“SETTLER COLONIALISM” AND TAMIL EELAM Part 5Ca

November 22nd, 2024

KAMALIKA PIERIS

Gal Oya starts in the hill country east of Badulla and flows through the south east of Sri Lanka passing Inginiyagala and flows into the sea 16 km south of Kalmunai.

The idea of using   Gal Oya for development was first suggested in the late 1930s.  A technical survey on harnessing the development potential of the Gal Oya catchment was conducted in 1936. A more detailed ‘Gal Oya Development Plan’ was formulated in 1946. The Gal Oya Development Board was appointed in 1949. It was modeled on the Tennessee Valley Authority and the Damodar Valley Corporation, but these were giant corporations, unlike Gal 0ya.

The Gal Oya Irrigation and Power Project was inaugurated on August 24, 1949. Irrigation engineer W. T. I. Alagaratnam carried out the preliminary surveys and investigations. He later became   the first Ceylonese   Director of Irrigation (1952-1955). Preliminary designs and estimates were prepared by Designs & Research Engineer D. W. R. Kahawita assisted by Designs Engineer, V. D. Kothare  and Actg. Designs Engineer V. N. Rajaratnam.

Kahawita took the designs to the consultants, at Denver, Colorado, USA.  The consultants, International Engineering Co were greatly impressed by the complete and comprehensive set of drawings, soil tests, gauge readings and other information needed to design the project, provided by Kahawita and his team.  Kahawita participated in the Denver design team’s work and was a decision maker in the project, said analysts. [1]

Gal Oya was Sri Lanka’s first, much hyped, development project of the post-independence period. It was a multipurpose project, serving Agriculture, Irrigation, Flood Control, Domestic Water Supply and Hydro Power.

The Gal Oya scheme was located some 150 miles from Colombo, in a region that had previously been jungle, sparsely populated by slash-and-burn cultivators. The valley had the air of being sealed off. It was situated in the deep interior and seemed inaccessible because of poor roads and transport.

Construction work began in March 1949. Modern machinery as well as elephants were used.  Machinery removed the top soil as well as the trees. Large swathes of land had been dozered” bare. [2]

Work on the Left Bank started in 1951, Right Bank in 1957. Headworks were completed in 1951 and the  water sent out.     The project created new water bodies, but also incorporated existing tanks such as Kondavattavan, Valathippiddy, Veeragoda, Chadayantalawa and Irakkamam. A 10 MW hydro power plant was built.

 Gal Oya project created a reservoir at Inginiyagala. The catchment area of the reservoir was in the Uva Province, but the reservoir benefited those living in the Eastern Province, observed analysts. The reservoir, Senanayake Samudra, had a capacity of 979 million cubic meters.   Gal Oya National Park was declared in 1954 to protect the reservoir’s catchment area.

Immediately below the dam there were three main channels that control the delivery of the water the Right Bank (11,741 ha), the River Division (8,502 ha), and the Left Bank (16,328 ha).

The main reservoir was completed in 1960, and the full irrigation system transferred from the Gal Oya Development Board to the Irrigation Department. Its combined irrigated area made Gal Oya the largest contiguous irrigation system in Sri Lanka.[3]

Rice production was a priority at Gal Oya because 70% of the rice was imported. [4] The project would provide irrigation for 70,000 acres of new paddy land. Gal Oya acquired a huge rice mill, to assist in processing rice.

 Provision was also made for cultivation and marketing cash crops by agricultural organizations. There was also a tile factory and   a sugar factory at Gal Oya. The sugar factory was an utter failure, said analysts.  The local farmers, unused to sugar cane cultivation, were never able to supply more than 18% of the factory’s requirements

The project functioned from 1951 onwards, garnering both praise and criticism. In 1966 the Dudley Senanayake government appointed a Committee to Evaluate the Gal Oya Project. The committee stated that from a purely cost/benefit point of view the project was a failure. But from colonization, paddy production point of view the project was successful. .[5]

The Gal oya scheme was also a colonization scheme, providing land to the landless. Gal Oya was sparsely populated, much of it was jungle. The jungle area was developed and people brought in and settled. First preference was given to people from the Eastern province. There were no applicants.[6]

Tamil Separatist Movement charged that Sinhala colonists were brought into the traditional homelands of the Tamils”. K.M. de Silva   said that Gal Oya and most of the other major colonization schemes of the Eastern Province were located in areas which were either the sites of remnant Sinhalese villages or were jungle. For example, the Sinhala farmers were given land in Wewegampattu, which was a Sinhala area. [7]

 The number of families settled from 1951 – 1953 were: from  Batticaloa district  852 families, Kandy  213, Kegalle  275, Uva 250, Hambantota  175. By 1962, 6000 families were settled in over 40 villages. 2250 families were from the Batticaloa area.  3750 families came from other parts of the country.

  S.J.Tambiah said about 50 percent of the settlers came from Eastern Province. They were Muslims and Tamils. This group also included Veddahs. The other 50% came from outside Gal Oya. About 25% of this second category came from from the Central Province, the majority being from the Kandy and Kegalle districts. The balance 25% came from Southern, Western, and Sabaragamuwa provinces, and they were all Sinhalese. [8]

Jayasuriya looked at the period 1951-1962. He said initially 15 villages, each with about 150 families were occupied by 2 categories of people .The first category were settlers from the area including Veddahs. They were the first to be settled in Wavinne and Paragahakelle in 1951. They were hunters and chena cultivators and they found it difficult to adjust to their new surroundings.

The second category was people from East Coast villages around Kalmunai. They were not interested in changing their traditional methods of livelihood. Their land produced only about 25 bushels of paddy per acre.

The most successful were those from Kandy and Kegalle. 25 villages, each with about 150 families, were occupied by settlers from Kandy and Kegalle in 1955/1956 . They were allotted 1 acre of highland & 3 acres of paddy land. They were the most enthusiastic . They used fertilizers  and improved methods of cultivation. Their land gave the highest yield of 45 bushels per acre..[9]

By 1980, the numbers had increased. Vandervelde reported that  about 19,000 families were resident in the project area, mostly  second or third generation sons and daughters of original colonist families for whom no provision for agricultural land was made in the original settlement. (VanderVelde 1982)  

The settlements were segregated by ethnic group.  Sinhalese settlements were separate from the settlements of the  east coast Tamils and Muslims. Nine settlements were located in the  Batticaloa District. There were no Sinhalese in these settlements.

From 1950 to 1958, about 43 village units were created in the Left Bank. The  Left Bank channel’ extended into Batticaloa District. Sinhalese households were in the majority in the Left Bank. Most of these were settled in the head and middle areas in the Left Bank, while Tamil and Muslim households were located downstream. [10]

The Sinhalese were settled on the favored upper reaches of the Left Bank, immediately below the dam, and the others were allotted less well irrigated lands at the ends of the irrigation channels close to their original settlements, reported Tambiah.

Vandervelde (1982) said  that on the Left Bank at the top end all families are Sinhala. They  have no problems with irrigation. The middle zone is mixed, majority Muslim with Sinhala and Tamil. They have serious problems with irrigation during the Yala season. At the bottom area families are from the Tamil speaking Muslim community and Tamil community. This area experiences the most acute and persistent water problems, including domestic water, especially during the Yala season.

Wimalaratne & Uphoff (1997) said that the most productive farming in Gal Oya was done in parts of the Right Bank and in the central portion of the system served directly by the Gal Oya River, because these areas had better water supply. The population in these areas was mostly Tamil and Muslim.

The colonists came into Gal Oya at staggered intervals as the main irrigation channels, distribution channels and field channels were developed and the paddy field sites were cleared and leveled. The first batch arrived in Gal Oya in November 1951. [11]

K.A. Podi Menike had come as an eight-year-old with her parents from Gonagala in Kegalle. When her father left his ancestral home and hearth and arrived with only his family and bundles of clothing to make a life here   Colony hathalihak hadala minissu dura gam walin genawa, she recalled.

63-year-old Digamadulle said his father was from Hindagala, Peradeniya and his mother from Dunkewila, Gampola. News filtered to Gampola that Gal Oya needed settlers. Seventy-two applications went from their village and nine families, eight of whom were closely related, were chosen after medical check-ups. In 1952 a lorry picked them up and dropped them at the Gampola Railway Station. When they de-trained at Batticaloa, they were met by a Colonization Officer and two Village Officers.

Herath Mudiyanselage Gunaratne came from Badulla. His father grew oranges there for a living but decided to take a chance in the new world of Gal Oya. They were amongst the first settlers, arriving to a literal desert, with all vegetation cleared by huge machinery and set ablaze in the village of Wawinna. Ithama dushkarai api enakota, yana-ena paraval thibbe ne, guru paraval witharai thibbe.” Malaria was rampant and the ambulance was regularly taking the sick to hospital.

Gunaratne attended the new village school which had on its register about 140 children and was the first to pass the Senior School Certificate from there, after which he trained as a teacher and returned to serve the area, retiring as a Principal.

Each colonist family was given a small cottage with three rooms, all tools such as mammoties, pannittu (buckets), kethi (sickles) lanterns, 400 rupees to buy  buffaloes  for ploughing and two busal of bittara wee (seed paddy) of the Illankaliya variety.

Their new houses were of cement-block walls and tile-roof while a school in the area before the scheme sported only goma-meti biththi (mud walls) and an iluk-thatched roof. The colonists were issued balapatra (permits) for the land they cultivated which were later changed to Swarnabhoomi or Jayabhoomi deeds. .[12]

The original allotments to each peasant family was 4 acres of irrigated paddy land and 3 acres of highland. This was reduced to 3 acres of paddy land and 2 acres of highland in 1953, and still later to 2 acres of paddy land and 1 acre of highland. [13] The families had to  have knowledge of  farming, [14] be in need of land and  their eldest should be a son. [15]

Farmer Organizations were  set up. the ‘main channels’ under the Gal Oya Scheme would be looked after by the Irrigation Department, the ‘distribution channels’ jointly by the department and the farmers and the ‘field channels’ by the farmers, using these Farmers Organizationa..[16] ( continued)


[1] https://thuppahis.com/2022/05/20/the-galoya-valley-scheme-the-people-who-made-it-a-reality/ KK de Silva.

[2] https://www.sundaytimes.lk/180204/plus/an-ocean-of-gratefulness-still-flows-279447.html

[3] https://www.iwmi.org/Publications/IWMI_Research_Reports/PDF/PUB018/REPORT18.PDF

[4] https://thuppahis.com/2017/01/14/gal-oya-addressing-errors-in-ajit-kanagasundrams-recollections/ GH Peiris

[5] https://www.lankaweb.com/news/items/2016/10/10/the-gal-oya-project-60-years-on/

[6] Neville ladduwahetty cites Hoole etc.    See Island  continuation  of the 20.5.16 essay

[7]Gamini Iriyagolle  The Eastern Province, Tamil Claims and “Colonisation”   https://fosus2.tripod.com/fs20000614.htm

[8] https://thuppahis.com/2017/02/02/the-anti-tamil-gal-oya-riots-of-1956/ SJ Tambiah

[9] https://thuppahis.com/2022/05/20/the-galoya-valley-scheme-the-people-who-made-it-a-reality/  KK de Silva.

[10] https://thuppahis.com/2017/01/14/gal-oya-addressing-errors-in-ajit-kanagasundrams-recollections/ GH Peiris

[11] https://thuppahis.com/2017/01/14/gal-oya-addressing-errors-in-ajit-kanagasundrams-recollections/ GH Peiris

[12] https://www.sundaytimes.lk/180204/plus/an-ocean-of-gratefulness-still-flows-279447.html

[13] Economic Review, March, 1977

[14] https://thuppahis.com/2017/02/02/the-anti-tamil-gal-oya-riots-of-1956/ SJ Tambiah

[15] https://www.sundaytimes.lk/180204/plus/an-ocean-of-gratefulness-still-flows-279447.html

[16] https://www.sundaytimes.lk/180204/plus/an-ocean-of-gratefulness-still-flows-279447.html

“SETTLER COLONIALISM” AND TAMIL EELAM Part 5Cb

November 22nd, 2024

KAMALIKA PIERIS

Tamils were initially very keen on the Gal Oya Project. They thought it would help   strengthen their position in the Eastern Province. They thought it would strengthen Settler Colonization. Gal Oya scheme was in Ampara and Ampara was part of Batticaloa the time.

G.H. PeIris observed that the records of the State Council proceedings indicate very clearly that Tamil representatives, especially those from Batticaloa District which, at that time covered the present Ampara District as well, were at the forefront of the agitation for implementing the Gal Oya project in the 1940s. [1]

However, when they found that the Gal Oya project was going to bring Sinhala settlers into Gal Oya, their attitude changed. The Tamil Separatist Movement then became openly hostile to the project.  Settler Colonization greatly feared the arrival of the Sinhalese into the Eastern Province.

The Gal Oya Irrigation and Power Project was inaugurated on August 24, 1949. Three months later, on the occasion of the inauguration of ITAK, in December 1949, its leader, Chelvanayagam, said There is evidence that the government intends planting a Sinhalese population in this purely Tamil-speaking area.”  He warned that the government’s colonization policy, starting with Gal Oya was even more dangerous to the Tamil people than Sinhala Only.[2]

Chelvanayagam had also complained to K.Kanagasunderam. Kanagasunderam was the Chairman, Gal Oya Development Board from 1952-1957.  Kanagasunderam’s son recalled, Once, travelling to Batticaloa by train, my father was told by SJV Chelvanayagam   Young man, do you realize that you are driving a dagger into the heart of the Tamil people”.

 Father had explained that, as AGA Kegalle, he had witnessed the dire land hunger of the Kandyan peasantry. The lands to be colonized at Gal Oya were un-inhabited jungle lands. There would be ample village expansion lands for the Tamils and Muslims too. Chelvanayagam had rejected the explanation. [3]

At Gal Oya the first preference for settlement   was given to people from the Eastern Province. But there were no applications from the Eastern Province. No one had applied. Tamil Separatist Movement noted this much later on, with deep regret. [4]    Clearly East coast Tamils had not wanted to leave the coastal areas and go into the hinterland. The Gal Oya Board then turned to applicants outside the Eastern Province. They found plenty. There were eighty eight applicants from HIndagala, (Peradeniya). Only 8 were selected. [5]

It is not well known that there were Sinhala-Tamil clashes in Batticaloa before the Gal Oya riots. There were Sinhalese in Batticaloa at the time,  well entrenched, doing business. Pieter Keuneman, speaking in Parliament in 1956 said the Eastern Province had a history of communal rioting,   S. J. V. Chelvanayakam admitted in    Parliament on 26 July 1956 that there had been clashes in Batticaloa and in the area between Batticaloa and Kalmunai before the Gal Oya riots took place. He admitted that   the offenders were Tamils .  [6]

The  Gal Oya  settlers  did not go straight to Gal Oya from their homes. They hit Batticaloa first. Batticaloa was a Tamil majority district . 1953 Census showed 72% Tamil, 25% Muslim and 1% Sinhalese.[7]  Batticaloa was also the entry point to the Gal Oya scheme. The road to Gal Oya started at Batticaloa and went through Kalmunai, also Tamil into the Gal Oya scheme.  

Gal Oya  settlers  arrived at Batticaloa by train to proceed  by road to Gal Oya.  Tamils  were  not happy to see the Gal Oya project become a reality.  In 1951  Tamils  demonstrated  when  the  first Sinhala settlers arrived at Batticaloa   railway station   . The ‘demonstration’ was   clearly an alarmingly aggressive one, because the army was brought in. Not police, but army. It should be noted therefore that the first Sinhala settlers  arrived at their settlements  in Gal Oya under army protection.

K.S. Podi Menike   who hailed from Kegalle recalled    that  from Polgahawela they took the train to Batticaloa. At Batticaloa  railway station,  they faced violent protests by the Tamils.  They travelled to their new home  in Gal Oya accompanied by an army escort.  Army came in the lorries they travelled in, she recalled,  providing a guard from the Railway Station to their  new home. [8] This means that  even before they   arrived  at Gal Oya, at Batticaloa railway station  itself,  the  Sinhala  settlers  faced aggressive  Tamil opposition.

The Gal Oya authorities would have known  that the East coast Tamils  as well as  ITAK objected to  Sinhala settlements in the east. The settlements  were therefore   planned as segregated settlements, not mixed. Sinhalese settlements were   separate from the Tamil and Muslim settlements.

 Elsewhere in Sri Lanka , Tamils and Sinhalese were living  next to each other. But Gal Oya was different.  The  Gal Oya colonization scheme was   in a highly  sensitive area. It was reaching into   the Eastern Province which Settler Colonization wanted to make fully Tamil. Settlement of large number of Sinhalese  in what Tamil nationalists considered their traditional Tamil homeland, would   create tension, observed   critics.

Four years later, in 1956, a few months after the  April 1956  general election,  Gal Oya became the site of the first major  Sinhala-Tamil riot. The riots started on June 11, 1956 and continued over the next five days. Gal Oya Board authorities were unable  to control the riots. They had to bring in the army.The army brought the riots under control.

S.J. Tambiah  , then  a lecturer in University of Ceylon had been in Gal Oya doing field work with his students when the riots broke out there.  On his return to Peradeniya , he was asked by the  Vice Chancellor, Nicholas Attygalle  to provide a  report on the riots, because these riots were a new phenomenon and  people did not know what to make of them.

In his report[9]  Tambiah said the Gal Oya disturbance cannot be treated as an isolated phenomenon. It must be viewed in the general context of communal tensions existing in the country and also as a continuation of disturbances that started in Colombo from June 5th.[10]Violence on a scale hitherto unknown broke out in Gal Oya some five days after Sinhala-Tamil clashes took place in Colombo, over Sinhala Only, he observed.

 If you wonder what the relationship between the official language controversy and ethnic violence in the Eastern Province might be, why the rioting leapt from urban Colombo on the west coast to Gal Oya, a bustling enclave of hectic development activity and peasant resettlement, the answer is that around this time, the language issue was also becoming interwoven with the government’s policy of peasant resettlement, continued Tambiah. [11]  

The  Sinhala Only” Bill, specifying that Sinhala would henceforth replace English as Sri Lanka’s official language was presented in Parliament on June 5th 1951. ITAK Leaders had  whipped up feeling against the Bill  for weeks. There was a hartal” in the Tamil-majority areas of Sri Lanka on June 5th.

 Also on June 5 ITAK staged a satyagraha at Galle Face Green in Colombo. Some 200 Tamil protesters, including leading politicians, took part. They were beaten up by  a crowd of Sinhalese who had  assembled there. Some  had to be taken to hospital.

In Batticaloa, probably at the same time, a mass demonstration by about ten thousand Tamils was fired on by the police, resulting in at least two deaths, reported Tambiah. [12] The main supply route to Gal Oya was the Batticaloa-Ampara road. There were large numbers of Tamils concentrated in Batticaloa and in the colonized areas of the valley, and a large number of Sinhalese in the Gal Oya Valley.  What takes place in Batticaloa and its hinterland would have repercussions in the Valley and vice versa, observed Tambiah.

The  riots  in Gal Oya were Sinhala versus Tamil . Both groups attacked each other .According to  a newspaper account the riots had started by someone setting fire to a Sinhalese shop in Batticaloa.  A Sinhalese inside the shop had shot three Tamil persons in the crowd that had gathered to watch the fire. A false rumor was spread in Gal Oya that a Sinhalese girl had been raped and made to walk naked down a street in Batticaloa town, by a Tamil mob.[13]

In his report to the Vice Chancellor Tambiah said, I was told that the rioting, assaults and looting in the Gal Oya scheme was done mainly by the irrigation and construction workers in Ampara   and those working in other construction sites such as Pallang Oya.  This group was   later joined by truck drivers.

Unlike the colonists who were a permanent population, these irrigation and construction workers and truck drivers, were not permanent residents in Ampara. They might not have been directly concerned with the language issue, but the politics and the wave of emotionalism prevailing in the country at the time, pushed them to exploit the situation, said Tambiah.[14]  This group later went to the Gal Oya   workshop,   took the vehicles in the workshop and went into the colonized areas. On the third day the fighting had spread to the colonized areas which had hitherto been peaceful.

Several incidents took place at Gal Oya on the first day, reported Tambiah. A bus was stopped and asked whether there were Tamils in the bus. On being told there were none, they were allowed to proceed . Miranda’s, a restaurant and store run by Indian Tamils was set on fire.

Gal Oya Board officials were celebrating at a café. a mob collected outside and demanded that the Tamil officials and their wives inside be delivered to them, the Sinhalese officials refused to do so. Instead they were smuggled out the back way. When the Sinhala officials emerged they were assaulted and their cars stoned.

The Sinhala Assistant Commissioner of Local Government told Tambiah that the rioters entered his house, where another official, Rajavarothiam also lived, and assaulted Rajavarothiam. Independent of this, Tambiah saw four Tamils brought to hospital. Two were dangerously clubbed on their skulls.

Thanks to all this, Tamils in Ampara had run to the Circuit Bungalow to seek refuge. By evening of the first day, the Circuit Bungalow was full of Tamils. A large [Sinhala] mob had encircled the Circuit Bungalow. the mob tried to stop a jeep bringing a Bren gun and assaulted the driver. the police opened fire. One man was shot dead through the bowels, another shot through the shoulder (he subsequently died) and the third was shot in the arm. All three were Sinhalese.

 Then the mob cut off the electricity and water supply to the bungalow, and a group broke into a dynamite dump at Inginiyagala and stole dynamite with the intention of blowing up the bungalow. Fortunately they could not lay hands on the detonators. The military arrived about 11 P.M. and with their arrival the mob dispersed. [15] Tamil refugees in Ampara were sent under escort to Batticaloa.

Tamil colonists retreating to their parent villages returned in large numbers armed with guns. Pitched battles began to take place in Bakiella, Vellai Valli, and the village units 11, 16, 14.  A lorry arrived in Ampara with Sinhalese refugees from Bakiella, who said that they had been attacked by Tamil Colonists, reported Tambiah.

It was rumored that an army of 6,000 Tamils armed with guns were in the process of approaching the Sinhalese settlements in the Gal Oya valley. This caused pandemonium. Some Sinhala colonists ran to the Circuit bungalow seeking refuge there.

On the fourth morning the bungalow grounds were swarming with Sinhalese refugees from the colonized areas, recalled Tambiah. Other Colonists started to flee in the direction of Ampara.  Vehicles packed with men, women and children evacuated the valley through the Inginiyagala-Moneragala road.

The rioters however, unlike the colonists, did not run away. Vehicles filled with armed men and carrying dynamite went to meet the mythical Tamil army which was supposed to be advancing. Batticaloa then became the scene of a reverse scare and rumor, continued Tambiah.

 The G.A.’s bungalow was mobbed by residents of Batticaloa who said that a Sinhalese army from Ampara, armed and in possession of dynamite and travelling in Gal Oya Board vehicles was going to attack the town. They requested the G.A. to issue them with rifles and to give them permission to blow up the bridges. No such attack took place, however.

The riots were discussed in Parliament. Pieter Keuneman said that while the Eastern Province had a history of communal rioting,  the events of June 1956 dwarfed them. The government should be more careful when forming mixed colonies

the explanations offered for the  Gal Oya riots, that it was due to food shortage, administration matters or labor problems was  incorrect, he said. The riots took place in the context of earlier incidents against Sinhalese in the Batticaloa-Kalmunai area. He called for a Commission of inquiry.

On 26 July 1956, S. J. V. Chelvanayakam, said in Parliament The Hon. Prime Minister announced that he was going to appoint a commission of inquiry into the riots at Gal Oya and elsewhere in the Batticaloa District. There were clashes before, but the scale of such attacks never rose to the level of riots.  Rioting took place on the 5th and 6th in Colombo and on the 11th and 12th at Gal Oya. (edited)[[16]

There was no Commission of Inquiry on the Gal Oya riots. There was an inquiry conducted by the Inspector General of Police, in collaboration with the Gal Oya Development Board, but in the huge turbulences of 1958 and the chaos that followed the SWRD assassination, the Gal-Oya riots faded into oblivion, said G.H .Peries. [17] The Sinhala Only” Bill, specifying that Sinhala would henceforth replace English as Sri Lanka’s official language was passed on June 14, 1956, by a vote of 56 to 29.  ( continued)


[1] https://thuppahis.com/2017/01/14/gal-oya-addressing-errors-in-ajit-kanagasundrams-recollections/ GH Peiris

[2] https://thuppahis.com/2017/02/02/the-anti-tamil-gal-oya-riots-of-1956/ SJ Tambiah

[3] https://www.lankaweb.com/news/items/2016/10/10/the-gal-oya-project-60-years-on/

[4] Neville ladduwahetty cites Hoole etc. island  continautin of the 20.5.16 essay p … Modern used file 13

[5] https://www.sundaytimes.lk/180204/plus/an-ocean-of-gratefulness-still-flows-279447.html

[6] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1956_anti-Tamil_pogrom

[7] 1951 Census was postponed to 1953.

[8] https://www.sundaytimes.lk/180204/plus/an-ocean-of-gratefulness-still-flows-279447.html

[9] https://thuppahis.com/2017/02/02/the-anti-tamil-gal-oya-riots-of-1956/ SJ Tambiah

[10] Stanley J. Tambiah, Leveling Crowds. Ethnonationalist Conflicts and Collective Violence in South Asia, pp. 87-94 https://thuppahis.com/2017/02/02/tambiahs-contemporary-account-of-the-gal-oya-riots-of-1956-to-vice-chancellor-attygalle/

 

[11] https://thuppahis.com/2017/02/02/the-anti-tamil-gal-oya-riots-of-1956/ SJ Tambiah

[12] https://thuppahis.com/2017/02/02/the-anti-tamil-gal-oya-riots-of-1956/ SJ Tambiah

[13] https://ellalanpadai.wordpress.com/2013/12/11/ceylon-anti-tamil-riots-part-1-gal-oya-riots/

[14] https://thuppahis.com/2017/02/02/tambiahs-contemporary-account-of-the-gal-oya-riots-of-1956-to-vice-chancellor-attygalle/

[15] https://thuppahis.com/2017/02/02/tambiahs-contemporary-account-of-the-gal-oya-riots-of-1956-to-vice-chancellor-attygalle/

[16]  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1956_anti-Tamil_pogrom

[17] https://thuppahis.com/2017/01/14/gal-oya-addressing-errors-in-ajit-kanagasundrams-recollections/ GH Peiris

Let Us Stop the War!

November 22nd, 2024

Prof. Hudson McLean

UK Cannot & Must Not Risk the Citizens of UK for a Corrupt Regime in Ukraine! 

Biden Made a Huge Mistake to Allow Ukraine Long Range Missiles.

Let Us Stop the War!

Express Your Opinion – Read What Others Say!
The Independent Interactive Voice of Sri Lanka on the Internet.

Please visit -: http://www.lankaweb.com/

Let Elon Musk Lead Trump & USA!

November 22nd, 2024

Prof. Hudson McLean

Let Elon Musk Lead Trump & USA! 

The IQ, Experience, Background, Success  of Elon Musk is Much Superior than the rest of Trump Team collectively!

Ukraine to Allow Long Range by USA & UK is an unnecessary escalation, more killing  just before Christmas and when Trump will VETO as he starts in January!

Biden runs from Afghanistan leaving Billions of Dollars of Americam military assets and now getting Russia to destroy Ukraine, as well as threatening UK, Finland & Poland.

Express Your Opinion – Read What Others Say!
The Independent Interactive Voice of Sri Lanka on the Internet.

Please visit -: http://www.lankaweb.com/

Government Digital Transformation: Opportunities, Challenges and Strategies

November 22nd, 2024

By Dr. Gamini Padmaperuma

Initiatives on Digital Transformation are given very high priority by the new government. While the opportunities and benefits that are associated with Digital Transformation are widely highlighted, the challenges that face such major initiative are not so well identified. The purpose of this article is to highlight Opportunities, Challenges and Strategies relating to the Digital Transformation with a view to providing a holistic view of the subject.

The benefits of the Digital Transformation are widely published in the literature. These publications relate to case studies and other experiences worldwide relating to digitalization in both private and public sector. The experiences in digitalization initiatives in private and public sector have many similarities while they also do differ in some major aspects. In this article, the author will try to focus on the general issues as well as the specific issues which directly relate to the digitalization in governments.

Key Opportunities

Following are a few major opportunities and benefits of the digital transformation in the government:

Increased efficiency and productivity: Having a single reliable source, and ready access of documents and data can save valuable time in finding and updating information. Readily accessible data means users have the information they need when they need it the most. Document management automation can also help avoid repetitive tasks and streamline workflows, avoiding the need for manual data entry, etc.

Better understanding of stakeholders: With relevant data, it is easier to establish a reliable picture and behavior patterns of both internal and external stakeholders and use this information to continuous improvement of services. For example, with internal digital workflows (instead of exchanging physical files among different offices), it is much easier to identify bottlenecks and take action to remove them. Externally, website data and analytics can reveal valuable insights into how citizens use the site and where improvements can be made.

Effective collaboration across the organization: With documents and data accessible to everyone who needs them, every department has the latest version and the most accurate data. This avoids occurrence of out-of-date information in the reports, or the wrong details being held and duplicated across departments. 

Better decision-making through data-driven insights: Real-time access to documents and data means you always have the latest version.

More dynamic and responsive public services: Simply bringing in new technology does not constitute digital transformation. For transformation to be successful, it requires a deep cultural change. With people onboard, digital technologies can help organizations become more agile, making them more able to adapt to changing priorities and the demands of citizens.

Key Challenges

There are many challenges in implementing Digitalization in Government. Embarking on a digital transformation journey is not a simple task for any organization, and governments are no exception. The public sector faces unique challenges due to its size, complexity, and the critical nature of the services it provides. Major challenges include:

Resistance to Change: One of the major hurdles to digital transformation in government is the resistance to change. Well thought-out change management strategies, top management’s commitment and support and comprehensive training programs are necessary for promoting a culture of digital innovation.

Legacy Systems: Many government agencies depend on outdated legacy (traditional) systems that are incompatible with modern digital technologies. These systems can be expensive to maintain, difficult to integrate with newer solutions, and may pose security risks. This is where the Business Process Engineering (BPR) should be used to reengineer the inefficient and outdated processes prior to digitalization. Migrating data from legacy systems to modern platforms (digitizing) can also be a complex and time-consuming process.

Budget Constraints: Digital transformation initiatives can require significant financial investments in new technology, infrastructure, and training. However, governments often face budget constraints and competing priorities, making it difficult to secure the necessary funding.

Cybersecurity Risks: As governments digitize their services and store more sensitive data online, they become increasingly vulnerable to cyberattacks. The consequences of a successful cyberattack can be severe, including data breaches, service disruptions and loss of public trust. Ensuring the security of digital systems and protecting citizens’ data is a critical challenge for any digital government.

Skills Gap: Digital transformation requires a workforce with the skills to implement and manage new technologies. However, there is often a shortage of qualified personnel in the public sector with expertise in areas such as cyber security, data analytics and cloud computing. This skills gap can hinder the successful implementation of digital initiatives. The skills gap or the level of digital literacy of the citizens who are going to avail the government’s digitalized services is also a concern.

These challenges, while significant, are not insurmountable. By acknowledging and addressing these roadblocks upfront, the government can pave the way for a successful digital transformation.

Key Strategies

Despite the challenges, many governments worldwide have successfully implemented their digital transformations, proving that it is possible to overcome the obstacles. Here are some key strategies that can pave the way for success:

Strong Leadership: Digital transformation in government requires strong leadership at all levels. Leaders must articulate a clear vision for the digital future, set ambitious goals, and secure buy-in from stakeholders. They must also be willing to challenge the status quo, take calculated risks, and champion change throughout the organization.

Change Management: Successful digital transformation involves more than just implementing new technologies; it requires a fundamental shift in organizational culture. Change management strategies, such as top management commitment and support, effective communication, employee engagement and training programs, etc. are essential to ensure that employees understand the benefits of digital transformation and are equipped and motivated to adapt to new ways of working.

Technology Selection: Choosing the right technology solutions is critical for the success of digital transformation in government. This involves careful consideration of factors such as functionality, scalability, security, and compatibility with existing systems. Governments should also prioritize solutions that are user-friendly and accessible to all citizens, regardless of their digital literacy.

Collaboration: Digital transformation is not a solo endeavor. Governments can benefit significantly from collaborating with the private sector, academic institutions and other government agencies. Partnerships can provide access to expertise, resources, and innovative solutions that may not be available in-house. Sharing best practices and lessons learned can also accelerate the pace of transformation.

(Dr. Gamini Padmaperuma is a Chartered Professional Engineer, Honorary Fellow Member of the IESL, former Director, Academic Affairs at Saegis Campus and Senior Lecturer at OUSL. He holds a PhD in Instructional Design for Computer-Based Learning from the University of Canterbury, New Zealand and can be contacted at gamini_pad@hotmail.com) 

DIGITILISED TOURISM TO PROMOTE SRI LANKA AS THE BEST TOURIST DISTINATION BEAUTIFUL SRI LANKA IS SUGGESTED AS THE BRAND NAME ON THE TOURISM MAP

November 22nd, 2024

Sarath Wijesinghe President’s Counsel, former Ambassador to UAE and Israel Solicitor in England and Wales, President Ambassador’s Forum UK/SL

Best tourist destination ?

It is a known fact that Sri Lanka is one of the best tourist destinations – if not for the best-  which is a beautiful compact Island in the Indian ocean with varied climatic conditions within hours in an excellent network of roads and other modes of communications with facilities for other modes of transport available with the excellent infrastructure and communication network. It is a historic island with a great history to be proud of on culture civilization places of religious significance and today an educated nation with high library rate IT skills and mobile penetration of over 160% countrywide with the citizen skilled in operation of modern digital platforms in consumerism with the rest of the world. It is happy to note the newly elected government and the energetic young President has pledged to introduce digitalisation in all the sectors including tourism that will open a new chapter on tourism promotion which is badly needed to the ailing and battered economy to be taken to the correct tract to give relief to the citizen pressed with issues on cost of living and indebtedness to the world for the past mistakes by previous regimes. World is developing fast towards Artificial Intelligence and the closest  ally of AI is digitalisation which is the mode of compression of data and  images in a compressed format to be able to transfer,store and to be utilized fast and easily in all kind of business, technology and administrative activities. In the modern world when the world happening are so fast and in all sectors Sri Lanka can not afford to be lagging behind when other tourist nations and growing faster in the most competitive tourism  world which carries trillions to the  world economy and respective GDPs of the nations thriving by tourist trade.

President’s inaugural speech at the parliament on digital Sri Lanka

His speech was long as usual and delivered without notes or a written paper by others which is normally the case on previous occasions. He spoke from his heart based on knowledge and experience in many areas in details surprising the listeners including the foreign dignitaries on his eloquence, knowledge of subject matters, continuity,and the convincing nature of the speech on digitalisation amongst many other matters discussed. Whilst justifying the  appointment of Dr Hans Wijesuriya for the appointment he is amply suited to implement the digitalisation process in Sri Lanka, he put forward his vision and plan for the nation he is entrusted to represent based on his vision to the satisfaction of the citizen who are still undergoing hardships in all areas and respects with teh country as a nation during the difficult periods not in the vicinity of at least signs of successful future.

How will digitalisation help promote tourism ?

Digitalisation helps to store and forward the date and images fast accurately and technically for the promotional process of tourism in the modern form also towards Artificial Intelligence. A good example of implementation of AI is unmanned vehicles by Uber which is often used in tourism in Sri Lanka and worldwide. The other good news is that many digital and consumer platforms have initiated programs and implementation in Sri Lanka with easy access to the world on world affairs in business and eschatology. President AKD has reiterated that he will take steps to utilize digitalization developments which he has proved by taking the services of Dr Hans Wijesuriya who has chosen  to lead ICTA whilst serving the President on voluntary basis are new and pleasant developments. Digitalisation may help expedite the system and prevent corruption and briary to the minimum as there could be an orderly system in place on digitalisation, that also will help to step into the next stage of Artificial Inelegancy obviously depend on the next steps strategies and implementation of strategies and policies.

Brand for Tourism in Sri Lanka Let us suggest ‘’Beautiful Sri Lanka’’ to be the brand name

Volume on tourism and hospitality edited by this author with 40 chapters and 330 pages is freely availabe on the Google Drive for the public

India’s Brand is Incredible India, and Malesia’s brand is Truly Asia and there is none on the internet on  Sri Lanka and we suggest it to be ‘’ beautiful Sri Lanka’’ as it is a truly most beautiful compact island full of beauty and all requirements to be the best tourist destination. We hope the Head of Tourism Mr ‘Buddhadasa’ who appears to be a genuine and learned professional on the subject ( though I have not met him yet as I am based in UK planning to  be in SL soon) take our suggestion forward  to appropriate forums for Sri Lanka to have a brand name which is a requirement in promoting tourism which may be a boom to our GDP funds are badly needed. In Sri Lanka the largest contribution to GDP is on tourism which is 12%,and France 231 billion as the most visited nation, USA earns2.36 million UK 100 million are few examples of earnings on tourism for the GDP which are lessons for us as the most beautiful island with a great potential to contributes much more in billons if properly utilized the beauty and resources to suit the modern world.

Way forward for Sri Lanka to be the best tourist destination on the Globe

It appears we have a Minister who will read  and listen and a professional to lead tourism in teh right direction, with no resistance from the top and also to be able to serve with not undue influence and free of bribery and corruption. These are our visions and thinking as observers, professionals and academics to give you guidance on implementation of the task before you entrusted by the people with great expectations and trust. It is your duty to implement it with no fer or favour to gather maximum to our GDP. Sarath Wijesinghe could be reached on sarathdw7@gmail.com The articles by the editor could be retried from the internet/ Towards the best destination of the globe – a reality/ Sri Lanka an ideal tourist destination in the future/Tourism in Sri Lanka to be the best destination of the globe/ Sri Lanka a Paradise  tourists and tourism on the globe/Foreign policy foreign relations foreign policy and foreign relations/Cricket cinnamon tea and tourism/Comparative tourism regimes and world tourism day/Tourism and hospitality/World based omnipresent digital Normandy/SMEs  on tourism the cradle of tourist industry/Is tourism booming in Sri Lanka/

Honeymoon year’ for Sri Lanka’s new govt

November 22nd, 2024

Padma Rao Sundarji Courtesy The Asian Age

Sri Lanka’s NPP sweeps elections, ending political dynasties. Challenges await in corruption, IMF demands, and ethnic relations Fed up of nepotism, corruption and a staggering economic crisis and for the first time in their history, Sri Lankan citizens last week voted a largely unknown political party, the National People’s Power (NPP), with a landslide two-thirds majority in their Parliament. The snap poll came barely two months after the leader of the NPP, Anura Kumara Dissanayake of the Marxist-Leninist-Communist Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP), was elected as the country’s new President.

But though the NPP’s parliamentary victory last week was somewhat predictable, few expected such a resounding one. It ensured the defeat of political dynasties like the powerful Rajapaksa family and the supremely confident Opposition leader Sajith Premadasa, also the son of a former President. Even political veteran Ranil Wickremesinghe, who, as the former President, had at least set the debt-ridden country on the path to recovery over the past two years, was shown the door.

A motley constellation of NPP activists, academics and doctors will now occupy 159 seats in the 225-member Parliament. In many ways, the NPP’s victory is no ordinary one. There is a trim cabinet of 22 ministers. The previous one had more than 50 Cabinet ministers and ministers of state. Of the total elected 159 MPs, 145 are rank newcomers to politics and 20 are women. However, the most outstanding achievement of all is how the NPP fared in the Tamil-Hindu-dominated Northern Province of Sri Lanka.

President Dissanayake’s JVP has a bloody and chequered past. It had instigated two uprisings, in which thousands were killed. The JVP has consistently rejected all attempts to grant greater autonomy to Sri Lanka’s Tamil-majority Northern and Eastern provinces, such as the 1987 India-authored 13th Amendment to the Sri Lankan Constitution. But more than autonomy, Sri Lankan Tamils are enraged about other issues.

Even 15 years after the end of the devastating civil war, the Sri Lankan Army continues to occupy land in their provinces. The local police, too, still report to the Central government in Colombo. Since Mr Dissanayake himself made no reference to the Tamil demands before he became President in September, it could be surmised that of the 690 odd parties who contested last week’s snap election, his JVP/NPP would be the last to win hearts in the Tamil heartland. And yet, that’s precisely what happened. At a recent rally in Jaffna and much to the chagrin of his security detail, Mr Dissanayake mingled fearlessly with the Tamil audience, and promised to return occupied lands. That had a mighty effect.

The NPP became the first Sinhala-Buddhist party to win in the traditionally hardline Tamil bastions of Jaffna and the Vanni, where the terror group, Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, once had its headquarters”. The northern victory by NPP is historical,” says Jaffna-based economist Ahilan Kadirgamar. Over the last few years, the Tamil National Alliance (parliamentary party in Colombo), which was really a political mouthpiece of the separatist Tamil Tigers, provided no solutions. Instead, they kept lobbying Western actors and the Tamil diaspora kept pumping money into the TNA to prop it up. Alienation mounted. People were angry, they lost faith. And they turned to Dissanayake.”

The director of Colombo’s National Peace Council (NPC), Jehan Perera, points to other factors that led to the NPP’s path-breaking victory in the North. Tamils voted for the NPP because they see how happy the rest of the country is with it, and felt they could trust it too,” he says. But he warns that the NPP must now put that faith to good use. The new government has a majority, but it must not act unilaterally. It now has ‘its own’ minority Tamils and Muslims in Parliament. And since these MPs have themselves come in under the JVP/NPP mandate, it will be harder for them to obstruct the government. It is very hard for Sri Lanka’s Sinhala majority to think like its minorities. So, the latter must be consulted, when it comes to ethnic relations,” Dr Perera said.

However, minority woes, or even relations with India (whose security interests the NPP government says it will protect) are not the main issues in Colombo right now. There is endemic corruption, that led to the devastating economic meltdown in 2022, for one. President Dissanayake has sworn to put an end to it. But to any South Asia watcher, corruption is a by-product of unlimited power and an inherent fault-line that cannot be eradicated.

So how will Mr Dissanayake’s largely inexperienced government succeed, when others have failed? I agree that corruption is embedded at every level,” says Dr Perera. But over the past 40 years, JVP leaders have demonstrated a certain ascetic quality. They dress simply and don’t lead ostentatious lives. I am confident that that ethos of the core JVP group will permeate the NPP, and Sri Lankan society as a whole. Everybody knows that this government has inherited a bad situation and will give them time for their promised reforms.”

The other urgent issue is Sri Lanka’s staggering external debt and the ongoing negotiations with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to help pull the country out of its economic crisis. The IMF had approved an Extended Fund Facility (EFF) of $3 billion to be disbursed over 48 months and subject to periodic reviews.

An IMF delegation recently concluded its third such review. But the austerity measures” that the IMF has demanded of the Sri Lankan government are what made the previous President, Ranil Wickremesinghe, highly unpopular. President Dissanayake had defeated him by assuring relief from those very austerity measures, whilst assuring adherence to the IMF’s demands at the same time. But that’s a Gordian knot. Can it really be untangled?

A billion-dollar question”, said economist Ahilan Kadirgamar, who maintains that the IMF had mounted early pressure on Mr Dissanayake by arriving in Sri Lanka ahead of the presidential poll in September, when it became clear that the Marxist” would win, and that it was almost a kind of blackmail into cornering him” to accept the IMF’s conditions. The NPP raised expectations all over Sri Lanka and is now secure with an overwhelming vote,” he said. This is the honeymoon period. But, if the government fails to find a balance between the IMF’s demands and relief measures in about a year from now, we may well see protests on the streets all over again.”

Sri Lankan shares closed lower on Thursday, dragged by real estate and industrial stocks.

November 22nd, 2024

Courtesy The Business Recorder

The CSE All-Share index settled 1% lower at 12,982.10.

Sri Lanka’s consumer price inflation reached minus 0.7% year-on-year in October after easing to minus 0.2% in September, official data showed on Thursday, as the island nation continued its economic rebound.

The change was largely driven by a slowing in non-food price inflation that dipped to minus 2.3% in October from minus 0.7% in September, the Department of Census and Statistics said.

Sri Lankan shares rise as president reappoints prime minister, keeps finance minister role

Bukit Darah Plc and eChannelling Plc were the top losers on the index, down 7.8% each.

Trading volume on the index rose to 161.4 million shares from 137.6 million shares in the previous session.

The equity market’s turnover rose to 7.04 billion Sri Lankan rupees ($24.20 million) from 2.73 billion rupees in the previous session, according to exchange data.

Foreign investors were net sellers, offloading stocks worth 341 million rupees, while domestic investors were net buyers, purchasing shares worth 6.91 billion rupees, the data showed.

Sri Lanka president makes U-turn on IMF bailout

November 22nd, 2024

Courtesy Kuwait Times

COLOMBO: Sri Lanka’s new leader on Thursday backed a controversial IMF bailout, marking a U-turn from his election pledge to renegotiate the deal secured by his predecessor.

Leftist President Anura Kumara Dissanayake, who tightened his grip on power last week after winning a huge majority in the legislature following his own victory in September, vowed to maintain the IMF program. Sri Lanka went to the IMF for a rescue package after the country defaulted on its $46 billion external debt in April 2022 during an unprecedented economic meltdown. The shortage of foreign exchange that left the country unable to finance even the most essential imports of food and fuel led to months of street protests and forced then-president Gotabaya Rajapaksa to resign. The $2.9 billion loan secured early last year required Colombo to sharply raise taxes, remove generous energy subsidies and agree to restructure more than 50 loss-making state enterprises.

Dissanayake’s National People’s Power party had said it did not agree with the International Monetary Fund’s debt assessment and would renegotiate the bailout program. But in his first address to the new parliament, where his party enjoys a two-thirds majority, Dissanayake said the economic recovery was too fragile to take risks. The economy is in such a state that it cannot take the slightest shock… there is no room to make mistakes,” he said as he ruled out negotiations with either the IMF or creditors.

This is not the time to discuss if the terms are good or bad, if the agreement is favorable to us or not… The process had taken about two years and we cannot start all over again,” he said. The delayed third review of the four-year loan program could be concluded by this weekend, with the finance ministry holding talks with a visiting IMF delegation in Colombo, he added. Sri Lanka expects the next tranche of about $330 million following an early approval from the board of the international lender of last resort.

Dissanayake’s interim cabinet last month signed off on a controversial restructuring of $14.7 billion in foreign commercial credit tentatively agreed by predecessor Ranil Wickremesinghe. The debt restructuring is a key IMF demand to rebuild the island’s economy, which suffered its worst crisis in 2022 when it shrank 7.8 percent. The dissatisfaction with traditional politicians held responsible for the economic collapse was a key driver of Dissanayake’s electoral success.

In June, the government concluded a deal with its bilateral lenders to restructure its official credit amounting to $6 billion, but formal agreements are yet to be signed. Under the deal announced on September 19, private creditors holding more than half of international sovereign bonds and foreign commercial loans to the South Asian nation agreed to a 27 percent haircut on their loans. They also agreed to a further 11 percent reduction on the interest owed to them. International sovereign bonds account for $12.5 billion and the balance of $2.2 billion is owed to the China Development Bank. — AFP

Opinion | Dissanayake’s NPP Win: A Turning Point In India-Sri Lanka Ties?

November 22nd, 2024

Bharti Mishra Nath Courtesy NDTV


Sri Lankan President Anura Kumara Dissanayake’s leftist coalition, the National People’s Power (NPP), made history by securing an unprecedented mandate in the country’s snap parliamentary elections held on 14 November. The NPP coalition won 159 out of 225 seats in Sri Lanka’s Parliament. This victory is a more significant achievement than Dissanayake’s key presidential win in September, further consolidating his alliance’s position from a fringe political force to the main player in Sri Lankan politics.

Previously, the NPP held only three seats in the outgoing Parliament, which led Dissanayake to dissolve it ahead of its full term in August 2025, seeking a fresh mandate to pursue his electoral promises.

Dissanayake’s victories – first in the presidential elections in September and now in the snap parliamentary polls – have major implications for Sri Lanka’s domestic and international politics. He now possesses the legislative power needed to advance his policies on alleviating poverty, fighting corruption, and steering the country out of financial crisis. At the same time, he must maintain a delicate geopolitical balance, especially between India and China.

On the Domestic Front

The NPP received overwhelming support from ethnic minorities, even in Tamil-majority areas in the north and east, where its candidates outperformed traditional Tamil nationalist parties. For the first time in the island nation’s history, Tamils in the northern province district of Jaffna voted for Dissanayake’s JVP (Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna), a Sinhala-Buddhist party. This marks a successful outreach and a shift in voter sentiment towards the NPP, which promises to improve the daily lives of the people.
The NPP’s victory in the parliamentary elections gives President Dissanayake the legislative power needed to implement his policies, which are primarily focused on alleviating poverty and combating corruption. The country is still grappling with the aftermath of a financial collapse.

The twin elections, especially the parliamentary one, are a game changer for the JVP-led NPP coalition. Overnight, they have moved to centre stage in the country’s politics,” says Sripathi Narayanan, a New Delhi-based security and foreign policy analyst.

With traditional political heavyweights decimated in the elections, Dissanayake’s NPP must act swiftly.
Sri Lanka’s northern and eastern provinces, which endured 26 years of civil war between the LTTE (Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam) and the Government of Sri Lanka, remain impoverished with little sign of development. These regions lack industries or significant job opportunities, relying primarily on trade and fishing. There is now an opportunity for this government to focus on development in these areas. With the flight of Tamils and Muslims from Jaffna, this government has the chance to win them over by implementing developmental work, providing equitable opportunities, and ensuring fair governance.

One of the main promises of the NPP coalition was to abolish the executive presidency, which grants the President enormous powers – a long-standing demand of civil society.

Prosecutions of prominent individuals in corruption cases, as well as thorough investigations into Sri Lanka’s horrific Easter terrorist attack in 2019 and targeted killings 15 years ago, were also pledged. The coalition’s call to renegotiate the USD 2.9 billion International Monetary Fund bailout will also be under close scrutiny.

Sri Lanka has still not overcome its economic challenges. Therefore, much of the administration’s focus will be on the state of the economy, particularly issues affecting people’s daily lives, which were key factors in the NPP coalition’s public mandate,” says Narayanan.

Implications for India

The NPP’s parliamentary majority has significant implications for India, given its strategic interests in Sri Lanka. Adding to this, China’s growing economic footprint and political influence in Sri Lanka have further strained India-Sri Lanka relations.

President Dissanayake is known for his anti-India and pro-China stance. Historically, Dissanayake’s party, the JVP, opposed the 1987 India-Sri Lanka Accord and did not support the 13th Amendment to the Sri Lankan Constitution, which sought to devolve powers to Tamil minorities. These have been sensitive issues for India.

Conversely, the JVP has always viewed China as a friend and maintains wide contacts with the Chinese Communist Party.

Dissanayake’s criticisms of Indian projects, particularly renewable energy projects, have raised concerns in India.

It’s a leftist position to scrap all projects involving India. Dissanayake has categorically stated that he plans to renegotiate all Indian projects. This signals that he is unlikely to move forward with the previously planned projects with India,” says Gooneratne.

However, recently Dissanayake has made positive remarks regarding granting political rights to Tamil communities, suggesting a readiness to engage with India on these issues.

He has also repeatedly assured that he will not permit Sri Lanka’s territory to be used against India. He has expressed a desire to engage with India and maintain cordial relations. Dissanayake visited India as early as February 2024 and met with External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar and National Security Adviser Ajit Doval.

India, too, has proactively engaged with Dissanayake since his presidential win.
EAM Jaishankar visited Sri Lanka in October this year and met Dissanayake to strengthen bilateral ties.

President Dissanayake chose India for his first foreign visit after taking office, which is significant. He accepted India’s official invitation. We have many examples in the past showing that without India’s close relationship, Sri Lanka cannot move forward,” says Thushara Gooneratne, editor-in-chief of Mawrata News.

President Dissanayake has also acknowledged India’s economic and humanitarian support for development efforts in Sri Lanka. Recently, he has been critical of Chinese-backed projects, such as the Hambantota Port.

On the bilateral front, much give and take can be expected. This will reflect both the cost-benefit assessments by both sides and the local conditions affecting specific points of engagement,” says Narayanan.

For instance, a legal procedure has been initiated in Sri Lanka on projects of interest to India. This legal process must reach its logical conclusion before anyone can draw any conclusions,” he adds.
The current engagement reflects India’s continued prioritisation of its relationship with Sri Lanka under the Neighbourhood First policy.

As Sri Lanka navigates its political and economic uncertainties, it needs India as a constant support and partner. A positive view suggests opportunities for enhanced collaboration in areas such as trade, maritime security, and people-to-people connections, further strengthening India’s influence and leadership in the region.

Sri Lanka ‘should be vigilant’ about Adani power deal following U.S. indictment, say experts

November 22nd, 2024

Meera Srinivasan Courtesy The Hindu

President Dissanayake’s government had earlier said it would revisit the deal after the Parliamentary election

Former President Ranil Wickremesinghe and Gautam Adani during a meeting in New Delhi in July 2023. Photo: Special Arrangement

Sri Lanka should be vigilant about the Adani power project in the island, experts said on Thursday,after Federal prosecutors in New York indicted Group Chairman Gautam Adani and seven others on multiple counts of fraud. 

Sri Lanka has often seen cases of significant corruption in the country being exposed in other jurisdictions, according to Nishan De Mel, Executive Director of Verité Research, a Colombo-based think tank. He referred to the allegations of bribery in Sri Lankan Airlines’s purchase of aircraft from Airbus, which surfaced in a United Kingdom-based investigation a few years ago, and to the Pandora Papers that threw up names of local politicians and businessmen. It is very important for Sri Lanka to redouble its efforts against corruption, to ensure that we are protected from corrupt deals,” he told The Hindu.

 Why Gautam Adani was indicted in the U.S. over alleged $250mn bribery scheme?

After news on the alleged bribery scheme of the Adani Group surfaced on Thursday, many citizens and activists in Sri Lanka took to social media and called for greater scrutiny of the Group’s power project on the island. President Anura Kumara Dissanayake, who won the Presidency this September, and his National People’s Power [NPP] alliance, which secured a historic, two-thirds majority in the November 14 general election, have pledged to root out corruption. Days before his election win, Mr. Dissanayake vowed to cancel the corrupt Adani deal” if his government came to power. Subsequently, Foreign Minister and Cabinet spokesperson of the interim administration said the government would review” the project after the Parliamentary polls.  The International Monetary Fund, too, in its ongoing programme with Sri Lanka, has underscored the need to arrest corruption vulnerabilities”.

Related Stories

Controversial deal

Adani Green Energy is investing $442 million in a wind power project in Mannar and Pooneryn in northern Sri Lanka. From the time the former Gotabaya Rajapaksa government roped in the firm in 2022, the project has remained controversial. The main political opposition accused the conglomerate of backdoor entry”, in the absence of an open call for tenders. The same year, a top Ceylon Electricity Board (CEB) official told a Parliamentary panel that the project was given to the Adani Group after Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi pressured” President Gotabaya Rajapaksa. The official subsequently resigned, after withdrawing his original statement.

Regardless, the Ranil Wickremesinghe administration went ahead with the project, amid questions from corruption watchdogs. When the Adani Group came under the global spotlight in early 2023, and its stocks plummeted in the wake of U.S. short seller Hindenburg accusing it of pulling the largest con in corporate history”, then Foreign Minister of Sri Lanka Ali Sabry said the Wickremesinghe administration was very, very confident” of the future of the project, which it saw as a government-to-government” deal with India.

U.S. indictment: Adani’s legal storm explained

Earlier this year, environmentalists and Mannar residents moved Sri Lanka’s Supreme Court, challenging the project on grounds of potential environmental impact and lack of transparency”. The case was taken up by a five-member Bench and the next hearing is scheduled on March 18 and 19, 2025, according to sources familiar with the proceedings.

Also read: Adani wind power project sparks concern in Sri Lanka’s Mannar district

‘Review the project’

The U.S. indictment of the firm now bolsters” the NPP’s argument for reviewing the project in Sri Lanka, noted Shihar Aneez, a consultant editor with Colombo-based news portal Economynext. Right from the beginning there has been ambiguity over whether the Adani project is a government-to-government deal with India, or a private sector investment. We saw heated debates in the last Parliament,” the financial journalist said.

The credibility of Adani projects has come into question not just in the U.S., but also in the region, he noted, pointing to the Bangladesh High Court recently ordering a high-level probe to re-examine the country’s power purchase agreement with the Group. Going forward, the Dissanayake government must revisit the project with an open tender process, Mr. Aneez said, adding, If Adani Green wins the bid through that process, then they are welcome… The Sri Lankan government has greater bargaining power now.”

The renewable energy project is one of two projects that the Adani Group is executing in Sri Lanka. Its other major investment is the Adani Ports-led container terminal project in Colombo. In November 2023, the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation (DFC) announced a $553-million investment in the project, a  $700-million joint venture among Adani Ports, Sri Lanka Ports Authority (SLPA), and Sri Lankan conglomerate John Keells Holdings.

රටම ඉවරයි…? L බෝර්ඩ් ත්‍රස්තවාදීන් පාර්ලිමේන්තුවේ යකා නටයි… Ramanthan Archchuna | Nalinda Jayath

November 22nd, 2024

Sisi Tv

ජයමංගල ගාථා වානා – කැන්ටිමේ කෑම ඕනා…. | ණය ගත්තට වාහනේ දොර තනියෙන් ඇරගන්නවා නෙ….|

November 22nd, 2024

TAPROBANE TV

WATCH: New Jaffna MP sits in Opposition Leader’s chair, refuses to move

November 22nd, 2024

Courtesy NewsIn.Asia

Controversial Jaffna District MP Dr. Archchuna Ramanathan made headlines on the first day of the new Parliament after taking the seat traditionally allocated for the Leader of the Opposition.

Dr. Archchuna Ramanathan made headlines earlier this year after raising concerns at the Chavakachcheri Hospital and was later elected to Parliament after contesting independently in the 2024 General Election.

At the inaugural session of the 10th Parliament of Sri Lanka today, the first-time MP assumed the seat of the Leader of the Opposition, refusing to move when requested by a Parliament Staff.

Responding to the Parliament staff, MP Archchuna Ramanathan pointed out that there were no seating arrangements on the first day of the new Parliament.

Requesting for any announcement stating the allocated seat for the Leader of the Opposition, the MP refused to move from his seat, claiming We have changed the tradition of the Parliament.”

Parliament 🔴LIVE | නව රජයේ පළමු පාර්ලිමේන්තු සැසි වාරය | INAUGURAL SESSION OF 10th PARLIAMENT

November 22nd, 2024

It’s the Economy Stupid: Forget Woke Ethno-religious Identity Politics!

November 21st, 2024

Dr. Darini Rajasingham-Senanayake

The list of recent IMF program successes is long. Barbados and Benin, Cabo Verde and Costa Rica, Moldova and Morocco, Suriname and Sri Lanka, to name but a few’, triumphantly declared the International Monetary Fund head, Kristalina Georgieva at Annual Meetings in Washington last month.[i]  Heedless of repeated calls for reform to give voice to the Global South perspectives, the IMF Managing Director claimed Sri Lanka as a debt restructuring ‘success’ story:

Left unsaid was that the geostrategic Indian Ocean island’s debt had apparently ballooned from $ 26 billion to a purported whopping $100 billion in just two years of IMF Extended Fund Facility (EFF) negotiations and reforms. The latter included mandate and mission creep into domestic debt restructure (DDR)![ii] Simultaneously, the retirement funds of working people were earmarked to pay International Sovereign Bond (ISB) private creditors who charge predatory interest rates despite widespread protests by trade unions and activists. Sri Lanka’s largest private creditor is BlackRock.

Nor did Georgieva dwell on the BRICS summit held earlier that week in Kazan, Russia, where de-dollarization was a hot topic amid renewed calls for reform of the Bretton Wood Twins (IMF and World Bank). The US dollar has been weaponized in multiple forms, not just sanctions, against many emerging economies trapped in International Sovereign Bond (ISB), odious debt and the IMF’s bailout business. There are 55 countries in post-Covid-19 Eurobond debt traps. Meanwhile, Sri Lanka is currently on its 17th IMF program and Argentina on its 23rd

Around the world and in Sri Lanka, skepticism has been growing about IMF claims to be a ‘Savior’ of countries in economic crisis, and the narrative that ‘there is no alternative to the lender of last resorts’. Under its Debt Restructuring Agreements (DSA), dollar denominated Eurobond debt traps seems to deepen and extend, rather than reduce. At this time there are 55 countries caught in post-Covid-19 ISB debt traps, in IMF treatment. The IMF Extended Fund Facility (EFF), seems to be aptly named!

It’s the Economy Stupid! Forget Woke Ethno-religious Identity Politics

In General Elections last week, the National Peoples Power (NPP) party led by President Anura Kumara Dissanayaka swept to power on a landslide mandate to restore Sri Lanka’s economic sovereignty, exit US-dollar Eurobond debt neocolonialism, and ensure debt justice for working people whose retirement funds are at risk.

The fundamentally economic reasons for the NPPs sweeping victory have been little remarked in post-election analysis in the corporate media echo chamber and NGO think tank discussions. These seem to be still distracted with Woke ethno-religious identity politics, which the electorate had rejected wholesale. After all, identity politics has long been a well-funded research industry that distracted from economic inequality and the geopolitical dimensions of the geostrategic island’s permanent ‘poly crisis’. However, it would appear that geopolitical economic history of colonialism is embedded somewhere in the ‘political unconscious’ of the nation and manifest in the rejection of ethno-religious identity politics by voters across Sri Lanka.

Recall that President Anura Kumara Dissanayake had reversed IMF-promoted ‘reforms’ and privatization of the Ceylon Electricity Board and Sri Lankan Airlines within a month of taking office in September. It was hence too that he received a huge vote of approval from the general public who gave his National Peoples Power (NPP) party landslide win two months later.

The new NPP government that came to power supported by trade unions would now be expected to take the time to carefully review the IMF Debt Sustainability (DSA) and other booby trap agreements and sweetheart deal with ad hoc groups of ISB holders entered into by the previous Ranil Rajapaske regime. 

To rescue working people’s EPF pension funds it would be necessary for the new NPP government to roll back ISB-IMF mission creep into DDR. So too review of Lazard, Clifford and Chance’s Macro-economy-linked (MLB) proposales would also as part of the fight against corruption and for Debt Justice.

Eurobond debt traps, Sanctions, and hybrid economic proxy war

During her plenary address at the annual meetings, IMF Managing Director, Georgieva sought more information on the BRICS new payment system, which was discussed as an alternative to the current US controlled SWIFT international trade settlements and payment system in Kazan. SWIFT leaves countries vulnerable to brow beating and US exchange rate manipulation in the context of not just trade and tariff wars, but hybrid economic proxy wars on partner countries of on China’s Belt and Road (BRI), as well as, sanctions hit Russia, Iran, Venezuela etc.

The United States recently sanctioned an Indian firm which is in a consortium with a Russian firm to manage Sri Lanka’s Mattala Airport. [iii]  According to EconomyNext: The U.S. Department of the Treasury had sanctioned India-based Shaurya Aeronautics Private Limited (Shaurya), among 275 individuals and entities involved in supplying Russia with advanced technology and equipment.

The Mattala International Airport in Hambantota initially built by the Chinese was perceived to be a White Elephant’ development project, but is actually located near one of the world’s busiest maritime trade, energy and submarine Date Cable routes in the world. The Shaurya Aeronautics plan to develop the airport would bring needed foreign investment to the country and showcase collaboration among the big three Asian powers- China, India and Russia but is now on ice due to US sanctions.

Sri Lanka clearly caught in the cross-hairs of big power rivalry, had formally submitted an application to join BRICS and the New Development Bank at the meeting in Kazan, where President Putin hosted China’s President Xi and Indian Premier Modi along with other Global South leaders. The new government in Colombo would be hoping to leverage regional growth and support from the Global South in the Asian 21st Century”. However, no senior Minister from Sri Lanka attended the meeting in Kazan– an opportunity missed in deference to Washington?

BRICS, Geopolitics and IMF’s Bailout Business

With BRICS increasingly challenging the narrative that ‘there is no alternative to the IMF’, hybrid economic proxy war and de-stabilization in the geostrategic island nation at the center of the Indian Ocean is clearly set to continue.  The new Government in Colombo led by the President Anura Kumara Dissanayake that won a landslide victory to restore economic sovereignty would hence have to tread a fine line. Escaping US dollar-Eurobond debt neocolonialism given America’s expanding sanctions regime and the on-going hybrid economic proxy war with Digital Colonialism will be challenging.

An IMF team led by Peter Breuer arrived in Colombo for the third review of the EFF this week even before the Cabinet Members of the new government were sworn in. The first challenge of the new government would face is avoiding being bamboozled into signing the draft booby trap agreements granting sweetheart deals to ad hoc groups of bondholders and the Official Creditor Committee (OCC), negotiated sans transparency by the previous Ranil Rajapase regime, which was implicated in a series of bondscams at the Central Bank CBSL.

It was primarily those CBSL bondscams that led to the accumulation of Odious Debt and the staging of Sri Lanka’s first ever Sovereign Default in 2022. That pattern continues with the subsequent debt restructuring corruption racket with a gravy train of local and international Economic Hit men.

Since the new government won a landslide victory on November 21 to fight corruption in order to restore Sri Lanka’s Economic Sovereignty it would need to carefully review the Debt Sustainability Agreements. This, especially as several national economists (Danushka Pathirana, Ahilan Kadirigamar), have noted that the current agreements with ad hoc groups of bondholders of the colonial Club de Paris, set up the country for Default no sooner it starts servicing the Odious debt.

Moreover, the IMF principles of ‘compatibility of treatment’ creditors regardless of whether they charge predatory interest rates, the secrecy surrounding the identity of bondholders, and the practice of ‘lending into arrears’ by marketing Macro-economy linked bonds in order to borrow from the same predatory creditors in order to pay them is highly questionable.

Clearly, fighting corruption would be a big part of the new government’s Primary Mandate, which is to restore the Sri Lanka’s economic sovereignty in the context of the IMF’s mission and mandate creep into domestic debt restructure/ optimization (DDO) and reverse the IMF agenda to privatize State Owned Enterprises, State Owned Enterprises and other strategic assets – coastal and hilltop lands, transport, energy, telecom infrastructure.

Finally, would be of paramount important that the new government replace Lazard, Clifford and Chance, with a team of Sri Lankan national experts, better able to represent citizen’s interests in negotiations with bondholders and the IMF. It is well established that Lazard has conflict-of-interest given connections with bondholders. Indeed, it is of paramount importance that the county be rescued from local-global networks of corruption that include the gravy train of debt restructuring advisors, consultants and Economic Hitmen, who have turned debt restructuring into rocket science, replete with numbers games and Disinformation. The devil they say is in the detail!

TO BE CONTINUED


[i] https://www.imf.org/en/News/Articles/2024/10/25/sp102524-annual-meetings-plenary

[ii] https://www.lankaweb.com/news/items/2024/10/25/sri-lanka-met-with-bondholders-aims-to-exit-default-as-soon-as-possible-central-bank-governor-says/

[iii] https://economynext.com/us-sanctions-indian-firm-involved-in-deal-with-sri-lankas-mattala-airport-186347/

Ballot Vs Bullet

November 20th, 2024

Vichara

Now that the NPP has won an absolute majority in the Parliament, there will be reams written on their achievement, particularly on the unique contribution and wise leadership of AKD the President. While endorsing the sentiments expressed so liberally, what is not understood is why this radical change did not come earlier in a country with a literacy rate of 92 % for adults aged 15 and above and a high income inequality where more than half the total household income of the country is enjoyed by the richest 20% while the bottom decile (poorest 20%) gets only 5%, with the share of household income being just 1.6% for the poorest 10%.

https://www.cepa.lk/blog/the-correlation-between-poverty-and-inequality/

The country did not lack the leadership to rectify this situation. It was Robert Knox who said in1680 about the farmer of the country that by reason of his quality and descent is fit to be a King and if the mud was washed off the back of a farmer, he was fit to be a king.” President AKD has proved beyond doubt the veracity of the observation of Knox many centuries back.

The roots of the NPP-led revolution can be traced to the Kannangara Education Reforms, which stressed that Education is not just literacy. It should be important to shape the thinking of the people of a country. The main objective should be to create a free and open-minded people.” The radical recommendation in para 372 is that education should be free from kindergarten to the University. That made education open to every child regardless of income.

Knnangare said in Parliament that Any amount of money spent on education will have a very big return. It will certainly compensate for the loss in the first instance.” (Hansard 1944, pp. 838-860).” Today, we see the return on investment in free education in the nonviolent political revolution by the NPP.

The next step in the ladder of social change was heralded in 1956 when there was a social and cultural revolution all over the country that generated a national outlook. Eminent author Martin Wickremasinghe identified the 1956 Revolution as the fall of the Brahmin regime. That revolution did not survive in any radical form as it lacked a strong political ideology. It crumbled with the assassination of the leader by reactionary forces.

The next socialist coalition governments failed to meet the expectations of the masses due to divisions within the coalition, an adverse international environment, and a combination of political, economic, and social factors. Consequently, a neo-liberal UNP government under JR Jayawardhana with absolute power emerged. The massive majority in the parliament allowed the UNP to dominate Sri Lankan politics and implement sweeping economic and political reforms in the years that followed.

The harsh policies of the JR regime encouraged the JVP to become more active. The Indo-Sri Lanka Accord made them adopt an anti-Indian nationalistic policy. However, the insurgency mounted by the JVP was ruthlessly demolished by the government. The party was banned but later participated in electoral politics with negative results. It was the nadir of socialist politics which could not muster even 3 to 4 % of the national votes. The main reason for this regress was the fear among the population that the JVP believed and nurtured violence which was an anathema to the national culture.

The separatist war sent socialism to the backburner. The war pushed back the country for several decades. India’s former National Security Adviser and Foreign Secretary, Shivshankar Menon had disclosed in his book Choices: Inside the Making of India’s Foreign Policy” that the estimated cost of this three-decade-old war was around US$ 200 billion. This estimate does not include the opportunity cost” to Sri Lanka which was once the fastest growing and the most open economy in South Asia.

The euphoria of the victory over the LTTE created a sense of impunity in the MR regime, which allowed corruption and maladministration to creep in and made socialism irrelevant.

With an ineffective President and neo-liberal Prime minister, the Yahapalana regime too acted with impunity in governance and particularly in the management of the economy. It is the wanton borrowing in ISBs at high rates of interest that finally led to the bankruptcy of the country.

The consequent impact of the dearth of foreign exchange leading to a fuel and power crisis and the insufferable cost of living made the people rise against the government. It engendered the desire and opportunity to change the system of government, which had miserably failed the people. It is in this sordid background that the leadership of the JVP had to choose between Ballot or Bullet. The route of the bullet taken previously by the JVP had been disastrous. in the two JVP insurgencies in 1971 and 1988/89, the country lost over 80,000 youths of the JVP and government supporters, which was the cream of the youth in the country.

This time in 2024, the JVP had a leader in AKD, who believed that the path of violence should be abandoned and the nonviolent path of the ballet must be adopted. He realized that violence begets violence, creating a cycle of violence. It is the concept described in the Gospel of Matthew, verse 26:52. “Put your sword back in its place,” Jesus said to him, “for all who draw the sword will die by the sword.”

Buddhism went further and believed that Hatred does not cease through hatred at any time. Hatred ceases through love. This is an unalterable law.”

Gandhi took the religious principle of ahimsa, common to Buddhism, Hinduism, and Jainism, and turned it into a nonviolent tool for mass action. He used it to fight not only colonial rule but also social evils such as racial discrimination and untouchability.

Malcolm X used the mantra Ballot or the Bullet” to galvanize the black community to use political power to achieve civil rights and caution the government of the repercussions of holding back. It was a powerful rallying cry coined by Malcolm X in 1964 to emphasize the urgency of Black Americans securing civil rights and equality”.

There is no doubt that AKD would have to do a lot of convincing with his more militant comrades to agree with his approach. In July 2022, when the Gotabaya left the country and MR resigned and the military was reluctant to intervene, the country was ripe for a revolutionary capture. It would have been AKD’s calm and composed personality and perspicacity that would have made him win their unequivocal consent to take the path of the ballot instead. It is his statesmanly poise and sincerity, which has won the trust of 6.8 million voters of all communities giving him an absolute majority in the Parliament.

The unprecedented victory of the NPP was not accompanied by celebrations and harassment of the defeated parties. There is only a nationwide sense of calm and satisfaction. AKD, as President, has already announced that his government would be all-inclusive and serve all citizens equally. The support he has received from minority communities heralds a unified nation with common objectives.

The President has appointed a cabinet of ministers with both academic and professional distinction. The vilification that they lack experience should not be taken seriously. The efficiency and effectiveness of the LSSP ministers in the coalition regimes, who had no previous experience, prove the inanity of this concern. The AKD cabinet has to face the same economic crisis that brought them to power. It is an enormous challenge. In this task, it is hoped that the government resorts to the widest possible consultation with the citizens of the country which placed their implicit trust in the government. It is suggested that before major policy changes are adopted, ‘white papers’ are published for public discussion. (This is a common practice In the UK)

In the current complex international political milieu and the strategic location of the country there could be hostile developments against the new regime. Therefore it is essential that the security of the President and the regime be accorded very high priority. In the meantime, the President must nurture a successor in his own mould to take his place in the future.

Thank you AKD for your choice of ballot over bullet.

Vichara

My hearty and warm congratulations! The President of the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka  

November 20th, 2024

Dr Sudath Gunasekara. Mahanuwara 

  20th Nov 2024.

Dear Sir,

Please accept my hearty and warm congratulations!

firstly, on your unprecedented and historic victory as the President of this Island nation, the pearl of the Indian ocean and the most important geopolitical, economics and strategic hub of the present-day world.

Secondly, on your landslide victory at the general election where you were able to unify this country after 574 years, since it was done last by King Parakramabahu the sixth of Kotte, by capturing the Jaffna Kingdom in 1450 under his able commander Prince Sapumal.  Your victory this time, I have no doubt will also go down in history of this country as a turning point in political development and a land mark that will be scribed in golden letters in Mahawansa.

Besides that, you also have captured the Kandyan kingdom as well (now turned out to be a virtual Malayanadu- which they call Malayaiha,), for the first time after 1815 British subjugation and once again assured its continuity to be a part of the Republic of Sri Lanka. Thereby, you also have dismantled the back bone of the virtual serfdom of the feudalist Thondaman rule for good, and diffused the Malayanadu atom bomb of Indian dream of expansionism, against which your party had stood right from the beginning as a national liberation movement. In pursuance of this ideology your party has scored a double century by getting a labourer girl Ambika, elected as a potential future leader of the entire estate Tamil community in the hill country, who is prepare to live and die as a true Sri Lankan and no more as an Indian. Thereby, you also have put an end to the hegemonic exploitation of this helpless people by the Thondaman Maharaja clan on the hills for 76 years from 1948 UpToDate, virtually as their slaves. They were brought by Jeevans Great grandfather Kanupriya as indentured slave labour, starting from 1883 and his grandfather Samyamurthi Thondaman from 1924 until he died on 30 October 1999. Even today, the Thondaman clan use these labourers as slaves in their virtual serfdom.

Your strategy in getting Ambika to Parliament is a first-class political strategy of the Kautilyan strategy and it has opened a new chapter in Sinhala-Tamil social integration in this country, free from all future Indian meddling in our internal governance, as an independent and sovereign nation.

The other matter I would like to bring to your immediate and serious notice, before any lawyer or a politician raise it in Parliament.   

Mr. President,

Please check with your legal advisors, whether your appointment of Cabinet Ministers done on the 18th, other than the PM and Mr. Vijitha Herath, were in conformity with Sec 44 (b) of the Constitution, as they have not yet taken their oaths as members of Parliament, as required by the Constitution.

Therefore, you may advise your secretary immediately to take suitable steps to avoid any legal or political embarrassment in this regard before the parliament meets on the 21st.

Wishing you all success in all your future endeavors to take this country out of the present political, economic and social quagmire, into which it had been dumped into, by self-centered ugly politics since 1977, as you have got a clear mandate to arrest this disastrous trend and make your mark in the annals of political history in this country.

Thank you.

Dr Sudath Gunasekara. Mahanuwara 

071 8075326 -081 2232744   

PS:  Another national issue pertaining to the Hill Country that needs your Special attention”

I had prepared a comprehensive concept paper and a working plan on the need to protect the Physical stability of this region in 1991, when I was Executive Director of the Hadabima Authority of Sri Lanka as a Geographer and a member of the Sri Lanka Administrative Service.

First,

 To protect the physical stability of the Central Hill Country, (which I have identified as the Geographical Heartland (HADABIMA)- the Heart of the country) that guarantees the perennial flow of all 103 rivers of this country that have their sources there and that determine and dictates the survival of the entire life system of this Island nation which in turn decides the destiny of human civilization on this Island.     

And

Second, to find a permanent solution to the following long neglected issues.

1 Landlessness, and other issues such as abject poverty, housing, education, communication, medical facilities, unemployment among the Kandyan Peasants as identified by the Kandyan Peasantry Commission in 1951 (which remain unsolved up to date)

2 Rectifying the historical injustices done to the native Kandyan Sinhalese who protected this country from all European colonial invasions from 1505 to 1948 particularly by the British colonial invaders who took over all m their ancestral land by force after 1815, which they had owned for millennia from the inception of history on this Island.

3.Claiming compensation from the Portuguese, Dutch and the British Colonial rulers for the draconian and savages’ crimes and war damages they committed on the Kandyan Sinhalese who defended and protected the motherland, without allowing it to be another America, Australia or New Zealand, where the natives were annihilated and colonized by the invaders. If not for the valiant sacrifices they made to defend[S1]  the motherland, there would have been no Sri Lanka or a Sinhala Buddhist nation on this Island to boast about. 

4. Reverting the entire central hill country and all its adjoining areas forcibly taken over by the British and where Coffee and Tea plantations were established by them from 1840 to 1910, back to their original owners, where an artificial South Indian Tamil enclave has been carved out to take revenge from the Sinhala natives for defeating the invaders for from 1505 onwards, specially in 1803 the British at Balana, Waagolla and Randenigala battles and the fatal resistance displayed by them in 1818 (Uva- Wellassa) and 1848 (Matale) freedom struggles.

(I see a close parallel between this move by the British and other Western attempts on the one hand and the  Indian conspiracies on the other, both in  prehistoric and recorded historic times, from Ramayana days  down the line to the present day, such as the Rajiv Ghandhi- Dixith  Parippu invasion in 1987, the Sethu Samudra bridge, the Manar -Trinco  superhighway and the much hyped Ramayana trail project designed to cover the whole Island   and all other projects like the Adani involvement in power generation  under  the Modi regime, as well orchestrated universal attempts to conquer this resplendent and bountiful Island nation strategically located at the midst of the Indian Ocean  right at the center of the great East- West  connectivity of the future world and to destroy its millennia old unique Sinhala Buddhist Civilization, which is the envy of many a nation in the world. Apart from these reasons, Sir Arthar clerk’s prophecy that by 2050 all religions based on the belief in God will disappear and only Buddhism will remain thereafter (Deep Range) may also has heavily contributed towards this world envy of the followers of Abrahamic religions towards this Sinhala Buddhist Sri Lanka).

Deep Range is a 1957 science fiction novel by British writer Arthur C. Clarke

5. Finding a permanent solution to the 1. 2 million Indians slave labourers left behind by the British on this soil. It has to be mentioned here that although countries like Uganda and Burma chased them out after getting independence from the invaders, foolish comprador Sri Lankan leaders kept the venomous serpent under their panties without, realizing the dangers to come.

6 Workout a resettlement programme of ethnically mixed settlements of 2- to 2 ½ acre land selected by lot for both the native landless Sinhalese and the estate Tamil labour who qualify to be Sri Lankan citizens under the conditions in the Nehru/Kotalawala Agreement 1953, within a 2500 feet wide belt between 1000 ft and 3500 ft msl, right round the hill country.  But unfortunately, so far, no politician has been able to understand its value. Because they all are only politicians and none was a Stateman

I have already given a copy of my proposal on this subject to my friend the Governor of the CP Prof Sarath Abeykon about a month back to be given to you Sir.


 [S1]

From 3rd World to 1st – an arduous task

November 20th, 2024

Chanaka Bandarage

The fact that we now have a fine government (at least uncorrupt), many have the unrealistic expectation that we will soon become a developed nation.

Sri Lanka is a  3rd world country; a chronic one. Before becoming a 1st world country (eg. Singapore), we have to pass the 2nd world stage (eg. Malaysia).

Surely AKD and his Ministers/MPs will do their best to  make Sri Lanka a clean, prosperous country. They are a highly disciplined, hardworking and corruption free lot.

This is a real blessing for Sri Lanka.

It is very good that the whole country is now united (from Point Pedro to Dondra)

The government cannot perform miracles.

It must be afforded full support by everyone.

If we are determined to become a better country, all of us must pull our weight.

Needles to say our public service (who now receives good wages/perks) is one of the worst in Asia. Overall, it is utterly indisciplined, lethargic, not friendly to people, ill-trained, very inefficient, dishonest and bribe taking.

Our school teachers – than teaching the full syllabus, many concentrate on securing students to their afterschool  tuition class.

Politicians, especially those who were in power after 1978, must bear the responsibility for ruining our public service.

When the British left us in 1948 we probably had the best public service in Asia.

Can this corrupt public service be rescued/reformed?

An extremely difficult task, but possible.

Then the people at large – the citizenry – sadly, majority of them  are indisciplined, impolite (thankfully not to foreigners), selfish, unpatriotic, rude, aggressive and deceitful.

If we want to become a 1st world country (of course, this is a distinct possibility), each of us must change.

We must acknowledge that as citizens we have many weaknesses and that we must reform.

We must remove ourselves from bad habits and  cultivate good ones.

Some of our vices – environmental pollution – from public spitting (now it is more of spitting out red saliva in the open  after chewing betel nuts), illegal dumping (including to rivers and sea), queue jumping, careless pedestrian walking, dangerous vehicle driving, unbearable honking, illegal vehicle parking, bad bus commuter manners, stealing/theft, chronic lying, using ugly language, substance use, sexual misconducts and  basically  very bad manners everywhere including committing public nuisance.

Sadly, it is those who were born after 1970 that show bad manners, ill-discipline.


Of all the age groups, the baby boomers demonstrate best manners and discipline. This is because they grew up in the best good old years. During that time, there existed a culture of discipline, respectfulness, caringness, command obedience and high law and order.

It is important that we go back to the drawing board, and as the last resort try to rescue our children. If they continue to go down in the current pit, there will be no Sri Lanka left.

From scratch, let us teach our children good manners, discipline, camaraderieship, patriotism and overall how to become responsible citizens.

Children must be taught of the correct history – who we are and how we came to be.

All children must be able to proudly sing the National Anthem loudly – in Sinhala or Tamil (better if in both languages). Children must know about our National Heroes. They must be encouraged to attend Sunday religious schools (Daham Pasal, Christian/Hindu Sunday schools etc). Private tuition classes must be banned on Sunday mornings.

For these; the government, in good faith, will have to re-train all the teachers. It will be a massive task.

The government must utilise its resources. It must realise that it is a good future investment.

Again, it is ludicrous to expect AKD and his team to perform  miracles. Of course they will do their best – to the best of their ability and belief; as stated before, we must do our bit.

We must resolve to work towards making our beautiful Sri Lanka a better, peaceful, friendly, clean, corruption free and  respectful place.

Then, at the end of this government’s 5-year term, Sri Lanka will be a country hastening to become a 1st world nation.

Sri Lanka Parliamentary Election – Statement in Parliament

November 20th, 2024

Chandra Arya Member of Parliament/Député – Nepean

www.X.com/AryaCanada

www.Facebook.com/ChandraAryaCanada

Mr. Speaker,

On behalf of Canada’s Sri Lankan diaspora, including both Sinhalese-Canadians and Tamil-Canadians, I extend heartfelt congratulations to Sri Lanka’s President, Anura Kumara Dissanayake, and his progressive party, National People’s Power, on their historic majority in the parliamentary elections.

This victory represents a mandate to implement the promised economic and constitutional reforms, including addressing longstanding demands such as returning state-acquired lands in the North to their rightful owners.

The Sinhalese in the South, the Tamils in the Jaffna North, and all ethnic minorities, including Muslims and Malaiyaha Tamils, have expressed newfound trust in the government.

I urge Canada to seize this opportunity to reset its approach, shifting away from the influence of diaspora groups with divisive agendas and focusing instead on fostering respectful and strengthened bilateral relations.

Thank you Mr. Speaker

VISION OF AKD FOR THE BATTERED NATION AND ASPIRETION OF THE CITIZEN –  ARE THEY  COMPATIBLE ?

November 20th, 2024

Sarath Wijesinghe President’s Counsel –  Sri Lanka –  Solicitor England and Wales former Ambassador to UAE and Israel, President Ambassador’s forum UK/SL

A loud and clear mandate

President AKD is in power only for a few weeks (just over 50 days) elected by the citizen with and unprecedented majority of the Parliament surprising the world and – not the citizens-  who he was elected with a clear and loud mandate for his vision, program, and the conduct so far having observed carefully and as one taking collective decisions with full of aspirations and hopes for a CHANGE expected and promised by AKD and the group appeared to be well disciplined and understood the mission they are engaged in. It appears from results of the elections that the citizen has taken a collective decision to elect AKD for a change despite oppositions and objections from many sectors locally and internationally ended us with a praise from Donald Trump AKD as a great honest man defenitely after scrutinizing his conduct carefully via his network of researchers. His conduct and disciplined behaviour so far has shown that he is living up to the expectations of the electors with a sense of warning that absolute power corrupts human beings. Yet to be proved otherwise.

Policy and implementation

Apart from the lengthy policy document the summary of his speeches echo the aspirations and policies in nutshell as priority for Rule of Law, law and order, disciplined society and  governance without bribery and corruption, peace, respect, protection of all kinds of rights and duties including protection of  minorities of all sectors, and oppressed and supressed groups including children disabled eradication of poverty growth of agriculture and improve industry including tourism amongst other aspirations he  is often speaking on. His speeches like that of RW is long, convincing, appealing and will go on for hours without any notes or interruptions non stop followed by the audience for hours without moving an eyelid and with pin drop silence,  may be due to his education, determination, and experience coupled with the suppression he has gone through from childhood which he readily and often narrated.

Digitised country at the door steps of Artificial Intelligence

In the completed developing society at the doorsteps of AI and Digitalisation age he has chosen to most competent, educated and qualified in the world give priority to Digitalization as the next step for AI by appointing Dr Hans Wijesuriya – one of the who has sacrificed the multi million salary with all perks to serve the country with no payment or  perks whatsoever which is creditable for him for accepting and AKD for picking him for the job the country is badly in need of. Sri Lanka is indebted and battered due to mismanagement of the pervious rulers and the citizen is exhausted and helpless without a vision or a visionary leader for the beautiful island full of resources, and beauty for a tourist paradise inadequately utilised. Rest of the appointments and appointees so far has not met with many  criticism and generally with the tacit approval of  the citizen now vigilant and care66fully following the events with microscopic vision with the young and educated young generation equipped with the battery of mobile phones and developed IT skills and internet connected to the world and many international platforms. It is no be noted that AKD is declared to formulate a digitalized  Sri Lanka in order to minimize corruption, acceleration of the development process and to be compatible with the modern changes in the world over.

Firm and Visible mandate and believed by the masses

AKD is armed with a firm and visible mandate to implement his mandate with the visible and firm support of the citizen with high expectations to implement the main issues such as removal  of bribery and corruption, get into the proper tract on development, emerge from the debts incurred due to mismanagement of the past mistakes, and debt ridden  financial compactions in all sectors,, and unbearable cost of living and the unproductive an inefficient state sector not cooperating with the plans of the governance to deliver goods early to the citizen eagerly awaiting for results. AKD’s victory is unprecedent having obtained 2/3rd majority with 61.56 % by one party effortless as the citizen believed him his policies and tm as incorrupt above bribery and corruption and equipped with professional and intellectuals  mostly ready to serve with no remuneration.

Peaceful transformation of political culture with many seen and unseen by products on the right direction appear to be cementing by the Cabinet of Ministers scientifically chosen

The way the elected conducted is exemplary being most peaceful and orderly with only 16 minor incidents, when compared mini wars during pervious elections with killings and damage to the property before and especially after the election. I tis a new culture introduced to Sri Lanka followed by the general elections with the credit to the security forces, officers conducted the  elections, the parties involved and the citizen who voted which is a victory indeed, and the vision guidance and directions  by the visionary leadership  scrutinized  by the  entire world on international media with highest praise showing the discipline set in by the Presidents network with no force or compulsion. It seems the message is conveyed so convincingly that there were no destruction of traditional milk rice or lighting crackers that ignites the rival fractions and political groups. It seems the message conveyed to the entire  country that was followed to  the last word to the prise  and the satisfaction of the citizen which is victorious indeed that is bound to follow in other elections in the near future. Elections previously were  followed by the post election celebrations and evets that has been violent in the past yet peaceful after the presidential and general elections followed peacefully and no incidents whatsoever as happened historically befree. Introduction and implementation of this political disciplined  cultuer is a great achievement to the credit of the leadership of the new president and the group silently conducted with no publicity fanfare or compulsion.

Other direct and indirect achievements

One of the main achievements and the significance of the all island election victory with 61%  voting island wide and winning all provinces expect only one including north east are unprecedented decisions taken by the citizen extending the willingness  to live under  the umbrella of a united Sri Lanka  shedding differences coming  down for  decades with wars agitations and struggles for a sperate state merging north and east as one unit forget by traditional politicians in the north and east who are completely  rejected by the citizen believing and trusting the leaders from the south. Today north, east , and south is merged politically and a new rea is dawn based on peace friendship and reconciliation based on love and understanding of all communities is indeed an achievement dawned as a result of the miraculous victory of the citizen.and indications of the citizens in north and east is that they are no longer involved or interest in communal politics and are prepared to integrate with south that is the entire country believing the president, his team,policies and the programme readily shedding the age-old claims of separatism and merger of NE and implementation of 13th amendment believing that the entire country will be considered a single unit and country will be a united, unitary century as Sri Lankans enjoying equal rights and benefits under the proposed constitution the new administration has pledge to put forward. On the other hand now as North,East and South is merged under the leadership of the new leader believed by all communities, country will look forward to a modern revolutionary programme based on moderations in the door steps if AI and digitalisation  and AI age with the president’s pledge to do so having taken the initial step of picking Dr Hasns Wijesuriya to implement digitalisation and AI as a matter of urgency which is now being implemented.

Will Aspirations Expectations and the delivery of vision put forward could  match together?

Vision and a visionary is a prerequisite for a nation to thrive and successful in the complicated and competitive family of nations generally selfish and look inwards for  the benefit of their own nations and the citizen living with high expectations and demands with visions of visionaries who brought nations for what it is today with hard work and implementation the vision..  Few example in our vicinity are the developments of Singapore once a baron land has transformed into one of the richest nations with a world business ccentre by Lee Kuan Yew- a leader who made Singapore what it is with his vision, hard work and dedication by making the nation  disciplined nation reading it as a business hub in south east Asia a powerful commercial  empire with excellent legal and arbitration centre. Dubai is the other example where the vision of the leader Bin Alla Zyhead  converted the sandy UAE one of the richest and powerful business hubs in the middle east transformed to what it is today . Israel was made what it is today is the vision of the visionary David Benguarian, who continuously worked hard to create Israel and an agriculture hub of with  innovations converting the tiny strip in Middle East to  a nuclear power base  at the initiative of the vision hard work and collective degermation trickles down for generations irrespective of where they live on the globe. These are achievements of some successful stories of nations by disciplined visionary leaders with a vision carrying the citizen together towards the destination with hard work and vision for the nation and citizen they love. The achievement so far and the response of the citizen indicated beyond doubts that the aspirations expectations and the vison are matching and everybody is advised and warned to continue with the vision and the programme they are engaged in for the benefit of all citizens. Sarathdw28@gmail.com

Sri Siddha: A fine Cinematic effort to explore one of the turbulent times in history of Sri Lanka

November 20th, 2024

Dr. Punsara Amarasinghe

Basis of Historical Movies

Historical movies resonate with stories from the past for an audience watching them with a sense of awe after many years. The effect is gob-smacking when you see what you have fancied in your imagination on the silver screen as the events in history unveil how our world is shaped. Besides the benign charm that the historical movies generate there is a triviality involved in distorting the history through false narratives. Historical movie directors and scriptwriters often get lambasted for culling the stories by adding their whims and fancies which leads to fabricating stories devoid of historical accuracy. The South Asian audience is especially agitated before such cinematic creations regardless of the artistic value. The hullabaloo occurred after screening Jodhaa Akbar in India and Aba in Sri Lanka, which exposed the tip of the iceberg. Thus, writing a screenplay based on historical facts or directing a historical movie can be a Herculean task for any movie maker in this region. 

It is by no means an exaggeration to describe the recently released Sinhala movie Sri Siddha as a movie standing above such accusations. Rear Admiral Dr. Sarath Weerasekera wrote the script and also took the plunge of directing the movie, which brings the theatrical talents of many Sri Lankan artists such as Jagath Chamila, Paboda Sandeepani, Udari Warnakulasooriya and many more into the silver screen. The long silence that Dr Weerasekera took after his debut Gamini in 2011 hasn’t marred his skills as a director, which is visible from the entertaining manner in which he presents a wonderful historical story full of humour and pathos equally. The movie is based on the Panakaduwa  Cooper Plate discovered in 1948, which unveiled the toughest times of Vijayabahu I  in his childhood escaping from the Chola invaders and the content of the Copper Plate refers to the veneration given by the Sinhalese monarch to a leader called Sipna Budalna for protecting him during the turbulent period he underwent.

Taking from the first scene that shows how Prof Senerath Paranavithana grasped the hidden value of the Copper Plate, the rest of the movie flows exploring the different stages of Vijayabahu’s life until his arch triumph of restoring the Sinhalese dynasty in Rajarata by overthrowing the Chola rule. While unfolding this historical narrative the movie evokes many subthemes ranging from love to betrayals that add a catharsis to this find work. As a commentator in military history and strategic studies, my admiration would naturally go to Dr Weerasekera’s effort in tracing how Sinhalese organized themselves against the large forces of the Chola empire after the complete dissolution of Anuradhapura. According to Prof. Raj Somadeva, the fall of Anuradhapura was an offshoot of internal chaos within the polity than the magnitude of Cholas as the historical chronicle Mahawamsa affirms the feeble rule of Mahinda V, the last king of Anuradhapura. The state’s reliance on the mercenaries went haywire when the treasury had no money to pay them which propelled the mercenaries to switch sides by deteriorating the situation. The first half of the movie refers to all the anarchy that prevailed after the total eclipse of Anuradhapura and how Sipna Budalna, the ferocious Sinhalese leader from the Rohana devoted himself to safeguarding Prince Kitthi, who hailed from Rohana principality. 

Panakaduwa Copper Plate

The basis of Panakaduwa Copper Plate reveals the bonhomie of Sipna Budalna , the chieftain from Ruhuna who protected Vijayabahu as the Plate narrates the following annotation.

රුහුණ දඩ නායක
සිත්නරු බිම් මුදල්නාවන්
වැඩි තැන් සහ වියෙහි
වඩමින් ලොවැඩ වඩා” 

Several scenes from the move depict the military mastery of Buddalna and the way he inculcated the military discipline in young Vijayabahu . Although no evidence from Mahawamsa or the Panakaduwa Copper Plate corroborate this , Dr . Weerasekera’s imaginative endeavor adds glamour to the rich tapestry of the movie. 

A historical movie can feel tedious if it doesn’t evoke human emotions like love and grief throughout its narrative. Beyond showcasing the heroic endeavors of Vijayabahu, the film touches on the softer side of this tough monarch, who lives in the forests to unify his country. His romantic involvement during his exile ultimately ends in tragedy, as he must sacrifice his love for the preservation of the crown. When Dr. Weerasekera included this element in the plot, he likely intended to connect it to a broader geopolitical reality during the late Anuradhapura and Polonnaruwa eras. The intermarriages between the Sinhalese kings and the Pandyan royal families acted as a shield, protecting the Sinhalese monarchy from Chola invasions, as the Pandyans formed a formidable alliance with the Sinhalese against their common enemy, the Cholas. The practice of intermarriage as a political strategy was not new to the Asokan state system in the Indian subcontinent; ancient Indian strategist Shukracharya endorsed it in his well-known work, “Shukra-Nithi.” This approach served as a pragmatic tool for smaller states to secure their positions against more powerful neighbors. The movie illustrates how Prince Vijayabahu adopted this time-honored practice for long-term political gain, even at the expense of his personal sentiments.

Military Strategies

Another notable aspect of Sri Siddha is its engagement with the military strategies adopted by Vijayabahu in taming the formidable Chola opponents who kept their grip over Rajarata by transforming it into a part of the Chola Mandala system. After the cascade of failures, Vijayabahu finally vanquished the enemy by encircling them from two sides and his alliance with the Pandyan king brought the due results when Pandyan militarily engaged with Cholas, which reduced their capacity to send reinforcements to Mahathiththa in Sri Lanka. More than an artistic piece filled with love, humour, sorrow and bravery this is an eye-opener for a vigilant reader in history, who wants to know the strategic factors behind the long occupation of Cholas in Rajarata. To be precise, the narrative throughout Sri Siddha” unfolds the perennial geopolitical uncertainties around the island and how our ancestors successfully outmatched them. 

Like many historical films, this one has notable flaws. Specifically, the fighting scenes and the use of technology are quite disappointing, especially considering the advanced AI tools available to filmmakers today. The depiction of the Chola ships arriving at Mahathiththa and the representation of the Chola fortress do not do justice to the intriguing plot. However, despite these minor shortcomings, viewers should not be discouraged from watching Sri Siddha”, as it is a commendable effort to recreate our history and honor the characters who deserve our respect.

( Writer is a lecturer at the Department of International Law, Faculty of Law, General Sir John Kotelawala Defence University )

Cementing UNO’s Role in global crises resolutions

November 20th, 2024

Ibrahim Khalil Ahasan,  Dhaka, Bangladesh

The Palestinian issue is a long-standing humanitarian crisis that has been going on for almost seven decades. The Palestinian people have been living under constant Israeli occupation, oppression, and illegal settlements. This crisis is not limited to Palestine and Israel; rather, it has become a global conscience call for international human rights, freedom, and justice. In the current situation, the question has become even more important: has the United Nations actually been able to play a proper role in resolving the Palestinian crisis, or has it only played the role of a silent spectator?

The roots of the Palestinian crisis date back to the establishment of the State of Israel in 1948. Since then, the conflict has been based on the question of land and the rights of the people. For the Palestinians, the events of this year have been catastrophic, forcing them to become landless. After that 1948 event, millions of Palestinians were forced to flee their homes and become refugees, in what is known in Palestinian history as the “Nakba” or catastrophe. Over the next few decades, Israeli occupation and settlement expansion continued, severely violating the basic human rights of Palestinians. After the 1967 Arab-Israeli war, Israel occupied the West Bank, the Gaza Strip, and East Jerusalem. This occupation became a new nightmare for Palestinians, which continues to this day. The UN Security Council called on Israel to withdraw from the occupied territories in Resolution 242 in 1967. But Israel has ignored that resolution and has continued to expand settlement activities. Although these settlement activities are contrary to international law, practically nothing has been stopped.

The founding goal of the United Nations was to protect world peace, security, and human rights. The United Nations has repeatedly passed resolutions on the Palestinian issue, which have not yet been implemented. In 1947, the United Nations proposed the partition of Palestine into two separate states. It planned to establish a Jewish state and an Arab state. But that plan was never implemented. Since then, the role of the United Nations in the Palestinian issue has been only a policy position, which has never been implemented. Although there have been several Security Council resolutions, they have often been blocked due to the interests of major powers. Although Israel has been called upon to withdraw from the occupation, powerful countries such as the United States have often taken a stand in favor of Israel and vetoed the resolutions. As a result, the Palestinian crisis has become increasingly complex. This biased behavior of the world’s major powers has called into question the credibility and effectiveness of the United Nations.

The Gaza Strip is one of the most densely populated and besieged regions in the world. The people of Gaza constantly have to live with a lack of water, electricity, food insecurity, and the lack of necessary medical services. Schools and hospitals are often attacked, which has created a terrible reality for children and vulnerable people. Several UN reports have painted a grim picture of the humanitarian crisis in Gaza. The blockade has crippled the local economy. Children are growing up in a violent environment, which is having a serious impact on their mental and physical health.

The UN, as well as other powers in the international community, were supposed to play a role in resolving the Palestinian crisis. However, in reality, the geopolitical interests of the major powers have become an obstacle to resolving this crisis. The biased policies of the United States, the soft response of the European Union, and the division of the Arab world have weakened the struggle for the rights of the Palestinian people. Due to this, the path to international assistance has become even narrower. Although human rights organizations have highlighted human rights violations in Palestine, they have not brought about any effective change. Organizations such as the UN Human Rights Commission and Human Rights Watch have repeatedly condemned Israel’s occupation and human rights violations. Although these reports have expressed criticism and concern at the international level, the suffering of the Palestinian people continues to this day due to the lack of any effective action.

The UN’s overall efforts are seen as a major international failure as they are insufficient to resolve the Palestinian crisis. Although various UN agencies continue to provide relief and humanitarian assistance to Palestine, political consensus is essential to bring about a real solution. Unless the Security Council’s abuse of veto power and partisan behavior are stopped, the solution to this crisis will become impossible. Such global partisanship has played a role in the continuation of the Israeli occupation. Critics often question the existence of the organization due to the lack of an effective role for the UN. They believe that the UN has become an unprincipled and ineffective organization, which is used to protect the interests of major powers. The UN’s inability to resolve the Palestinian crisis is a major example of this criticism. Although the UN’s goal was to establish peace and protect human rights, that goal has often remained unfulfilled in the Palestinian issue.

Political reconciliation is still considered the most effective way to resolve the Palestinian crisis. Two-state solution, where Israel and Palestine would coexist as two independent states, has long been at the center of the negotiations. However, to implement this solution, both sides will have to make major concessions and the international community will have to play an effective role in forging a compromise based on justice. To bring about a lasting solution through negotiations, the United Nations and other powers of the world must play a neutral and active role. The UN human rights agency and other humanitarian organizations must work more effectively. A lasting solution to this crisis is not possible without reducing differences and building consensus among the nuclear-armed states. Resolute action must be taken to rise above political interests and achieve a just and lasting solution.

The European Union and other regional powers must also strengthen their position in resolving the Palestinian crisis. It is necessary to end injustice through effective action, not just condemnation or concern, on the issue of the rights of the Palestinian people. The UN must respond effectively and take action to address human rights violations by major international organizations. It is essential for world leaders, along with human rights organizations, to be active in both humanitarian aid and political support.

Although the Palestinian crisis is a long and complex problem, it cannot remain unresolved. Finding a humanitarian solution to this crisis is one of the greatest moral responsibilities of the world today. The United Nations and other international organizations must reassess their roles. The international community must unite and work for a humanitarian and lasting solution. As long as the Palestinian issue remains unresolved, a major crisis in human rights and justice will persist in the world. This is a major challenge not only for the Palestinians, but for the peace and security of the entire world. To solve the humanitarian crisis, everyone must stand together on the issue of humanity, not power politics. Only then will a just solution to the Palestinian issue be possible, where everyone can coexist peacefully. Without a just, lasting and respectful solution, world peace and human values will never be complete. The Palestinian people are waiting for the day when they will taste freedom and can stand with their heads held high in the world. The responsibility of the United Nations and the world community to solve this humanitarian crisis is still unresolved. We should all move towards that solution, because the struggle against unjust, true human rights and justice are the main pillars of peaceful co-existence. 

Social significance of countering misinformation

November 20th, 2024

Ibrahim Khalil Ahasan,  Dhaka, Bangladesh

 The advancement of technology around the world and the widespread spread of social media have made our lives easier, and there has been a mobility in obtaining and spreading information. However, along with this convenience, a big challenge has also arisen – propaganda. Once the only source of information was newspapers, radio, or television, where information was provided through verification and selection. But now anyone can post any news or information on social media, which quickly reaches a large number of people. As a result, even if any information is not correct, it can cause confusion among a large number of people. Propaganda can affect our personal lives, family relationships, social bonds and even the entire society. Raising awareness to prevent propaganda is very important, because propaganda is never confined to a specific boundary. Once any false information or misleading news is spread, it does not only harm a specific group; rather, it has a negative impact on the entire society. It becomes difficult for the common people to understand which information is true and which is false. And that is why propaganda can easily cause tension, panic and conflict among people.

Propaganda is often spread intentionally to harm a specific section or group of society. For example, propaganda in the field of religion, race, or politics can easily create mental and mutual hatred. When propaganda is directed at a specific group, it creates division and intolerance in society. This increases communal conflict, religious division, or ethnic hatred. Due to such propaganda, peace in society is destroyed and social bonds are weakened. Apart from this, the negative impact of propaganda can also be seen at the personal level. Spreading false information or rumors about personal life on social media is now a common occurrence. Spreading false propaganda against a person has an adverse effect on his mental and social life. Many times, due to propaganda, personal life is disrupted and the victim is mentally damaged. As a result, not only is a person’s personal life damaged, but also there is a lack of trust and confidence in society.

The most important thing to avoid the bad effects of propaganda is awareness. Even if an aware person is a victim of propaganda, he is not easily misled. One should develop the habit of verifying the truth of information. If the information is not true or cannot be verified, one should refrain from it. The help of various reliable sources or media can be taken to verify information. For example, if any information is first published on social media, it can be verified whether it was published in a reliable media. Education and awareness are the biggest tools in preventing propaganda. Education teaches people to understand the difference between truth and falsehood. In a well-educated society, propaganda cannot easily have an impact. Because educated people verify information on their own and learn to distrust false information. If media literacy, that is, awareness about the media, is included as part of education, students will learn to understand the importance of verifying information from an early age.

Although it is easy to get information through the Internet these days, the habit of verifying information has not yet been developed. Many people still assume that any information found on the Internet is true. In this regard, in addition to making social media and information technology users aware, technology companies must also take responsibility. Social media should identify suspicious news or rumors and remove them quickly. Sometimes social media authorities take some measures to prevent propaganda. However, it needs to be strengthened further. There is a need for more advanced methods to prevent propaganda from a technical perspective. The media should also play a role in preventing propaganda. The information published in the media creates trust among people. The importance of reliable media in preventing propaganda is immense. If any wrong or false information is published in the media, it spreads quickly among people and creates confusion. Therefore, the media should properly verify the information and publish it. In addition, the general public should also be made aware of the correct use of the media. People should be taught which news is credible and which is not.

Legal systems can also play an important role in preventing propaganda. In many countries, special laws have been enacted to prevent the spread of false information or propaganda. If strict punishment is provided for those who spread propaganda, no one will want to engage in propaganda easily. At the same time, in addition to preventing propaganda through legal means, emphasis should also be placed on social awareness. Personal responsibility is also an important factor in preventing propaganda. Every person must verify information on their own responsibility. If any information is shared with others without verifying it, it quickly becomes large. Therefore, it is very important to verify it before anyone shares any information on social media or at the personal level. If not verified consciously, misinformation can be spread in society and confusion can be created. Due to the widespread use of digital technology in the current world, it is necessary to increase the use of technology to prevent propaganda. Using artificial intelligence or AI technology, false or misleading information can be automatically identified and removed on social media. This may make it possible to slow down the pace of propaganda.

It is necessary to take coordinated initiatives at both the government and private levels to prevent misinformation. The general public can be made aware by running campaigns on social media and the media. In addition, the government and local administration can take up various awareness programs. The most important thing to prevent misinformation is to create awareness among the general public. Everyone should develop the habit of verifying information and resisting false information. On the one hand, this is good for the society, and it also plays a very effective role in maintaining peace and stability in the society.

පාර්ලිමේන්තු මන්ත්‍රීවරයෙකු ලෙස ප්‍රතිඥා/ දිව්රුම් නොදී  පාර්ලිමේන්තු මන්ත්‍රීවරයෙකුට හිමිවන අගමැති සහ අමාත්‍ය ධූර දැරිය හැකිද?

November 20th, 2024

අරුණ ලක්සිරි උණවටුන B.Sc(Col), PGDC(Col), නීතීඥ. සමායෝජක, වෛද්‍ය තිලක පද්මා සුබසිංහ අනුස්මරණ නීති අධ්‍යාපන වැඩසටහන

1. පාර්ලිමේන්තු මන්ත්‍රීවරයෙකු ලෙස ප්‍රතිඥා/ දිව්රුම් නොදී මන්ත්‍රීවරු ලෙස තෝර පත්කර ගත් අයට කළ හැක්කේ කථානායකවරයා තෝරා ගැනීම පමණක් බව ආණ්ඩුක්‍රම ව්‍යවස්ථාවේ 63වන ව්‍යවස්ථාවේ දක්වා ඇත.

2. පාර්ලිමේන්තු මන්ත්‍රීවරු අතරින් අගමැති සහ අමාත්‍යවරු පත් කළ යුතු බව ආණ්ඩුක්‍රම ව්‍යවස්ථාවේ 43.4 සහ 44.2 අනුව්‍යවස්ථා දක්වා ඇත.

3. පාර්ලිමේන්තු මන්ත්‍රීවරුන් ලෙස කථානායකවරයා ඉදිරියේ ප්‍රතිඥා/ දිව්රුම් නොදී සිටියද ආණ්ඩුක්‍රම ව්‍යවස්ථා ධූර වන අගමැති සහ අමාත්‍ය ධූර ලබා ගැනීම නිවැරදි බව අනුර දිසානායක ජනාධිපතිවරයා තීරණය කර ඇති හෙයින් පාර්ලිමේන්තු මන්ත්‍රීවරුන් ලෙස කථානායකවරයා ඉදිරියේ ප්‍රතිඥා/ දිව්රුම් නොදුන් තෝරාපත් වූ පාර්ලිමේන්තු මන්ත්‍රීවරු අතරින් අගමැති සහ අමාත්‍ය ධූර 2024.11.18 දින පත් කර ඇත.

4. පාර්ලිමේන්තු මන්තීවරයෙකු ලෙස ප්‍රතිඥා/ දිව්රුම් නොදීම පාර්ලිමේන්තු මන්ත්‍රීවරයෙකුගේ අසුන හිස් වීමට හේතුවක් ලෙස ආ.ක්‍ර.ව්‍ය 66 ව්‍යවස්ථාවේ දක්වා නැත්තේ
පාර්ලිමේන්තු මන්තීවරයෙකු ලෙස ප්‍රතිඥා/ දිව්රුම් දී නැති අයෙකු පාර්ලිමේන්තු මන්ත්‍රීවරයෙකු නොවන නිසාද? යන ප්‍රශ්නයට ලැබෙන පිළිතුර සමඟ පාර්ලිමේන්තු මන්ත්‍රීවරයෙකු ලෙස ප්‍රතිඥා/ දිව්රුම් නොදී  පාර්ලිමේන්තු මන්ත්‍රීවරයෙකුට හිමිවන අගමැති සහ අමාත්‍ය ධූර දැරිය හැකිද? යන ප්‍රශ්නයට පිළිතුරු ලබා ගත හැකිය.

5. පාර්ලිමේන්තු මන්ත්‍රීවරු ලෙස ප්‍රතිඥා නොදුන් තෝරා පත්කළ මන්ත්‍රීවරුන්ට මන්ත්‍රීවරු ලෙස හැදුනුම්පත් ලබාදීම, මන්ත්‍රී  වරප්‍රසාද ලබා දීම, නිවාස ලබා දීම, අගමැතිධූරය, අමාත්‍යධූර ලබා දීම සහ ඒ ස‍ඳහා සූදානම් වීම එකක්ද යන්න විමසිය යුතුය.

http://neethiyalk.blogspot.com/2024/11/blog-post.html?m=1

අරුණ ලක්සිරි උණවටුන B.Sc(Col), PGDC(Col), නීතීඥ. සමායෝජක, වෛද්‍ය තිලක පද්මා සුබසිංහ අනුස්මරණ නීති අධ්‍යාපන වැඩසටහන. දුරකථන 0712063394. (2024.11.19)

North: A change in status ahead of Maaveerar Naal

November 20th, 2024

By Shamindra Ferdinando Courtesy The Island

* One-time LTTE mouthpiece TNA is no more

* N & E Tamil speaking representation enhanced

Fresh look at Sarath Fonseka’s performance at 2010 Prez poll in North required

The new government’s main challenge is ensuring the full implementation of the IMF-led post-Aragalaya economic recovery in line with the Economic Transformation Bill approved by the previous government without a vote. Whatever the side-shows, the focus not only of the government but the Parliament should be on preparing the country to resume debt repayment in 2028 or be ready to face the consequences.

In a way it was a great thing for the country that the National People’s Power (NPP) scored an emphatic victory at the Nov. 14 general election. Now the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP)-led NPPers can have no excuses for not being able to fulfill their promises as would have been the case if the preceding September Presidential election outcome was repeated with the combined Opposition having the lion’s share of the vote, which would have left the country with a virtual hung Parliament of no benefit to anyone other than creating a parliamentary stalemate, leading to fresh political chaos.

We will, however, grant the fact they have a very tall order to fulfill after the previous governments having virtually signed away our sovereignty with the deals they had inked during their tenures.

But we do have a nagging suspicion about someone working in not so mysterious ways against us behind the scene, after what the former US Secretary of State, John Kerry, publicly stated not too long after the defeat of President Mahinda Rajapaksa at the 2015 presidential election when he crowed to the whole world how they had spent several hundred million dollars for regime change operations at the time in several countries, including Sri Lanka. Then we also know since then how a US engineered coup ousted the popularly elected Prime Minister of Pakistan Imran Khan by way of parliamentary and military shenanigans, and then the more publicised way they ousted Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina of Bangladesh and then virtually ruined that country as was the case during the Aragalaya here in 2022 to oust the legally elected President, with a wide mandate, Gotabaya Rajapaksa.

The NPP has accomplished the impossible, even in the North, in the form of securing the Jaffna electoral district at the recently concluded parliamentary election. The NPP obtained three seats, nothing but a historic watershed.

The ruling party also won the Vanni electoral district, the scene of some of the bloodiest fighting during the Eelam War IV (Aug 2006-May 2009). Securing Jaffna and Vanni consisting of Vavuniya, Kilinochchi and Mullaitivu administrative districts, is as difficult as eradicating the conventional fighting capability of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). The NPP won two seats in the Vanni.

The final phase of the ground offensive was conducted in a corner of the Vanni electorate where LTTE leader Velupillai Prabhakaran met his maker.

The NPP secured two seats in Trincomalee and one in the Batticaloa districts, whereas Digamadulla gave President Anura Kumara Dissanayake’s party four more seats. Altogether 12 out of 29 parliamentary seats available in the five above-mentioned electoral districts ended up with the NPP.

The NPP delivered the stunning blow to those who still pursued separatist agenda, regardless of the LTTE’s demise over 15 years ago. The combined armed forces brought the war to a successful conclusion in May 2009.

The Illankai Tamil Arasu Kadchi (ITAK)-led Tamil National Alliance (TNA) that dominated the Northern and Eastern provinces since 2001 hadn’t been in the fray at the 2024 general election. The TNA that had been in the grip of the LTTE, during 2004-2009, disintegrated 15 years after the end of war, with the ITAK unceremoniously ending the partnership. Ex-TNA members, EPRLF, TELO and PLOTE contested the general election under the ticket of Democratic Tamil National Alliance (DTNA).

The ITAK obtained seven seats (Batticaloa three, Jaffna one, Vanni one, Digamadulla one, Trincomalee one) whereas DTNA won just one (Vanni one). It would be pertinent to mention that ITAK and DTNA fielded a common list for the Trincomalee district to ensure a split in the Tamil vote wouldn’t cost the community much valued representation therein. ITAK Trincomalee leader Kathiravelu Shanmugam Kugathasan, who replaced R. Sampanthan in Parliament at the last Parliament, won that seat.

In addition to the seven elected, the ITAK that contested under the ‘House’ symbol won one National List slot. Ahila Ilankai Tamil Congress (AITC) was the only other party to secure a seat (Jaffna/ Gajendrakumar Ponnambalam) while Independent Group 17 (Jaffna/ Ramanathan Archuna) won one. Altogether Tamil political parties obtained 11 seats, one less than the NPP.

M.A. Sumanthiran (ITAK/Jaffna), Dharmalingham Siddharthan (DTNA/Jaffna) and Sashikala Nadarajah (DTNA/Jaffna), widow of slain ITAK MP Nadarajah Raviraj were some of the big losers. In the east, one-time Chief Minister of the Eastern Province Sivanesathurai Chandrakanthan alias Pilleyan, formerly of the LTTE, failed to retain his Batticaloa district seat. Former LTTE field commander and ex-lawmaker Vinayagamoorthy Muralitharan aka Karuna Amman made an unsuccessful bid to re-enter Parliament also from the Batticaloa district.

In the previous Parliament, there had been 16 MPs representing five Tamil political parties (ITAK, AITC Eelam People’s Democratic Party [EPDP], Tamil Makkal Viduthalai Pulikal [TMVP] and Tamil Makkal Thesiya Kuttani [TMTK]. Last week’s poll eliminated EPDP, TMVP and TMTK while new entrant NPP created political history by winning 11 seats.

In spite of the humiliating setback suffered by those who had been previously in Parliament, the NPP tally has increased the total strength of the Tamil-speaking group representing N & E in Parliament. Perhaps, the successful formation of NPP’s Tamil-speaking wing may influence other political parties to re-examine their overall political strategy. They may not have any other alternative as failure to do so can further weaken their position at the forthcoming Provincial Council and Local Government polls. PC and LG polls are expected to be held next year.

Shanakiyan Rasamanickam, who re-entered Parliament with a convincing win in Batticaloa, consolidated his position, within the party and the district, due to ITAK’s admirable performance there. If not for three Batticaloa seats, ITAK aka Federal Party would have been in an utterly embarrassing position. Batticaloa electoral district is the only one that the NPP couldn’t win. Therefore, the outspoken Rasamanickam can be really happy to have thwarted the NPP in the eastern district.

Now to bury the hatchet between the two or, more correctly, the three literally warring communities here, NPP will have to think out of the box to find a solution that may be by way of sharing power at the centre rather than the periphery, as was successfully done under the Donoughmore Constitution.

Accountability issues

At the presidential election held in Sept. the NPP couldn’t win at least one electorate in the North but did so well several weeks later, it could win Jaffna and Vanni electorates. If not for that sterling performance, the NPP couldn’t have secured an unprecedented 2/3 majority. President AKD should be ever grateful to the northern and eastern electorates for facilitating a 2/3 majority.

Since the introduction of the proportional representation at the 1989 Parliamentary election, no party succeeded in securing a 2/3 though many alleged the Rajapaksas abused such huge mandates. They were, of course, referring to the UPFA securing 144 seats and 145 seats at the 2010 and 2020 general elections, respectively. For a simple majority, the winning party needs 113 seats while 2/3 means 150 seats.

Against the backdrop of NPP’s victory in the N & E, the new Parliament should review Sri Lanka’s response to post-war accountability issues. Since the eradication of the LTTE, the TNA propagated politically motivated unsubstantiated war crimes allegations, both here and abroad. Finally, the treacherous Yahapalana government (2015-2019) betrayed the war-winning armed forces at the Geneva-based United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) in Oct 2015. The accountability resolution that had been co-sponsored by the US-led grouping and Sri Lanka was meant to pave the way for a new Constitution aimed at doing away with the country’s unitary status.

Interestingly, the war-winning Army Commander, Sarath Fonseka, who had been promoted to the rank of Field Marshal, in March 2015, served in that Yahapalana Cabinet, chaired by President Maithripala Sirisena. The role played by the then Premier Ranil Wickremesinghe and the late Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera in that despicable act is in the public domain. The failure on the part of Fonseka, who served President Sirisena’s Cabinet to vigorously oppose the government move is still a mystery.

The writer repeatedly discussed the failure on the part of Parliament and urged concerned political parties to raise the Yahapalana-TNA Geneva operation after the same lot fielded Fonseka as the common presidential candidate in 2010. Although Fonseka lost the contest by a massive 1.8 mn votes to war-winning President Mahinda Rajapaksa, he handsomely won the Jaffna, Vanni, Trincomalee, Batticaloa and Digamadulla electoral districts at the same election.

The NPP’s excellent showing in the N & E at the recently concluded general election should be examined taking Fonseka winning the former war zones 14 years ago.

Having alleged Fonseka’s Army of war crimes throughout the northern campaign, the TNA had no qualms in backing the Sinha Regiment veteran. Unfortunately, political parties represented in Parliament never bothered to raise TNA’s duplicity. Instead, all of them shamelessly and brazenly played politics with the issue, seeking petty political advantage at the expense of the armed forces. There hadn’t been a single instance of a war-winning country betraying its armed forces hitherto anywhere in the world. It was only the Maithripala Sirisena/Ranil Wickremesinghe govt. that achieved that dastardly act.

The JVP, though being not part of the Yahapalana Cabinet, never opposed the government’s move against the armed forces. However, the NPP’s victory in the North, perhaps would give an opportunity for President AKD, who is also the Defence Minister and Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces, to address the issue at hand afresh. President AKD retained the Defence portfolio when the new Cabinet of Ministers was sworn in last Monday.

The developing situation in the North may help post-war national reconciliation efforts. Successive governments deliberately allowed further deterioration of relations between the two communities by not taking apt remedial measures. Those who propagated lies were allowed to do so much to the disappointment of the armed forces. Parliament turned a blind eye even when the US and Australia et al denied visas to retired and serving officers and US imposed travel ban on the then Army Commander Gen. Shavendra Silva, the incumbent Chief of Defence Staff (CDS). Maj. General Chagie Gallage, now retired, is another victim of external reprisals.

Maaveerar Naal (Great Heroes’ day)

The Tamil Diaspora must have been quite surprised by the outcome of the general election. Some interested parties played down the importance of NPP victory in the North on the basis of low turnout of voters. It would be interesting to observe how the Diaspora and political parties here mark this year’s Maaveerar Naal. Commencing 1991, the LTTE used to celebrate Nov. 21-27 week as Great Heroes Week. During the period the group wielded power, the weeklong celebrations and activities received even international media attention.

This year, Maaveerar week is scheduled to commence on Nov 21 (tomorrow), the day the 10th Parliament meets. What would those elected from the NPP, ITAK and other parties do this year? Would interested parties seek to cause some unnecessary commotion in a bid to embarrass the government. Let us hope the government would handle the situation cautiously as opportunistic elements on both sides seek to exploit the developments. ITAK’s Sivagnanam Shritharan paid tribute to fallen Maaveerar at Kanagapuram, Kilinochchi.

The NPP’s unexpected victory in the north may compel not only Tamil Diaspora but Western countries, particularly Canada, to review their position.

Canada declared May 18 as Tamil Genocide Remembrance Day as Premier Justin Trudeau’s government sought to appease Canadian voters of Sri Lankan origin. Canada cannot under any circumstances ignore the Tamil vote received by the NPP as people discarded unsubstantiated war crimes allegations directed at the government, for the second time. Had the northern electorate believed the Army wantonly killed civilians on the Vanni east front in 2009, as alleged by the UN, they wouldn’t have voted for Fonseka. Perhaps, the people wanted the government to bring the war to an end at any cost. Having waged two terror campaigns in 1971 and 1987-1990, the JVP should be able to comprehend the need and the responsibility on the part of the government of the day to take whatever measures necessary to deal with the challenge.

The NPP was formed in 2019 just months ahead of the presidential election as the JVP realized it couldn’t push ahead on its own but needed wider public support. The NPP achieved that with ease within six years.

In August 2006, the then President Mahinda Rajapaksa went ahead with an-all-out campaign against the LTTE after failing to convince them to negotiate for a final settlement. President Rajapaksa had no option but to go on the offensive after the failed LTTE assassination attempts on the then Army Commander Lt. Gen. Fonseka (April 2006) and then Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa (Oct. 2006). The TNA remained committed to the LTTE’s murderous cause until the very end.

A matter for serious concern

An unbelievably large number of voters skipped the general election. All political parties, including the NPP, should be concerned over the unprecedented deterioration of voter interest, especially after a thrilling presidential election brought AKD to power just six weeks ago. A substantial increase for the NPP from 5,634,915 votes (42.31 %) at the presidential to 6,863,186 (61.56%) at the general election just weeks later shouldn’t be allowed to divert attention to the massive drop in public interest. Well over half a million rejected votes, too, must worry all.

The NPP won 159 seats, including 18 National List slots, nine more than required for a 2/3 majority. At the presidential election 3,520,438 voters refrained from exercising their franchise. But that figure increased to 5,325,108 at the general election while the number of rejected votes, too, recorded a significant increase. According to the Election Commission, at the presidential poll, the number of rejected votes was 300,300 while the general election recorded 667,240 rejected votes.

What really caused such an increase in the number of rejected votes was when the number of polled votes dropped from 13,619,916 votes (79.46%) to 11,815,246 (68.93%)? In other words of the 17,140,354 people eligible to vote, a staggering percentage decided not to. Voter apathy is not healthy. Not healthy at all.

A rethinking on the part of the SJB and New Democratic Front (NDF/consisted of former SLPP lawmakers and UNP) is necessary as they couldn’t at least retain the number of votes received at the presidential election. SJB that polled 4,363,035 votes (32.76 %) at the presidential poll could muster only 1,968,716 (17.66%) at the general election, while NDF could secure 500,835 (4.49%) having polled 2,299,767 (17.27%) just weeks ago. The SJB and NDF ended up with 40 seats (including five NL slots) and five seats (including 2two NL slots) while the SLPP that won 145 seats at the 2020 general election had to be satisfied with three seats, including one NL slot.

Both Sajith Premadasa and Ranil Wickremesinghe should seek remedial measures before the EC announced PC and LG polls. Perhaps, divided groups have to unite under one banner either under SJB or UNP or face annihilation at the PC and LG polls. For Premadasa and Wickremesinghe time seemed to have run out.

The SLPP obtained 350,429 votes (3.14%) at the general election up from 342,781 (2.57 %) at the presidential election. For the SLPP a rapid recovery process will never be possible as its only NL member and leader of the minute group Namal Rajapaksa is likely to be the target of corruption investigations. The SLPP group consists of Namal Rajapaksa, newcomer Chanaka Sampath (Galle) and D.V. Chanaka (Hambantota).

Fifteen political parties represented the last Parliament. They were SLPP (145), SJB (54), ITAK (10), NPP (03), EPDP (02), AITC (02), TMVP (01), SLFP (01), MNA (01), TMTK (01) TMTK, ACMC (01), NC (01), SLMC (01), UNP (01) and OPPP (01). The new Parliament will be represented by 13 political parties and one independent group – namely NPP 159, SJB 40, ITAK 08, NDF 05, SLPP 03, SLMC 03, Sarvajana Balaya (NL), UNP (01), DTNA (01), ACTC (01), ACMC (01), Jaffna Ind. Group 157 (01) and SLLP (01).

Letter to the president

November 20th, 2024

Lt Col.Anil Amarasekera.(Rtd)

Let me take this opportunity to explain to you why the letter that was sent by me on behalf of the NJC is important. The letter only summarised the dangers of devolution as opposed to decentralization. What is written below will convince you that the President should not devolve power to the provinces as suggested in the NPP manifesto.

Taking into consideration the difficulty or virtual impossibility for a central government to recall devolved power to a region, a province or a district let us consider the possible repercussions of such an eventuality in this country with several simple examples.

Firstly let us consider irrigation which is the life blood of the farming community in the northern and eastern provinces. Once this subject is devolved to a province, if the provincial administration fails to maintain the reservoirs (Wewas) and irrigation canals in the Sinhala villages, there is nothing the central government can do to help the Sinhala cultivators in distress. The only alternative left for them would be to leave those villages in the northern and eastern provinces and migrate to some other province.

Secondly let us consider the subject of health. Once this subject is devolved to a province, if the provincial administration fails to provide adequate funds to maintain the rural hospital buildings serving the Sinhala community or fails to provide adequate doctors, nurses and other staff or even medical supplies to rural hospitals in their area, the Sinhala villagers will have no other alternative left other than to leave the province and to migrate to some other province where these facilities are available.

Thirdly let us consider the subject of education. Once this subject is devolved to a province, if the provincial administration fails to appoint the teachers needed to schools in Sinhala villages and also does not allocate adequate funds to maintain and repair school buildings in the Sinhala villages, there is nothing that the central government can do in this regard. The Sinhala population will therefore leave the province and migrate to some other province where good education facilities are available for their children.

These are only three simple examples that I have provided to bring to your attention the danger of devolving power to the provinces. However the situation would be the same with regard to distribution of electricity, repair of roads, purchase of agricultural produce and many other such subjects, if there is devolution of power to a province where the Sinhala population is a minority. Therefore while devolution will only hasten the division of the country by creating administrative avenues to encourage the migration of the Sinhala population from the northern and eastern provinces of the country to other provinces, decentralization of power will not encourage such action as these powers can be withdrawn by the central government if found to be misused by any provincial council. 

Yours sincerely,

Lt Col.Anil Amarasekera.(Rtd)

About the article on Ravana

November 20th, 2024

Sunil Vijaya

I just read the article – https://www.caorc.org/post/2019/06/10/ravanas-mechanical-flying-peacock and thought of clarifying some issues the article has raised.

1.  All these GODs in Hindu mythology were humans like you and me. but since they had superhuman, attributes, they became gods after their demise.

2. Ravana was never born in Lanka or Heladeepa – he was pure Indian and related to Rama.  Rama cut the nose of a beautiful lady cousin of his and Ravana thought of one day taking revenge.

3.  Ravana moved to Sri Lanka and showed some extraordinary skills in medicine, warfare, technology, etc. The term 10 heads refers REALLY to mean 10 extraordinary skills.

4. Ravana married Mandodari – who taught Ravana chess and he perfected it later. so now he is considered the inventor.

5. Now to take revenge Ravana fabricated a flying machine for the abduction of Sita as the exit from India had to be fast.

6.  When you visit Sri Lanka next time – visit NILDIYA POKUNA where Sita was kept inside the massive rocky mountain.  still, the rooms are visible it seems.

7. The monkey god Hanuman is not a monkey but he disguised himself as a monkey to evade capture during the Rama – Ravana war his tail caught fire and the whole area was burnt down and the eventual killing of Ravana.  so Ravana became the bad guy (who never touched Sita) and Rama became the good guy who cut the nose of a princessly lady! every year these Hindu fools burn the effigy of Ravana which is a disgusting sight for us the Sri Lankans.

8. Ravana’s medicine is still used as traditional medicine (not Ayurveda) which is very effective.

9. Waariyapola – a village in Sri Lanka still boasts of an airport Waariya means air and Pola means port.

10.  Bisoskotuwa and Sorouvva are HELA language or Maaghadi (Veddas) terms used in irrigation, the most advanced hydrological society existed before the 1000s of years Anuradhapura era.

11. The racist Indian-origin Mahaanaamer wrote Mahaavansa the Lanka chronicle completely obliterating the history of Hela (Ravan tradition) culture. and before Mahinda’s arrival, pushing it back to pre-historic. (alas!)

12.  we now believe hela/elu (Sinhala / Tamil) origin dates back to millenniums and might have migrated to India rather than the other way about – observed in megalithic ruins – 30k 40k years old in the island.

13. The Brahmins were caste-promoting lot to put themselves on top of everyone.  the Rama Ravana story was created by Valmiki who wrote Ramayana and in fact, states that Ravana’s aircraft has flown a long distance which might prove Lanka was a huge continent even Ptolemy’s map shows Lanka bigger than India!

so you know it’s not a myth – a real person who lived in Lanka called Ravana. Some lab in California ended up in smithereens after trying mercury as a propellent! Ravana’s idea of propulsion is a technology never discovered yet.

sunil vijaya

mt lavinia

sri lanka

The First Mosque in London – The Fazl Mosque celebrates its Centenary.

November 20th, 2024

by A. Abdul Aziz, Sri Lankan Correspondent, Al Hakam – London.

Head of the Worldwide Ahmadiyya Muslim Community (Fifth Khalifa) Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad (,ay Allah be his Helper) in one of Friday Sermon , delivered at Masjid Mubarak, Islamabad, Tilford, UK, said that the Fazl Mosque in London, is significant because it was the first mosque of the Ahmadiyya Community built in a predominantly Christian nation. The opponents of Ahmadiyyat say that Ahmadiyyat was established by the British; however, it is strange because, in that case, this Community which was supposedly established by them, came to their country and highlighted the weaknesses of their faith and promoted the beautiful teachings of Islam. Those who raise this allegation themselves have not been able to carry out such efforts in propagation.

The First Mosque in the UK

Ahmadiyya Khalifa said that before the Fazl Mosque, there was a mosque in Woking which was built by a renowned academic, G.W. Leitner, who used to be the principal of the Oriental College in Lahore. He returned to the UK after retirement and built the mosque in 1889. Interestingly, this was the same year in which Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, peace be on him, established the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community. G.W. Leitner also established an academic institute beside the mosque as well. The professor passed away in 1899, and there was no one to look after the mosque properly after him.

The Distinction and Significance of the Fazl Mosque

The first mosque formally established by the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community was the Fazl Mosque. Today, in London and elsewhere in the world, the Ahmadiyya Community has established many mosques. However, the Fazl Mosque has the distinction of being the first mosque in London, Ahmadiyya Khalifa remarked.

Ahmadiyya Head said that other mosques in London do not spread the true message of Islam, of peace, love and harmony, as is spread from the mosques of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community. Furthermore, these other non-Ahmadi mosques will be funded by other foreign bodies or governments. However, the Ahmadiyya Community does not receive any foreign funds; instead, these mosques are built as a result of the financial contributions and sacrifices made by Ahmadi Muslims. Due to these financial sacrifices, many other mosques have also been built in England and many other western nations.

The Sun Shall Rise From the West”

His HolinessAhmadiyya Khalifa said that the Promised Messiah– Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, peace be on him said a great deal about the spread of Islam Ahmadiyyat in the West, which serves as the basis for our efforts in propagation. Founder of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Jamaát Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad – The Promised Messiah, peace be on him, said with reference to, The Sun shall rise from the West” that it was revealed to him that those Western nations which are engulfed by the darkness of disbelief will be enlightened by the light of Islam. The Promised Messiah made another prophecy, in which he said that he saw a vision in which he was standing at a pulpit in London and was delivering a speech in English filled with rational arguments in favour of the truthfulness of Islam. He then saw in a vision that he was catching white birds resembling partridges from small trees. He understood this to mean that his writings would spread to the West and many pure-natured Englishmen would accept Islam.

Ahmadiyya Khalifa said that this was the desire and hope of the Promised Messiah, peace be on him.  In light of this, the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community in London, and indeed around the world, including the West, strives to fulfil this vision of the Promised Messiah, peace be on him, through its efforts to propagate the true message of Islam. It was for this very purpose that the Fazl Mosque was established.

Establishment of the Mission House & the Wembley Conference

Under the guidance of the Second Caliph of Ahmadiyya Muslim Community, a property to serve as a mission house was acquired in Putney. When the Second Caliph was informed of this acquisition, he was in Dalhousie where he held a large function and also named the mosque the Fazl Mosque. He also made an appeal for financial contributions for this property.

Ahmadiyya Khalifa said that this piece of land was acquired from a Jewish man. Though it has developed since then, at the time, the land comprised a house and was about an acre in total.

Ahmadiyya Second Khalifa Arrives in England

Ahmadiyya Khalifa said that a consultation was held in which it was suggested that on this auspicious occasion, it would be apt for the Second Caliph Hazrat Mirza Bashiruddin Mahmood Ahmad himself to attend the Wembley Conference in 1924. This suggestion was accepted, and after visiting Egypt, Damascus, Switzerland and France, the Second Caliph made his way to England on 22 August 1924. Interestingly, the Second Caliph had seen a vision prior to his arrival in which he saw that he was stepping onto the shores of England like a victorious general and heard a voice saying, ‘William the Conqueror.’

Ahmadiyya Khalifa said that newspapers covered the arrival of the Second Caliph in England quite extensively. The Second Caliphand those who travelled with him visited St Paul’s Cathedral, outside of which he prayed for Islam’s victory, after which he entered the city. During the course of the Second Caliph’sstay in London, word about the Ahmadiyya Community spread a great deal.

Ahmadiyya Supreme Head said that after attending the various functions, it came time to lay the foundation stone of the Fazl Mosque. The Second Caliphhad decided that rather than renting various homes as mission houses which naturally would impact the efforts of propagation, a central headquarters should be established. Until 1919, due to a lack of funds and land, this task seemed too difficult. However, God furnished the required means. First came the funds; after the war, the value of the British Pound dropped. When this happened, the Second Caliphthought to take advantage. On 6 January 1920, he instructed that 14 to 15 thousand rupees should be sent to England. Later, when putting this instruction into writing, the Second Caliphwrote 30,000 rupees instead, and rather than sending it as a loan, he wrote that it would be sent as a financial contribution. Initially, on the first day, 6,000 rupees were collected. By 11 January, the Ahmadiyya Community in Qadian (Punjab, India) made great sacrifices and collected 12,000 rupees. Then, an appeal was also made outside of Qadian and in order to give people more opportunities for sacrifices, the amount was increased to 100,000 rupees. Then, through the Bank of India, this amount was sent to England.

Laying of the Foundation Stone & Address of Ahmadiyya Caliph on the Event.

On 19 October 1924, the Second Caliph laid the foundation stone of the Fazl Mosque. It was raining on that day, and when this was brought to the attention of the Second Caliphwho said that it was no matter, for those who still came to the event would do so out of sincerity and the event would be successful. A small marquee was erected for the event. Invitations were sent out to various people including politicians, dignitaries and diplomats. Despite the short notice, many guests attended the event.

After laying the foundation, the Second Caliphdelivered an address on this occasion, highlighting the importance and significance of the moment. He drew attention to the fact that all of this was being done to build a structure where people could gather and unite in the worship of the Creator of the entire universe, no matter their status, race or any other apparent difference.

The Second Caliph highlighted that a mosque does not belong to any person; rather, it belongs to God. He quoted the following Qur’anic verse:

‘And who is more unjust than he who prohibits the name of Allah being glorified in Allah’s temples’ (The Holy Qur’an, 2:115), the Ahmadiyya Second Caliph quoted at the event. On the occasion of the laying of the foundation stone, the Second Caliphalso unveiled a commemorative plaque which reads:

‘IN THE NAME OF ALLAH THE MOST BENEFICENT AND THE MOST COMPASSIONATE. WE PRAISE AND INVOKE HIS BLESSING ON HIS PROPHET THE EXALTED ONE. WITH THE GRACE AND MERCY OF GOD, HE ALONE IS THE HELPER.

Ahmadiyya Supreme Head said that this event was widely covered by newspapers and various quotes of the Second Caliph’s( speech were also quoted. After two years, in 1926 the Fazl Mosque was inaugurated by Sheikh Abdul Qadir.

The World Head of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community, the Fifth Khalifa (Caliph), His Holiness, Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad delivered the keynote address to commemorate the historic milestone of one hundred years since the foundation stone was laid by the second Caliph of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community, Hazrat Mirza Bashir-ud-Deen Mahmood Ahmad (may Allah be pleased with him) of the Fazl Mosque in London.

900 people including 300 guests gathered at the mosque in Southfields to celebrate the centenary event of London’s first Mosque, themed, ‘Islamic Light in the West: A Century of Spiritual Revival’.

His Holiness, Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad, delivered the keynote address via video link from Islamabad, UK, to attendees at the Fazl Mosque and viewers from all around the world.

His Holiness began by expressing gratitude to Allah the Almighty for this momentous milestone.

Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad stated:

Today, with profound gratitude to Allah the Almighty in our hearts, we are holding this reception to mark and celebrate the centenary of the foundation stone being laid at the Fazl Mosque in London.”

Speaking about the core purpose of mosques, Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad stated:

The reception or events associated with our mosques are entirely unlike worldly functions, as they are free from all material objectives or pursuits. A mosque is a spiritual sanctuary where individuals congregate to worship Allah the Almighty five times a day to foster spiritual growth and moral development.”

Turning to the dangers of the present circumstances of the world His Holiness said that there is a storm of unrest and global conflict” due to the ruthless pursuit of vested interests” that threatens millions of lives and casts a very long and bleak shadow over the future of humanity.”

His Holiness urged for urgent efforts to extinguish the flames of war” and reminded that the consequences of our actions today will reverberate through time and shape the world our children inherit from us.”

Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad said:

As Muslims, we believe that this worldly life is just a fleeting passage on the way to the eternal life that awaits us in the Hereafter. We believe that our deeds in this world will echo into eternity, where our actions will be weighed on the scales of divine justice, and we will be held accountable for our choices. And so, if, God forbid, humanity ever again witnesses the horrors of nuclear warfare, the harrowing consequences will be felt for generations to come.”

Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad continued and stated:

Innocent children will be born with physical or mental disabilities. Generations will be consumed by trauma, rage and hopelessness – all because of our selfishness and failure to uphold peace and justice.  So, as I conclude, it is my heartfelt prayer that may the love of God Almighty and His Creation enter the hearts of all mankind.”

Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad concluded his address and stated:

May Allah the Almighty enable all of us, irrespective of our faith or beliefs, to play our respective roles in the creation of a society where people of all religions, ethnicities and backgrounds live harmoniously and manifest grace and love to one another.”

Prior to the commencement of His Holiness’ keynote address, formal proceedings were held where guest speakers took to the podium.

Chris Cotton DL, His Majesty’s Deputy Lord Lieutenant for Greater London, touched on the importance of the second Caliph’s (may Allah be pleased with him) travel to London in 1924 and shared a passage from the second Caliph’s (may Allah be pleased with him) message to the English press.

Mr. Cotton ended his remarks by reading out the inscription on the foundation stone outside the Fazl Mosque which entailed a number of prayers including for the establishment of the mosque as a ‘sun of spiritual light’. He concluded with the words it can be said that this prayer has been answered and the Ahmadiyya Community thrives today”.

Reverend Jonathan Sedgwick, the Archdeacon of Southwark congratulated the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community, noting that it is fitting for London—the most diverse city in the world—to host its first mosque. He concluded by expressing his profound respect and appreciation for the contributions of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community.

Sir Ed Davey, Leader of the Liberal Democrats, commended the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community for its continued charitable work across the country and its members’ contribution to British society at large. Sir Ed Davey reflected on the persecution Ahmadi Muslims face in Pakistan, stating that it was maybe somewhat misfortunate that you had to be here but it’s our fortune that you are here”. He concluded his remarks by saying that His Holiness, Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad’s leadership on the debate and campaign for peace in our world has been outstanding over many years and has never been needed more.”

Chamber of Marine Industries congratulates NPP on electoral success

November 20th, 2024

CMISL President Kaushal Rajapaksa

The Chamber of Marine Industries of Sri Lanka (CMISL) has congratulated President Anura Kumara Dissanayake and the National People’s Power (NPP) on their success at the Parliamentary Election last week.

This achievement reflects the collective aspirations of Sri Lankans for transformative leadership and a renewed focus on sustainable economic growth,” CMISL President Kaushal Rajapaksa said in a letter to President Dissanayake.

The letter also said the following.

The CMISL is encouraged by your administration’s commitment to fostering economic resilience, streamlining governance, and attracting Foreign Direct Investment (FDI). We believe that expediting the implementation of the regulatory framework for the marine industry, already drawn up by the Deputy General of Merchant Shipping, is a crucial step to unlocking the full potential of this sector. A well-defined and operational framework will attract investments, reduce bureaucratic inefficiencies, and set the foundation for robust growth.

A key enabler for expanding the marine industry’s international presence is the Port City Commission’s offshore company status, which provides a significant advantage for global competitiveness. By leveraging this strategic status, Sri Lanka can position its marine industry as a regional leader in boat building, brokerage, leasing, and chartering, enabling the sector to align with global standards and capture new revenue streams. These efforts will also contribute significantly to advancing the nation’s Blue Economy, unlocking sustainable opportunities from its vast maritime resources. The concept of ‘Grow Boating’ also aligns perfectly with this vision. By promoting boating activities, increasing leisure craft ownership, and fostering a nautical culture, we can enhance both domestic engagement and tourism. This initiative will pave the way for expanding associated industries such as marine tourism, water sports, and boating events, significantly contributing to revenue generation and job creation.

Furthermore, activities such as watersports and sail training have immense potential to develop a skilled workforce, particularly among youth, while positioning Sri Lanka as a destination for unique maritime experiences. These initiatives underscore the broader goal of making the marine industry a pivotal driver of sustainable development and an integral part of the Blue Economy.

The shipbuilding and ship repair sector continues to be an integral part of the industry, enabling Sri Lanka to generate substantial revenue and maintain its maritime capabilities. Colombo Dockyard, as a flagship contributor, demonstrates the potential of this sector in supporting the nation’s ambitious targets of $ 1 billion in FDI and $ 1 billion in exports by 2029. Without a thriving shipbuilding and repair ecosystem, achieving this vision would be impossible.

The CMISL is also advancing key initiatives, including the transformation of fishing harbours into dual-use mini-marinas, the promotion of Trincomalee as a hub for offshore industry development, and the enhancement of infrastructure to support slipways, repairs, and advanced technologies. These measures, coupled with the implementation of the regulatory framework, will enable Sri Lanka to harness its strategic location and maritime assets effectively.

We stand ready to work collaboratively with your Government to bring these initiatives to fruition. By prioritising swift and decisive action, we can unlock the immense potential of the marine industry, positioning Sri Lanka as a leading maritime nation on the global stage.

Once again, we extend our congratulations to the NPP on its remarkable success and look forward to contributing to a vibrant and sustainable future for Sri Lanka.”


Copyright © 2026 LankaWeb.com. All Rights Reserved. Powered by Wordpress