Farewell, my departed classmates…. 

March 18th, 2026

Nava Thakuria

It was shocking and heart-breaking news even for an emotionless creature like me. Within a few days, we have lost at least three AECian friends because of  ailments. Their untimely demise was highlighted and  mourned in the whatsapp group (created for the 1985-90 batch of Assam Engineering College, under Gauhati University). I just became clueless how to address the emotional issue. Should I write an obituary (being a professional journalist, that’s an easy job for me), but it was too painful and difficult to pen any article about our classmates, with whom we stayed in a serene AEC campus in Jalukbari behind a hill to Gauhati University campus. We all arrived in the prestigious institutions with a lot of dreams and left the campus with commitments  to our family,  society and nation. My journey got deflected after the college days as I started working for an Assamese daily newspaper from Guwahati in far eastern Bharat/India. An accidental decision changed my entire working life till attaining the retirement age.

My  busy and cramped lifestyle (often turns unproductive!) shattered when the information about Jyotiprakash Kurmi’s sudden death flashed in the social media group.  Kurmi, a tall and handsome guy with decent attire, was my branch-mate and I remember our days from classrooms to mechanical workshops to numerous hostel 7 moments. We used to attend the classes where many acclaimed professors including our Principal sir (Dr Aparna K Padmapati) guided us to solve mechanical problems from the boring textbooks.  He was a rational student and always maintained with us as a soft spoken gentleman. Kurmi lost his battles with recently diagnosed kidney ailments. Days back, Kamal Das left this world after living with a prolonged post-accident disaster, where the smiling chap lost his usual brainstorm for months. Another companion Sugyan Dutta died after battling serious diseases a few months back. Even when it appeared that his days were numbered because of complicated health issues,  Sugyan  called me, but never described his painful moments. Rather he had a whole lot of complaints about my profession!

Years back, we lost two AECian classmates as  Sandeep Goel breathed his last after fighting severe sickness. He  was intelligent and  largely sober. Unlike me, Sandeep  used to speak when it became  necessary. A serious student who later improved himself as a successful professional and finally Sandeep grew as an adorable family man. Another depressing news within a week saddened us with the demise of Gunagovinda Buragohain. Guna was my hostel-mate and we faced initial troubled days on the college campus. A jolly man, Guna was so simple, well behaved and friendly in nature. I often recollect the memories of college days,  rushing to classes in the morning hours and reaching Sundarbari market for evening tea and snakes. Occasionally we went to discover Guwahati from different dimensions and very often we failed in our adventures, but Guna remains optimistic all the time.

Soon after leaving the college, I opted to work in a newspaper (my gratitude to AEC Professor Dr Surendra Nath Medhi and Natun Dainik’s founding editor Chandra Prasad Saikia). Our college-mate Pradip Medhi, who was looking for a good job at that time, used to meet me at the press club premises. He was critical and sometimes even abusive to me as I preferred a profession with no financial security. He always fantasized about his future days as a successful engineer. But a heart attack cut short his journey, which I came to know a little late. Meanwhile, we lost many AECian friends including Prabal Choudhury (a hard-hitting  debater), Uttam Kumar Roy (fantastic theatre actor and a creative director), Manju Borah (a fascinating friend), Swapan Kr Das (gentleman in a real sense), Bipul Sarma (humble and friendly in nature), Kamal Krishna Gupta (stood always stout & stable), Monilal Brahma (a man of thoughtful temperament), Imliakum Longkumar (popularly known as Akum), Parag J Baruah (introvert with a poetic mind), etc. Pranabjyoti Bordoloi, a leader of our batch, died in a fatal road accident during college days. My friends in Bajali College (now Bhattadev University) namely Jayanta Kr Das, Kailash Sarma and Manoranjan Talukdar also bid final farewell to us.

During high school days at Makhibaha in Nalbari district, we encountered the untimely demise of classmate Shiva Prasad Thakuria with visibly thick & black hairs, who was suffering from serious illness for some time. He was followed by a number of classmates from our locality in later part of life, who left for the heavenly abode too young. Srimati Barman (married an early age to a distant village), Gopal Seal (who worked for national armed forces), Bhupen Bhattacharya (an agri-engineer), Phatik Thakuria (another engineer), Mahesh Sarma (a popular footballer), Ranjit Pathak (a strongman among us), Dinesh Deka (police officer), Srimati Barman (lady with an open heart) and Dilip Deka (a practicing doctor Dilip was the first boy in classes and went missing nearly two decades back during the troubled days in western Assam) joined the list of departed souls.

I remember the day, when we received horrible news of losing a friend during my middle school days at Bhojkuchi, a typically isolated village in western Assam. Some of our friends were playing at the school playground when a white ambassador car arrived. We instantly followed the vehicle without knowing that one of our beloved childhood friends was lying inside it. Our classmate Prahlad Barman (whose handwriting was appreciated by everyone) suffered from some heart related ailments. Just before the seventh standard examination (at that time, it was the last exam in our school), he died in a Guwahati hospital.

For the last time we saw Prahlad, sleeping peacefully at the courtyard amidst heartbroken cries in sorrow by his mother and other relatives. Next day we had a condolence meeting at our school. Everyone wept while remembering him as a bright student with an amiable nature. Until then no photograph of Prahlad was available with his family. Later a close-up snap was arranged from a group photograph, where we all were present on the school campus, and was taken by Tihu-based legendary photographer Mahendra Barua just before Prahlad went for treatment in the city. Whenever I visit my village, I can feel his warm presence in that photograph and even hear his crispy voice. Goodbye my friends, till we meet again somewhere, sometime

From ‘Epic Fury’ To A Trap Of Trump’s Own Making: Finding The Way Out

March 18th, 2026

Dr. Alon Ben-Meir

Trump never tested serious, sustained diplomacy to resolve the wide-ranging, conflicting issues with Iran; instead, he defaulted to the illusion that enough bombs could end” a conflict that has spanned nearly five decades.

This war with Iran is a war of choice, and a reckless one at that. President Trump has floated a carousel of justifications—an imminent” threat, the need to destroy Iran’s missile stockpile and manufacturing capacity, to dismantle its nuclear program, to trigger regime change, to spark an uprising from within. Yet, weeks into a brutal conflict, his administration has still not articulated a clear, coherent objective commensurate with the risks and costs involved. That is not a strategy; it is improvisation with live ammunition.

A war of choice that should not have started Defenders of the war claim that Iran’s expanding missile arsenal, its accumulation of highly enriched uranium, and its network of proxies left the United States with no choice but to strike. They speak of an imminent threat in slow motion,” arguing that the alternative to war now is a far worse war later. But even if one accepts that Iran’s trajectory was deeply troubling, it does not follow that a maximalist air and naval campaign—decapitation strikes, broad attacks on infrastructure, and open-ended escalation—was the only or wisest option.

Miscalculating Iranian resistance, resilience, and war plans The miscalculation at the heart of this war is the belief that Iran would crumble quickly under shock and awe. Trump and Netanyahu appear to have badly underestimated Iran’s resilience, its capacity for asymmetric retaliation, and the depth of its preparation. Iran has done pretty much what its own doctrine and countless experts said it would do: fire missiles and drones at US bases and Israel, mobilize its axis of resistance” across the region, and move to close or heavily disrupt the Strait of Hormuz—putting global shipping and energy markets at risk.

Instead of a short, sharp epic fury,” we now face a grinding confrontation that has driven up oil prices, rattled global markets, and forced US and Israeli air defenses into high-intensity operations with no clear end in sight. Proponents of the war insist that Iran’s military capabilities are being badly degraded.” Perhaps. But degraded is not defeated, and a wounded adversary with intact asymmetric tools is often more dangerous, not less.

Netanyahu’s push vs Trump’s desire to end” the conflict Many observers blame Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu for pushing Trump over the brink. For years, Netanyahu has championed a confrontational Iran policy, opposing past nuclear deals and casting the Islamic Republic as an existential threat to be confronted, not managed. His fingerprints are all over this crisis. Yet focusing solely on Netanyahu obscures Trump’s own agency and ambition. Aides describe the war as a historic chance to finally end” the Iran problem—to do what previous presidents would not.

This is a fantasy. You cannot bomb away a nation’s identity, trauma, sense of encirclement, or deterrent logic. The belief that decapitation strikes and infrastructure damage will yield a pliant, post revolutionary Iran ready to embrace US preferences lacks any historical foundation. Worse, leadership decapitation often empowers the most hardline factions, confirming their conviction that only missiles, proxies, and nuclear latency can keep the country safe.

No exit strategy and fraying coalition

Three weeks into the war, there is still no exit strategy. Trump appears politically and strategically trapped. He cannot point to a defined set of war aims achieved, yet he also cannot escalate indefinitely without risking a wider regional explosion or a surge of American casualties. Meanwhile, his pleas for an international naval coalition to keep the Strait of Hormuz open have been met with lukewarm responses. Key allies in Europe, Canada, and Australia have either refused to dispatch forces under US command or have limited their role to protecting their own shipping, explicitly stating they will not be drawn into a war they neither initiated nor were seriously consulted about.

End of war scenarios and mission accomplished”

This is the context in which we must consider the endgame. Broadly, several scenarios are debated: a prolonged air and naval campaign ending in a unilateral US declaration of victory”; a ceasefire mediated by regional and international actors; dangerous escalation into limited ground operations; or uncontrolled regional war involving multiple fronts. Of these, only a negotiated de escalation grounded in realistic objectives offers a path that avoids producing more instability than it resolves.

The United States needs an off ramp enabling Trump to claim success without demanding Iranian capitulation. A carefully crafted mission accomplished” narrative—asserting that Washington has severely degraded Iran’s military, missile production, and capacity to reconstitute its nuclear program—can provide that. But it must be paired with substance: a several-week cooling-off period with no new offensives, an end to triumphalist and humiliating rhetoric about Iran, and discreet back-channel contacts to explore conditions for resuming broader talks.

Cooling off period and avoiding humiliation The importance of tone is often dismissed as cosmetic. It is not. Iranian politics are saturated with memories of humiliation—foreign intervention in 1953, the brutal Iran–Iraq War, and decades of sanctions. Public gloating by American or Israeli leaders over killing Iran’s supreme leader or crushing” its armed forces will only narrow the space for any Iranian decision-maker to contemplate engagement.

We must all remember, national pride is not a luxury good in Tehran; it is a political necessity. If the United States wants Iran to show flexibility, it must allow Iranian leaders to tell their own public that they defended the nation’s honor and extracted concessions, not that they were forced to kneel.

Back channel contacts and multilateralizing talks Back channel diplomacy, facilitated by trusted intermediaries such as Oman or Qatar, is essential. Formal talks should not begin with crowds or media fanfare. Quiet exploration of parameters—red lines, sequencing, verification—must come first. Since Iran, for good reason, distrusts Trump after he withdrew from the JCPOA in 2018 and attacked Iran twice during negotiations (June last year and February this year), representatives acceptable to both sides—perhaps British and Saudi—should later join as observers. Invited by Washington, they would reassure Tehran that the US is bound to the process and signal to skeptics that the outcome is durable, not a fragile bilateral deal.

Professional negotiators and psychological understanding of Iran Just as important is who negotiates. Trump’s habit of sending personal loyalists and real estate fixers to handle enormously complex security dossiers is a recipe for spectacle, not success. Negotiating with Iran requires deep technical knowledge of nuclear and missile issues, sanctions architecture, and regional security dynamics, as well as a nuanced understanding of Iranian political psychology and factional dynamics. The United States should appoint first-rate diplomats and experts in international negotiations and conflict resolution, not family or business partners, to lead these extraordinarily sensitive talks.

Constrained but realistic US negotiating agenda Washington must narrow its demands to what is legitimate and achievable. A realistic package would aim to end Iran’s funding and operational support for proxies attacking US forces and destabilizing neighbors; roll back its 60 percent enriched uranium stockpile under a mutually agreed mechanism; and establish a new Israel Iran security framework in which Tehran halts direct and indirect threats against Israel, and Israel ceases threatening the Iranian regime.

In return, the US would recognize Iran’s right to a peaceful, strictly monitored civilian nuclear program; coordinate with key partners to lift nuclear related sanctions in phased steps tied to compliance; gradually unfreeze Iranian assets; pledge non interference in Iran’s internal politics; and move toward gradual normalization.

Critics will bristle. Iranian hardliners will resist limiting support for Hezbollah, Iraqi militias, and other axis of resistance” elements seen as essential to deterrence. Israeli leaders will argue that anything short of zero enrichment and missile dismantlement leaves an existential threat intact. American hawks will denounce sanctions relief or recognition of Iran’s nuclear rights as appeasement.

Yet the alternative to such a constrained bargain is no tidy victory, but an indefinite, simmering war—one that repeatedly ignites regional crises, keeps oil markets on edge, hardens Iran’s radicals, and erodes the US-Arab Gulf alliance system as partners recoil from Washington’s unilateral adventurism.

Anticipating Israeli attempts to sabotage a deal That is why the United States must also stop allowing its Iran policy to be effectively subcontracted to whoever sits in the prime minister’s office in Jerusalem. Yes, Israel has legitimate security concerns, and Iran must not be allowed to threaten Israel’s existence or use the Israeli–Palestinian conflict as a permanent lever of regional destabilization.

But it is not for Washington to conduct its foreign policy on Israel’s behalf. Furthermore, neither Israel nor the US should dictate who governs Iran. As long as Tehran refrains from threatening Israel and interfering in the Israeli–Palestinian arena, the United States should judge the Iranian government primarily by its behavior, not its ideology.

Iran is not going away. Neither is Israel. Nor is the durable reality of American strategic interests in the Middle East, or the universal desire—among Americans, Iranians, Israelis, and their neighbors—for a more stable and peaceful region. The war we are in now is a choice. Continuing it without a plausible political endgame is also a choice. So is building an off-ramp that trades maximalist fantasies for hard-nosed, enforceable peaceful coexistence.

The question is not whether that off-ramp is easy. It is whether we have the wisdom to take it before the alternatives become far worse.

____________ Dr. Alon Ben-Meir is a retired professor of international relations, most recently at the Center for Global Affairs at NYU. He taught courses on international negotiation and Middle Eastern studies

JR Jayewardene sought $1 million from Mossad for election campaign, document reveals

March 18th, 2026

Courtesy The Daily Mirror

Colombo, March 18 (Daily Mirror) – Declassified documents from Israel’s Foreign Ministry have revealed that former Sri Lankan President Junius Richard Jayewardene had requested $1 million from Israel’s intelligence agency Mossad to finance his election campaign in 1987.

According to cables dated August 6 and August 14, 1987, the request was made during a meeting with a Mossad representative, at a time when the Sri Lankan government was facing mounting pressure from Arab states and local opposition to shut down the Israeli Interests Section in Colombo.

The revelations were reported in an article by The Wire, based on partially declassified files from the Israel State Archives detailing relations between Sri Lanka and Israel during the mid-1980s.

Sri Lanka had severed diplomatic ties with Israel in 1970 under pressure from Arab nations. However, ties were partially restored in 1984 with the opening of an Israeli Interests Section at the U.S. Embassy in Colombo, amid the escalation of the island’s civil war. Documents indicate that Sri Lanka sought Israeli assistance to counter Tamil militancy.

By the late 1980s, Israel had supplied military equipment to Sri Lanka worth approximately $30 million. This included Dvora-class fast patrol boats, Mini-Uzi submachine guns, electronic fencing, communications systems, and ammunition. Israeli personnel also trained Sri Lankan military units and members of the President’s security detail.

Cables reveal that Israeli instructors, sometimes presented as agricultural advisers, were involved in training operations aimed at strengthening Sri Lankan forces, particularly in the north. Israeli officials believed such training could help local forces mount offensives in areas such as Jaffna.

The documents further show that Israeli assistance extended to the Special Task Force (STF), an elite police unit that had faced serious allegations of human rights abuses. Despite warnings from U.S. officials about the long-term consequences of supporting the STF, Israel continued its involvement, including training a newly formed VIP protection unit following an assassination attempt on the President in 1987.

While the cables confirm Jayewardene’s request for campaign funding, there is no evidence in the released documents that Israel provided the $1 million. However, Israeli officials acknowledged their strategic interest in his political survival, noting that a victory by the opposition could have led to the expulsion of Israeli representatives from Sri Lanka.

The files also highlight concerns among Israeli diplomats regarding Sri Lanka’s deteriorating human rights situation during the civil war, including reports of civilian casualties, enforced disappearances, and allegations of torture. Despite these concerns, Israel continued its military and intelligence assistance, viewing it as critical to maintaining bilateral relations.

The documents provide rare insight into the depth of cooperation between Sri Lanka and Israel during one of the most turbulent periods in the island’s history, as well as the geopolitical considerations that shaped those ties.

MID-EAST CRISIS AND ECONOMIC & SOCIAL IMPACT ON SRI LANKA

March 17th, 2026

By Raj Gonsalkorale

There is a time to play politics, a time to destabilize governments for political gain and a time to hide the truth from the people, again, for political gain. This is not that time as the consequences arising from the war in the Middle East is far too devastating for the global economy and therefore for Sri Lanka. The current behavior of the Opposition, and some trade unions is like the behavior of Ostriches with their heads in the sand. The under-performance of some Ministers makes matters worse for the country. It is time to take stock of the performance of some Ministers and make necessary changes so that the country could weather the impending storm with the least discomfort for the people. It is time to take stock of the country’s economic situation before the storm is upon us and take measures to avoid a social upheaval that might become inevitable if action is not taken now.

The article titled Strait of Hormuz closed by Iran: An economic Tsunami in the making for Sri Lanka?” (https://www.ft.lk/opinion/Strait-of-Hormuz-closure-An-economic-Tsunami-in-the-making-for-Sri-Lanka/14-789226) laid out the scenario facing Sri Lanka should the war in the Middle East were to continue for a prolonged period. Presently, it does not appear that the conflict will end soon, and all indications are that it will continue and it will cause irreparable damage to the global economy. Sri Lanka is not on a sound economic footing to weather the economic Tsunami although it was showing very positive signs of economic recovery in recent times. The economic fundamentals are flawed in Sri Lanka and successive governments that ruled the country since independence have not had a strategic economic vision for the country although various development projects were done. A strategic vison entails a sound economic footing where, the country borrows for investments that will yield good financial returns, and not for consumption, manages its service projects with its own funds, builds a net debt free economy with high foreign reserves, achieves a GDP growth and a high per capita income to retain its talent within the country and prepares the economic platform of the country to facilitate ongoing foreign and domestic investments. The bankruptcy in 2022 showed that Sri Lanka never had an economic vision to avoid that debacle. In order to achieve such a vision over time, a National Economic Governance Framework was suggested in the above article and it is reiterated in this one.

Sri Lanka as well as many other countries will face the negative consequences arising from the current war in the Middle East.  These will require immediate measures as well as long-term measures

  1. SUPPLY AND COST OF ENERGY (OIL, GAS, CRUDE OIL)

The closure of the Strait of Hormuz, and the impact on movement of supplies, impact on production of oil and gas itself in the mid-eastern countries that produce them, will result in shortages and major price hikes. This will have a cascading effect on the economies of many countries. Unless this conflict ends soon, and a solution found to whatever issue that precipitated this conflict, a new world order of shortages, inflation, price rises, increase in poverty, and food insecurity, and general civil unrest could eventuate.  Sri Lanka will undergo this downward transformation from a country just raising its head from bankruptcy to a lesser and greater degree depending on how the country prepares for these possible eventualities.

  • FOOD INSECURITY

Sri Lanka spends a considerable amount of money for food imports. These will get affected due to production slowing down in exporting countries, transportation challenges arising from fuel shortages and high prices of fuel, and the shortages of inorganic fertilizers both in the producing countries and even in Sri Lanka for what is grown locally. While assessing what is produced locally and its sufficiency, Sri Lanka will have to explore food imports from countries which are relatively less impacted by the Middle East Crisis. This will have to be done as a top priority activity

  • MEDICINE SHORTAGES

If the war in the Middle East continues and the global economic impact spreads, production of drugs by the pharmaceutical industry will get impacted. A significant number of pharmaceuticals are petroleum-based or utilize petrochemical derivatives as raw materials in their manufacturing process. Many common drugs, including aspirin, paracetamol (acetaminophen), and various antibiotics, are synthesized from petrochemicals like benzene and toluene. Transportation challenges will exacerbate the problem. Sri Lanka will have to take immediate measures to assess the availability and duration of what is available of at the least essential items and take steps to bring in additional stocks keeping in mind the expiry dates of the items.

  • IMPACT ON FOREIGN RESERVES, DEBT (BOTH FOREIGN AND LOCAL, REPAYMENTS OF DEBT EXPECTED TO COMMENCE IN 2028), REVENUE (EXPORTS, OVERSEAS REMITTANCES, AND LOCALLY GENERATED), CURRENCY EXCHANGE RATE (DEVALUATION MIGHT BECOME INEVITABLE)

These economic fundamentals could be seriously affected. Foreign reserves (currently USD 7.2 Billion), which is sufficient for about 3.5 months of imports, could dwindle if export income and overseas remittances decline, as they surely will, and this results in the country resorting to spending its reserves to fund imports. Considering an inevitable rise in inflation, and pressure on supply unless demand is arrested, economic impact on other countries, the Sri Lanka Rupee may have to be devalued to contain foreign exchange outflows and keep internal revenue at a level it can fund essential services without resorting to major borrowings.

  • IMMEDIATE AND SHORT-TERM MEASURES THAT MAY BE NEEDED TO SURVIVE THE ECONOMIC ONSLAUGHT

Inevitable measures that will be unpopular will have to be taken. Politically, the government will have a daunting task ahead to prepare for a likely situation they had no part in it. This is not how the Sri Lankan Opposition will see it and make use of it to do their best to destabilize the country, hoping to topple the government. The following broad suggestions are made

  1. The government will have to minimize the impact of the crisis on the most vulnerable.
  2. Expenditure on energy (oil and gas) will have to be reduced. Planned power cuts and fuel rationing for private motor vehicles may become necessary. Schooling days may need to be reduced to say 3 or 4 days a week, and office working days (physical presence) will need a similar reduction. This will result in a reduction in transport costs.
  3. A food security assessment will have to be carried out as a matter of urgency and necessary measures taken based on findings.
  4. Health service will have to be declared an essential service, and work to rule, work stoppages, and strikes, officially banned under emergency rule with harsh penalties imposed on those breaking rules.
  5. Exporters and foreign remittances given an incentive payment of 10-15 percent over the official exchange rate.
  6. All infrastructure projects to be temporarily halted, with intended expenditure transferred to an essential service reserve fund.
  7. LONG TERM SYSTEM CHANGES 

The fundamental premise here will be the need to strengthen the country’s economy and drive it towards greater self-reliance.

Essential components of this strengthening will be

  1. Increasing its net foreign reserves and foreign assets wealth up to or beyond its foreign debt.
  2. Increasing export revenue in sufficient amounts to meet the foreign reserves target mentioned at (a) above .
  3. Introducing mechanisms to increase its foreign assets wealth via mechanisms similar to the Singapore model, TEMASEK HOLDINGS (https://www.temasek.com.sg/en/index), and the GIC (Government of Singapore Investment Corporation)https://www.gic.com.sg/
  4. Increasing its manufacturing base to supply local demand as well as for exports.
  5. Increasing emphasis on preventive healthcare using nontraditional (non-Western) approaches like Ayurvedic and indigenous medical methodologies, and other practices like Yoga and similar practices that are focused on preventive health, rather than curative health which incurs a huge component of the national budget.
  6. Increasing food security with a combination of measures.
  7. Ensuring local recurrent expenditure is met with local revenue, with no borrowings, and project expenditure is also met as far as possible with local revenue and in partnership with long term debt (where necessary).
  8. All infrastructure projects to be assessed independently for their costs and benefits, prior to commencement.
  9. Energy self-sufficiency – Sri Lanka should work towards this and increase solar power, wind power and hydro power including mechanisms for reusing reservoir contained water as in the Snowy Mountains in Australia (see https://www.webuild-group.com.au/en/what-we-do/projects/snowy-mountains-hydro-electric-scheme/)

A NATIONAL ECONOMIC GOVERNNACE FRAMEWORK TO ADVANCE LONG TERM SYSTEM CHANGE

It is strongly recommended that long-term systems change measures noted above and other relevant ones, are included in a national economic governance framework supported by all political parties and approved by the national parliament as an abiding act of parliament that should be reviewed every five years with the participation of all political parties

While a National Economic Governance Framework is suggested as a long-term measure to mitigate similar issues arising in the future to a better degree, a challenge is thrown to the broad political establishment (the government and the Opposition)  to place the country before themselves, and organize themselves as a National Governance Committee to discuss, debate and collectively agree on urgent measures that are essential to minimize the impact of the current crisis on the general populace. In order to avoid any side taking political advantage of the dire global economic situation unfolding before everyone’s eyes, and its impact on Sri Lanka, one of the primary tasks of the committee would be to brief the community with one voice about the global situation, its impact on the country and why some essential measures are being taken. This is not the time to play politics.

ශ්‍රී ලංකාවේ සියලුම ක්‍රිකට් ලෝලීන්ට කරන ආයාචනයක්

March 17th, 2026

රොහාන් අබේගුණවර්ධන

1997 දී ඕස්ට්‍රේලියානු පත්‍රිකා වෙත ලිවීමෙන් මෙම ක්‍රමය මුලින්ම ආරම්භ කළ ශ්‍රී ලාංකික නීතිඥ සේනක වීරරත්න මහතාට නිසි ගෞරවයක් වශයෙන්, ශ්‍රී ලංකා ක්‍රිකට් (SLC) විසින් තීරණ සමාලෝචන පද්ධතිය (DRS) සේනක තීරණ සමාලෝචන පද්ධතිය (SDRS) ලෙස නැවත නම් කිරීම සඳහා ICC වෙත නියෝජනයන් ඉදිරිපත් කිරීමට කාලය පැමිණ තිබේ.

ඔහු The Australian හි කර්තෘ වෙත ලිපියක් යැවීමට පෙර, ක්‍රිකට් ක්‍රීඩාවේ හෝ වෙනත් ඕනෑම ක්‍රීඩාවක ක්‍රීඩක යොමු කිරීමක් යෝජනා කරන ප්‍රකාශිත ලිපියක් නොමැත”.
ලබා ගත හැකි සියලු සාක්ෂි නම්, සේනකගේ ලිපිය ක්‍රිකට් සඳහා යොමු කිරීමේ ක්‍රමයක් යෝජනා කළ පළමු අවස්ථාව බවයි. 1997 මාර්තු 25 වන දිනට පෙර, වෙනත් ක්‍රීඩා වල පවා එවැනි ක්‍රමයක් හෝ යාන්ත්‍රණයක් නොතිබූ බව පෙනේ.
 
මෙම යාන්ත්‍රණය අභියාචනාධිකරණ විනිසුරුවරයෙකු විසින් පහළ අධිකරණ තීන්දුවක් සමාලෝචනය කිරීමට සමාන වන අතර, නීතිඥයෙකු ලෙස, ක්‍රිකට් උද්යෝගිමත් සේනක වීරරත්න දිගු කලක් ක්‍රිකට් ලෝකය පුරා පාවෙමින් තිබූ විනිසුරු තීරණවලට එරෙහි විවේචන ජය ගැනීම සඳහා මෙම අදහස යෝජනා කළේය. ඇත්ත වශයෙන්ම, පැරණි දිනවල, ප්‍රශ්නකාරී තත්වයක් පැවති විට. විනිසුරුවරයෙකුගේ තීරණයක්, අසතුටින් සිටි ප්‍රේක්ෂකයින් "අම්පයර් හොරා" යනුවෙන් කෑ ගැසුවා, එහි තේරුම "අම්පයර්" යනු තක්කඩියෙකි. දැන්, ක්ෂේත්‍ර විනිසුරුවන්ට එරෙහිව එවැනි චෝදනා අසන්නට නොලැබේ, අවම වශයෙන් ජාත්‍යන්තර තරඟවලදී.
 
DRS හි ප්‍රධාන සාධකය වන "ක්‍රීඩක යොමු කිරීමේ" යාන්ත්‍රණයේ කර්තෘත්වයට සේනකගේ නීත්‍යානුකූල හිමිකම් පෑම පැහැදිලි කරන The Papare.com හි මෙම විෂය පිළිබඳව පළ වූ ලිපියක් කියවන ලෙස මම සියලුම ශ්‍රී ලාංකික ක්‍රිකට් ලෝලීන්ගෙන් ඉල්ලා සිටිමි. මම උපුටා දක්වන්නේ:
 
සාමාන්‍යයෙන්, සියලුම නව නිපැයුම් නිර්මාතෘගේ නම දරයි. වර්ෂාවෙන් බලපෑමට ලක් වූ එක්දින ජාත්‍යන්තර ක්‍රිකට් සම්බන්ධයෙන්, 'ඩක්වර්ත් සහ ලුවිස්' ක්‍රමය භාවිතා කරනු ලබන්නේ එය ඉංග්‍රීසි ජාතිකයන් දෙදෙනෙකු (ෆ්‍රෑන්ක් ඩක්වර්ත් සහ ටෝනි ලුවිස්) විසින් සකස් කරන ලද ක්‍රමයක් වන බැවිනි. DRS සම්බන්ධයෙන් එය එසේ නොවන්නේ ඇයි? 1997 මාර්තු තරම් ඈත අතීතයේ දී, ලොව ප්‍රථම වතාවට, ප්‍රමුඛ පෙළේ ජාත්‍යන්තර ක්‍රිකට් සඟරා සහ පුවත්පත්වල, DRS හි පදනම බවට පත් වූ ‘ක්‍රීඩක යොමු කිරීමේ’ යාන්ත්‍රණයේ අත්‍යවශ්‍ය අංග පිළිසිඳ ගත් සහ ලියා ප්‍රකාශයට පත් කළ මිනිසා සුදු ජාතිකයෙකු නොවන නිසාද? ශ්‍රී ලංකාවේ සේනක වීරරත්න ඔහුගේ සංකල්පය ක්‍රිකට් ක්‍රීඩාවට යොදා ගැනීමට පටන් ගත් දා සිට යුක්තිය වෙනුවෙන් සටන් කරමින් සිටී. ස්වාධීන තෙවන පාර්ශවීය බේරුම්කරුවෙකු විසින් අපක්ෂපාතී පරීක්ෂණයක් සහ නිසි විභාගයක් සඳහා ඔහුගේ ඉල්ලීම සලකා බලා නැත. 
 
ශ්‍රී ලංකාවේ ක්‍රිකට් ලෝලීන් ලෙස, අපි ශ්‍රී ලංකා ක්‍රිකට් (SLC) නිලධාරීන්ගෙන් සහ ක්‍රීඩා අමාත්‍යාංශයෙන් ඉල්ලා සිටින්නේ, සේනක වීරරත්නගේ සංකල්පය හඳුනාගෙන, එම යෙදුම සේනක තීරණ සමාලෝචන පද්ධතිය (SDRS) ලෙස නැවත නම් කිරීමට මැදිහත් වී ICC නියෝජනයක් ලබා දෙන ලෙසයි. එය ආරම්භක සේනකට පමණක් නොව, ශ්‍රී ලංකාවට ද මහත් ගෞරවයක් වනු ඇත.
 
රොහාන් අබේගුණවර්ධන
 

Capitalizing on the Real Estate Expansion: Lanka Property Show 2026 Sets the Stage for Sri Lanka’s Next Era of Growth

March 17th, 2026

Press Release – Lanka Property Show 2026

The Lanka Property Show 2026, Sri Lanka’s flagship real estate exhibition, is set to return for its 10th edition on 21st and 22nd March 2026, at the Oak Room, Cinnamon Grand Hotel, from 10:00 AM to 8:00 PM. Hosted by LankaPropertyWeb, the country’s leading online real estate platform, the event provides a unique opportunity for property buyers, investors, and enthusiasts to explore the nation’s most prestigious residential and commercial offerings,all under one roof.

The two-day event will feature over 30 apartment and housing projects across Colombo and its suburbs, with prices starting from LKR 28.3 million. Visitors can engage directly with developers, explore home financing options with leading banks, and access free legal advice from property law experts, ensuring a comprehensive and informed property experience.

A virtual edition will run alongside the physical event, offering live video calls, 3D virtual tours, and real-time chat, enabling participants to explore the showcase and engage with developers from anywhere.

This year’s Lanka Property Show will feature three expert panel discussions highlighting key trends shaping Sri Lanka’s property sector. Mr. Dhananath Fernando, CEO of Advocata Institute, will moderate Sri Lanka in the Global Real Estate Map – Opportunities Beyond Borders,” while Ms. Duruthu Edirimuni Chandrasekara, Assistant Business Editor at the Sunday Times, will lead Meeting Tomorrow’s Housing Demand: How Demographics, Domestic Migration, and Lifestyle Changes Are Reshaping the Real Estate Landscape.” Moderator – Prof. Janaka Fernando, Department of Business Economics, University of Sri Jayewardenepura, will moderate Ditva වලින් පසු ලංකාව – නිවාස නැවත ගොඩනැගීම, ජීවන රටා පිලිබඳ නැවත සිතා බැලීම.”

The Lanka Property Show 2026 continues to attract Sri Lanka’s most distinguished developers and service providers. Platinum Partners for this edition are Fairway Properties, John Keells Properties, Marina Square, and Global Housing. Gold Partners include Prime Residencies, Juniper, Alfred Residencies, Prime Lands, and DFCC Bank, while Silver Partners are Iconic Galaxy, Bhoomi, Odilia Residencies, Seylan Bank and Sampath Bank.

The event’s Official Banking Partner is Commercial Bank. Storm Media serves as the Official Outdoor Digital Advertising Partner, Derana as the Official Media Partner, and අරුණ and The Morning Money as the Official Print Media Partners. Colombo Coffee Company joins as the Coffee Partner, reflecting the event’s premier status in the local real estate landscape.

Daham Gunaratna, Managing Director of LankaPropertyWeb, emphasized the significance of the show: The Lanka Property Show 2026 brings together the nation’s leading developers, financial institutions, and property experts to provide a complete and insightful experience for buyers and investors. Whether you are looking to purchase a home, explore investment opportunities, or understand market trends, this edition offers something for everyone.”

With an impressive portfolio of projects, expert guidance, and engaging panel discussions, the Lanka Property Show 2026 is poised to be the most anticipated real estate event of the year.

For more information and registration, visit LPW.LK/events.

The Architects of the Modern Cricket Revolution 

March 17th, 2026

Source:  Chat GPT

Duckworth, Lewis, Stern Rule ( DLS) 

Senaka Weeraratna Rule (DRS)

The Duckworth-Lewis-Stern (DLS) method and the Decision Review System (DRS) are the two most significant technological innovations in modern cricket, respectively addressing rain interruptions and officiating accuracy. While the

DLS method is officially attributed to British and Australian statisticians, the DRS is increasingly associated with the pioneering conceptual work of Sri Lankan lawyer Senaka Weeraratna

The Duckworth-Lewis-Stern (DLS) Method

This mathematical system is used to calculate target scores in rain-affected limited-overs matches. 

  • Inventors: Originally developed by English statisticians Frank Duckworth and Tony Lewis (DL method) in 1997.
  • Evolution: In 2015, Australian academic Steven Stern updated the formula to reflect modern scoring rates, leading to its renaming as the DLS method.
  • Function: It uses the “resources” available to a team—a combination of overs remaining and wickets in hand—to determine a fair revised target for the team batting second. 

The Senaka Weeraratna Rule (DRS)

While the International Cricket Council (ICC) officially introduced the Decision Review System in 2008–2009, its origin is widely credited to a proposal by Senaka Weeraratna

  • The Concept: In 1997, Weeraratna first proposed a “Player Referral” system in a letter to The Australian newspaper.
  • Core Principles: His proposal included four key elements that define modern DRS:
    1. Allowing players to challenge an on-field decision.
    2. Routing appeals through the captain or the dismissed batsman.
    3. A review by the third umpire using technology.
    4. Limiting the number of unsuccessful appeals per innings to prevent delays.
  • Recognition: Despite his concept appearing 12 years before the official implementation of DRS, Weeraratna has yet to receive formal recognition from the ICC, though he is often referred to by commentators and historians as the “Father of DRS”
  • He is increasingly becoming a source of comfort and pride to Sri Lankan Cricket fans for his work in changing the fundamental rules of Cricket (‘Player Referral’ concept) and at a time when the current Sri Lankan Cricketers ( T20 Tournament ) are failing to keep up with the glories of the past eras of Cricket ( 1996 World Cup Victory).

Source:  Chat GPT

https://share.google/aimode/O3iy4Ekq4z8vpQAXE

Duckworth, Lewis and Senaka

March 17th, 2026

Senaka Weeraratna

https://share.google/aimode/nrLpaZ24GFbzqowTx

In the context of cricket,

Duckworth, Lewis, and Senaka refers to the two main systems used to ensure fairness in limited-overs matches: the Duckworth-Lewis (DLS) method for rain-affected games and the Senaka Weeraratna Rule, which is the conceptual foundation for the Decision Review System (DRS)

Key Figures and Their Contributions

  • Frank Duckworth and Tony Lewis: These English statisticians developed the Duckworth-Lewis (D/L) method (introduced in 1997 and adopted by the ICC in 1999). It uses a mathematical formula to recalculate target scores when matches are interrupted by weather, based on the “resources” (overs and wickets) available to each team. In 2014, it was renamed the Duckworth-Lewis-Stern (DLS) method after Australian statistician Steven Stern became its custodian.
  • Senaka Weeraratna: A Sri Lankan lawyer widely credited as the “father of DRS”. In 1997, he authored the concept of the Player Referral System, which allows players to challenge on-field umpiring decisions. While Duckworth and Lewis addressed weather interruptions, Weeraratna’s rule aimed to eliminate umpiring errors and enhance the integrity of the game. 

Comparison of Systems

Feature Duckworth-Lewis-Stern (DLS)Senaka Weeraratna Rule (DRS)
PurposeAdjusts targets in rain-affected matchesCorrects on-field umpiring errors
Core ConceptScoring resources (Overs and Wickets)Player-initiated decision referrals
FormatLimited-overs (ODIs and T20Is)All formats (Test, ODI, and T20I)
OriginsFrank Duckworth & Tony Lewis (1997)Senaka Weeraratna (1997)

Source: Chat GPT

  • …………………………………………………..

AI Overview

Frank Duckworth and Tony Lewis developed the DLS method to fairly adjust scores in rain-interrupted cricket matches. Senaka Weeraratna is a Sri Lankan lawyer who pioneered the player referral concept in 1997, which evolved into the Decision Review System (DRS), enabling players to challenge umpire decisions. 

Key Aspects of the Individuals:

  • Duckworth-Lewis-Stern (DLS) Method: Devised by English statisticians Frank Duckworth and Tony Lewis (later maintained by Steve Stern) following the 1992 World Cup. It calculates a new target for the team batting second based on remaining overs and wickets.
  • Senaka Weeraratna & DRS: Senaka Weeraratna proposed the “Player-Referral” concept in 1997, which challenged the finality of on-field umpire decisions. His concept is regarded as the foundation of the modern DRS, which is now universally used to review decisions, notes this article

Both innovations aim to enhance fairness, though they apply to different aspects of the game: one for weather interruptions (DLS) and the other for umpire errors (DRS).

This video explains the DLS method, a technique for recalculating scores in rain-affected matches:  

This Video explains the DRS Method

Watch “DRS, Snicko, Hot Spot, Hawkeye & Umpire’s call explained and Sri Lankan lawyer Senaka Weeraratna identified as the world’s first person to conceive and publish the concept of ‘ Player Referral” which is the true basis of the Umpire Decision Review System ( UDRS or DRS).

https://youtu.be/5tuTDJaS2ik?si=t4FRU4vvM7A43_NL

https://youtu.be/5tuTDJaS2ik

Watch “DRS, Snicko, Hot Spot, Hawkeye & Umpire’s call explained and Sri Lankan lawyer Senaka Weeraratna identified as the world’s first person to conceive and publish the concept of ‘ Player Referral” which is the true basis of the Umpire Decision Review System ( UDRS or DRS).

https://youtu.be/5tuTDJaS2ik?si=t4FRU4vvM7A43_NL

Please visit

https://youtu.be/5tuTDJaS2ik?si=j3lKkUcWkUw

The reference to Senàka Weeraratna is found at 2.40 minute in this video playback program. 

Senaka Weeraratna’s opinion has been published as a comment No.5 

Both the International Cricket Council (ICC ) and Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) must respond to the points made in his comment, if they are to remain credible.

One of the most controversial and misunderstood aspects of Cricket is the use of the Umpire Decision Review System or DRS. Cricket has come a long way since India assimilated Science and Technology into the game which has redefined how it is played today. But many people are still unsure how DRS works, especially Umpire’s call. Pale Blue Thoughts looks at DRS, Snicko, Hot Spot, Hawk Eye and Umpire’s call in detail. 

If you watch and love cricket, this video is for you!

see also 

Duckworth, Lewis, and Senaka-by Rohan Abeygunawardena

https://www.sundaytimes.lk/210815/sports/duckworth-lewis-and-senaka-452374.html

Questions the Public should ask about the arrest of Maj. Gen. Suresh Sallay

March 16th, 2026

Shenali D Waduge  Political Analyst

The Easter Sunday attacks of 21 April 2019 have been thoroughly examined through multiple investigations, including the Presidential Commission of Inquiry, the Parliamentary Select Committee, court proceedings, police investigations, and international intelligence investigations. Hundreds of witnesses were interviewed, and extensive documentary evidence was reviewed over several years. Given this exhaustive scrutiny, the sudden naming of Major General Suresh Sallay as Suspect No. 3” in 2026 raises serious questions that the public deserves to have answered.

1. QUESTIONS BASED ON THE PRESIDENTIAL COMMISSION OF INQUIRY (PCoI)

The Presidential Commission recorded 457 testimonies over 214 days, resulting in a 472 page report focused on prevention and institutional failures. 

Yet, did it ever identify Suresh Sallay as a suspect or person of interest?

1.     The Commission reported extensively on intelligence warnings and failures – was Suresh Sallay’s name mentioned anywhere in the PCoI findings?

2.     Of the 457 testimonies from officials and security personnel, did any implicate Sallay in operational decisions prior to the attacks?

3.     The report was presented to the President in 2021. Why does the publicly acknowledged portion omit Sallay entirely from the list of officials accountable for intelligence failures?

4.     The PCoI identified top defence and police authorities responsible for lapses – was Suresh Sallay among these individuals who held command when the April 2019 warnings were issued?

5.     If any annexures or unpublished pages existed, have they ever been verified to include Sallay’s name?

6.     Did the Commission record the recipients of intelligence briefings, and was Sallay among them?

Request to Readers:

Carefully observe that Suresh Sallay’s name does not appear in the official PCoI findings or testimonies.

Ask yourself: can someone who was not in the operational chain of command at the time reasonably be considered a suspect after 7 years?

Reflect on the timing — why is Sallay suddenly being named in 2026, years after multiple investigations and judicial reviews?

2. QUESTIONS BASED ON THE PARLIAMENTARY SELECT COMMITTEE (PSC)

The PSC (May–Oct 2019) heard multiple testimonies and made recommendations for reform. 

1.    Which chief intelligence figures did the PSC hold accountable and why does Sallay’s name not appear among them?

2.    Did the PSC recommend any charges against Sallay, or did it focus on institutional and other individual failures?

3.    Was Sallay operationally responsible within the intelligence chain at the time of the PSC investigation?

4.    Which agencies were primarily responsible for failures, according to evidence, and did Sallay appear in any accountability chain?

5.    Did the PSC distinguish between administrative lapses and operational intelligence failures?

6.    Were temporary or acting officers handling intelligence flows at the time, and could any of the operational gaps be reasonably attributed to Sallay?

Request to Readers (for PSC)

Observe that Sallay is not mentioned in the PSC findings as operationally or administratively responsible.

Reflect: can someone who was not in the chain of responsibility reasonably be implicated seven years later?

Consider whether naming him now aligns with evidence or seems to rely on conjecture to build a new narrative.

3. QUESTIONS BASED ON THE A.N.J. DE ALWIS AND S.I. IMAM COMMITTEE REPORTS

Separate committees by senior retired judges were established to examine intelligence handling before the attacks and media narratives after the attacks. 

Their reports are publicly available and have been referenced in multiple official and media discussions.

1.     Did the De Alwis committee’s publicly released report on intelligence handling ever specifically name Suresh Sallay as a suspect, conspirator, or person of operational responsibility in connection with the Easter Sunday attacks?

2.     If the De Alwis committee examined intelligence preparedness and response, which officers and agencies did it identify as responsible for failures – and was Sallay among them in any section of the report?

3.     Did the De Alwis committee provide any evidence or testimony showing that Sallay had operational command responsibility over intelligence units during the period when warnings were issued before 21 April 2019?

4.     Were there any sections in the De Alwis report that linked the chain of operational intelligence failures to individuals who were not in command at the time – and if so, what evidence did the committee cite?

5.     Did the De Alwis committee receive or review operational communications, call logs, or directives involving Sallay in relation to the NTJ threat prior to 21 April 2019?

6.     Did the Imam committee’s report, which analysed media claims about alleged meetings or interactions between intelligence officers and alleged extremists, ever establish that Suresh Sallay had an operational relationship with the attackers either in Sri Lanka or from overseas (where he was during the Easter Sunday bombings)?

7.     Did either committee recommend criminal or disciplinary action against any senior intelligence or security official based on verifiable evidence – and if so, did Sallay’s name ever feature in those recommendations?

Request to Readers

Note that both the De Alwis and Imam committees issued detailed public reports without naming Sallay as having operational responsibility or being implicated in the planning or execution of the Easter Sunday attacks.

Consider the nature of these inquiries: they involved retired judges, independent review of intelligence and media evidence, and were intended to document factual findings, not narrative assertions.

Ask yourself: 

if extensive and independent committee reviews did not establish any operational link or culpability for Sallay, why is he now suddenly designated as a suspect in 2026?

Reflect on whether proposing new theories at this stage – theories not supported by the actual findings of these committees – constitutes logical argumentation or speculative reconstruction.

4. QUESTIONS BASED ON INTERNATIONAL INTELLIGENCE ASSISTANCE

Multiple foreign intelligence agencies, including the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Research and Analysis Wing (RAW), MI6, and the Australian Secret Intelligence Service (ASIS), assisted Sri Lankan authorities with warnings and intelligence about the extremist group National Thowheed Jamaath (NTJ) prior to the Easter Sunday attacks.

1.     Indian intelligence issued official warnings of an imminent attack from 4 April 2019 onwards.Were these warnings ever formally addressed to or received by Suresh Sallay (note: He was not in the country. He did not hold position as Intel head)

2.     If warnings were sent two weeks prior to 21 April 2019, which Sri Lankan intelligence officials were listed as recipients in the documented communications – was Sallay among them?

3.     Did any foreign intelligence agency, in its public or released reports, identify Sallay as the operational lead responsible for 

a) collecting, analysing, or acting upon these warnings, or 

b) having any direct connection to the attackers?

4.     International reports highlighted extremist networks with links to the Islamic State. Did any such report mention Sallay in any operational or decision-making context or potential links with the attackers prior to April 2019?

5.     The FBI and other agencies formally indicted the three individuals responsible for the attacks. Have investigators provided evidence that Suresh Sallay had any link – operational, financial, or communicational – to any of these indicted individuals to justify naming him as “Suspect No.‚3”?

Request to Readers

Foreign intelligence agencies issued warnings and analysed extremist networks, yet public reports from these agencies do not identify Sallay as responsible or operationally involved.

Consider the FBI indictments: the named perpetrators were clearly identified, yet Sallay was not among them, nor linked in any publicly documented operational context.

1. Mohamed Naufer – organized recruitment, propaganda and training

2. Mohamed Anwar Mohamed Riskan – prepared the improvised devices used by suicide bombers.

3. Ahamed Milhan Hayathu Mohamed – scouted attack locations.

Ask yourself: 

if multiple international agencies, with independent verification and global oversight, did not connect Sallay to the attacks even during their interviews, why is he now being portrayed as a principal suspect?

Reflect on whether the current narrative relies on substantiated evidence or on post-facto conjecture, possibly motivated by political or personal vendettas.

5. QUESTIONS BASED ON FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE FINDINGS

Several of the world’s top foreign intelligence agencies were involved in the investigation, including:

·      Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)

·      MI6 (UK Secret Intelligence Service)

·      Research and Analysis Wing (RAW, India)

·      Australian Secret Intelligence Service (ASIS)

Key Questions for Clarification:

1.     Did any foreign intelligence investigation identify Retired Major General Suresh Sallay as being connected to the Easter Sunday attackers?

2.     If foreign agencies analyzed the electronic devices of the suicide bombers, did those analyses reveal any communication with Sallay?

3.     When international investigators traced the foreign connections of the attackers, was Sallay’s name ever mentioned in any reports or intelligence briefs?

4.     Following the attacks, if foreign intelligence agencies cooperated with Sri Lankan authorities, did any of them formally identify Sallay as part of the operational network?

5.     If foreign investigators mapped the extremist cell responsible for the attacks, where does Sallay appear in that network-if at all? If Sallay was not named in these operational maps, what is the basis for labeling him as “Suspect No. 3” in 2026?

6.     Did any foreign intelligence agency formally communicate to the Government of Sri Lanka that Suresh Sallay should be investigated as a suspect in connection with the Easter Sunday attacks?

7.     Did any foreign intelligence agency conclude that the failure to prevent the Easter attacks was due to deliberate interference by Sallay?

8.     If the FBI and other foreign intelligence agencies had already established the operational identities of the attackers years ago, why is Sallay only being labeled as “Suspect No. 3” in 2026?

9.     Does the current investigative narrative provide direct evidence showing that Sallay had operational contact with the indicted perpetrators, or is this a retrospective attribution made years later?

10.  How can investigators reconcile the fact that credible international investigations previously assigned operational responsibility to other individuals, yet now attempt to implicate a senior military intelligence officer who was not in operational command at the time?

11.  Did any domestic or foreign investigation conclude that the Easter Sunday attacks were carried out with the objective of influencing the 2019 presidential election in Sri Lanka?

12.  Across seven years of investigations, multiple commissions of inquiry, court proceedings, parliamentary hearings, and foreign intelligence cooperation, is there a single verified document prior to 2026 that names Sallay as involved in the planning, facilitation, or execution of the attacks?

13.  Regarding the latest arrest and charges: What motive has been presented by investigators to explain why a senior military intelligence officer would allegedly assist an extremist group responsible for mass civilian casualties?

Request for Readers

We respectfully request that readers, analysts, and all concerned stakeholders critically examine the sequence of investigative actions, evidence presented, and public narratives regarding this case.

Is there verified, contemporaneous evidence linking Retired Major General Suresh Sallay to the operational planning or execution of the Easter Sunday attacks?

How does the sudden designation of “Suspect No. 3” in 2026 align with prior international intelligence findings and multiple domestic inquiries?

Can retrospective attributions made years after the attacks be considered reliable without supporting documentation from the period in question?

We invite readers to scrutinize the evidence objectively and ask whether the principles of fair investigative procedure, evidentiary consistency, and due process are being fully observed.

6. QUESTIONS BASED ON MEDIA ACCOUNTS vs. OFFICIAL RECORDS

Media commentary — including programmes broadcast by private media organisations — has repeated allegations concerning the Easter Sunday attacks. However, such productions are editorial interpretations and are not judicial findings or official investigative conclusions.

Public understanding of the attacks must therefore distinguish between documented evidence placed before official inquiries and claims presented through media narratives.

Several allegations have been circulated through media platforms, including claims that:

• Major General Suresh Sallay contacted an informant known as Jude Krishantha Perera

• Sallay allegedly arranged reconnaissance of churches in January 2019

• Sallay allegedly instructed a team to identify a church target in Negombo

These claims raise a number of important questions when compared with official records.

1.     If Major General Suresh Sallay was attending an overseas military training programme during much of 2019, how could he have personally coordinated reconnaissance operations within Sri Lanka during the period alleged?

Are there verified telephone records, communication logs, or operational instructions presented in any official investigation to substantiate this claim?

It should also be noted that Sallay assumed duties as Director of the State Intelligence Service seven months after the Easter attacks.

2.     If it is claimed that Sallay met individuals connected to the attackers, have any official investigations produced documentary evidence such as:

• call detail records

• travel documentation

• surveillance reports

• meeting logs

• intelligence briefing records

that confirm such meetings occurred?

3.     When investigative commissions requested individuals making allegations to present evidence, did those making these claims appear before the Commission and provide sworn testimony or supporting documentation?

If not, what explanation has been provided for declining to present such evidence before an official inquiry?

Did it take 7 years to remember it was Sallay who told an informant to show a church”

4.     Media productions can present interpretations and narratives as public sensationalism. However, prior to 2026, did any:

• court ruling

• investigative commission report

• criminal indictment

• or official investigative finding or even international investigation

determine that Major General Suresh Sallay had contact with extremist operatives involved in the Easter attacks?

5.     In the Fundamental Rights determination of the Supreme Court of Sri Lanka, specific state officials were identified as having failed in their duty to act upon intelligence warnings.

Was Major General Suresh Sallay named among those individuals held responsible by the Court?

6.     Public reporting confirms that both foreign and domestic intelligence warnings were received prior to the attacks. According to official documentation presented before investigative commissions and inquiries, several state institutions and officials were responsible for receiving, evaluating, and acting upon those warnings.

From 4 April 2019 onward, Sri Lanka’s security apparatus was informed through foreign intelligence channels of potential suicide attacks targeting churches and hotels.

This raises a fundamental question for public reflection.

If credible intelligence warnings were already in the possession of state authorities identifying potential targets, what immediate preventive measures were taken to protect those locations?

Even in the absence of arrests, basic precautionary steps could have included:

·      restricting or screening access to churches on the identified date,

·      alerting the hotels named in the warnings,

·      deploying visible security at potential targets,

·      or issuing public or institutional advisories.

These preventive measures fall within the standard responsibility of security authorities when credible intelligence warnings are received. A nation that endured 30 years of terror and over 300 terror attacks should know not to take warnings lightly.

Regardless of how many attackers or alleged masterminds may later be identified, one basic fact remains central to understanding the tragedy: the attacks occurred despite prior intelligence warnings.

No subsequent investigative narrative can change the historical reality that warnings existed before 21 April 2019. The key question therefore remains how those warnings were handled by the institutions responsible for acting upon them.

Request to Readers

When evaluating allegations presented through media commentary, it is important to distinguish between documented evidence examined by official investigations and claims presented in televised or online narratives.

Readers may wish to reflect on several key considerations:

• Were these allegations ever presented under oath before a commission of inquiry or court of law?

• Do official records contain documentary evidence supporting these claims?

• If multiple investigations over several years did not identify these allegations, why are they emerging only now?

Understanding these distinctions helps ensure that conclusions about events of such national importance are based on verified evidence rather than retrospective speculation or media interpretation.

7. QUESTIONS BASED ON PUBLICLY KNOWN FACTUAL RECORDS

Multiple official investigations, court proceedings, and parliamentary reviews have examined the Easter Sunday attacks and the failures surrounding them. 

These proceedings produced extensive documentary records, witness testimonies, and institutional findings.

When these publicly available records are reviewed, several questions naturally arise.

1.    Court proceedings involving suspects connected to the extremist network — including the High Court Trial-at-Bar and other related criminal cases — contain testimony regarding individuals who reported extremist activities prior to the attacks.

Do any of these court records mention Major General Suresh Sallay in connection with those reports or investigations before 2026?

2.    In the immediate aftermath of the attacks, emergency responses and criminal investigations involved senior police, intelligence, and security officials.

Which officials’ names appear repeatedly in official reports, investigative records, and public testimony during that period — and does Major General Suresh Sallay appear among them?

3.   Several official inquiries focused on the central question of why intelligence warnings were not acted upon in time.

According to the findings of the Presidential Commission of Inquiry and the Parliamentary Select Committee, which institutions and decision-makers were identified as responsible for receiving, assessing, and acting upon those warnings?

 

4.   Senior church leaders, including the Cardinal, publicly acknowledged the Presidential Commission of Inquiry report as an important investigation into the attacks.

In their public statements following the release of that report, was Major General Suresh Sallay ever mentioned in connection with responsibility for the attacks?

 

Researchers examining the documentary record often refer to several major investigative reports and reviews, including:

• the Presidential Commission of Inquiry (PCoI)
• the
 Parliamentary Select Committee (PSC)
• the
 De Alwis Committee report
• the
 Imam Committee report
• the
 Special Investigation Board findings
• the
 Sectoral Oversight Committee reviews

Across these multiple inquiries conducted over several years, are there any verified findings linking Major General Suresh Sallay to the planning, preparation, or operational execution of the Easter Sunday attacks?

Request to Readers

When reviewing allegations surrounding the Easter Sunday attacks, it may be useful to consider the consistency of the documentary record produced over several years of investigations.

Readers may wish to reflect on the following:

• Do official court records and investigative reports mention the individual now being accused?
• If numerous inquiries examined the same events over several years, why did none identify this person earlier?
• Are the current allegations supported by documentary evidence found in those investigations?

Such questions help ensure that public understanding is guided by verifiable records and documented findings, rather than by retrospective interpretations that may emerge years later.

8. QUESTIONS ON SUSPECTS – 1, 2, 3 AFTER 2026 ARRESTS

Recent reports indicate that Major General Suresh Sallay has been identified as Suspect No. 3 in the latest stage of the investigation.

This raises several questions regarding the structure and logic of the current suspect hierarchy.

1.     In the present investigative narrative, who exactly have investigators identified as Suspect No.1 and Suspect No.2, if Major General Suresh Sallay is listed as Suspect No.3?

2.     If Suspects No.1 and No.2 are reportedly linked primarily to the Vavunativu police officers’ shooting incident, how is that incident operationally connected to the Easter Sunday attacks?

If the incidents are unrelated, on what investigative basis are those suspects positioned within the hierarchy of an Easter attack conspiracy?

3.     If Suspects No.1 and No.2 were not members of the extremist network responsible for the Easter attacks, how can Suspect No.3 be alleged to be part of the same operational conspiracy?

4.     The attackers responsible for the Easter bombings were widely identified as members of National Thowheed Jamaath.

Where do Suspects No.1, No.2, and No.3 appear within that extremist network structure according to documented investigative findings?

5.     Investigations established that Zahran Hashim and members of the extremist network discussed the attacks among themselves, and interrogations conducted with the assistance of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and other investigative bodies reportedly examined the motives, ideological objectives, and operational planning of the group.

Did any of these investigative interviews, statements, or intelligence analyses identify Retired Major General Suresh Sallay as having communicated with, instructed, supported, or participated in the planning discussions of the attackers?

If investigators now allege that Sallay was part of the conspiracy, what verifiable evidence demonstrates a direct link between him and the operational discussions, motivations, or decision-making processes of the group led by Zahran Hashim?

Readers may wish to consider that in criminal conspiracy cases, participation normally requires evidence of communication, coordination, or shared intent between the accused and the perpetrators.

If the attackers’ own discussions, statements, and interrogations did not identify such a link, what evidence now establishes that connection?

6.     Is there documentary evidence showing that any of the three suspects (1 2. 3) communicated directly with the Easter suicide bombers or other members of their group — either individually or collectively?

7.     What evidence has investigators presented to establish direct links between Suspects No.1, No.2, and No.3, such as:

• communication records

• financial transfers

• intelligence reports

• witness testimony

• operational coordination

Without such evidence, how is an unified conspiracy between these individuals being established?

8.     After seven years of investigations, have investigators produced documentary, electronic, financial, or witness evidence linking Major General Suresh Sallay to the operational planning of the Easter Sunday attacks, which would justify such a serious allegation against a senior intelligence officer?

9.     If credible evidence linking Suresh Sallay to the attacks existed at any point between 2019 and 2025, why was no criminal prosecution initiated during that period?

10.  If investigators are unable to demonstrate the role of Suspects No.1 and No.2 in the Easter conspiracy, or their connection to Suspect No.3, doesn’t the entire structure of the newly presented suspect hierarchy become questionable?

11.  If Suspects No.1 and No.2 were already known to investigators before 2026, why were they not previously charged in connection with the Easter attacks during the numerous investigations conducted over the past seven years?

Request to Readers

When examining the newly presented suspect hierarchy, readers may wish to reflect on several issues:

How were these suspects identified after years of prior investigations?

What documented evidence links them to the extremist network responsible for the attacks?

Do official investigative records support the relationships now being alleged between these individuals?

Understanding these questions may help the public assess whether the current investigative narrative is based on new evidence or on reinterpretations of events that were already examined in earlier investigations.

9. QUESTIONS BASED ON NEGLIGENCE FINDINGS ALREADY MADE

Two major legal and investigative processes examined responsibility for the Easter Sunday attacks:

• the Presidential Commission of Inquiry into the Easter Sunday Attacks

• the Supreme Court of Sri Lanka Fundamental Rights determination

Both examined the issue of intelligence warnings and the failure to act upon them.

These findings raise several important questions.

1.     The Supreme Court judgment on the Easter Sunday attacks identified specific state officials responsible for failing to act on intelligence warnings.

Was Suresh Sallay among the officials named in that ruling?

2.     Several officials were ordered by the Supreme Court to personally pay compensation to victims due to negligence.

Was Suresh Sallay among those ordered to pay compensation?

3.     If the highest court of the country examined the intelligence failures and assigned liability to specific office holders, why does Suresh Sallay’s name not appear in that judicial determination?

4.     The Presidential Commission of Inquiry examined the security command structure and institutional responsibilities prior to the attacks.

Which individuals holding command positions were identified by the Commission as responsible for receiving and acting upon intelligence warnings?

Was Suresh Sallay holding any position within that command hierarchy during April 2019 that would have placed him in the chain responsible for receiving or acting upon those warnings?

5.     When the Supreme Court reviewed the failure to act on intelligence warnings, which office holders and institutions were identified as responsible for evaluating and responding to those warnings in April 2019?

6.     If responsibility for negligence has already been legally determined, what new evidence now links Suresh Sallay to those failures — particularly if he did not hold a command position responsible for receiving or acting upon the warnings at that time nor was in the country?

7.     If both the Supreme Court and the Presidential Commission have already examined the intelligence failures and identified specific officials responsible for negligence, what new evidence now transforms the narrative from institutional failure to an alleged criminal conspiracy involving Suresh Sallay?

Request to Readers

The findings of the Supreme Court and the Presidential Commission represent two of the most authoritative examinations of the Easter Sunday attacks.

Readers may therefore wish to consider:

If these processes already identified the officials responsible for failing to act on intelligence warnings, why does the name of the individual now being accused not appear in those findings?

What new evidence has emerged that changes the conclusions reached by those earlier investigations?

Are the current allegations consistent with the factual and legal determinations already made?

Reflecting on these questions may help ensure that public understanding remains grounded in documented legal findings and verified investigative records.

10. QUESTIONS ON THE CONSPIRACY THEORIES  

Recent allegations appearing in some media commentary suggest that the Easter Sunday attacks may have been part of a broader political conspiracy intended to influence the 2019 presidential election.

Such claims represent a significant new shift in narrative — from institutional negligence to intentional conspiracy.

In criminal law, allegations of conspiracy require specific forms of evidence demonstrating both operational coordination and shared intent among the alleged participants.

Several important questions therefore arise.

1.     If a person is accused of participating in a terrorist conspiracy, what evidence exists demonstrating direct communication between that individual and the perpetrators of the attacks?

2.     Are there documented telephone records, electronic communications, financial transfers, or travel records showing contact between Suresh Sallay and the suicide bombers, members of their group or their financiers?

3.     During interrogations of individuals connected to the extremist network, did any captured suspects identify Suresh Sallay as someone involved in the planning or coordination of the attacks – even the foreign intel agencies interviewed them?

4.     In statements recorded from suspects during investigations with local investigators or with foreign investigators, did any witness or suspect testify that Sallay participated in meetings where the attacks were discussed?

5.     During the hearings of the Presidential Commission of Inquiry into the Easter Sunday Attacks, did any witness testify under oath that Suresh Sallay attended meetings with the attackers or played a role in their planning?

6.     In the recorded martyrdom videos and communications issued by the attackers led by Zahran Hashim, did any of the perpetrators identify Suresh Sallay as part of their operation or planning?

Or do those recordings instead indicate that the attackers pledged allegiance to their ideological cause?

7.     If it is alleged that a meeting between Sallay and individuals connected to the attacks took place in a hotel, are there hotel records, CCTV footage, booking records, or travel dates, witness testimony confirming such a meeting occurred? Heresay, cannot be accepted as fact.

8.     Have investigators produced forensic evidence — including digital data, documents, or operational records — linking Suresh Sallay to the planning or coordination of the Easter Sunday attacks?

9.     If the alleged conspiracy was intended to influence the 2019 presidential election, what evidence exists demonstrating that the attackers themselves had such a political objective?

Were the suicide bombers or members of their families/immediate networks known to have political affiliations, allegiances, or sympathies toward any political party or political leadership within Sri Lanka?

If anyone is advancing the theory that the attacks were orchestrated to facilitate a particular political outcome in the presidential election, several additional questions arise:

·      Did the attackers themselves express support for, or alignment with, any political actor whose electoral prospects were allegedly strengthened by the attacks?

They released videos of their allegiance. Interviews with foreign investigators clearly showcase this. 

·      Conversely, were there any indications that individuals connected to the attackers maintained relationships or sympathies with political figures or groups associated with the government in power at the time of the attacks?

·      Understanding these questions is important because allegations that the attacks were engineered to influence the election must logically demonstrate a connection between the attackers’ intentions and the alleged political objective.

·      If the attackers’ own statements, ideological materials, interrogation records, or communications do not demonstrate such a political objective, it becomes necessary to ask:

o   On what evidentiary basis is the claim made that the attacks were designed to influence the outcome of the 2019 presidential election?

o   What documented proof exists that the perpetrators themselves were aware of, or acting in furtherance of, such a political objective?

Request to Readers

When evaluating claims that the Easter Sunday attacks were part of a broader political conspiracy, readers may wish to consider:

·      Whether the attackers themselves expressed any political objective related to the presidential election.

·      Whether the alleged conspiracy theory aligns with the documented ideological motivations of the extremist group responsible for the attacks.

·      Whether political interpretations being advanced today are supported by evidence from the attackers’ own statements and investigative records, or whether they represent interpretations introduced after the events.

Understanding these distinctions is important in ensuring that explanations for the tragedy remain grounded in verifiable evidence rather than retrospective political narratives.

10.  At the time the Easter attacks occurred in April 2019, was the outcome of the presidential election scheduled for November 2019 known or predictable with certainty – was a bloodbath needed for the outcome?

11.  During investigations conducted immediately after the attacks, was there any documented evidence indicating that the attackers discussed influencing the presidential election or supporting a particular political outcome?

Request to Readers

When evaluating allegations of conspiracy, readers may wish to consider the types of evidence normally required to establish such a claim.

These may include:

• documented communications between conspirators

• financial or logistical coordination

• witness testimony confirming meetings or instructions

• forensic or electronic evidence linking participants to operational planning

• statements demonstrating a shared objective among those involved

Without such evidence, allegations of conspiracy risk relying on assumptions rather than verifiable proof.

Understanding these distinctions may help the public assess whether the current narrative is supported by documented evidence or by interpretations introduced long after the events themselves with other motives in mind.

11.  Role of the Attorney General During the Easter Investigations

During the period in which the Easter Sunday attacks were investigated and prosecuted, the Attorney General of Sri Lanka was Dappula de Livera.

The Attorney General’s Department is responsible for reviewing investigative material, determining whether sufficient evidence exists for prosecution, and filing indictments in court.

This raises several questions regarding the prosecutorial record related to the Easter investigations.

1.     Did the Attorney General’s Department at any point possess credible evidence implicating Suresh Sallay in the planning or execution of the Easter Sunday attacks?

2.     Following the attacks, the Attorney General’s Department filed indictments against numerous individuals connected to the extremist network responsible for the bombings.

Was Suresh Sallay ever named among those charged?

3.     In the High Court Trial-at-Bar relating to the Easter bombings, was Suresh Sallay listed in any capacity as:

• an accused person

• a suspect

• or a witness

in the indictments filed by the Attorney General’s Department?

4.     The Attorney General’s Department reviewed thousands of pages of investigative material submitted by law-enforcement agencies.

If such material contained evidence linking Sallay to the attacks, why does the record of indictments not include his name?

5.     The Attorney General’s Department works closely with the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) and the Terrorism Investigation Division (TID) when reviewing terrorism cases.

Between 2019 and 2025, did any investigative file submitted to the Attorney General’s Department identify Suresh Sallay as a conspirator in the Easter attacks?

6.     During the same period, did any investigative report submitted to the Attorney General recommend that Suresh Sallay be investigated or prosecuted in connection with the attacks?

7.     If credible evidence linking Sallay to terrorism had existed, would the Attorney General not have been legally obligated to initiate prosecution during that period?

8.     When the Easter attacks occurred in April 2019, was Suresh Sallay serving as Director of the State Intelligence Service at that time?

9.     If an individual had played a role in a terrorist conspiracy of this magnitude, would that person not reasonably be expected to appear in the indictments filed by the Attorney General’s Department during the years immediately following the attacks?

Request to Readers

The prosecutorial record maintained by the Attorney General’s Department reflects the evidence considered sufficient to bring criminal charges before a court of law.

Readers may therefore wish to consider:

Whether the indictments filed in the years following the attacks identified the individuals responsible for the conspiracy.

Whether the person now being accused appeared anywhere in those indictments or investigative recommendations.

If not, what new evidence has emerged that would justify such allegations several years later.

Examining the prosecutorial record may help clarify whether the present narrative is supported by documented legal evidence or represents a reinterpretation of events long after the investigations were conducted.

 12. QUESTIONS ABOUT TIMELINE AND COMMAND RESPONSIBILITY

Understanding the chain of command within Sri Lanka’s intelligence and security structure at the time of the Easter Sunday attacks is essential to determining who had responsibility for receiving and acting upon intelligence warnings.

Several questions therefore arise regarding the roles held by different officials at the time.

1.     When the Easter attacks occurred on 21 April 2019, who was serving as the Head of the State Intelligence Service (SIS)?

Was Suresh Sallay holding that position at that time?

2.     On what date was Suresh Sallay officially appointed Director of the State Intelligence Service?

Did this appointment occur before or after the Easter Sunday attacks?

3.     Intelligence warnings regarding potential attacks reportedly began circulating as early as 4 April 2019.

Which officials and institutions were responsible for receiving, analysing, and acting upon those warnings at that time?

(Note: intel units only gather info and pass on to units assigned and mandated to take action – if intel was passed it is not an intelligence failure)

4.     When those warnings were circulated among defence and police leadership, which individuals were in the command chain responsible for responding to them?

Was Suresh Sallay holding any operational command responsibility over the agencies responsible for acting on those warnings during Easter Sunday attacks?

5.     During 2019, when did Suresh Sallay attend the National Defence College overseas, and when did he return to Sri Lanka?

6.     If it is alleged that Sallay communicated with individuals inside Sri Lanka during this period, can verified telephone or communication records confirm with whom such communications occurred/dates and times?

7.     At the time the intelligence warnings were circulated in early April 2019, did Suresh Sallay hold any operational authority within the intelligence or security command structure responsible for analysing or acting upon those warnings?

8.     Was Suresh Sallay present at, or a member of, any official intelligence coordination meeting or national security briefing where the pre-attack warnings were discussed?

9.     Is there any documented instruction issued by Suresh Sallay directing officers to delay, ignore, or suppress intelligence warnings related to the extremist network responsible for the attacks?

10.  During the hearings of the Presidential Commission of Inquiry into the Easter Sunday Attacks, did any witness testify that Suresh Sallay interfered with the transmission, analysis, or dissemination of intelligence warnings prior to the attacks?

Request to Readers

Understanding who held authority within the intelligence and security system in April 2019 is essential to determining responsibility for the failure to prevent the attacks.

Readers may therefore wish to consider:

Who was actually responsible for receiving and acting upon the intelligence warnings issued before the attacks?

Did the individual now being accused hold any position within that operational command structure at that time?

Are there official records showing that he exercised authority over those decisions?

Examining the timeline of appointments and responsibilities may help clarify whether the current allegations align with the documented structure of the intelligence system at the time.

13. QUESTIONS ON INVESTIGATOR INTEGRITY

The credibility of any investigation depends on the independence and impartiality of those conducting it. 

When officials previously criticised for negligence, mishandling intelligence, or procedural lapses remain involved in new inquiries, this raises important questions.

1.     Several officials connected to the intelligence and investigative structures during the Easter Sunday attacks were previously criticised in official inquiries for negligence or mishandling intelligence warnings. 

Which of these officials continue to hold senior positions within the investigative structures dealing with the Easter Sunday case today?

2.     The Presidential Commission of Inquiry recommended disciplinary or legal action against certain officials for their conduct prior to the attacks.

Have any of these officials, previously removed from office for negligence or misconduct, been reinstated and now participate in the current investigation that resulted in the arrest of Suresh Sallay?

3.     If individuals previously criticised by inquiries remain in positions of investigative authority, how is the independence and impartiality of the current investigation ensured?

4.     Were any investigators previously removed, transferred, or disciplined due to their handling, mismanagement, or leaking of Easter-related investigative material?

5.     If so, are any of these same officers now actively participating in the present investigation or serving on bodies examining the Easter attacks?

6.     If officials previously associated with intelligence failures or evidence leaks are now shaping the narrative or participating in investigative decisions, does this not create a potential institutional conflict of interest?

7.     What safeguards exist to ensure that the current investigation is free from personal or institutional bias, especially when prior negligence may have been implicated?

8.     If commissions of inquiry recommended penal action under the Penal Code against certain officials, were those recommendations implemented?

Are any of these individuals currently involved in investigations connected to the Easter attacks?

Request to Readers

When evaluating the current investigation, consider:

Who is conducting it, and what is their prior record regarding Easter Sunday?

Could officials previously criticised for negligence or misconduct influence the direction, interpretation, or outcome of new allegations?

Are there independent mechanisms ensuring accountability and impartiality, or is there a risk of institutional self-protection shaping the narrative?

Critical thinking about the integrity of investigators is essential before accepting newly constructed narratives, especially when they suddenly implicate previously unmentioned individuals.

From Institutional Failure to an Unproven Conspiracy

For seven years, the Easter Sunday attacks of 21 April 2019 have been examined by multiple investigative bodies, including the Presidential Commission of Inquiry into the Easter Sunday Attacks, the Parliamentary Select Committee on the Easter Attacks, criminal investigations, court proceedings, and extensive cooperation with foreign intelligence agencies such as the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Research and Analysis Wing, and Australian Secret Intelligence Service.

Across these investigations:

·      Hundreds of witnesses were examined.

·      Thousands of pages of evidence were reviewed.

·      Extremist networks linked to the attackers were analysed domestically and internationally.

Yet throughout this entire investigative process from 2019 to 2025, the name of Suresh Sallay does not appear in official findings as:

1.     a suspect

2.     a conspirator

3.     an operational participant

4.     or a responsible officer in the intelligence chain at the time of the attacks.

Even the Supreme Court of Sri Lanka, when examining intelligence failures in its Fundamental Rights determination, identified specific officials responsible for negligence and ordered compensation to victims. 

Suresh Sallay was not among those named.

Similarly, the indictments filed by the Attorney General’s Department against numerous suspects connected to the extremist network did not list him as an accused, witness, or conspirator.

This raises a fundamental question:

How does a person who does not appear in seven years of investigations suddenly emerge as Suspect No. 3” in 2026 in connection with one of the most extensively investigated terrorist attacks in Sri Lanka’s history?

For a conspiracy allegation of this magnitude to be credible, investigators must present clear and verifiable evidence such as:

·      documented communication with the attackers

·      financial or logistical support to the terrorist network

·      operational instructions or intelligence interference

·      testimony from witnesses linking the accused to the plot

·      forensic or electronic evidence establishing contact or coordination

Without such evidence, the narrative shifts dangerously from evidence-based investigation to retrospective speculation.

Equally significant is the question of motive. If investigators claim that the Easter attacks were orchestrated as part of a political conspiracy to influence the 2019 Sri Lankan presidential election, they must demonstrate that:

1.     the attackers themselves were aware of this political objective,

2.     the extremist group National Thowheed Jamaath was acting in coordination with political actors, and

3.     there existed a documented link between that political objective and Suresh Sallay.

No such evidence has been publicly demonstrated except by talk shows!

The central issue raised by these questions is therefore not merely the arrest of one individual — it is the credibility of the newest investigative narrative itself.

The sudden construction of a suspect hierarchy in 2026, after seven years of inquiries, commissions, judicial rulings, and international intelligence cooperation, raises serious concerns. 

It strongly suggests that the case may now be built not on verifiable evidence, but on layers of inference, conjecture, and retrospective interpretation of events.

In criminal law, particularly in cases involving allegations of terrorism and conspiracy, guilt cannot be established through conjecture or by stitching together circumstantial fragments that do not independently demonstrate criminal intent or operational involvement.

Where the evidentiary record accumulated over seven years did not previously identify an individual as part of the conspiracy, introducing such a narrative at a much later stage risks appearing as a deliberate attempt to construct guilt around the weakest points capable of creating doubt, rather than to prove culpability beyond reasonable doubt.

The public therefore deserves clarity on a fundamental issue:

Is the current investigation uncovering genuinely new evidence — or is it attempting to reinterpret past events through conjectural connections to sustain a criminal accusation that earlier inquiries never established?

Shenali D Waduge

Political Analyst

Smart Metering: A Simple Reform Sri Lanka Must Adopt

March 16th, 2026

Dr Sarath Obeysekera

Sri Lanka often speaks proudly of being a rapidly developing nation with digital capabilities and highly skilled IT professionals. Yet, in many basic public utility services we still operate in a manner that belongs to the past century. A simple example is the way electricity and water meters are read.

In many developed countries, and even in several developing nations, utility providers have already moved to smart metering systems. These systems use digital meters connected to communication networks that automatically transmit consumption data to a centralized billing center. Bills are generated electronically, and customers receive them through email or mobile applications.

In the United Kingdom, customers served by companies such as British Gas or EDF Energy receive monthly statements based on remote meter readings. The amount due is automatically deducted through the banking Direct Debit system, ensuring efficiency and transparency. Customers can also monitor their consumption daily through mobile apps.

Similarly, water utilities in many countries have adopted remote meter reading technologies. Meter readers no longer need to walk long distances or knock on household doors to obtain readings. Instead, the data is transmitted wirelessly to the utility provider’s database.

In contrast, Sri Lanka still largely relies on manual meter readers from the Ceylon Electricity Board and the National Water Supply and Drainage Board. These employees walk from house to house, sometimes covering miles under the sun. When residents are not at home, when a gate is locked, or when a dog is roaming freely in the garden, the reading may not even be taken. The result is estimated bills, delays, and inconvenience for both the customer and the utility provider.

In my own case, the water meter had to be installed through an opening in the boundary wall simply to make access easier for the meter reader. Yet the process still depends entirely on a person walking long distances and manually recording figures. This method is inefficient, costly, and outdated.

Ironically, many Sri Lankan households today operate sophisticated renewable energy systems. My own solar power installation uses a lithium battery system and digital inverter technology that allows me to monitor electricity generation and consumption daily, monthly, and yearly through a mobile application. I can see exactly how many units my rooftop solar panels export to the grid and how many units I import.

For example, if my solar system exports around 600 units to the national grid and I import approximately the same amount, the net electricity bill becomes almost zero under the current net-metering scheme administered by the Ceylon Electricity Board.

If individual homeowners can access such accurate real-time information through their mobile phones, it raises an important question: why cannot the national utilities do the same?

Smart meters would allow Sri Lanka to introduce more efficient electricity pricing systems, such as:

  • Time-of-use tariffs (lower rates at night, higher rates during peak hours)
  • Real-time energy monitoring for consumers
  • Automatic billing and payment systems
  • Reduced operational costs for utilities

These systems would also help manage national energy demand. Consumers could shift heavy electricity usage—such as charging electric vehicles or running large appliances—to off-peak hours, reducing strain on the national grid.

Sri Lanka has excellent IT professionals and software developers. The success of digital platforms such as the fuel QR system demonstrated that the country has the technical capability to deploy large-scale digital solutions quickly when required.

What is needed now is not technology, but policy vision and administrative courage.

If Sri Lanka truly wishes to modernize its infrastructure and move toward a smart energy economy, introducing nationwide smart electricity and water meters would be a logical and necessary step.

Until then, we will continue to speak of digital transformation while meter readers walk miles under the sun, knocking on doors and occasionally retreating when confronted by a barking dog.

That is not the image of a modern nation.

It is time for Sri Lanka to move from manual meters to smart utilities for a smart country.

Regards

Dr Sarath Obeysekera

Duckworth, Lewis and Senaka

March 16th, 2026

Rohan Abeygunawardena

       image.png
          Frank Duckworth (left) and Tony Lewis (right) collecting their MBEs in 2010 (PA)

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/tony-lewis-death-cricket-duckworth-method-age-cause-mathetmatics-a9464921.html

   Professor Steven Stern live in Sri Lanka

          Professor Steven Stern at the BMICH on March 13, 2026

                 Senaka Weeraratna 

Inventor of the Player Referral System in Sports

Renamed as DRS (Decision Review System) for Cricket by the ICC without consent of inventor

Whose brainchild has had a greater impact on the adjudicatory process of world cricket?

by Senaka Decision Review System (SDRS)- Why Not?  

https://www.sundaytimes.lk/210815/sports/duckworth-lewis-and-senaka-452374.html

https://share.google/aimode/zWWDy5K1ZAzmJIXAN

An Appeal to All Cricket Lovers in Sri Lanka

It is high time that Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) made representations to the ICC to rename the Decision Review System (DRS) as the Senaka Decision Review System (SDRS), in due recognition of Sri Lankan Lawyer Senaka Weeraratne who first initiated this system, by writing to the Australian Papers in 1997.

There is not a single published article suggesting a Player Referral in Cricket or, in any other sport, before his letter to the Editor of The Australian”.

All available evidence is that Senaka’s letter was the first to suggest a Referral System for Cricket. It appears there was no such system or mechanism even in other Sports, prior to March 25, 1997.

The mechanism is similar to the review of a lower court decision by an Appeal court judge and, being a Lawyer himself, Cricket enthusiast Senaka Weeraratne suggested this idea to overcome criticisms against Umpiring decisions floating around the cricketing world for a long time. In fact, in the good old days, when there was a questionable decision by an umpire, unhappy spectators used to shout Umpire Hora”, which literally means the umpire is a rogue. Now, such allegations against field umpires are not heard, at least at international matches.

I request all Sri Lankan Cricket lovers to read an article published in The Papare.com on the subject, which explains Senaka’s rightful claim to authorship of the ‘Player Referral’ mechanism which is the lynchpin of the DRS. I quote:

Generally, all inventions carry the name of the founder. In the case of rain-affected One-Day International Cricket, the nomenclature ‘Duckworth & Lewis’ method is used because it is a system worked out by 2 Englishmen (Frank Duckworth and Tony Lewis). Why is it not the same with the DRS? Is it because the man who conceived and, for the first time in the world, wrote and published the essential ingredients of the ‘ Player Referral’ mechanism, which became the foundation of the DRS, in leading international cricket Journals and newspapers, as far back as March 1997, is non-white? Senaka Weeraratna from Sri Lanka has been fighting for justice since his brainchild came to be used in Cricket. His request for an impartial investigation and proper hearing by an independent 3rd party arbitrator, has not even been considered.”

As Cricket lovers of Sri Lanka, we appeal to Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) officials and the Ministry of Sports to step in and make representation to the ICC, to recognise Senaka Weeraratna’s brainchild and rename the term as Senaka Decision Review System (SDRS). It would be a great honour not only to the initiator Senaka, but also to Sri Lanka.

https://www.sundaytimes.lk/180916/sports/cricket-catastrophe-diagnosed-311484.html

DLS and DRS (based on Player Referral) are new additions to Cricket. Between the two methods, which one is more far reaching in impact and value to the game?https://www.lankaweb.com/news/items/2026/03/15/dls-and-drs-based-on-player-referral-are-new-additions-to-cricket-between-the-two-methods-which-one-is-more-far-reaching-in-impact-and-value-to-the-game/

The Catastrophic Effects of the War in the Middle East [MTA News Special]

March 16th, 2026

MTA News

Government declares every Wednesday as public holiday

March 16th, 2026

Courtesy Daily Mail

Colombo, March 16 (Daily Mirror) – The government has decided to declare every Wednesday as a public holiday in a move to save energy due to the Middle East tensions, the Commissioner-General of Essential Services Prabath Chandrakeerthi said.

He told a special press brefing that the decision was taken at a meeting with the President.

The holiday will not be applicable for health, ports, water services and the Sri Lanka Customs.

The holiday will be applicable to schools, universities and judicial service instituions.

Carl Sagan’s Last Words Before Death Changed Everything We Know About The Afterlife

March 16th, 2026

Sagan Explains

Carl Sagan changed the way we see the universe. His words still echo through time — and they’ve never been more relevant than today. On this channel, we explore the cosmos, the mysteries of existence, and the deepest questions about life, death, time, and space — all through the lens of one of the greatest scientific minds in history. From the Pale Blue Dot to the search for extraterrestrial life, from the nature of time travel to the secrets NASA doesn’t want you to know — Sagan Explains brings you the answers science is still catching up to. New videos every week. Subscribe and turn on notifications so you never miss an upload.

The robe and Buddha Dhamma: A new Order to compliment the Sangha?

March 15th, 2026

By Raj Gonsalkorale

Unworthy Wearer: “Whoever, being depraved, devoid of self-control and truthfulness, should don the monk’s yellow robe, he surely is not worthy of the robe”.

Worthy Wearer: “But whoever is purged of depravity, well-established in virtues and filled with self-control and truthfulness, he indeed is worthy of the yellow robe”Dhammapada (Verses 9-10)

In a world where a rules based governance order has been replaced by a rules for some, and not for others” order, and the adjudicator of compliance with rules, the United Nations system, has become more or less impotent, the rules applicable for an important segment of  the Sri Lankan society, the Buddhist clergy is being discussed in this article.  Rules for the Buddhist monastic order are governed by what are called Vinaya rules, a code of conduct for Buddhist Monks contained in the Vinaya Pitakaya. The monastic order itself is responsible for making sure the members of the order adhere to these rules. A question does arise today in the minds of many lay Buddhists as well as perhaps some Buddhist Monks themselves whether the Vinaya rules are being adhered to by some Buddhist Monks. Challenges faced by Buddhist monks themselves in having a book of rules but inability to adhere to them also need to be looked at in empathy of practical challenges they face in a very materialistic world.

The Pali Tipitaka states that the last major Theravada Buddhist Council (Sangayanawa), known as the Sixth Council was held in Yangon, Burma (Myanmar), from 1954 to 1956 ( https://www.tipitaka.org/chattha#:~: text=King%20Aj% C4%81tasattu%20sponsored%20the%20First,This%20is%20what%20happened). The outcome reported was that The council concluded on Vesak day, May 24, 1956, resulting in a newly verified and approved edition of the Tripitaka and its commentaries, which were later printed on modern presses

However, considering the doubts and apprehensions revolving around adherence to the Vinaya Pitakaya and the effectiveness of these rules in a general sense, it may be an opportune time for the Vinaya Pitakaya to be revisited and reviewed by Buddhist Monks themselves, and its rules looked at from the prism of the contemporary environment. Times have changed from the days of Buddha some 2600 years ago, and it may be opportune to consider what changes if any are to be introduced for the Order itself and the rules governing the Order. Amongst possible changes could be the introduction of a new Order that could complement the existing Sangha Order. It is perhaps time for another Sangayanawa to have a look at the Vinaya pitakaya and revise it in keeping with the contemporary environment.

In context, this article examines a practice, an age old one, where lay persons make a distinction between a Robe a Buddhist Monk wears and the Monk who is wearing it, and worships the Robe, as a mark of respect to Buddha and what Buddhism represents, and not necessarily the Monk who is wearing it. The verse quoted from the Dhammapada, (a revered collection of 423 verses in the Pali Canon, representing Buddha’s teachings on ethics, wisdom, and mindfulness. Known as “The Path of Truth,” it emphasizes that the mind shapes reality, guiding followers toward ethical living, mental purity, and liberation from suffering), states otherwise and emphasises that the wearer should be a Worthy Wearer: “whoever is purged of depravity, is well-established in virtues and filled with self-control and truthfulness, and that he indeed is worthy of the yellow robe”.

This distinction attributed to Buddha himself, between a worthy” wearer, and an unworthy” wearer stands in contrast to the popular distinction and belief and practice of venerating a Robe irrespective of the qualities of the wearer. While various commentaries are there concerning the robe that Prince Siddhartha (and later the Buddha) wore, and what he supposedly said as to what it should be made of and why Monks should wear it, the above mentioned Dhammapada verse encapsulates the principle and practice when it comes to the meaning behind who should wear it and under what circumstances.

Today, the contradiction between the practice of many members of the Buddhist public who believe that worshipping the robe is like worshipping the Buddha, irrespective of the values, qualities, ethics and the practice of the Dhamma as per the Vinaya rules, and what is attributed to Buddha in the Dhammapada in regard to who should be wearing the robe, is very stark. This article is not elaborating on this contradiction as readers will be fully aware of individual cases of contradictions.

While it would be a controversial statement to make, nonetheless, there is no evidence” as such as to what Prince Siddhartha wore upon his renunciation, except a description that has been carried on through a verbal tradition for hundreds of years.  However, what one can surmise very clearly from the numerous commentaries is the symbolism behind why a robe was worn, what kind of robe, what it constituted of and what it represented.

If one were to say it was a symbol of Renunciation of everything that was material, everything that was unsatisfactory, everything that attracted greed and deception, it could be very much closer to what Buddha taught as the four truths and the eightfold path towards the cessation of the cycle of birth.

The verbal commentaries that spread over five centuries after Buddha’s passing, saying that the original robes were constructed of discarded rags gathered from cemeteries, funeral pyres, and trash heaps, patched together, and dyed, perhaps was very  representative of the rejection of materialism, and it would be very much in line with what Buddha would have meant when he spoke about the robe and its symbolism and who deserved to wear it and who did not.

Ritualism and veneration

These two probably have a symbiotic relationship and the fostering and spread of one has a direct impact on the other.  The word veneration used here is also from a ritualistic angle as veneration, as Buddha had said, would mean veneration that it is an acknowledgment of truth and an expression of the desire to realize that same enlightenment by oneself. In Buddha-dharma, the distinction between veneration and ritualism lies in the practitioner’s intention and understanding. While veneration is a mindful act used to cultivate virtue, ritualism is often defined as the third mental fetter (sīlabbata-parāmāsa), which practitioners must eventually abandon to reach enlightenment. 

The reality of the spread of ritualism, and possibly a misconception relating to veneration, are imbedded in the culture of many Buddhists.  Today’s very materialistic world with information technology advancing beyond ones’ imagination, conservative cultural habits being increasingly replaced with liberal, free-thinking lifestyles, the environment in which people live, including Buddhist monks, should be viewed from a more contemporary prism. In a very general sense, one could say that many Buddhist Monks, for want of a better word, are stranded, between two worlds. An ancient world where most became Monks after renunciation of their material lives in search of the truth or the ending of their cycle of life (samsara), and a modern, more contemporary world where Monks become Monks perhaps with the same objective, at least some of them, but whose way of pursuing this objective is not in alignment with the practice of renunciation as one knows it.

Ritualism and institutionalisation of the Buddhist order are also very much two sides of the same coin, as the growth of institutions are directly dependent on the growth of ritualism. The proliferation of Stupas, Buddha statues, other edifices, ceremonies etc are consequences of institutionalisation that result in and promote veneration shifts. These are now embedded in cultural practices that are promoted as necessary for the protection and progression of Buddhism.

Future of Dhamma preservation

Practicing the Buddha Dhamma is very much an individual choice. Buddhists have a choice. They could look more closely and intently at the practice of the Buddha Dhamma and explore ways of doing so, or they could further institutionalise Buddhism through more and more ritualism in the belief that it will bring them closer to the cessation of samsara and is necessary to safeguard Buddhism. As the Britannica says (https://www.britannica.com/ topic/Buddhism/Historical-development) , the institutionalization accelerated significantly during the reign of Emperor Ashoka in the 3rd century BCE. While the initial sangha (monastic community) founded by Buddha during his lifetime were a group of wandering ascetics spreading the Dhamma and pursuing the truth, the organized institutionalisation with state support happened over the following centuries and continues in Sri Lanka.

This institutionalisation began in Sri Lanka after Emperor’s Ashoka’s son Venerable Mihindu’s formal introduction of Buddhism from one Royal family to another. There are reportedly some evidence or indications that Buddhism had moved to Sri Lanka prior to Venerable Mihindu’s arrival in Sri Lanka, and in fact there had been Monastic centres too prior to that. The presence of an inscription at Rajagala, in Ampara (also known as Girikumbhila Tissa Pabbatha Viharaya) mentioning the enshrinement of Ven Mihindu’s ashes is one of the most significant archaeological finds in Sri Lanka as per the UNESCO World Heritage Convention (https://whc.unesco.org/en/ tentativelists/ 6454/#:~:text=Apart%20from% 20the%20above% 20significant,the% 20ancient%20water %20management %20system). Whether a monastery existed there prior to Ven Mihindu’s formal introduction of Buddhism to Sri Lanka, or whether it came into being after this, is still unresolved. It does raise a question why his ashes were interred there if it was place of wilderness and not some type of Monastery. In any event, institutionalisation of Buddhism is nothing new to Sri Lanka, and it has grown over time for it to become an important cornerstone in the country’s political governance ethos. This however does not automatically translate to a corresponding increase in the practice of the Buddha Dhamma by the people.

A new Buddhist Order?

As mentioned earlier, Buddhist Monks in general are trapped between two worlds. One world, representing the ancient one, and the other that is very much influenced by materialism, acquisition of wealth, engaging in other worldly practices. In the past two notable Monks were convicted of murder and sentenced to death over the assassination of a Prime Minister. This was a serious contradiction of objectives of the Monks concerned.

Activities and lifestyles of some Monks have had an impact on the entire Sangha, and the practice of Buddhism has become an external manifestation of a desire to be seen as practicing Buddhism, rather than being actual practitioners. While it may sound sacrileges, if the Dhamma is to take precedence over this situation, the Sangha order governed by the Vinaya Pitakaya would have to undergo a major system change.

In order to assist in overcoming the dilemma faced by many Buddhist Monks in the contemporary world and to provide more freedom for them to decide which world they wish to be in, the ancient world or the modern world, and how best their objectives could be pursued ethically, a suggestion is made to create another formal Buddhist order of lay preachers say wearing a yellow national dress, to complement the Sangha order. These lay preachers could for example, lead a lay life but undergo a period of training as Anagarika’s or a form of it that suits the contemporary world (Anagarikas commit to full-time Buddhist practice, often taking the Eight Precepts and renouncing worldly possessions, serving as a transitional step toward ordination or a lifelong commitment to dedicated practice). This new order should operate along with established Buddhist temples and other Buddhist Institutions, but their task will be to teach the essence of the Dhamma and to assist the Sangha to transform Buddhist temples as sanctuaries for lay persons to free their mind from fetters that impact on their attitude to life and also places where they can seek guidance on the many social matters that can be overcome through exercises in developing mindfulness.

The existing members of the Sangha will have an opportunity to join this Order and move away from the sangha Order as an accepted practice but continue their teaching of the Dhamma. If they chose to remain in the Sangha order, they could remain in the temples or move to Monastries and away from the Institutions. The members of the new Order of course will have to live outside temples and monasteries, but work in close association with temples. An essential element of this system change will have to be a revision of the Vinaya Pitakaya to reflect this change and the introduction of rules for the new Order and the revision of rules relating to the Sangha.

In regard to this suggestion, the attention of readers is drawn to an organisation called the Sri Lanka Buddhist Vinayawardhana Organization (https://budumina.org/about.php), which is primarily a lay-led movement, meaning it is run by laypeople rather than ordained monks. It and several others, while focussing on the necessity of strict discipline of monks as per the Vinaya Pitakaya, also engage in teaching the Buddha Dhamma and associated practices. They generally only support or associate with monks who they believe strictly adhere to the original Vinaya rules, such as those who do not handle money or participate in politics.

Challenges to the suggestion

The main hurdle to this suggestion will come from the concept of Merit. In traditional Buddhist societies, laypeople give donations or almsgivings to Monks, specifically because they believe, through an assumption rather than a real conviction, of a monk’s celibacy and strict adherence to the Vinaya (monastic code), that such an act generates “merit.” A lay preacher in a national dress might struggle to receive the same level of acceptance and support, as the “exchange” for merit is historically tied to the asceticism of the robe, irrespective of course to the asceticism of the person wearing the robe. A complementary class of lay preachers who will be aligned with the Sangha and the temples may help to overcome this hurdle. It could also help Monks to decide whether they wish to remain as Monks and adhere fully to the revised Vinaya rules, or become members of the new Order which will have its own rules. Several traditions already use a system similar to what has been suggested. Bhutanese Gomchens (Lay Priests), Tibetan Ngakpas (Tantric Practitioners), Japanese Temple Priests are some of them. Sri Lanka could adopt a system that is culturally complementary and a system that looks towards the future and the effective preservation of the teachings of the Buddha. It is hoped that a discussion will ensue on what has been suggested and presented here and some leading Monks takes the leadership to further the discussion.

Heaven, Hell and the Near-Death Experience

March 15th, 2026

Dr. Ruwan M Jayatunge

During my time working as an anesthetist in various hospitals, I witnessed patients passing away in the intensive care units and operating theatres. I also encountered individuals who had experienced near-death situations and engaged in conversations with them. Near-Death Experiences (NDEs) have long intrigued me. The phenomenon raises profound questions about consciousness and the nature of existence, as individuals recount vivid encounters during moments of clinical death.

Drawing from these encounters, along with my studies in medical science, psychology, the human brain, and consciousness, I came to a significant realization: When an individual passes away, they typically experience clinical death first, characterized by the cessation of blood circulation and breathing -two essential functions for sustaining life. This state often arises during cardiac arrest, when the heart ceases to beat effectively. If blood circulation is not promptly restored, the brain can begin to incur irreversible damage within approximately 4 to 6 minutes at normal body temperature, ultimately leading to biological death.

During the phase of clinical death, an individual may find their consciousness temporarily trapped within a specific entity. In this state, they lose all perception of time and space, experiencing intense sensations and vivid hallucinations. This mental activity continues until the moment of biological death. Clinical death generally persists for a duration of 4 to 6 minutes before irreversible brain damage or biological death occurs. During this brief period, individuals may experience a profound sense of timelessness, often feeling as though they are immersed in vivid thoughts within their own consciousness. This state is characterized by a complete disconnection from the concepts of time and space.

A person experiencing a near-death event without the burden of depression or anxiety may find themselves floating, surrounded by a serene blue sky and a radiant light, accompanied by a profound sense of peace. In this state, the concept of time becomes irrelevant, as the individual may feel detached from the constraints of clock time. Upon regaining consciousness, they often report a renewed connection to their physical body, having experienced this tranquil floating sensation. Conversely, an individual experiencing a near-death situation while struggling with fear, depression, and anxiety may face unsettling sensations, such as a feeling of burning, and find themselves navigating through a chaotic environment.

Near-death experiences are often marked by vivid hallucinations resulting from unusual neuronal activity in the brain, typically triggered by oxygen deprivation. Individuals who undergo these experiences frequently report sensations such as travelling through a tunnel, feeling weightless, and seeing a distant light. Additionally, some may perceive their life events as unfolding rapidly, like a fast-paced film. These phenomena are fundamentally linked to the irregular functioning of brain neurons.

Imagine a scenario where individuals have transcended the near-death experience and have actually passed away. Their physical bodies and minds are lifeless, yet the perceptions they encountered during their near-death experiences remain intact. In a hypothetical situation, individuals have moved beyond the near-death experience and have actually succumbed to death. Their physical forms and cognitive functions are no longer active, yet the impressions they experienced remain etched in their minds. This near-death experience imparts a sensation of enduring vivid perceptions. Moments later, as they pass away, their irregular neural activities cease. Despite being deceased, the individual feels as though they are ensnared in an extraordinary realm. The situation feels surreal; the individual is no longer alive, devoid of any biological components capable of sensation. However, a near-death experience lasting four to five minutes solidified his conviction that he is perpetually immersed in the feelings associated with that moment. This brief neural episode provided him with a sense of timelessness that continues to resonate within him.  This time-limited neural encounter instilled in him a sense of being perpetually bound to a single moment.

The nature of the near-death experience can vary significantly based on one’s religious beliefs—where a Christian might encounter St. Peter and a Hindu might see Krishna—shaped by the neural pathways influenced by lifelong beliefs.  (As a joke, I say atheists might see Ozzy Osbourne).  If someone has internalized the notion of being a sinner, they may envision flames, whereas a belief in being virtuous could lead to visions of paradise. It is crucial to understand that these experiences are not mere dreams as we know them but rather profound perceptions that the brain undergoes during the near-death state.

The notion that a person is reborn in a favorable realm after death can be seen as a perception, just as the idea of descending into hell can also be interpreted in a similar light. When it is said that the deceased has entered a divine realm, this aligns with the calm and serene feeling that he experienced in his near-death moment.  

Individuals who adhere to religious beliefs, particularly those that encompass concepts like reincarnation and life after death, may not align with my viewpoint. Nonetheless, I propose a perspective grounded in neuropsychological possibilities. It is essential to regard this suggestion as a potential area for further investigation rather than as a conclusive assertion.

This perception cannot be quantified by our conventional understanding of time; what may feel like mere minutes to an observer could be experienced as a vast, extensive period by the individual undergoing this realization. Thus, while biologically he is dead, the subjective experience of time for him stretches far beyond our clock, transforming those fleeting moments into an eternal sensation.  In my view, near-death experiences often lead individuals to perceive that they are transitioning to either heaven or hell.  

I encourage contemplation of these ideas through the lenses of quantum physics and neuropsychology, rather than being confined by traditional religious beliefs and myths, and advocate for an independent and critical mindset.

(For comments, please see the link ) LINK ; https://transyl2014.blogspot.com/2026/03/heaven-hell-and-near-death-experience.html

When new guards readied to lead Nepal

March 15th, 2026

Nava Thakuria

When most of the veterans and their parties failed to impress the electorates of Nepal in the recently conducted single day polling on 5 March 2026, a relatively new party and young leaders earned mandates in the Himalayan republic. Rashtriya Swatantra Party (RSP), which was formed in the middle of 2022, recorded a resounding victory in the election necessitated by the violent youth uprising in September 2025 that shook the south Asian nation of 30 million people and collapsed the government in Kathmandu. The party with young leader Balendra Shah as its prime ministerial candidate won in 125 seats out of 165 constituencies where polling was conducted to fill up the 275-member House of Representatives. Balendra, the engineer-turned-rapper-turned politician even defeated his nearest rival KP Sharma Oli, the veteran Marxist in his home turf (Jhapa-5 constituency of eastern Nepal). The former Kathmandu mayor  defeated Oli by a margin of around  50,000 votes  in the electoral battles. Mentionable is that the four-time premier, who leads the Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist-Leninist) was ousted last year during the deadly anti-corruption uprising.

The CPN-UML was restricted to 9 seats only, whereas the Hindu majority republic’s oldest party Nepali Congress (NC) emerged a distant second with  18 constituencies. According to the Nepal Election Commission, Nepali Communist Party (NCP, a combination of Maoist parties) succeeded in 7 seats followed by Shram Sanskriti Party (3) and pro-monarchist Rastriya Prajatantra Party (1). RSP chairman Rabi Lamichhane and Pushpa Kamal Dahal alias Prachanda, who led the anti-monarchy violent movement (1996 to 2006) and fought the electoral battle with an NCP candidate won in their respective constituencies. However, NC president Gagan Thapa lost the battle.  More than 60 % of total 19 million Nepali voters exercised their franchise in the election, where 10 women candidates (nine nominated by RSP and one by NC) also emerged victorious. The remaining 110 seats in the Parliament are elected by the proportional voting system, where the RSP received altogether 5,183,493 votes and thus earned additional 57 seats. The NC got 1,759,172 votes to earn 20 more seats. The  CPN-UML with 1,455,885 votes got 16 seats, followed by NCP (811,577 votes 9 seats),  SSP (385,856 votes 4 seats) and RPP (330,684 votes  4 seats).

Conducted under the mentorship of interim premier Sushila Karki, who once served Nepal Supreme Court as its chief justice and was sworn in on 12 September 2025 as first woman Prime Minister of the Federal Democratic Republic of Nepal, the election was peaceful. When President Ramchandra Paudel will appoint Balendra as  the new premier of Nepal, he is supposed to be one of the youngest heads of  Nepal government and first one from Madhesh province. Located in the southeastern region, bordering  Uttar Pradesh  and Bihar, the province is believed by Sanatani Hindus to be the birthplace of Maa Sita (of great epic Ramayana era) when it was known as Janakpur.

Earlier, the Maithili speaking politician attracted global media attention by withdrawing the China-backed Damak project in Jhapa district from the election manifesto. Strategically located near to Siliguri corridor (Chicken’s neck), the project (lately renamed as Nepal-China Friendship Industrial Park) is linked to Beijing’s Belt and Road Initiative, which was considered as an annoying development for New Delhi. Otherwise, Balendra promised to follow Nepal-First policy while dealing with  foreign nations. He also pledged to create 1.2 million jobs to address the growing unemployment problem and frustration among the Nepali youths and establish social safety measures including healthcare insurance facilities  and other welfare initiatives to the entire Nepali population.

Political observers in Kathmandu believe that the election signaled a thorough rejection of communists aligned political parties, which used to rule the country for the last two decades. It may bring positive news for New Delhi to reset the tie with Kathmandu, which was strained in all the years. Prime Minister Narendra Modi was prompt to personally call the RSP leaders and reaffirmed New Delhi’s commitment to work with the new government for mutual prosperity, progress and well-being of both the countries. Earlier, Modi  congratulated the people of Nepal and the interim government in Kathmandu for the successful completion of the 2026 general election saying that as a close neighbour, India remains steadfast in its commitment to working closely with the people of Nepal and their new government to scale new heights of shared peace, progress and prosperity.

Questionable QR

March 15th, 2026

Dr Sarath Obeysekera

This is just an assumption for decision makers to be watchful information and Communication Technology Agency of Sri Lanka (ICTA) cannot legally change fuel QR quota allocations for personal interests in Sri Lanka.

But How the QR Fuel System Worked

The National Fuel Pass (QR system) was introduced in 2022 during the fuel crisis by the Ministry of Power and Energy, with the technical platform built by ICTA. 

  • Each vehicle received a QR code after registration.
  • Fuel quota was assigned based on vehicle category (car, motorcycle, bus, etc.).
  • Fuel stations scanned the QR code and the system allowed only the remaining quota to be pumped. 

Who Decides the Quota

The policy decision (how many litres per week) is made by the Ministry of Power and Energy, not ICTA.(is re named now ) 

ICTA’s role is technical only—running the digital platform.So:

  • ICTA cannot independently change quotas.
  • Any quota change must come from government policy decisions.

Could Someone Manipulate It?

In theory:

  • Unauthorized changes would require access to the central system and government authorization.
  • Such action would be illegal and traceable because transactions are logged when QR codes are scanned.

Important Update

The QR fuel quota system was abolished in September 2023 when fuel supply stabilized, so the system is not currently used in Sri Lanka. 

Conclusion:

  • ICTA cannot change QR allocations for personal interest.
  • Only the government (Ministry of Power & Energy) could change quotas officially.
  • Any personal manipulation would be illegal abuse of the system.

Ps

During the period of bankrupcy may be politicians were changing the data ?

Worth auditing 

Regards

Dr Sarath Obeysekera

DLS and DRS (based on Player Referral) are new additions to Cricket. Between the two methods, which one is more far reaching in impact and value to the game?

March 15th, 2026

Query from: Senaka Weeraratna Answer from :  Chat GPT 

While both systems are pivotal to modern cricket, the Decision Review System (DRS) is generally considered to have a more far-reaching impact on the game’s actual play and philosophy. While the Duckworth–Lewis–Stern (DLS) method is indispensable for fairness in rain-affected limited-overs matches, DRS has fundamentally altered how players, umpires, and fans interact with the rules across all major formats of the game. 

Decision Review System (DRS)

DRS, which introduced the Player Referral concept, has had a transformative effect on cricket’s traditional landscape. 

  • Fundamental Shift: It overturned a founding principle of the sport—that the “umpire’s decision is final”—by allowing players to challenge on-field calls.
  • Tactical Depth: Teams now use reviews strategically, considering the “value” of a wicket or the remaining reviews when deciding whether to challenge a decision.
  • Impact on Play: It has changed how bowlers (especially spinners) bowl and how batters defend, as technology like ball-tracking has reduced the “benefit of the doubt” previously given to batters.
  • Widespread Application: It is utilized in Test, ODI, and T20I formats, affecting every delivery and dismissal in a match. 

Duckworth–Lewis–Stern (DLS)

DLS is a mathematical formulation specifically designed for limited-overs matches interrupted by weather or other external circumstances. 

  • Target Fairness: It provides a statistically fair target by considering “resources” (overs remaining and wickets in hand) rather than just run rate.
  • Situational Criticality: While crucial when it rains, it does not affect the day-to-day tactical play or the fundamental laws of the game in the same way DRS does.
  • Format Limitation: It is exclusively used in limited-overs cricket (ODIs and T20Is) and has no application in Test matches. 

PLEASE VISIT THIS WEB LINK TO SEE THE COMPARISON LISTED ON A TABLE

https://share.google/aimode/fTE4JF4FmbxOVqSbL

……………………………………………

AI Overview

Both DLS (Duckworth-Lewis-Stern) and DRS (Decision Review System) are critical modern additions, but DRS (based on Player Referral) has a more far-reaching impact and higher intrinsic value to the overall game of cricket. 

While DLS is vital for fairness in limited-overs matches, DRS has fundamentally altered the structural, technical, and psychological aspects of all three formats of the sport.

1. DRS (Decision Review System)

  • Impact: Massive. It has abolished “howlers” (obvious errors) and shifted the balance of power back to the players, reducing the sole, often erroneous, authority of on-field umpires.
  • Value: It has added a new layer of drama, suspense, and strategy to the game, with teams now managing reviews as a crucial, limited resource.
  • Game Evolution: It has caused tactical changes in batting (less reliance on pads against spin) and increased LBW dismissals by almost 17% for spinners.
  • Scope: Applied across Tests, ODIs, and T20Is. 

2. DLS (Duckworth-Lewis-Stern Method)

  • Impact: High, but specialized. It is essentially a mathematical formula applied only to limited-overs cricket to adjust targets when play is interrupted by weather.
  • Value: It ensures fair play by taking into account both wickets and overs, avoiding the farcical scenarios of older methods.
  • Game Evolution: Its impact is largely administrative/statistical. It prevents matches from being abandoned without a result but does not change the playing style or rules of combat between bat and ball.
  • Scope: Limited to ODIs and T20Is; not used in Test cricket. 

Conclusion

DRS is far-reaching because it is present in every ball of a Test match (where DLS is not) and has fundamentally changed how the game is officiated and perceived by spectators. It is an indispensable tool for justice, fairness, and modern fan engagement, making it the more influential addition. 

https://share.google/aimode/eGxnFZLxWZKDOjn5I

Credit Attribution

Query 

A huge amount of Credit is given to the innovators of DLS Method 

(projected as Masterminds) but in contrast credit is denied to the 

innovator of the ‘Player Referral method’ ( which is the foundational concept of DRS). 

Why is there a huge discrepancy in the grant of recognition to the 

founders of two pivots of modern cricket?

Answer

Chat GPT

The dichotomy in recognition between the founders of the

Duckworth-Lewis-Stern (DLS) method and the Player Referral method (the core of the Decision Review System (DRS)) stems from the nature of their contributions and the International Cricket Council’s (ICC) institutional history. 

Recognition of DLS Founders

The inventors of the DLS method, Frank Duckworth, Tony Lewis and later Steven Stern 

are officially credited and their names are part of the method’s title. This is largely because: 

  • Unique Statistical Formula: They developed a specific, proprietary mathematical model based on “resources” (wickets and overs) that did not exist previously.
  • Direct Adoption: The ICC formally adopted their specific table and calculations, leading to an immediate and named implementation. 

Lack of Recognition for the Player Referral Innovator 

The “Player Referral” concept was first proposed by Sri Lankan lawyer

Senaka Weeraratna

in a 1997 letter to The Australian newspaper. Despite his foundational contribution, he remains largely uncredited by the ICC for several reasons: 

  • Conceptual vs. Technical: While

Weeraratna

conceived the “Player Referral” logic—allowing players to challenge decisions to a third umpire—the ICC views the modern DRS as a collaborative technological evolution involving multiple hardware providers (like Hawk-Eye) rather than a single inventor’s idea.

  • Institutional “Birth”: The ICC officially launched the system in 2008 without attributing its origin to any individual. Supporters argue this ignores the fact that Weeraratna’s 1997 proposal contained the four key elements used today: player challenges, routing through captains/batsmen, third umpire review, and limited appeals per innings.
  • Lack of Intellectual Property Protection: Unlike the DLS method, which was a specific formula, the Player Referral concept was an idea for a rule change. The ICC argues it has no formal copyright over the DRS, making it difficult for

Weeraratna to establish legal ownership.

  • Perceived Bias: Critics and supporters of

Weeraratna

have often questioned whether the lack of recognition is tied to a historical power imbalance, prejudice and Eurocentric bias within the cricket administration, contrasting the ready acceptance of the ” White Skinned Englishmen” (Duckworth and Lewis) with the sidelined claim of a non-European (Sri Lankan) Dark Skinned innovator (Senaka Weeraratna). 

There is currently a growing movement, particularly in South Asia, calling for the ICC to formally recognize

Weeraratna as the “Father of DRS” or rename the system WDRS (Weeraratna Decision Review System). 

Would you like to explore the four specific elements of

Senaka Weeraratna’s original 1997 proposal and how they compare to today’s ICC regulations?

See

https://share.google/aimode/jImOg8Drci1FJN6Nu

U.S. Is Abandoning ALL OUR Asian & Middle Eastern Allies! – Scott Ritter

March 15th, 2026

Warrant issued for Asoka Ranwala

March 15th, 2026

Courtesy Hiru News

The Mahara Additional Magistrate, Bandara Ilangasinghe, ordered the arrest and production of former Speaker and Member of Parliament Asoka Sapumal Ranwala before the court. This directive follows his failure to appear in court regarding an incident in the Denimulla area of Heiyanthuduwa.

The suspect MP remained absent when the case was called on the 13th. Consequently, the Sapugaskanda Police Traffic Branch filed a charge sheet against him involving allegations of failing to prevent a collision, reckless driving, and causing both serious and minor injuries. Further charges include operating an unroadworthy vehicle resulting in severe harm.

The incident occurred when a Jeep driven by the MP collided with a motor car and a motorcycle. A mother, a seven-month-old infant, and the child’s grandmother, all from the same family traveling in the car, sustained injuries. The court scheduled further proceedings for July 10.

Officers from the Sapugaskanda Police, including the Traffic and Litigation branches, led the prosecution under the direction of the Station Internal Officer.

US-UK-France– Out of the Indian Ocean! Time to close Military Bases, Stop War and Blue Environmental Pollution

March 14th, 2026

Darini Rajasingham-Senanayake

The bodies of eighty-four Iranian sailors who died in a US torpedo attack in the seas of Sri Lanka were repatriated yesterday, 13 March 2026.  Describing the scene of the rescue of some of the sailors who survived the dastardly attack, the Sri Lanka Navy Commander Buddhika Sampath said that the boats that reached the location of the distress call on March 4 had observed only an oil slick.

In Washington Donald Trump and his War Secretary had boasted that they had finished off the Iranian Navy. “An American submarine sank an Iranian warship that thought it was ​safe in international waters,” U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said at the Pentagon. “Instead, it was sunk by a torpedo. Quiet death.”

“We found people floating in the water and rescued them,” Sri Lankan Navy officer Sampath told reporters. “Later on, we found upon inquiring that they belonged to the Iranian ship.”

The sunken IRIS Dena was unarmed having just participated in the International Fleet Review in India’s Nagapatnam. Had the Colombo regime of President Anura Kumara Dissanayaka not delayed providing safe habour to the IRIS Dena due to US pressure, the war crime would likely not have happened in the island’s maritime Exclusive Economic Zone. Subsequently a second Iranian Ship was given habour in Sri Lanka enabling the Colombo regime to play up its humanitarian role while citing UNCLOS.


Environmental Damage

A couple of days after the sinking of IRIS Dena, fishers and coastal communities in Hikkaduwa, Galle and Unawatunna noticed a thick oil patch along the coast, impacting the coastal economy, fisheries and tourism in the island nation. These are some of the most pristine coastal belts in the south of Sri Lanka, frequented by tourists throughout the year with a peak tourism season from December to March.

It is increasingly clear that a proper inquiry must be held into the sinking of the Iranian ship and response, as well as an environmental damage impact assessment. If responsible for environmental damage the United States must pay reparations to Sri Lanka for harm caused to fisheries livelihoods and the Tourist sector by the sinking of an unarmed Iranian ship in Sri Lanka’s maritime Exclusive Economic Zone. The new spiritual leader of Iran has stated that the US and Israel must pay reparations for the war they started.

The US is in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, and has no right to bring its environment polluting war machine to the Indian Ocean. The US should return it war toys to the Atlantic Ocean and remove all its military bases from the Indian Ocean. So too its NATO partners UK and France.

Peace Campaign needed to evict US-UK-France and Israel from the Indian Ocean World

India despite aspiring to lead the Global South has failed to liberate the Indian Ocean from Euro-American neocolonialism and military bases, having fallen prey to Imperialist Divide and Rule narratives and policies– given fear of the Rise of China.

Hence, it is increasingly clear that small Indian Ocean littoral states and islands need a peoples’ Peace Campaign to ensure closure of US-UK-French neocolonial military bases, de-militarization, and de-colonization of the Indian Ocean Region.

The US war machine uses the huge Diego Garcia military base on the occupied Chagos Islands, not far from the Maldive Islands and Sri Lanka to stage attacks in it war of aggression on Iran and to wage hybrid economic warfare on Rising Asian and Indian Ocean countries, particularly South and Southeast Asia. Geoengineering and weather warfare to Make the Economy Scream” includes geoengineering disasters and weather warfare like the Ditwah Twister storms last December. Previously the 2004 Christmas/ Boxing Day Earthquake and Indian Ocean Tsunami destroyed the same countries in the Indian Ocean World.

Protests in London over the US-UK Occupation of the Chagos Islands where there is a huge military base, Diego Garcia, near the Maldives and Sri Lanka. A US Submarine attacked the Iranian Frigate ISIS Dena killing 87 sailors and causing environmental damage in Sri Lanka’s Exclusive Economic Zone.

US-Israeli Aggression Spreading in the Indian Ocean

Once upon a time the Indian Ocean was called a ‘British Lake’ or Pond, when ‘Britannia Ruled the Waves’. Now increasingly, Israelis have set up the Chabad Lubovitch Spiders web to stage ‘climate disasters’ in Sri Lanka, while Israeli surfers claim they ‘own the waves’ in Arugam Bay on the East Coast.

The US-Israeli war of aggression on Iran is spreading across the Indian Ocean World, which must be liberated– from past and present US-UK-French military bases, occupation, and neocolonialism, including the exploitation of Indian Ocean fisheries and mineral resources.

The US, UK, French (NATO) war machine which is highly environmentally polluting must be banished from the Indian Ocean and sent back to the Atlantic Ocean where they belong.

No more aggression and Hybrid Economic warfare against the Rise of Asian economies, particularly South and Southeast Asia in what Singapore academic Kishore Mabubani termed ‘the Asian 21st Century” in the Indian Ocean.  The Indian Ocean must be decolonized so that its rich resources may be sustainably harvested and used by Indian Ocean littoral countries and people, many of whom are dirt poor.

Please listen to this presentation and share: The Indian Ocean as a Zone of Peace, free of Militarization https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QqV44gItEQ4

The Closure of Sri Lanka’s Fertilizer Plant: A Strategic Mistake We Still Pay For

March 14th, 2026

Dr Sarath Obeysekera

Sri Lanka today struggles with fertilizer shortages, high import costs, and a heavy dependence on foreign suppliers for a commodity that is essential for our agricultural survival. Few people remember that decades ago Sri Lanka possessed the capability to manufacture fertilizer locally with the assistance of world-class engineering firms.

During my early professional career, I had the opportunity to work in London with the engineering group KBR (Kellogg Brown & Root), which was then closely associated with Halliburton. Kellogg engineers were globally recognized for designing and constructing large industrial facilities including fertilizer plants, petrochemical complexes, and energy projects. The same engineering expertise was involved in building Sri Lanka’s fertilizer manufacturing facility.

However, during the economic reforms that followed the open-economy policies introduced under President J. R. Jayewardene, the government led by Finance Minister Ronnie de Mel decided to close the fertilizer plant. While the reforms aimed to liberalize the economy after years of state control under Sirimavo Bandaranaike, the closure of this strategic industrial asset was, in my view, one of the most damaging decisions taken during that period.

The shutdown effectively dismantled Sri Lanka’s domestic capability to manufacture fertilizer. From that point onward, the country became almost entirely dependent on imports to sustain its agriculture. This decision did not merely close a factory—it eliminated an entire industrial ecosystem of engineers, technicians, and skilled workers who were capable of supporting a national fertilizer industry.

Over the decades that followed, Sri Lanka’s agriculture became increasingly vulnerable to global supply disruptions, currency shortages, and international price fluctuations. The fertilizer crisis experienced in recent years has highlighted how dangerous it is for an agricultural nation to depend entirely on external suppliers for such a critical input.

Ironically, while Sri Lanka dismantled its fertilizer manufacturing capability, many countries around the world expanded their petrochemical and fertilizer industries using advanced technologies. For example, in Qatar, companies such as Shell plc invested billions of dollars in projects like the Pearl GTL Project, which converts natural gas into ultra-clean liquid fuels using advanced chemical processes. These large-scale industrial developments demonstrate how energy resources and industrial technology can be integrated to create long-term economic value.

Sri Lanka may not possess vast natural gas reserves like Qatar, but the lesson remains clear: countries that maintain and develop their industrial capabilities gain strategic economic advantages. Those that dismantle them often become permanently dependent on imports.

The closure of our fertilizer plant should therefore be studied not only as a historical decision but also as a lesson in long-term national planning. Industrial capacity, once lost, is extremely difficult and costly to rebuild. Yet rebuilding such capacity is precisely what Sri Lanka must consider if it wishes to strengthen its food security and economic independence.

Today, as the country debates agricultural policy, fertilizer supply, and economic resilience, policymakers would do well to remember the industrial decisions of the past. The story of Sri Lanka’s fertilizer plant is not merely history—it is a reminder that strategic industries should be protected, modernized, and expanded rather than abandoned.


Sarath Obeysekera

Regards

Dr Sarath Obeysekera

LIQUIFIED NATURAL GAS (LNG)DEVELOPMENT …WHERE ARE WE HEADING?

March 13th, 2026

Dr Sarath Obeysekera

J R Jayewardene came to power in 1977 and handed over harnessing of the Hydro power potential to his trusted young Gamini Dissanayake . Proposals and funding from Western countries and Sweden ,discussions  negotiations ,extensive travelling to fix deals ,and final output was accelerated high priced power plants and dams  along Mahawali ,Today we reap the benefits and people forgot who did it and who became quite rich 

Now we has exhausted hydra power potential and moving in to rather new source of power which is Electricity generation using (Liquefied Natural Gas) LNG as the fuel for turbines to run generators .Unlike ample water resources, we do not have LNG as yet country is hoping to extract Gas in Mannar and Covery Basin with expensive capital outlay and of course cost of incentives.

Exploration History

Petroleum exploration in Sri Lanka began approximately between 1967-68 Compaigne General de Geophysicque of collected approximately 420 km of onshore and 75 km of offshore seismic data on behalf of the Ceylon Petroleum Corporation (CPC or Ceypetco). In 1974 Soviets spudded Pesalai 1 and Pesalai 2 on the Mannar Island but both failed.

In 1975 Pexamin Pacific acted as a consultant to promote exploration in the Cauvery Basin of Sri Lanka. In 1976 Western Pexamin Pacific signed a contract with CPC for an offshore exploration block.

Marathon Petroleum in 1976 drilled two exploratory wells, Palk Bay-1 and Delft-1 in the Cauvery Basin, and both failed to encounter any hydrocarbons and in 1977, the Marathon -Pexamin group relinquished its interests.

In 1981, Cities Services acquired interests in the Cauvery and Mannar basin. The same year Cities Services drilled Pearl-1, located on the northeast shelf of the Gulf of Mannar no oil and gas was present. 

In 1984 under a tripartite agreement between Phoenix Canada Oil Company, Petro-Canada and CPC, Petro-Canada acquired seismic data in the Mannar Basin. However, no further work was done and by 1984 petroleum exploration work offshore Sri Lanka came to a halt and remained dormant till 2001.

In, TGS NOPEC, a Norwegian seismic contractor with a regional office in Perth, Australia, approached CPC to undertake a speculative seismic program in the Mannar Basin.

After reviewing seismic data set in the Mannar Basin for exploration companies interested in the area.

From 2002 to 2006 the Government of Sri Lanka and TGS NOPEC made attempts to attract exploration companies to Sri Lankan through road shows at various venues. These efforts were unsuccessful. In 2007 under a Cabinet Decision the government of Sri Lanka bought the Mannar Basin 2D data from TGS NOPEC thereby cancelling the exclusive rights that TGS NOPEC had to collect seismic data in the territorial waters of Sri Lanka.

There was a speculation that Norwegian Government was brokering a peace deal with Sri Lank to solve LTTE issue, and the Sri Lankan Government was not in favour of working with Norwegians.

Based on this data out or nine blocks the Cabinet of Ministers decided to offer three for petroleum exploration under an international licensing round.

In 2007 an extensive marketing campaign was carried out globally with road shows and data rooms in London, Houston and Kuala Lumpur.The Cabinet of Ministers decided that the number of bids received for blocks 002 and 003 are not enough and thus directed the Ministry to evaluate only the bids received for block 001.

The bidders for Block 001 in the Mannar Basin licensing Round consisted of Cairn India Limited, Niko Resources (Cyprus) Limited and Oil and Natural Gas Company of India (ONGC). On July 07, 2008 the Government of Sri Lanka, through the Minister of Petroleum and Petroleum Resources Development signed a Petroleum Resources Agreement with Cairn Lanka(Private) Limited marking the beginning of petroleum exploration of Sri Lanka after 25 years.

Cairne has reported two discoveries in Mannar basin in wells Dorado 91/H and in the well Barracuda 1G/1after hitting gas paying zones mainly natural gas .In 2015 Cairne India decided to give up further development in Sri Lanka claiming that after assessment of discoveries and found unviable due to price slump.

Sri Lankan government has again embarked into a program of calling offers to carry our production drilling for which few companies has submitted the proposals now under evaluation 

On 24.09.2020 – Hon. Minister of Energy, Udaya Gammanpila, presented letters of appointment to Mr. Surath Ovitigama as the Director General of the Petroleum Resources Development Secretariat (PRDS) and appointed Ex DG of PDRS Mr. Saliya Wickramasuriya, as an Advisor.

Current DG Mr Surath Ovitigama who claim to have experience in working in Oil and Gas sector in North Sea Industry has stated that a fresh approach has been taken by the government to attract investors for the upstream oil and gas industry of Sri Lanka.He further stated that during the pandemic situation where most oil companies are currently not investing in new ventures the government plans to rectify issues within the legal and fiscal framework of Sri Lanka which would align with the interest of investors when the pandemic ends and the world economy recovers and as the first step Natural Gas Policy of the country has been formulated and finalized. Currently several data reprocessing work under multi-client business model is underway to upgrade the existing data set to a modern one. In addition to that the airborne survey awarded to Bell Aerospace which was planned to collect geophysical data over the Manner and Cauvery Basins will also go ahead soon, after delays due to the pandemic situation.

Whatever the amount of Gas to be found in Sri Lanka is not high enough to find international buyers ,hence government should carefully plan to develop mid stream processing of LNG for transportation to the proposed floating storage and re-gasification Unit ( FSRU ) for which RFP’s will be issued quite soon .

With current expertise ,CEB and CPC are not fully conversant with process planning andconstruction management of Mid-stream and Upstream development of LNG facilities unless local Sri Lankan experts are requested to join a Project Management Team to avoid highly paid expatriates to provide know how.

Experts also predict that Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) facilities may have to be developed on shore to make it available for vehicles .trains and buses as an alternative fuel .Government has not yet plan for such facilities.

We have contacted Dr Sarath Obeysekera who has extensive exposure to Oil and Gas Industry in Norway and UK and inquired about the future of the development of LNG industry in Sri Lanka 

Q What is your opinion about future prospectsof LNG development and what the obstacles we might face ?

I will first give an  interesting preamble to our discussion ..

I came on a holiday to Sri Lanka from Russia where I was studying for a major in the University in the Field of Oil and Gas Exploration and visited the Russian Camp on shore where Oil was drilled .Russians were very helpful and took me to the drilling site and later in the evening we had a  Vodka feast where they told me s startling story. It was the pre-election year and Mr Subasinghe was the minister of Industries under the Premiere Sirimavo Bandaranayake who was adored by Russians for being the first Woman prime minister in the world .As the government needed to attract votes, they got the CPC to get help from Russians to pour a barrel of crude oil into a well and gave wide publicity that Sri Lanka Found Oil Sadly there was no oil in the wells and they packed up and left

As I mentioned before, with my encounter with Russians in 1974 .I was closely monitoring the development of exploration of oil and gas in Sri Lanka. Main problem we are facing is finding the right people with exposure to manage the institutions which are involved in  Oil Gas Production.

Political patronage with vested interest may be a prime criteria during the   appointment of key personnel and also finding the right approach to execute the project .When Sri Lanka came to know of existence of Gas ,we should have drafted the Gas Policy and complete in a short period .Now due to unavailability of an Approved Legislation on Gas and a nominated authority to ensue adherence government went ahead in calling tenders for exploration .If and when Gas starts to flow presumably in two years’ time ,we should have Intermediate ( mid)  stream processing of the Gas to be  filtered and cleaned in order to either store in Croyogenic ( Ultar cold  temperate to -162 C Degrees ) or transport by a pipe line to shore for processing before storage .Sri Lanka has not planned for any of above .

We also note that Sri Lanka is now planning to develop Down Stream LNG processing to provide energy for power production ,until LNG from Sri Mannar or Cauvery start flowing,

Current request for proposal consist of Construction of LNG unloading jerry or a Single Point Mooring Buoy SPM)  along side a ( floating storage and re gasification Unit ( FSRU ) to be deployed by a prospective investor on a BOT and BOO based development with a planned investment of Us $ 400 million .This project is to be completed within a span of 30 to 36 months .

Question is  whether any investor will dare to put forward a proposal to provide LNG to end user LNG power generating company which has to sell power to the government at 15 Rs per unit ,under the current Fitch and Moody downgrading Sri Lanka.These investment companies will look for funds from  international  funding agencies or investment banks who will be forced to carry out due diligence on Sri Lanka ,and they may be discouraged to invest as sovereign guarantees to be provided by the government may not stand ground .

FSRU deployment will also be done providing that the government  concludes the Approval of Gas policy in Sri Lanka and signs a long term LNG supply with world wide suppliers like  Nigeria ,Qatar Australai and Russia .Generally LNG suppliers look  for almost 20-25  yearlong supply contract for which Sri Lanka Government should be ready to undertake .Supplier countries look for long term supply contracts to underpin the financing of LNG terminal developments hence agreeing them to sign shorter term contracts are quite difficult

Q2 How does government ensure signing of continuous LNG supply contracts?

My opinion is that speculation about possible termination the PUCSL ( public utilities commission ) is somewhat connected to the Gas Policy implementation and setting up new Power Purchase Agreements with power generating companies mushrooming up ,as PUCSL may dictate terms on the long term buying rates on LNG and power from LNG driven plants ,which can be an issue to the negotiators of LNG prices. Gas Policy should be again published so that professionals can review the same to advise the negotiators.

As I said best LNG bulk price depends on cost of FSRU ,Unloading Jetty offshore and onshore pipe line to Kerawalapitiya power plant and Kelanitissa  power plant and the cost of the new LNG driven Kerawalapitiya power plant with distribution upgrades of switch gear .

I assume that government has done a detailed feasibility on above .

Finally back to our own production of LNG which may take around 3 to 4 years. Sri Lanka should plan and develop mid-stream facilities from now on in order to provide the LNG to be transported to the FSRU for Regasification or lay a pipeline offshore from  Manar to Kerawalapitiya 

J R built Hydropower plants,MR built Coal Power Plant ,and  now GR has to build LNG plants .

Burning question is what will happen to the plansby environmentalist who are  pushing for shifting to alternative sustainable energy like Solar assisted Electricity Generation Plants and Wind Power generation  and Sea wave assisted power generation plants in Sri Lanka ?.

Looming Fertiliser Crisis: A Lesson Sri Lanka Cannot Ignore

March 13th, 2026

Dr Sarath Obeysekera

The world is once again moving towards a period of geopolitical uncertainty. Conflicts in the Middle East and tensions among major powers are beginning to disrupt global supply chains. While the headlines focus on military developments and oil prices, another silent crisis may soon emerge — the global shortage of fertiliser.

Sri Lanka has already experienced the painful consequences of agricultural policy mistakes. The sudden fertiliser ban introduced under the administration of Gotabaya Rajapaksa triggered a dramatic drop in agricultural production, particularly in rice and tea. The resulting food shortages and loss of export income contributed significantly to the broader economic crisis that engulfed the country.

Today, the danger is different but equally serious.

Modern agriculture depends heavily on imported fertilisers such as urea, potash and phosphate. Much of the world’s fertiliser supply is linked to energy markets and is produced in regions vulnerable to geopolitical conflict. When wars disrupt shipping routes, increase energy costs or trigger sanctions, fertiliser prices rise rapidly and supplies become uncertain.

Sri Lanka, unfortunately, appears to have learnt little from recent experience. There is no clear indication that the government has built sufficient fertiliser reserves to protect farmers against a potential global supply disruption. If shipments are delayed or prices spike, the coming cultivation seasons could face serious difficulties.

Farmers cannot wait until the last moment. Paddy cultivation cycles depend on timely fertiliser availability. Even a short delay can reduce yields significantly. A shortage would not only affect rural incomes but could once again threaten national food security.

Countries that have learned from recent crises are quietly stockpiling essential agricultural inputs. Strategic reserves of fertiliser, much like strategic petroleum reserves, are increasingly seen as necessary buffers against global instability.

Sri Lanka must act with urgency. The government should immediately assess national fertiliser requirements for the next two cultivation seasons and secure adequate stocks while global supplies are still accessible. Diversifying import sources and encouraging local organic supplementation may help, but these measures must be implemented gradually and scientifically.

The lesson from the recent crisis is clear. Agriculture is not merely an economic sector — it is the foundation of national stability. Food security, farmer livelihoods and economic resilience are deeply interconnected.

If global tensions escalate and fertiliser supplies tighten, Sri Lanka must not once again find itself unprepared.

Preparedness today will prevent crisis tomorrow.

Regards

Dr Sarath Obeysekera

Fast-Tracking Colombo Port City: A Strategic Opportunity for Sri Lanka in a Changing World

March 13th, 2026

By Sarath Obeysekera

The rapidly changing geopolitical environment is forcing nations to rethink their economic strategies and global positioning. Conflicts in several regions, shifting trade patterns, and emerging security concerns are gradually reshaping the global economic landscape. For Sri Lanka, these developments present not only challenges but also an opportunity to reposition itself as a strategic hub in the Indian Ocean.

Sri Lanka sits at the crossroads of some of the busiest maritime trade routes in the world. The island’s proximity to major East-West shipping lanes has historically given it immense strategic importance. Yet, successive governments have often failed to act decisively to capitalize on this advantage.

One such missed opportunity was the proposed infrastructure modernization under the Millennium Challenge Corporation Compact, which included plans for improved transport corridors connecting Colombo with the rest of the country. If implemented effectively, these projects could have significantly strengthened Sri Lanka’s logistics network and enhanced connectivity to emerging economic zones.

At the same time, global manufacturing and trade have been undergoing gradual restructuring. Many multinational corporations have been pursuing the China Plus One Strategy to diversify production and reduce dependence on a single manufacturing base. Sri Lanka could have leveraged this shift several years ago by offering industrial zones, efficient logistics, and investor-friendly policies.

However, the opportunity has not entirely passed.

Today, global uncertainties and regional tensions are creating new dynamics in international business and migration patterns. Major financial and commercial hubs such as Singapore and Dubai have long attracted global investors and expatriates. While these cities remain important global centres, their dense urban environments and rising living costs are prompting some professionals and businesses to explore alternative destinations offering a better balance between economic opportunity and quality of life.

In this context, the development of Colombo Port City could become a defining national project for Sri Lanka.

Port City has the potential to emerge as a modern financial and commercial hub within the Indian Ocean region. Its strategic location adjacent to the Port of Colombo — one of South Asia’s busiest container ports — provides a strong foundation for maritime trade, logistics, and financial services.

However, the project must now move beyond gradual development and enter a phase of accelerated implementation. Sri Lanka should aim to complete key commercial, residential, and financial infrastructure within the next two years. Speed is essential if the country wishes to capture the attention of global investors and expatriate professionals seeking stable and attractive locations to live and work.

Equally important is the development of modern transport connectivity. A direct, high-capacity corridor linking Port City with the airport, the main commercial districts of Colombo, and the national expressway network would significantly enhance accessibility and investor confidence.

In addition, Sri Lanka should introduce competitive residency and investment programs designed to attract global professionals, entrepreneurs, and financial institutions. Long-term visas, streamlined regulatory frameworks, and tax incentives could position Colombo Port City as a welcoming environment for international business.

Unlike many crowded global financial centres, Sri Lanka can offer something unique: a combination of modern infrastructure and natural beauty. Oceanfront living, a tropical climate, and relatively lower population density provide an attractive lifestyle alternative for expatriates and investors seeking a balance between work and quality of life.

The global environment is changing rapidly, and nations that move quickly will benefit the most. Sri Lanka must therefore recognize the strategic importance of Colombo Port City and treat it as a national priority.

If the country acts decisively, Colombo Port City could become a vibrant international financial and commercial hub — transforming Sri Lanka into a gateway between Asia, the Middle East, and the wider Indian Ocean region.

The time to act is now.

Dr Sarath Obeysekera 

The Forgotten Steel of Ancient Sri Lanka

March 13th, 2026

History Undug

Iran to fly out most crew members of warship docked in Kochi on chartered flight

March 13th, 2026

Courtesy Hindustan Times

Iran intends to repatriate non-essential members of the 183-strong crew of IRIS Lavan. A limited number of crew members will stay back to maintain the warship

IRIS Lavan docked at Kochi on March 4 and its 183-member crew was accommodated at naval facilities (X/IN_WNC)
IRIS Lavan docked at Kochi on March 4 and its 183-member crew was accommodated at naval facilities (X/IN_WNC)

The same chartered flight will also carry the bodies of Iranian sailors who were killed when another warship, IRIS Dena, was torpedoed and sunk by a US submarine near Sri Lanka on March 4, the people said on condition of anonymity.

The Iranian side intends to repatriate the non-essential members of the 183-strong crew of IRIS Lavan, while a limited number of crew members will stay back to maintain the warship, the people said.

The chartered flight travelled to Colombo to pick up the bodies of sailors killed during the sinking of IRIS Dena but had not taken off from the Sri Lankan capital till late on Friday night, the people said.

The crew members of IRIS Lavan will be sent home in a special flight arranged by the Iranian side in coordination with Indian authorities,” a person said, without providing details.

The bodies of the sailors from IRIS Dena will also be sent from Kochi,” he said.

Reports in the Sri Lankan media said 45 bodies of crew members of IRIS Dena were transported from Galle National Hospital to Mattala Rajapaksa International Airport to be airlifted.

Sri Lankan authorities recovered the bodies of 84 Iranian sailors after IRIS Dena was sunk. They also rescued 32 crew members who have been kept at a naval facility.

IRIS Dena had participated in an International Fleet Review and a multi-nation exercise hosted by the Indian Navy last month.

On March 1, India granted permission to three Iranian warships that were in regional waters – IRIS Dena, IRIS Lavan and IRIS Booshehr – to dock at the country’s ports in response to a request from Tehran. However, only IRIS Lavan docked at Kochi on March 4 and its 183-member crew was accommodated at naval facilities.

External affairs minister S Jaishankar has said that the Indian government’s decision to allow IRIS Lavan to dock at Kochi was the right thing to do”, and that the decision was made on humanitarian grounds.

IRIS Booshehr docked in Colombo and its 204-member crew was sent to a Sri Lankan naval facility, while IRIS Dena was sunk by a US submarine in international waters off Sri Lanka’s southern coast.

Sri Lankan authorities and officials of the Iranian embassy in Colombo are engaged in discussions regarding the next steps for the Iranian sailors currently in Sri Lanka’s care. The Sri Lankan government has decided to grant one-month free visas to the Iranian sailors and to provide them necessary facilities on humanitarian grounds.

Bodies of Iranian sailors repatriated.

March 13th, 2026

Courtesy Hiru News

A special aircraft carrying the remains of 84 Iranian sailors who died aboard the ‘IRIS DENA’ departed from Mattala International Airport for Iran this afternoon (13).

Deputy Minister of Defense Aruna Jayasekara stated that the Iranian warship sank in Sri Lankan waters following a strike.

The vessel was destroyed on March 4th in international waters, a few nautical miles off the southern coast of Sri Lanka, after being hit by a torpedo from an American submarine.

Before repatriation, the bodies were kept at the Galle Karapitiya Teaching Hospital.

Following the completion of legal proceedings, a court order recently authorised the release of the remains to the Iranian Embassy.

Pothcast | බුදුන් උපන්නේ කොහෙද? | Patali Champika Ranawaka

March 13th, 2026

Patali Champika Ranawaka


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