Shut Down of Daily Dinkal and Media Freedom Narrative: Example of Post-Truth Politics?

February 26th, 2023

Aziz Patwary London, England

On February 19th, Bangladesh shut down a daily newspaper, Dainik Dinkal, for violating the country’s press and publication law. The decision has created a national debate in Bangladesh. Many portray this shutdown by legal intervention as an attack on the country’s media freedom. The issue has also attracted international media such as BBC, Al Jazeera, and The Guardian. Committee for Protecting Journalists (CPJ) also quickly gave a statement citing the decision as a ‘blatant’ attack against media freedom. Perhaps, the daily’s political affiliation with the opposition, BNP, and its top leader, Tarique Rahman is the reason behind such media attention. But in the era of post-positivism, it is worth asking if the shutdown is really a media freedom issue. Or is it an example of post-truth politics?

What is ‘Post-Truth’ Politics?

Post-truth politics, also called post-factual politics and post-reality politics, is a political culture in which debate is framed largely by appeals to emotion disconnected from the details of policy, and by repetition of the framed statement, it ignores objective rebuttals to it. Post-truth politics is largely applied by populist political parties to pursue the masses. It is a very modern concept that has become popular in academia since 2015 to understand contemporary phenomena.

As the narratives are framed based on emotions and personal beliefs rather than objectivity. Academics, political leaders, and commentators become very important in shaping them. In post-truth politics, disinformation, false or fabricated news, rumor, conspiracy theories, and manufactured controversies are widely used to shape public opinion or ‘gaslight’ the public into confusion and fuel dissidence.

Dinkal Shutdown

Dinkal’s shutdown is not a single decision, rather it’s a legal process. The issue began on 26th November 2022, when a Dhaka court ordered to cancellation of its license over a violation of the law. After that, the Dinkal authority appealed against the decision on 29th December. But their appeal was rejected at the Bangladesh Press Council on 19th February. Since then, the publication of the daily is off.

The allegation brought against Dinkal is that it is violating press and publication law.

According to law, the editor of any Bangladeshi daily must hand over the charge of the respective newspaper if he stays more than 6 months abroad. The editor of Dinkal is Tarique Rahman, the top leader of the main opposition, BNP. Tarique Rahman is currently a fugitive in the eye of the law as he has been sentenced to several criminal lawsuits against him. He is also one of the masterminds behind the 21st August Grenade Attack that took place in 2004. Tarique Rahman has been living in exile in the United Kingdom to escape jail time for more than 14 years now.

Yet he did not hand over the charge of the Daily Dinkal to anyone. The managing editor, Shamsur Rahman Shemul was managing the newspaper till the court decision with Rizwan Siddique as the acting editor.

Such management of the daily Dinkal is a clear violation of the law upon which the press council decided to reject the appeal. It is worth mentioning that the press council also consists of a wide range of stakeholders including fellow journalists.

Dinkal and Post-Truth Politics

No doubt, Bangladesh is struggling to uphold its media freedom. The country is currently at 162nd in Global Media Freedom Index 2022. But the legal proceedings and Dinkal’s clear violation suggest that the shutdown is a completely legal step. Hence, it has nothing to do with media freedom in Bangladesh. Yet CPJ portrayed it as a ‘Blatant attack’ on press freedom.

Again, the prominent international media such as Al Jazeera, Barrons, and the Guardian portrayed Dinkal as the ‘main opposition newspaper’. There is also an attempt to portray Dinkal as a dissident voice and a ‘prominent’ newspaper.

But in reality, Dinkal is just another newspaper struggling to maintain existence with least circulation. According to the government’s Department of Films and Publications, the daily’s latest daily circulation stood at only 15,580 copies. With such low circulation, Dinkal is not even in the top fifty Bengali newspapers in Bangladesh.

It seems the press freedom narrative and the debate over license cancellation are driven by subjectivity, and emotion; disconnected from the detail of the case and objectivity. The narrative is also driven by a conspiracy theory aimed to fuel dissidence only. Therefore, the debate and the narrative regarding Dainik Dinkal is an example of post-truth politics.

In a nutshell, Dinkal’s shutdown is a legal decision. It is not a political decision or a repressive measure. Bangladesh currently has more than 500 dailies published every day. Dinkal is just one of them that violated the country’s law. The subsequent debate and narrative are only exaggerated portrayals and it reveals that there is post-truth politics at play motivated by subjectivity, emotion, personal belief, and conspiracy theories.

China’s ‘position paper’ on security stresses non-interference in internal affairs of countries

February 26th, 2023

By P.k. Balachandran Courtesy Ceylon Today

On February 21, China released its ‘position paper’ on global security. The comprehensive paper touches on all aspects of global security (except security from debt traps). But an aspect that should please many countries of the Global South, both big and small, is the plea for non-interference in the internal affairs of countries by the big powers.

We believe all countries, big or small, strong or weak, rich or poor, are equal members of the international community. Their internal affairs brook no external interference, their sovereignty and dignity must be respected, and their right to independently choose social systems and development paths must be upheld,” the position paper said.

Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Bangladesh, China, and lately India too, have been bitterly complaining of US interference in their internal affairs, either to strengthen human rights or to promote a particular social or political ideology or to bring about a suitable regime change. Till some time ago, it was fashionable to openly champion the ‘Right to Protect’. At present, under the rubric of protecting human or democratic rights, interference goes on through censuring, shaming, lecturing and sanctioning.

Ever since the West started getting interested in Sri Lanka, following the entry of China into the field of economic development in the island under the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) in 2010, the South Asian country has been annually hauled over the coals at the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC)for alleged war crimes. Sri Lanka’s plea that it was fighting a ruthless terror group, the LTTE, fell on deaf ears in the  West as did the plea that outside interference is an assault on the country’s sovereign right to conduct its internal affairs as it deems fit.

The European Union denied Sri Lanka GSP Plus tariff concessions for a few years badly affecting incomes of thousands of poor female garment workers. Some high ranking army officers and two past Lankan Presidents were sanctioned by Western nations.

Most recently Sunday Times had written about a Western diplomat seeking appointments with Sri Lankan judges, allegedly to influence them in a case involving the controversial Local Government Elections. In the past, this diplomat had tweeted seeking tolerance towards agitators who had in the past broken into the Presidential office.

On Wednesday, the National Freedom Front (NFF) MP, Wimal Weerawansa, alleged that a US Defense Department team under Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary Jedidiah P. Royal had visited Sri Lanka with plans to get all Sri Lankan intelligence placed in the hands of a CIA official. The veracity of this claim is to yet to be established.

In January, on the second anniversary of the military coup in Myanmar, the US sanctioned six individuals and three entities connected to the military regime for alleged violation of human rights. In December 2021, the US sanctioned seven officials of Bangladesh’s Rapid Action Battalion (RAB), an anti-terrorist and anti-drug trafficking outfit, for excesses, ignoring the drug and extremist threat to that developing country.

Critical media coverage

India has now come in for trenchant criticism over the treatment of Muslims and political opponents and critics by the Narendra Modi’s Hindu nationalist government. Indian liberals, rights lobbyists and the opposition parties welcomed the critical media coverage in the West, including the BBC documentary on Modi’s alleged complicity in the Gujarat anti-Muslim riots in 2002. But Indian Foreign Minister S.Jaishankar, described the Western media coverage as politically motivated and a thinly veiled bid to influence Indians against Modi ahead of the 2024 parliamentary Elections. Others said that the West was annoyed with the Modi government for not backing it on Ukraine and trying to rally the Global South behind it in a bid for world leadership.

China, of course, is unabashedly threatened by the US. President Trump’s Secretary of State Mike Pompeo had made no bones about the fact that the US aimed at overthrowing the communist party government in China.

It is in the context that the Global South will welcome the Chinese position paper which calls for non-interference in the internal affairs of other countries. As far as India is concerned, it fits in with Nehru’s Five Principles for Peaceful Co-existence, which includes non-interference in each other’s internal affairs.

Other concerns

The Chinese position paper indicates Beijing’s approach to the Ukraine crisis in which the security of both Russia and Ukraine are involved. It says: We believe all countries are equal in terms of security interests. The legitimate and reasonable security concerns of all countries should be taken seriously and addressed properly, not persistently ignored or systemically challenged. Any country, while pursuing its own security, should take into account the reasonable security concerns of others.”

Going further, it says: War and sanctions are no fundamental solution to disputes; only dialogue and consultation are effective in resolving differences. We call on countries to strengthen strategic communication, enhance mutual security confidence, diffuse tensions, manage differences and eliminate the root causes of crises.”

Major countries must uphold justice, fulfill their due responsibilities, support consultation on an equal footing, and facilitate talks for peace, play good offices and mediate in light of the needs and will of the countries concerned. The international community should support all efforts conducive to the peaceful settlement of crises, and encourage conflicting parties to build trust, settle disputes and promote security through dialogue. Abusing unilateral sanctions and long-arm jurisdiction do not solve a problem, but only create more difficulties and complications.”

Here, Beijing has a message for Russia as well as the US. While the former has been told that war is no solution, the latter has been ticked off for its crippling sanctions on Russia, which have indirectly affected  Europe too.

The prescription that the ‘root causes’ of crises should be eliminated upholds Russia’s plea that the US and NATO had shown scant regard for the threat to its security arising from NATO’s encroachment right up to Ukraine that is pat on Russia’s border.

Commitment to the UN system

The position paper calls for commitment to the UN system. It calls on major countries to lead by example in honoring equality, good faith, cooperation and the rule of law, and in complying with the UN Charter and international law. It calls for adherence to mutual respect, peaceful coexistence and win-win cooperation, sticking to the bottom line of no conflict and no confrontation, seeking common ground while reserving differences, and managing differences.

In an apparent allusion to disputes such as the one between India and Pakistan over Kashmir, the position paper says that political settlement of international and regional hotspot issues should be promoted. Countries should be encouraged to overcome differences and resolve hotspots through candid dialogue and communication.

The paper seeks compliance with the joint statement on preventing nuclear war and avoiding arms races issued by leaders of the five nuclear-weapon states in January 2022.”

The international community should constructively participate in the political settlement of hotspots, but under the premise of non-interference in internal affairs, mainly through the means of facilitating peace talks, with fairness and practicality as the main attitude, and mainly following the approach of addressing both symptoms and root causes.”

The paper specifically mentions support for the political settlement of the Ukraine crisis through dialogue and negotiation.”

On fighting terrorism, the position paper says that the UN’s role as the central coordinator in the global fight against terrorism should be supported by the international community. It calls for the full implementation of the UN General Assembly and Security Council counter-terrorism resolutions and the UN Global Counter-Terrorism Strategy.

Of interest to India and Pakistan and also China, is the call to jointly crack down on all terrorist organizations and individuals designated by the Security Council.”  India has been accusing Pakistan of sheltering UN-designated terrorists and China of siding with Pakistan on this issue.

In an apparent reference to the branding of Pakistan as a terrorist State” the position paper says that China opposes linking terrorism with any particular country, ethnic group or religion.”

By P.K. Balachandran

A Nation in Limbo

February 26th, 2023

By Shivanthi ranasinghe Courtesy Ceylon Today

Last week, there was a buzz over the unfounded report that the IMF may consider approving the USD 2.9 billion Extended Fund Facility (EFF), even without China’s assurances. This was politely refuted by the IMF Asia and Pacific Department Director Krishna Srinivasan, for he thinks the ideal way would be to await financial assurance from China. Thus, we are back to square one, which is to wait for the IMF ‘bailout’ with our any day now” attitude.

Alternative Solutions

While all eyes turn back towards China, the outspoken former Central Bank Governor Ajith Cabraal points out that multilateral lenders as IMF, World Bank and ADB as ‘Senior Creditors’ must, in the sovereign debt re-structuring exercise, also have their loans restructured like other bilateral and commercial creditors. He further urges IMF’s top management to grant a moratorium of at least one year on all emerging nations’ debt due to ‘Senior Creditors’ at the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic – something he had been reiterating since March 2020.

Earlier, the non-profit British campaign group Debt Justice and a group of 182 economists and development experts, from around the world, had called on hedge funds and other private creditors to ease up their hardline stance in the debt-relief negotiations with the Island nation. It is their opinion that all lenders, bilateral, multilateral, and private – must share the burden of restructuring, with assurance of additional financing in the near term.”

It has been pointed out that almost 40 per cent of Sri Lanka’s external debt is held with the private creditors. These are mostly in the form of international sovereign bonds, which charge a higher interest rate due to the risks involved in lending to weak economies as Sri Lanka’s. Consequently, through the interests levied by these bonds the lenders receive more than 50 per cent of the external debt payments. It is these higher interest rates that directly contributed to Sri Lanka’s downfall.

In the opinion of this group of financial experts, as the risk anticipated by the private lenders have come to pass, those who charged a higher premium for taking that risk must now be willing to accept the consequences of that risk.

Recently, in Parliament, a young MP from Jathika Nidahas Peramuna made a poignant speech. MP Uddika Premarathna, taking the Tuna-Tourism concept of the Maldives, the agricultural venture in Dubai and the home grown solutions adapted by Ethiopia advocates that we too look into our own resources and start developing our own economy. He disdained the very idea of sending our young blood, especially our mothers, overseas for foreign remittances.

Faithfully Waiting for the IMF

Yet, instead of considering these alternatives, we stay faithful to the hope that the IMF can and will bail us out. The staff agreement that was reached with the IMF in September 2022 has so far only been a bait.

In anticipation of this fund, we have increased our taxes and interest rates. We have adapted these measures notwithstanding the effect it will have on our SME and resulting economic contraction. Subsidies have been cut off, which have has resulted in our utility bills shooting up. By reducing the retirement age, the State sector has been drastically reduced.

All these measure’s definitely need to be implemented if we are to move away from our current welfare State. However, this drastic course correction will not yield overnight results but disasters. It is important to understand the costs and benefits of these measures. For instance, will reducing the State sector alone improve efficiency is an important question before us.

Reducing the cadre will certainly ease the Treasury’s burden significantly. However, is that alone enough to strengthen our economy? If the economy is not providing employment opportunities for those who retire from public service, what will be their fate when they need more than their pensions to meet their personal responsibilities and obligations?

We must not forget that we were a nation in recovery after a 30-year costly war against terrorism. Just before the 10th anniversary of eradicating terrorism, the devastating Easter Attack adversely affected tourism – one of our major forex earning avenues. Before tourism could recover, we were plagued with the Covid-19 pandemic, which curtailed most of our forex revenues.

Thus, people in this country need a little bit of breathing space to recover. Instead, when the economy is deliberately contracted, the shock to the system and society might be too much. The unfortunate sequence of events in 2022, that forced a democratically elected President to resign from Office or lose his life, puts every government henceforth in danger of anarchy and being ousted by an angry crowd.

While Waiting to be Bailed Out

As we wait for foreign experts to figure out a plan, to get us out of this financial mess, we have been quite busy. A special committee was appointed to decide if the national flower should be called the nil manel or just manel. Also the decision was taken to rename ‘Slave Island’ as Kompagngna Veediya and so blot out a colonial blemish”.

While PM Dinesh Gunawardena took a leading role in these acts, he is still to utter a word against plans to implement the 13th Amendment in full. It appears these controversies are only bridges to cross to reach the pinnacle of one’s political career.

In the meantime, we celebrated the 75th Independence Day, spending an approximate Rs 200 million. We did not want to be stingy with the expenses lest the world thinks we could not afford to celebrate our own independence. It seems that we need a little bit more time for the penny to drop and realise that the reigns of a country is with the one who controls the economy.

Almost coinciding with our Independence Day celebrations is the release of the movie ‘Gaadi: Children of the Sun’. Though we faithfully celebrate the Independence Day every year, proudly showcasing what we have inherited from the British – right down to the kilt, we do not speak of the extraordinary events that took place before or after 1815 or for that matter of the treaty we signed with the British or what happened to that treaty.

It is in this vacuum that movies like ‘Gaadi’ that highlights the trials of a condemned woman are released. Therefore, this story is taken completely out of context from the actual events. Instead of being a historical anecdote, this continues to feed a fallacy spun to justify the forced occupation of the British.

In this day and age, almost all information – including accounts of history – are freely and easily available. It is thus truly shocking that we continue to teach our children the falsehood that after the brutal execution of the Ehalepola family and others, people were so disgusted with King Sri Veera Parakrama Narendra Singha and wanted him replaced with a foreign king. For the record, the movie does not make any such statement. Nevertheless, by maintaining a deafening silence over all other related events but only accentuating on this, it feeds the fallacy.

Our Forgotten Heroes

At the very least, we do not honour the Most Venerable Wariyapola Sri Sumangala Thera. It was he who forced the Union Jack down and insisted that our national flag continue to be hoisted until this treacherous treaty was signed. The Venerable Thera’s actions were very much akin to that of the 21-year old naval rating Wijitha Rohana Wijayamuni in 1987.

Wijayamuni too made history by demonstrating his opposition to another treaty signed with another foreign power during a different era. The Indian Premier Rajiv Gandhi twisted the then Sri Lankan President JR Jayewardene’s arm and on 27.07.1987 and forced the Indo-Lanka Accord despite the severe opposition from the country.

Key ministers, including J.R. Jayewardene’s own Prime Minister Ranasinghe Premadasa, had to be kept under house arrest as they were vehemently opposed to the Accord. Despite this opposition, President Jayewardene signed the Accord and with it passed the controversial 13th Amendment to the Constitution. Curiously, PM Ranasinghe’s son, incumbent Opposition Leader SajithPremadasa is for the full implementation of it.

Soon after the signing of the Accord, the Indian Premier was invited to inspect a Guard of Honor on his behalf. The Indian Premier appeared both smug and arrogant as he made his inspection, only to be assaulted with a rifle butt by young Wijayamuni.

Both Venerable Sri Sumangala Thera and Naval rating Wijayamuni depicted the mood of the nation as leaders took foolish decisions that endangered the country. By forgetting these heroes, we forget who we are, our values and our worth.

As things stand, the IMF bailout may never materialise. Even if it does, their remedy might be worse than the malady.

Conversely, searching for alternative solutions and heeding alternative advice will certainly not kill us but broaden our perspectives and options. We should not be afraid to go against the IMF’s word for it was under their guidance that our robust economic growth of seven per cent in 2014 was reduced to two per cent by 2019, which also contributed to the ongoing economic crisis.

ranasingheshivanthi@gmail.com

(The views and opinions expressed in this article are writer’s own and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of Ceylon Today)

By Shivanthi Ranasinghe

IMF calls for ‘timely and orderly processes’ of debt resolution for Sri Lanka

February 26th, 2023

Courtesy Adaderana

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) on Saturday called for ‘timely and orderly processes’ under common framework with regards to Sri Lanka’s debt resolution. The island nation faced severe economic crisis which resulted in high debt.

In a statement issued after conclusion of G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors (FMCBG) meeting under India’s presidency, IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva strongly endorsed efforts to strengthen the debt architecture and improve the speed and effectiveness of debt resolution, keeping in mind rising debt vulnerabilities in many countries. 

Sovereign debt vulnerabilities, which were already in an elevated state before the pandemic, have been exacerbated by the shocks stemming from Covid-19 and Russia’s war against Ukraine. This is particularly the case for developing and low-income countries with very limited policy space and huge development needs, she added.

During 2020, in order to strengthen debt architecture, the G20 initiated Debt Service Suspension Initiative (DSSI) and established the Common Framework (CF) for debt resolution. 

It is now critical to complete Zambia’s debt restructuring, establish a Creditor Committee for Ghana and advance work with Ethiopia. Nonetheless, more predictable, timely and orderly processes are needed both for countries under the CF and for those not covered by it, including Sri Lanka and Suriname,” she said.

Growth slowdown

She reminded of global growth slowdown in 2023. She also recalled from her previous blog that too many people in too many countries are struggling to make ends meet. Keeping this in mind, the international community, has a responsibility to come together to find solutions for the most vulnerable members of global family. This calls for urgent action to strengthen the international financial architecture, especially in the area of debt resolution and strengthening the global financial safety net,” she said.

Quota review

Considering the great uncertainty and repeated turbulence in the global economy, she emphasised on further bolstering the IMF’s capacity to support its members. This applies most urgently to its concessional financing for low-income countries through and Poverty Reduction and Growth Facility (PRGT). Demand for PRGT support has reached unprecedented levels and can only be met if matched by an increase in PRGT loan and subsidy resources. In addition, a successful quota review — which the IMF’s membership has committed to complete by December 2023 — is critical for a strong Global Financial Safety Net.

The latter has always been important for global stability and is even more important in today’s challenging global environment, especially for the most vulnerable countries and people. Our common interest is to secure a well-functioning and integrated global economy, for the sake of a more secure and prosperous world,” she said.

Source: The Hindu Business Line

–Agencies 

Karannagoda committee recommends CID probe against Gen. Shavendra Silva

February 26th, 2023

Courtesy Adaderana

The committee appointed to look into any lapses by State Intelligence, Police and the Armed Forces during the mass anti-government protests and violent incidents across the island on 09 and 10 May 2022 has recommended that the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) conduct an investigation into former Army Commander General Shavendra Silva. 

Accordingly, the committee, referred to as the Karannagoda Committee, recommended that the CID conduct an investigation into General Shavendra for not taking the required measures to prevent the violence incited and the burning of MPs houses on the aforementioned dates. 

The report submitted by the committee further stated that General Shavendra, in his capacity as the Chief of Defence Staff, had failed to communicate the orders issued by the Secretary to the Defence Ministry to the relevant officials in order to prevent the violence that had occurred. 

The report was handed over to President Ranil Wickremesinghe on 08 September 2022, while a copy of the report was submitted to the Court of Appeal on 24 February 2023, by Karannagoda ‘s legal representation, President’s Counsel Uditha Igalahewa. 

In June 2022, then President Gotabaya Rajapaksa appointed a three-member committee, comprising of Marshal of the Air Force Roshan Gunathilake and General R. M. Daya Ratnayake, and chaired by Admiral of the Fleet Wasantha Karannagoda. 

The Karannagoda Committee was appointed after 34 MPs belonging to the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP), including Bandula Gunwardena, Shehan Semasinghe, prasanna Ranatunga, Janaka Bandara Tennakoon and Gamini Lokuge filed a petition against IGP Chandana D. Wickramaratne, former Army Commander and current Chief of Defence Staff, Gen. Shavendra Silva, the Defence Secretary, Senior DIG-in-Charge of Western Province SDIG Deshabandu Tennakoon and 13 others, seeking an order that the torching of their residencies be investigated, and to inquire into any lapses that may have taken place by the relevant officials.

President urges young lawyers to lead new legal developments in Port City

February 26th, 2023

Courtesy Adaderana

President Ranil Wickremesinghe has urged young lawyers to specialise in offshore economy law and a form a committee to lead new legal developments in the Port City.

Addressing the Annual General Meeting (AGM) of the Royal College Lawyers’ Association held at the Blue Ballroom of the Hilton Hotel Colombo yesterday (25 Feb.), the Head of State proposed the forming of a committee of lawyers focusing on offshore economy law, following the development of the Colombo Port City as a financial hub.

Wickremesinghe encouraged young lawyers to get a head-start on the legal areas in relation to making the Port City into a financial centre and emphasised the importance of taking on responsibility and leadership roles.

Highlighting the important role that Royal College has played in shaping the law and legal system in Sri Lanka, President Wickremesinghe suggested new areas of law that may emerge in the future. 

He also remphasisied his commitment to making tough decisions for the good of the economy and the country, even if they are unpopular. 

In a lighter vein, the President joked that he cannot make all the lawyers President’s Counsels but is happy to make them all Royal Counsels.

Meanwhile, the Welcome Speech was delivered by the President of Royal College Lawyers’ Association Rohan Sahabandu (PC) while outgoing Secretary of the Royal College Lawyers’ Association Harshana Matharaarachchi presented the report.

Rohan Sahabandu (PC) was re-elected as the President of the Royal College 
Lawyers’ Association. Newly elected secretary Lasitha Kanuwanaarachchi delivered the vote of thanks.

Attorney General Sanjay Rajaratnam, and Principal of the Royal College R. M. Ratnayake were also present at the occasion.

Nearly 20 injured and hospitalized during NPP protest

February 26th, 2023

Courtesy Adaderana

Nearly 20 persons who were injured during today’s protest staged by the National People’s Power (NPP) were brought to the National Hospital in Colombo for treatment. 

Accordingly, hospital sources confirmed that those injured during the protest were brought for treatment after tear gas and water cannons were fired in attempts to disperse the protesters. 

Police had fired tear gas and water cannons to disperse the group of protesters at Ibbanwala Junction near Town Hall in Colombo during the demonstration organized by the National People’s Power (NPP) earlier today (26 Feb.). 

Meanwhile, the road leading from the Nelum Pokuna Theatre towards Town Hall was also completely blocked due to the protest. 

The political party took to the streets today amidst two court orders being issued by both the Fort Magistrate’s Court and the Maligakanda Magistrate’s Court, preventing a total of 26 persons, including Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake from entering several areas in Colombo during the protest. 

The NPP protest is being staged against the government and demanding the holding of elections without delay

We can’t afford ad hoc payments, we need reserves if IMF deal doesn’t come through – President

February 26th, 2023

Courtesy Adaderana

President Ranil Wickremesinghe has stated that the country’s economy cannot afford the release of funds on an ad hoc basis, owing to its ongoing economic crisis.

Taking to Twitter, the Head of State said We are facing an economic crisis, and we need to plan our spending carefully. Budgets are made for the whole year, so we can’t release funds on an ad hoc basis. We have to keep a reserve in case the IMF funds for which we are negotiating aren’t received in March”.

Speaking on current controversies surrounding the 2023 Local Government (LG) election, Wickremesinghe stated that they are yet to receive proper clarity on the costs incurred for the polls, as the estimated amounts and those requested do not tally.

EC estimated it at Rs. 10B but requested 6B. The police have requested higher than the estimates”, he said, adding that the Finance Ministry has been instructed to study these discrepancies and submit an accurate budget.

Moreover, the Prime Minister has also been instructed to take the necessary measures to appoint a  Select Committee Inquiry into who is responsible for ‘destroying the economy’ by the third week of March.

The economy is my top priority. We will not have a country if the economy does not develop”, the President emphasised, adding that the constitution may be protected only if the country is protected.

Ranil Wickremesinghe does not want an election. According to him, neither does the Sajith Premadasa.

February 26th, 2023

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https://www.facebook.com/vraiecallybalthazaar/videos/523246279894005

More powers for BOI, assures state minister Dilum

February 26th, 2023

Courtesy Adaderana

In a bid to further facilitate investors through speedy approvals for investment projects, thereby easing the ease of doing business, the Board of Investment of Sri Lanka (BOI) will be granted more powers in future, Investment Promotion State Minister Dilum Amunugama stated.

He stressed that the new powers would see investors being given more efficient clearance processes for relevant projects, offering investors additional certainty and clarity.

The State Minister made these remarks during a discussion held with the BOI trade union representatives recently.

It is evident that the modus operandi in obtaining necessary approvals for investment projects causes significant hindrances to investors, which has a considerable bearing on the willingness and confidence of the investors to continue their business. In fact, some projects require approvals from 70 institutions,” Amunugama highlighted.

In this context, attention has been drawn to leveraging a business model called the plug-and-play model where all clearances and other prerequisites will be in place before the project is awarded to any investor. Here, the business firms are not required to focus on the basic requirements for setting up a business as everything is arranged by the relevant authority, which would be the BOI,” he explained.

With the new powers in place, the BOI will be equipped to act more independently and effectively and thus, upbeat about wooing more investors to Sri Lana,” Amunugama added.

Moreover, the State Minister pointed out, In light of the present situation in the country, driving more investments and promoting tourism is the need of the hour. As such, the BOI needs to bend over backwards to make sure that investors feel comfortable and confident in doing business in Sri Lanka,”

Meanwhile, Convenor of the Joint Trade Union Alliance Mahesh Abegunawardana opined, The delays that are caused owing to the inefficiency of other institutions when granting approvals for projects, are often considered delays of BOI. This is evident with what transpired in the recently declared open Hanthana International Bird Park where BOI was blamed for not granting approvals on time causing a major impediment; however, there were no delays from our end.”

The BOI employees are always geared to perform their duties with utmost capacity and commitment for the betterment of the institution and the country at large, Mr. Abegunawardana added

Jaffna Salt Water Scheme

February 25th, 2023

Researched and written by Mr. Rama Somasunderam retired State Secretary of the Ministry of Transport (1990) and retired Additional Secretary of the Ministry of Mahaweli (SLAS).   

This was called the Jaffna Peninsula Lagoon Scheme which is located at Elephant Pass which is located 30 miles South East of Jaffna.

The lagoon is 19,000 acres and is saline due to sea water entering from the West during the South West Monsoon, through the bride at Elephant pass and from the East, during the North East Monsoon, due to the failure of the Sand Bar opening at Chundikulam.

The projects seek to stop the seawater and thereby getting freshwater drawing down Kanagrayan Aru. It was first mooted in 1879 and later in 1928. The projects involves catchment area of 474 square miles. The length of the bund at Elephant Pass 2m 3740 feet. The length of bund and spill at Chundikulam is 1m.4700 feet. Spill is 2,000 feet in length and the link channel is two and a half miles. 

This project was known as a river for Jaffna and the main points of the scheme is:

  1. Closing of the road and railway bridges at Elephant Pass so as to prevent fresh water going for this end. I believe this work has been completed.
  2. Building a bund of the Eastern end of the Elephant Pass lagoon so as to prevent fresh water going into the sea at Chundikulam.  This work to be completed but the bund was breached by heavy rain which allowed sea water seep in.
  3. Excavate a 12 meter wide, 4. KM wide long channel from the Northern part of the Elephant Pass Lagoon to get fresh water from the Elephant Pass to the Vadamarachchi Lagoon. This has not been completed.
  4. To re do the existing Thondamanaru Barrage so as to allow discharge of flood water. At present the condition of the barrage is not satisfactory and allows sea water to enter the lagoon.   
  5. A Spill Way and gates to be constructed at the Southern End of Upparu Lagoon. This is near Arialai. This should Upparu Lagoon a fresh water lagoon. It will also provide the link channel from Elephant Pass. The Pill way and Gates have been constructed but is not satisfactory and allows sea water to enter the lagoon.

In summary the following four steps have to be taken, which are as follows:

  1. Recondition of the Thondamanaru Barrage.
  2. To recondition Arialial Barrage.
  3. Complete Mulilyan Link Channel.  
  4. Complete Spill Cum Causeway.

In 1983 and 2003 the Sri Lankan government stated that they will take steps but no action was taken to date.

                                                      Project Benefits.

The project when completed will transform agricultural production and improve the quality of water as there is a problem of salinity in the wells.

About 8,000 heaters of land is cultivated with paddy in Jaffna but his is done with rainwater. About 44,000 heaters of land are not cultivated near the lagoons as they are saline. With fresh water this can be cultivated.

Converting Elephant Pass Lagoon into 77 sq.km fresh water lagoon will increase agricultural production in Jaffna in the North and the Vanni in the South.   

References

  1. Water Resources of Ceylon its Utilisation and Development by S. Arumugam, 1969. 
  2. K. Shanmugarajah – Water Resources Development Jaffna Peninsula, 1993.
  3. Thiru Arumugam – A River for Jaffna, 1995 – 1997.

Kelani Ganga Development scheme for flood control and to utilize the water potential for power generation and irrigation

February 25th, 2023

Mr. Rama Somasunderam retired State Secretary of the Ministry of Transport (1990) and retired Additional Secretary of the Ministry of Mahaweli (SLAS).   

The Kelini Ganga is one of the main rivers of Sri Lanka. It has its source in the Central Hills near Adam’s Speak and follows through the South Western Part of the country and falls into the sea at Colombo. Due to the heavy rain fall the average yield of 486 million acre feet makes it the second largest water resource within Sri Lanka. The total basin is about 56 miles in length and 28 miles in width.  

The emphasis on the river has been to control floods. The present development of the river is to control floods. This will involve diversion channels which flow into the sea and to clear obstacles to the river flow.

 In 1961 a team from Russia prepared a report both for flood control and to utilize the water potential for flood protection, development of power and irrigation. The report was done by Technopromaexports of Russia.  Their report has four components: 

  1. Two reservoirs across two upper tributaries of the river.
  2. Hydropower Generation of 33 M. W.
  3. Diversion Cannel to irrigate 146, 500 acres of new land.
  4. Construction of an embankment along the banks of the river in the lower reaches.

The diversion cannel will be of 50 miles in length. It will carry the water to the dry zone areas of the North Western Province with the potential to develop 146, 500 acres of new land. There will be nine pumping stations which will provide lift irrigation for about 80,000 acres of paddy cultivation.

Apart from the Russians the Americans did a study in the l ate 1940s. This was by the International Engineering Company situated at San Francisco in the USA.

In 1952 there was a study by the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development. This aimed at resettlement of flood victims to higher areas.

I will recommend that aid be got to update the studies and thereafter call for tenders. It is suggested that Chinese aid be got along with other countries like India and the USA. In India Wapcos are the best.

Kind regards, Rama.                          

දේව හස්තයේ එඩ්මන්ඩ් දනතිස්ස

February 25th, 2023

චානක බණ්ඩාරගේ

දීර්ඝ නාවික ගමනකින් පසු 19 හැවිරිදි නාවික උප කපිතන් එඩ්මන්ඩ් දනතිස්ස කඩිනමින් ප්‍රංශයේ මාර්සෙයි නගරයට පැමිණියේ සිය ප්‍රියම්භිකාව වන මධුමනී විවාහ කර ගැනීමටය. නැවේ අවසාන මෙහෙයුමේදී කපිතාන් වරයා ද හදිසියේ මිය ගියෙන් එම තනතුරද ඔහුට ලබා දීමට නැව් සමාගම් අධිපතියා දනතිස්සට පොරොන්දු වී තිබුණි.

තමනගේ හොඳම කාලය ලබා ඇතැයි තරුණ දනතිස්ස සහ මධුමනී සිතුහ.

එහෙත්, නැවේ දනතිස්ස සමඟ එකට වැඩ කල දන්ගෙදර සහ ඉතා සුරූපී මධුමනීගේ අත ගැනීමේ සිහිනයෙන් දිවා රෑ පෙළුණු මොරලන්ද දෙදෙනාට තිබුනේ වෙනත් අදහසකි – කෙසේ හෝ දනතිස්ස අමාරුවේ දමා ඔහුගේ අභිප්‍රායන් පාගා, තමනගේ අභිප්‍රායන් ජය ගැනීමයි.

දන්ගෙදරට නැවේ කපිතාන් වීමටත්, මොරලන්දට මධුමනී දිනා ගැනීමටත් බෙහෙවින්ම අවශ්‍ය විය.

දන්ගෙදර සහ මොරලන්ද එකතුව, බීමත් කැදෑරුස අල්වා ගෙන, දනතිස්සට විරුද්ධව පෙත්සමක් මාර්සෙයිහි ගරු විනිෂ්‍යකාරතුමා වෙත ලියා යැවුහ.

අභාවප්‍රාප්ත වියපත් නැව් කපිතාන් එල්බා දුපතේ සිර කර සිටී නැපෝලියන් බොනපාර්ට්ගේ රහසිගත ලිපියක් ප්‍රංශයේ බලවතෙක් වෙත ගෙන එමින් තිබුණු අතරය ඔහු නැවේදී මිය ගියේ. ඔහුගේ අවසන් මොහොතේ නැව් කපිතාන් දනතිස්ස කැඳවා එම ලිපිය ප්‍රංශයේ අදාළ බලවතා වෙත යොමු කරවිය යුතුය යන නියෝගය ලබාදී නැවේදීම මිය පරලොව ගියේය.

ලිපියේ අන්තර්ගතය කුමක්ද හෝ එය කා විසින් කා වෙත එවන ලද්දක්ද යන්න ගැන දනතිස්සට කිසිම දැනුමක් නොවීය. ඒ ගැන දැනගැනීමට ඔහුට වුවමනාවක්ද නොවීය. තම හාම්පුතා කිවූ දේ පමණක් කිරීමට ඔහු භාර ගත්තේය. එය තම රාජකාරියේ කොටසක් ලෙස ඔහු සැලකීය.

දනතිස්ස පිළිබඳවූ පෙත්සම විභාග කලේ කපටි පෙනුමක් ඇති, ඉහල නැගීමේ දැඩි ගිජු කමින් පෙලුණු  තරුණ විනිෂ්‍යකාරතුමෙකි.

දනතිස්ස කිසිම වරදක් කර නැති බවත් ඔහුට ආපසු නිවසට යාමට හැකි බවත්, පසුවදා පැවැත්වෙන දනතිස්සගේ සහ මධුමනීගේ විවාහ මංගලෝත්සවයට තමන් සුභ පතන බවත් තරුණ විනිෂ්‍යකාරතුමා සිනහසෙමින් පැවසීය.

දනතිස්ස අධිකරණ ශාලාවේ දොරෙන් එලියට යාමට මත්තෙන් දනතිස්සව නැවත ඇමතු විනිෂ්‍යකාරතුමා ‘එම ලියුම යොමු කර තිබුනේ කාගේ නමටද’ කියා විමසීය. මට මතක හැටියට ‘නෝතියර් විල්කොටුව යන නමටයි ස්වාමිනි’ වශයෙන් දනතිස්ස පැවසීය.

එයින් තිගැස්සුණු විනිෂ්‍යකාරතුමා ඒ බව දනතිස්සට නොදැනෙන ලෙස හැසිරී දනතිස්සව තම පුද්ගලික නිල මැදිරියට ගෙන්වා එම ලිපිය පුළුස්සා එවැනි ලිපියක් ගැන වෙන කිසිවෙකුට නොකිව යුතුය යන ශපතය දනතිස්සගෙන් ලබා   ගත්තේය. අත්‍යාවශ්‍ය පරිපාලනමය කරුණු කිහිපයක් වෙනුවෙන් ඔහුට එදින සිර මැදිරියේ ගත කිරීමට සිදු වන බව විනිෂ්‍යකාරතුමා දනතිස්සට පැවසීය, පසුදින උදේ ඔහුව නිදහස් කරන බව පැවසීය.

දනතිස්සව මාර්සෙයි නගරයේ සිට මුහුද මැද තිබෙන සිර ගෙදරකට ගෙන ගොස් දමා, වසර 6ක් පමණ කිසිම මනුෂ්‍ය ආශ්‍රයක් නොමැතිව තනිව, දැඩි අඳුරේ  ගත කිරීමට සිදු විය. තමන් කල අපරාධය කුමක්ද, මධුමනීගේ සහ තම පියාගේ තත්ත්වය කුමක්ද යන කිසිවක් ගැන දනතිස්සට දැනුමක් නැති විය. කථා කිරීමට කිසිවෙක් සිටියේ නැත.

තමාට ඇති එකම විසඳුම සිරගෙයින් පැන යාම යයි සිතා දනතිස්ස තමන් විසින්ම සාදා ගත් සුළු ආයුධ වලින් තම සිර මැදිරියේ බිත්ති හොරෙන් සෑරීය. ඔහු වසර කිහිපයක් මේ දේ එක දිගට කළේය. එක් දිනක් ඔහුගේ සිර මැදිරියට එහා බිත්තියට  යමෙක් තට්ටු කරන හඬ ඔහුට ඇසුණි.  ඉන් පසු කාරුණික, මහළු කටහඬකින් ‘ඔය ගල ගලවා ඉවත් කර, මා සිටින සිර කුටියට එන්න’ යන වදන් දනතිස්සට ඇසුණි.

දනතිස්ස ඒ කිවූ ලෙසම කළේය. ඔහුට සුදු, දිග රැවුලකින් හෙබි, කරුණාබර මුහුණකින් යුත්, වයෝවෘධ, යහපත්   පුද්ගලයෙක් දක්නට ලැබුණි.

‘සිරගෙදර නිලධාරීන් ‘පිස්සු පුජකවරයා’ වශයෙන් හඳුන්වන්නේ මට තමා’ කියා හේ සිනාසීය.

තමන්ව සිර ගෙයින් හොර රහසින් පිට කළහොත් සිරගෙදර නිලධාරීන්ට විශාල මුදලක් දෙන බවට පුජකතුමා නිතර නිතර කරන යෝජනාව නිසා සිරගෙදර නිලධාරින් ඔහුට ‘පිස්සු පුජකවරයා’ යන නම පටබැඳ තිබුණි.

දනතිස්සට ඒ කතෝලික පාදිලිතුමා හමු වුයේ එලෙසිනි. පුජකතුමාද සිරගෙයින් පලා යාම සඳහා සිරගෙදර බිත්ති බිඳිමින් සිටී කෙනෙකි. දන්ගෙදරටත් වඩා ඔහු සිරගෙදර පැරණි සිරකරුවෙකි.

වසර 8ක් මේ දෙදෙනා දැඩි මිතුරන් වශයෙන් සිරගෙදර තුල කල් ගත කළහ. ඔවුන් එකට සිර ගෙයි බිත්ති හෑරූහ. දනතිස්සට බුද්ධිමත් පුජකවරයා ඉතිහාසය, සංස්කෘතිය, භූගෝලය, විද්‍යාව ආදී කී නොකී සෑම දේම ඉතා හොඳින් කියා දුන්නේය.

පුජකවරයා දනතිස්සට පුතෙක් මෙන් ආදරය කළේය.

නිල දරුවන්ට අසු නොවන සේ සිටීමට දෙදෙනාම වැඩ කළහ.

පුජකවරයාද නැපෝලියන් පාක්ෂිකක් වීම නිසා සිර දඬුවම් විඳමින් සිටියෙකි.

තවත් නැපෝලියන් ගැත්තෙකු වූ නෝතියර් විල්කොටුව යන ප්‍රංශයේ ජ්‍යෙෂ්ඨ විනිෂ්‍යකාරතුමා ඒ තරුණ විනිෂ්‍යකාරතුමාගේ පියා  බව පුජකතුමා දනතිස්සට පෙන්වා දෙන විට දනතිස්ස විශ්මයට පත් විය. තම පියා සහ නැපෝලියන් අතර වූ රහස් සම්බන්ධය හෙළිදරව් වේය යන බියෙන් තරුණ විනිෂ්‍යකාරතුමා දනතිස්ස ගෙනා ලිපිය පුළුස්සා, දනතිස්සව ජිවිතාන්තන්තය දක්වා මුහුද මැද දුපතේ සිර කර තැබීමට නියෝග දී ඇති බව පුජකවරයා දනතිස්සට පැහැදිලි කර දුනී.

දිනක් අසාධ්‍ය තත්ත්වයේ සිටී පුජකවරයා දනතිස්සව ඔහුගේ සිර කුටියට කැඳවා පැරණි සිතියම් දී කිවේ එහි දැක්වෙන මොන්තේ ක්‍රිස්තෝ දිවයින (ඉතාලියට අයත්) සොයා ගොස්  එහි සඟවා ඇති මහා වස්තු සම්භාරය හිමි කරගන්නා ලෙසයි.

මැරුණු පුජකවරයාගේ මිනිය සහිත ගෝනිය බන්ධනාගාරයේ නිලධාරීන් විසින් සිර කුටියේ පැත්තක තබා තිබියදී  දනතිස්ස පුජකවරයාගේ දේහය ඉන් ඉවත් කර එය සිර කුටියේ සඟවා, දනතිස්ස ගෝනිය තුලට විය. ඉඳිකටුවකින් ගෝනියේ කට දනතිස්ස විසින් මසා ගන්නා ලදී.

පුජකවරයාගේ සිරුර සහිත ගෝනිය නිලධාරින් මුහුද මැද තිබු සිර ගෙයින් පහල මුහුදට විසි කල පසු ගෝනිය තුල සිටී දනතිස්ස ගෝනිය ලිහා එලියට විත්, මුහුදේ පිනා යද්දී මුහුදු මංකොල්ලකරුවන් පිරිසක් විසින් බේරා ගන්නා ලදී.

මාස කිහිපයකට පසුව දනතිස්ස මොන්තේ ක්‍රිස්තෝ පාළු (මනුෂ්‍ය වාසයක් නැති) දිවයින සොයා ගොස් පුජකවරයා දුන් සිතියමේ ප්‍රකාරව ඒ මහා ධන සම්පත (මුතු, මැණික්, රත්‍රන්, කාසි) සියල්ල අත් පත් කරගත්තේය. ඒ වස්තුවේ වටිනාකම කියා නිම කල නොහැකි තරම්ය.

‘පලිගන්නෙමි’ යන උර්ධුත පාටය තම එකම අදිටන කරගත් දනතිස්ස ‘මොන්තේ ක්‍රිස්තෝ සිටුවරයා’ යන  නමින් ප්‍රංශයට අවතීර්ණ වුයේ ඔහුගේ ප්‍රතාපවත් පෙනුම, මහා ධනය සහ මනුසත්බව  ගැන ප්‍රංශ වැසියන් විමතියෙන්  විමතියට සහ උද්ධාමයට පත් කරවමිනි. රජුන්, ආදීපාදවරුන්, සිටුවරුන්  ඇසුරු කරමින්, දුප්පතුනට උදව් කරමින් මොන්තේ ක්‍රිස්තෝ සිටුවරයා  ප්‍රංශයේ ඉහල සමාජයේ උසස්ම තත්වයෙන් වැජභුනු පුද්ගලයෙක් බවට පත්වීමට ගත වුයේ ඉතා කෙටි කාලයක් පමණි.  

තමා සිරගත වූ පසු තම පියා නිරාහාරව මිය ගිය බවත්, මධුමනී මොරලන්ද විසින් විවාහ කරගත් බවත් බීමත් කැදෑරුසගෙන් දනතිස්ස (මොන්තේ ක්‍රිස්තෝ සිටුවරයා ) දැන ගතී.

දනතිස්සව බලධාරීන්ට පාවා දුන්නේ දන්ගෙදර සහ මොරලන්ද බවද කැදෑරුස සනිටුහන් කළේය.

කැදෑරුසට මොන්තේ ක්‍රිස්තෝ සිටුවරයා ෆ්‍රෑන්ක් 50,000ක් (අද වටිනාකම යුරෝ මිලියන 110ක්) පරිත්‍යාග කෙරිණි.

මේ වෙනවිට, දන්ගෙදර සහ මොරලන්ද එවක ප්‍රංශ සමාජයේ ඉහලම තලයේ සිටී කීර්තිමත් ප්‍රභූවරයෝ දෙදෙනෙක් වුහ. දන්ගෙදර බැංකු කිහිපයක් හිමි බැංකු හිමියෙකු ලෙසද මොරලන්ද හමුදාවේ උසස් නිලධාරියෙකු ලෙස කටයුතු කර විශ්‍රාමිකව, උසස් අය ඇසුරු කරමින් විසු අයෙක් විය. එදා තරුණ විනිෂ්‍යකාරතුමා (විල්කොටුව පුතා), ප්‍රංශයේ අධිකරණ පද්ධතියේ ප්‍රධානියා ලෙස කටයුතු කරමින් සිටියේය.

තම ජීවිතය විනාශ කර දැමු ඒ පාපතරයන් තිදෙනා – දන්ගෙදර, මොරලන්ද සහ විල්කොටුවගෙන් දනතිස්ස පන්න පන්නා පළි ගත්තේ ඔවුන්ව ඉතා කිට්ටුවෙන් ආශ්‍රය කරන ගමන්,  තමන් ඔවුනගේ ඉතා කිට්ටු හිතෛෂීයෙකු බව ඔවුනට ඒත්තු ගන්වමිනි.

මේ තුන්දෙනාම ප්‍රංශ සමාජයේ ඔවුන් සිටී ඉහල තැන් වලින් විසීවී බිමට වැටුනා පමණක් නොව, ඔවුන් අවසන් වුයේ යාචක වැනි පහළම මට්ටම් වලිනි.

පළිගැනීම තම ඒකායන අරමුණ වුවත් විරුද්ධවාදීන්ගේ ජීවිත නැති කිරීමට මොන්තේ ක්‍රිස්තෝ සිටුවරයාට අවැසි නොවීය. වරක් බලවත් ව්‍යාපාරික ප්‍රශ්ණ නිසා සිය දිවි නසා ගැනීමට ගිය දන්ගෙදරව එයින් වැලැක්වූවේද ඔහුයි.  තමනට අහිතක් නොකළ මධුමනී, නෝතියර් විල්කොටුව වැන්නන්ට සිටුවරයා අතිශයින් කරුණාව  පෑය.

ඇන්ඩ්රූ කමල්කන්නි නමැති ‘බැටළු හමක් පොරවා ගත් වෘකයා’ යොදවා ප්‍රංශයේ ප්‍රධාන විනිෂ්‍යකාරතුමා  වන විල්කොටුවගේ (නෝතියර් විල්කොටුවගේ පුතා) ‘නිරුවත’ මුළු  ප්‍රභූ සමාජය ඉදිරියේ නිරාවරණය කරවීය. 

ඒ අයගේ සමාජ අවසානය ලඟා වූ මොහොතේ තමන් කවුදැයි දනතිස්ස ඔවුනට වෙන් වෙන්ව කියා දෙන ලදී. ‘දැන ගන්න, මොන්තේ ක්‍රිස්තෝ සිටුවරයා ලෙස මේ පෙනී සිටින්නේ නුඹ විසින් එදා ජීවිතය සහමුලින්ම  විනාශ කර දමන ලද එඩ්මන්ඩ් දනතිස්ස තරුණයායි, මා මරුනේ නෑ; එඩ්මන්ඩ් දනතිස්ස මමයි’ කියා ඔහු කෑ ගෑය.

මොරලන්දගේ සහ මධුමනිගේ පුත්‍රයා වන ලක්ෂ්මන් සමඟ ද්වන්ද කඩු සටනක් සඳහා  අභියෝග කල මොන්තේ ක්‍රිස්තෝ සිටුවරයා ඒ මඟින් මධුමනි තමන් වෙතට ගෙන්වා ගැනීමට සමත් විය. ‘මාගේ පුතා මේ සටනින් නියතව මැරෙනවා; ඔබ කවුද’ කියා ඇය ඇසීය.

‘ඉතා අසාධාරණ ලෙස මාව සිරගත කිරීම නිසා මාගේ පියා මාර්සෙයි නගරයේ දී නිරාහාරව මිය ගියා, මාගේ ප්‍රියම්බිකාව මට මාර්සෙයි නගරයේදී මේ ලක්ෂ්මන්ගේ පියා – මොරලන්ද ජ්‍යෙෂ්ඨයා අහිමි කළා, ඔහු නිසා මා වසර ගණනාවක් මුහුද මැද අඳුරු සිර කුටියක දස වධ වින්දා’ යයි මොන්තේ ක්‍රිස්තෝ සිටුවරයා කීය. ‘අහෝ එඩ්මන්ඩ්, මේ ඔබද’ කියා මධුමනීට කියැවිණි.

තමන් ඉදිරියේ සිටින්නේ තමන් සදා ආදරය කල, තමන් මිය ගියා යයි සිතු  එඩ්මන්ඩ් දනතිස්ස බව මධුමනී වටහා ගත්තාය. ඇයට හැඬුම් ආය.

මධුමනීගේ බැගෑපත් ඉල්ලීම නිසා දනතිස්ස ද්වන්ද සටන අත්හැර ලක්ෂ්මන් මොරලන්දට අභය දානය දිණි.

‘දේව හස්තය’නමින් KB සුගතදාසයන් විසින් පරිවර්තනය කරන ලද  අලිසන්දර දුමාගේ කවුන්ට් ඔෆ්  මොන්තේ ක්‍රිස්තෝ නැමති මේ අගනා  නව කතාවෙන් අපට කියා දෙන පණිවුඩය කුමක්ද?

තමනට බලවත් අසාධාරණ සිදුකළ, තම ජීවිතය විනාශ කල අයව, සොයා සොයා ගොස්, ඔවුන් විසින් කරන ලද අපරාධ ඔවුනට පෞද්ගලිකවම පවසා, ඔවුන්ගෙන් උපරිම ලෙස අප පළි ගත යුතු බවයි.

‘දෙවියන්ගේ අත  මාය (දේව හස්තය)’ සිතා කටයුතු කරන ලෙසයි මේ ග්‍රන්ථය අපට කියා දෙන්නේ.

බුද්ධ ධර්මයෙන් පෝෂණය වූ පෙරදිග රටක් වූ අප ශ්‍රී ලංකාවාසීනට මේ ධර්මතාව (පළිගැනීම) කිසිසේත් නොගැලපේ.

නමුත්, තදින්ම පළි ගන්නා රටවල් වේ. ඒවා බටහිර  රටවල්ය. එම රටවල ‘පළිගැනීම’ ඔවුනගේ සංස්කෘතියේ උවමනාම අංගයකි.

පළිගැනීම සිද්ධාන්තයක් වූ පසු නොකළ වරදවලට, තමන් අකමැති  අහිංසකයන්ගෙන්, කරන පළිගැනීම් ද සිදුවේ.

පළිගැනීමෙන් තොර සමාජයක් අප බිහිකරමු.

කොළඹ හිටපු ප්‍රධාන අධිකරණ වෛද්‍ය නිලධාරී, විශේෂඥ වෛද්‍ය ලූෂන් බර්නාඩ් ලලන්ත ද අල්විස් මහතා පිලිබඳ සටහනක්

February 25th, 2023

වෛද්‍ය රුවන් එම් ජයතුංග 

කොළඹ හිටපු ප්‍රධාන  අධිකරණ වෛද්‍ය නිලධාරී, විශේෂඥ වෛද්‍ය ලූෂන් බර්නාඩ් ලලන්ත ද අල්විස් / එල් බී එල් ද අල්විස් / ලලන්ත සර්) සහ කාරියවසම් මැඩම් මගේ ගුරුවරු. ලලන්ත සර් කෙලින් අවංකව වැඩ කරපු කෙනෙක්.  වෛද්‍ය ආනන්ද සමරසේකරලා වගේ අය මේ ක්ශේත්‍රය දූෂණය කලා බලය සහ මුදල් හමුවේ. ඒත් ලලන්ත සර් මහා පවුරක් වගේ මුදල් සහ බලය හමුවේ කෙලින් හිටියා. මරණ සහ මෘත ශරීර එක්ක නිතිපතා වැඩ කලත් ලලන්ත සර් විහිලුව සිනහව අගය කලා. ඔහු කී කතා වලට අපිට මෝචරියෙත් හිනා ගියා. වරක් මෝචරියේ සුළු සේවක ස්ට්‍රයික් එකක් ගියා. ඒකට යුද හමුදාවෙන් ආදේශක සොල්දාදුවෝ යොදවලා තිබ්බේ. ඒ කාලේ (2006) මම යුද හමුදාවට අනියුක්ත වෙච්ච වෛද්‍ය  මේජර් කෙනෙක්.  මම එදා මෝචරියට ගිහින් ලලන්ත සර් හමු වුනා. යුද හමුදාවේ සොල්දාදුවෝ සුළු සේවක ස්ට්‍රයික් එක නිසා අන්ද  මන්ද වෙලා වගේ හිටියේ.මම සොල්දාදුවන්ට කිව්වා මේ ඉන්නේ මගේ ගුරුවරයෙක් එතුමාට පූර්ණ සහයෝගය දෙන්න කියලා. ඒ වගෙම ලලන්ත සර් මා විසින් ලියපු  PTSD Sri Lankan Experience පොතට post-mortem examination කිරීම සහ පසුකාලීන ක්‍ෂිතිමය අත්දැකීම්  ඇතිවීම පිලිබඳව අදහස් ලබා දුන්නා. පහත දැක්වෙන්නේ මා ලලන්ත සර් සමග වැඩ කිරීමේදී ලැබූ අත්දැකීම්. 

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1993 වසරේදී කටුගස්තොට ප්‍රදේශයේ සිසුවෙකු උසස් පෙළ සමත්වී වෛද්‍ය විද්‍යාලයට යාමට සුදුසුකම් ලැබුවේය. එහෙත් ඔහුට සහ ඔහුගේ පවුලේ සාමාජිකයන්ට එම සතුට විඳ ගැනීමට වරම් නොවීය. මෙම සිසුවා වෛද්‍ය විද්‍යාලයට යාමට සුදුසුකම් ලැබූ නිසා ඉරිසියාවෙන් පෙළුණු අසල්වැසියන් මෙම සිසුවා ඝාතනය කොට මළ සිරුර ලිඳට දැමූහ. ඔවුන්ට අවශ්‍ය වූයේ මෙය දිවි නසා ගැනීමක් කියා පෙන්වීමටය. මෙම ඝාතනය සිදු වූ කාලයේ මා සිටියේ අධිකරණ විශේෂඥ වෛද්‍ය ලලන්ත ද අල්විස් මහතා යටතේ අධිකරණ වෛද්‍ය විද්‍යාව පිලිබඳව පුහුණුවක් ලබමිනි. මෙම සිසුවාගේ දේහය ගෙන එන ලද්දේ මිනී පෙට්ටිය සමගය. එය පොලිතීන් වලින් ඔතා තිබුනේය. පොලිතීන් වලින් ඔතන ලද පස් තැවරී තිබූ මිනී පෙට්ටිය කම්කරුවන් විසින්  විවෘත කරන ලදි. එම අවස්ථාවේදී මමද එතැන සිටියෙමි. මුලින්ම වෛද්‍ය ලලන්ත ද අල්විස් මහතා මෘත ශරීරය බාහිරින් නිරීක්‍ෂණය කරන ලදි.  සිසුවාට අන්දවා තිබුනේ දුඹුරු පැහැති කෝට් එකකි. ඔහුගේ සුදු කමිසය අත්වැසුම් සහ දෙපා වලට දමා තිබූ සුදු මේස් මාගේ අවධානයට යොමු විය. මෘත ශරීරයේ දකුණු පස කම්මුලේ සුදු පැහැති දිලීර  විශේෂයක් බැඳී තිබුණි. දේහය පොළව යට තිබූ නිසා මෘත ශරීරයේ දිලීර  බැඳෙන්නට ඇත. දේහය ගොඩ ගන්නා ලද්දේ මිහිදන් කොට සති හයක් හෝ අටක් ගතවූ පසුව වූවද මිනිය කුණුවී තිබුනේ නැත. එම්බාම් කිරීමේදී යෙදූ ෆෝමලීන් නිසා දේහය ආරක්‍ෂා වන්නට ඇත. 

වෛද්‍ය ලලන්ත ද අල්විස් මහතා පිටත රැඳී සිටි සිසුවාගේ ඥාතීන් දෙදෙනෙකුට එන්නට කියා පණිවිඩයක් යැවීය. මුලින්ම ඥාතීන් විසින් වෛද්‍ය අධිකරණ අංශයට ගෙන එන ලද දේහය හඳුනා ගත යුතුය. සිසුවාගේ මාමා කෙනෙකු සහ තවත් පුද්ගලයෙකු පැමිණ දේහය හඳුනා ගන්නා ලදි. මළ සිරුර දැක ඔවුන් හඞා වැළපේ කියා මා සිතුවද ඔවුන් කිසිදු චිත්තාවේගී ප්‍රතික්‍රියාවකින් තොරව මළ සිරුර දෙස මොහොතක් බලාගෙන සිට එය තම ඥාතියාගේ බව තහවුරු කළහ. ඉන්පසු කම්කරුවෙකු විසින් ඔවුන් දෙදෙනාව මිනී කාමරයෙන් පිටතට ගෙන යන ලදි. ඔවුන් නික්ම යාමෙන් පසුව වෛද්‍ය අල්විස් දේහය මිනී පෙට්ටියෙන් ඉවතට ගෙන වෝභාර පරීක්‍ෂණය ආරම්භ කලේය. 

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ඝාතනය කරන ලද සිසුන් ගේ කියා සැක කරන ලද සූරියකන්දේ සමූහ මිනීවලෙන් සොයා ගත් ඇටකටු පොහොර ගෝනි වල බහා කොලඹ ෆ්‍රැන්සිස් මාවතේ මෘතශරීරාගාරයට 1994 දී ගෙන එන විට මම කොළඹ ප්‍රධාන අධිකරන වෛද්‍ය නිළධාරි එල්.බී.එල් ද අල්විස් මහතා යටතේ අධිකරන වෛද්‍ය විද්‍යා පාඨමාලාව හදාරමින් සිටියෙමි. මෙම ඇටකටු කිසිම අධිකරන වෛද්‍ය ක්‍රියාදාමයකින් තොරව හාරන ලද බැවින් සාක්‍ෂි විනාශවී තිබෙන බව ප්‍රධාන අධිකරන වෛද්‍ය නිළධාරි එල්.බී.එල් ද අල්විස් මහතා අපට කීවේය. එය තවත් දේශපාලන සංදර්ශනයක් විය. 

වෛද්‍ය රුවන් එම් ජයතුංග 

Benefits of FDI / විදේශ සෘජු ආයෝජන ප්‍රථිලාබ

February 25th, 2023

Sasanka De Silva Pannipitiya

Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) refers to investment made by foreign companies or individuals in the economy of another country.

FDI can have a significant impact on the economy of the recipient country in several ways:

1.     Increased Capital: FDI brings much-needed capital to a country, which can be used to build infrastructure, create jobs, and develop industries. This increased capital can stimulate economic growth and create opportunities for local businesses.

2.     Technology Transfer: Foreign investors bring in new technologies, processes, and management practices that can enhance the productivity of local businesses. This transfer of knowledge and technology can help improve the quality of goods and services produced in the country, which can enhance competitiveness in both domestic and international markets.

3.     Job Creation: FDI can create jobs in the recipient country by establishing new businesses or expanding existing ones. These jobs can help reduce unemployment rates and improve the standard of living of local people.

4.     Increased Trade: FDI can lead to increased trade between the recipient country and the foreign investor’s home country. This can be beneficial for both countries as it can increase the flow of goods, services, and capital.

5.     Improved Balance of Payments: FDI can improve a country’s balance of payments by generating foreign exchange through exports or repatriation of profits by foreign investors.

However, the impact of FDI on the economy depends on several factors, including the quality of the investment, the policies and regulations of the recipient country, and the political and economic stability of both the home and recipient countries.

If the investment is poorly managed, or if the recipient country has weak institutions or unfavourable policies, FDI may not have a positive impact on the economy. 

(FDI) යනු වෙනත් රටක ආර්ථිකය තුළ විදේශීය සමාගම් හෝ පුද්ගලයන් විසින් කරන ලද ආයෝජනය වේ.

FDI ක්‍රම කිහිපයකින් ලබන්නාගේ රටේ ආර්ථිකයට සැලකිය යුතු බලපෑමක් ඇති කළ හැකිය:

1. වැඩි කළ ප්‍රාග්ධනය: FDI මගින් රටකට අවශ්‍ය ප්‍රාග්ධනය ගෙන එයි, එය යටිතල පහසුකම් ගොඩනැගීමට, රැකියා උත්පාදනය කිරීමට සහ කර්මාන්ත දියුණු කිරීමට යොදා ගත හැකිය. මෙම වැඩිවන ප්‍රාග්ධනය ආර්ථික වර්ධනය උත්තේජනය කළ හැකි අතර දේශීය ව්‍යාපාර සඳහා අවස්ථා නිර්මාණය කළ හැකිය.

2. තාක්ෂණ හුවමාරුව: විදේශීය ආයෝජකයින් දේශීය ව්‍යාපාරවල ඵලදායිතාව ඉහළ නැංවිය හැකි නව තාක්‍ෂණ, ක්‍රියාවලි සහ කළමනාකරණ භාවිතයන් ගෙන එයි. මෙම දැනුම හා තාක්‍ෂණ හුවමාරුව මඟින් රට තුළ නිෂ්පාදනය කරන භාණ්ඩ හා සේවාවල ගුණාත්මක බව ඉහළ නැංවීමට උපකාර වන අතර එමඟින් දේශීය හා ජාත්‍යන්තර වෙළෙඳපොළ තුළ තරගකාරිත්වය ඉහළ නැංවිය හැකිය.

3. රැකියා උත්පාදනය: නව ව්‍යාපාර පිහිටුවීමෙන් හෝ පවතින ව්‍යාපාර ව්‍යාප්ත කිරීමෙන් FDI මගින් ලබන රටෙහි රැකියා උත්පාදනය කළ හැක. මෙම රැකියා විරැකියා අනුපාතය අඩු කිරීමට සහ දේශීය ජනතාවගේ ජීවන තත්ත්වය වැඩිදියුණු කිරීමට උපකාරී වේ.

4. වෙළඳාම වැඩි කිරීම: විදේශ ආයෝජනය ලබන්නාගේ රට සහ විදේශ ආයෝජකයාගේ මව් රට අතර වෙළඳාම වැඩි කිරීමට හේතු විය හැක. භාණ්ඩ, සේවා සහ ප්‍රාග්ධනය ගලායාම වැඩි කළ හැකි බැවින් මෙය දෙරටටම වාසිදායක විය හැකිය.

5. වැඩි දියුණු කළ ගෙවීම් ශේෂය: විදේශ ආයෝජකයින් විසින් අපනයනය කිරීම හෝ ලාභ ආපසු ගෙන්වා ගැනීම හරහා විදේශ විනිමය උත්පාදනය කිරීම මගින් FDI මගින් රටක ගෙවුම් ශේෂය වැඩිදියුණු කළ හැක.

කෙසේ වෙතත්, ආර්ථිකය මත FDI බලපෑම රඳා පවතින්නේ ආයෝජනයේ ගුණාත්මකභාවය, ලබන්නාගේ රටේ ප්‍රතිපත්ති සහ රෙගුලාසි සහ නිවසේ සහ ලබන රටවල දේශපාලන හා ආර්ථික ස්ථාවරත්වය ඇතුළු සාධක කිහිපයක් මත ය.

ආයෝජනය දුර්වල ලෙස කළමනාකරණය කර ඇත්නම්, හෝ ලබන්නාගේ රටට දුර්වල ආයතන හෝ අවාසිදායක ප්‍රතිපත්ති තිබේ නම්, FDI ආර්ථිකයට ධනාත්මක බලපෑමක් ඇති නොකරයි.

Sasanka De Silva

Pannipitiya 

පෙබ 24 දා අධ්‍යාපන අමාහ්‍යාන්ශයේ යකඩ ගේට්ටුව උඩින් ඇතැමුන් සිවුරු වැට උඩ රඳවාද තවත් අය පේමන්ට් එකේ දමාද දිව්වේ  බෞද්ධ භික්ෂූන්ද.

February 25th, 2023

සැදැහවත් බෞද්ධයෙක්

පෙබ 24 දා අධ්‍යාපන අමාහ්‍යාන්ශයේ යකඩ ගේට්ටුව උඩින් ඇතැමුන් සිවුරු වැට උඩ රඳවාද තවත් අය පේමන්ට් එකේ දමාද දිව්වේ  බෞද්ධ භික්ෂූන්ද. මා හිතන අන්දමට ඔවුන් භ්ක්ෂූන් නොවිය හැක.අනිවාර්‍යෙන්ම ඔවුන් සිවුරු පෙරවාගත් අන්තවාදී දේශපාලන පක්ෂයකට අයත් පිරිසක් විය යුතුය. ඔවුන් සැබෑ භික්ෂූන් නම් ඒ අයගේ ගුරු හාමුදුරුවරුන් විසින් ඔවුන් වහාම පන්සලට කැඳවා උපැවිදිකොට වහාම ගෙදර යැවිය යුතුයයි මම සිතමි. මන්ද මෙවැනි අය සිවුරේ සීටිම සාශනයට මහත් ව්‍යශනයක් බැවින් එවැනි පුද්ගලයින් කිසිසේත් තවදුරටත් සිවුරේ නොසිටිය යුතුය. එසේම ලාන්කික බෞද්ධ භිෂූන්ට ඉමහත් අපකීර්තියකි.

 එසේ වැට උඩින් පැන්න පුද්ගලයින් සැබෑ භිෂූන් නොවේනම් කැරළිකෝලාහලවලට සම්භන්ධ වීමට අමතරව ලන්කාවේ බෞද්ධ භික්ෂූන් අපකීර්තියට පතකිරීම වෙනුවෙන් ඔවුන්ට විරුද්ධව අප්‍රමාදව නීතිමගින් ක්‍රියාකළ යුතුයයි මම සිතමි.

US Hegemony and Its Perils

February 25th, 2023

Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People’s Republic of China

February 2023

https://www.fmprc.gov.cn/mfa_eng/wjbxw/202302/t20230220_11027664.html

Contents

Introduction

I. Political Hegemony—Throwing Its Weight Around

II. Military Hegemony—Wanton Use of Force 

III. Economic Hegemony—Looting and Exploitation

IV. Technological Hegemony—Monopoly and Suppression

V. Cultural Hegemony—Spreading False Narratives

Conclusion

Introduction

Since becoming the world’s most powerful country after the two world wars and the Cold War, the United States has acted more boldly to interfere in the internal affairs of other countries, pursue, maintain and abuse hegemony, advance subversion and infiltration, and willfully wage wars, bringing harm to the international community.

The United States has developed a hegemonic playbook to stage “color revolutions,” instigate regional disputes, and even directly launch wars under the guise of promoting democracy, freedom and human rights. Clinging to the Cold War mentality, the United States has ramped up bloc politics and stoked conflict and confrontation. It has overstretched the concept of national security, abused export controls and forced unilateral sanctions upon others. It has taken a selective approach to international law and rules, utilizing or discarding them as it sees fit, and has sought to impose rules that serve its own interests in the name of upholding a “rules-based international order.”

This report, by presenting the relevant facts, seeks to expose the U.S. abuse of hegemony in the political, military, economic, financial, technological and cultural fields, and to draw greater international attention to the perils of the U.S. practices to world peace and stability and the well-being of all peoples.

I. Political Hegemony — Throwing Its Weight Around

The United States has long been attempting to mold other countries and the world order with its own values and political system in the name of promoting democracy and human rights.

◆ Instances of U.S. interference in other countries’ internal affairs abound. In the name of “promoting democracy,” the United States practiced a “Neo-Monroe Doctrine” in Latin America, instigated “color revolutions” in Eurasia, and orchestrated the “Arab Spring” in West Asia and North Africa, bringing chaos and disaster to many countries.

In 1823, the United States announced the Monroe Doctrine. While touting an “America for the Americans,” what it truly wanted was an “America for the United States.”

Since then, the policies of successive U.S. governments toward Latin America and the Caribbean Region have been riddled with political interference, military intervention and regime subversion. From its 61-year hostility toward and blockade of Cuba to its overthrow of the Allende government of Chile, U.S. policy on this region has been built on one maxim-those who submit will prosper; those who resist shall perish.

The year 2003 marked the beginning of a succession of “color revolutions” — the “Rose Revolution” in Georgia, the “Orange Revolution” in Ukraine and the “Tulip Revolution” in Kyrgyzstan. The U.S. Department of State openly admitted playing a “central role” in these “regime changes.” The United States also interfered in the internal affairs of the Philippines, ousting President Ferdinand Marcos Sr. in 1986 and President Joseph Estrada in 2001 through the so-called “People Power Revolutions.”

In January 2023, former U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo released his new book Never Give an Inch: Fighting for the America I Love. He revealed in it that the United States had plotted to intervene in Venezuela. The plan was to force the Maduro government to reach an agreement with the opposition, deprive Venezuela of its ability to sell oil and gold for foreign exchange, exert high pressure on its economy, and influence the 2018 presidential election.

◆ The U.S. exercises double standards on international rules. Placing its self-interest first, the United States has walked away from international treaties and organizations, and put its domestic law above international law. In April 2017, the Trump administration announced that it would cut off all U.S. funding to the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) with the excuse that the organization “supports, or participates in the management of a programme of coercive abortion or involuntary sterilization.” The United States quit UNESCO twice in 1984 and 2017. In 2017, it announced leaving the Paris Agreement on climate change. In 2018, it announced its exit from the UN Human Rights Council, citing the organization’s “bias” against Israel and failure to protect human rights effectively. In 2019, the United States announced its withdrawal from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty to seek unfettered development of advanced weapons. In 2020, it announced pulling out of the Treaty on Open Skies.

The United States has also been a stumbling block to biological arms control by opposing negotiations on a verification protocol for the Biological Weapons Convention (BWC) and impeding international verification of countries’ activities relating to biological weapons. As the only country in possession of a chemical weapons stockpile, the United States has repeatedly delayed the destruction of chemical weapons and remained reluctant in fulfilling its obligations. It has become the biggest obstacle to realizing “a world free of chemical weapons.”

◆ The United States is piecing together small blocs through its alliance system. It has been forcing an “Indo-Pacific Strategy” onto the Asia-Pacific region, assembling exclusive clubs like the Five Eyes, the Quad and AUKUS, and forcing regional countries to take sides. Such practices are essentially meant to create division in the region, stoke confrontation and undermine peace.

◆ The U.S. arbitrarily passes judgment on democracy in other countries, and fabricates a false narrative of “democracy versus authoritarianism” to incite estrangement, division, rivalry and confrontation. In December 2021, the United States hosted the first “Summit for Democracy,” which drew criticism and opposition from many countries for making a mockery of the spirit of democracy and dividing the world. In March 2023, the United States will host another “Summit for Democracy,” which remains unwelcome and will again find no support.

II. Military Hegemony — Wanton Use of Force

The history of the United States is characterized by violence and expansion. Since it gained independence in 1776, the United States has constantly sought expansion by force: it slaughtered Indians, invaded Canada, waged a war against Mexico, instigated the American-Spanish War, and annexed Hawaii. After World War II, the wars either provoked or launched by the United States included the Korean War, the Vietnam War, the Gulf War, the Kosovo War, the War in Afghanistan, the Iraq War, the Libyan War and the Syrian War, abusing its military hegemony to pave the way for expansionist objectives. In recent years, the U.S. average annual military budget has exceeded 700 billion U.S. dollars, accounting for 40 percent of the world’s total, more than the 15 countries behind it combined. The United States has about 800 overseas military bases, with 173,000 troops deployed in 159 countries.

According to the book America Invades: How We’ve Invaded or been Militarily Involved with almost Every Country on Earth, the United States has fought or been militarily involved with almost all the 190-odd countries recognized by the United Nations with only three exceptions. The three countries were “spared” because the United States did not find them on the map.

◆ As former U.S. President Jimmy Carter put it, the United States is undoubtedly the most warlike nation in the history of the world. According to a Tufts University report, “Introducing the Military Intervention Project: A new Dataset on U.S. Military Interventions, 1776-2019,” the United States undertook nearly 400 military interventions globally between those years, 34 percent of which were in Latin America and the Caribbean, 23 percent in East Asia and the Pacific, 14 percent in the Middle East and North Africa, and 13 percent in Europe. Currently, its military intervention in the Middle East and North Africa and sub-Saharan Africa is on the rise.

Alex Lo, a South China Morning Post columnist, pointed out that the United States has rarely distinguished between diplomacy and war since its founding. It has overthrown democratically elected governments in many developing countries in the 20th century and immediately replaced them with pro-American puppet regimes. Today, in Ukraine, Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, Syria, Pakistan and Yemen, the United States is repeating its old tactics of waging proxy, low-intensity, and drone wars.

◆ U.S. military hegemony has caused humanitarian tragedies. Since 2001, the wars and military operations launched by the United States in the name of fighting terrorism have claimed over 900,000 lives with some 335,000 of them civilians, injured millions and displaced tens of millions. The 2003 Iraq War resulted in some 200,000 to 250,000 civilian deaths, including over 16,000 directly killed by the U.S. military, and left more than a million homeless.

The United States has created 37 million refugees around the world. Since 2012, the number of Syrian refugees alone has increased tenfold. Between 2016 and 2019, 33,584 civilian deaths were documented in the Syrian fightings, including 3,833 killed by U.S.-led coalition bombings, half of them women and children. The Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) reported on 9 November 2018 that the air strikes launched by U.S. forces on Raqqa alone killed 1,600 Syrian civilians.

The two-decades-long war in Afghanistan devastated the country. A total of 47,000 Afghan civilians and 66,000 to 69,000 Afghan soldiers and police officers unrelated to the September 11 attacks were killed in U.S. military operations, and more than 10 million people were displaced. The war in Afghanistan destroyed the foundation of economic development there and plunged the Afghan people into destitution. After the “Kabul debacle” in 2021, the United States announced that it would freeze some 9.5 billion dollars in assets belonging to the Afghan central bank, a move considered as “pure looting.”

In September 2022, Turkish Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu commented at a rally that the United States has waged a proxy war in Syria, turned Afghanistan into an opium field and heroin factory, thrown Pakistan into turmoil, and left Libya in incessant civil unrest. The United States does whatever it takes to rob and enslave the people of any country with underground resources.

The United States has also adopted appalling methods in war. During the Korean War, the Vietnam War, the Gulf War, the Kosovo War, the War in Afghanistan and the Iraq War, the United States used massive quantities of chemical and biological weapons as well as cluster bombs, fuel-air bombs, graphite bombs and depleted uranium bombs, causing enormous damage on civilian facilities, countless civilian casualties and lasting environmental pollution.

III. Economic Hegemony — Looting and Exploitation

After World War II, the United States led efforts to set up the Bretton Woods System, the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, which, together with the Marshall Plan, formed the international monetary system centered around the U.S. dollar. In addition, the United States has also established institutional hegemony in the international economic and financial sector by manipulating the weighted voting systems, rules and arrangements of international organizations including “approval by 85 percent majority,” and its domestic trade laws and regulations. By taking advantage of the dollar’s status as the major international reserve currency, the United States is basically collecting “seigniorage” from around the world; and using its control over international organizations, it coerces other countries into serving America’s political and economic strategy.

◆ The United States exploits the world’s wealth with the help of “seigniorage.” It costs only about 17 cents to produce a 100 dollar bill, but other countries had to pony up 100 dollar of actual goods in order to obtain one. It was pointed out more than half a century ago, that the United States enjoyed exorbitant privilege and deficit without tears created by its dollar, and used the worthless paper note to plunder the resources and factories of other nations.

◆ The hegemony of U.S. dollar is the main source of instability and uncertainty in the world economy. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the United States abused its global financial hegemony and injected trillions of dollars into the global market, leaving other countries, especially emerging economies, to pay the price. In 2022, the Fed ended its ultra-easy monetary policy and turned to aggressive interest rate hike, causing turmoil in the international financial market and substantial depreciation of other currencies such as the Euro, many of which dropped to a 20-year low. As a result, a large number of developing countries were challenged by high inflation, currency depreciation and capital outflows. This was exactly what Nixon’s secretary of the treasury John Connally once remarked, with self-satisfaction yet sharp precision, that “the dollar is our currency, but it is your problem.”

◆ With its control over international economic and financial organizations, the United States imposes additional conditions to their assistance to other countries. In order to reduce obstacles to U.S. capital inflow and speculation, the recipient countries are required to advance financial liberalization and open up financial markets so that their economic policies would fall in line with America’s strategy. According to the Review of International Political Economy, along with the 1,550 debt relief programs extended by the IMF to its 131 member countries from 1985 to 2014, as many as 55,465 additional political conditions had been attached.

◆ The United States willfully suppresses its opponents with economic coercion. In the 1980s, to eliminate the economic threat posed by Japan, and to control and use the latter in service of America’s strategic goal of confronting the Soviet Union and dominating the world, the United States leveraged its hegemonic financial power against Japan, and concluded the Plaza Accord. As a result, Yen was pushed up, and Japan was pressed to open up its financial market and reform its financial system. The Plaza Accord dealt a heavy blow to the growth momentum of the Japanese economy, leaving Japan to what was later called “three lost decades.”

◆ America’s economic and financial hegemony has become a geopolitical weapon. Doubling down on unilateral sanctions and “long-arm jurisdiction,” the United States has enacted such domestic laws as the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, the Global Magnitsky Human Rights Accountability Act, and the Countering America’s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act, and introduced a series of executive orders to sanction specific countries, organizations or individuals. Statistics show that U.S. sanctions against foreign entities increased by 933 percent from 2000 to 2021. The Trump administration alone has imposed more than 3,900 sanctions, which means three sanctions per day. So far, the United States had or has imposed economic sanctions on nearly 40 countries across the world, including Cuba, China, Russia, the DPRK, Iran and Venezuela, affecting nearly half of the world’s population. “The United States of America” has turned itself into “the United States of Sanctions.” And “long-arm jurisdiction” has been reduced to nothing but a tool for the United States to use its means of state power to suppress economic competitors and interfere in normal international business. This is a serious departure from the principles of liberal market economy that the United States has long boasted.

IV. Technological Hegemony — Monopoly and Suppression

The United States seeks to deter other countries’ scientific, technological and economic development by wielding monopoly power, suppression measures and technology restrictions in high-tech fields.

◆ The United States monopolizes intellectual property in the name of protection. Taking advantage of the weak position of other countries, especially developing ones, on intellectual property rights and the institutional vacancy in relevant fields, the United States reaps excessive profits through monopoly. In 1994, the United States pushed forward the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS), forcing the Americanized process and standards in intellectual property protection in an attempt to solidify its monopoly on technology.

In the 1980s, to contain the development of Japan’s semiconductor industry, the United States launched the “301” investigation, built bargaining power in bilateral negotiations through multilateral agreements, threatened to label Japan as conducting unfair trade, and imposed retaliatory tariffs, forcing Japan to sign the U.S.-Japan Semiconductor Agreement. As a result, Japanese semiconductor enterprises were almost completely driven out of global competition, and their market share dropped from 50 percent to 10 percent. Meanwhile, with the support of the U.S. government, a large number of U.S. semiconductor enterprises took the opportunity and grabbed larger market share.

◆ The United States politicizes, weaponizes technological issues and uses them as ideological tools. Overstretching the concept of national security, the United States mobilized state power to suppress and sanction Chinese company Huawei, restricted the entry of Huawei products into the U.S. market, cut off its supply of chips and operating systems, and coerced other countries to ban Huawei from undertaking local 5G network construction. It even talked Canada into unwarrantedly detaining Huawei’s CFO Meng Wanzhou for nearly three years.

The United States has fabricated a slew of excuses to clamp down on China’s high-tech enterprises with global competitiveness, and has put more than 1,000 Chinese enterprises on sanction lists. In addition, the United States has also imposed controls on biotechnology, artificial intelligence and other high-end technologies, reinforced export restrictions, tightened investment screening, suppressed Chinese social media apps such as TikTok and WeChat, and lobbied the Netherlands and Japan to restrict exports of chips and related equipment or technology to China.

The United States has also practiced double standards in its policy on China-related technological professionals. To sideline and suppress Chinese researchers, since June 2018, visa validity has been shortened for Chinese students majoring in certain high-tech-related disciplines, repeated cases have occurred where Chinese scholars and students going to the United States for exchange programs and study were unjustifiably denied and harassed, and large-scale investigation on Chinese scholars working in the United States was carried out.

◆ The United States solidifies its technological monopoly in the name of protecting democracy. By building small blocs on technology such as the “chips alliance” and “clean network,” the United States has put “democracy” and “human rights” labels on high-technology, and turned technological issues into political and ideological issues, so as to fabricate excuses for its technological blockade against other countries. In May 2019, the United States enlisted 32 countries to the Prague 5G Security Conference in the Czech Republic and issued the Prague Proposal in an attempt to exclude China’s 5G products. In April 2020, then U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced the “5G clean path,” a plan designed to build technological alliance in the 5G field with partners bonded by their shared ideology on democracy and the need to protect “cyber security.” The measures, in essence, are the U.S. attempts to maintain its technological hegemony through technological alliances.

◆ The United States abuses its technological hegemony by carrying out cyber attacks and eavesdropping. The United States has long been notorious as an “empire of hackers,” blamed for its rampant acts of cyber theft around the world. It has all kinds of means to enforce pervasive cyber attacks and surveillance, including using analog base station signals to access mobile phones for data theft, manipulating mobile apps, infiltrating cloud servers, and stealing through undersea cables. The list goes on.

U.S. surveillance is indiscriminate. All can be targets of its surveillance, be they rivals or allies, even leaders of allied countries such as former German Chancellor Angela Merkel and several French Presidents. Cyber surveillance and attacks launched by the United States such as “Prism,” “Dirtbox,” “Irritant Horn” and “Telescreen Operation” are all proof that the United States is closely monitoring its allies and partners. Such eavesdropping on allies and partners has already caused worldwide outrage. Julian Assange, the founder of Wikileaks, a website that has exposed U.S. surveillance programs, said that “do not expect a global surveillance superpower to act with honor or respect. There is only one rule: there are no rules.”

V. Cultural Hegemony — Spreading False Narratives

The global expansion of American culture is an important part of its external strategy. The United States has often used cultural tools to strengthen and maintain its hegemony in the world.

◆ The United States embeds American values in its products such as movies. American values and lifestyle are a tied product to its movies and TV shows, publications, media content, and programs by the government-funded non-profit cultural institutions. It thus shapes a cultural and public opinion space in which American culture reigns and maintains cultural hegemony. In his article The Americanization of the World, John Yemma, an American scholar, exposed the real weapons in U.S. cultural expansion: the Hollywood, the image design factories on Madison Avenue and the production lines of Mattel Company and Coca-Cola.

There are various vehicles the United States uses to keep its cultural hegemony. American movies are the most used; they now occupy more than 70 percent of the world’s market share. The United States skilfully exploits its cultural diversity to appeal to various ethnicities. When Hollywood movies descend on the world, they scream the American values tied to them.

◆ American cultural hegemony not only shows itself in “direct intervention,” but also in “media infiltration” and as “a trumpet for the world.” U.S.-dominated Western media has a particularly important role in shaping global public opinion in favor of U.S. meddling in the internal affairs of other countries.

The U.S. government strictly censors all social media companies and demands their obedience. Twitter CEO Elon Musk admitted on 27 December 2022 that all social media platforms work with the U.S. government to censor content, reported Fox Business Network. Public opinion in the United States is subject to government intervention to restrict all unfavorable remarks. Google often makes pages disappear.

U.S. Department of Defense manipulates social media. In December 2022, The Intercept, an independent U.S. investigative website, revealed that in July 2017, U.S. Central Command official Nathaniel Kahler instructed Twitter’s public policy team to augment the presence of 52 Arabic-language accounts on a list he sent, six of which were to be given priority. One of the six was dedicated to justifying U.S. drone attacks in Yemen, such as by claiming that the attacks were precise and killed only terrorists, not civilians. Following Kahler’s directive, Twitter put those Arabic-language accounts on a “white list” to amplify certain messages.

◆The United States practices double standards on the freedom of the press. It brutally suppresses and silences media of other countries by various means. The United States and Europe bar mainstream Russian media such as Russia Today and the Sputnik from their countries. Platforms such as Twitter, Facebook and YouTube openly restrict official accounts of Russia. Netflix, Apple and Google have removed Russian channels and applications from their services and app stores. Unprecedented draconian censorship is imposed on Russia-related contents.

◆The United States abuses its cultural hegemony to instigate “peaceful evolution” in socialist countries. It sets up news media and cultural outfits targeting socialist countries. It pours staggering amounts of public funds into radio and TV networks to support their ideological infiltration, and these mouthpieces bombard socialist countries in dozens of languages with inflammatory propaganda day and night.

The United States uses misinformation as a spear to attack other countries, and has built an industrial chain around it: there are groups and individuals making up stories, and peddling them worldwide to mislead public opinion with the support of nearly limitless financial resources.

Conclusion

While a just cause wins its champion wide support, an unjust one condemns its pursuer to be an outcast. The hegemonic, domineering, and bullying practices of using strength to intimidate the weak, taking from others by force and subterfuge, and playing zero-sum games are exerting grave harm. The historical trends of peace, development, cooperation, and mutual benefit are unstoppable. The United States has been overriding truth with its power and trampling justice to serve self-interest. These unilateral, egoistic and regressive hegemonic practices have drawn growing, intense criticism and opposition from the international community.

Countries need to respect each other and treat each other as equals. Big countries should behave in a manner befitting their status and take the lead in pursuing a new model of state-to-state relations featuring dialogue and partnership, not confrontation or alliance. China opposes all forms of hegemonism and power politics, and rejects interference in other countries’ internal affairs. The United States must conduct serious soul-searching. It must critically examine what it has done, let go of its arrogance and prejudice, and quit its hegemonic, domineering and bullying practices.

Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the People’s Republic of China

Wimal: State Intelligence Service to be placed under CIA

February 25th, 2023

Courtesy The Island

Wimal Weerawansa

SLPP rebel and National Freedom Front leader, Wimal Weerawansa, told Parliament yesterday that the government was planning to place the State Intelligence Service’s decision-making responsibility under a Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) of the US.

Weerawansa said that a similar shifting of the responsibility had happened in 2001.

The 20-member Pentagon delegation, headed by US Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defence for Indo-Pacific Security Affairs (PDASD), Jedidiah P. Royal, visited the SIS office in Colombo, according to Weerawansa.

We heard that the US delegation visited the SIS office. Plans are underway to bring the SIS information handling and decision-making under CIA officials. The same operation was initiated in 2001 and suspended in 2004,” he said.

Weerawansa said the government should reveal what had been discussed and the decisions made during the US delegation’s visit. He claimed that they had met the President, Defence Secretary and heads of intelligence services.

Weerawansa asked Foreign Minister, Ali Sabry to explain to the House the purpose of the US delegation’s visit and meetings with local authorities.

Minister Ali Sabry said the Foreign Ministry was unaware of the visit and that it had been handled by the Defence Ministry.

Chief Government Whip Minister Prasanna Ranatunga said the government would inform the House of the matter later. (SI)

Economic crisis: How Sri Lanka sleepwalked over a debt cliff

February 25th, 2023

Courtesy The New Indian Express

Sri Lanka’s economic crisis and sovereign default were the result of long-lasting fiscal indiscipline, weak institutions, lack of transparency and accountability and short-sighted economic policies.

By PTI

COLOMBO: The issues that led Sri Lanka to become an economic basket case in 2022 serve as a warning for other nations.

When politicians chase popularity over sound economic management, it can spell disaster. Just ask Sri Lanka’s former president Gotabaya Rajapaksa.

Rajapaksa quit in July last year after fleeing to Singapore at the height of protests against his government’s mismanagement of the economy which resulted in Sri Lanka declaring sovereign default in April 2022.

Many blame Rajapaksa for driving the country into its worst economic crisis since independence, leading to severe shortages of fuel, food and medicines.

While it’s easy to blame one person, Sri Lanka’s economic crisis and sovereign default were the result of long-lasting fiscal indiscipline, weak institutions, lack of transparency and accountability and short-sighted economic policies that were taken for political popularity.

Since the default, Sri Lanka has made some progress with debt restructuring. Private bondholders have expressed a willingness to restructure debt. The Paris Club group of creditors and India have provided financing assurances.

Many of Sri Lanka’s outstanding foreign debt holders have expressed a willingness to restructure debt, but not all of them. But the position taken by China, Sri Lanka’s largest creditor is concerning.

While the Export-Import Bank of China will provide an extension on the debt service to help relieve Sri Lanka’s short-term repayment pressure, China’s level of commitment to debt restructuring remains unclear and Beijing consistently insists multilateral financial institutions should also bear the burden of debt relief.

These comments and lack of specific commitments have delayed IMF board approval of Sri Lanka’s request to obtain a bailout package.

China EXIM Bank too had stated that it would provide a two-year moratorium for debt repayments due in 2022 and 2023, but it remains unclear on debt restructuring methods.

China is Sri Lanka’s largest bilateral creditor accounting for 19 per cent of its total outstanding foreign debt.

Private creditors own 36 per cent of outstanding foreign debt due to the large number of Eurobonds issued by Sri Lanka in the previous decade. But the country needs to fix the issues that led it off the debt cliff in the first place.

The makings of disaster Sri Lanka’s problems go back decades.

While global shocks such as COVID-19 and the Russia-Ukraine war had some impact on the country’s economy, the major causes were long-lasting structural weaknesses successive governments failed to properly address.

Instead of fixing these weaknesses, Sri Lanka continued to focus on debt-fuelled growth.

The result was an economic catastrophe.

Sri Lanka grappled with persistent twin deficits (fiscal and current account) that lasted decades.

A fiscal deficit is when a government spends more than it earns.

A current account deficit is when a government spends more foreign currency than it earns.

Both of these deficits resulted in five major structural weaknesses: Falling government revenue, stagnant exports, an overvalued currency, lack of direct foreign investment and continued losses by state-owned enterprises twinned with subsidised energy prices.

Sri Lanka has lacked fiscal discipline.

It has one of the lowest tax-to-GDP ratios in the world, meaning it barely collects any taxes, usually a substantial part of government revenue. In 1990, Sri Lanka’s tax GDP ratio was approximately 20 per cent of GDP. By 2015 this had dropped to 10.1 per cent.

Gotabhaya Rajapaksha’s decision to hand out tax cuts in 2019 in order to fulfil an election promise reduced this further. By 2021, Sri Lanka’s tax ratio dropped to 7.7 per cent. This decline took place while the country’s GDP per capita income increased significantly.

In 1990 Sri Lanka was a low-income country with a per capita of USD 464. Seven years later it had lifted itself to a middle-income country with a per capita income of USD 814. Its GDP per capita continued to grow and was USD 4,060 in 2018.

Accordingly, the World Bank classified Sri Lanka as an upper-middle-income country in 2019. (Although it was downgraded a year later.) But while GDP per capita grew, the tax ratio fell, forcing the government to borrow heavily to breach the fiscal deficit.

So people’s incomes grew but taxes fell.

At the same time, government expenditure increased.

From 2005, ex-president Rajapaksa’s brother Mahinda led a government which invested heavily in public infrastructure.

This made him popular, with the construction of highways, a new port, an airport and massive road development projects.

Foreign loans, from capital markets and China, paid for most of it.

To secure this money, Sri Lanka offered government bonds at high-interest rates.

This meant the country would need significant foreign currency reserves to pay creditors when the bonds matured.

Most of the Chinese loans were not commercial but had far higher interest rates than loans from the World Bank, ADB and Japan which were Sri Lanka’s three major traditional lenders.

This infrastructure development took place largely for political reasons.

For instance, Mahinda Rajapaksa decided to build a second airport in his hometown of Hambantota when the sensible option would have been to expand the existing international airport near Colombo.

Corruption was also a major problem in these projects.

In 2004, the share of non-concessional debt of Sri Lanka’s foreign loans was only 2.4 per cent.

This rocketed to 50 per cent in 10 years, increasing the debt burden.

There are two reasons why: access to concessional loans fell as Sri Lanka’s income levels rose to force the government to look for alternative foreign financing to bridge the budget deficit.

And the government was obsessed with building large-scale infrastructure development and maintaining import substitution policies such as increasing import tariffs.

The latter resulted in a deterioration of the country’s export performance.

Import substitution policies did not increase exports, instead, it expanded the non-tradable sector (sectors with few exports).

From 2000 to 2015, Sri Lanka’s exports as a share of the GDP fell from 39 per cent to 20 per cent. This meant while the foreign debt repayment burden increased, Sri Lanka’s ability to repay foreign loans deteriorated.

Sri Lanka was compelled to borrow more from international capital markets to repay previous loans. This led to a massive increase in foreign debt repayment costs.

Sri Lanka’s external debt servicing ratio went up to 25.4 per cent in 2019 from 10.7 per cent in 2000.

As Sri Lanka transitioned from a low-income to a middle-income nation, successive governments facilitated rent-seeking, maintained lower tax rates, expanded the public service by hiring unskilled labour for political reasons and financed loss-making state-owned enterprises for political gain.

The country’s growing middle class loved these policies.

The government also facilitated non-tradable sector businesses by maintaining an overvalued exchange rate, high import tariffs and low-interest rates.

Businesses loved these policies as they offered relatively easier income generation compared to competing in the global market.

This led to a stagnation of exports and imports based on non-tradable sectors.

The current account deficit kept growing.

By 2022, Sri Lanka ran out of foreign currency to repay foreign loans.

The hard road ahead Sri Lanka is now compelled to reverse most of these policy mishaps. Electricity and fuel prices have increased, taxes have increased, interest rates have increased, and the exchange rate has increased, causing inflation to soar. In January it was 53.2 per cent.

This means the country’s middle-class as well as the business community is struggling as the government no longer can subsidise them.

Almost a year after protests against the Rajapaksa government, more protests and strikes opposing tax reforms and other policy reforms have wracked the nation.

Austerity is hard and it is harder in a shrinking economy, but Sri Lanka has no choice.

It is compelled to carry out reforms in order to receive the support of the IMF, and other multilateral agencies and to conclude debt restructuring progress.

The lesson Sri Lanka teaches is that middle-income transitions sound and look fancy for many low-income countries.

But, hurrying into it without fixing structural issues in the economy, strengthening institutions and ensuring strong checks and balances can create an economic catastrophe.

In the short term, people, businesses and politicians may be very happy. But that party won’t last unless the country has been able to get its house in order. Sri Lanka didn’t.

Now, Sri Lanka is trying to do it and it is not easy. Parties are fun while it lasts, but hangovers often are bitter.

Sri Lanka to Launch App to Protect Tourists

February 25th, 2023

Courtesy Tempo.co

TEMPO.COColombo – Sri Lanka will launch a mobile app on March 1 to protect tourists, Tourism Minister Harin Fernando said on Saturday, Feb. 25.

The minister, addressing an event in Colombo, said this is one of the best mobile applications in the region for tourist safety. “The app can be operated in seven languages,” he added.

The mobile app will register all three-wheelers and a barcode will be displayed on the vehicle for foreign tourists to scan, the minister said.

Once a tourist reports an incident by scanning the barcode, police and tourism officials would take action. The ministry will operate a 24-hour active call center to support the app, he said.

The police can also monitor the app and take appropriate action in the event of any incidents that inconvenience or endanger tourists.

Tourism, one of Sri Lanka’s leading foreign exchange earners, has suffered a setback due to the COVID-19 pandemic and economic and political crises in the country. 

Sri Lanka aims to attract around 1.5 million tourists in 2023 and 3 million tourists in 2024. 

Worried about Chinese loans in India’s neighbourhood being used for terror threats: US

February 25th, 2023

Courtesy India Today

The United States has expressed its concerns about India’s neighbours using Chinese funds for terror threats.

By India Today World Desk: The US is deeply concerned that loans provided by China to Pakistan and Sri Lanka, which are in India’s immediate vicinity, may be utilised as means of exerting coercive pressure, a senior State Department official was quoted as saying by news agency PTI.

Concerning Chinese loans to countries in India’s immediate neighbourhood, we are deeply concerned that loans may be used for coercive leverage,” Donald Lu, Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia, told PTI ahead of Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s India visit.

The top American diplomat is travelling to New Delhi on a three-day official visit from March 1 to 3.

Lu stated that the United States is encouraging nations within the region that includes India to make independent decisions and not feel obligated to any external allies. We are talking to India, talking to countries of the region about how we help countries to make their own decisions and not decisions that might be compelled by any outside partner, including China,” Lu said.

ALSO READ | Biden invites PM Modi for state visit to US later this year: Report

Earlier, the Finance Minister of Pakistan, Ishaq Dar, declared that the China Development Bank (CDB) Board has granted a credit facility of USD 700 million to their country. The Pakistan economy is in dire straits amid depleting forex reserves and soaring inflation.

The country is desperately seeking a much-needed bailout from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to pull itself out of a spiralling debt crisis.

When questioned, Lu mentioned that there has been a significant dialogue between the United States and India regarding China. We have had serious conversations about China, both before the latest scandal over this surveillance balloon but in the aftermath. So, I fully expect those conversations will continue,” he said.

Lu, in response to a question, insisted that Quad is not a military alliance.

The Quad is not, in fact, an organisation that is against any single country or group of countries. The Quad stands for trying to promote activities and values that support the Indo-Pacific – free and open Indo-Pacific, but Indo-Pacific that’s prosperous and supports the values that we as these four countries represent,” he said.

When asked about India’s military ties with Russia, he stated that Russia is facing immense challenges in meeting their global obligations for military agreements. We see plenty of evidence of that around the world. And if you look at press reporting, I think you can see the Indians are also wondering whether Russia will be able to provide for its defenses,” Lu said.

Govt. to introduce non-paying wards in private hospitals: President

February 25th, 2023

Courtesy The Daily Mirror

President Ranil Wickremesinghe said yesterday that the government is seeking the possibility of introducing non-paying wards in private hospitals where the government is taking the tab for the treatments made in those non-paying wards, the President’s Media Division (PMD) said.

The President also said the government was considering to introduce paying wards in Government hospitals as well.

He said it is discussed to introduce a health insurance scheme where the government can assist those in the lower income category, when they need to get the service of growing private hospitals.

He made these observation addressing at the inauguration ceremony of the 6th annual academic sessions of the Sri Lanka College of Military Medicine (SLCOMM) under the theme of ‘Resilience of Military Medicine in the Times of Crisis’ held at the Eagle’s Lagoon in Katunayake.

The President said opening a new chapter in military medicine, a separate unit would be established to send military personnel overseas to help out at the times of health disasters.

He also said that the government had sent a group of military personnel to Nepal.

They were sent at the times of natural disasters. “But I’m looking at the possibility of using our military medical personnel to be sent abroad when the people are faced with health disasters,” the President said.

“Health disasters take place more often than natural disasters and I would discuss this matter with the military to establish such unit. So that is opening of a new chapter in military medicine.’

The President also said that under the Indian credit line, the government is to get more medicines to address the shortage of medicinal drugs during this crisis situation.

He added by now, the government is working on making more foreign exchange available to the medical sector. He said further that discussions are in progress with the Ministry of Health to upgrade the Medical Research Institute (MRI) into one of the best research laboratories in the region. (Ajith Siriwardana)

Chinese EXIM Bank offers short, mid, long term measures

February 25th, 2023

Courtesy The Daily Mirror

EXIM Bank of China (Export-Import Bank) submitted a comprehensive program in its financial support document on January 19 to ‘strongly support’ Sri Lanka’s debt restructuring process with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and it includes short, mid and long-term measures for debt treatment, a diplomatic source from the Chinese embassy said.

Sri Lanka is seeking the support of all the creditors to unlock the US $ 2.9 billion program with the IMF in four years.

According to the source, it is not just a two -year moratorium on debt repayments. The two-year moratorium on borrowings is only part of the support to help relieve Sri Lanka’s immediate debt repayment pressure,” the source said.

The Bank would like to have friendly consultation with Sri Lanka regarding medium and long term debt treatment in this window period; and the Bank will make best efforts to contribute to the debt sustainability and the future development of Sri Lanka. Only the short term measure is talked about in the media. It is incomplete and inaccurate,” the source said.

China calls on commercial creditors including the ISB holders to provide debt treatment in an equally comparable manner, and encourage multilateral creditors to do their utmost to make corresponding contributions.

We also call on the IMF to take into full consideration the urgency of the situation in Sri Lanka and provide loan support as soon as possible to relieve the country’s liquidity strain,” the source said.

EXIM Bank works as the official bilateral creditor representative of China in dealing with the IMF.

Sri Lanka owes US $ 7.4 billion to EXIM Bank and China Development Bank according to the Ministry of Finance.(Kelum Bandara)

Failure to prevent violence after May 9: Wasantha Karannagoda report tabled in Court

February 25th, 2023

Courtesy The Daily Mirror

The report of the Board of Inquiry prepared by a three-member-committee headed by Admiral of Fleet Wasantha Karannagoda to ascertain lapses by the armed forces and state intelligence services during the recent incident of violence was today filed before the Court of Appeal.

President’s Counsel Uditha Igalahewa appearing for Admiral of Fleet Wasantha Karannagoda filed this report before court when a writ petition filed by 22 government Parliamentarians representing Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) was called before the Court of Appeal.

Filing a writ petition in Court of Appeal, 22 government Parliamentarians representing SLPP and several others have sought an order directing the authorities to conduct a comprehensive investigation in order to ascertain as to whether former Army Commander  General Shavendra Silva, IGP Chandana Wickremaratne or any other respondents have willfully disobeyed the orders given by former President Gotabaya Rajapaksa to take action to prevent the damages to property and people following the attack on Galle Face protesters on May 9.

Court Appeal two-judge-bench comprising Justices Nissanka Bandula Karunaratne and M.A.R. Marikkar directed the respondent parties to file their objections on May 22. President’s Counsel Sanjeeva Jayawardena with counsel Rukshan Senadheera appeared on behalf of the petitioners.

The Board of Inquiry report stated that the conduct of former Army Commander General Shavendra Silva during the time period material to the instant application is highly questionable and that he has on several occasions disregarded direct and repeated instructions given to him by the former President, and the Secretary to the Ministry of Defence to protect the private property of the petitioners as well as other Citizen and also the public property of the State.

The petitioners stated that the Board of Inquiry has found that the conduct of General Shavendra Silva on 31-03-2022 and 09-05-2022 are highly suspicious and questionable.

They further alleged that General Shavendra Silva had disregarded repeated instructions from then President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and the Secretary of Defence to take action to prevent the damages to property and people being harmed near Beira Lake at Navam Mawatha in the afternoon and to clear the mob along the Galle road in front of the Temple Trees in spite of having over 4,500 including five Battalions from the elite Air Mobile Brigade, Special Forces and Commandos stationed in different locations within Colombo city limits.

President’s Counsel Faisz Mustapha with Counsel Faisza Mustapha Marka appeared for General Shavendra Silva. (Lakmal Sooriyagoda)

IMF flags debt restructuring hurdles for distressed economies

February 25th, 2023

Courtesy Adaderana

There are some disagreements over restructuring debt for distressed economies, the chief of the International Monetary Fund said on Saturday on the sidelines of a G20 meeting, adding that banning private cryptocurrencies should be an option.

India’s G20 presidency comes at a time when its South Asian neighbours Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Pakistan are seeking urgent IMF funds due to an economic slowdown caused by the COVID-19 pandemic and the Russia-Ukraine war.

China, the world’s largest bilateral creditor, urged G20 nations on Friday to conduct a fair, objective and in-depth analysis of the causes of global debt issues as clamour grows for lenders to take a large haircut, or accept losses, on loans.

On debt restructuring, while there are still some disagreements, we now have the global sovereign debt roundtable with consideration of all public and private creditors,” IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva told reporters after the roundtable she co-chaired with Indian Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman.

We just finished a session in which it was clear that there is a commitment to bridge differences for the benefit of countries.”

Apart from restructuring debt, regulating cryptocurrencies is another priority area for India, which Georgieva agreed with.

We have to differentiate between central bank digital currencies that are backed by the state and stable coins, and crypto assets that are privately issued,” Georgieva said.

There has to be very strong push for regulation… if regulation fails, if you’re slow to do it, then we should not take off the table banning those assets, because they may create financial stability risk.”


Source: Reuters
-Agencies

US concerned Chinese loans in Pakistan, Sri Lanka may be used for ‘coercive leverage’

February 25th, 2023

Courtesy Adaderana

The US is deeply concerned that the loans being given by China to India’s immediate neighbourhood – Pakistan and Sri Lanka – may be used for coercive leverage, a senior State Department official said on Friday.

Concerning Chinese loans to countries in India’s immediate neighbourhood, we are deeply concerned that loans may be used for coercive leverage,” Donald Lu, Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia, told reporters ahead of the India trip of Secretary of State Antony Blinken.

The top American diplomat is travelling to New Delhi on a three-day official visit from March 01 to 03.

Lu said that the US is talking to countries in the region comprising India to take their own decisions and not feel compelled by any outside partner.

We are talking to India, talking to countries of the region about how we help countries to make their own decisions and not decisions that might be compelled by any outside partner, including China,” Lu said.

Earlier in the day, Pakistani Finance Minister Ishaq Dar announced that the Board of China Development Bank (CDB) has approved a USD 700 million credit facility to the country.

Responding to a question Lu said that there has been a serious conversation between India and the US on the issue of China.

We have had serious conversations about China, both before the latest scandal over this surveillance balloon but in the aftermath. So, I fully expect those conversations will continue,” he said.

Lu, in response to a question, insisted that Quad is not a military alliance. The Quad is not, in fact, an organisation that is against any single country or group of countries. The Quad stands for trying to promote activities and values that support the Indo-Pacific – free and open Indo-Pacific, but Indo-Pacific that’s prosperous and supports the values that we as these four countries represent,” he said.

When asked about India’s military relationship with Russia, he said globally Russia is having a really difficult time fulfilling orders for military contracts.

We see plenty of evidence of that around the world. And if you look at press reporting, I think you can see the Indians are also wondering whether Russia will be able to provide for its defenses,” Lu said.

Lu strongly refuted the allegations that India avoids the use of war when it comes to Russia. India uses the word war” all the time,” he asserted.

You heard Prime Minister Modi say, in August, now is not the era for war. You heard External Affairs Minister Jaishankar say in September, at the UN, that we need this war to end through diplomatic means and along the principles of the UN Charter, reinforcing territorial integrity and sovereignty,” he said.

And then, in November you heard the Indian Defense Minister say the threat to use nuclear weapons by Russia is totally unacceptable and at odds with the basic tenets of humanity. So, I don’t particularly see a reluctance to use the word ‘war.’ I think they use it all the time,” Lu said.

Source: Press Trust of India (PTI)
-Agencies

EC requests Speaker to intervene to secure funds for LG polls

February 25th, 2023

Courtesy Adaderana

Chairman of Election Commission Nimal G. Punchihewa says that he has sent a letter to Speaker Mahinda Yapa Abeywardene asking him to intervene to urge the Treasury to release the funds required to hold the Local Government election.

The decision has been arrived at when the Election Commission met yesterday (Feb. 24).

The Election Commission’s chairman further stated that the relevant letter was sent to the Speaker yesterday itself.

National Council sub-committee discusses rural credit and social security programmes

February 25th, 2023

Courtesy Adaderana

The National Council Sub-Committee to identify short- and medium-term programs related to stabilization has held a discussion on rural credit and social security programmes.

This was taken up for consideration on Thursday (Feb. 23) when the National Council sub-committee met in Parliament under the chairmanship of MP Patali Champika Ranawaka.

Representatives including the Central Bank of Sri Lanka, the Ministry of Finance, the Sri Lanka Institute of Policy Studies and the Regional Development Bank were present in this committee meeting.

There was a lengthy discussion about the programs including the Samurdhi program which was initiated to provide relief to low-income earners. The parties who were present commented on the preparation of methods for the systematic distribution of these benefits to low-income earners.

Further, attention was paid to the provision of loan concessions by rural banks including Samurdhi Bank

Electricity sharing opens new window for BBIN countries

February 24th, 2023

Sufian Asif Independent researcher and freelance columnist, Dhaka.

Today, challenges like climate change, pandemics, energy reliance, economic crisis, and many more are concerning us. No nation can overcome these obstacles without the assistance and collaboration of other nations. Most importantly, many of these problems have international repercussions. South Asia is facing much more difficulty when compared to other regions. In South Asia, we have some regional organizations, but they are ineffective.

The time has come to revive regional organizations such as Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, and Nepal (BBIN), a sub-regional organization under SAARC, which has gathered some momentum in recent years.  All four nations of this subregion are facing an energy crisis due to the Russia-Ukraine war. There cannot be a better way with sub-regional energy trade involving Nepal, India, Bangladesh, and Bhutan; which would be a win-win for all countries concerned. 

Energy trade between Bangladesh and Nepal via Indian territory

The rapid growth of electricity demand in developing nations and the emergence of digital technologies has created increased opportunities for international electricity trade. BBIN-sub-regional energy integration, by having new transmission lines54, can facilitate energy trade among these countries. Following this, India-Bangladesh-Nepal could consider trilateral trade of electricity where Nepal could export its surplus electricity to Bangladesh to meet its deficit in electricity via Indian territory.

In early 2022, Dhaka proposed power trade between Nepal and Bangladesh in a way that suits the interest of both countries. No doubt that the proposal made perfect sense. The remarks by Bangladesh come at a time when India, which lies between the two countries, has expressed its eagerness to promote sub-regional cooperation on energy with Nepal, Bangladesh, and Bhutan. The proposal indicates a good example of regional energy cooperation between Bangladesh and Nepal in partnership with India where the latter’s transmission system needs to be used.

In August 2022, Nepal and Bangladesh have jointly requested India to use its land for inter-country electricity transportation using the Indian infrastructure. Initially 50 megawatts of electricity will be transported via India. Officials and experts say if India gives access to its transmission infrastructure, bilateral power trade between Nepal and Bangladesh is compatible with the needs of both countries. However, the proposal needs further scrutiny to better understand the nature of energy cooperation between Bangladesh and Nepal and the level of partnership with India in this regard.

Prospects of energy trade between Nepal and Bangladesh

Bangladesh’s connectivity with the regional countries, especially with Nepal, Bhutan, and India is developing. Prospects of energy trade among these countries are also growing in this regard. Any energy generated by Nepal that is not consumed there can be consumed by Bangladesh or others.

The seasonal demand for electrical energy among countries in the BBIN region influences the amount of energy that can be traded. Because the electricity trade will predominantly involve the export of hydroelectric energy, the seasonal demand for electricity in Bhutan and Nepal plays a critical role in determining the feasibility of trade. In the monsoon season, there is ample energy available from hydroelectric resources in Bhutan and Nepal which can be sold to India and Bangladesh. This seasonal variation in the need for electricity in Bangladesh offers an opportunity for Bhutan and Nepal, where electricity generation peaks during the monsoon season, because of water availability.

The fact is that, in Bangladesh, the demand during the daytime in summer is high due to cooling needs. These demand patterns throughout the day suggest opportunities for Nepal to flatten the pattern of energy production throughout the day relative to the pattern of their internal demand by selling electricity to Bangladesh, particularly during the summer months when the demand in Nepal is low and the demand in Bangladesh is high. Importing this surplus electricity would boost Nepal’s economic fortunes as well as Bangladesh’s summer demand.

Bangladesh-Nepal-India trilateral relation

India is considering Nepalese and Bangladesh proposals to allow Kathmandu to sell electricity to Dhaka via Indian territory and Indian infrastructure which would deepen sub-regional cooperation in a big way. Officials say a meeting between Nepali and Indian officials led by energy secretaries of the countries will finalize the matter. The meeting is scheduled to be held in the third week of February in New Delhi.

India offers the opportunity to interconnect the Bangladesh, Bhutan, and Nepal electricity supply industries. The possibility of using Indian power infrastructure for electricity trade between Nepal and Bangladesh is another facet of India’s neighborhood engagement. These bonds of support, trade, and economic opportunities should bind the countries, with India as a critical player. Acting in unison would be in the enlightened self-interest of each country in South Asia. This approach makes India a reliable partner. The power trade between Nepal and Bangladesh also reflects active role of a silent organization BBIN. Nepal will gain from the sale, and Bangladesh will benefit from access to electricity.

Besides opening the opportunity for bilateral trade between Nepal and Bangladesh, a new opportunity for sub-regional energy trade among BBIN countries is also emerging, with India itself pushing for it. For this, transmission line connectivity alone will not be enough. There is a need for harmonized rules and regulations among the participating963.- countries and there should be a multilateral agreement on details including the wheeling charge of electricity among the participating countries. It is hoped that Nepal and Bangladesh will widen collaboration in the power sector and include partner nations to solve the energy interdependency in South Asia.

The New Abnormal

February 24th, 2023

Malinda Seneviratne

Post Independence Sri Lanka. That’s a period of 75 years. Long enough for a decent mix of the good, the bad and the ugly. And the downright scandalous. Now in this long period of time, we’ve had representative democracy. More or less. And we’ve had periods when that what and what it means were grotesquely twisted.  Here’s a question: what were the darkest days for democracy?

The Rajapaksa Era, hands down.

During the tenure of Mahinda Rajapaksa and the presidency of Gotabaya Rajapaksa the following happened, as people would very well recall:

Mahinda Rajapaksa famously said, with regard to economic policy, ‘let the robber barons come!’ He also said ‘I will roll the electoral map for ten years.’ Was it Gotabaya? No, I think, Mahinda. He obtained undated letters of resignation from all MPs of the UPFA and later the SLPP. He waved these over their heads when he compromised the sovereignty of the country, wrecked territorial integrity and allowed India to obtain more than a hegemonic toehold over the island when the leader of that country held a pistol to his head, so to speak.

Well, friends, Mahinda Rajapaksa is guilty of a lot of wrongdoing, this much is clear, but none of the above can be attributed to him. That was J R Jayewardene and his government which included the likes of Ranil Wickremesinghe and Ranasinghe Premadasa. The latter, one might argue, was biding his time but the former was clearly in agreement, never mind the undated letter of resignation he submitted to the then President.

‘JR’ came to power with a five-sixths majority. He didn’t postpone parliamentary elections, as Sirimavo Bandaranaike did in 1975. He simply cancelled elections. Instead, he went for a referendum where the people were asked to allow the parliament elected in 1977 to continue in office for a six years more. All he needed was a simple majority (50%+1) so that the five-sixths sway could be held.

That referendum was rigged. The Presidential Election of 1982 was rigged. Indeed all elections held until 1994 were rigged. Voter impersonation, intimidation of opposing candidates and voters likely to support some other party, burning of party offices, ballot box stuffing, you name it. It was par for the course under JR.

He stripped his strongest opponent of her civic rights. He crushed trade unions. He unleashed party thugs on Tamils in 1983. Students were killed in 1984. Censorship was his constant companion and that of his successor too, let’s not forget. And by the end of the decade, 50-60 people were getting killed on a daily basis. You want a script for a horror film called ‘Dark Days of Democracy’? Well, JR wrote it. Yes, you could do a compare and contrast with Gotabaya’s brief tenure and you may very well conclude, ‘if #gotagohome was legit, it was overkill plus plus.’  

JR had lost legitimacy by 1982. Ranil Wickremesinghe, president and current leader of JR’s party, the UNP, never had it. His only claim to a semblance of legitimacy lies in the fact that he accepted the Prime Minister’s post at a moment when there were simply no takers. That’s about it.  

The largely illegitimate president hasn’t been twiddling his thumbs, democracy-wise or rather with record to being anti-democratic.

Elections. True, there’s been no agitation about PC elections not being held for years and in the case of the Northern and Eastern Provincial Councils, for more than 11 and 12 years respectively. He hasn’t made that point, though, as a justification for what is clearly his opposition to holding local government elections.

Wait, he hasn’t said that has he? Right. He has not. However, he is the EXECUTIVE President, all powerful, all-wise and all that. He knows what’s what. And it’s not as though he’s not executed anything so far. The way he extracted ‘agreement’ with the PUCSL for tariff reform, heavily skewed against the low-end consumer by the way, is scandalous and reminiscent of JR’s tactics. He waited until the forthright chairperson of the PUCSL was out of the country and (it seems) arm-twisted the other commissioners to give in to his preferred formula.

So he, understandably doesn’t want the local government elections to be held. Understandable because a) his party is almost a non-entity now in Sri Lanka’s political firmament, and b) his main ally to whom he owes his position today, the SLPP, appears to have lost much ground in terms of political legitimacy or even relevance. Naturally, the opposition stands to gain in such scenarios caused or exacerbated by economic hardship. The SJP is the main opposition in Parliament. The JVP is already on the ground and running. The possibility of a massive defeat is real.

Ranil Wickremesinghe has been in this business long enough to know the costs of an electoral nose-dive. He knows how the Yahapalana regime in which he was Prime Minister lost legitimacy after the SLPP swept the local government elections in February 2018. Sure, there wasn’t much yaha (good) and hardly any palanaya (governance) post January 8, 2015, but that defeat buried the ruling coalition. Without a party of his own worthy of that term, dependent on a political group he has been at odds with for most of his political career, a resounding opposition victory would be curtains. It’s worth pointing out that given the political fortunes or lack thereof of the SLPP, most of the MPs of that party are now operating as though they’ve given Ranil Wickremesinghe undated letters of resignation.

One may have serious issues with the SJB or the JVP or both but that’s irrelevant here. The point is that this government is elections-averse. It is terrified of the true dimensions of legitimacy being stamped by way of election results. This government or rather its movers and shakers (and there’s no mover or shaker more powerful at this moment than Ranil Wickremesinghe) has resorted to disgusting tactics to stop local government elections.  

If Gotabaya, for whatever reason, was reluctant to anger India and the USA, Wickremesinghe seems to have resolved to bend over backwards in submitting to the strategic and economic interests of these two countries. Most of it behind the scenes, although the recent in-your-face show-of-force by the USA was a bit hard to conceal.

Whether it is economic policy (21st Century racketeers courtesy the IMF instead of the robber barons JR loved), strong-arm tactics (the PTA stands, still) or spurning of democratic norms, it’s JR all over again.

If democracy was struck by an abnormality called JR with ripple effects running into the third decade of the 21st Century, it’s got a second kick in the face. As abnormal as it was back in JR’s time. ‘The New Abnormal’ would be a fair description. 

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