Constitution Bill that was Passed by Parliament with 174 Votes for and one against comes into force as the 21st Amendment to the Constitution Following the Endorsement of Speaker Mahinda Yapa Abeywardene’ »

We need to strengthen feminist critiques of the structures of exploitation, oppression, and domination and examine how predatory, especially financialised neoliberal capitalism, has weakened democratic spaces, social protection capacities, and living conditions.

By Dr. Harini Amarasuriya


(Academic, rights activist, and Member of Parliament Dr. Harini Amarasuriya delivered the keynote address at the Regional Conference on Equality and Equity in Recognising Unpaid Care Work and Women’s Labour in South Asia on 20-21 October, organised by the Women and Media Collective and Social Scientists’ Association.)


Following is the address:

This conference could not be held at a more important time. Sri Lanka is going through one of its worst economic crises – possibly the worst it’s experienced – and social reproduction work such as child care, maintaining households, and community relations are becoming increasingly difficult. Not only is this work being done primarily by women – whether paid or unpaid – but it is becoming harder and harder to do. This is not simply an economic crisis – but a social crisis of mammoth proportions and one that was a long time in the making.

In my talk today, I would like to propose that this social crisis – especially the crisis in social reproductive work – calls for an interrogation of feminism’s relationship with capitalism, especially neoliberal capitalism, and also that it provides us with an opportunity which we should not miss, to reshape the future in radically different terms. The more time I spend on policy work, the more I realise that there is a startling consistency – and for me an increasingly uncomfortable consistency – in what counts as ‘women’s issues’ and the policy and other interventions that are proposed to deal with those issues.

Deteriorating economic conditions on the one hand and the need to increase women’s labour force participation rates (apparently not high enough) on the other, topped off by microfinance lending programmes for poor women, lack of women’s representation in decision-making bodies, and therefore a lack of empowerment programmes and quotas to ensure equality is occasionally disrupted by talks of the need to ensure meritocracy so that only women who deserve to be in these positions get there, because if not, there is the shame of having ‘unqualified’ women in positions of power.

Gender-based violence in homes, workplaces, and the community must be combated by law reforms. In general, there is very little recognition of how these very institutions that are expected to deliver equality and justice are themselves the sources of exclusion, oppression, and exploitation, especially of women from minority communities and low-income groups.

Continue reading ‘We need to strengthen feminist critiques of the structures of exploitation, oppression, and domination and examine how predatory, especially financialised neoliberal capitalism, has weakened democratic spaces, social protection capacities, and living conditions.’ »

The Norwegians in general and Solheim in particular invested time in talking to Prabhakaran for the simple reason that that was what their assignment required them to do

By Mark Salter

(The writer is the author of ‘To End A Civil War: Norway’s Peace Engagement in Sri Lanka’ [Hurst, London, 2015])

Erik Solheim’s recent visit to Sri Lanka – his first in 16 years – elicited its fair share of media attention, with ‘what’s he doing back here again?’ the obvious starting point for much of the coverage.

On the back of an announcement soon after Solheim’s arrival that he had been appointed as the President’s Climate Change Advisor, interviews in this paper and elsewhere focused on the myriad environmental challenges facing Sri Lanka, the title of one ‘My appointment is not a paid job – Solheim’ doubtless answering the question on many people’s minds.

Most recently, ‘Rajasinghe’ – presumably a nom de plume – has penned an interesting profile of the man.

First a brief interest disclosure: I have known Solheim for 10 years, having authored a book on Norway’s engagement in Sri Lanka during the final 10 years of the civil war that draws extensively on in-depth interviews with him and Vidar Helgesen (also referenced by Rajasinghe).

Today I am equally a firm friend and (on some issues) a staunch critic of the man. And as anyone who’s read it will hopefully attest, my book is a critical account of the Norwegian’s role as third-party facilitators in the Lankan conflict.

Continue reading ‘The Norwegians in general and Solheim in particular invested time in talking to Prabhakaran for the simple reason that that was what their assignment required them to do’ »

Erik Solheim with his global connections can help in raising bilateral assistance and multilateral trust funds to revive Sri Lanka’s economy.


By Rajasinghe

Like Mary and her little lamb, Norwegians tend to follow Ranil Wickremesinghe (RW) wherever he goes. This was true during the north-east war, when, at Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga’s (CBK’s) request, the Norwegian Government began to intervene as a supposedly ‘honest broker’ in attempting to solve our ethnic conflict.

What CBK did not know was that by then many pro-LTTE Tamils had migrated to Norway. With its electorates [Ridings] being small, Norwegian politicians were increasingly under pressure to help the Tamil cause and treat Prabhakaran as an equal negotiating partner with the Sri Lankan State.

Though CBK invited them to lead the dialogue, Norwegian interlocutors were more at home with Prime Minister RW and his advisor Hameed. Norwegians had achieved fame as mediators in the Israel-Palestine conflict with Norway’s representatives journeying to the Middle East and the Israelis and Arabs visiting Oslo for consultations. Many a Palestinian leader went to Norway for all-expenses-paid medical treatment, including Arafat, as they could not be sure of Israeli sabotage in many mid European countries.

A Norwegian NGO named International Alert (IA) also attempted to mediate in Sierra Leone, where the military dictatorship was threatened by an uprising which was based in the diamond-rich and hilly interior provinces. IA also hired Kumar Rupasinghe, who had later married a Norwegian lady and was domiciled in Oslo, to lead a well-funded peace initiative in Sri Lanka.

Continue reading ‘Erik Solheim with his global connections can help in raising bilateral assistance and multilateral trust funds to revive Sri Lanka’s economy.’ »

“Parasakthi”: The Groundbreaking Film that Catapulted Sivaji Ganesan and “Kalaignar” Karunanidhi to Fame 70 Years ago

By

Siddarth Muralidharan

At the very outset, it was a typical, conservative Tamil movie plot: three brothers coming home to attend their dear sister’s wedding. But, as it turned out, Parasakthi (The Supreme Power), a 1952 Tamil film directed by Krishnan-Panju and written by the then 28-year-old Muthuvel Karunanidhi, triggered a wave of radicalism in Tamil popular culture, thanks to harpoon-sharp dialogues that attacked casteism, religion, and social inequality, and scenes that sent shockwaves across the Tamil country.

“Kalaignar” Karunanidhi & Sivaji Ganesan

The rest, as the cliche goes, is history. Legendary thespian Sivaji Ganesan’s debut vehicle made history and propelled the growth of the Dravidian ideology. Parasakthi hit the screens at a crucial juncture in Tamil history. Just three years prior, C.N. Annadurai, who had been a member of Periyar’s Dravidar Kazhagam (DK), established the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK).

A brigade of young writers associated with the DMK, including Karunanidhi, charged by the ideals of Dravidian politics, had already embraced Tamil cinema. They engaged in direct political propaganda through movies such as Nalla Thambi (1949), Velaikkari (1949), and Manthiri Kumari (1950, story by Karunanidhi).
Even though Karunanidhi had worked as an uncredited dialogue writer in Marutha Naattu Ilavarasi (1950), it was Parasakthi that brought him acclaim. The film had several unforgettable dialogues and scenes, including the iconic temple scene where Sivaji Ganesan confronts a priest who tried to molest his sister, and, of course, the elaborate courtroom scene featuring a marathon monologue by Sivaji Ganesan, which played a significant role in defining and delivering Dravidian sentiments for the Tamil people across the globe.

Continue reading ‘“Parasakthi”: The Groundbreaking Film that Catapulted Sivaji Ganesan and “Kalaignar” Karunanidhi to Fame 70 Years ago’ »

“You Ceylonese have eaten the fruit before you planted the tree.” Stated Cambridge economist Prof. Joan Robinson, during her visit to Sri Lanka in 1969,- Dr.Indrajit Coomaraswamy

By

Dr.Indrajit Coomaraswamy

(Former Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) Governor Dr Indrajit Coomaraswamy, during a recent session with The Indian Express, analysed Sri Lanka’s economic crisis and the debt restructuring needed for the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to release the $2.9 billion package that the nation is seeking. The session was moderated by the publication’s National Editor for Strategic Affairs, Nirupama Subramanian.)


Following are excerpts from the session:


Sri Lanka’s economy and status of the IMF bailout

The gross external reserve level is just under $ 1.8 billion, but $ 1.4 billion of that is a swap arrangement with the People’s Bank of China, which is not very usable. You’ve got to have three months’ worth of import cover before you can draw on that, so the reusable reserves are only about $ 300 million. Of that about $ 100 million account for Special Drawing Rights Holdings with the IMF. A little bit of gold is left after the sale of some gold stocks that the Central Bank had. So actually it’s about $ 300 million that exists, and that’s about a week’s high imports.

Continue reading ‘“You Ceylonese have eaten the fruit before you planted the tree.” Stated Cambridge economist Prof. Joan Robinson, during her visit to Sri Lanka in 1969,- Dr.Indrajit Coomaraswamy’ »

Conviction of former Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak and his wife on multiple counts of graft and corruption;In contrast, can Sri Lanka speak to a single conviction of a political ‘shark’ under its anti-corruption laws? No!


By

Kishali Pinto-Jayawardene

“We put our untouchables into jail’, a senior Malaysian advocate told me proudly in Kuala Lumpur last week.

Our crime of ‘accidental citizenship’

His reference was to jail sentences of respectively twelve and ten years, handed down by Malaysian courts on former Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak and his wife. Long considered as Malaysia’s ‘untouchables’ due to the immense political power and influence that they wielded, Najib’s conviction of multiple counts of graft and corruption, was upheld by the highest court in August this year. A most striking charge related to transfers to his personal accounts of close to USD 9.8 million from SRC Inter-national, a former unit of a state development fund, 1MDB (1 Malaysia Development Berhad),

A month later, his wife was convicted of ‘soliciting and receiving bribes’ to help a company win a USD 279 million project. She also faces charges of money laundering and tax evasion. What my Malaysian conversationalist was too polite (or perchance too merciful) to ask me was, why Sri Lanka could not have followed suit in regard to its own ‘untouchables’ in politics? Probably that question need not be asked, this country’s bankruptcy and the continuing painful financial crisis that has beggared its popu-lace, answers that unspoken question all too eloquently.

Whatever it was, I was glad that I was not called upon to answer that question left hanging in the air. After all, there is a limit to being acutely embarrassed due to the accident of being saddled with citi-zenship of a nation that, not only allows its grand political crooks who rob the public purse to escape unscathed but also sings paeans of praise in their name as Sri Lankan voters did (and some, probably still do) until the bubble burst in their astonished and crest fallen faces. But the point is that, Malaysia did not have spectacularly fine laws that enabled the convictions of Najib and his wife.

Continue reading ‘Conviction of former Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak and his wife on multiple counts of graft and corruption;In contrast, can Sri Lanka speak to a single conviction of a political ‘shark’ under its anti-corruption laws? No!’ »

“Basil Rajapaksa will have a maximum of another 10 years in his political career. Apart from that, if he wants, he can always give up his US citizenship and come and contest here; that is up to him. He left the Parliament when there was no such clause.” – Sagara Kariyawasam


By Marianne David

The Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) is not split despite members taking different decisions, especially when faced with the 22nd Amendment Bill vote, asserted General Secretary Sagara Kariyawasam.

“Constitutional change is a critical thing which has serious impacts, so we decided that the party would not tell anyone how to vote and that they should take a decision in line with their conscience,” he revealed, in an interview with The Sunday Morning.

Kariyawasam said he did not vote due to two reasons – the weakening of the Executive Presidency in an ad hoc manner and amendments being brought targeting individuals.

Commenting on the criticism being levelled against SLPP National Organiser Basil Rajapaksa by party members, Kariyawasam said there had been no change in how the affairs of the party were being handled and that people came up with excuses when they saw the other side as being greener.

He also questioned the policies and principles of those voting for successive amendments to the Constitution, noting that they were voting merely to remain in power.

Following are excerpts of the interview:

Problems within the party have resulted in splits with the SLPP, with defections of several groups over the past few months. Remaining SLPPers have also shown a clear split over the 22nd Amendment Bill vote. Why did you oppose the bill?

Continue reading ‘“Basil Rajapaksa will have a maximum of another 10 years in his political career. Apart from that, if he wants, he can always give up his US citizenship and come and contest here; that is up to him. He left the Parliament when there was no such clause.” – Sagara Kariyawasam’ »

“This 22nd Amendment was first taken up by former President Gotabaya Rajapaksa.This is not Ranil Wickremesinghe’s amendment, this is Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s amendment, which Wickremesinghe continued with” – Mahindananda Aluthgamage

.
By Marianne David

The 22nd Amendment Bill is former President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s amendment and not that of Ranil Wickremesinghe and having formed a government after Gotabaya Rajapaksa left, the Government had to support the Government, asserted Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) MP Mahindananda Aluthgamage, explaining his reasons for supporting the 22nd Amendment Bill.

“If we are in the Government, we have to support the Government. There were arguments and various things, but we stood by the President,” he pointed out, in an interview with The Sunday Morning.

Commenting on the growing dissension within the party over party politics being controlled by SLPP National Organiser Basil Rajapaksa and his loyalists, Aluthgamage, while conceding that the party was experiencing issues, revealed that a decision had been reached on establishing democracy in the party.

“We have come to an understanding with Basil Rajapaksa. The party has now decided on democracy for the party. Very soon the convention will be held and new appointments and committees will come in,” he added, emphasising on the importance of giving opportunities to young and talented politicians.

As for the alliance with Wickremesinghe, he said that the decision to support Wickremesinghe had been reached after a lengthy discussion and the realisation that Wickremesinghe was the best person for the job in the face of the economic crisis.

Following are excerpts of the interview:

Problems within the party have resulted in splits with the SLPP, with defections of several groups over the past few months. Remaining SLPPers have also shown a clear split over the 22nd Amendment Bill vote. Why did you support the bill?

Continue reading ‘“This 22nd Amendment was first taken up by former President Gotabaya Rajapaksa.This is not Ranil Wickremesinghe’s amendment, this is Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s amendment, which Wickremesinghe continued with” – Mahindananda Aluthgamage’ »

How and Why the LTTE Evicted Muslims from the Northern Province in “Black October 1990”.

By D.B.S.Jeyaraj


This article was written in 2015 to mark the Twenty – Fifth Anniversary of Muslim Mass Expulsion From North by the LTTE.It is being re-posted without any changes to denote the 32nd annivrsary of the tragic event

The Investigation launched by the office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights has in accordance with its terms of reference probed the period of time from the 2002 February ceasefire until the end of the war in May 2009 to ascertain whether war crimes, crimes against humanity and human rights violations occurred in Sri Lanka during the final phase of the war as alleged. The focus on these particular years has naturally led to the overlooking of many other terrible incidents which happened in the years preceding 2002. Notable among these horrors is the mass expulsion of Muslims from the North by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam(LTTE).

The twenty-fifth anniversary of this cruel, inhuman episode in the history of Tamil –Muslim relations in Sri Lanka is being widely remembered at present. It was in October 1990 that the tiger organization (LTTE) forcibly expelled the Tamil speaking Muslim people from the Northern Province in an atrocious act amounting to ethnic cleansing. Within a few days the Muslims were chased out of their homeland where they had lived for many, many centuries.

Mosque in Chavakachcheri, October 2010

Mosque in Chavakachcheri, October 2010

The mass expulsion of Muslims from the North in 1990 was a humanitarian catastrophe. Uprooting a people from their habitat at gun point and driving them away after depriving them of their cash and jewellery was despicable and unpardonable. I have often written about this tragedy in the past. I now intend to focus upon this mass expulsion on the occasion of its 25th anniversary. I shall be drawing on some of my earlier writings in a bid to revive memories of this mass expulsion by relating in brief the tale of this terrible tragedy. I also want to trace the sequence of events that led to this sordid exercise in which the Tamil speaking Muslims were chased out by their gun toting linguistic brethren.
Continue reading ‘How and Why the LTTE Evicted Muslims from the Northern Province in “Black October 1990”.’ »

Tamil Nadu Police Begin Investigating Terrorism Plot after Car Bomb Explosion Kills Suspected Suicide Bomber in Coimbatore ; Anong those Allegedly Involved are Persons With Earlier Links to Sri Lankan Easter Bombing Mastermind Zahran Hashim

By Wilson Thomas and S. Vijay Kumar

K. Valliammal, 73, of Kottai Eswaran Kovil Street in Coimbatore, went to bed late on the night of October 22. The next morning, she woke up with a jolt, not to the usual chants from the Sangameswarar temple in the neighbourhood, but to a deafening explosion.

“I heard a blast and rushed out of the house. Flames and smoke billowed from the road near the temple. I thought the transformer close to the temple had exploded. Then I realised that the flames were coming from a car in front of the temple,” recalled Valliammal, who runs a home food eatery on the populated street. She said the blast was followed by another.

Coimbatore turned tense with the news of the blasts. It was the morning before Deepavali. Those who had made last-minute shopping plans were afraid to step out. The police began to identify and isolate deserted vehicles, which had been parked for a long time, across the city.

Senthil Kannan, a milk agent who lives at the temple junction, heard the explosion a few minutes after waking up at 4 a.m. and seeing the temple’s gopuram, a routine he had been following for several years. He ran to the street and found a burning car in front of the temple.

Sub-inspector R. Selvarajan of Ukkadam station, head constable Deva Kumar, and constable Pandiya Raja were the first to go close to the burning car. They were manning a temporary checkpoint in the area.

“I also thought the transformer had exploded, as the power had gone off. On my way to the fire ball, I alerted the control room over my walkie-talkie. As I got closer, I found that a car was in flames. I told the control room to alert fire services,” said Selvarajan.

Continue reading ‘Tamil Nadu Police Begin Investigating Terrorism Plot after Car Bomb Explosion Kills Suspected Suicide Bomber in Coimbatore ; Anong those Allegedly Involved are Persons With Earlier Links to Sri Lankan Easter Bombing Mastermind Zahran Hashim’ »

How and Why Actor “MGR” Launched the ADMK Party 50 Years ago

by D.B.S.JEYARAJ

17 October 1972 was a Tuesday. Fifty years ago on that auspicious day , a new political party was launched in the South Indian state of Tamil Nadu. The founder and pioneering leader of that party – which celebrated its golden jubilee a few days ago- was the well known film actor turned politician Maruthur Gopalan Ramachandran known popularly as “MGR” by his magical initials . The new party at its inception was named Anna -Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (ADMK). It was later changed to All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK)

MG Ramachandran or MGR had been for two decades, a stalwart of the Dravida Munnetra Kazham (DMK) meaning Dravidian Progressive Federation in English. The DMK at that time was the ruling party in Tamil Nadu. MGR was party treasurer. However MG Ramachandran was formally expelled from the DMK on 10 October 1972 for allegedly violating party disciplne .MGR launched the Anna-Dravida Munnetra Kazhagham (ADMK) a week later on the 17th. In forming his new party MGR retained the name of DMK with an added prefix – Anna derived from the DMK founder-leader C.N. Annadurai popularly referred to as “Anna”. MGR later amended the Anna-DMK to AIADMK or All-India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagham in 1976.

Continue reading ‘How and Why Actor “MGR” Launched the ADMK Party 50 Years ago’ »

CID Uncovers Rs 14 Billion Financial Fraud Affecting 8000 Sri Lankans where website called “Sports Chain” was used as platform to promote Fake cryptocurrency investment; Scheme Chinese national Zhang Kai and Partner arrested at Katunayake Airport while Attemptin to flee Country

The Police yesterday (27) shed light on a massive financial fraud committed through a fake cryptocurrency investment scheme.

The Criminal Investigation Department (CID) had initiated probes after receiving a complaint about the scam, according to Police Spokesperson Senior Superintendent of Police (SSP) Nihal Thalduwa.
According to him, one Sri Lankan named Keerthi Bandara was arrested in connection with the incident. He is currently enlarged on bail.
Meanwhile, a Chinese national by the name of Zhang Kai and his partner have also been taken into custody over the scam. They were arrested at the Bandaranaike International Airport (BIA) in Katunayake on 12 September while attempting to fly out of the island.
The trio had reportedly set up a website called “Sports Chain”, which they used to lure investors by introducing it as a highly profitable cryptocurrency investment platform.
They had commenced their fraudulent operation in 2020 and run it as a Ponzi scheme, an investing scam that generates returns for earlier investors using the money obtained from new investors.
At least 8,000 Sri Lankans have been scammed by the three suspects and have swindled more than Rs. 14 billion, according to the police spokesperson.
Earlier reports revealed that professionals such as doctors, teachers, security personnel, and people from lower middle-income backgrounds have been affected by the scam.

Courtesy: The Morning

Mrs. Rushira Kulasingham ,Designated as Principal of Jaffna College, Vaddukkoddai With Effect From 1st January 2023, Makes History as the First Woman Principal of the Institution


(Text of Announcement made by the Jaffna College Alumni Association, Vaddukkoddai on 25th October 2022)

The Jaffna College Alumni Association wishes to announce to the alumni across the world that the Board of Directors of Jaffna College have appointed Mrs. Rushira Kulasingham as the Principal of Jaffna College with effect from the 1st of January 2023.

Mrs. Rushira Kulasingham

We are delighted to note that Mrs. Rushira Kulasingham will be the first female Principal of Jaffna College.

An installation service for the new Principal will be held at the St. Thomas’ Cathedral of the Jaffna Diocese of the Church of South India at Vaddukoddai on Sunday, the 6th of November 2022. The time of the service will be announced soon.

Continue reading ‘Mrs. Rushira Kulasingham ,Designated as Principal of Jaffna College, Vaddukkoddai With Effect From 1st January 2023, Makes History as the First Woman Principal of the Institution’ »

A reform program to bring about a profound change in the system is something that should be achieved with the support of the Parliament and not through a struggle on the street. Even a change of the govt could be effected only by an election, not by a struggle on the street

By

Victor Ivan

Due to a sudden illness, I had to refrain myself from writing for two consecutive weeks. I must admit that the comment made by Shehan Karunathilaka, the Booker Prize winner 2022 about my book titled ‘Paradise in Tears’, which was published in September 2008, generated an innocent pride in me while I was confined to a sick bed recently.

Karunathilaka, who was eight when the war began, says that he found his memories came back when he read a book called Paradise in Tears by the journalist Victor Ivan. “It brought back the mobs, and my mum pulled my face away. Later I found out they were pulling people out of cars to test whether they could speak Sinhalese; if they couldn’t, they were set on fire.” Despite it has not been subjected to an adequate academic review, the ‘Paradise in Tears’ is a valuable pictorial resume of the main events connected with the present crisis; it contains a large number of photographs (444) of historic importance followed by a brief description of each of them, and could be considered as a significant research study on how Sri Lanka has been pushed to its present state of failure, collapse and bankruptcy.

It has covered a large portion of the episode of the great collapse in the socio-political system of Sri Lanka. In that sense, this book explains not only the historical development of the crisis but also the way Sri Lanka was moving towards great devastation. In fact, what I really wanted was to present the serious events and the grim atmosphere that affected the course of the country in the form of an appropriate pictorial resume using a collection of rare photographs that have been published in regard to each event as and when they occurred, with a brief narration of each picture in a manner they would make an intense impact and a deep shock in the reader.

I originally dreamt not only of publishing just a book with a collection of annotated photographs, but also having an exhibition of them held across the country with the aim of educating and enlightening the general public of the situation. I had been working for a long time to achieve this objective. About 15 years had passed by the time the final collection of photographs was completed. Needless to say, that the selection of 442 photographs of historic importance and illustrating them with background details with specific dates alone is not a simple or easy task

Continue reading ‘A reform program to bring about a profound change in the system is something that should be achieved with the support of the Parliament and not through a struggle on the street. Even a change of the govt could be effected only by an election, not by a struggle on the street’ »

How the prominent Indian independent news site “the Wire” Diminished its own Credibility by Publishing Hastily without proper technical vetting or adequate editorial checks.

One constant throughout the original nine seasons of “The X-Files”, a globally syndicated American television show about a pair of fbi special agents assigned to weird cases, is a poster in the background. Mounted on a wall in the agents’ dingy basement office, it shows a grainy picture of a flying saucer and is emblazoned with a slogan in large sans-serif letters: “i want to believe”. This sentiment ultimately (two-decade-old spoiler alert!) helps the agents uncover a massive conspiracy involving the government and a technologically superior society capable of magical feats (in this case, space aliens).

A similar urge appears to have driven editors at the Wire, an independent Indian news website. Earlier this month, it published a story alleging a massive conspiracy involving the government and a technologically superior society capable of magical feats (in this case, Meta, the parent company of Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp).

The short version of a very long saga goes something like this. On October 10th the Wire alleged that Meta had handed awesome powers to Amit Malviya, who oversees social media for the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (bjp). So extensive were his privileges that his posts on Instagram were immune to review by content moderators, it said. What’s more, he had the ability to flag posts from other accounts as objectionable, which would be instantly removed without question. It published what it said were internal Instagram reports to support its claims.

It was earth-shattering stuff. Meta’s communications chief, Andy Stone, denied the claims on Twitter. But his employer has the rare distinction of being considered untrustworthy even when it denies something flat out, so few observers were willing to take him at his word. The Wire certainly did not: the next day it published what it claimed was a leaked email written by Mr Stone himself, thus proving its allegations as well as providing evidence of a botched cover-up. “How the hell [this internal report] got leaked?” it read. “Who is the reporter, not on our watch list, and why didn’t anyone of you bother to link me up?”

Ignore for a moment the ropey English in an email supposedly written by an American. Even with Meta’s reputation, it was hard to dismiss its next move as mere obfuscation. The company published a lengthy statement refuting the claims in the strongest possible terms. “There is no such report…There are no such emails.”

Continue reading ‘How the prominent Indian independent news site “the Wire” Diminished its own Credibility by Publishing Hastily without proper technical vetting or adequate editorial checks.’ »

The Fragmentation of the S LPP into factions will permit President Wickremesinghe to play a greater role as a visionary and strong willed leader in forging a consensual approach to the serious problems that the country faces.


by Jehan Perera

The passage of the 22nd Amendment to the constitution came as a surprise. It was originally scheduled to be debated in parliament a fortnight earlier. When the decision to postpone was taken it seemed as if the 22nd Amendment would not be taken up again in the near future or even if it was, it would not be passed.

There were two contentious areas on which members of the government and opposition were in disagreement. The disagreement was not only between parties but within them. The first contentious issue was the president’s power to dissolve parliament at his discretion after the passage of two and half years. The retention of the two and a half year provision is a clear political triumph for President Ranil Wickremesinghe.

The 20th Amendment and now the 22nd Amendment states that the President can dissolve parliament in two and a half years. The 19th Amendment that preceded these limited the president’s power to dissolve parliament by affirming it could only be done after four and half years.

But the 22nd Amendment retains this presidential power to dissolve parliament after the elapsing of two and a half years. This can be construed as an erosion of parliamentary democracy. It is not a good democratic practice for the president to dissolve the parliament so soon after the people have given it a mandate for five years.

President Wickremesinghe was himself a victim of this use of arbitrary presidential power in 2004 when his term as prime minister was cut short by the then president Chandrika Kumaratunga.
The second contentious issue was the right of dual citizens to contest elections and be elected to parliament and other elected political office. The 20th Amendment gave dual citizens the right to contest elections which the 19th Amendment had specifically taken away in the same way that the 22nd Amendment does.

Continue reading ‘The Fragmentation of the S LPP into factions will permit President Wickremesinghe to play a greater role as a visionary and strong willed leader in forging a consensual approach to the serious problems that the country faces.’ »

A State is not a regime: the latter can be replaced, the former cannot and should not. And yet, Colombo’s civil society has given the impression that it is working against the State, instead of specific regimes harbouring authoritarian tendencies.


By Uditha Devapriya

US Assistant Secretary of State Donald Lu visited Sri Lanka last Wednesday, October 19. He is reported to have arrived early morning. Having briefed US Embassy staff, he then presided over a civil society roundtable, after which he paid a visit to President Ranil Wickremesinghe and Foreign Affairs Minister Ali Sabry. Given that civil society does not see the president eye-to-eye, there’s little doubt that these two sessions yielded two completely different pictures of Sri Lanka’s situation.

In any case, while commending civil society, Mr Lu went on record stating that President Wickremesinghe was “the right person to get country out of crisis.” This was obviously not a sentiment shared by civil society.

There is such a thing as diplomatic protocol. Although State propaganda immediately made use of Mr Lu’s statement, as one commentator pointed out on Twitter, there was no way a high-ranking US diplomat would describe a country’s president as the wrong person to lead the country, especially during a courtesy call.

Yet if Mr Lu’s visit reassured certain members of civil society that the world’s most powerful purveyor (or propagandist, depending on how you see it) of liberal democracy was looking out for them, his visit to the president’s office left them cold.

The notion that the US will promote their values, which they feel to be in the country’s interests, no longer seems to hold as it did, say five years ago.

Continue reading ‘A State is not a regime: the latter can be replaced, the former cannot and should not. And yet, Colombo’s civil society has given the impression that it is working against the State, instead of specific regimes harbouring authoritarian tendencies.’ »

Had the Opposition put personal rancour and political needs aside and worked with Mr. Wickremesinghe once he became the president, a better 22 Amendment and other reforms could have been possible.


BY

Tisaranee Gunasekara

“You are in the end – what you are.” Goethe (Faust)

Twenty two is not perfect. Far from it, perhaps light years far. Yet, in a season of defeats and setbacks, it is a win for Sri Lankan democracy, and for those Sri Lankans who would be free citizens rather than obedient subjects or terrified children waiting for the next saviour.

The passing of the 22 (officially 21) came hard on the heels of another democratic victory. The Supreme Court effectively killed the deadly Rehabilitation Act. If President Wickremesinghe or the Rajapaksas dreamed of using the Act to punish past dissent and discourage future protests, that dream is now dead.

The two wins demonstrate that however flawed or even dysfunctional the Sri Lankan political system might be it’s not broken. It can be built on, improved. The better kind of system change, the sort that harms less, roots deep, lasts long.

By 2014, the Rajapaksas had disembowelled every single democratic institution in the country from the highest court to the lowliest Pradesheeya Sabha. Only periodic elections remained, a heads-we-win-tails-you-lose game the family believed it had mastered. Wrongly. Mahinda Rajapaksa lost the presidency and democracy made a comeback.

The Sirisena-Wickremesinghe administration removed the executive’s mailed fist from the collective back of the judiciary and paved the way for more institution-building than any previous administration via the 19th Amendment and the Right to Information Act.

Electoral defeat also revealed the ordinary clay in the Rajapaksa makeup, diminishing the shock and awe effect created by the war victory. High King Mahinda and Supreme General Gotabaya were downsized to normal size for a while.

The memory of that reduction had faded by 2018 but not dead. In 2022, as normal life collapsed under the cumulative weight of shortages and queues, that memory would return. Without its liberating effect, the peaceful revolt of the middle class which constituted the first inspiring phase of the Aragalaya couldn’t have happened.

Thus the importance in the death of the 20th and the safe birth of 22nd, especially if system change is a real goal and not just a radical sounding slogan or an excuse to scuttle reforms.

Continue reading ‘Had the Opposition put personal rancour and political needs aside and worked with Mr. Wickremesinghe once he became the president, a better 22 Amendment and other reforms could have been possible.’ »

“Prime Minister Sunak does not mark a change from the Tory policies that have left Britain in such a state. Rather he personifies them. Mr Sunak may be the only available man to fix the govt’s errors. But he also helped make them.”- The Economist

Rishi sunak entered Downing Street clutching an invisible dustpan and broom. “Mistakes were made,” declared the new prime minister on October 25th, all but rolling up his sleeves. “I have been elected as leader of my party…to fix them.”

The Economist

The voice was passive but the identity of the culprit was clear—Liz Truss, Mr Sunak’s hapless predecessor, who managed just 49 days in the job. It is the morning after the night before in the Conservative Party. The grown-ups have returned to find the house has been trashed. Now Mr Sunak must start the clean-up.

There is just one problem with this narrative. Mr Sunak is a cause of the problem as well as the solution. The new prime minister is helping tidy up a mess that he helped create.

When the Conservative Party has erred in recent years, Mr Sunak has nearly always been in favour of the mistake rather than the fix. There were many reasons to support Britain leaving the eu. Mr Sunak, however, picked the worst one: he thought it was a cracking idea. Britain will be “freer, fairer and more prosperous outside,” wrote Mr Sunak in 2016. It was a pragmatic decision, not a romantic one.

The fundamental problem at the heart of his own government will be a policy for which he long campaigned. Likewise, Mr Sunak was comfortable with a “no deal” Brexit so long as Britain actually left the eu. Mr Sunak has pledged a more constructive relationship with the bloc. Better not to have broken it at all.

Continue reading ‘“Prime Minister Sunak does not mark a change from the Tory policies that have left Britain in such a state. Rather he personifies them. Mr Sunak may be the only available man to fix the govt’s errors. But he also helped make them.”- The Economist’ »

Ministers Douglas Devananda and Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe to Visit Kurunthoormalai in Mullaitheevu and Vedukkunaari Malai in Vavuniya on Nov 1 to Resolve Temple Related Issues in Decision Taken by Cabinet Sub committee on Reconcilation


BY Mirudhula Thambiah

Minister of Fisheries Douglas Devananda and Minister of Justice, Prison Affairs, and Constitutional Reforms President’s Counsel (PC) Dr. Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe will visit Kurunthur Malai in Mullaitivu and Vedukkunari Malai in Vavuniya in the North on 1 November to resolve longstanding temple-related issues in the area.

During the initial meeting of the Cabinet Sub-Committee on Reconciliation held yesterday (25), it was decided to visit the above locations to identify and resolve the said issues, Devananda said.

Continue reading ‘Ministers Douglas Devananda and Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe to Visit Kurunthoormalai in Mullaitheevu and Vedukkunaari Malai in Vavuniya on Nov 1 to Resolve Temple Related Issues in Decision Taken by Cabinet Sub committee on Reconcilation’ »

Jaffna Mayor Visvalingam Manivannan Initiates Moves to Set up a Drug Rehabilitation Centre Within Municipal Limits in an Effort to Curb the Rise of Heroin Addiction among Northern Youth


By

Mirudhula Thambiah

In an effort to curb increasing heroin addiction among youth in Jaffna, the city’s Mayor Attorney Visvalingam Manivannan has said he will soon initiate a dialogue with other stakeholders of the city with the goal of establishing a drug rehabilitation centre within municipality limits.

Speaking to The Morning, Manivannan on 23 October said that he hopes to commence talks with the representatives of the Jaffna District Secretariat, the Jaffna Teaching Hospital, the Jaffna Bar Association, the Police, the Department of Education and the Regional Health Directors, in this regard.

Continue reading ‘Jaffna Mayor Visvalingam Manivannan Initiates Moves to Set up a Drug Rehabilitation Centre Within Municipal Limits in an Effort to Curb the Rise of Heroin Addiction among Northern Youth’ »

EPDP Leader and Fisheries Minister Douglas Devananda to raise several Issues Including Establishment of a Ministry of Northern Affairs at the Inaugural Meeting of the Cabinet Sub-Committee on Reconciliation chaired by President Ranil Wickremesinghe to be held on October 25th :


BY

Mirudhula Thambiah

The Cabinet Sub-Committee on Reconciliation chaired by President Ranil Wickremesinghe will hold its first meeting today (25).

Speaking to The Morning, Minister of Fisheries Douglas Devananda said yesterday (24) that at the first meeting, he would mainly discuss land-related issues, the activities of the Department of Archaeology, foreign and natural reserves, the Mahaweli L-Zone, missing persons, detainees, the pardoning of all Tamil political prisoners through a method similar to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) of South Africa, the implementation of the 16th Amendment to the Constitution on administrative languages, maintaining the ethnic proportionality in the Security Forces, and forming a ministry for Northern affairs.

“I will propose to release private lands under State control or State ownership. Some of these areas which include lands belonging to the people, temples, schools, and sacred places, should be released,” he added.

Continue reading ‘EPDP Leader and Fisheries Minister Douglas Devananda to raise several Issues Including Establishment of a Ministry of Northern Affairs at the Inaugural Meeting of the Cabinet Sub-Committee on Reconciliation chaired by President Ranil Wickremesinghe to be held on October 25th :’ »

Tamil Progressive Alliance (TPA) Leader and Opposition MP Mano Ganesan will meet Govt representatives this week to discuss the plight of plantation workers and the impact of the current economic crisis on them.

BY Mirudhula Thambiah

Tamil Progressive Alliance (TPA) Leader and Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) Opposition MP Mano Ganesan will meet Government representatives this week to discuss the plight of plantation workers and the impact of the current economic crisis on them.

Speaking to The Morning, Ganesan said: “During my speech last week in Parliament, I spoke about plantation workers and the impact of the economic crisis on their day-to-day life. This week, I will meet Government representatives to discuss the issue in detail,” he added.

Continue reading ‘Tamil Progressive Alliance (TPA) Leader and Opposition MP Mano Ganesan will meet Govt representatives this week to discuss the plight of plantation workers and the impact of the current economic crisis on them.’ »

That such a clumsily evil document like the Rehabilitation Bill came to the actual Bill stage is a grave question. Is the President, the Prime Minister or the verbose Minister of Justice responsible? If not, who? This question must be answered to prevent a repeat of this fiasco.


By
Kishali Pinto – Jayawardene

This ecstatic rolling about in the Diyawanna mud to celebrate the passing of the 22nd Amendment to the Constitution defeats logic if not common sense.

No cheers, vigilance needed

Constitutional yo-yo games of the 17th, 18th, 19th, 20th and now 22nd Amendments demonstrate how stupendously unfit the members of Sri Lanka’s Parliament are to hold their seats. Each of these amendments were diametrically opposite to its predecessor in its varying democratic or anti-democratic thrust. Yet they were approved by the same parliamentarians raising their hands in the House, in obedience to passing political winds. This is the pathetic state to which the Constitution, the supreme law of the land, has been reduced.

What is to say that, next year, we will not have a 23rd Amendment that will restore the 20th Amendment’s ferociously anti-democratic status quo?

If at all, this Amendment should have given rise to solemn introspection on our own sins. The bankruptcy of the country and its ranking as a governance ‘basket case’ in South Asia and beyond, are due to monkeying around with the Constitution by greedy, venal and supremely ignorant political leaders.

Business leaders, professionals, academics and civil society’s collusion in ‘yahapalanaya’ or ‘viyath maga’ charades, played their own part.

So, as far as the 22nd Amendment is concerned, there is nothing to be ecstatic about. Sobriety must attend its passing and vigilance must govern the aftermath. The working of the Amendment in practice must be monitored and critiqued. Will a diluted Constitutional Council stand as a safeguard to politicisation of constitutional commissions and important public offices? That is a key test.

Continue reading ‘That such a clumsily evil document like the Rehabilitation Bill came to the actual Bill stage is a grave question. Is the President, the Prime Minister or the verbose Minister of Justice responsible? If not, who? This question must be answered to prevent a repeat of this fiasco.’ »

Gamini Dissanayake’s Name will resonate as long as the great reservoirs of Kotmale, Victoria, Randenigala, Rantambe, Maduru Oya, Ulhitiya, Rathkinda, Lunugamwehera and Samanalawewa remain on this land.


By Karu Jayasuriya

(The 28th death anniversary of Gamini Dissanayake is on @4 October 2022)

The name of Gamini Dissanayake is an indelible mark in Sri Lanka’s politics. This statement was issued to mark the 28TH death anniversary of the late politician who marked a turning point in national politics.

Gamini Dissanayake was born on March 20, 1942 and entered Parliament in 1970. But perhaps, it was never with the intention to die as a man who would continue to live in the hearts and minds of the people.

Although many people born as human beings often become a burden to one’s nation only to pass away quietly, a handful of people fulfill their responsibilities and duties to die as free men and continue to live in the hearts of the people.

Continue reading ‘Gamini Dissanayake’s Name will resonate as long as the great reservoirs of Kotmale, Victoria, Randenigala, Rantambe, Maduru Oya, Ulhitiya, Rathkinda, Lunugamwehera and Samanalawewa remain on this land.’ »

22nd Amendment to the Constitution passed in Parliament with a two thirds majority. The final vote on the bill received 174 votes in favour and none against.As per the 22nd Amendment, dual citizens are disqualified from contesting elections.


By Saman Indrajith

The 22nd Amendment to the Constitution was passed in Parliament yesterday with a two thirds majority. The final vote on the bill received 174 votes in favour and none against.At the second reading stage vote, the Bill received 179 votes in favour and one vote against. Colombo District SLPP MP Rear Admiral (Retd)Sarath Weerasekera was the only MP who voted against the Bill.At the third reading vote MP Weerasekera abstained from voting.

Former Speaker Chamal Rajapaksa and former Minister Namal Rajapaksa were among those who voted for the Bill.The vote originally scheduled to be taken at 5.30 pm yesterday was postponed until 6.15 pm as the debate dragged on. The Bill was debated on Thursday and Friday and over 50 MPs took part in it.

Continue reading ‘22nd Amendment to the Constitution passed in Parliament with a two thirds majority. The final vote on the bill received 174 votes in favour and none against.As per the 22nd Amendment, dual citizens are disqualified from contesting elections.’ »

“The Supreme Court also has swung like a pendulum. In the 19th amendment bill they permitted various changes and said this doesn’t require a referendum, but now those identical changes, with the very same words, within a few years, the same supreme court says you require a referendum. How can that be? -MA Sumanthiran MP

( Full Text of Speech made in Parliament by TNA Jaffna District Parliamentarian M.A.Sumanthiran during the debate on the 22nd Constitutinal Amendment bill on 20th October 2022” )


Thank you,
Honourable Deputy Speaker, for the opportunity to speak on this very important constitutional amendment that has been presented to this house. I say ‘important’ not because there are any important contents in this Bill, but because this Bill is being touted as an important reform to the constitution of this country, while it is not. And it is my intention today to inform the country as to what this amendment actually seeks to do.

There are many members in this House who voted for the 17th amendment to the constitution. The same members voted for the 18th amendment to the constitution Those very members voted for the 19th amendment to the constitution, and they voted for the 20th amendment to the constitution and today they are all ready to vote for the 22nd amendment to the constitution, which will become the 21st amendment. They are like a pendulum they swing from one end to the other. I have my respect for Hon. Sarath Weerasekara seated there: right or wrong he stands at one end. He doesn’t swing like a pendulum.

I say this because when the 17th amendment to the constitution was passed in this house nobody cast a vote against it, only one member of Parliament abstained from voting. When the 19th amendment to the constitution was passed in this house, only one member, Hon Sarath Weerasekara voted against it. Everybody else voted for it. That shows what the 17th amendment and what the 19th amendment sought to do and how even members in the opposition benches were conscious of the expectations in the country and they went along with it, particularly the 19th amendment. When the 19th amendment was presented to this House, I think the government had only 48 members, the opposition had over 150 members. Yet it was passed. That was soon after an election. But those very members out of that 150, I think about 60 odd members, later voted for the 20th amendment, including the Hon Minister of Justice or you did not vote you did not come, or you voted , including the Minister of Justice who presented this Bill and pleaded with the other members to give them an opportunity to correct a wrong that they have committed by passing the 20th amendment.

Continue reading ‘“The Supreme Court also has swung like a pendulum. In the 19th amendment bill they permitted various changes and said this doesn’t require a referendum, but now those identical changes, with the very same words, within a few years, the same supreme court says you require a referendum. How can that be? -MA Sumanthiran MP’ »

Supreme Court Determines that the Bureau of Rehabilitation Bill as a whole is inconsistent with Article 112(1)nof the Constitution Announces Speaker Mahinda Yapa Abeywardena in Parliament


Speaker Mahinda Yapa Abeywardena announced yesterday in Parliament that the Supreme Court of Sri Lanka has determined that the Bureau of Rehabilitation Bill as a whole is inconsistent with Article 112(1)nof the Constitution

He said therefore, the Supreme Court has said the Bill may be enacted only by the special majority required by Article 84 (2) of the Constitution.

Continue reading ‘Supreme Court Determines that the Bureau of Rehabilitation Bill as a whole is inconsistent with Article 112(1)nof the Constitution Announces Speaker Mahinda Yapa Abeywardena in Parliament’ »

All Parties,Groups and Individuals in Oppostion sign Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) Pledging to work together and defeat the Government’s alleged attempt to delay local Government Elections further


Parties and organisations representing the country’s Opposition have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to work together against the Government’s alleged attempt to further delay local Government Elections

The recent announcement by President Ranil Wickremesinghe of the need to implement electoral reforms prior to holding polls has been slammed by Opposition parties. They have accused the Government of attempting to put off an election in the guise of implementing reforms in the polling system as it is unable to face an election at this juncture due to high disapproval rates among the public.

The signing of the MoU was held at the Parliament yesterday with the participation of Opposition party leaders and members based on a collective decision taken at an earlier date to oppose any moves to postpone the local Government elections.

Continue reading ‘All Parties,Groups and Individuals in Oppostion sign Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) Pledging to work together and defeat the Government’s alleged attempt to delay local Government Elections further’ »

Amitabh Bachchan: Evergreen Octogenarian is Hindi Filmdom’s “Shahenshah” (King of Kings)

By
D.B.S.Jeyaraj

Well-known Hindi film actor Amitabh Bachchan celebrated his eightieth birthday on October 11th. The veteran thespian continues to be active , playing a variety of roles in films. As a “rasika” who relishes his performances, it is with great pleasure that I write about him this week. It has been the practice of this column to focus on a film, film personality or film related topic on the first Saturday of each month. Since I was unable to write on the first two Saturdays of this month, I do so now on this third Saturday.

The six-foot three inch tall Amitabh Bachchan with a deep baritone voice is a towering personality in Hindi cinema. He has been walking tall for more than five decades as a lead and supporting actor. He has given voice-overs in some films too. Bachchan has also been a playback singer and film producer.

Amitabh Bachchan dominated Hindi cinema as a superstar from the mid-seventies to the early nineties of the 20th century. So great was his power and influence in those years that the famous French director Francois Truffaut described him once as a “one-man industry”. He is no more a super star playing the lead nowadays. Nevertheless the evergreen actor playing assorted non-hero roles remains perennially popular with a broad fan base.

Continue reading ‘Amitabh Bachchan: Evergreen Octogenarian is Hindi Filmdom’s “Shahenshah” (King of Kings)’ »

The Ranil Wickremesinghe Govt’s “Strategic Plan “for Trincomalee district and Eastern Province is to ‘Sinhalise’ and ‘de-Tamilise’by subtracting the Tamil percentage and proportion of the populace and the land through administrative re-structuring of areas

By

Dr.Dayan Jayatilleka

‘…Unable to summon the full resources of its vaunted intelligence or its political will to meet the formidable challenges issued by an unprecedented crisis, the elite presented other bizarre exhibitions of helplessness, bewilderment and naivete…Various theories were put forward like… “For God’s sake give them Trinco” …’

– The Marooned Elite, Crisis Commentaries: Selected Political Writings of Mervyn de Silva, International Center for Ethnic Studies, Colombo, 2001, pp. 55-67.


Mahinda can’t comeback

Critiquing the policies of the last decade of Chairman Mao Zedong’s life, Fidel Castro once remarked sadly that there are some leaders “who break with their feet, what they built with their hands”. That would be even truer of Robert Mugabe and Alberto Fujimori than Mao. It fits Mahinda Rajapaksa. It wouldn’t fit Gotabaya who simply broke with his feet what generations had built with their hands (i.e., agriculture).

Mahinda and his SLPP cannot come even close to anything remotely like an electoral comeback for six reasons:

1. MR nominated Gotabaya as candidate even though he could have picked Chamal. In mid-2018, I had personally warned him of the dangers of a GR candidacy (which I had supported in 2016-17) and pitched for Chamal or Dinesh in print.

2. MR could have but didn’t challenge Gotabaya when as President the latter centralised all power in his hands through the 20th Amendment, thereby devaluing the PM who happened to be GR’s vastly experienced older sibling.

3 MR could’ve but didn’t pushback publicly against the catastrophic fertiliser policy which has destroyed most of the SLPP’s and the Rajapaksas’ traditional rural peasant support base including in the South.

4. MR turned his back on his own rebellious street-agitator past which should have enabled him to empathise with the Aragalaya youth. Instead, utterly unprovoked he gave a very hardline militarist speech on 11 April 2022, well before ‘MynaGoGama’ or 9 May. His son Namal has eschewed the path of progressive dissent that Chandrika adopted even against her mother Sirimavo and brother Anura, which translated itself later into considerable political capital.

5. MR has abandoned what he symbolised and championed, and installed as President his traditional foe Ranil who still stands for everything in economic policy that Mahinda stood against.

6. The people are suffering as never before in living memory; the Rajapaksas are held responsible, and will remain indelibly associated for decades in the mass mind with this anguish and nepotism, just as Madam Bandaranaike was for 17 years after the material hardships and nepotism of 1970-1977.


Trincomalee three-card trick

The Tamil political leadership has commendably brought to light the attempt of the Sri Lankan regime, operating octopus-like through state authorities, to unilaterally alter the demographic composition, i.e., the population ratios, of the North and East. What they have not done is to grasp the perfidy of the plan in its entirety. They have not connected up the dots.

President Wickremesinghe’s grand (or sordid) design can be glimpsed in his Trincomalee Strategic Development Plan. This Plan must be read together with the demographic changes that are sought to be made through an array of administrative-cartographic operations. Districts, provinces, must not remain static and population ratios should and do change, but that has to be through evolutionary trends, chiefly of economics, not of unilateral, top-down state intervention.

The Wickremesinghe administration is trying to qualitatively add value to Trincomalee while subtracting the Tamil percentage and proportion of the populace and the land by administrative land-swaps. If his ‘strategic plan’ works, Trincomalee will be another Port City, the jewel in the crown not of the place and people as they exist or have historically existed, but of a district and province that are ‘Sinhalised’ and ‘de-Tamilised’ by several strokes of a pencil through maps and of the pen on new administrative regulations—the method greatly favoured by imperialist-colonial powers throughout history (e.g., Sykes-Picot).

The administrative exercises now under way, going by the letter to the President authored by Hon Sampanthan and the speeches by M.A. Sumanthiran and Gajan Ponnambalam, will render the 13th Amendment, the Northern and Eastern Provincial Councils and the Indo-Sri Lanka Accord automatically meaningless because the configuration and composition of those two provinces would have been drastically altered.

This is the method used by Israel’s Netanyahu to render meaningless the two-state solution of the Oslo peace accords.

The Wickremesinghe administration’s plan in effect displaces the Tamil people of the district, province and region since they will find themselves on the other side of district and provincial boundaries, as small minorities in Sinhala majority areas, overnight, while the Sinhalese majority areas will be annexed to the remaining part of the district, creating enclaves that serve as settlements.

Most cynically of all, President Wickremesinghe’s move seeks to tempt and co-opt India, a country with 80 million Tamil people, into partnering the Sri Lankan state and powering the economic success of this project which disempowers the Tamils through downsizing, while enshrining through cartographic chicanery, the hegemony of one community in an area historically inhabited by another and of a multi-communal composition and character.

Ranil Wickremesinghe is probably counting on the trade-off within the trade-off, namely that the installation of Sinhala dominance over Trincomalee will more than neutralise, or at least offset, Sinhala nationalist outrage at handing over Trincomalee to India as he handed over Hambantota to China.

The Trincomalee triple-cross is signalled in these recent remarks of High Commissioner Milinda Moragoda to the Times of India:

“Sri Lanka is in a transition phase and there is a need to renegotiate the social and political compact in the country. Sri Lanka is a complex country with many regions and ethnicities. This issue (13th amendment) also falls under the same category. We have to work out a new compact.”

The imminent/ongoing changes on the ground in the Eastern Province seem to have been ‘renegotiated’ without the Tamil and Muslim parties or the main parliamentary Opposition.

The 13th Amendment issued from the Indo-Sri Lanka Accord, the product of protracted bilateral negotiations, and cannot be ‘renegotiated’ without India.

While the Ranil regime strives to strategically shrink the Tamil geopolitical space on the island, the Tamil political parties and civic organisations have newly expanded space in the public consciousness to avail themselves of in resisting the regime’s political expansionism.

I cannot recall a time when Sinhala racism was as socially and politically marginalised as it is now and sentiments of anti-racism and pluralist democracy as widespread as they are now due to the economic crisis and a new enlightened consciousness among a whole generation. It is the Age of the Aragalaya; our May ’68.

The wording of the UN High Commissioner’s report, the latest UNHRC resolution, the statements of the Indian delegate to the UNHRC and the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee resolution could frame a joint Sinhala-Tamil-Muslim platform against renewed supremacism.

Reading Ranil’s mindse
t

With the sophistication that characterises European political theory as distinct from the Anglo-American, the French introduced the category of ‘history of mentality/mentalities’ (‘histoire des mentalités’) also known as ‘history of attitudes’ into the study of social history and politics. When the history of Sri Lanka’s current crisis is written it would be useful to note the particular attitudes or mentalities that characterised the contemporary political leadership—Gotabaya Rajapaksa and Ranil Wickremesinghe.

President Wickremesinghe’s mentality was very much on display last week, in a number of episodes. He appointed Erich Solheim his advisor on Climate Change. This was the week after Sri Lanka’s Prof. Mohan Munasinghe, 2021 Blue Planet Prize Laureate (known as the Environmental Nobel Prize) and co-winner of the 2007 Nobel Prize for Peace, delivered a keynote speech at the Presidential Palace in Hanoi, Vietnam in the presence of that country’s President. President Wickremesinghe preferred Erich Solheim. The Government swerved from Gotabaya’s Rajapaksa’s disastrous taxation policy to Ranil’s calamitous one last week. GR’s policy was influenced by what George HW Bush referred to as his boss Ronald Reagan’s ‘voodoo economics’ by which he meant the economics of Arthur Laffer, the main policy instrument of which was a massive tax cut. Reagan abandoned it along the way.

For his part, Ranil has just committed one of the biggest possible mistakes in the playbook of politics: imposing a huge tax burden on the middle-classes and small and medium businesses.

He has just ensured that when the Aragalaya comes around again, the middle, upper-middle, professional and middle-bourgeois classes and strata which had peeled-off after Gota left and Ranil came in, will be back again with the struggle, and this time for the long haul, i.e., until an election.

Why Ranil would do this when the obvious place to go from Gotabaya’s savage tax cuts is not savage tax burdens on the middle classes and employment-generating small and medium businesses, but precisely a policy advocated by the US Democrats and European social democrats, of slashing taxes on the middle-classes and shifting to steeply graduated taxes on the ‘super-rich’, combined with heavy corporate taxes.

Ranil has burdened the 99% rather than the 1% which benefited from the GR tax cut and the policies of the years the economy was going downhill and the middle-classes were getting poor, the poor getting poorer.

“No taxation without representation” was a founding slogan of the American Revolution of 1776. The Sri Lankan citizens didn’t elect Ranil Wickremesinghe, therefore he doesn’t represent them—but his administration is imposing taxes on them. The JVP has already signalled that it would support a taxpayers revolt.

President Wickremesinghe would do well to remember that Sri Lanka’s 1848 rebellion led by Puran Appu, which required the British troops on the island to be reinforced from India to quell it, was occasioned by an array of unfair taxes imposed on the people by the British colonial rulers.

Soon, Sri Lankans will feel that their economic agony is attributable (not entirely accurately) to decisions made by outsiders, bureaucrats sitting in Washington DC, together with a national leadership which they didn’t elect, rather than by a leadership democratically chosen by the citizens of this country.

If the Trincomalee area, including its port and oil tank farm is sold or leased to India as Ranil is signalling, instead of adhering to the Indo-Sri Lanka accord and developing the oil-tank farm jointly, the populist backlash that is inevitable in the context of economic contraction and IMF cutbacks, will take a patriotic or nationalist-populist character, not merely a socioeconomic populist form.

President Wickremesinghe said a few days ago that the Trincomalee give-away project should have been implemented in 2003 when he first started on it. The facts are that he was turfed out by President Chandrika because the nationalist backlash became too threatening on the one hand and tempting on the other. Having been fired as PM, when the country went to the polls in 2004 it endorsed his ouster by defeating him. It kept him unelected for almost 15 years since his election in 2001, until it next tried him out in 2015. At the end of that 2015-2019 term, the electorate kicked him and his party right out of Parliament.

President Mahinda Rajapaksa went to the Supreme Court and took back the oil-tanks, and his foe and successor President Sirisena dragged his feet on giving more oil tanks to neighbouring India.

Ranil is trying to override the evidence of the negative electoral verdict on his two stints as an elected PM (2001-2003/4, 2015-2019), when he strove to implement his economic policies with a partial mandate (as PM not President).

If he feels that the people have since learned their lesson and endorses his economics of sell-out, he should hold an election, win it, and return with a mandate to implement the policies which were anathema to the majority of citizens earlier.

Ranil Wickremesinghe transparently intends to do without a mandate, that which he was never given a mandate to do on all the occasions he sought the Presidency, i.e., to lead the country, because the public knew or feared he would sell out the country.

He intends to implement policies that he was twice thrown out by the electorate for trying to implement. Put differently, not only does he not have a mandate for these policies, he has a negative mandate for them—meaning that he is focused on implementing policies that the people have manifestly and repeatedly voted against.

Political sustainability and economic stability

Only a reckless politician would go against the grain—the representative democratic electoral ethos—of Sri Lankan politics and public opinion, and do so at a time of grave crisis in which instability is unaffordable.

International experience shows that economic contraction overturns incumbent administrations. That overturning can either be done the easy, systemic way i.e., elections or the a-systemic/extra-systemic way. Economic contractions coupled with an IMF package increase the probability of convulsions. Those convulsions can either be contained or channelled through elections, so that a government or successive governments with a sufficient measure of popular consent can stabilise the situation e.g., Greece, Lebanon.

The best practices clearly call for timely elections, and most often, the fast-forwarding of elections. Stuck in his 1970s-1980s mindset, Ranil Wickremesinghe and his backers, the Rajapaksa cartel are determined not to hold elections. The UNP chairman Vajira Abeywardena reiterated Ranil’s position that no elections will be held for many months until all the electoral reforms are completed.

The Rajapaksa-run SLPP’s backtrack on the 22nd Amendment proves that the ruling party cannot be the agency of democratising political and governance reforms.

By kicking the electoral can down the road, President Wickremesinghe has done the impossible. He has caused a convergence, in two conclaves, of 16 Opposition political parties, the broadest seen in living memory in Sri Lanka, ranging from the SJB and the SLFP, through the FPC to the FSP.

The first meeting was convened at the Monarch hotel by the Dullas Alahapperuma-G.L. Peiris group (FPC), the second, at the Public Library by the trade unions. The question is not why the FSP was present but why the JVP-JJB was absent. The Opposition conclaves announced 2 November as the kick-off date for their campaign.

Ranil will meet protests with repression. Repression would rapidly re-activate a cycle of revolt and rebellion.

Debt sustainability requires political sustainability. Without electoral legitimacy the Ranil Presidency is politically unsustainable. Ranil is treading water these days. However, that is temporary survival, not structural sustainability. Given his lack of a mandate, his polarising unilateralism and the deepening and widening of the economic pain, Ranil’s presidency is politically unsustainable in the structural and systemic senses.

Without political sustainability, there is no stability, political or economic. Sustainable economic reform must be preceded and made safe, or more simply, feasible, by restructuring the political leadership.

The only way to ensure political sustainability and stability is a steely insistence by the International Financial Institutions, the creditor states and private creditors, as well as EU states deliberating on GSP Plus, that immediate elections at all levels, front-end loaded with the presidential, constitute conditionality for support.

Courtesy:Daily FT

President Ranil Wickremesinghe Justifies Hike in Income Tax as being Necessary to Garner Much Needed Financial Support from International Community and go Forward for the Greater Good of the Country


Amidst growing criticism President Ranil Wickremesinghe yesterday justified a hike in income tax for both corporate and personal saying it was for the greater good of the country going forward and critical to garner much needed financial support from the international community.

In an address to the nation, the President said the International Monetary Fund (IMF) with whom the Government has signed a Staff Level Agreement for a $ 2.9 billion 4 year financial support, advised the need for a surplus in Sri Lanka’s primary budget. “It was agreed to, since the country needs the support of the IMF,” he said.

“It was also decided to increase the country’s income from 8.5% to 14.5% of the GDP. However, it is a difficult task to accomplish immediately, it is envisaged to achieve this by 2026.

• Says country will have to revert to an era of queues if revenue is not raised through direct tax increases
• Admits new tax measures are IMF recommendations, hence critical to secure international support to salvage SL economy
• Insists tax hikes not being taken wilfully but being done reluctantly
• Reveals SL lost Rs. 700 b
• due to wrong economic policies in the past
• Inflation rate increased to 70% since Rs. 2.3 t printed during the past two-and-a-half years
• Suggests tougher times ahead but reassures Govt. ready for prudent economic management following successful debt restructuring
• Says Government ready to discuss concerns further if required

Continue reading ‘President Ranil Wickremesinghe Justifies Hike in Income Tax as being Necessary to Garner Much Needed Financial Support from International Community and go Forward for the Greater Good of the Country’ »

TNA Spokesperson Sumanthiran wants International Involvement in Truth Seeking Mechanism but SLMC Leader Rauff Hakeem Wants Purely Domestic Mechanism


BY Mirudhula Thambiah

Tamil and Muslim political representatives in the Parliamentary Opposition are divided over the nature of the proposed truth-seeking mechanism, specifically on whether it should be solely a domestic mechanism or whether it should have international involvement.

Expressing his party’s stance on the proposed truth-seeking mechanism, Tamil National Alliance Spokesman and Opposition MP M.A. Sumanthiran (PC) said that as long as it is independent and impartial, they would support the ascertainment of the truth, but that it should necessarily have international involvement, as the Government is only one party to the matter, while Sri Lanka Muslim Congress (SLMC) Leader and Samagi Jana Balawegaya Opposition MP Rauff Hakeem noted that the mechanism should be domestic, and a restorative justice project as opposed to a retributive one.

Continue reading ‘TNA Spokesperson Sumanthiran wants International Involvement in Truth Seeking Mechanism but SLMC Leader Rauff Hakeem Wants Purely Domestic Mechanism’ »

“Now that Mahinda Rajapaksa has declared that the SLPP is capable of winning elections, let the government be urged to hold the local government polls without further delay and prove his claim.”- The Island

(Full Text of Editoria; appearing in “The Island”of 19 October 2022 under the geading “Mahinda’s Labour”)

Most political leaders in this country tend to live in the past. Former President Mahinda Rajapaksa is one of them. He seems to be labouring under the delusion that his theatrics can still yield enough votes for the SLPP to win elections. He has undertaken to revitalise the battered SLPP almost single-handed and enable it to recover lost ground fast. (He has also bragged that he is physically fit enough to run faster than the youth who make ageist remarks about him!) His courage seems to be outrunning his judgment.

What the SLPP’s overdependence on Mahinda signifies is that the ruling party is without any other leader capable of at least making an effort to turn it around. A similar situation arose following the 2015 regime change; Mahinda had to lead the rebel faction of the SLFP, pave the way for the formation of the SLPP and steer the newly-formed party to victory. He was hugely popular at the time despite his defeat and equal to the task he undertook to accomplish. But today the situation has changed. The SLPP has become a metaphor for corruption as well as incompetence; it has bankrupted the country, inflicted untold suffering on the public, and ruined its chances of winning an election in the foreseeable future.

Continue reading ‘“Now that Mahinda Rajapaksa has declared that the SLPP is capable of winning elections, let the government be urged to hold the local government polls without further delay and prove his claim.”- The Island’ »

Shehan Karunatilaka’s Booker Prize Winner “The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida” is narrated by a dead man: ‘Only the dead could offer plausible explanations of the Sri Lankan tragedy, as the living clearly did not have a clue’ … Shehan Karunatilaka


By’
Justine Jordan

The remarkable thing about this violence-soaked novel narrated by a dead man is how full of life it is. Shehan Karunatilaka’s The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida comes a decade after his rollicking debut Chinaman, which combined the love of cricket with the horror of Sri Lanka’s civil war. Set at the tail end of the 80s, his second novel again plumbs national violence and atrocity, teasing out its roots in colonial history. It’s also an offbeat love story, both romantic and platonic, and a whodunnit written in the urgent, intimate second person.

As the novel opens, Maali Almeida, a charming, dilettantish photographer with a weakness for gambling and beautiful boys, wakes up dead. He finds himself in an afterlife that’s just as threatening and confusing as the living world, a busy and chaotic realm drawing on Sri Lankan myth and folklore as well as Dante’s Inferno.

Continue reading ‘Shehan Karunatilaka’s Booker Prize Winner “The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida” is narrated by a dead man: ‘Only the dead could offer plausible explanations of the Sri Lankan tragedy, as the living clearly did not have a clue’ … Shehan Karunatilaka’ »

Sri Lankan author Shehan Karunatilaka wins 2022 Booker Prize for his second novel The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida about a journalist murdered amid the country’s sectarian strife.


Sri Lankan author Shehan Karunatilaka on October 17 won Britain’s Booker Prize for fiction for his work The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida, about a journalist murdered amid the country’s sectarian strife.

“My hope for Seven Moons is this… that in the not-so-distant future… that it is read in a Sri Lanka that has understood that these ideas of corruption and race-baiting and cronyism have not worked and will never work,” he said.

“I hope it’s in print in 10 years but if it is, I hope it’s written in (a) Sri Lanka that learns from its stories, and that Seven Moons will be in the fantasy section of the bookshop… next to the dragons, the unicorns (and) will not be mistaken for realism or political satire,” he added.

Continue reading ‘Sri Lankan author Shehan Karunatilaka wins 2022 Booker Prize for his second novel The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida about a journalist murdered amid the country’s sectarian strife.’ »

UNP General Secretary Palitha Range Bandara Unaware of Telephone Conversation Between President Ranil Wickremesinghe and SLPP National Organizer Basil Rajapaksa

BY Buddhika Samaraweera

Despite reports to the effect that incumbent President and United National Party (UNP) Leader Ranil Wickremesinghe and Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) Founder and former Minister Basil Rajapaksa recently discussed an alliance between the SLPP and the UNP in a forthcoming Parliamentary election, UNP General Secretary Palitha Range Bandara stated that he was unaware of any such discussion between the President and Rajapaksa.

There are reports that Wickremesinghe and Rajapaksa had, via phone call, recently discussed a possible alliance between the SLPP and the UNP in a future Parliamentary election.

Continue reading ‘UNP General Secretary Palitha Range Bandara Unaware of Telephone Conversation Between President Ranil Wickremesinghe and SLPP National Organizer Basil Rajapaksa’ »

Suresh Goonesekere Played an exemplary innings in the Game of Life; it was a privilege to witness his time at life’s crease – a sight to behold!


By Krishantha Prasad Cooray

Suresh Goonesekere would have turned 50 today (Oct 17), just over a year after his tragic death left his family and friends bereft of his kindness, generosity, strength of character and permanent grin. Being one of those friends, who knew him from childhood, it is still hard to believe that he is gone. We were more than mere friends. Growing up, we attended Thomas’ College, Mt Lavinia together and our childhood homes were close to each other.

In our adulthood, our lives crossed paths in so many delightfully unpredictable ways, each one leaving me with memories of joy, human kindness and good times. Knowing that we have crossed paths for the last time leaves a void in me that I cannot fathom how to fill. Whatever else may ever have been uncertain in this world, Suresh’s presence, his kindness, his loyalty and his compassion were never in doubt.

Suresh lived most of his adult life in Singapore and in England. Whenever my travels took me to either country, we would meet without fail, almost like a ritual or tradition. So, it was not unusual for him to invite my family over to dinner when we were visiting Singapore a little over two years ago.

It was quite a random invitation, very typical of Suresh. He knew that I was not going through the best of times. I had not told him as much, but he made it his business to know about the wellbeing of everyone close to him.

As it so happened, the day he hosted us also happened to be my birthday, a fact that my wife casually mentioned over dinner. Suresh’s response came instantly. He said, ‘Adey KP, we have to celebrate tonight,’ before proceeding to order a bevvy of whiskey, wine and even more food. In a flash, he transformed a low-key reunion dinner into a massive and humbling celebration.

Continue reading ‘Suresh Goonesekere Played an exemplary innings in the Game of Life; it was a privilege to witness his time at life’s crease – a sight to behold!’ »

Charismatic Actor -Politician Vijaya Kumaratunga: 75th Birth Anniversary Tribute

By

D.B.S.Jeyaraj

(This 75th Birthday Tribue to Vijaya Kumaratunga written in 2020 is being re-posted here without any changes to commemorate the actor-politico’s 77th birth anniversary.)

Kovilage Vijaya Anthony Kumaratunga, known to the world as Vijaya Kumaratunga, was born in Seeduwa on 9 October 1945. Vijaya was an endearing personality with an enduring vision whom I liked, admired and respected very much. He was a man who envisaged the transformation of Sri Lanka into an inclusive, multi-ethnic, egalitarian and plural nation. A much-loved man of the masses who may have altered the destiny of this resplendent isle in a very positive manner, had he not been felled in the prime of life by foul assassins. A man whose worth is increasingly valued in the present time where communal discord is deliberately promoted for short-term political gain.

I write this week about the beloved actor-turned-politician Vijaya Kumaratunga whose 75th birth anniversary falls on 9 October.I have written some articles about Vijaya in the past. I will be drawing on some of them in writing this column which will focus on the much loved charismatic actor cum politician.

Continue reading ‘Charismatic Actor -Politician Vijaya Kumaratunga: 75th Birth Anniversary Tribute’ »

How C.P. de Silva did not Become Prime Minister Due to “Salagama” Caste Factor.

By
D.B.S.Jeyaraj

The Prime Minister was the most poweful person in Sri Lanka known earlier as Ceylon during the first three decades of independence from Britain. The post of Prime minister lost its sheen after the Executive presidency was introduced in 1978. Until then the prestigious PM POST was a position much coveted by politicians.. This column wanders down nemory lane this week and narrates the tale of a man who could not become Prime Minister on two occasions– in September 1959 and April 1960 – due to fate’s cruel trickery. The man who was deprived of the Prime minister post twice was none other than C.P.de Silva whose 50th death anniversary falls on October 9th.

Charles .Percuval de Silva was born on April 16, 1912 at Randombe in Balapitiya. His parents were C.R. de Silva, a lawyer and Ms. Adlin de Silva, a co-founder of Musaeus College. CP de Silva or CP as he was generally known entered the Ceylon Civil Service in 1935. . CP resigned from the Civil Service in 1950 while holding the post of Director of Land Development.

Continue reading ‘How C.P. de Silva did not Become Prime Minister Due to “Salagama” Caste Factor.’ »

Sri Lankan Govt Should Withdraw Draft ‘Rehabilitation’ Law that Would Spur Great risk of abuse Abuse by Proposing Detention Without Judicial Review at Military-Run Centers States Human Rights Watch


The Sri Lankan government should withdraw a draft law that would give the authorities broad powers to detain people in military-run “rehabilitation” centers, placing them at great risk of abuse, Human Rights Watch said today. The Bureau of Rehabilitation Bill, submitted to parliament on September 23, 2022, would allow the compulsory detention in centers of “drug dependant persons, ex-combatants, members of violent extremist groups and any other group of persons.”

The Bureau of Rehabilitation Bill would establish a new administrative structure controlled by the Defense Ministry to operate “rehabilitation” centers staffed by military personnel. The proposed law, which human rights advocates have already challenged in the Supreme Court, does not describe the basis for being sent for “rehabilitation,” but other recent government policies provide vague and arbitrary powers to forcibly “rehabilitate” people who have not been convicted of any crime.

Continue reading ‘Sri Lankan Govt Should Withdraw Draft ‘Rehabilitation’ Law that Would Spur Great risk of abuse Abuse by Proposing Detention Without Judicial Review at Military-Run Centers States Human Rights Watch’ »

Police Ban SJB led Protest Against “Ekwa Nagitimu” SLPP Rally in Nawalapitiya to Prevent Potential Breach of Peace; Protesters Gather in Town Chanting Slogans Calling Mahinda and Rajapaksas “Hora,Hora”;15 Including SJB Organizer Arrested


By Buddhika Samaraweera

A total of 15 persons were arrested by the Police during a protest held in Nawalapitiya town against the rally organised by the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) under the theme “Let’s Rise Together” (Ekwa Nagitimu), and former Prime Minister and incumbent MP Mahinda Rajapaksa, who arrived to participate in the said rally, which was held yesterday (16).

The second of the SLPP’s “Let’s Rise Together” rally series, which started in Kalutara recently, was held yesterday in Nawalapitiya town. The rally, which started at around 9.30 a.m. and was attended by Rajapaksa and several other SLPP MPs, was organised by former Minister and incumbent MP Mahindananda Aluthgamage.

Among the SLPP MPs who attended the rally were: Aluthgamage, Ministers Keheliya Rambukwella and Dr. Ramesh Pathirana, State Ministers Sanath Nishantha Perera, Siripala Gamlath, Indika Anuruddha, Piyal Nishantha de Silva, and Dilum Amunugama, and MPs Namal Rajapaksa, SLPP General Secretary Sagara Kariyawasam, Johnston Fernando, and D. Weerasinghe.

Continue reading ‘Police Ban SJB led Protest Against “Ekwa Nagitimu” SLPP Rally in Nawalapitiya to Prevent Potential Breach of Peace; Protesters Gather in Town Chanting Slogans Calling Mahinda and Rajapaksas “Hora,Hora”;15 Including SJB Organizer Arrested’ »

President Wickremesinghe Expresses Confidence on Successful Restructuring of External debt Following Discussions Between SL delegation led by State Minister of Finance and International Monetary Fund, China, India and Japan


President Ranil Wickremesinghe yesterday expressed confidence on successful restructuring of external debt following talks with Chinese Finance Minister.

The President said that the delegation headed by the State Minister of Finance, who is currently in Washington, held initial discussions on Saturday with the International Monetary Fund and the three main countries, China, India and Japan that have given loans to the country. He said that the Government is giving priority to immediately solve the problem of the country’s bankruptcy and to ensure food security.

President Ranil Wickremesinghe made these remarks following an observation tour of the cultivated lands in Rathumada-Weerakandawala area in Siambalanduwa Divisional Secretariat yesterday morning (16).
The President also discussed the progress of the implementation of the food security program in Monaragala district with Government officials.

He said that there is no problem with having debates and also recalled the statements made by some people that they would come forward and shed blood and said that one should live before shedding blood.

Continue reading ‘President Wickremesinghe Expresses Confidence on Successful Restructuring of External debt Following Discussions Between SL delegation led by State Minister of Finance and International Monetary Fund, China, India and Japan’ »

5.7 million Sri Lankans require urgent humanitarian assistance States latest Economic Survey Report released by the Sri Lanka Red Cross Society and the International Federation of Red Cross Societies; “The numbers are very likely to multiply” says report


By Darshana Abayasingha

The economic crisis has impacted 96% of households with food, health costs and livelihoods at the top of listed concerns, reveals the latest Economic Survey Report released last week by the Sri Lanka Red Cross Society (SLRCS) and the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC).

The psychological wellbeing and education of children was also listed as a major priority of concern.

It found that 5.7 million – 26% of the population – require urgent humanitarian assistance and ‘upstream’ interventions. The numbers are very likely to multiply and consequences will depend, the report adds.

The survey conducted by the agencies engaged 2,871 respondents across 11 districts and studied insights on impacts of the current crisis on food security, livelihoods, health and protection.

Continue reading ‘5.7 million Sri Lankans require urgent humanitarian assistance States latest Economic Survey Report released by the Sri Lanka Red Cross Society and the International Federation of Red Cross Societies; “The numbers are very likely to multiply” says report’ »

We cannot invoke only the LTTE’s atrocities against children while overlooking the State’s raining down of shells on bunkers where (Tamil) children sheltered. Majority or minority alike, the Sri Lankan State’s list of grievous sins against its own children are many.


By

Kishali Pinto Jayawardene

When President Ranil Wickremesinghe uses gut wrenching imagery to equate Sinhalese mothers and fathers taking their children to protest sites with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) using Tamil children as human shields against state forces, it is deliberate and premeditated.

Two unsettling sides of the same coin

The President’s well aimed play is on the familiar theme of ‘protestors as fascists,’ used to excellent effect to frame his Office around twin motifs of stability and security. Well meaning responses by Sri Lankans have since hailed this Presidential response as worthy of praise.

But there is a deeper context to this issue that must be critically looked at. If the President shows such heartwarming concern for Sri Lanka’s children, why did he not address the question of excessive police brutality practiced against them in the first instance?

That police response was against this week’s peaceful commemoration of those who had died during recent protests, at the Galle Face Green. Two small children were roughly manhandled, leading to one child being admitted to hospital. They were literally torn away from the arms of their parents. Is this action by the police to be condoned? Could not different tactics have been used by the police, where was the evidence of ‘minimum force’ that is parroted?

Equally to the point, do protestors not have the right to commemorate the dead, similarly to Northern mothers being stopped from mourning the deaths of their children during the Vanni’s war?

In fact, the commonalities with which the State uses its tools to crush dissent are striking. There is nothing very new here. We have heard all this before, the rhetoric of the Northern terrorists/Southern insurrectionists and the besieged State. That dynamic was invoked in exactly that same way by the President.

Continue reading ‘We cannot invoke only the LTTE’s atrocities against children while overlooking the State’s raining down of shells on bunkers where (Tamil) children sheltered. Majority or minority alike, the Sri Lankan State’s list of grievous sins against its own children are many.’ »

“Ranil Wickremesinghe is our President but he will have to bear the shame of defeat if he does not accept our proposals and rushes the 22nd amendment through with Justice Minister Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe.” Threatens SLPP Gen Secy Sagara Kariyawasam


By Damith Wickramasekara

The fate of the Constitution’s 22nd Amendment (22A) hangs in the balance with the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) laying down two “mandatory” conditions to ensure its passage—including a clause to make members of independent Commissions accountable for their actions.

The SLPP also wants the clause prohibiting dual citizens from holding membership in Parliament removed, General Secretary Sagara Kariyawasam told the Sunday Times.

A party delegation will meet President Ranil Wickremesinghe next week to convey its demands “for the final time”. The 22A is unlikely to be passed without SLPP support.

Continue reading ‘“Ranil Wickremesinghe is our President but he will have to bear the shame of defeat if he does not accept our proposals and rushes the 22nd amendment through with Justice Minister Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe.” Threatens SLPP Gen Secy Sagara Kariyawasam’ »

India’s stand during voting at the UN is nuanced to serve its national interest while maintaining its focus on core issues. In other words, it is an expression of realpolitik.


By Col R Hariharan

India’s abstention from voting on a draft resolution at the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) to debate on the human rights situation in China’s Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region (XUAR) on October 6, has surprised many at home and abroad. The draft resolution, moved by a core group of eight nations—Canada, Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Sweden, the UK and the US—could find support from only 17 members in the 47-strong Council. Nineteen others, led by China and most of the Islamic countries, including Pakistan, voted against it, confirming our neighbour’s clout in the UN body.

Since 2017, international civil society organisations and media have been highlighting China’s increasing rights violations to systematically brainwash and subjugate the Uygur people. Former UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet had recently submitted a scathing report on China’s coercive conduct against Uygur in XUAR. Had the resolution been voted, China would have been hauled up for the first time in the history of UNHRC to account for its terrible human rights record in XUAR.

It was reasonable to expect that India would vote for the draft resolution, particularly as China’s conduct at the UN had been hurting its interests on several issues relating to Pakistan’s support to jihadi terrorist operations. This has been going on for quite some time to suit China’s emerging strategic interests in the Af-Pak region.

Two years ago on January 20, at the behest of Pakistan, China tried to revive the Kashmir issue for “closed-door consultation” under “AOB” (Any Other Business) at the United Nations Security Council (UNSC). Its attempt miserably failed after all the other 14 members of this Council rejected it. That is a small consolation for India as China has also been repeatedly blocking the UN listing of jihadi terrorists based in Pakistan as global terrorists under the UNSC 1267 Al Qaeda Sanctions Committee. China had been placing them on “technical hold” without giving specific reasons for its action.

Continue reading ‘India’s stand during voting at the UN is nuanced to serve its national interest while maintaining its focus on core issues. In other words, it is an expression of realpolitik.’ »

Ponniyin Selvan: I (PS-1) could have helped in removing the “anti-Chola perception prevalent among sections of Sinhalese” states Sri Lankan Writer Ayathurai Santhan “The Pandyas and the Sinhalese were traditionally close allies” he says


By T. Ramakrishnan

Ponniyin Selvan: I (PS-1) the star-studded Tamil feature film based on the novel of Tamil writer of yesteryear Kalki, could have helped in removing the “anti-Chola perception prevalent among sections of Sinhalese”, according to Ayathurai Santhan, a Jaffna-based veteran bilingual Sri Lankan Tamil writer.

Pointing out that the Pandyas and the Sinhalese were traditional and close allies, Mr. Santhan said the latter sided with the former during wars between the Pandyas and the Cholas. It was for the reason of removing the support the Sinhalese had extended to the Pandya’s that the Cholas invaded Sri Lanka, he said.

Continue reading ‘Ponniyin Selvan: I (PS-1) could have helped in removing the “anti-Chola perception prevalent among sections of Sinhalese” states Sri Lankan Writer Ayathurai Santhan “The Pandyas and the Sinhalese were traditionally close allies” he says’ »

The Tamil language flourished under the Cholas but not all Chola subjects were Tamils in an ethnic or racial sense. Did the Cholas or their subjects retain any notion of a unified Tamil ethnicity or race?

By
Elijah Hoole

Mani Ratnam’s Ponniyin Selvan-1, or PS-1, is billed as a pan-India movie. The story, based on Kalki Krishnamurthy’s historical fiction by the same name, unfolds in the early years of the Chola dynasty of 10th century CE. Speaking at a promotional event in Mumbai, Vikram, a lead actor in the film, told an engaged audience, “Think about our culture, how advanced we were. We need to be proud of this. This has nothing to do with North India, South India, East India, West India. We are Indians. We need to feel proud about that.” ‘Pan-India’, thus, denotes much more than the release of the film in five languages.

Poonguzhali

Regardless of how we view our past, we must acknowledge that a lot has changed in the thousand years between us and the Cholas of PS-1.

Think of Poonguzhali, the pretty and powerful fisherwoman who transports key figures in the story across the Palk Strait, between Chozha Nadu and Eelam. While the character is fictional, her character-defining act is not.

Continue reading ‘The Tamil language flourished under the Cholas but not all Chola subjects were Tamils in an ethnic or racial sense. Did the Cholas or their subjects retain any notion of a unified Tamil ethnicity or race?’ »

Leader of the Opposition Sajith Premadasa denies accusations that the Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) led by him and other parties in the Opposition are blocking the adoption of the 22nd Amendment to the Constitution

Opposition Leader Sajith Premadasa denied accusations that the Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) led by him and other parties in the Opposition are blocking the adoption of the 22nd Amendment to the Constitution.

Premadasa said the Opposition would have had a favourable response regarding the 22A prepared had the Prime Minister provided satisfactory answers to several concerns raised by them during a meeting held on Wednesday.

The parliamentary debate on the 22A which was scheduled for 6-7 October was postponed to next week when the Parliament convened yesterday in agreement with all party leaders. Speaker Mahinda Yapa Abeywardene was forced to call for the party leaders’ meeting after both the ruling and Opposition party members blamed each other for blocking it.

Continue reading ‘Leader of the Opposition Sajith Premadasa denies accusations that the Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) led by him and other parties in the Opposition are blocking the adoption of the 22nd Amendment to the Constitution’ »

“Taking children to protest demonstrations should be stopped. They are taking children to protests, not because they cannot be left alone at home, but to be used as a human shield, similarly to what Prabhakaran did.”- President Ranil Wickremesinghe


BY Buddhika Samaraweera

While equating those who take their children to protest demonstrations as being akin to slain Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) Leader Velupillai Prabhakaran’s use of children as human shields, President Ranil Wickremesinghe stated that all measures will be taken in consultation with Attorney General (AG) Sanjay Rajaratnam (PC) to prevent young children from being brought to protests.

Speaking during a discussion at the Presidential Secretariat on the protection of children’s rights, he said: “Taking children to protest demonstrations should be stopped. They are taking children to protests, not because they cannot be left alone at home, but to be used as a human shield, similarly to what Prabhakaran did. The Police should be instructed to prevent such incidents from happening. If this is to continue, everyone will bring their children [to protests]; even the university students will bring children.”

Continue reading ‘“Taking children to protest demonstrations should be stopped. They are taking children to protests, not because they cannot be left alone at home, but to be used as a human shield, similarly to what Prabhakaran did.”- President Ranil Wickremesinghe’ »

Hindi Film SuperstarAmitabh Bachchan Celebrates 80th Birth Anniversary:: How “Brand Bachchan” has stood the test of time in the Advertising World


By

Krishna Gopalan

Be it films, advertising, public messaging, Amitabh Bachchan remains a credible voice and much sought after; it is a case of getting better with age

Vivek Sharma, Founder, Altivyst Advisors and former CMO Pidilite & Philips, thinks one of the biggest strengths of Bachchan is his credibility with all sections of people.

The audience mouthing their hero’s dialogue or dancing to a famous song of his in a movie theatre is a tradition inextricably linked to Bollywood. But hold on for a minute. We are talking of films released in the 1970s playing to a full house today in cities such as Mumbai, Delhi, Kolkata, Pune, Ahmedabad, Prayagraj, Kolhapur, Kanpur. Something is not quite adding up.

Welcome to the world of Amitabh Bachchan. As the star turns 80, a rerun of his films, that were an integral part of his heady superstardom days, is currently on. Social media, is quite literally, going nuts, with footage of people clapping, whistling, dancing and just being themselves. Thanks to an initiative taken by PVR, 11 iconic films of Bachchan are being played at their multiplexes across 17 centres.

Continue reading ‘Hindi Film SuperstarAmitabh Bachchan Celebrates 80th Birth Anniversary:: How “Brand Bachchan” has stood the test of time in the Advertising World’ »

Arjuna Mahendran, Arjun Aloysius and Eight Others accused in the first Bond Scam case of 2015 released from the charges filed under the Public Property Act, by the Colombo Permanent High Court Trial-at-Bar in a 2/3 Majority Verdict

Central Bank former Governor Arjuna Mahendran, and nine other individuals who were accused in the first Bond Scam case of 2015 were released from the charges filed under the Public Property Act, by the Colombo Permanent High Court Trial-at-Bar yesterday.

The court ruled that it cannot proceed with the charges filed under the Public Property Act by the Attorney General against the 10 people accused of committing the Bond Scam of 2015. The verdict was delivered by a 2/3 majority in the Court. The case was called up in the presence of Justices Chamath Morias, Damith Thotawatte and Namal Balalle.

Continue reading ‘Arjuna Mahendran, Arjun Aloysius and Eight Others accused in the first Bond Scam case of 2015 released from the charges filed under the Public Property Act, by the Colombo Permanent High Court Trial-at-Bar in a 2/3 Majority Verdict’ »

Urban Poverty Triples in Sri Lanka with the On-going Economic Crisis Creating More “Newly Poor Families”: World Bank Urges Govt to Devise a Social Protection Strategy and Increase Financing for Social Assistance

By
Meera Srinivasan

As Sri Lankans continue braving their worst economic crisis since Independence, urban poverty on the island has tripled in the last year, from 5% to 15 %, according to a recent World Bank report.

Sri Lanka is experiencing “its highest poverty rate since 2009 [when the civil war ended], and an erosion of the steady gains in welfare made between 2006 and 2019,” the Bank noted in its recent Sri Lanka Development Update titled ‘Protecting the poor and vulnerable in a time of crisis’, released earlier this month.

While 80% of Sri Lanka’s poor still live in rural areas, the poverty rate in urban areas has tripled since 2021, and half the population in estate areas is currently living below the poverty line, it said, referring to Sri Lanka’s hill country that is home to the island’s historically-neglected Malaiyaha Tamils. About 1.5 lakh people, mostly women, from the million-strong community work in the tea estates, bringing in crucial foreign exchange to the country. They live in dire conditions, in colonial era line rooms, and labour hard to be paid their hard-won LKR 1000 daily wage (roughly ₹ 225).

Continue reading ‘Urban Poverty Triples in Sri Lanka with the On-going Economic Crisis Creating More “Newly Poor Families”: World Bank Urges Govt to Devise a Social Protection Strategy and Increase Financing for Social Assistance’ »

Sirimavo Bandaranaike: The Grand Old Lady of Sri Lankan Politics

Sirimavo Bandaranaike-(April 17, 1916-October 10, 2000)

Sirima Bandaranaike-(April 17, 1916-October 10, 2000)-pic: sundaytimes.lk

by

D.B.S.Jeyaraj

October 10th 2022 is the 22nd death anniversary of the world’s first woman prime minister Mrs.Sirima Bandaranaike.

I am therefore reproducing on my blog an article written about her by me 22 years years ago. It was published in the Indian news-magazine “Frontline” of Aug 19th – Sep 01st 2000 (Vol 17-Issue 17) under the heading “Exit of an Elder Stateswoman”.

I wrote the article after Mrs. Bandaranaike resigned as Prime minister on August 10th 2000. Ill – health had been the primary cause for this decision.

I realised then that the days of the grand old lady were numbered. I thought I must write something about her that should be read by her or have it read to her while she was among us rather than pay tribute to her after her death. I also wanted it to have international exposure.

Continue reading ‘Sirimavo Bandaranaike: The Grand Old Lady of Sri Lankan Politics’ »

We need a Govt that the people trust, one that enjoys their confidence and one that will speak with them in terms of why we have to make the sacrifices and bear the burden necessary to get us out of the horrendous mess we have allowed ourselves to get into.


By

Dr.Paikiasothy Saravanamuttu

Yet another resolution on Sri Lanka has passed in the UN Human Rights Council, 20 member states voting for it, seven against and 20 abstaining. This resolution will facilitate the continuation of the Accountability Project to collect and preserve evidence in respect of the allegations of war crimes and crimes against humanity and includes economic crimes.

Interestingly, the Supreme Court has given leave to proceed in the case citing a host of high level officials including former presidents, finance ministers, governors of the Central Bank and members of the Monetary Board for accountability for the current economic crisis. The final comprehensive report on the resolution is due in 2025 with reporting in the intervening years.

The resolution contains strong language and reference to more recent developments. Based on the report of the High Commissioner to the Council, it highlights the centrality of impunity as the cancer on the enjoyment and protection of human rights and governance in Sri Lanka.

The Government of Sri Lanka has rejected the resolution on the grounds that the inclusion of economic crimes exceeds the mandate of the council and reference to universal jurisdiction for accountability and indeed the Accountability Project violates the constitution of Sri Lanka.

These are fallacious arguments; there is no explicit stipulation of such a nature in the constitution and were intended to muddy the waters on the grounds of the current situation in Sri Lanka – you do not kick a country when it is down – and the usual argument about the threats to national sovereignty in the Global South from the Global North.

Continue reading ‘We need a Govt that the people trust, one that enjoys their confidence and one that will speak with them in terms of why we have to make the sacrifices and bear the burden necessary to get us out of the horrendous mess we have allowed ourselves to get into.’ »

“I intend to reduce before the next election , the number of council members for local Governing bodies such as Pradeshiya Sabhas, Municipal Councils, and Urban Councils from the current 8,000 to 4,000,” States President Ranil Wickremesinghe


President Ranil Wickremesinghe yesterday announced a raft of amendments to the electoral system, noting that the existing political system was a major cause for the current economic crisis.

“A referendum will be called to decide on the parliamentary electoral system if the Select Committee which is proposed to be established fails to decide on the matter by July next year,” he said during a meeting with professionals held at the President’s Office yesterday.

President Wickremesinghe said plans are also underway to slash the number of local Government councillors by 50% before the next election.

“Before the next election, I intend to reduce the number of council members for local Governing bodies such as Pradeshiya Sabhas, Municipal Councils, and Urban Councils from the current 8,000 to 4,000,” he added.

President Wickremesinghe also said ‘Jana Sabha’ will be introduced to streamline the local government councils.

Continue reading ‘“I intend to reduce before the next election , the number of council members for local Governing bodies such as Pradeshiya Sabhas, Municipal Councils, and Urban Councils from the current 8,000 to 4,000,” States President Ranil Wickremesinghe’ »

TNA Leader and Trincomalee MP Sampantha writes to President Wickremesinghe Regarding Issues Concerning the Thirukkoneshwaram Temple and Attempts to Interdict the Territorial Contiguity of the Predominantly Tamil Speaking Northern and Eastern Provinces


(Full Text of Letter Dated 14 September 2022 sent by Tamil National Alliance(TNA) Leader and Trincomalee district MP Rajavarothayam Sampanthan to President Ranil Wickremesinghe Regarding Issues relating to the Thirukkoneshwaram Temple)

THIRUKONESHWARAM – “DAKSHANA KAILASH” RENOWNED HIND U TEMPLE IN TRINCOMALEE AND TRINCOMALEE HARBOUR

I am informed that in recent times certain meetings have been held in Trincomalee wherein activities relating to the above two institutions Thirukoneshwaram – Dakshana Kailash and Trincomalee Harbour have been discussed and certain decisions are to be taken.

May I first deal with

1. Thirukoneshwaram – Dakshana Kailash the ancient temple was destroyed in 1623 by the Portuguese Viceroy Constantain Desa. The temple is said to have had 1000 pillars, 3 Rajagopurams, two abutting the sea on either side and one in the center.

Portuguese historians at the time of Rev Queroz stated that most of the Hindus in the world including those in India venerated this temple more than any other temple. This temple was regarded by them as the ‘Rome of the East”.

2. Sir Paul Peris the eminent Sri Lankan has in his historical works has stated that long before the arrival of Vijaya in Ceylon, there existed in Ceylon five Eashwarms of Lord Siva – Naguleshwaram and Thirukethesewaram in the North, Thirukoneshwaram in the East, Muneshwaram in the West and Thondeshwaram in the South. This temple is said to be on the decline while the other four temples are flourishing. These five Siva temples are said to have been constructed all around Ceylon in the North, East, West and South to protect the country. Vijaya was the precursor of the Sinhala Race.

3. Indian Prime Minister Charan Singh who went to Thirukoneshwaram to worship as he alighted from the Vehicle uttered the following words ‘I have come to Dakshana Kailash’. The antiquity and Sanctity of this temple needs to be preserved.

In recent days there have been some proposals which I wish to bring to your notice. Thirukoneshwaram is situated inside the Fort Fredric. One enters the area from the main gate on the front of the fort. Some decades ago some Army personnel occupying part of the Fort Fredric constructed a statue of Lord Buddha on the part of the land occupied by them. People who wished to worship at Thirukoneshwaram and Lord Buddha entered the fort through the main gate and worshipped. There was no other route to enter the fort and worship Lord Buddha and Thirukoneshwaram.

Continue reading ‘TNA Leader and Trincomalee MP Sampantha writes to President Wickremesinghe Regarding Issues Concerning the Thirukkoneshwaram Temple and Attempts to Interdict the Territorial Contiguity of the Predominantly Tamil Speaking Northern and Eastern Provinces’ »

“We can engage in our daily debates, but we need to make one national policy. If we continue with that national policy, we will never fail. We made the mistake of changing policies with every change of Government,” states President Ranil Wickremesinghe

President Ranil Wickremesinghe yesterday reiterated the need for a stable national policy to rebuild Sri Lanka, insisting on the importance of an export-oriented economy.

“A strong economic policy and political stabilisation are essential to improve Sri Lanka’s economy and place it in the international sphere,” he said, opening Sri Lanka’s first life-saving pharmaceutical manufacturing plant established by Yaden Laboratories in Katunayake yesterday.

The President further pointed out the need to work under a common national policy irrespective of party differences to rebuild the country.

“We should all follow one national policy. We can engage in our daily debates, but we need to make one national policy. If we continue with that national policy, we will never fail. We made the mistake of changing policies with every change of Government,” he added.

He also said discussions on a strong national policy can take place using the National Council as the platform.

Continue reading ‘“We can engage in our daily debates, but we need to make one national policy. If we continue with that national policy, we will never fail. We made the mistake of changing policies with every change of Government,” states President Ranil Wickremesinghe’ »

Geopolitics and National Interests Determined the Ayes,Nays and Abstentions during the Vote on the Resolution on Sri Lanka at the UN Human Rights Council Session in Geneva

By P.K.Balachandran

Looking at the voting on the UN Human Rights Council’s resolution on Sri Lanka on October 6, it appears that the decisions taken by the 47 members were determined by their respective positions in geopolitics and their national interest.

The 20 members who voted for the resolution castigating Sri Lanka for alleged human rights violations, were Western nations and their political allies. Japan, which is a firm ally of the West, however, struck a different path. It abstained perhaps due to its national interest vis-à-vis Sri Lanka. Those who voted against the resolution had been at odds with the West geopolitically. And those who abstained either had mixed feelings about the West’s agendas or had other more important national interests at stake.

Among those who said “aye” were hardcore Western nations, such as the US, UK, France, Germany and the Netherlands. These were also votaries of the Western concept of human rights. Among others countries that said “aye” were those feeling threatened by the Russian invasion of Ukraine and had been flocking to the West and NATO. Many of these are new States that had emerged from the former Soviet Union but are now harboring fears of Russian expansionism. Ukraine, which voted for the resolution, is being aided by the West to fight Russia.

Continue reading ‘Geopolitics and National Interests Determined the Ayes,Nays and Abstentions during the Vote on the Resolution on Sri Lanka at the UN Human Rights Council Session in Geneva’ »

No Elections Until Parliamentary Select Committee (PSC) Formulates new System of Voting by July 2023 ; If PSC does not Deliver by July a Country wide Referendum will be held to Decide on Electoral system says President Wickremesinghe

According to a press release issued by the Presidential Media Division (PMD) yesterday (9), President Ranil Wickremesinghe is to appoint a Parliamentary Select Committee (PSC) to decide on the Parliamentary voting system by July next year, with the next General Election to be held under the new system.

This virtually rules out the possibility of Parliament being dissolved, or an election being held, in the first half of 2023, despite the President being vested with the powers to dissolve Parliament by February next year under the 20th Amendment to the Constitution .

President Wickremesinghe yesterday (9) said that a referendum will be called to decide on the Parliamentary electoral system if the PSC that is proposed to be established fails to reach a decision on the matter by July next year.

Continue reading ‘No Elections Until Parliamentary Select Committee (PSC) Formulates new System of Voting by July 2023 ; If PSC does not Deliver by July a Country wide Referendum will be held to Decide on Electoral system says President Wickremesinghe’ »

Colombo District MP Mano Ganesan Requests President Wickremesinghe to Direct IGP to Discontinue the Gathering of Personal Details from Residents in Colombo by the Police

BY Mirudhula Thambiah

Samagi Jana Balawegaya Opposition MP and Tamil Progressive Alliance Leader Mano Ganesan yesterday (9) said that he brought to President Ranil Wickremesinghe’s attention that the collection of personal residential details carried out by the Police in the city of Colombo had caused disturbance among residents, and noted that he believes that President would take immediate action.

Ganesan told The Morning that President Wickremesinghe agreed to remedy the issue.

“President Wickremesinghe accepted that it is not right, and therefore, he said he would immediately inform the Inspector General of Police (IGP) and other officials to remedy this issue. Since the President himself is the head of the armed forces, I believe that he will solve this issue,” he added.

Continue reading ‘Colombo District MP Mano Ganesan Requests President Wickremesinghe to Direct IGP to Discontinue the Gathering of Personal Details from Residents in Colombo by the Police’ »

Police Disperse Event at Galle Face Green to Commemorate Persons Involved in the “Aragalaya” who lost their Lives due to Various Reasons, Police Personnel Deployed in Large numbers Remove Men,Women and Children Forcibly


By Buddhika Samaraweera

The Police yesterday (9) obstructed a peaceful protest to commemorate those who lost their lives during the “aragalaya” (people’s struggle), which began by demanding the resignation of former President Gotabaya Rajapaksa at the Galle Face Green in Colombo in April, and arrested several persons who attended the said protest.

The Police had proceeded to remove those including civil society activists who had gathered at the Galle Face Green at around 5.45 p.m. to commemorate those that had lost their lives due to various reasons while being involved in the “aragalaya”.

It was observed that a large group of police officers, including senior officers of the Colombo Fort Police Station, arrived at the scene and informed the participating activists, including Ceylon Teachers’ Union General Secretary Joseph Stalin and former Presidential candidate Dr. Ajantha Perera, to leave the place. The police officials mentioned that since the Galle Face Green area was under Government ownership, the people would not be allowed to hold protests there.

Continue reading ‘Police Disperse Event at Galle Face Green to Commemorate Persons Involved in the “Aragalaya” who lost their Lives due to Various Reasons, Police Personnel Deployed in Large numbers Remove Men,Women and Children Forcibly’ »

Can Southern communities reduced to scraping for daily existence due to reckless decisions taken by corrupt ‘kings’ on whom they lavished unstinted adoration, ‘eat’ the political propaganda of the ‘magnificent Sinhala majority,’ which they and their unfortunate children have been nourished on, for most of their lives?

By

Kishali Pinto-Jayawardene

There is a deep tragedy at the heart of Sri Lanka’s constitutional, financial and legal paralysis that we must understand.

‘Eating’ political propaganda

Some years ago, infuriated supporters of a drug baron turned vassal of the Rajapaksas lashed out at a courageous forest officer who protested against the destruction of the environment by politicians, asking ‘are we to eat oxygen’? Now, Southern communities reduced to scraping for daily existence due to reckless decisions taken by corrupt ‘kings’ on whom they lavished unstinted adoration, may perhaps ask themselves another question.

Can they ‘eat’ the political propaganda of the ‘magnificent Sinhala majority,’ which they and their unfortunate children have been nourished on, for most of their lives? In a special report last month following a crop and food security assessment mission to the country, the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) along with the World Food Programme (WFP) warned about ‘acute food insecurity’ in Sri Lanka. The report cautions that, ‘nearly 30 percent of the population are experiencing acute food insecurity and (that the situation) will likely deteriorate further unless urgent assistance is provided.’

This is cause and effect in the most classic of consequential processes, the direct result of allowing a coterie of foolish and ignorant men to take the most fatal of decisions affecting the lives of millions. Even so, the question is not about their foolishness or their ignorance (evidenced from beginning to end, as it were) but rather, about how an entire population of (not entirely foolish) men and women allowed this to happen? Ergo, the decades-long crippling of the democratic nation-state and the monstrous growth of a xenophobically communalistic political behemoth lodged in the innards of the State which refuses to die.

Continue reading ‘Can Southern communities reduced to scraping for daily existence due to reckless decisions taken by corrupt ‘kings’ on whom they lavished unstinted adoration, ‘eat’ the political propaganda of the ‘magnificent Sinhala majority,’ which they and their unfortunate children have been nourished on, for most of their lives?’ »

Wimal Weerawansa claims the debate on 22 A is being held up due to the opposition of 10-15 government MPs whose strings were being pulled by “Mola Hathano” (The one with seven brains), a term he frequently uses to refer to Basil Rajapaksa.


By Sandun Jayawardana

The passage of the 22nd Amendment (22A) to the Constitution, widely considered as a key component in the political reform process, was delayed in Parliament this week amid sharp divisions between the government and opposition over the draft amendment.

Differences of opinion regarding the content of the draft amendment were far more apparent within the ruling Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP), despite the rather clumsy attempt by government leaders to hide it and pin the blame for the delay on the opposition.

A two-day debate on the second reading on 22A had earlier been scheduled for Thursday (6) and Friday (7). On Thursday morning however, President Ranil Wickremesinghe took to the floor to make a special statement regarding the current economic situation where he briefed MPs regarding measures taken by the government to take the country out of the crisis.

At the conclusion of the President’s speech, Leader of the House Susil Premajayantha announced that the government was prepared to grant a debate on President Wickremesinghe’s speech with the agreement of the House. The announcement prompted Chief Opposition Whip Lakshman Kiriella to query whether Mr Premajayantha was asking to hold the debate on that day itself. “We are ready, but does that mean the 22nd Amendment will not be moved today?” he queried.

It then became apparent that the government was not ready to proceed with the debate on 22A, with Prime Minister Dinesh Gunawardena blaming the opposition for blocking the passage of 22A. He claimed that the Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) led by Opposition Leader Sajith Premadasa and several other opposition parties had indicated to him the previous evening of their inability to support the draft amendment. “We deeply regret this,” said the PM.

Continue reading ‘Wimal Weerawansa claims the debate on 22 A is being held up due to the opposition of 10-15 government MPs whose strings were being pulled by “Mola Hathano” (The one with seven brains), a term he frequently uses to refer to Basil Rajapaksa.’ »

“You all hold different political views. But you can achieve your political goals only if the country recovers from this economic crisis.At a time when no other political party or leader of the opposition would accept this risk, I accepted the risk for the country and embarked on a dangerous journey. We have progressed gradually, but steadily. We know that the majority of people in our country support this journey”. – President Ranil Wickremesinghe


(Full text of President Ranil Wickremesinghe’s Special statement in Parliament on October 6, 2022)

I got the opportunity to exchange views with the state leaders during the visits to the United Kingdom and Japan recently. I also got the opportunity to meet the Finance Ministers of the countries where the Asian Development Bank operates during my visit to the Philippines. These meetings and exchange of views are of pivotal importance to overcome the economic crisis we are currently facing.

Today, the country’s economy and financial condition are not at sound levels. But some political parties and groups are still working under the assumption that the country is in a sound state. They make their comments, criticisms as well as make their proposals under the same assumption. We can’t assume that the economy has come back to normal just because the fuel queues are over.
We are facing the most serious economic crisis our country has ever faced in recent history. I explained the strategy to get out of this crisis on many occasions.

• Reaching a staff-level agreement with the International Monetary Fund
• Reaching a common agreement on debt restructuring with countries like Japan, India and China and private creditors who have given us loans

• Thereafter stabilizing the economy by obtaining loan assistance from the IMF and other countries after certification from the International Monetary Fund.

• Working to raise the country’s economy to a developed level through a general plan after stabilizing the economy.

I pointed out at the initiation that we should strive to fulfill these four factors. It is because depending on the success of the first step, the second step could be made successful and only once the second step is made successful the third could be made successful and so on.

I pointed out those facts even before I assumed duties in the office of Prime Minister.

Continue reading ‘“You all hold different political views. But you can achieve your political goals only if the country recovers from this economic crisis.At a time when no other political party or leader of the opposition would accept this risk, I accepted the risk for the country and embarked on a dangerous journey. We have progressed gradually, but steadily. We know that the majority of people in our country support this journey”. – President Ranil Wickremesinghe’ »