The Impact of  Buddhism in Europe 

August 24th, 2022

Senaka Weeraratna

The greatest impact of Buddhism in Europe is seen in the growth of Atheists (and Atheism) and sharp decline in Monotheism among Europeans of Christian origin. 

The Buddha rejected the idea of an external saviour from the very inception of his mission and advocated self reliance and self – effort for your personal salvation. You save yourself by your own efforts, the Buddha said and not through rituals, prayers and animal sacrifice. 

The Buddha, while rejecting an all mighty God, however never rejected virtue or the goodness in conduct. In fact, he placed a high emphasis on ethics e.g. Noble Eightfold Path:, and developed a perfect system of Ethics without placing a God in the center of his doctrine. 

There is a parallel in what we see happening in Europe today with  Buddhist thinking and way of life. Europeans of Christian heritage are no longer going to Church, do not engage in prayers, nor project themselves as worshippers. Churches are steadily becoming empty. A common sight in Europe.

Great Intellectual Heritage 

But yet they, i.e., Europeans,  have not become aloof or indifferent to Right Thinking, Philosophy and Ethical behavior. They are conscious of their great intellectual heritage and legacy of free thinkers like the German Philosopher Artur Schopenhauer, the French critic Voltaire, and the English Mathematician Bertrand Russell who revolted against orthodox religion.

Europeans are freedom loving and prefer a life unrestricted by religion. They are sensitive to the suffering of others and conscious of Man’s inhumanity towards animals. Many have become Vegetarian or Vegan out of concern and display increasing sensitivity for the lives of non – human sentient beings. They do not kill animals for the purpose of sacrifice to earn a reward for themselves in ‘heaven’.

 One specific group that is ahead of the rest of Europeans in this respect are the Jews. They have experienced the Holocaust and are acutely aware of human imposed suffering on others. A practice that happens daily in human interaction with animals. We shut our hearts and minds to both cruelty against humanity and cruelty against animals. For example, a glaring instance of indifference to the plight of animals in Sri Lanka is the failure to enact the Animal Welfare Bill.

In contrast, European countries with growing Atheism are displaying growing legislative interest in the welfare and protection of animals. 

Jew-buds

The Jews who have turned to Buddhism for solace and insights are called Jew-buds. They are interested in both Judaism and Buddhism. They are an influential group in both the USA and Europe now giving leadership to White skin Buddhist communities in the Western countries.

The movement towards Atheism in Europe is more or less in line with what the Buddha advocated 2, 600 years ago. Rely on yourself to achieve wisdom through your own efforts e.g. Meditation, and develop Compassion by causing no harm to living beings, human and non – human.

Buddhist insights are the main reason that have influenced Europeans to distance themselves from monotheism and embrace Atheism. The average European is no longer interested in playing a numbers game with religion.They do not wear religious labels.  For them it is a private matter.   

They have adequate means to survive to avoid becoming vulnerable to inducements to change religion or transfer their loyalties. There are no significant ‘ Born Again’ communities, in major European cities unlike in former European colonies. 

This movement in Europe towards Atheism is unstoppable with increasing ‘ God Delusion’.

Senaka Weeraratna 

‘Aragalaya’ activist Senadhi Guruge arrested

August 24th, 2022

Courtesy Adaderana

Senadhi Guruge, an activist of the ‘Aragalaya’ movement, was arrested by the police today (Aug 24).

He was taken into custody in connection with an assault on two intelligence officers.

Delisting of former proscribed entities

August 24th, 2022

By Neville Ladduwahetty Courtesy The Island

A media release issued by the Ministry of Defence (MoD) says, The ban was lifted after a study was conducted by a committee consisting of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Attorney General’s Department, intelligence agencies, law enforcement agencies, and the Financial Intelligence Unit of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka.”

The report also states: According to the Ministry, 577 individuals, and 18 organizations, had been blacklisted, in 2021, for financing terrorism, under the United Nations Regulations No. 01 of 2012. However, following lengthy considerations, it was decided to delist 316 individuals, and six organisations as they no longer continue to fund terrorist activities, the Ministry said” (Daily FT, August 17, 2022).

According to the above statement, by the MoD, the reason for delisting some individuals and organisations on the basis that they no longer continue to fund terrorist activities”. However, United Nations Regulations No. 01 of 2012, referred to in the MoD release, is based on the Minister of Foreign Affairs promulgating the United Nations Security Council Resolution 1373 (2001) designating individuals, and entities, related to terrorism and terrorist financing, in national level. Accordingly, Institutions are obliged to have measures, in place, to identify and freeze funds, financial assets or economic resources of such designated persons, and entities, upon order by the Competent Authority who is Secretary to the Ministry of Defence. The Secretary to the MoD is appointed as the Competent Authority for the implementation of UNSCR 1373 and its successor resolutions in Sri Lanka.

When the Minister of Foreign Affairs promulgated UNSC Resolution 1373, it was limited ONLY to identify and freeze funds, financial assets or economic resources”. This is too limited because it misses the full scope of 1373. The scope of UNSCC Resolution goes beyond to any form of support, active or passive, to entities”. Therefore, since these provisions cover activities far beyond funding terrorist activities, the comment in the MoD release that those delisted no longer fund terrorist activities” is too limited a basis for delisting; a fact that is evident from the UNSCR 1373 provisions presented below. This is a serious lapse in the interpretation of UNSC Resolution 1373, by the Minister of Foreign Affairs, and followed by the MoD, and all those organizations, and individuals, who participated in making the decision to delist some individuals and organizations, however rigorous their investigations were.

PROVISIONS of UNSCR 1373

SC Resolution 1373 states as follows:

1. Decides that all States shall: (a) Prevent and suppress the financing of terrorist acts; (b) Criminalize the wilful provision, or collection, by any means, directly, or indirectly, of funds by their nationals, or in their territories, with the intention that the funds should be used, or in the knowledge that they are to be used, in order to carry out terrorist acts; (c) Freeze, without delay, funds and other financial assets, or economic resources, of persons who commit, or attempt to commit, terrorist acts or participate in or facilitate the commission of terrorist acts; of entities owned, or controlled directly or indirectly by such persons; and of persons, and entities, acting on behalf of, or at the direction of such persons and entities, including funds derived, or generated, from property, owned or controlled directly or indirectly by such persons and associated persons, and entities;

(d) Prohibit their nationals, or any persons and entities, within their territories, from making any funds, financial assets or economic resources or financial or other related services available directly or indirectly for the benefit of persons who commit, or attempt to commit, or facilitate, or participate in the commission of terrorist acts of entities owned or controlled, directly or indirectly by such persons and of persons and entities acting on behalf of or at the direction of such persons;

2. Decides also that all States shall: (a) Refrain from providing any form of support, active or passive, to entities or persons involved in terrorist acts, including by suppressing recruitment of members of terrorist groups and eliminating the supply of weapons to terrorists; (b) Take the necessary steps to prevent the commission of terrorist acts, including by provision of early warning to other States by exchange of information; (c) Deny safe haven to those who finance, plan, support, or commit terrorist acts, or provide safe havens; (d) Prevent those who finance, plan, facilitate or commit terrorist acts from using their respective territories for those purposes against other States or their citizens; (e) Ensure that any person, who participates in the financing, planning, preparation or perpetration of terrorist acts or in supporting terrorist acts, is brought to justice and ensure that in addition to any other measures against them, such terrorist acts are established as serious criminal offences in domestic laws and regulations and that the punishment duly reflects the seriousness of such terrorist acts; (f) Afford one another the greatest measure of assistance in connection with criminal investigations or criminal proceedings relating to the financing or support of terrorist acts, including assistance in obtaining evidence in their possession necessary for the proceedings; (g) Prevent the movement of terrorists or terrorist groups by effective border controls and controls on issuance of identity papers and travel documents, and through measures for preventing counterfeiting, forgery or fraudulent use of identity papers and travel documents;

This interpretation is amply demonstrated in the judgment given by the United States Supreme Court in the case of Holder v Humanitarian Law project cited below.

According to the Court material support” to terrorist means even when offerings are not money or weapons but things such as ‘expert advice or assistance’ or ‘training’ intended to instruct in international law or appeals to the United Nations”.

The United States Supreme Court, in the case of Holder v Humanitarian Law Project, when the …court voted 6 to 3 to uphold a federal law banning ‘material support’ to foreign terrorist organizations. The ban holds, the court explained, even when offerings are not money or weapons but things such as ‘expert advice or assistance’ or ‘training’ intended to instruct in international law or appeals to the United Nations” (Washington Post, June 22, 2010). Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. in writing the majority opinion said that those challenging the ban simply disagree with the considered judgment of Congress and the Executive that providing material support to a designated terrorist organization – even seemingly benign support bolsters terrorist activities of the organization… (the law) is on its face, a preventive measure – it criminalizes not terrorist attacks themselves, but aid that makes the attack more likely to occur…” (Ibid).

EFFORTS to REVIVE the LTTE

The Island of January 31, 2022, carries a report that states: The Indian National Investigation Agency (NIA) has registered a case and launched a probe in connection with the arrest of three Sri Lankan nationals with fake passports who are allegedly involved in raising money to revive the LTT ….”

The amended Prevention of Terrorism (Special Provisions) Act No. 48, 1979 of Sri Lanka that is tabled in Parliament does not adequately address the act of raising money” by terrorist entities such as the proscribed LTTE. Instead, the amended PTA addresses mainly the rights and entitlements of perpetrators of terrorism, and NOT those who advise and support the many facets of LTTE activities. However, proscribing entities is not a sufficient deterrent to discourage terrorism. Instead, the breadth and scope of the legal provisions that exist need to be strengthened in order to prevent and suppress terrorism.

According to The Island report, the action taken by the NIA is under provisions of Unlawful (Prevention) Act and Foreigners Amendment Act among others of the Penal Code”. Whether these instruments cover only terrorist acts or are sufficiently wide in scope to cover not only fund raising but also material support, needs to be established if they are to prevent and deter terrorism. If not, they need to be extended beyond, into activities such as selecting, training, fund raising and engaging the perpetrators of terrorism, if the legal provisions are to have an impact. Since the Security Council Resolution 1373 is sufficiently wide in scope to address these issues, it is imperative that ALL Member States incorporate its provisions because they are specifically designed to prevent and suppress terrorism. Since those arrested are now engaged in the revival of the LTTE, it is absolutely vital that Sri Lanka takes immediate action to implement the full scope of Security Council Resolution 1373, if terrorism is not to recur.

CONCLUSION

The press release issued by the Ministry of Defence states: 577 individuals, and 18 organizations, had been blacklisted in 2021 for financing terrorism under the United Nations Regulations No. 01 of 2012. However, following lengthy considerations, it was decided to delist 316 individuals and six organizations as they no longer continue to fund terrorist activities the Ministry said” (Daily FT, August 17, 2022).

This means nearly 55% individuals and 33% organizations were delisted from a list as recent as 2021. According to the press release, this decision was taken after a study was conducted by a galaxy of individuals representing the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Attorney General’s Department, intelligence agencies, law enforcement agencies and the Financial Intelligence Unit of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka on the basis that they no longer continue to fund terrorist activities”

However, United Nations Regulations No. 01 of 2012 referred to in the MoD release is based on the Minister of Foreign Affairs promulgating the United Nations Security Council Resolution 1373 (2001)”. The promulgation of UNSC Resolution 1373 by the SL Minister of Foreign Affairs is limited ONLY to prohibiting fund raising for terrorist activities. Section 2 of Resolution 1373 prohibits any form of support, active or passive to entities or persons involved in terrorist acts…”. Therefore, the basis for delisting is NOT in keeping with the provisions of UNSC Resolution 1373. This reflects poorly on Sri Lanka’s obligations to the Security Council.

Despite the fact that the grounds for delisting cannot be justified on the basis claimed that they no longer continue to fund terrorist activities”, the reason for doing so appears to be a measure adopted by the government to encourage the participation of the diaspora as it is a strength and source of investment”, as stated by the President. In fact, the President went on to suggest that Sri Lanka should set up a Special Diaspora Office” (Ceylon Today, August 18, 2022).

While the intention to set up a Special Diaspora Office to attract diaspora funds has merit, by delisting first and hoping the diaspora to respond by way of investments is too much to expect in the absence of a quid pro quo. Therefore, the diaspora is bound to expect a political solution to gain their confidence, as suggested by the TNA (The Island, August 21), before they become a source of investment”. Under the circumstances, the grounds for investment would become a bargaining chip to extract the most expansive of political solutions such as a federal arrangement as indicated by one of the delisted entities. Since such an outcome would be a certainty, it would have been more prudent to delist only those who invest, instead of opening the flood gates without any assurances in place.

The reason for such caution is twofold. The unhindered access to Sri Lanka by those delisted could present opportunities for them to engage in active and/or passive support to encourage the revival of the LTTE as reported by the Indian National Investigation Agency. No amount of vigilance by the security establishment would reveal clandestine arrangements as took place with the activities that precipitated the Easter Sunday terrorist attack. The other is that the front runner for the Prime Ministerial post in the UK, Rishi Sunak, has at a meeting with British Tamil conservatives stated: the UK will continue to play a central role to bring about justice and accountability” (The Island, August 21, 2022). In his statement, he stressed his support for the latest UN Resolution on Sri Lanka, which mandated the collection of evidence that may be used in a future war crimes tribunal” (Ibid).

To delist 55% individuals and 33% organisations from a year-old list in the expectation of attracting diaspora investments against the background of the support of a future UK government, and the expectation of a federal arrangement as a political solution without assured commitments is beyond any sense of reality because it would be too high a price for the People of Sri Lanka to accept. Instead, what the MoD should have done was to delist only those who have shown or show good faith by investing to build a prosperous Sri Lanka.

Sri Lanka’s foreign debt – 81% debt held by West & Allies not China

August 24th, 2022

Shenali D Waduge

Much hype and propaganda has fooled the world & Sri Lankans into believing China has trapped Sri Lanka in debt. For every woe Sri Lanka suffers the credit is put on China. This has been the fashionable sing-song-of Colombo cocktail circles who want to dictate how the entirety of Sri Lanka think. Sri Lanka’s economic woes have naturally being pinned on China. The ugly truth is that Sri Lanka’s foreign debt is owed to the West & not China. Holding 81% of Sri Lanka foreign debt the West & its allies are breathing down Sri Lanka. It is not China but West & allies who have trapped Sri Lanka in debt. Over $50billion of Sri Lanka’s $54billion debt is not held with China but West & their allies.

IMF Genie

81% of Sri Lanka’s debt is held by US & European financial institutions together with their Asian allies Japan & India. (source Ben Norton) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U52tT5hgtSk

Sri Lanka has gone to IMF 16 times & faced structural adjustments – has structural adjustments done Sri Lanka any good?

Against 81% Sri Lanka’s debt held by West & its allies – Sri Lanka’s debt to China is just 10%. 

Advocata claims China holds $3.5b of the $54b debt Sri Lanka owes foreigners.

This means over $50billion Sri Lanka’s debt is not owed to China.

47% of this 81% foreign debt is held by Western funds & banks. 

Topping this list holding international sovereign bonds are:

  • Allianz (Germany)
  • Amundi Asset Management
  • Ashmore Group (Britain)
  • BlackRock – in 2009 acquired Barclays Global Investors (BGI)
  • Fidelity Investments- US retirement system
  • Hamilton Reserve Bank – holds $250m of Sri Lanka’s 5.875% bond due on 25 July 2022. They filed a legal suit in New York.
  • HBK Capital Management
  • HSBC (Britain)
  • JPMorgan Chase – US retirement system
  • Lord Abbett – US retirement system
  • Morgan Stanley Investment Management
  • Neuberger Berman – US retirement system
  • Pacific Investment Management
  • PIMCO – US retirement system
  • Prudential (U.S.)
  • Saint Kitts & Nevis accused Sri Lanka of excluding certain bondholders from restructuring accusing hanky panky by officials handling restructuring.
  • Rowe Price Associates Inc – US retirement system
  • UBS (Switzerland)

Sri Lanka’s defaulting is causing US retirees suffering from massive losses upto 80% of their original investment value was the argument raised by Hamilton Reserve Bank who took Sri Lanka to courts. Inspite of defaulting repaying on China’s loan of $78m due in July, China’s Exim Bank has not taken Sri Lanka to court.

$12.5billion international sovereign bonds were issued by Sri Lanka on the advice of then governor CBSL Indraji Coomaraswamy. This was taken far before covid 19 impacted Sri Lanka in March 2020. Sri Lanka’s current CBSL head & then Finance Minister Sabry decided to default claiming Sri Lanka was ‘bankrupt’ in April 2022. The above 3 have much to answer for. Taking sovereign bonds and boldly defaulting obviously had not taken stock of how Sri Lanka was to make repayment or the repercussions of declaring Sri Lanka would not repay. Did it not occur to them that their big talk would land the nation in legal issues?

Sri Lanka has hired financial & legal advisers Lazard & Clifford Chance to renegotiate with creditors which include 30 asset managers and bilateral lending from Japan, India & China.

How much is Sri Lanka paying Lazard & Clifford Chance for their advice?

Lazard & Clifford Chance will be up against White & Case LLC the legal advisor and Rothschild & Co as financial advisers for the more than 30 asset managers that hold Sri Lanka’s international bonds.

ADB owns 13% of Sri Lanka’s foreign debt

World Bank owns 9% of Sri Lanka’s foreign debt

Both ADB and World Bank are US dominated with veto power.

Japan owns 10% of Sri Lanka’s foreign debt while Japan exerts influence over ADB.

2% of Sri Lanka’s foreign debt is owed to India though with the current handouts by India, the % would have increased.

The West & its alliances not only yield monetary control over Sri Lanka but its formation of Quad & anti-China military alliance places Sri Lanka to walk on a tight-rope with tremendous pressure using the 81% debt reality. 

When they give – they give with undisclosed & disclosed expectations.

Thus, the West & its allies is using this 81% to exert tremendous pressure on Sri Lanka.

In 2015 US-India installed a puppet regime to power.

By end of 2019 – less than 5% of Sri Lanka’s foreign debt was held by China. 64.6% was in dollars, 14.4% in IMF SDR & 10% Japanese yen.

Given that China is well accustomed to the lies and distortions of western media & can afford to ignore, can Sri Lanka do the same?

Was this 81% foreign debt a malady of the neoliberal policies & associated ills Sri Lanka had to suffer forcing Sri Lanka to be trapped to West?

Was the sudden decision to default on debt primarily without repaying a debt due to China, part of a larger plan to put Sri Lanka further into West-Allies debt?

If IMF bail outs have not succeeded 16 times earlier – how far is the 17thIMF bail out likely to succeed?

How did west & its allies get away by spreading false propaganda. Where were the so-called Sri Lankan economists to set the story straight. Surely, they had all the numbers and should have told the general public the true picture.

It is not only the ‘economic experts’ who are guilty of spreading lies & distortions taking the West-Allies, anti-China stand but the local and international media are equally guilty.

Wall Street Journal China’s lending comes under fire as Sri Lankan debt crisis deepens”

Voice of America China’s Global Image under Strain as Sri Lanka faces debt trap’ accused China of following a debt-trap diplomacy to weaken countries to make them dependent on China.

Associated Press ABC News, Al Arabiya, Al Jazeera too carried the anti-China tempo.

India Today, The Print, Wion, New Indian Express, Business Standard too echoed anti-China rhetoric attributing Sri Lanka’s economic situation to China.

Numerous think tanks across US also carried the same version as did UK & EU news agencies.

Sri Lanka is not in debt to China  

China has not seized assets of Sri Lanka and globally there are close to 20 cases where China has helped countries out of economic crisis instead of asset seizures. China has not taken Sri Lanka to courts either. The differing aspect of West & China’s loans is the manner it looks at how a project can contribute to the future.

In fact China has cancelled more than $3.4billion & restructured $15billion of Africa’s debt. At no time has China exerted pressure on countries in debt.

China has shown by its 30 year development plan how to bring a nation in poverty to become a nation challenging Western hegemony. Over the past 40 years China has taken 800million out of poverty while 37.2million Americans (11.4%) are living in poverty. If Sri Lanka should be seeking advice, it is from China on how to restructure state enterprises given that China has shown how to turn a poverty-stricken China to become where it is today. Sri Lanka has to seriously look away from returning to neoliberal privatization failed models.

Shenali D Waduge

Will IMF Help Ever Come?

August 24th, 2022

Dilrook Kannangara

IMF help is getting delayed and delayed. So many rounds of negotiations have been held but Sri Lanka is yet to see the money. Even if IMF help comes, it will be a loan which will have to be repaid with interest just like other loans. Since all economic powers have to approve (or rather not reject) IMF’s help to Sri Lanka, they use it as a stick against Sri Lanka. IMF officials, and economic powers that can veto IMF help to Sri Lanka have taken the island nation round and round in circles. Tangible help is nowhere in sight. Sri Lankan government must have a Plan B. Relying totally on the IMF is dangerous and will be a disappointment.

Some developed nations face the likelihood of a recession, economic contraction, liquidity crisis and may seek IMF help themselves. Yes; they will need assistance themselves! Helping others comes at a cost to them which they are unwilling to bear. Recession fears have hit USA, Germany and a few other industrialized nations. They can’t get by themselves, let alone help others. In this context, a reasonable double has arisen whether they genuinely want IMF to help Sri Lanka or they want IMF to carefully retain its resources for their own use.

USA, UK, EU and China have already used the IMF stick against Sri Lanka to advance their own interests. If Sri Lanka refuses to oblige, they’d block IMF help. Some of these ensure Sri Lanka will never be able to secure a meaningful amount of IMF loans to overcome the crisis. For instance, IMF demands Sri Lanka reigns in disruptions, achieve political stability and political consensus before they could approve a loan package. On the other hand, USA, UK and the EU want Sri Lanka to allow protests, strikes, disruptions and upheaval to continue by not arresting and punishing violent protestors. It seems that they want to somehow prevent IMF use its limited funds on Sri Lanka and retain it for the benefit of recession-struck western nations.

Sri Lanka has to consider other options too as IMF help may not come after all or it will be too late or too little. IMF help may come at a worse economic cost than the meager loan they may extend. As with many western remedies, the remedy may kill the patient along with the ailment.

Even if Sri Lanka gets IMF help in sizable amounts, there will be a bun fight amongst lenders to get paid first, and, more importantly, a battle to prevent Sri Lanka paying other lenders first. For instance, Japan and China (second and third largest creditors) will not want IMF money to use used to repay bond loans (largest creditor). China would not want it used in order to repay Japan, and vice versa. Both Japan and China have already suspended their projects in Sri Lanka. India, USA and the EU make matters even more complicated. Sri Lanka is stuck in the midst of their rivalries. On top of that there is a large number of foreign investors in Sri Lanka waiting to get out of the island the moment they can profitably translate their rupees into dollars. They too will rush to grab whatever dollars Sri Lanka gets via the IMF as a loan.

The net impact of all these will be Sri Lanka sinking further down in debt without having enough investments to overcome the economic crisis.

Therefore, it is crucially important to look beyond the IMF. But sadly, Lankan leaders are neither creative nor visionary. Just as the people, they too want quick results and IMF is their only hope which may not even materialize.

A GOOD CONCEPT REJECTED IN Sri Lanaka BUT WELCOMED ABROAD

August 24th, 2022

Sugath Kulatunga

A home-grown concept which has been accepted globally, has been considered irrelevant by the EDB which originated the concept. The rural sector in many developing countries offers potential for increased exports, as well as for expanded employment opportunities in what is often one of the poorer segments of the economy. Introducing programmes to stimulate exports from rural regions is a challenge in many countries because of the lack of entrepreneurial skills among the rural population, scattered and sometimes widely dispersed locations of producers, the small scale of production operations and lack of knowledge of market opportunities.

The concept of Export Production Villages (EPV) is based on the belief that there is tremendous potential to mobilize rural based products for export. But the lack of institutional arrangements and access to markets inhibit the development of rural exports. The strategy was to mobilize the producers in a collective institution and link them with established exporters. It envisaged the establishment of a series of Export Production Village Companies harnessing the entrepreneurial talents and skills of rural people through the development of products in the rural areas where they live and providing them with access to buyers. The concept has the advantage of replicability for almost any product group and in almost any geographical area.

As a response to this challenge, Sri Lanka adopted a new approach to develop rural-based exporters. The programme, called the “Export Production Village” scheme, was started in 1981with 21 EPVs which led to increased exports of several types of products as well as additional employment and higher income levels to the rural producers. Sri Lanka was able to capture the Lower Gulf marker for vegetables chiefly due to the competitive supplies from the NCP EPVs.

The marketability of the product depends not only on the international market but also the existence of an exporter committed to purchasing the products. One essential precondition for the approval of a project was therefore the existence of an “export-ready” exporter prepared to cooperate with the EPV. The exporter should have experience in that product line or in associated products, and also either already have orders in hand or be in a position to obtain orders within a short period.

Exporters cooperating with the EPVs are expected to provide feedback from the market on buyers’ requirements; assist in product upgrading; provide quality control, packaging and post-harvest advice (in regard to agricultural products); contribute transport and other servicing facilities if the EPV is unable to afford them; support producers in their requests for bank credit; and assist in technical and management training of EPV personnel.

The EPV scheme in Sri Lanka started as a pilot exercise to test a concept and design a methodology for the systematic development of rural exports.

Whatever the shortcomings of individual EPVs, the scheme has on the whole achieved the objective of validating the concept and the methodology adopted. The overall performance of 21 EPVs indicates that, in relation to the total investment made, the scheme has produced satisfactory results in income generation, export earnings and employment generation.

From a national export development point of view, the scheme has pioneered certain export products, induced exporters to work directly with village producers and demonstrated the potential for export supply development in the rural sector. It has generated greater awareness of the potential for export development in general and rural export development in particular, on a national scale.

EPVs have demonstrated that with proper organization, they can not only retain a higher share of the export benefits at the village level but also bring greater overall advantages to the country as a whole.

Above all, the scheme created a rural producers’ institution capable of doing business in the competitive field of export. One EPV in Dambadeniya has survived all problems and continue to provide employment in basket weaving for over 1000 rural women. This EPV has also was the origination of the Dambadeniya Foundation which has contributed on education, health and housing to the locality. https://www.srilankabusiness.com/emarketplace/emarketplace/seller/profile/shop/dambadeniya-export-products-development-co-ltd

Most of the information on Sri Lanka experience is culled from an article on https://www.thefreelibrary.com/Export+production+villages%3A+Sri+Lanka%27s+novel+approach.-a014345577?utm.

In 1989 at the invitation of the Ghana Export Promotion Council the former Director General of the EDB successfully introduced the EPV model to Ghana under an ITC (UNCTAD/WTO) consultancy. The performance of this project is given in brief quoting official reviews.

1.Extract from an IMF document  https://www.elibrary.imf.org/view/journals/002/2000/002/article-A002-en.xml gives a brief description of the EPV program in Ghana.

The Export Production Village is an example of a GEPC program to foster nontraditional exports. Under the program, small rural producers are organized in companies which interface directly with exporters. The GEPC assists with sponsorship, equity participation, sourcing of production inputs, and extension services. The coverage of the program includes agricultural products, mainly fruits, vegetables, spices, staples and tree crops; shrimp farming; handicraft goods such as batik, rattan furniture, straw baskets, jewelry, and wooden items; and manufactured items, such as salt, processed cashew nuts, and coconut fiber products.”

2. In a review of the Ghana: capacity-building for export-led poverty reduction Geneva 1999, it was said

the new UNDP-funded project of the Government of Ghana, the Government has identified a number of

priority rural districts (Bongo, Dangbe West, Afram Plains, Accra Metropolitan Area and Juabeso Bia) and

products (cashew, mango, honey and beeswax, mushrooms, fish, processed fish, packaged fruits and vegetables, black pepper, straw handicraft) for the development of a number of new EPVs. The project follows an earlier one implemented in the early 1990s) which had already launched various successful EPVs in the country.”

3. Review of ITC, ‘Ghana: Export Production Villages’ (Geneva, April 1998).

Ghana: wooden handicraft in the Aburi EPV Started with 35 woodcarvers in 1990, this EPV has grown to over 300 woodcarvers. It now employs nearly 700 persons (including the woodcarvers). Its annual export turnover has risen from US$ 160,000 in 1990 to US$ 3,250,000 in 1997. It has become a reliable supplier to Getrade and Pier One.”

After initial difficulties in obtaining reliable support from several public bodies for exporting its product, the EPV started in Bolgatanga turned to leading private-sector exporters of straw baskets and done extremely well and the number of women weavers associated with it has grown from 200 in 1993 to 1,000 in 1997. Basket weaving has become the main income-generating activity for women in this area.”

There is also the sad situation where innovative programs initiated during one regime are disregarded to deny any credit to the previous regime. In Sri Lanka a Minister of a changed regime has had the audacity to suggest restoring the EPV scheme under another name. Whereas the EPV model has been

successfully implemented in foreign countries and in fact becomes the seminal concept for wider international programs which are implemented internationally including in China.

With the experience of the successful implementation of the EPV model in several countries the ITC (UNCTED/WTO) conceptualized a wider project with the thrust on Poverty reduction, titled EXPORT LED POVERTY REDCTION. (EPRP).

EPRP projects were implemented in several countries: Bolivia, Brazil, Cambodia,
China, Ethiopia, El Salvador, India, Kenya, Mongolia, Vietnam and South Africa. Many
countries have approached ITC for similar projects, based on the results from existing
projects. The sectors selected included: agriculture products, Community Based Tourism
(CBT), leather products, textiles/clothing and light manufacturing, based on
product/market potential and local resource strengths.EPRP attempts to link small producers to the export value chain, often in collaboration with export-oriented enterprises.

ITC responded to several country requests for the implementation of EPRP projects. Work is currently underway in Bolivia, Brazil, Cambodia, China, Ethiopia, El Salvador, India, Kenya, Mongolia, South Africa and Vietnam.

Another 17 countries had requested ITC’s EPRP technical support and are on the
waiting list for future technical assistance, subject to the availability of funds.

Another success story was the Organic pepper project in Kerala This project was one of the proposals selected in the Development Marketplace Competition hosted by the World Bank in 1999, based on its innovative approaches to poverty reduction at the community level. The project aimed to organise small Indian spice farmers in a few villages, build capacity for organic production. and certification through partnerships with local NGOs, and ultimately provide access to higher-value export markets. The origin of the Project was the initial work done through a former ITC project on EPVs in Kerala done in collaboration with the Spice Board of India.

Group Formation and Culture of Galle Face Protesters -Part I

August 23rd, 2022

By Sena Thoradeniya

During their occupation of the Galle Face Green, Galle Face Protesters (GFP) had brought forth the relationship between youth, politics and culture to the focus of cultural critics. Nobody had ventured into study this phenomenon in detail in the uprisings of 1971, 1988-89 and Tamil Eelam War, although fragmentary  references were made into JVP’s post-1971 Vimukthi Gee”  (of Nandana  Marasinghe fame, assassinated by JVP/DJV; a stern warning for those upper class elements who pampered the GFP coining some adorable names such as Aragalists” and Gotagamians”!) , Nanda Malini’s Pawana” and Sathyaye Geethaya” during JVP’s second insurrection and LTTE’s Pongu Thamil Eluchchivila” celebrations.

In this two-part article we first discuss about formal and informal groups and characteristics of informal groups, relating them to Galle Face protest. In the second part we intend to discuss culture of Galle Face Protesters in depth that arose as a blend of individual level variables of members of different groups of protesters and their group level variables.   

 Since saving space is more important, we in this short piece do not intend to define what is meant by youth, politics and especially culture. It is also not necessary to discuss the political demands” of the GFP or what they understood by politics and how they interpreted the current political situation, some surfaced showing their naivety, inexperience and immaturity, all signifying a lacuna in  theory-based political knowledge; some demands were vague and undefined and some uncertain and concealed. What surfaced were parroting of what were scripted by their masters and handlers, local and foreign.  

The main focus of this article is on Galle Face Culture”, which we do not believe that it will be sustained, developed or become a permanent feature in the cultural landscape of Sri Lanka, although we do not deny that some aspects of it can penetrate into the wider society.  Some other arguments against this may arise questioning our premise   whether it is scientific to examine a culture among some loosely knitted individuals, not inhabiting a particular locality permanently.

But some sort of a culture is discernible among groups of office- train travelers (forcible reservation of seats and sections of compartments, playing cards, repartee etc.), parents who chaperon their children to school and Room Mothers”, students sitting next to each other in a classroom, devotees of Bacchus who habitually go to the same barroom, people living in one lane or adjoining apartments or different floors of flats”  etc.. With the advent of Facebook, WhatsApp and other social media platforms another method of group formation receives our attention.  Newspaper reports are in abundance of Facebook parties organised by people who have never met each other physically or engaged in face-to-face communication.  It is common knowledge that the GF protest had originated with the work of some WhatsApp groups. We have discussed this earlier, highlighting how the foreign-funded media agencies played a crucial role in this regard; this needs further investigations

In Organisation Behaviour (OB), groups are defined as consisting of people who interact frequently over a period of time and who share similar interests, attitudes and see themselves as a group. Although a universal definition of groups does not exist, readers may revive their memories, how sociologists and management and OB theorists had defined groups, group formation and characteristics of groups.

There are two types of groups: formal and informal groups.  Although the Galle Face protest has passed   more than sixty days to this day (at the time of writing the first version of this piece in the first week of June ) and some occupy the Galle Face Green turning it into a village”, according to Group Dynamics (area of study  that is concerned with the interactions and forces between group members in a social situation), we still defined it as an informal group. This informal group was spontaneously constituted of likeminded people, as a result of interactions through social media platforms, attractions to each other in small circles, with personal agendas such as self-glorification and a common need: chasing out GR.

There is no dispute that the protesters had come from different economic, social and cultural backgrounds, making it a heterogenous mix of individuals. One of the many attributes of group formation is propinquity or spatial or geographical proximity of individuals who join groups.  We argue now with the advent of social media platforms, proximity described by earlier theorists has taken a new dimension; technological proximity had taken precedence and had become more active, effective and faster than physical proximity. Friendship had outweighed   economic, political or cultural needs and other issues considered by theorists as triggers of group formation. A childlike measure taken by a President who had not tasted the bitter pill of political undercurrents, setting up a ready to occupy Protest Site” at the Galle face, solved the problem of proximity of the protesters and permanency of occupation.  As wild elephants do not strictly pass through elephant corridors” demarcated by wild life authorities and devastate crops and property of the peasants, protest sites spead out to other parts of the country based on the simple factors of proximity and common need.

Theoretically speaking, age, gender, marital status, personality characteristics, values, attitudes, emotions, perceptions, ability levels and learning, motivation are the individual level variables they had brought into this informal group. They had to adjust themselves to group level variables such as group behaviour, group standards, communication patterns, leadership styles, power and politics and also conflicts, all integral components of a group. Their culture was determined by the interplay of these two types of variables.

It also can be defined as an open group having free entry as well as free exit which allowed more diverse individuals to shape standards, attitudes, values and behaviours of the rest. People are attracted to informal groups for satisfaction of their needs (in this situation their needs were numerous: personal needs such as gaining recognition, status and pride: theatrical appearance of celebrities, actors, singers, lyricists, medical specialists and many more) and to share a common goal, GotaGoHome”, basically an emotional response of anger, not a product of any ideology, liberal in all aspects, although there were some hidden UNP hardliners and UNP digital strategists. Individuals who experience this emotion seek others who have the same emotion. That was one reason for Galle Face Protesters for not being able to lay a foundation for a new political formation and produce a new breed of political leaders. 

 In the initial stages, we observed that this group inclined to become structured, establishing their external networks, norms or rules of conduct. Emergence of informal leaders and spokespersons which were numerous was a part of this structure. This structure, also can be described as a part of group development through mutual acceptance and open communication; some members volunteering to undertake certain roles and assigning of roles to others by informal leaders, showing some sort of a division of labour.

As the Galle Face group was a large informal group, a mixed clique” in management jargon, we observed the emergence of sub-groups and contending forces with some intriguing names, each calmouring for authorship of hashtags, paternity and leadership arousing internal conflicts; goals becoming inconsistent and unachievable.

Theoretically, the emergence of leaders who are acceptable to all and maintaining cohesiveness in a large informal group like Galle Face Green is unattainable and all leaders who emerge in an informal group remain as informal leaders, who are not formally recognised by all. Imbalances had occurred.  Some self-appointed leaders were chased out attaching the ignominious label Left”.  With the ascendance of Ranil Wickremasinghe it lost its steam, compelling many to decamp. First to decamp were UNP supporters.  

The leadership crisis was the main reason behind the protest becoming an easy prey of more organised political parties, that allowed them to hijack the protest, paving the way to forcibly and unlawfully occupy public buildings, violence, destruction, vandalism, arson and finally being neutralisd and forced to retreat.

In its last days the so-called village” turned into an urban ghetto shaping its culture; vagabonds, drug peddlers and addicts and other underworld elements began to occupy some tents and the communal kitchen became a dana shalawa” to many who search for food.

There is no sign of re-grouping; only veiled threats of a comeback. JVP, FSP and IUSF have started to flex muscles showing that they have become the deciding factor of the next operation. Some of them talk about turning points”.  Representatives of the NGO aristocracy had begun to predict a re-emergence of the protest movement, this time a more clearly organised one with leadership being given by the JVP” and the protests will mount nationally as well”. Who else can predict like this except the fund managers?    

UNP bigwigs who were active with the protesters were given high posts within a very short period, in addition to the positions given to defeated UNPers and ex-Ministers;  (1) one, a former appointed MP, who had launched a malicious social media campaign against Rajapksas and supported the GF protesters, extolling them making  a plethora of posters, as a Presidential Advisor, (2) a staunch anti-Rajapaksa campaigner, former appointed MP, who served less than a month as a parliamentarian and  who made millions by selling the duty free vehicle, as the Trade Union Director, (3) head of a foreign-funded election monitoring outfit as a mandarin in the Presidential Secretariat, (4) a member of the NGO cabal as a media head. How do the Pohottuwa strategists bear this ignominy? So, the present government is not a government of the Rajapakisas, for the Rajapaksas, by the Wickremasinghes” as some make jests. 

Future revelations will tell us who were the real architects of the Galle Face Protest- more on foreign hands, who benefited from it and who were taken for a ride!

https://www.lankaweb.com/news/items/category/sena-thoradeniya/

US Footprints at the Galle Face Protest Site

Saturday, August 20th, 2022

By Sena Thoradeniya M.P. Wimal Weerawansa participating in the debate on Emergency Regulations on 27 July said that CIA through USAID and NED (National Endowment for Democracy) have funded various Sri Lankan Non-Governmental Organisations aiming regime change and protesters were attempting to destroy the State with the aid of external forces. He disclosed the amount […]More >

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Who Were Not Afraid of Galle Face Protesters?

Friday, August 19th, 2022

By Sena Thoradeniya Broadly speaking there were two major groups who supported and sympathised with the Galle Face Protesters (GLF); (1) Local players and (2) International players. It was easy to identify the local players, but not the international players who were hidden and used various agents and dubious methods to attain their main objective, […]More >

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Mirihana Outrage: Harbinger of Present and Some Future Events?

Wednesday, August 17th, 2022

Sena Thoradeniya The previous version of this piece was written soon after the Mirihana Incident (31, March,2022) but I was unable to get it published due to some reasons which do not have any importance to the reader. Whilst accepting that during the past one month (in April) many developments had taken place beyond anybody’s […]More >

Ahmadiyya Delegation Meets Hon. Vidura Wickramanayaka.

August 23rd, 2022

By A. Abdul Aziz – Chairman, Press & Media Desk, AMJSL.

A four member delegation from the Ahmadiyya Muslim Jama’at Sri Lanka (AMJSL) visited to Ministry of Buddhasasana, Religious and Cultural Affairs in Colombo on 22 August 2022. 

Ministry Officials welcomed the delegation and arranged to meet  Hon. Vidura Wickramanayaka, Minister of Buddhasasana, Religious and Cultural Affairs.

Honorable Minister was very much delighted and respectfully accepted the Holy Qur’an Sinhala Translation and the Sinhala Translation of the book ‘Life of Muhammad (pbuh)’  –  and the book: World Crisis and the Pathway To Peace – A compilation of addresses in various Parliaments by Ahmadiyya Khalifa His Holiness Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad.

Sri Lanka is not a boxing arena for India to curb China’s influence

August 23rd, 2022

Rabi Sankar Bosu Courtesy CGTN

China’s space-tracking ship Yuanwang-5 dock at Hambantota International Port in Hambantota, Sri Lanka, August 16, 2022. /Xinhua

Editor’s note: Rabi Sankar Bosu is an Indian contributor to Chinese media outlets. He writes about Chinese politics, social and cultural issues, and China-India relations with a special interest in the Belt and Road Initiative. The article reflects the author’s views, and not necessarily those of CGTN.

This week, Sri Lanka has once again made headlines in various news media outlets. The way the United States and Indian media outlets are criticizing the foreign policy of the current Sri Lankan government, as well as the Chinese government over the arrival of a Chinese ship in Sri Lanka is baseless.

China’s space-tracking ship Yuanwang-5 anchored at Sri Lanka’s Hambantota International Port (HIP) for replenishment purposes on August 16. According to media reports, it departed from the Chinese-run port on August 22 after refueling and other supplies. 

Nonetheless, long before the arrival of the Yuanwang-5 in Sri Lanka’s southern port of Hambantota, Washington and New Delhi expressed strong objections to Colombo from allowing the Chinese space-tracking vessel to land at its port without offering any “concrete reasons” for their opposition to it. The U.S. and Indian defense analysts have described the latest generation of the space-tracking ship as China’s “spy ship,” operated by the People’s Liberation Army’s Strategic Support Force (SSF).

The arrival of the Chinese ship took on an entirely different diplomatic dimension when U.S. Ambassador to Sri Lanka Julie Chung met Sri Lankan President Wickremesinghe and raised her country’s concerns. Accordingly, there is little doubt that China’s influence in the Indian Ocean has long been a geopolitical headache for the “security bloc” of the United States, Japan, Australia, and India.

On the other hand, New Delhi fears that Yuanwang-5 might get involved in tracking its satellite, rocket and intercontinental ballistic missile launches, citing the space-tracking vessel’s “military capabilities.” Both Washington and New Delhi’s so-called apprehensions have unmasked their latent attempts to fend off China’s rise in the Indo-Pacific region in order to wage a new Cold War through the so-called Indo-Pacific strategy.

In response, Beijing reaffirms that the Yuanwang-5 ship is serving a maritime monitoring mission in the Pacific Ocean and its arrival at the Sri Lankan port demonstrates the healthy and stable development of bilateral relations between China and Sri Lanka, while Indian media outlets are arguing that India’s security is under threat due to this surveillance ship with several advanced technologies including sensors, which could “track India’s ballistic missiles” from the Hambantota Port.

Indian media analysts should keep in mind that Colombo earlier allowed ships from India, the U.S. and other countries to its ports in compliance with international obligations. Yet China never pressures Colombo to refuse docking of other countries’ ships at its ports by using its financial aid to the debt-ridden island nation, which New Delhi does.

A cargo ship at Sri Lanka’s Hambantota International Port, June 30, 2021. /Xinhua

The docking of China’s latest-generation space-tracking ship may make India feel that it is in an intense competition with Beijing to establish the two countries’ influence in the strategically important country. The welcoming ceremony of the Yuanwang-5 clearly signals that China has friendly ties with Colombo, despite the constant noise from a few other countries. 

So the question is not the landing of the Chinese ship; the main question is New Delhi is really worried about the rise of Chinese influence in Sri Lanka. Many Indian commentators believe that the arrival of the Chinese ship has upset the Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi-led government. The Modi government has helped Sri Lanka during the time of its worst economic crisis providing nearly $4 billion of support through multiple lines of credit for purchasing food, medicines and other essential commodities.

New Delhi remains wary of Chinese investments under the “Belt and Road Initiative” in Sri Lanka. On July 29, 2017, Colombo leased the Chinese-built Hambantota port to China for 99 years. India accused China of developing the Hambantota port into a naval base and criticized the project as China’s “debt-trap diplomacy.” Nonetheless, New Delhi’s concerns over the Chinese-built port are unnecessary since China holds no military ambitions in Hambantota.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin said on August 16 that “the marine scientific research activities of the Yuanwang-5 ship are consistent with international law and international customary practice. They do not affect the security and economic interests of any country and should not be obstructed by any third party.”

So it’s unjustified for certain countries to cite so-called security concerns to pressure Sri Lanka, Wang said at an earlier press conference.

Accordingly, Beijing has no intention to offend New Delhi. If India continues to have problems with China-funded infrastructure projects and industrialization process under the Belt and Road Initiative in the island nation, it only shows New Delhi seeks to meddle in Sri Lanka’s internal and external affairs. It is hoped that Indian media should not hype up China’s normal activities in the Indian Ocean with prejudiced thinking or stirring up China-Sri Lanka bilateral relations. Hence, India should learn to accept China’s presence in the region and to work with Beijing for its own interests.

(If you want to contribute and have specific expertise, please contact us at opinions@cgtn.com. Follow @thouse_opinions on Twitter to discover the latest commentaries in the CGTN Opinion Section.)

Sri Lanka: Hope May Be A Firefly But It Has Replaced Darkness Of Last Couple Of Months

August 23rd, 2022

Sam Peres Courtesy Outlook

This is in Colombo where I live, and the situation in the interior must be more difficult. However, there is general agreement that the QR system introduced for the distribution of fuel is a success.

Life is not perfect in Sri Lanka, but it is definitely better than it was when the “Go Gota Go” protests began in April. The financial crisis continues but the government is better positioned to handle it. Or perhaps people have reconciled themselves to chronic shortages and understand that the economy cannot stabilise overnight. They are  willing to give President Ranil Wickremesinghe and his team some time to fix the supply chains.

While petrol and diesel are not unlimited, they are available without waiting for hours or days and the quantity issued is manageable. This is in Colombo where I live, and the situation in the interior must be more difficult. However, there is general agreement that the QR system introduced for distribution of fuel is a success.

If you walk around Colombo you may not see much amiss unless you look closer. Power cuts have been scaled back substantially. Once again there is traffic on the road (not as usual but it is no longer a few vehicles driving whilst others wait in line!!) and cooking gas is freely available.

On the other hand, the cost of living is excessively high. The government has started slashing taxes on essential items such as dal, potatoes, onions, soya meat, eggs and several other products. The ministry of education has also started a mid-day meal programme for high-risk primary schools. So things are happening – maybe not as fast as we would like but as reality permits.

Bottom line is, having had our say, now we are keen to return to normalcy and being Sri Lankans (after all we have gone through 30 years of war, several years of civil – JVP unrest, tsunami, Covid-19) we are good at inventing new normal. Weddings, functions, cricket matches, and religious ceremonies are back and giving a semblance of normalcy that we desperately need. Schools are once again operating five days a week (which makes most parents – especially mothers very happy).

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I have been in touch with some catering companies who have confirmed that after several months, they are again getting bookings to provide food at functions…which also means that the earning opportunities for the informal sector are on the rise. Some are optimistic that Ranil will be able to bring some control to the volatility, after all he is an experienced hand.

One concern is that the Rajapaksas will raise their heads again. People are wary of that and would oppose any such move by the family.

We are engaged in a waiting game. We are all waiting to see where things will head. If there is no visible improvement then mumblings are likely to rise again and then will continue to gain in volume. I think now people are more likely to keep politicians where they belong to and not put them on pedestals. Of course, this is the current mood. As you know, it takes very little to get the trends to change here. Build up racism and religious intolerance and most Sinhalese will fall for it lock stock and barrel.

This October, the personal income tax system introduced by Gotabaya will come to an end. Once again, the high-income earners will start paying higher rates of taxes. The tax threshold was also reduced and taxation will be at the source. There is talk that capital gains will also be taxed. In other words, this will reduce the need to print money to pay the salaries of the government sector. This will help reduce the depreciation of the rupee and hopefully inflation. Thanks to the pegging system introduced by quite a few IT companies, the number of people earning over LKR 1 million per month has increased dramatically. So the government will earn more tax revenues.

Banks have indicated that they can now honour their LOCs and have also started sending money to students studying overseas. People are looking carefully at who the next lot of ministers will be. Ranil’s supposed refusal to appoint some of the people suggested by Basil has gone down well. I noticed today that some of the SLPP don’t want to support the 22nd amendment. Let’s see where that heads. The new tax measures are an important step in the right direction and the education ministry has begun a free midday meal programme for primary students in underprivileged schools.

Ranil is getting some things right, mostly on the economy, and some things worryingly wrong, like the handling of political contradictions. Eventually, bad politics might unravel sensible economic measures.

For now, things are better than they were one month ago. Everything is horrendously expensive. Sri Lanka’s actual poverty rate must be close to 50 per cent, while one-third of all households don’t know when and how their next meal will come. Hope might be a firefly, but you do glimpse it now and then. Earlier there was just darkness.

(The name of the author has been changed on request.)

PTA, a must to tackle terrorism: Cabinet Spokesman

August 23rd, 2022

Courtesy The Daily Mirror

Was there a conspiracy to topple the government

The government today said that the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) sleuths are questioning several suspects including the convener of the IUSF Wasantha Mudalige detained under the provisions of Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) to determine whether there was a conspiracy to topple the government.

The Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) was a must to tackle the recent wave of terrorism and as such no one would be arrested or charges filed against any Sri Lankan citizen who has not committed any act of violence during the protest campaigns, cabinet spokesman, Minister Bandula Gunawardana said addressing the weekly cabinet press briefing.

He also said that the Convenor of the IUSF and two other IUSF members Ven. Galwewa Siridhamma Thera and Hashan Jeewantha would be detained under the provisions of Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) until the recording of their statements are concluded.

The CID was still in the process of questioning them for further information on the matter, he added.

He also said that the government was in the process of replacing the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) with a new National Security Act (NSA) and Justice Minister Dr. Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe was attending to the task.

Minister Gunawardana said the dastardly acts of violence that took place on May 9 this year was a stigma not only to the country but to the parliamentary democracy practiced in Sri Lanka for nearly 100 years.

I have never engaged in any kind of law breaking, violence or unbecoming action. I have never obtained the house allowance paid to ministers or lived in official residences. Never obtained an official weapon (revolver) for my personal use. I am living in a house built with earnings I raised from my blood and sweat. But what happened on May 9th. My house was set on fire destroying it totally with two of my vehicles. My family lived in total fear for several weeks. If these protesters do not let a law abiding, innocent Sri Lankan like me to live in peace with my family in my own house, who are they? Should not the PTA apply on them and take punitive action against them under the law of the land?” Minister Gunawardana asked.

“During the reign of terror on May 9th, residences and properties of 72 Parliamentarians, ministers and deputy and state ministers’ including houses had been subjected to arson attacks by hooligans. The SLPP Parliamentarian Amarakeerti Atukorale together with his bodyguard were murdered in a beastly manner incomprehensible. Should not these murderers be charged under the PTA?” he asked.

Minister Gunawardana assured that charges will be framed under the PTA only on those who have committed extreme violence on innocent civilians and politicians. Those who have committed petty crimes would be charged under the normal law, namely under the civil procedure code or criminal procedure code. (Sandun Jayasekera)

Ex-President Gotabaya may return home by early September – sources

August 23rd, 2022

Courtesy Adaderana

Sri Lanka’s former president Gotabaya Rajapaksa may return home in about two weeks after fleeing a popular uprising in July, two sources familiar with the matter told Reuters on Tuesday, depending in part on arrangements to secure his safety.

One of the sources said his return was partly linked to the costs of his stay in Thailand.

Rajapaksa fled Sri Lanka in the early hours of July 13 after massive protests engulfed Colombo and demonstrators angry with the country’s economic devastation stormed his official residence and office. He resigned as president after reaching Singapore, from where he later flew to Thailand.

Sri Lankan media had reported Rajapaksa could come back on Wednesday, but the sources said the arrival had been deferred as talks continue between the ruling Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) and the government over his security and other concerns.

He definitely wants to come back. But security is the main issue and intelligence has advised that he delay his return,” said one of the sources, a Sri Lankan government official.

He may return in two weeks or even before that if arrangements for his safety can be made.”

The second source said high cost of his stay in Thailand was a factor in seeking a return home as soon as possible.

The bill has now run to several hundred million rupees as it includes the cost for a private jet, a presidential suite and round the clock security,” the source said. The cost is becoming prohibitive.”

The expenses are largely being borne by some of his supporters, according to another source close to the Rajapaksa family.

All the sources declined to be named discussing the affairs of a former president.

SLPP General Secretary Sagara Kariyawasam said the party had met President Ranil Wickremesinghe seeking arrangements for Rajapaksa’s return.

We have made the request for his return to be facilitated as soon as possible,” Kariyawasam said.

Wickremesinghe told Reuters last week he was not aware” of any plans for Rajapaksa’s return. He also said any legal action against Rajapaksa would proceed in accordance with Sri Lanka’s laws.

Anti-corruption body Transparency International says Sri Lanka has already approached the country’s top court seeking action against persons responsible for the current economic crisis”, including two of Rajapaksa’s brothers who were prime minister and finance minister under him.

As Sri Lanka tries to deal with one of its worst economic crises, a team from the International Monetary Fund will arrive on Wednesday for talks on a possible $3 billion bailout, which will include a debt restructuring framework.

Sources- Reuters

-Agencies

Sri Lanka aims to cut fiscal deficit in budget 2023

August 23rd, 2022

Courtesy Adaderana

Sri Lanka’s 2023 budget would aim to reduce the fiscal deficit to 6.8 per cent in 2023 from the projected 9.9 per cent in 2022, a senior Cabinet Minister said on Tuesday, ahead of the visit by the IMF delegation for a bailout package to the crisis-hit island nation.

Sri Lanka is in the midst of an unprecedented economic crisis that has led to severe shortages of fuel and other essentials, leading to long serpentine queues in front of filling stations.

Sri Lanka is planning to cut the budget deficit to 6.8 per cent of gross domestic product in 2023 from an expected 9.9 per cent in 2022,” Bandula Gunawardena, the Cabinet spokesman and Minister of Mass Media said on Tuesday.

The Cabinet of ministers has approved a fiscal framework for 2023-2025. Sri Lanka is facing the worst fiscal crisis in its history,” he said.

We have to eventually bring down the deficit to 5 per cent of the GDP to manage debt, reduce money printing and have low inflation,” Gunawardena said.

The deficit target was announced ahead of the visit by the IMF delegation which will arrive here tonight. They are to resume talks on reaching the staff level agreement between August 24 and 31.

The government’s statistics office said on Monday that the overall rate of inflation as measured by the National Consumer Price Index on a year-on-year basis had gone up to 66.7 per cent in July over the 58.9 recorded in June.

This was mainly due to the higher price levels prevailing in both food and non-food groups. The food group increased to 82.5 in July 2022 from 75.8 in June 2022,” the release said.

In its latest assessment, the World Bank has said that Sri Lanka has been ranked 5th with the highest food price inflation in the world. Sri Lanka is ranked behind Zimbabwe, Venezuela, and Turkey, while Lebanon leads the list.

The World Bank said record high food prices have triggered a global crisis that will drive millions more into extreme poverty, magnifying hunger and malnutrition while threatening to erase hard-won gains in development.

The war in Ukraine, supply chain disruptions, and the continued economic fallout of the covid-19 pandemic are reversing years of development gains and pushing food prices to all-time highs.

Rising food prices have a greater impact on people in low- and middle-income countries since they spend a larger share of their income on food than people in high-income countries. This brief looks at rising food insecurity and World Bank responses to date.

Source: PTI

Sri Lanka suspends import of over 300 items.

August 23rd, 2022

Courtesy Adaderana

The import of over 300 items has been temporarily suspended with effect from today (August 23) under the Import and Export Control Act through a government notification by the Finance Ministry.

The regulation has been issued by has been issued by President Ranil Wickremesinghe, in his capacity as the Minister of Finance, Economic Stabilization and National Policies, in terms of the powers vested in him by Section 20 of the Imports and Exports (Control) Act, No. 1 of 1969.

Cited as the “Imports and Exports (Control) Regulations No. 13 of 2022”, it temporarily suspends the importation of items listed under 305 HS Codes, effective from August 23 and effective until further notice. 

However, it states that any goods specified in these Regulations, which have been shipped on board with the date of Bill of Lading / Airway Bill on or before August 23, 2022 and which arrived at any sea ports or airports in Sri Lanka on or before September 14, 2022, shall be allowed for Customs clearance.
 
It also says that the regulation shall not be applied for importation of any goods, specified in the these Regulations, by any enterprises / operators, approved under the Temporary Importation for Export Purposes (TIEP) Scheme of the Sri Lanka Customs or any enterprises approved under Section 17 of the Board of Investment of Sri Lanka (BOI) Act.

It further states that importation of any goods, specified in these Regulations, by any approved enterprises for processing and re-export purposes may be allowed by the Controller General of Imports and Exports Control on recommendation of the Secretary, Ministry of Industries or Director General, Export Development Board of Sri Lanka, case by case basis.

The host of items included in the list range from chocolate and other food preparations containing cocoa, condensed milk, yogurt, coconuts, Coconut base arrack, roses to perfumes, beauty or make-up preparations, deodorants, dental floss and trunks, suit-cases, brief-cases to various clothing items. 

See the full list of items below: https://www.scribd.com/embeds/588595553/content?start_page=1&view_mode=scroll&access_key=key-5pXatNjcSBPHWUDsT6SF

Imports & Exports (Cont… by Adaderana Online

Sri Lanka’s Experiment with Organic Farming Fails Miserably

August 23rd, 2022

By Ted Nordhaus, the executive director of the Breakthrough Institute, and Saloni Shah, a food and agriculture analyst at the Breakthrough Institute. Courtesy  Foreign Policy.com

A nationwide experiment is abandoned after producing only misery.

Faced with a deepening economic and humanitarian crisis, Sri Lanka called off an ill-conceived national experiment in organic agriculture this winter. Sri Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa promised in his 2019 election campaign to transition the country’s farmers to organic agriculture over a period of 10 years. Last April, Rajapaksa’s government made good on that promise, imposing a nationwide ban on the importation and use of synthetic fertilizers and pesticides and ordering the country’s 2 million farmers to go organic.

The result was brutal and swift. Against claims that organic methods can produce comparable yields to conventional farming, domestic rice production fell 20 percent in just the first six months. Sri Lanka, long self-sufficient in rice production, has been forced to import $450 million worth of rice even as domestic prices for this staple of the national diet surged by around 50 percent. The ban also devastated the nation’s tea crop, its primary export and source of foreign exchange.

By November 2021, with tea production falling, the government partially lifted its fertilizer ban on key export crops, including tea, rubber, and coconut. Faced with angry protests, soaring inflation, and the collapse of Sri Lanka’s currency, the government finally suspended the policy for several key crops—including tea, rubber, and coconut—last month, although it continues for some others. The government is also offering $200 million to farmers as direct compensation and an additional $149 million in price subsidies to rice farmers who incurred losses. That hardly made up for the damage and suffering the ban produced. Farmers have widely criticized the payments for being massively insufficient and excluding many farmers, most notably tea producers, who offer one of the main sources of employment in rural Sri Lanka. The drop in tea production alone is estimated to result in economic losses of $425 million.

Human costs have been even greater. Prior to the pandemic’s outbreak, the country had proudly achieved upper-middle-income status. Today, half a million people have sunk back into poverty. Soaring inflation and a rapidly depreciating currency have forced Sri Lankans to cut down on food and fuel purchases as prices surge. The country’s economists have called on the government to default on its debt repayments to buy essential supplies for its people.

The farrago of magical thinking, technocratic hubris, ideological delusion, self-dealing, and sheer shortsightedness that produced the crisis in Sri Lanka implicates both the country’s political leadership and advocates of so-called sustainable agriculture: the former for seizing on the organic agriculture pledge as a shortsighted measure to slash fertilizer subsidies and imports and the latter for suggesting that such a transformation of the nation’s agricultural sector could ever possibly succeed.


A worker carries leaves at a tea plantation in Ratnapura, Sri Lanka.A worker carries leaves at a tea plantation in Ratnapura, Sri Lanka.

A worker carries leaves at a tea plantation in Ratnapura, Sri Lanka, on July 31, 2021. ISHARA S. KODIKARA/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES

Sri Lanka’s journey through the organic looking glass and toward calamity began in 2016, with the formation, at Rajapaksa’s behest, of a new civil society movement called Viyathmaga. On its website, Viyathmaga describes its mission as harnessing the nascent potential of the professionals, academics and entrepreneurs to effectively influence the moral and material development of Sri Lanka.” Viyathmaga allowed Rajapaksa to rise to prominence as an election candidate and facilitated the creation of his election platform. As he prepared his presidential run, the movement produced the Vistas of Prosperity and Splendour,” a sprawling agenda for the nation that covered everything from national security to anticorruption to education policy, alongside the promise to transition the nation to fully organic agriculture within a decade.

Despite Viyathmaga’s claims to technocratic expertise, most of Sri Lanka’s leading agricultural experts were kept out of crafting the agricultural section of the platform, which included promises to phase out synthetic fertilizer, develop 2 million organic home gardens to help feed the country’s population, and turn the country’s forests and wetlands over to the production of biofertilizer.

Following his election as president, Rajapaksa appointed a number of Viyathmaga members to his cabinet, including as minister of agriculture. Sri Lanka’s Ministry of Agriculture, in turn, created a series of committees to advise it on the implementation of the policy, again excluding most of the nation’s agronomists and agricultural scientists and instead relying on representatives of the nation’s small organic sector; academic advocates for alternative agriculture; and, notably, the head of a prominent medical association who had long promoted dubious claims about the relationship between agricultural chemicals and chronic kidney disease in the country’s northern agricultural provinces.

Then, just a few months after Rajapaksa’s election, COVID-19 arrived. The pandemic devastated the Sri Lankan tourist sector, which accounted for almost half of the nation’s foreign exchange in 2019. By the early months of 2021, the government’s budget and currency were in crisis, the lack of tourist dollars so depleting foreign reserves that Sri Lanka was unable to pay its debts to Chinese creditors following a binge of infrastructure development over the previous decade.

Enter Rajapaksa’s organic pledge. From the early days of the Green Revolution in the 1960s, Sri Lanka has subsidized farmers to use synthetic fertilizer. The results in Sri Lanka, as across much of South Asia, were startling: Yields for rice and other crops more than doubled. Struck by severe food shortages as recently as the 1970s, the country became food secure while exports of tea and rubber became critical sources of exports and foreign reserves. Rising agricultural productivity allowed widespread urbanization, and much of the nation’s labor force moved into the formal wage economy, culminating in Sri Lanka’s achievement of official upper-middle-income status in 2020.

By 2020, the total cost of fertilizer imports and subsidies was close to $500 million each year. With fertilizer prices rising, the tab was likely to increase further in 2021. Banning synthetic fertilizers seemingly allowed Rajapaksa to kill two birds with one stone: improving the nation’s foreign exchange situation while also cutting a massive expenditure on subsidies from the pandemic-hit public budget.

But when it comes to agricultural practices and yields, there is no free lunch. Agricultural inputs—chemicals, nutrients, land, labor, and irrigation—bear a critical relationship to agricultural output. From the moment the plan was announced, agronomists in Sri Lanka and around the world warned that agricultural yields would fall substantially. The government claimed it would increase the production of manure and other organic fertilizers in place of imported synthetic fertilizers. But there was no conceivable way the nation could produce enough fertilizer domestically to make up for the shortfall.

Having handed its agricultural policy over to organic true believers, many of them involved in businesses that would stand to benefit from the fertilizer ban, the false economy of banning imported fertilizer hurt the Sri Lankan people dearly. The loss of revenue from tea and other export crops dwarfed the reduction in currency outflows from banning imported fertilizer. The bottom line turned even more negative through the increased import of rice and other food stocks. And the budgetary savings from cutting subsidies were ultimately outweighed by the cost of compensating farmers and providing public subsidies for imported food.

Left: Workers are seen at a tea plantation in Ratnapura, Sri Lanka, on July 31, 2021. ISHARA S. KODIKARA/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES   Right: A Sri Lankan farmer carries paddy on his head in a field on the outskirts of Sri Lanka’s capital, Colombo, on Sept. 7, 2018. LAKRUWAN WANNIARACHCHI/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES

Farming is, at bottom, a fairly straightforward thermodynamic enterprise. Nutrient and energy output in the form of calories is determined by nutrient and energy input. For most of recorded human history, the primary way humans increased agricultural production was by adding land to the system, which expanded the amount of solar radiation and soil nutrients available for food production. Human populations were relatively small, under 1 billion people in total, and there was no shortage of arable land to expand onto. For this reason, the vast majority of anthropogenic changes in global land use and deforestation has been the result of agricultural extensification—the process of converting forests and prairie to cropland and pasture. Against popular notions that preindustrial agriculture existed in greater harmony with nature, three-quarters of total global deforestation occurred before the industrial revolution.

Even so, feeding ourselves required directing virtually all human labor to food production. As recently as 200 years ago, more than 90 percent of the global population labored in agriculture. The only way to bring additional energy and nutrients into the system to increase production was to let land lie fallow, rotate crops, use cover crops, or add manure from livestock that either shared the land with the crops or grazed nearby. In almost every case, these practices required additional land and put caps on yields.

Starting in the 19th century, the expansion of global trade allowed for the import of guano—mined from ancient deposits on bird-rich islands—and other nutrient-rich fertilizers from far-flung regions onto farms in Europe and the United States. This and a series of technological innovations—better machinery, irrigation, and seeds—allowed for higher yields and labor productivity on some farms, which in turn freed up labor and thereby launched the beginning of large-scale urbanization, one of global modernity’s defining features.

But the truly transformative break came with the invention of the Haber-Bosch process by German scientists in the early 1900s, which uses high temperature, high pressure, and a chemical catalyst to pull nitrogen from the air and produce ammonia, the basis for synthetic fertilizers. Synthetic fertilizer remade global agriculture and, with it, human society. The widespread adoption of synthetic fertilizers in most countries has allowed a rapid increase in yields and allowed human labor to shift from agriculture to sectors that offer higher incomes and a better quality of life.

The widespread application of synthetic fertilizers now allows global agriculture to feed nearly 8 billion people, of whom about 4 billion depend on the increased output that synthetic fertilizers allow for their sustenance. As a result, the modern food systems that have allowed global agriculture to feed Earth’s population are far more energy intensive than past food systems, with synthetic fertilizers accounting for a significant source of the energy for crops.

As synthetic fertilizers became increasingly available globally after World War II and combined with other innovations, such as modern plant breeding and large-scale irrigation projects, a remarkable thing happened: Human populations more than doubled—but thanks to synthetic fertilizers and other modern technologies, agricultural output tripled on only 30 percent more land over the same period.

The benefits of synthetic fertilizers though go far beyond simply feeding people. It’s no exaggeration to say that without synthetic fertilizers and other agricultural innovations, there is no urbanization, no industrialization, no global working or middle class, and no secondary education for most people. This is because fertilizer and other agricultural chemicals have substituted human labor, liberating enormous populations from needing to dedicate most of their lifetime labor to growing food.


A Sri Lankan farmer applies fertilizer at a vegetable farm in Horana South, Sri Lanka.A Sri Lankan farmer applies fertilizer at a vegetable farm in Horana South, Sri Lanka.

A Sri Lankan farmer applies fertilizer at a vegetable farm in Horana South, Sri Lanka, on Oct. 25, 2017. LAKRUWAN WANNIARACHCHI/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES

Virtually the entirety of organic agriculture production serves two populations at opposite ends of the global income distribution. At one end are the 700 million or so people globally who still live in extreme poverty. Sustainable agriculture proponents fancifully call the agriculture this population practices agroecology.” But it is mostly just oldfashioned subsistence farming, where the world’s poorest eke out their survival from the soil.

They are the poorest farmers in the world, who dedicate most of their labor to growing enough food to feed themselves. They forego synthetic fertilizers and most other modern agricultural technologies not by choice but because they can’t afford them, caught in a poverty trap where they are unable to produce enough agricultural surplus to make a living selling food to other people; hence, they can’t afford fertilizer and other technologies that would allow them to raise yields and produce surplus.

At the other end of the spectrum are the world’s richest people, mostly in the West, for whom consuming organic food is a lifestyle choice tied up with notions about personal health and environmental benefits as well as romanticized ideas about agriculture and the natural world. Almost none of these consumers of organic foods grow the food themselves. Organic agriculture for these groups is a niche market—albeit, a lucrative one for many producers—accounting for less than 1 percent of global agricultural production.

As a niche within a larger, industrialized, agricultural system, organic farming works reasonably well. Producers typically see lower yields. But they can save money on fertilizer and other chemical inputs while selling to a niche market for privileged consumers willing to pay a premium for products labeled organic. Yields are lower—but not disastrously lower—because there are ample nutrients available to smuggle into the system via manure. As long as organic food remains niche, the relationship between lower yields and increased land use remains manageable.

The ongoing catastrophe in Sri Lanka, though, shows why extending organic agriculture to the vast middle of the global bell curve, attempting to feed large urban populations with entirely organic production, cannot possibly succeed. A sustained shift to organic production nationally in Sri Lanka would, by most estimates, slash yields of every major crop in the country, including drops of 35 percent for rice, 50 percent for tea, 50 percent for corn, and 30 percent for coconut. The economics of such a transition are not just daunting; they are impossible.

Importing fertilizer is expensive, but importing rice is far more costly. Sri Lanka, meanwhile, is the world’s fourth largest tea exporter, with tea accounting for a lion’s share of the country’s agricultural exports, which in turn account for 70 percent of total export earnings.

There is no conceivable way that export sales to the higher value organic market could possibly make up for sharp falls in production. The entire global market for organic tea, for example, accounts for only about 0.5 percent of the global tea market. Sri Lanka’s tea production alone is larger than the entire global organic tea market. Flooding the organic market with most or all of Sri Lanka’s tea production, even after output fell by half due to lack of fertilizer, would almost certainly send global organic tea prices into a spiral.

The notion that Sri Lanka might ever replace synthetic fertilizers with domestically produced organic sources without catastrophic effects on its agricultural sector and environment is more ludicrous still. Five to seven times more animal manure would be necessary to deliver the same amount of nitrogen to Sri Lankan farms as was delivered by synthetic fertilizers in 2019. Even accounting for the overapplication of synthetic fertilizers, which is clearly a problem, and other uncertainties, there is almost certainly not enough land in the small island nation to produce that much organic fertilizer. Any effort to produce that much manure would require a vast expansion of livestock holdings, with all the additional environmental damage that would entail.

Sustaining agriculture in Sri Lanka, for both domestic consumption and high-value export products, was always going to require importing energy and nutrients into the system, whether organic or synthetic. And synthetic fertilizers were always going to be the most economically and environmentally efficient way to do so.


Sri Lanka's President Gotabaya Rajapaksa (center) waves to supporters during a rally ahead of the upcoming 2020 parliamentary elections.Sri Lanka’s President Gotabaya Rajapaksa (center) waves to supporters during a rally ahead of the upcoming 2020 parliamentary elections.

Sri Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa (center) waves to supporters during a rally ahead of the upcoming parliamentary elections, near Sri Lanka’s capital, Colombo, on July 28, 2020.ISHARA S. KODIKARA/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES

While the proximate cause of Sri Lanka’s humanitarian crisis was a bungled attempt to manage its economic fallout from the global pandemic, at the bottom of the political problem was a math problem and at the bottom of the math problem was an ideological problem—or, more accurately, a global ideological movement that is innumerate and unscientific by design, promoting fuzzy and poorly specified claims about the possibilities of alternative food production methods and systems to obfuscate the relatively simple biophysical relationships that govern what goes in; what comes out; and the economic, social, and political outcomes that any agricultural system can produce, whether on a regional, national, or global scale.

Rajapaksa continues to insist that his policies have not failed. Even as Sri Lanka’s agricultural production was collapsing, he traveled to the U.N. climate change summit in Glasgow, Scotland, late last year, where—when not dodging protests over his human rights record as Sri Lankan defense minister—he touted his nation’s commitment to an agricultural revolution allegedly in sync with nature.” Not long afterward, he fired two government officials within weeks of each other for publicly criticizing the increasingly dire food situation and fertilizer ban.

As farmers begin their spring harvest, the fertilizer ban has been lifted, but fertilizer subsidies have not been restored. Rajapaksa, meanwhile, has established yet another committee—this one to advise the government on how to increase organic fertilizer production in a further demonstration that he and his agricultural advisors continue to deny the basic biophysical realities that constrain agriculture production.

Much of the global sustainable agriculture movement, unfortunately, has proven no more accountable. As Sri Lankan crop yields have plummeted, exactly as most mainstream agricultural experts predicted they would, the fertilizer ban’s leading advocates have gone silent. Vandana Shiva, an Indian activist and ostensible face of anti-modern agrarianism in the global south, was a booster of the ban but turned mute as the ban’s cruel consequences became clear. Food Tank, an advocacy group funded by the Rockefeller Foundation that promotes a phase-out of chemical fertilizers and subsidies in Sri Lanka, has had nothing to say now that its favored policies have taken a disastrous turn.

Soon enough, advocates will surely argue that the problem was not with the organic practices they touted but with the precipitous move to implement them in the midst of a crisis. But although the immediate ban on fertilizer use was surely ill conceived, there is literally no example of a major agriculture-producing nation successfully transitioning to fully organic or agroecological production. The European Union has, for instance, promised a full-scale transition to sustainable agriculture for decades. But while it has banned genetically modified crops and a variety of pesticides as well as has implemented policies to discourage the overuse of synthetic fertilizers, it still depends heavily on synthetic fertilizers to keep yields high, produce affordable, and food secure. It has also struggled with the disastrous effects of overfertilizing surface and ground water with manure from livestock production.

Boosters of organic agriculture also point to Cuba, which was forced to abandon synthetic fertilizer when its economy imploded following the Soviet Union’s collapse. They fail to mention that the average Cuban lost an estimated 10 to 15 pounds of body weight in the years that followed. In 2011, Bhutan, another darling of the sustainability crowd, promised to go 100 percent organic by 2020. Today, many farmers in the Himalayan kingdom continue to depend on agrochemicals.

In Sri Lanka, as elsewhere, there is no shortage of problems associated with chemical-intensive and large-scale agriculture. But the solutions to these problems—be they innovations that allow farmers to deliver fertilizer more precisely to plants when they need it, bioengineered microbial soil treatments that fix nitrogen in the soil and reduce the need for both fertilizer and soil disruption, or genetically modified crops that require fewer pesticides and herbicides—will be technological, giving farmers new tools instead of removing old ones that have been proven critical to their livelihoods. They will allow countries like Sri Lanka to mitigate the environmental impacts of agriculture without impoverishing farmers or destroying the economy. Proponents of organic agriculture, by contrast, committed to naturalistic fallacies and suspicious of modern agricultural science, can offer no plausible solutions. What they offer, as Sri Lanka’s disaster has laid bare for all to see, is misery.

Ted Nordhaus is the co-founder and executive director of the Breakthrough Institute and a co-author of An Ecomodernist Manifesto. Twitter: @TedNordhaus

Saloni Shah is a food and agriculture analyst at the Breakthrough Institute. Twitter: @SaloniShah101

පාණදුරා වාදයේ කාලීන වටිනාකම

August 23rd, 2022

කොළඹ විශ්ව විද්‍යාලයේ ආර්ථික විද්‍යා අංශයේ මහාචාර්ය ලලිතසිරි ගුණරුවන් විසිනි

1873 අගෝස්තු මස 26 හා 28 දෙදින තුළ පාණදුරේදී ඉමහත් ආශ්චර්යාත්මක පරිවර්තනයක් සිදු විය. ඒ අන් කිිසිවක් නොව අධිරාජ්‍ය විරෝධී සහ දේශීයත්වය නියෝජනය කළ බෞද්ධයන් හා සුදු අධිරාජ්‍යවාදය නියෝජනය කරමින් යටත්විජිත පාලනයේ අනුග්‍රහය ලද ක්‍රිස්තියානි මිෂනාරින් අතර පැවැති මහා වාදයයි. මේ වසරේ දී අප සමරන්නේ ඒ අරුම පුදුම සංසිද්ධියේ 149 වැනි අනුස්මරණයයි.

පාණදුරා වාදය යනු හුදු ආගම් දෙකක දර්ශනයන් අතර ඇති වූ මත ගැටුමක් ය යන්න පූර්ණ සත්‍යය නොවේ. එය මතවාදී අරගලයකි. කිසි දා පරාජය කළ නොහැකි බවට ආකල්පමය මතවාදයක් සිය යටත්විජිත පාලිතයන් තුළ ජනනය කරවමින් හිරු නොබසින්නේ යැයි පැවැසුණු සිය අධිරාජ්‍යයට ලෝකයේ බොහෝ රටවල් යටත් කරමින් අයෝමය හස්තයකින් ඒ යටත්විජිත පාලනය කළ බ්‍රිතාන්‍ය අධිරාජ්‍යයට එල්ල වුණු ප්‍රථම හා ප්‍රබලම විප්ලවීය අභියෝගයකි.

පාණදුරා මහා වාදයට  මඟ පෑදු බටහිර සංස්කෘතික ආක්‍රමණය බොහෝ කාලයක් පුරාවට දියත් කෙරෙමින් තිබිණි. දේශීයයාට, විශේෂයෙන් බෞද්ධයාට, තම ආගමික කටයුතු නිදහසේ කරගෙන යාමට අධිරාජ්‍යවාදී පාලන යන්ත්‍රය තුළ ඉඩ නොතිබිණි. 16 වැනි සියවසේ ආරම්භයේ පටන් ප්‍රතිකාල්, ඕලන්ද හා ඉංගිරිසි ආක්‍රමණිකයන්ගේ ග්‍රහණයට මුහුදුබඩ කලාපයන් නතු වෙමින් ද, 1815 උඩරට මහා පාවාදීමෙන් අනතුරුව සමස්ත දේශයේම ස්වෛරීත්වය අහිමි වී යාම නිසා ද, යටත්විජිත පාලකයන් විසින් තමන් මතට ආගන්තුක වූ සිරිත් විරිත් හා මතවාද බලෙන් ආරෝපණය කිරීමේ පීඩනයට ඔවුහු ලක් වී සිටියහ. බෞද්ධ ඉගැන්වීම් ප්‍රසිද්ධියේම අවඥාවට ලක් කෙරුණි.  පන්සල් අවට හා බෞද්ධයන්ගේ ව්‍යාපාරික ස්ථාන අසල බුදුරජාණන්වහන්සේට හා බුදු දහමේ ඉගැන්වීම්වලට නිගා කරමින් පුවරු හා දැන්වීම් ප්‍රදර්ශනය කෙරිණි. බෞද්ධ පොතපත ප්‍රසිද්ධියේ පරිශීලනය ලජ්ජාසහගත දෙයක් බවට පත් කරනු ලැබ තිබිණි. බෞද්ධ සංස්කෘතික ලක්ෂණ අවතක්සේරු කෙරුණේ රජයේ තනතුරු තානාන්තරවලට බඳවා ගැනීම් වලදී පවා බෞද්ධ ගති පැවතුම් ඇත්තන්ට අවහිර ඇති කරමිනි. විටෙක බුද්ධාගම ඇදහීම තහනමට ලක් කරන ලද බව ද වාර්තා වෙයි.

දේශීය සිරිත්-විරිත් හා ගති පැවැතුම් මෙන්ම භාෂාව හා දාර්ශනික පසුබිම ද මේ තර්ජනයේ ප්‍රධාන ඉලක්කයන් වී තිබිණි. විශේෂයෙන් සිංහලයා තුළ තමන් ගේ හරපද්ධතීන් අවතක්සේරු කරවීමටත්, බෞද්ධයන් තුළ දාර්ශනිකත්වය අකා මකා දැමීමටත් යටත්විජිත පාලකයෝ පියවර ගත් හ. ඉංගිරිසිය රජයේ භාෂාව විය. එය නොදන්නන් කොන් කරනු ලැබිණි. මෙසේ සැලසුම් සහගතව එල්ල කෙරුණු පීඩනයන්ට පාත්‍ර වූ දේශීයත්වයේ සන්තානය ක්‍රමයෙන් දුර්වල විය. සංස්කෘතික හා දාර්ශනික මතවාදී ආක්‍රමණය ආයුධ සන්නද්ධ මර්දනයටත් වඩා ප්‍රබල වූ අතර ඒ ඔස්සේ දේශීයත්වයේ මුදුන් මුල් එකින් එක උදුරා දමන ලද්දේ යටත්විජිත බලාධිකාරිය දේශීයයාගේ චින්තනය තුළ ම පිළිගැන්නවීමට පොළඹවමිනි. 18 වැනි සියවස අවසන් වන විට ශ්‍රී ලංකා භූමියෙන් බුදු සසුන අතුරුදහන් වනු ඇති බවට ජේම්ස් ද අල්විස් පඬිතුමා සිදත් සඟරාවට  ප්‍රස්තාවනාවක් ලියමින් 1850 දී සඳහන් කළේ මේ අධිරාජ්‍යවාදී ආක්‍රමණයේ සාර්ථක ඉදිරිගමන නිරීක්ෂණය කළ නිසා විය යුතු ය.

20 වැනි සියවස ඇරෑඹෙන විට ඒ අනාවැකිය බොරු වී තිබුණා පමණක් නොව ශ්‍රී ලාංකික ජන සමාජය තුළ, විශේෂයෙන් සිංහල බෞද්ධයා තුළ, දේශාභිමානය මෙන් ම අධිරාජ්‍ය විරෝධී නිදහස් අරගලයේ පන්නරය ද තීරණාත්මකව මුවහත් වී තිබිණි. මිලාන වෙමින් පැවැති බුදු සසුන වඩාත් දීප්තියෙන් බැබැළීමට පටන් ගෙන තිබිණි. බ්‍රිතාන්‍යයන් විසින් කහකඩයන් ලෙස අවඥා සහගතව හඳුන්වා දෙන ලද බෞද්ධ භික්ෂූන්වහන්සේලා දාර්ශනික පදනමන් වඩවඩාත් ශක්තිමත්ව හා ධෛර්ය සම්පන්නව නැඟී සිටීමට සමත් වූහ. දේශීය විමුක්ති අරගලය ජව සම්පන්නව පන්නරයෙන් යුතුව පෙරට විත් තිබිණි. කිසි විට පරාජය කළ නොහැකි වනු ඇතැයි ද කිසි දා පලවා හැරිය නොහැකි යැයි ද විශ්වාස කළ යටත් විජිත පාලනය දෙදරීමට පටන් ගෙන තිබිණි. කිසිවිටෙක අභියෝගයට ලක් නොවූ අධිරාජ්‍යවාදීන්ට හා ගැත්තන් ට එරෙහිව අලුත් නිදහස් විමුක්ති සටනක් දියත් වී තිබිණි. පාණදුරා වාදයෙන් සිදු කෙරුණු මහා විප්ලවීය චින්තන පරිවර්තනය එයයි. පාණදුරේ බෞද්ධයන් විසින් පණ පෙවුණු නිදහස් අරගලයයි.

බ්‍රිතාන්‍ය පාලනයට එරෙහිව හා සංස්කෘතික ආක්‍රමණයට එරෙහිව මුහුදුබඩ කලාපයේ අන් ප්‍රදේශ වල ජනතාව මෙන් නොව පාණදුරේ බෞද්ධයෝ ඍජුව නැගී සිටියහ. තමන්ට සිදු වන අසාධාරණයන්ට එරෙහිව බ්‍රිතාන්‍ය ආණ්ඩුකාරතැන වෙත 1826 තරම් ඈත දී පෙත්සමක් ඉදිරිපත් කරමින් පැමිණිලි කිරීමට පවා පාණදුරේ බෞද්ධයන් විසින් පියවර ගෙන තිබිණි. පාණදුරේ වලානේ සිරි සිද්ධාර්ථ හිමියන්ගේ ශාසනික හා ආධ්‍යාත්මික වැඩසටහන් ඔස්සේ සහ උන්වහන්සේ විසින් ආරම්භ කරන ලද පරම ධම්ම චේතිය පිරිවෙන ඔස්සේ ක්‍රමයෙන් දියුණු තියුණු කරන ලද බෞද්ධ හික්ෂු දාර්ශනික පදනම හා ආකල්ප මෙන්ම පාණදුරේ ගිහි බෞද්ධ ප්‍රභූන් සිය ව්‍යාපාර තුළින් උපයා ගෙන තිබූ සැලකිය යුතු වත්කම් මත වර්ධනය කරගෙන තිබූ බෞද්ධ ආර්ථික ශක්තිය ද එකට කැටිව මේ ජවය පාණදුරේ බෞද්ධයන්ට ලබා දී තිබිණි. පහතරට සෑම නගරයකම පාහේ සිය මිෂනාරී ව්‍යාපාරය ලබා ඇති සාර්ථකත්වය පාණදුරේ ඇතුළු තවත් සීමිත ප්‍රදේශ කීපයක් තුළ පමණක් ළඟා කර ගත නොහැකි වී ඇති බව ගොගර්ලි පූජකතුමා ඇතුළු වෙස්ලියන් මිෂනාරී පූජකතුමන්ලා විසින් බ්‍රිතාන්‍ය ආණ්ඩුවට ඉදිරිපත් කරනු ලැබ තිබූ වාර්තාවන්ගෙන් මේ බව තවදුරටත් පිළිබිඹු වෙයි.

අධිරාජ්‍යවාදී මිෂනාරී බලයට අභියෝග කිරීමට පාණදුරේ බෞද්ධයන් ශක්තිය හා ආත්මධෛර්යය උත්පාදනය කරගෙන තිබු‍ණේ  ඒ අයුරිනි. පාණදුරේ වෙස්ලියන් දේවස්ථානයේ දී 1873 වසරේ එක් ඉරු දිනක දාවිත් ද සිල්වා දේවගැතිතුමා විසින් බුදු දහමේ ඉගැන්වීම් විවේචනය කරමින් පවත්වන ලද දේශනයට ඊට හරියටම සතියකට පසු පාණදුරේ ගල්කන්දේ විහාරයට (වර්තමාන රන්කොත් විහාරයට) පූජ්‍ය මොහොට්ටිවත්තේ ගුණානන්ද හිමියන් වඩමවා පිළිතුරු දෙසුමක් පැවැත්වීමට සමත් වීම තුළින් පාණදුරේ ජනතාව විසින් ඇති කරගෙන තුබූ ඒ ශක්තිය නිරූපණය වෙයි.  සන්නිවේදන තාක්ෂණ කිසිවක් නොතිබූ යුගයක අන්‍යාගමික දෙසුමක අන්තර්ගතය සටහන් කර ගැනීමට සමත්වීම හා කිසිදු යාන්ත්‍රික ප්‍රවාහන මාධ්‍යයක් නොතිබූ අවදියක කිලෝමීටර 30 ක පමණ දුරකින් කොළඹ කොටහේනේ දීපදුත්තාරාමයේ වැඩසිටි ගුණානන්ද හිමියන් වෙත ඒ දෙසුමේ හරය වාර්තා කිරීම පමණක් සලකා බැලුව ද, එවැන්නක් වර්තමාන සන්නිවේදන හා ගමනාගමන තාක්ෂණය තුළ පවා කිරීම එතරම් පහසු කර්තව්‍යයක් නොවේ. තව ද, වාදයට සහභාගි වීමට කොළඹ කොටහේනේ සිට පාණදුරයට වැඩම කරවන අතර ගුණානන්ද ස්වාමීන්වහන්සේව පැහැරගැනීමට කුමන්ත්‍රණයක් ක්‍රියාත්මක වූ බව සිය තොරතුරු ජාලය ඔස්සේ දැනගැනීමට ද බෞද්ධයෝ සමත් වූහ. එහෙයින් උන්වහන්සේ ගැල්කරුවකු ලෙස වෙස්වළාගෙන පිදුරු කරත්තයක් දක්කාගෙන පාණදුරේ රන්කොත් විහාරයට වැඩි බව වාර්තා වෙයි. වාදීභසිංහ ගුණානන්ද හිමියන් පැහැරගෙන යාමෙන් වාදයට බලපෑමක් එල්ල කිරීමට තිබූ අවදානම ඒ අනුව වැළැක්වීමට එවක බෞද්ධයා ඉතාමත් උපායශීලී වී ඇති අයුරු අපූරු ය. මේ සා බිහිසුණු හා බලවත් අධිරාජ්‍යයකට එරෙහිව නැගිටීම උදෙසා පාණදුරේ බෞද්ධයන් සතුව තිබී ඇති ශක්තිය, අධිෂ්ඨානය හා සූක්ෂ්ම උපායමාර්ගික ප්‍රවේශය අදටත් අප දේශීයත්වය ඉදිරියේ ඇති අභියෝගයන්ට මුහුණදීමට අවශ්‍ය ආදර්ශයන් හා පන්නරය සපයන බව අමුතුවෙන් කිව යුතු නැත.

දෙපාර්ශ්වය වෙන් වෙන් ව සිය ආගමික ස්ථාන වල සිටිමින් අදහස් උදහස් ඉදිරිපත් කිරීමට වඩා එක් වේදිකාවක ප්‍රසිද්ධියේ සංවාදයක් පැවැත්වීම සුදුසු යැයි ක්‍රිස්තියානි පාර්ශ්වයේ මත්තෙස් සුවාරිස් ගුණවර්ධන හා පීතර් දානියෙල් යන මහතුන් සහ බෞද්ධ පාර්ශ්වය වෙනුවෙන් ජෙරමියෙස් දියෙස් හා කුරුකුලසූරිය කොර්නේලිස් ප්‍රේරා අප්පුහාමි  යන මහතුන් එකඟතාවකට එළඹෙන්නේ මේ වාතාවරණය තුළදී ය. ඒ අනුව, වර්තමාන දුම්රිය ස්ථානය අසල පිහිටි සහ එවක ජෙරමියෙස් දියෙස් මැතිඳුන්ට අයත්ව තිබූ පාණදුරේ දොඹගහවත්ත නම් බිම්කඩෙහි වේදිකාවක් ඉදිකර දෙදිනක් පුරා මහා වාදයක් පැවැත්වීමට පියවර ගන්නා ලදී. ඒ සම්බන්ධ පූර්ව අදහස් උදහස් දැක්වීම් සමකාලීන ජනමාධ්‍ය විසින් වාර්තා කර තිබූ අයුරු ද නිරීක්ෂණය කළ හැකි ය.

බුදු දහමේ ඉගැන්වීම් මෙන්ම එහි දාර්ශනික පදනම ද අවඥාවට ලක් කරමින් ඒ වේදිකාව මත අභියෝග කළ දාවිත් ද සිල්වා වෙස්ලියන් දේවගැතිතුමා හා සිරිමාන්න කතිසේරුතුමා මෙන්ම ඒ අයට වාදයේ දී දායකත්වය සැපැයූ ඇස් ලංග්ඩන්, සි. ජයසිංහ, එස් කොලින්ස් හා පී. රුද්‍රිගු යන පාදිලිවරුන් සහ හුණුපොළ නිලමේතුමා ඇතුළු බොහෝ දෙනා ද අභිබවමින් හික්කඩුවේ සිරි සුමංගල, වැලිගම සිරි සුමංගල, බුලත්ගම ධම්මාලංකාර, වස්කඩුවේ සිරි සුභූති හා රත්මලානේ ධම්මාලෝක වැනි දාර්ශනික පාණ්ඩිත්‍යයෙන් හෙබි බෞද්ධ භික්ෂූන්වහන්සේලා ගේ මෙන් ම බටුවන්තුඩාවේ දේවරක්ෂිත පඬිතුමා ද ගේ උපදෙස් හා සහය ලබමින් වාදීභසිංහ මොහොට්ටිවත්තේ ගුණානන්ද ස්වාමීන්වහන්සේ සිංහ නාද පැවැත්වූ හ. පාණදුරා වාදය නමින් ලෝ පතළ වූයේ එයයි. එම ස්ථානයේ සිටිමින් එම වාදයේ තතු වාර්තා කළ සිලෝන් ටෛම්ස් පුවත්පතේ පිටපත් රටපුරා මෙන් ම ජේ. එම්. පීබල්ස් වැනි මහතුන් ගේ ලේඛන ඔස්සේ ලෝකය පුරා ද පැතිර යාමෙන් බුදු දහමේ ඉගැන්වීම් පිළිබඳව පමණක් නොව ශ්‍රී ලාංකිකයාගේ දේශීයත්වයේ අභිමානයට අභියෝග කළ අධිරාජ්‍යවාදීන් ගේ පසුබෑම ද සනිටුහන් වුණු බව දැන් ඉතිහාසයට එක් වී හමාර ය.

පාණදුරා වාදයේ ජයග්‍රහණය පිළිබිඹු කෙරෙනුයේ ඉන් ජනිත වූ ප්‍රතිඵල මත ය. ඒ වන විට ද බෞද්ධ – ක්‍රිස්තියානි දෙපාර්ශ්වය අතර වාද හතරක් පැවැත්වී තිබූ නමුදු පුළුල් ප්‍රචාරයක් සහිතව හා මුහුණට මුහුණ ලා සිදුවුණු පාණදුරා වාදය ඒ සියලු වාද අභිබවා යමින් තීරණාත්මක බලපෑමක් ආගමික, සමාජයීය හා දේශපාලනික ක්ෂේත්‍රයන් කෙරෙහි ඇති කිරීමට සමත් විය. විසි වැනි සියවසේ ජාතික හා ආගමික ප්‍රබෝධයේ සියලුම නියමුවන්ට පාහේ පන්නරය සැපයූයේ පාණදුරා වාදයෙනි. තමන් දස වැනි වියෙහි දී  පියා සමග පාණදුරයට ගොස්  මහා වාදය නැරඹූ බව අනගාරික ධර්මපාලතුමා සඳහන් කර ඇත්තේ ඒ නායකත්වය තුළ ජාතිකත්වයේ වස්තු බීජ පැල කෙරුණේ පාණදුරා වාදයෙන් බව පෙන්නුම් කරමිනි. පාණදුරේ ජෙරමියෙස් දියෙස් ආර්යාව ඇතුළු බෞද්ධ ප්‍රභූන් ගේ ධන පරිත්‍යාගය මත පිහිටුවනු ලැබූ බෞද්ධ පාසල් හා දහම් පාසල් පද්ධතිය පුළුල් කිරීම ද මේ මෙහෙවරෙහි සුවිශේෂී සන්ධිස්ථානයෝ වෙති. කොළඹ විශාඛා – ආනන්ද – නාලන්ද මෙන්ම මහනුවර ධර්මරාජ, ගාල්ලේ මහින්ද – අම්බලන්ගොඩ ධර්මාශෝක හා පාණදුරේ ශ්‍රී සුමංගල වැනි රට පුරා ඇති තවත් බොහෝ බෞද්ධ අධ්‍යාපනස්ථාන පිහිටුවනු ලැබුයේ පාණදුරා වාදයට පින් සිදු වන්නට ය. පාණදුරා වාදයේ අරමුණු හා ජාතික අභිලාෂයන් මල් පල ගැන්වීම උදෙසා අධිෂ්ඨානශීලීව පෙරට යාම ඒ පාසල් පද්ධතියෙන් බිහිවුණු ලක්ෂ සංඛ්‍යාත විද්වතුන් ගේ ඓතිහාසික කාර්යභාරයයි.

ඉතිහාසයේ විවිධ අවස්ථාවන් හි දී ශ්‍රී ලංකා රාජ්‍යයට සිය ස්වෛරීත්වය අහිමි ව ගිය අවස්ථා ඇත. ශතවර්ෂ 20 කට අධික කාලයක් තිස්සේ භාරතීය දේශපාලනික, හමුදාමය හා වෙනත් විවිධාකාර බලපෑම් හමුවේ රාජ්‍යත්වය අස්ථාවර වූ අයුරු මෙන් ම 16 වැනි සියවසේ ආරම්භයේ පටන් ප්‍රතිකාල්, ඕලන්ද හා ඉංගිරිසි ආක්‍රමණිකයන්ගේ ග්‍රහණයට රාජ්‍යය අර්ධ වශයෙන් හෝ සම්පූර්ණ වශයෙන් යටත්වීම මේ සඳහා උදාහරණ සපයයි. භූගෝලීය වශයෙන් වැදගත් වූ උපායමාර්ගික පිහිටීමක් සහිත වීම නිසා ශතවර්ෂ ගණනාවක් පුරාවට ශ්‍රී ලංකාවට එසේ විදේශීය බලපෑම් හා ආක්‍රමණ වලට විවිධ මට්ටම්වලින් නතු වීමට සිදු වීම හා ඒ ඔස්සේ රාජ්‍යයේ ස්වෛරීත්වයට තර්ජන එල්ල වීම වටහා ගැනීම දුෂ්කර නැත. 1815 මාර්තු 2 වැනි දින බ්‍රිතාන්‍ය කිරීටයට පාවා දෙනු ලැබීමත් සමඟ ශ්‍රී ලංකා රාජ්‍යයේ ස්වෛරීත්වය සම්පූර්ණයෙන්ම අහිමි වී ගියේ ය. 1818 ඌව වෙල්ලස්සේ හා 1848 මාතලේ විමුක්ති සටන් මර්දනය කරන ලද්දේ අධිරාජ්‍යවාදී පාලකයන් ගේ වෙඩි පහර හා අධිරාජ්‍ය ගැති කළු සුද්දන් ගේ පාවා දීම් ඔස්සේ ය. එවන් පීඩාවන්ගෙන් දුර්මුඛව ඇද වැටී අසරණව සිටි ශ්‍රී ලාංකික ජාතියට නිදහස හා ස්වෛරීත්වය යළි උදා කර ගත හැකිය යන බලාපොරොත්තුව ඇති කර දුන් පළමු තීරණාත්මක සංසිද්ධිය පාණදුරා වාදයයි.

බලවත් අධිරාජ්‍යයකට යටත්ව දණින් වැටී සිටි ජාතියකට වුව ද අවශ්‍ය නම් අධිෂ්ඨානශීලීව දෙපයින් සිට ගත හැකිය යන පණිවුඩය පාණදුරා වාදයෙන් අපට ඉගැන්වෙන පාඩමයි. එසේම, ජාතික ස්වෛරීත්වය වෙනුවෙන් ලේ – දහදිය කැප කළ අපේ දේශප්‍රේමී පැරැන්නන් වෙනුවෙන් අපට කළ හැකි හොඳම උපහාරය වන්නේ දිවි දෙවැනි කොට දේශයේ ස්වෛරීත්වය සුරැකීම වෙනුවෙන් කැප වීමයි. ඒ බව යළි යළි දු සිහිපත් කිරීම සහ ඒ අනුව පෙළ ගැසීම පාණදුරා වාදය පිළිබඳව කළ හැකි වටිනාම අනුස්මරණයයි.

 2022 අගෝස්තු 18

Why do some think that one has to be politically correct all the time?

August 23rd, 2022

Sasanka De Silva Pannipitiya

The Editor,

Lanka Web,

Dear Sir

Why do some think that one has to be politically correct all the time?

A video doing the rounds on many social media platforms shows a woman being caught red-handed by the owner of a lost credit card.

The gist of the incident was that the lost card was found by someone and given to a security guard on that premises, and instead of trying to restore it to its rightful owner, the guard called his wife and told her to go shopping with it.

When the owner realized the card was lost and it had been used twice, he deactivated the card and identified the woman who was using it after watching the CCTC footage of one such establishment.

Then he rushed to the nearby keels and the woman was caught red-handed trying to use it again for the third time. 

When I read many of the comments posted by other users, I could not help but wonder what is wrong with society. 

Many posts are in favour of the woman who was caught red-handed because she was poor, and the other reason is that there are many other large-scale scamming and looting happening in the country.

Then why try to highlight, according to most, this small incident?

Further, why use social media platforms to highlight such incidents?

I am sure they are just nave that they are unaware that even the law enforcement agencies, even from developed countries, use the same tactics to catch wrongdoers as well as educate the public.

How come two wrongs make one right?

Many try to act philosophically, as long as the problem is not theirs but take a 180-degree turn the moment it becomes one of your problems.

Stealing is stealing, whether the amount involved in the transaction is one cent or one billion in any form of currency, and it is not justified because others with influence and connections are getting away with Scott free.

I believe trying to be too politically correct in all such incidents has now become cancer in our society.

Sasanka De Silva

Pannipitiya.

මේ අවස්ථාවේදි මහ මැතිවරණයකට යාම කිසිසේත්ම සුදුසු නැත-( ඉහහත සඳහන් ලිපියට කෙටි එකතුවකි)

August 23rd, 2022

ආචාර්‍ය සුදත් ගුණසේකර -මහනුවර.  23.8.202

ඉහත ලිපියේ සඳහන් ගැටළු කිසිවක් නොසලකා හදිසි මැතිවරණයක් ඉල්ලා වටිනා කාලය සහ මිනිස්දින කා දමමින් ඝෝෂා කරමින්, විරෝධතා පෙළපාලි යන ජේ වී පී එක මැතිවරණයක් තිබ්බොත් ඔවුන්ට දැනට තිබෙන ආසන 3, රජයක් පිහිටුවීමට අවශ්‍ය 113 ක් වෙයි කියා හිතනවාද?  ඒ වගේම දැනට 50 ක් පම්ණ තිබෙණ තව නොබෝ දිනකින් එයද 30 කට පමණ බැසීමට ඉඩ ඇති සජිත් පෙරමුණට 113 කර ගත හැකිද යන ප්‍රශ්නය ඔවුන් විසින් තමන්ගෙන්ම ඇසිය යුතුය.මගේ මතයේ හැටියට ඒ දෙකම හුදු දවල් හීන පමණි.

හැබැයි එකක් නම් ඉස්ථිරවම කිව හැක. එනම් මේ දෙකම කිසි ලෙසකින් මේ අවස්ථාවේදී සිදු නොවන බවය. ජේ.වී.පී 3 ඇතැම්විට 10 ක් හෝ  13 ක් විය හැක. සජිත්ගේ පිළට 25 ක් හෝ 30 ක් ලැබිය හැක. මන්ද ඊ ළඟ මැතිවරණයට තරඟ කරන ප්‍රධාන පක්ශය වනුයේ පොදුපෙරමුණ සහ රනිල්ගේ පරණ එ.ජා. ප යේ සන්ධානයක් වන බැවිණි.

මේ අතර 10 යේ කන්ඩායමට සහ අලහප්පෙරුම කණ්ඩායමටද   ආසන 20 ක් 25 ක් පමණ ලැබීමෙන් මැතිවරණය හමාර වනු ඇත. එසේ වූ විට නැවතත් බලයට පත්වන්නේ පොදුපෙරමුණ+රනිල් එ.ජා.ප කණ්ඩායාමය.

එමනිසා  මේ අවස්ථාවේදී හදිසි මැතිවරණයක් සඳහා රුපියල් කෝටි 1500 ක් පම්ණ ණයට ගත් ජාතික ධනයක් වියදම් කිරීම මෙන්ම කාලය කා දැමීමෙ කිසිදු තේරුමක් නැත යන්න මගේ දැඩි  විශ්වාශයයි.එසේම එය මහා ජාතික අපරාධයක්ද වෙයි. තවද එය ගහෙන් වැටුණු මිනිසාට ගොණාත් ඇන්නා වැනි දෙයකි.

එමනිසා හදිසි චන්ද උනෙන් පෙළෙන සියලුම රෝගීන් දැන්වත් මේ යතාර්ථය තේරුම්ගෙන එම මෝඩ අදහස අත්හැර තාවකාලික සර්වපාක්ෂික රජයකට එකඟ වී, අතිපණ්ඩිතකම් මොහොතකට   පසෙක තබා එම රජයේ ඇමතිකම් ලබාගෙන ජනතා හිතවාදී වැඩ කොටසක් ඉටුකොට ශිල්ප දක්වා ජනතා ප්‍රශාදය ලබාගෙන 2025 මැතිවරණයට සූදානම් වීම වඩා ප්‍රඥාගෝචරයයි මම සිතමි.එවැනි දෑසට පෙනෙන ප්‍රඥාගෝචර මඟක් තිබියදී මේ අවස්ථාවේදි මහ මැතිවරණයකට යාම කිසිසේත්ම සුදුසු නැතැයි මම නැවතත් කියමි. එසේ නොකොට අඳුරේ අතගෑම සහ කාලය කා දැමීමේ කිසිදු තේරුමක් නැත යන්න මගේ දැඩි විශ්වාශයයි.

මේ අවස්ථාවේදි මහ මැතිවරණයකට යාම කිසිසේත්ම සුදුසු නැත

August 22nd, 2022

අචාර්ය සුදත් ගුණසේකර 22.8.2022 මහනුවර.

රට හෝ ජනතාව ගැන අබමල් රේණුවක හෝ ආදරයක් ඇති එසේම සිහිමොළයක් ඇති කිසිම දේශපලනඥකු මේ අවස්ථාවෙ මැතිවරණයක් ගැන සිතන්නේ නැත.

මේ රටේ අද පවතින කඩා වැටුණු ආර්ථිකය, සමාජ අසහනය හා අවුළ් සහගත තත්වය යටතේ මැතිවරණයක් ඉල්ලා උද්ගෝෂන වල යෙදීම රට තවත් අවුල් කිරීමක් පමණි.

කුහක දේශපාලකයිනි, ඔබ තුල රටට හා ජනතාවට අබමල් රේණුවක පමණ හෝ ආදරයක් තිබේනම් ඔබ ක්‍රියාකල යුත්තේ රට හා ජාතිය පළමු තැන තබා මිස  ඔබට හෝ ඔබගේ කණ්ඩායමට  බලය ලබාගැනීමේ එකම අරමුණ මුල්තැන තබා මැතිවරණයක් සඳහා  පාරවල් දිගේ උද්ඝෝෂනය කිරීම නොවේ.

අද පාර්ලිමේන්තුවේ සිටින සිළුම දේශපාලකයින් කළයුත්තේ සියළු දෙනාම එකතුවී කුහක පක්ශ දේශපාලනයෙන් මිදී පළමුව රට හා ජාතිය ඉදිරියේ ඇති අර්බුධවලින් රට ජාතිය බේරාගැනීම මිස මැතිවරණ මිරිඟුවක් පස්සේ හඹාගොස්   වාදභේධ වපුරා රටත් විනාශකොට ඔබත් දේශපාලන වශයෙන් සිය දිවි නසාගැනීම නොවේ.

අද මේ රට හා ජාතිය පත්ව ඇති අර්බුධයන්ගෙන් ගොඩගැනීමට  ඇති හොඳම විසඳුම, පවතින මැතිසබයේ සියළුම පක්ශ,  වසර 74 ක් තිස්සේ අනුගමනය කළ පටු කුහක දේශපාලන වාද භේද සියල්ල පසෙක තබා,  සියලු දෙනාම එක්වී සර්වපාක්ශික අන්තර්කාලීන රජයක් පිහිටුවා කුඩා ඇමති මන්ඩලයක් මඟින් පුලුල් ජාතික ප්‍රතිපත්තියක් අනුව, පළමුව ගිනිගෙන දැවෙන ජනතා ප්‍රස්න විසඳා ඒ ගින්න නිවී රට යථාතත්වයට පත්වූ පසු මැතිවරණයක් ගැන සිතීමයයි මම සිතමි.

මන්ද, මේ අවස්ථාවේ මැතිසභය විසුරුවා මැතිවරණයකට යාම කිසිසේත්ම සුදුසු නොවන බැවිණි.එයින් සිදු වන්නේ රට තවත් අරාජකවී ජනතා ප්‍රශ්න තවත් උග්‍රවීම පමණි.කොටින්ම මැතිවරණකට යාම ගහෙන් වැටුණු මිනිහාට ගොනාත් ඇනීමක්  වැනි දෙයකි.

දැනට පව්තින තත්වය අනුව මැතිව රණයක් සඳහා අවම වශයෙන් රුපියල් කෝටි 1500 පමණවත් අව්ශ්‍යවනු ඇත. රටේ පවතින  ආර්ථික තත්වය අනුව  එය සොයාගැනීමද බරපතල ගැටළුවකි. අනෙක් අතින් මැතිවරණ පැවැත්වීමට වඩා පලමුව ජනතාව ජීවත් කිරීම වැදගත්ය. දෙවනුව, මැතිවරණයක් පවත්වා අවසන් කිරීමට මාස 6 ක් වත් ගතවනු ඇත. අද රටේ පවතින තත්වය අනුව ඒ අතරතුර පවතින තත්වය තවත් උග්‍රවී, රටට කුමකින් කුමක් වේදැයි කිසිවෙකුට කිව නොහැක. එබැවින් මේ අවස්ථාවේ මැතිවරණයක් පැවැත්වීමට වඩා වැදගත් වනුයේ පක්ෂ පාට බෙධයෙන් තොරව සියළු දෙනාම එක්වී ජාතිය ඉදිරියේ ඇති ගිනිගෙන දැවෙන ප්‍රස්න පලමුව විසඳීම සහ ජනතාව ඉන් බේරාගැනීමයි.

අනෙක් අතින් කෙසේ හෝ මැතිවරණයක් පැවැත්වුවද කිසිම පක්ශයකට හෝ රජයක් පිහිටුවීමට බහුතරයක්ද ස්ථිරවෂයෙන්ම නොලැබෙනු ඇත.

මේ රටේ දේශපාලඥයින් කෙරෙහි ඇති කළකිරීම නිසා චන්දය ප්‍රකාශනොකරණ ප්‍රතිසතයද අධික වන නිසාද මැතිවරණ ප්‍රතිඵල වලින්ද නියම ජනතා මතය ප්‍රකාශ නොවණු ඇත.ප්‍රකාශවන චන්දවලින්  තේරෙන අය වුවද  යලිත් 1948 සිට මෙතෙක් සිදුවූ පරිදිම ඉර හඳ ඉල්ලන සුළුජන කොටස්වල ආධාරයෙන් ඔවුගේ ඇපකරුවන් වී හෙල්ලෙන දතක් වැනි රජයක් පිහිටුවීමෙන් යලිත් කබලෙන් ලිපටම වැටෙනු ඇත. ඒ සමඟම 2019 සින්හල බෞද්ධයින් දුටු සිහිනය යළිත් දවල් හීනයක් බවට පත්වනු ඇත.

 මෙවැනි හේතූන් නිසා මේ අවස්ථාවේ මැතිවරණයකට යාමෙන් රටේ ප්‍රස්න තවත් උග්‍රවනු මිස කිසිම ප්‍රස්නයක් ඉස්ථිර වශයෙන්ම  විසඳෙන්නේද නැත.

 ඇවසානයෙදී බෙරේ පලුවකුත් නැත එසේම නටපු නැටුමකුත් නැත වැනි තත්වයකින්  මැතිවරණයේ එකම ප්‍රතිඵලය රට තවත් හිඟමනට පත්  වීම සහ දෙශපාලනය තවත් අවුලෙන් අවුලටම පත්වණු ඒකාන්තය.

තවද අද රටේ පවතින දේශපාලන, ආර්ථික අවුල්, සාමාජික හා මානසික ගැටළු ආදී හේතූන් නිසා පැවත්වෙන මැතිවරණයකදී, චන්ද දායකයින්ට බුද්ධිමත්ව චන්දය ප්‍රකාශ කිරීමටද නොහැකිවනු ඇත. එසේ වූ විට 2019 දි අප ලබාගත් සියලුම ජයග්‍රහනයන් අවසන්වී නැවතත් 1948 සිට මේ දක්වා පැවැති අච්චාරු ආණ්ඩුවක්ම යළිත් පිහිටූවීමට සිදුවන නිසා ජාතියක් වශයෙන් අපි යළිත් කබලෙන් ලිපටම වැටෙනු ඒකානන්තය. එම නිසා මේ අවස්ථාවේ මැතිවරණයකට යාම කිසිසේත්ම සුදුසු නොවේ යනු බහුතරයේ අදහස බව අපගේ සමීක්ෂනවලින් අනාවරණය වී ඇත.

එමනිසා පවතින තත්වය යටතේ මේ අර්බුධ වලින් ගොඩ ඒමට තිබෙණ ඉතාමත් සුදුසු ක්‍රමය පවතින පාර්ලිමේන්තුව තුලින්ම සර්වපාක්ශික අන්තර්කාලීන රජයක් පිහිටුවාගෙන පළමුව ජනතාවගේ දැවෙන ප්‍රස්න විසඳීමයි. ඉන් පසුව මැතිවරණ යකට යාම වඩාත්ම සුදුසු බව මේ රටේ බුද්ධිමත් බහුතරයේ මතයයි.

එමනිසා මේ අවස්ථාවේ රට හමුවේ පවතින අර්බුධයන්ට තිබෙන හොඳම විසඳුම සියළුම පක්ෂභේධ සහ මතිමතාන්තර පසෙක දා සියළුම දේෂපාලකයින් කළැයුත්තේ තනියෙන් රජවීමේ සිහිනවළින් මිදී රටේ හා ජනතාවගේ යහපත ගැන පමණක් සිතා පොදු ජාතික ප්‍රතිපත්තියක් මත රට වැටී ඇති අඝාධයෙන්  හොඩ ගැනීමට සියළුදෙනාම එක්ව කටයුතු කිරීම බව රටේ පොදු මහජනතාවගේ ඒකමතික අදහසය

 කෙසේ වුවද ඒ අතරම ජනාධිපතිවරයාගේ නායකත්වය යටතේ පිහිටුවන රජය ආණ්ඩි 7 දෙනාගේ කැඳ හැළියක් නොවීමට වගබලාගැනීමටද සියළුදෙනාම වගබලාගතයුතුය,

මේ සඳහා මේ 21 වන දා ජනාධිපතිවරයා අනුරාධපුරයේ පැවැති සන්වර්ධන සභා රැස්වීමකදී කළ විශිෂ්ඨ කතාව ගුරුකොට ගත යුතුයයි මම යෝජනාකරමි.

 එම අදහසට එකඟ නොවී චන්දයකින් ටමන්ට බලයට ආ හැකියයි පෙළපාලි පවත්වමින් රට තවත් අවුල්කරන, මේ රටේ තමන් විමුක්තිය ලබා දීමට සිටින  ජාතිය කුමක්දැයි කියා හෝ පැහැදිළිව නොදන්නා ජාතික විමුක්ති පෙරමුණ ඇතුළු සියළු  දෙනාම  මේ රටෙ දේශපාලනයට කිසිසේත්ම සුදුසු නැත යනු මගේ අදහසය. එමනිසා තවත් ප්‍රමාද නොකොට ඔවුන් සියළු දෙනාම සදාකාලික දේශපාලන වනසණ්ඩයට යැවිය යුතුය යනු බහුතරයේ ඒකමතික තීරණයවන බව  ඔවුන් දැන්වත් වටහාගත යුතුය.

එම නිසා හදිසි චන්ද ජළභීතිකාවෙන් පෙලෙන මේ පිස්සන් සියළු දෙනාම වහාම අන්ගොඩට යවා ප්‍රතිකාර ලබා දිය යුතුයයි මම යෝජනා කරමි.

Japan showed that no Western colonial country was invincible 

August 22nd, 2022

Senaka Weeraratna 

It is said that freedom is never given but grabbed. Grabbing was possible in many parts of Asia because the Japanese had given hell for leather to the Imperial Western colonial countries occupying a vast swathe of Asian territory before 1939. At the end of the war in 1945 the Victors were tired, financially and economically weak. Their soldiers were in no mood to fight another war(s) with National Liberation Armies in European Asian colonies. 

Great Britain was forced to grant independence to India by threats of Naval Mutinies and Army Revolts. 2.5 Million demobbed Indian soldiers had retuned to India by the end of 1945. They could have easily overwhelmed the 30, 000 English soldiers left in India. The British did not want another Indian Mutiny on a scale bigger than what happened in 1857. The British Prime Minister Clement Atlee was wise. Following the dictum ‘ When the going gets tough the tough gets going’ the British granted independence to India and followed by grant of independence to Burma and Ceylon in 1948. 

It was Japan that sealed the fate of Western colonial countries in Asia. Japan showed by its blitzkrieg type attacks on Pearl Harbour and other parts of Asia that no Western country was invincible. The Japanese yellow man out  of all the non European races was the only one that was able to capture the breadth and imagination of the world by fighting a war on the same footing as the Europeans had successfully done over the last 500 years.

Only the crippled colonized Asian minds cannot see this high achievement on the part of a non – European race.

Sri Lanka is morally indebted to Japan and Indian freedom fighters for their contribution to Sri Lanka’s independence. Sri Lanka is very lucky for it gained freedom on a platter without a fight and without bloodshed. The credit for ending Western colonialism in Asia must go to Japan and other Asian freedom fighters for their immense blood sacrifices.

Claiming credit for other peoples blood sacrifices that helped Sri Lanka to win freedom without any blood sacrifices on our part, is shameful and dishonourable.

Senaka Weeraratna 

‘අරගලය පිටුපස සිටි බළල් අත් ගැන සොයන්න’ ජනාධිපති කොමිසමක් ඕනේ” – මොහොමඩ් මුසම්මිල්

August 22nd, 2022

Lanka Lead News

රට තුළ පැනනැගුණු ආර්ථික ආපදාව හේතුවෙන් ජනතාව මුහුණ දුන් සාධාරණ දුක්ගැනවිලි ගසාකමින්, දෙමළ ඩයස්පෝරාවෙන් මෙන්ම සෞදි අරාබි හා කටාර් රාජ්‍යවල සංවිධානවලින් යහමින් මුදල් ලබා ගනිමින්, ශ්‍රී ලංකා රාජ්‍යය බිඳවැට්ටවීමට උත්සාහ කළ ගෝල්ෆේස් අරගලය පිටුපස සිටි දේශපාලන පක්ෂ දෙකක් ඇතුළු සියලු බළල් අත් පිළිබඳව පුළුල් විමර්ශනයක් සිදුකොට, මෙකී අරගලයට සිය සාධාරණ දුක්ගැනවිලි හේතුවෙන් සහාය දුන් අහිංසක ජනතාව ඇතුළු සියලු රටවැසියන්ට සත්‍ය තොරතුරු අනාවරණය කිරීමට ජනාධිපති විමර්ශන කොමිෂන් සභාවක් පිහිටුවිය යුතුයැයි ජාතික නිදහස් පෙරමුණේ ප්‍රචාරක ලේකම්, පාර්ලිමේන්තු මන්ත්‍රී, මොහොමඩ් මුසම්මිල් මහතා අවධාරණය කරයි.

අද(21) පිටකෝට්ටේ පිහිටි ජාතික නිදහස් පෙරමුණේ ප්‍රධාන කාර්යාලයේදී පැවැති මාධ්‍ය හමුවකදී ඒ මහතා මෙසේ අවධාරණය කළේය.

එහිදී වැඩිදුරටත් අදහස් දැක්වූ ජානිපෙ ප්‍රචාරක ලේකම්වරයා මෙසේ ද සඳහන් කළේය.

ආර්ථික අර්බුදය හේතුවෙන් ජනතාවට ජීවිත පවත්වාගෙන යෑම දුෂ්කර වුණා. දේශපාලන අර්බුදය මෝරායෑමත් සමග මේ ප්‍රශ්නය විසඳාගැනීම පිළිබඳව ජනතාව තුළ ව්‍යාකූලත්වයක් නිර්මාණය වුණා, විශ්වාසය බිඳ වැටුණා. ඉතාමත් දුගී ජනයාගේ සිට, යම් මුදලක් අතේ ඇති අයට පවා මේ රටේ ජීවත් වීම දුෂ්කර වුණා. ඒ නිසා හැම මිනිසකුටම තම හිත ඇතුලේ, තමන් තුළ අරගලයක් කරන්න සිදුවුණා. දරුවන්ට තුන්වේල කන්න දෙන්න කුස්සිය තුළ අරගල කරන්න අම්මාට සිදුවුණා. තම ප්‍රමාණවත් නොවන ආදායමෙන් දරුවන්ට කන්න දෙන්නේ කොහොමද, කියන ප්‍රශ්නය තාත්තාට ආවා. රැකියා අහිමිවූවන්ට තමන්ගේ ජීවිතය පවත්වාගෙන යන්නේ කොහොමද, කියන ප්‍රශ්නය ඇති වුණා. ගොවියාට පොහොර නොමැතිවීම, අස්වැන්න ප්‍රමාණවත් නොවීම නිසා ප්‍රශ්න ඇති වුණා. ඒ අස්වැන්න පවා නෙළන්න ඉන්ධන නැති වුණා. ධීවරයාට රස්සාව කරන්න ඉන්ධන නැති වුණා. ඇතැම් මධ්‍යම පාන්තික ජනතාවට, නාගරික මහල් නිවාසවල ජනතාවට ගෑස් හිඟය නිසා කෑම ටික උයාගන්න බැරි වුණා. ව්‍යවසායකයාගේ බැංකු පොලිය වැඩි වුණා. තරුණයාට රැකියා සහ අනාගත බලාපොරොත්තු අහිමි වුණා. ශිෂ්‍යයාට පාසල් අධ්‍යාපනය, විශ්ව විද්‍යාල අධ්‍යාපනය අහිමි වුණා.

‘ගෝල්ෆේස් අරගලය’

මේ ආර්ථික සහ දේශපාලන අර්බුදය විසින් අපේ මුළුමහත් සමාජයම ප්‍රශ්න රාශියක් හේතුවෙන් අකර්මණ්‍ය වන තත්වයට ඇදදැමුවා. මේ තත්ත්වය තුළ තමයි ‘ගෝල්ෆේස් අරගලය’ නමැති අරගලයක් ආරම්භ වන්නේ. ඉහත කී ජනතාවගේ සාධාරණ ප්‍රශ්න, දුක්ගැනවිලි ඔවුන් ප්‍රකාශ කළා. සාධාරණ ප්‍රශ්න තිබූ පිරිස් සංවිධානය කරන්න පටන් ගත්තා. මේ අරගලයට සහාය දීපු දසදහස් සංඛ්‍යාත මිනිස්සු ගෝල්ෆේස් ආවේ තමන්ගේ සාධාරණ ප්‍රශ්නවලට පිළිතුරු සොයාගෙන. ඔවුන්ට උවමනා වුණේ ඔවුන් මුහුණ දී තිබෙන අර්බුදයෙන් එළියට එන්න.

‘අරගලයේ ලයිසන් අයිතිකාරයෝ වුණු චණ්ඩි’

නමුත් දැන් ආරංචි වෙනවා, දෙමළ ඩයස්පෝරාවේ මුදල් මේ අරගලය සඳහා විශාල වශයෙන් වැය කරලා තිබෙනවා, කියා. කුස්සියේ හිටපු, තමන්ගේ දරුවන්ට කන්න දෙන්න බැරිව පාරට ආපු අම්මාට, පොහොර ටික නැතිව ආපු ගොවියාට නොවෙයි මේ මුදල් ලැබුණේ. ඉන්ධන නැතිව, මුහුදු ගිහින් මාළු ටික ගේන්න බැරිව හිටිය ධීවරයාට නොවෙයි මේ මුදල් ලැබුණේ. එහෙමනම් මේ මුදල් ලැබුණේ කාටද, කියලා අරගලයේ හිටපු නායකයෝ කියන්න ඕනේ. දෙමළ ඩයස්පෝරාව ඉතා පැහැදිලිව කියනවා, ‘අරගලයට අපි මුදල් දුන්නා’ කියා. කටාර්වලින්, සෞදිවලින් මුදල් ලැබුණා, කියා ඔවුන් පැහැදිලිව පවසනවා. අරගලය තමන්ගේ කරගන්න හදපු, අයිතිකාරයෝ වෙන්න හදපු, ලයිසන් අයිතිකාරයෝ වුණු චණ්ඩීන් හිටියා. අද එකෙක් කට ඇරලා කියන්නේ නැහැ ‘අපට එහෙම කවුරුත් සල්ලි දුන්නෙ නැහැ’ කියා.

ජවිපෙ ‘මුළුමහත් අරගලයම අපේ’ කිව්වා.

එදා අනුර දිසානායක කීවා, ‘අපේ සමාජවාදී කලා සංගමය, සමාජවාදී තරුණ සංගමය තමයි අරගලයේ ඉදිරියෙන්ම ඉන්නේ. ශිෂ්‍ය සංගමය, කාන්තා සංගමය ඒ සියල්ලමත් ඉන්නවා’ කියා. ‘මුළුමහත් අරගලයම අපේ’ කිව්වා. මුළුමහත් අරගලයම තමන්ගේ වුණාට ඩයස්පෝරාව ‘අරගලයට අපේ මුදල් ආවා’ කියද්දී, ‘අපට මුදල් ආවේ නැහැ’ කියා ඒක ජනතා විමුක්ති පෙරමුණේ අනුර දිසානායකලා ප්‍රතික්ෂේප කරනවා අපි දුටුවේ නැහැ. අරගලයේ ‘ඉස්සරහම’ හිටියේ ජවිපෙ නම් ඔවුන්ට තමයි ඩයස්පෝරාවෙන්, සෞදියෙන්, කටාර්වලින් මුදල් එන්න ඕනේ. පෙරටුගාමීන් කීවා,’අපි තමයි අරගලයේ පෙරටුගාමී භූමිකාව ඉටු කරන්නේ’ කියා. ඔවුන් මොකක්ද අද මේ චෝදනාව ගැන කියන්නේ. ඒ නිසා ඉතාම පැහැදිලියි, මේ අහිංසක මිනිස්සුන්ගේ ජීවත්වීමේ අර්බුදය ගසාකාලා ඩයස්පොරාවේ සල්ලි, සෞදි, කටාර් සල්ලි ලබාගෙන යහතින් වැජඹුණු පිරිසක් ඉඳලා තිබෙනවා, ඒ මිනිස්සුන්ගේ දුක, වේදනාව, ආවේගය පාවිච්චි කරලා ජීවත් වුණු පිරිසක් ඉන්නවා, කියා, ඔවුන් මේ පිළිබඳව මේ රටේ මහජනයාට උත්තර බඳින්න ඕනේ.

ජනාධිපති පරික්ෂණ කොමිෂන් සභාවක්

අපේ රටේ තිබුණු ආපදා තත්ත්වය යොදා ගනිමින්, රාජ්‍යය අස්ථාවර කිරීම සඳහා කරපු ඒ මැදිහත්වීම පිළිබඳව විධිමත් පරීක්ෂණයක් සිදු විය යුතුයි, ඒ සඳහා ජනාධිපති පරික්ෂණ කොමිෂන් සභාවක් පත් කළ යුතුයි, කියා අප විශ්වාස කරනවා. අපි දන්නවා යුක්‍රේනයේත් මෙවැනි අරගලයක් ක්‍රියාත්මක වුණා. නමුත් එය ‘මයිදාන් පාක්’ එක තුළ පමණයි ක්‍රියාත්මක වුණේ. මාස ගණනක් පැවති එම අරගලයේදී ඒ රටේ අපරාධ නීතිය උල්ලංඝනය කළේ නැහැ. ඉන්දියාවේ ගොවීන්ගේ අරගලයත් මාස ගණනක් ක්‍රියාත්මක වුණා. නමුත් ඒ රටේ නීතිය උල්ලංඝනය කළේ නැහැ. නමුත් අපේ රටේදී රාජ්‍යයේ මර්මස්ථානවලට පවා කඩාවැදීමෙන්.දණ්ඩ නීති සංග්‍රහය, අපරාධ නඩු විධාන සංග්‍රහය ඇතුළු මුළුමහත් නීති පද්ධතියම උල්ලංඝනය කර තිබෙනවා, ඒ නිසා මේ අරගලය පිටුපස තිබුණු ‘බළල් අත්’ පිළිබඳව, ලැබුණු මුදල් පිළිබඳව ඇත්ත කරුණු සොයා ගන්න ජනතාවට අයිතියක් තිබෙනවා. විශේෂයෙන් අරගලයට තමන්ගේ බඩගින්න ගැන හෝ සමාජ වෙනසක් ගැන හෝ හිතලා ස්වෙච්ඡාවෙන් ආපු මිනිස්සුන්ට අයිතියක් තිබෙනවා මේ ගැන දැනගන්න. ඒ නිසා අපි විශ්වාස කරනවා වහාම ‘ජනාධිපති විමර්ශන කොමිසමක් පත් කළ යුතුයි’ කියා. අපි දන්නවා, ශ්‍රී ලංකා නීතිඥ සංගමයට, USAID එකෙන්, NED එකෙන් මුදල් ලැබී තිබෙනවා, කියා. කිවිසුමක් ගියත් නිවේදන නිකුත් කරන සාලිය පීරිස්ලා මේ ගැන වචනයක්වත් කියලා නැහැ. ඇත්ත තොරතුරු දැනගැනීමට ඇති ජනතා අයිතියට ගරු කරලා, මේ සියල්ල පිළිබඳව පැහැදිලි විමර්ශනයක් කිරීමට ජනාධිපති විමර්ශන කොමිසමක් පත් කළ යුතුයි.

මළගිය ඇතැම් දේශපාලන පක්ෂ කලබල වුණාට, තම ප්‍රශ්නවලට උත්තර රැගෙන එන අපේ නව දේශපාලන ව්‍යාපාරය ජනතාව ආදරයෙන් වැළඳ ගනීවි, කියා අප විශ්වාස කරනවා”

ඒ වගේම ජාතික නිදහස් පෙරමුණ ඇතුළු ස්වාධීන පක්ෂ එකමුතුවේ නව සන්ධානය ජනගත කිරීම ලබන සැප්තැම්බර් 04 වැනිදා සිදුකිරීමට නියමිතයි. ඒකට මළගිය දේශපාලන පක්ෂ කලබල වෙලා. මිනියක් ළග තියාගෙන අඬන දොඩන අය, මිනියක් ළඟ තියාගෙන බූරු ගහන අය මේ කවුරුත් දන්නවා, මේ මිනියට පණ එන්නෙ නැහැ, කියා. ඒ වගේ දේශපාලන පක්ෂත් අපේ රටේ තිබෙනවා. ඒවා මළගිය දේශපාලන පක්ෂ, ඒවාට පණ එන්නේ නැහැ. දැන් සමහරු උත්සාහ කරනවා, මාධ්‍ය සාකච්ඡා තියලා ‘ඒ මිනියට යළි පණ දෙන්න’ ඒක ඔවුන්ගේ හිතළුවක් පමණයි. මේ රටේ ජනතාවට අද අවශ්‍යව ඇත්තේ දේශපාලන පක්ෂයක උවමනාව නොවෙයි. මේ තිබෙන ප්‍රශ්නවලට උත්තර හොයන දේශපාලන ව්‍යාපාරයක්. සාම්ප්‍රදායික මාර්ගවලින් බැහැරව ගිහිල්ලා සැබෑ විකල්ප මාර්ගයකින් තම ප්‍රශ්නවලට උත්තර ලබා දෙන තෙක් තමයි ජනතාව බලා ඉන්නේ. ප්‍රශ්න වමාරන දේශපාලන පක්ෂ ඕනෑ තරම් තිබෙනවා. හන්දියක් ගානේ රැස්වීම් තියලා ප්‍රශ්න විතරක් කතා කරන දේශපාලන පක්ෂ තිබෙනවා. අපි අභියෝග කරනවා, එක ප්‍රශ්නයකට උත්තරයක් කියන්න, කියලා.

ඔබ දන්නවා අපි විපක්ෂයේ හිටියත් විමල් වීරවංශ මන්ත්‍රීතුමා, ඉන්ධන අර්බුදය සම්බන්ධයෙන් මේ රටේ ජනතාවට විශ්වාසනීය උත්තරයක් හොයලා දුන්නා, කියා. මේ ආණ්ඩුවයි, නිලධාරීතන්ත්‍රයයි මේක පස්සට අදිමින් ගියත් විමල් වීරවංශ මන්ත්‍රීතුමා ලෝක වෙළඳපොළේ මිලට වඩා 35%ක් අඩුවෙන් රුසියාවේ තෙල් ගන්න මාර්ගයක් අද සොයා දීලා තිබෙනවා. අපි ප්‍රශ්න දිහා බැලුවේ ප්‍රශ්න වවාගෙන කන මිනිස්සු විදිහට නොවෙයි, ප්‍රශ්නවලට උත්තර හොයන මිනිස්සු විදිහට. ඒ නිසා අපි බිහි කරන දේශපාලන ව්‍යාපාරයත් ජනතා ප්‍රශ්නවලට උත්තර හොයන දේශපාලන ව්‍යාපාරයක්. ඒ නිසා ‘මිනිය වටේ හඬමින් ඉන්න අය’ ප්‍රහාර එල්ල කරන්න හැදුවාට මේ රටේ මිනිස්සු තමන්ගේ ප්‍රශ්නවලට උත්තර හොයන මේ දේශපාලන ව්‍යාපාරය ආදරයෙන් වැළඳ ගනීවි, කියා අපි විශ්වාස කරනවා.”

ජූලි 09 වනදා සිද්ධීන්ට සම්බන්ධ විශාල පිරිසක් අත්අඩංගුවට

August 22nd, 2022

 Lanka Lead News

බස්නාහිර පළාත් ජ්‍යෙෂ්ඨ නියෝජ්‍ය පොලිස්පති දේශබන්දු තෙන්නකෝන් මහතාට පහරදීමේ සිද්ධිය සම්බන්ධයෙන් අත්අඩංගුවට ගත් සැකකරුවන් 8 දෙනා අධිකරණය හමුවේ වරද පිළිගැනීමෙන් අනතුරුව ඇප මත මුදාහැර ඇති බව වාර්තාවේ.

මේ අතර ජනාධිපති මන්දිරයට බලහත්කාරයෙන් ඇතුළු වූ බවට චෝදනා එල්ල වූ රංගන ශිල්පී ජෙහාන් අප්පුහාමි කොටුව මහේස්ත්‍රාත් අධිකරණයට භාර වී ඇති අතර ඔහුට රුපියල් ලක්ෂ පහක ශරීර ඇපයක් මත ඇප ලැබුනු බව අප වාර්තාකරුවෝ පවසති.

ජුලි 09 වැනිදා අරලියගහ මන්දිරයට සහ ජනාධිපති කාර්යාලයට බලහත්කාරයෙන් ඇතුළුවීම, අමාත්‍යවරුන්ගේ නිවෙස්වලට ගිනි තැබීම ඇතුළු දේපළ සොරකම් කිරීමේ සිද්ධීන් සම්බන්ධයෙන් භික්ෂූන් වහන්සේ නමක් ඇතුළු 8 දෙනෙකු මේ වන විට අත්අඩංගුවට ගෙන ඇති බව පොලිස් ආරංචි මාර්ග පවසයි.

මෙම පිරිස කොළඹ පෝට් සිටි වැඩබිමේදී සහ පොතුහැර සහ නුගේගොඩ ප්‍රදේශයේදී අත්අඩංගුවට ගත් බව පොලිසිය වැඩිදුරටත් පවසයි.

අත්අඩංගුවට ගත් 24 හැවිරිදි භික්ෂුන් හිමි නම පොතුහැර ප්‍රදේශයේ පිහිටි බෞද්ධ විහාරස්ථානයක වැඩ වාසය කරන බවත්, කොළඹ වරාය නගරයේ සේවය කරන 26 හැවිරිදි පුද්ගලයා ඕපනායක ප්‍රදේශයේ පදිංචිකරුවෙක් බවත් අනාවරණය වී තිබේ.

නුගේගොඩ කොට්ඨාශ අපරාධ විමර්ශන ඒකකය විසින් ගොතටුව ප්‍රදේශයේදී 53 හැවිරිදි කාන්තාවක් අත්අඩංගුවට ගත් බවද වාර්තාවේ.

මීට අමතරව, අරලියගහ මන්දිරයේ දේපළ සොරකම් කිරීමේ සිද්ධියට අදාළව වැලිකඩ බණ්ඩාරනායකපුර ප්‍රදේශයේදී 60 හැවිරිදි තවත් සැකකරුවෙකු අත්අඩංගුවට ගෙන ඇති බවද පොලිස් ආරංචි මාර්ග පවසයි.

සැකකරු සන්තකයේ තිබී අරලියගහ මන්දිරයේ දී සොරකම් කරන ලද විසිතුරු පිත්තල කැබලි හතක් සහ විශාල ප්‍රමාණයේ ගමන් මල්ලක් ද සොයාගත් බව පොලිසිය පවසයි.

මේ අතර, ජුලි 13 වැනිදා පොල්දූව මංසන්ධියේ පැවති විරෝධතා ව්‍යාපාරය සඳහා නීතිවිරෝධී ලෙස පිරිස් එක්රැස් කළ බවට සැක කෙරෙන 38 හැවිරිදි පුද්ගලයෙකු සහ ඇඳිරි නීතිය පනවා තිබූ කාලය තුළ නීති විරෝධී උද්ඝෝෂණයක සාමාජිකයෙකු ලෙස කටයුතු කළ 42 හැවිරිදි තවත් අයෙක්ද කොහිලවත්ත ප්‍රදේශයේදී අත්අඩංගුවට ගෙන ඇත.

පාර්ලිමේන්තු මන්ත්‍රී ගාමිණී ලොකුගේ මහතාගේ නිවසට ජුලි 09 වැනිදා , වාහන දෙකක් සහ නිවසට ගිනි තැබීමේ සිද්ධීන් සම්බන්ධයෙන් අවශ්‍යව සිටි 39 හැවිරිදි සැකකරුවකුද පිළියන්දල ප්‍රදේශයේදී අත්අඩංගුවටගෙන අති බව පොලිස් ආරංචි මාර්ග පවසයි.

මීට අමතරව පාර්ලිමේන්තු මන්ත්‍රී විමල් වීරවංශ මහතාගේ නිවසට ගිනි තබා දේපළවලට හානි කිරීමේ සිද්ධිය සම්බන්ධයෙන් 18 හැවිරිදි තවත් සැකකරුවෙකු හෝකන්දර ප්‍රදේශයේදී අත්අඩංගුවට ගනු ලැබු බවද පොලිසිය පවසයි.

පසුගිය මැයි මස 9 වැනිදා කොල්ලුපිටියේදී බස් රථයක ගමන් ගත් පිරිසක් නවතා එහි සිටි අම්බලන්ගොඩ ප්‍රාදේශීය සභා මන්ත්‍රීවරයෙකුට පහරදී ඔහු බේරේ වැවට තල්ලු කිරීමේ සිද්ධියකට අදාළව 34 හැවිරිදි පුද්ගලයෙකු ද අත්අඩංගුවට ගත් බවද වාර්තාවේ.

අත්අඩංගුවට ගත් සියලු සැකකරුවන් අදාළ අධිකරණවලට ඉදිරිපත් කරන බව පොලිස් මූලස්ථානය පවසයි.

Sri Lankan President Wickremesinghe calls Rajapaksa to facilitate his return: Reports

August 22nd, 2022

Courtesy One India

Sri Lankan President Ranil Wickremesinghe has reached out to his predecessor Gotabaya Rajapaksa to finalise arrangements and facilitate his return to the crisis-hit country, a media report said on Monday. Rajapaksa, 73, fled the country and resigned last month in the face of a popular uprising against his government for mismanaging the island nation’s economy.

Rajapaksa, 73, fled the country and resigned last month in the face of a popular uprising against his government for mismanaging the island nation’s economy.

Read more at: https://www.oneindia.com/international/sri-lankan-president-wickremesinghe-calls-rajapaksa-to-facilitate-his-return-reports-3451558.html

Is nuclear power appropriate for Sri Lanka?

August 22nd, 2022

By P.K. Balachandran Courtesy Ceylon Today

In his address to the Advocata Institute in Colombo, earlier this month, President Ranil Wickremesinghe said:I think we need to seriously consider getting a report on using nuclear energy in Sri Lanka.”In the current context of national penury, any plan to go for nuclear energy will seem far-fetched, even impossible. But considering the expansion of Sri Lanka’s energy needs in the years to come, and also considering the need to meet the challenges posed by climate change, working on the nuclear energy option is worth ‘serious’ consideration, as the President put it.  

Using nuclear energy is not a new idea in Sri Lanka. It was mooted way back in 1969. But, it took time to take any shape. Years later in 2010, addressing the 54th General Conference of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in Vienna, the then Minister of Power and Energy, Patali Champika Ranawaka said Sri Lanka had incorporated nuclear power in the country’s energy mix. The Atomic Energy Authority of Sri Lanka (AEASL) was in the process of training people in nuclear energy, he said.

The AEASL was tasked to conduct a pre-feasibility study of nuclear energy as a viable option beyond 2020 for power generation. The Sri Lanka Atomic Energy Act, No. 40 was passed in 2014.

In April 2022, an IAEA team of experts concluded a six-day mission to Sri Lanka to review the country’s nuclear infrastructure development. Team leader Jose Bastos said, Sri Lanka needed to further develop the required human resources.

Researchers’ Findings 

In 2018, Mahesh N. Jayakody and Jeysingam Jeyasugiththan of Colombo University and Prasad Mahakumara of the Government, published a Paper on the suitability of nuclear power plants for Sri Lanka. They recommended a mixture of fossil fuel, renewable sources, and nuclear plants for power generation. The installation cost of nuclear plants would be high and disposing of nuclear waste would be challenging,but nuclear plants are marked by low maintenance costs and a minimum adverse environmental impact, they argued.

In the long run, nuclear energy would work out to be cheaper, they said. These researchers recommended the VVER-1000 and the AP-1000 models based on Pressurised Water Technology (PWR) as suitable for Sri Lanka. 

Favourable International Experience 

Nuclear plants are a reality in South Asia. India has 22 reactors, Pakistan six, and Bangladesh is building two.According to the website of Physics World, France gets over 80 per cent of its electricity from fission reactors. But Australia, Portugal, and Norway have no commercial reactors. Germany, which wanted to decommission its three surviving nuclear reactors by year-end, is likely to keep them going, as there is a serious energy crisis with coal and gas ceasing to come from Russia.

According to a report of the US Nuclear Energy Agency (NEA), nuclear power is the largest source of low-carbon electricity in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries.

Supported by robust technical evidence and growing operating experience, many countries are already taking advantage of nuclear Long-Term Operation (LTO) to meet their climate goals in a cost-effective manner, while enhancing the security of electricity supply by 2050,” the NEA report says.

A US Office of Nuclear Energy report of 2021 says nuclear plants have the highest ‘capacity factor’ (maximum capacity) compared to any other energy source.Nuclear plants are producing maximum power more than 92 per cent of the time during the year. That’s about nearly two times more than natural gas and coal units, and are almost three times or more reliable than wind and solar plants.”

According to Physics World, it would be incorrect to claim that large amounts of energy (generating greenhouse gases) would be required to mine, process, and enrich uranium, and to construct and later decommission nuclear power stations.

This simply ignores a wealth of realworld data. Authoritative and independently verified whole-of-life-cycle analyses in peer-reviewed journals have repeatedly shown that energy inputs to nuclear power are as low as, or lower than, wind, hydro, and solar thermal, and less than half those of solar photovoltaic panels,” Physics World said.

According to the report of the US Office of Nuclear Energy, nuclear power plants require less maintenance and are designed to operate for longer stretches before refuelling (typically every 1.5 or 2 years).

Natural gas and coal capacity factors are generally lower due to routine maintenance and/or refuelling at these facilities. Renewable plants are considered intermittent or variable sources and are mostly limited by a lack of fuel (that is, wind, sun, or water). As a result, these plants need a backup power source such as large-scale storage (not currently available at grid-scale)—or they can be paired with a reliable baseload power like nuclear energy,” the report said.

Many claim that renewable energy sources such as solar and wind along with reduced use of fossil fuels would be enough to meet the climate change challenge. It is also said the world might run out of uranium, the raw material for nuclear power plants. This is debunked by Physics World.

Uranium and thorium are both more abundant than tin; and with the new generation of fast-breeder and thorium reactors, we would have abundant nuclear energy for millions of years. Yet, even if the resources lasted a mere 1,000 years, we would have ample time to develop exotic new future energy sources,” it says. 

Accidents

However, the biggest problem that a nuclear energy programme might face in Sri Lanka is the people’s perception that nuclear plants are accident-prone and dangerous, given the memory of the Chornobyl, Fukushima and Three Mile accidents. The fear of nuclear waste poses a threat is also palpable. But the authors of the Sri Lankan research paper quoted earlier, maintain that the evolution of nuclear power plant technologies has made reactors very safe and protected from human error.

The utilisation of self-regulating backup systems, the optimum design of the power plant and adoption of a rigorous programme for quality assurance are some of the key features used in modern nuclear power plants to ensure safety,” they point out.

Addressing this issue, Physics World says that the Chornobyl accident does not mean that the technology is inherently dangerous.Nuclear power is hundreds of times safer than coal, gas, and oil that countries currently rely on. A study of 4,290 energy-related accidents by the European Commission’s ExternE research project for example, found that oil kills 36 workers per terawatt-hour, (a terawatt hour is a unit of energy used for expressing the amount of produced energy, electricity and heat. 1 TWh = 1,000,000 MWh). In contrast, coal kills 25 and hydro, wind, solar, and nuclear kill fewer than 0.2 per terawatt-hour.”

Issue of Nuclear Waste

On the danger from nuclear waste, there is a widely-held belief that nuclear waste would have to be managed for thousands of years. But www.world-nuclear.org says: The amount of waste generated by nuclear power is very small relative to other thermal electricity generation technologies; nuclear waste is neither particularly hazardous nor hard to manage relative to other toxic industrial waste; and lastly, methods for the final disposal of high-level radioactive waste are technically proven. The international consensus is that geological disposal is the best option.”

Further: In over 50 years of civil nuclear power experience, the management and disposal of civil nuclear waste has not caused any serious health or environmental problems, nor posed any real risk to the general public. Alternatives for power generation are not without challenges, and their undesirable by-products are generally not well controlled.”

By P.K. Balachandran

කොළඹට එන විදුලි බස් …

August 22nd, 2022

Courtesy Adaderana

Police seek assistance to identify suspects who stormed PM’s Office

August 22nd, 2022

Courtesy Adaderana

Sri Lanka Police has sought public assistance to identify several persons who are accused of entering the Prime Minister’s Office and damaging its property on July 13. 

It said the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) is carrying out the investigations regarding the incident of several persons forcibly entering the Prime Minister’s Office and damaging its property on July 13. 

Accordingly, any information on the persons in the photographs below can be conveyed through the following phone numbers or through WhatsApp:

0718594924, 0718594950 or 0718594901

See photographs released by the police below:

Sri Lanka expecting IMF funding by year-end if all goes to plan: CBSL chief

August 22nd, 2022

Courtesy Adaderana

Sri Lanka’s Central Bank Governor Dr. Nandalal Weerasinghe says the International Monetary Fund’s disbursement of the Extended Fund Facility to Sri Lanka can be expected by the end of the year, subject to the success of debt restructuring with creditors and successful negotiations with the IMF.

Speaking on Bloomberg Television, the Governor also discussed inflation in Sri Lanka, monetary policy and the country’s domestic debt. 

Asked whether he can give the IMF assurances that Sri Lanka’s debt is sustainable without restructuring domestic debt, he said: This is exactly what we are discussing with the IMF.”

First part is to reach a staff-level agreement on the overall macro fiscal policy framework for the next 3-4 years and the medium-term framework, that we are coming closer to reaching an agreement on a macro fiscal framework.”  

The second part is for us to agree and negotiate with the debt targets for us to make our medium to long term debt sustainable. We are in the process of having this discussion. Only after that basically what we can say where the debt targets we have to meet.”

He said that they are currently discussing with the IMF and that they hope to reach that agreement as well. Then only we will approach the creditors,” he said.

In term of domestic debt, we are restructuring our position as I mentioned earlier that remains as we announced on 12th of April; we would like restructure only external debt and if we touch domestic debt now that will have a significant impact on our banking sector. That will not help any even the external creditors in terms of recovery of the economy.” 

We need to have a stable banking system. That is why our position as we announced earlier remains. That this is a balance of payment crisis. We want to restructure our external debt because of the balance of payment situation and our ability meet external debt service payments. We don’t see a problem with us meeting the domestic debt targets. So, this is why we think we can manage that situation without touching domestic debt.”

Dr. Weerasinghe was also asked when does he think the country will get that funding, realistically, if all goes to plan.

This is where we think….. for an example now once we reach the staff-level agreement, then the timeline is set. Then we have to approach all our external creditors and start negotiating and discussing in good faith for us to obtain a relief on the debt service payments.” 

For that we need what they call ‘financial assurance’ from our external creditors. We think next about 3-4 months, hopefully if all goes well, if all external creditors are cooperating with the Sri Lankan government’s debt management strategy, then hoping that we would be able to get financial assurance  somewhere is December, so the IMF  can submit our paper to the executive board so that disbursing the Extended Fund Facility towards end of this year.” 

That is our timeline that we would like to basically implement. That all depends on how we got the support from the external creditors and how the negotiation process is going on. So, this uncertainty is there so hopefully all will be supporting us,” the central bank chief said.

In fact, we have not officially approached the creditors through our advisers yet. That will only happen after we reach a staff-level agreement with the IMF. Probably next month,” he added.

Asked whether the foreign exchange crisis is over in Sri Lanka, he said: Yes, I think we can see the situation is much easing. And even without any bridging financing now we can manage the requirement for essential imports with higher exports and curtailing imports. And we are managing the situation much better than what we had earlier. So, going forward we can manage the forex situation much better. We can see stabilizing in currency.”

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CLIMACTERIC OF GOVERNMENT ENTERPRISES MANAGEMENT IN SRI LANKA

August 21st, 2022

BY EDWARD THEOPHILUS

Public sector investments from 1956 to 1977 had a tremendous growth, the major reason for the increasing trend was the political pressure towards the elected governments from public and trade unions while restrictions for private investment have been decreed by the government. Investment role and ownership patterns have been misinterpreted by Marxist political parties stressing more government investments in the country. After 1956, the government nationalized several private investments emphasising and giving a public feeling that the role of investment was the job of the government.  

Left political parties and associated trade unions were misleading people forcing the government to take the entire responsibility for investments in the country. In this situation, Governments did not provide comfort for private investors. Misguided information from left political parties forced the government to take additional responsibility, and trade unions’ pressure forced the responsibility for investments to be taken by the government.  The policy framework was reluctant to give investment responsibility to private investors. Now president Wickramasinghe openly states that the restructuring of public enterprises must need to get away from the current economic crisis and this view has been in the country for more than three decades, but the Rajapaksa administration used the view as a beggar’s wound to stay in power.

When left political parties and trade unions pressure the government the vital factor was how to find capital for investment the predicament of the government to find capital was disregarded many times insisted to borrow and the pressuring groups also intended to tax the private entrepreneurs. The negative impact of such action did not consider the awkwardness of the government. Ideologically, there was a conflict when reducing private investments and how to find sufficient capital taxing private investors. The only role of the government was not investing in business enterprises and spending on other government services such as health, education, defence and foreign services should have been considered in addition to investments.    

The misleading views of left political parties and trade unions launched the country to further difficulties and the Rajapaksa regime used the misleading views to stay in power. The policy framework was not a positive environment for private investors and the government had to take entire responsibility for investments without sufficient resources. After 1960, the government permitted domestic investors in various areas where many successful entrepreneurs originated and the trend was disturbed by the political union of SLFP, LSSP and CP. The investment trend was disturbed by this political union, which had no clear views on how to find capital for investment. Several private investments were nationalized giving a bad example for the private investments and a higher level of political risk for domestic and foreign private investors.

Trade unions and the misguided public had deluded views on investments and pushed for public investment without a clear understanding of investment management and finding working capital. Investment policies of the government should have a closer association with a macroeconomic policy of controlling the total population to less than 15 million including all ethnic communities. This vision was not successful and there was a huge gap between investment and the increasing rate of population. Geometric growth of the population created many macroeconomic problems relating to unemployment and others in the country. The major difference in growth between Sri Lanka and Singapore was this factor and the government did not adopt proper policies to overcome the problem relating to population growth now it has increased to 22 million and people are encouraged to go overseas for making money.     

The best solution to the climacteric of government enterprise management in the current environment is to privatise public enterprises (Restructure) including government banks and balance the government budget with the repayment of debts with an agreement of bondholders, then the government can achieve an excess budget, which supports improving the foreign value of a local currency and gradually builds healthy foreign reserves, which means the total value of reserves to the US $ 25 billion.

Sri Lanka has been given good policy advice by international donors and such advice has been disregarded by the misguided policy framework of the government and dishonest motives of politicians and bureaucrats, the public sector has been relegated to a climacteric environment by disregarding good advice.  When considering this line, the current crisis in Sri Lanka could consider it is created by humans than the international situation after Covid 19. Politicians and bureaucrats should have educated people that public investments need to be privatized and the economic responsibilities must share between the public and private sectors.   

Many politicians in the country have dishonest motives, for example, the family members of the Rajapaksa have been using political power to achieve individual aims than the requirements of the country.  When there are dishonest politicians who blindly support corrupt practices the climacteric of government business management would be natural.

The most important requirement at present is government should get away from business management and give the responsibility to capable private sector individuals and organizations they may be local or overseas. The selling of public enterprises should be in dollars which injects dollars fund into the economy.  In the late 1980s and 1990s, many Western countries associated with this policy action, although Sri Lanka initiated a market economic system in 1978, it failed mainly to indiscipline and dishonesty in the government management.

The international environment has secretly influenced Sri Lanka since 1948 for the policymaking process. The international environment regards as America and capitalist group and Russia as the leading socialist group.         

RUMBLE EXCLUSIVE: Sri Lanka Protest Leader Caught Lying about US Funding

August 21st, 2022

rumble.com

RUMBLE EXCLUSIVE: Sri Lanka Protest Leader Caught Lying about US Funding

Whose Grain Is Being Shipped from Ukraine? America’s GMO Agribusiness Giants to Take Control of Ukraine Farmland

August 21st, 2022

By F. William Engdahl Global Research, August 19, 2022

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A great humanitarian uproar in recent weeks demanding the safe shipping of Ukrainian grain to ease a hunger crisis in Africa and elsewhere is deceptive on many levels.

Not the least is who owns the land on which the grain is grown and whether that grain is actually illegal GMO patented corn and other grains. A corrupt Zelenskyy regime has quietly made deals with the major GMO agribusiness companies in the West who have been stealthily taking control of some of the world’s most productive black earth” farmland.

The 2014 CIA Coup

In February 2014 a US Government-backed coup d’etat forced the elected president of Ukraine to flee for his life to Russia. In December 2013 President Viktor Yanukovych had announced following months of debate that Ukraine would join the Russian Eurasian Economic Union on promise of a $15 billion Russian purchase of Ukraine state debt and 33% reduction in cost of imported Russian gas.

The competing offer had been a paltry associate membership” in the EU tied to Ukraine acceptance of a draconian IMF and World Bank loan package that would force the privatization of Ukraine’s invaluable agriculture land, allow planting GMO crops, as well as imposing severe pension cuts and social austerity. In return for a $17 billion IMF loan, Ukraine would also have to raise personal income taxes by as much as 66% and to pay 50% more for natural gas. Workers would have to work ten years longer to get pensions. The aim was to open Ukraine to foreign investment.” The usual IMF rape of the economy on behalf of globalist corporate interests.

A key provision of the US and IMF demands on the post-coup government of US-picked Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk , a leader of the CIA-backed Maiden protests against Yanukovych, was to finally open Ukraine’s rich agriculture land to foreign Agribusiness giants, above all GMO giants including Monsanto and DuPont. Three of the Yatsenyuk cabinet , including the key Finance and Economy ministers, were foreign nationals, dictated to Kiev by the US State Department’s Victoria Nuland and then-Vice President Joe Biden. The Washington-imposed IMF loan conditions required that Ukraine also reverse its ban on genetically engineered crops, and enable private corporations like Monsanto to plant its GMO seeds and spray the fields with Monsanto’s Roundup.

Since Ukraine declared independence from the Soviet Union in 1991, keeping control of Ukraine’s precious black earth” land has been one of the most heated issues in national politics. Recent polls show 79% of Ukrainians want to retin control of their land from foreign takeover. Ukraine, as southern Russia, is home to valuable black earth or chernozems, a dark, humus-rich soil that is very productive and needs little artificial fertilizer.

2001 Moratorium

A 2001 Ukraine law imposed a moratorium on private sale of farmland to larger companies or foreign investors. The moratorium was to halt buy up by corrupt Ukrainian oligarchs and their leasing to foreign agribusiness of the rich farmlands. By then Monsanto and other Western agribusiness had made significant inroads into Ukraine.

Ukraine: Land Privatization Demanded by IMF, Links to Biden Graft Scandal. Engineered Bankruptcy of National Economy

When Ukraine left the Soviet Union in 1991, farmers who had worked on the Soviet collective farms were each given small plots of the land. To prevent sale of the plots to hungry foreign agribusiness, the 2001 moratorium was voted. Seven million Ukrainian farmers owned small plots totaling some 79 million acres. The remaining 25 million acres were owned by the state. Cultivation of GMO crops was strictly illegal.

Despite the moratorium, Monsato, DuPont, Cargill and other Western GMO purveyors secretly and illegally began spreading their patented GMO seeds in the black earth of Ukraine. Small landowners would lease their land to large Ukrainian oligarchs, who in turn would enter secret agreements with Monsanto and others to plant GMO corn and soybeans. By the end of 2016 according to a now-deleted US Department of Agriculture report, about 80% of Ukraine’s soybeans, and 10% of corn, were grown illegally from genetically modified seed. The Zelenskyy 2021 law has allowed this open door to GMO to be vastly expanded.

Enter the Comedian

In May 2019 Volodymyr Zelenskyy, a Ukrainian TV comedian, a protégé of notoriously corrupt Ukraine oligarch, Igor Kolomoisky, was elected President in a tragic popular revolt against government corruption.” One of Zelenskyy’s first acts in 2019 was to try to overturn the 2001 land moratorium. Farmers and citizens staged huge protests throughout 2020 to block the changes proposed by Zelenskyy.

Finally, taking advantage of the covid lockdown restrictions and bans on public protests, in May 2021 Zelenskyy signed Bill No. 2194, deregulating land, calling it the key” to the farmland market.” He was right. In a sneaky move to calm farmer opposition, Zelensky claimed the new law allows only Ukrainian citizens to buy or sell the valuable farmland in the first few years. He did not mention the huge loophole allowing foreign-owned companies like Monsanto (today part of Bayer AG) or DuPont (now Corteva), or other companies which have been operating in Ukraine more than three years, to also buy the desired land.

The 2021 law also gave ownership to notoriously corrupt municipal and village governments who can change the land purpose. After January 2024 Ukraine citizens as well as corporations can buy up to 10,000 hectares of land. And an April, 2021 amendment to the land market law– On Amendments to the Land Code of Ukraine and other Legislative Acts concerning the improvement of the management system and deregulation in the field of land relations”– opened another huge loophole for foreign agribusiness to take control of the rich Ukraine black earth. The amendment circumvents the ban on sale of land to foreigners by changing the purpose of the land, say from cropland to commercial land. Then it can be sold to anyone, including foreigners who can in turn repurpose it to farmland. Zelenskyy signed the bill and went back on his campaign pledge to hold a national referendum on any change in land ownership.

Should there be any doubt as to interest of US GMO-linked agribusiness in grabbing Ukraine prime farmland, a look at the current Board of Directors of the US-Ukraine Business Council is instructive. It includes the largest private grain and agribusiness giant in the world, Cargill. It includes Monsanto/Bayer which owns patented GMO seeds and the deadly pesticide, Roundup. It includes Corteva, the huge GMO fusion of DuPont and Dow Chemicals. It includes fellow grain cartel giants Bunge and Louis Dreyfus. It includes the major farm equipment maker John Deere.

These were the powerful agribusiness corporations reportedly behind Zelenskyy’s betrayal of his election promise.

With Bayer/Monsanto, Corteva and Cargill already controlling a reported 16.7 million hectares of prime Ukraine black earth farmland, and with a de facto bribe from the IMF and World Bank, Zelenskyy’s government caved in and sold out. The result will be very bad for the future of what was until recently the breadbasket of Europe.” With Ukraine now being pried open by the GMO cartel companies, it leaves only Russia which banned GMO crops in 2016 as the only major world grain supplier without GMO. The EU is reportedly working on a new law that would overturn the long-established critical approval process for GMO crops and open the floodgates there to the GMO takeover.

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F. William Engdahl is strategic risk consultant and lecturer, he holds a degree in politics from Princeton University and is a best-selling author on oil and geopolitics, exclusively for the online magazine New Eastern Outlook” where this article was originally published.

He is a Research Associate of the Centre for Research on Globalization.

Featured image is from NEO


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