Is India Bangladesh’s True Friend And Well Wisher?

February 13th, 2022

Jubeda Chowdhury from Dhaka, Bangladesh

Is India Bangladesh’s  true friend and well wisher? It is a question of century. How India and Bangladesh can become a real friend in South Asia? India and Bangladesh can show the world how neighbouring countries can become all-weather friends. Bangladesh-India bilateral relations are a role model in the world in terms of relations among neighboring countries. They are deep and have evolved over time. India is seen as Bangladesh’s true friend.  

On December 6, 1971, India granted diplomatic recognition to Bangladesh as an independent and sovereign country. The same day, Bhutan recognized Bangladesh. India has stood by Bangladesh since the Liberation War started. It provided shelter and food to one crore refugees, training and arms to the freedom fighters and all assistance to the Bangladesh government-in-exile. After India’s recognition, Pakistan was quickly defeated in a joint offensive by the Mukti Bahini, the Bengali independence militia, and Indian forces on December 16. The date is very important for Bangladesh. 

This relationship has expanded in many different ways in a spirit of friendship, understanding and mutual respect. Under the visionary leaderships of Prime Ministers Narendra Modi of India and Sheikh Hasina of Bangladesh, the two countries have become partners in a “shonali adhyaya” (golden chapter).

Bangladesh celebrates the birth centenary of the Father of the Nation, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, and 50 years of independence. This year is also the 50th year of Bangladesh-India diplomatic relations. On December 6, for the first time, Bangladesh and India celebrated ‘Friendship Day’ in 16 countries.

Foundation of ties

Sheikh Mujibur Rahman and Indira Gandhi laid the foundation of bilateral relations through a 25-year Friendship Treaty in 1972, which his daughter, Sheikh Hasina has consolidated and diversified. Bangladesh has become an important partner of India due to its ‘Neighbours first’ policy

After the Treaty of Friendship, a trade agreement was signed in 1973 and the Mujib-Indira border agreement in 1974. After Mujibur Rahman’s assassination in 1975, social, political, economic and commercial relations between Bangladesh and India deteriorated. After 21 years, when the Awami League came to power, an atmosphere of trust and expectation was created again.

This led to the historic Ganges water agreement. After Sheikh Hasina returned to power in 2009, bilateral relations again improved. Since Modi took power in 2014, the two Prime Ministers have taken relations to a new height. The seven-year-old enclave exchange, maritime demarcation and other unresolved issues began to be resolved. 

Sheikh Hasina has reiterated her commitment to further strengthen the mutual ties. The anniversary has given us an opportunity, she said, to think about the basis of the bilateral relations and the way forward. Now it is necessary to focus on connectivity, trade, business and communications among the people. 

In a tweet on Friendship Day, Modi said: Together we are remembering and celebrating 50 years of friendship. I look forward to continuing to work with … Sheikh Hasina to broaden and deepen our ties.”

A year-long programme has been chalked out to celebrate the 50th anniversary of diplomatic relations. Bangabandhu-Bapu digital exhibitions are being held in different cities of the two countries. The two leaders unveiled stamps commemorating Bangladesh-India friendship. Exchange of visits of veterans of war, inspection of ships, sports events, and cultural and other programmes are being organized.  

Milestone year 

The last year was significant for Bangladesh and India. Modi visited Dhaka on March 26-27. Indian President Ram Nath Kovind will decorate the closing ceremony of Victory Day. Sheikh Hasina may be the Chief Guest on India’s Republic Day.  

Revolutionary changes have been made in the communication system of the two countries to make the economy dynamic. Dhaka, Kolkata and Khulna-Kolkata passenger train services and rail services for transporting goods from Chilhati in Nilphamari to Haldibari and Dhaka-Siliguri in West Bengal and Dhaka-Kolkata, Dhaka-Agartala, Dhaka-Siliguri-Darjeeling bus services have been introduced. In March, the Prime Ministers inaugurated the Sabroom Bridge over the Feni river, which connects Ramgarh in Khagrachari to Tripura. With the 1.9 km bridge, new business doors have been opened.  

Under the Protocol on Inland Water Transit and Trade (PIWTT) agreement, there are plans to connect the Sonamuri-Daudkandi route of the Gumti river and the waterway from Dhulia-Godagari to Aricha on the Padma. Cargo transportation activities have been started from Chittagong port to Tripura. But some pending issues such as the Teesta water-sharing issue and killings on the border should be resolved as soon as possible.  

India will provide training and technical assistance to Bangladesh through military experts.  India was the first country to provide free vaccines to Bangladesh to battle Covid-19. Amid a shortage, an Oxygen Express entered Bangladesh with 180 tonnes of oxygen. 

Sheikh Mujibur Rahman had said on February 8, 1972 in Calcutta: India-Bangladesh friendship will remain intact forever. No power in the world can separate it. Occasionally some anti-independence, fundamentalist forces try to destroy the relations between the two countries. But their efforts will not succeed. Because the basis of Bangladesh-India friendly relations is trust and confidence. This relationship is written in the blood through the great liberation war.”  India and Bangladesh can show the world how neighbouring countries can become all-weather friends.  

ලෝක සාමය යනු ප්‍රචණ්ඩත්වයෙන් තොර ලෝකය පිළිබඳ අදහසක් – අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය ආර්යා ශිරන්ති වික්‍රමසිංහ රාජපක්ෂ මහත්මිය

February 13th, 2022

අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය මාධ්‍ය අංශය

ලෝක සාමය යනු ප්‍රචණ්ඩත්වයෙන් තොර ලෝකය පිළිබඳ අදහසක් බව අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය ආර්යා ශිරන්ති රාජපක්ෂ මහත්මිය ලෝක සාම සමුළුව 2022 (කොරියානු අර්ධද්වීපයේ සාමය සඳහා වූ සමුළුව) අමතා ඊයේ (12) ප්‍රකාශ  කළාය.

විශ්ව සාම සම්මේලනයේ (UPF) ආරාධනාවකට අනුව වීඩියෝ තාක්ෂණය ඔස්සේ දකුණු කොරියාවේ සෝල් නුවර පැවැත්වෙන ‘‘ලෝක සාම සමුළුව 2022’’ ට එක්වෙමින් අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය ආර්යාව මේ බව අවධාරණය කළාය.

දින තුනක් පුරා පැවැත්වෙන මෙම ලෝක සමුළුව පසුගිය 11 වැනිදා ආරම්භ වූ අතර ලෝකයේ රටවල් 150කට වැඩි සංඛ්‍යාවක සාමය සඳහා කැපවන ආගමික නායකයන්, රාජ්‍යතාන්ත්‍රිකයන්, සාම ක්‍රියාකාරීන්, මාධ්‍යවේදීන් සහ විදේශ ප්‍රතිපත්ති විශ්ලේෂකයෝ රැසක් ඒ සඳහා එක්ව සිටිති.

අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය ආර්යා ශිරන්ති වික්‍රමසිංහ රාජපක්ෂ මහත්මිය ලෝක සමුළුව 2022 අමතා මෙසේ ද කීවාය.

ලෝක සාමය බොහෝ අවදානමකට ලක්ව ඇති අවස්ථාවක සාමය පිළිබඳ අදහස් බෙදා ගැනීමට ආරාධනා කිරීම ගැන ඔබට ස්තුතිවන්ත වෙමි.

විශ්ව සාම සම්මේලනය වැනි සංවිධාන ආරම්භ වීමේ ප්‍රතිඵලයක් ලෙස මනුෂ්‍ය වර්ගයා මුහුණ දෙන සියලු අභියෝගවලට එරෙහිව සටන් කරමින්  අනාගතය සඳහා  බලාපොරොත්තුවන සම්පූර්ණ සාමය උදාකරගත හැකි බව මම තරයේ විශ්වාස කරමි.

විශ්ව සාම සම්මේලනය (UPF) යනු සැමට නිදහසේ ජීවත් විය හැකි සාමකාමී  ලෝකයක් ගොඩනැගීමට කැප වූ පුද්ගලයන්ගේ සහ සංවිධානවල ගෝලීය ජාලයකි.

ඉවසීම තුළ ඇතිවන සහයෝගීතාවය ආචාර ධර්ම පද්ධතියක ප්‍රගතිය සඳහා ඉවහල්වන අතර එය සෞභාග්‍යය උදාකරයි.

විවිධ ආගම්වලට අයත් මිනිසුන් අතර වෙනස්කම් ඇති නොවීම තුළ අවංක යුක්තිය මෙන්ම විශ්වීය සාමය සඳහා පිළිගත හැකි ප්‍රවේශයක් ගොඩනැගෙයි.

ලෝක සාමය යනු ප්‍රචණ්ඩත්වයෙන් තොර ලෝකය පිළිබඳ අදහසකි. එහිදී ජාතීන් සාමයෙන් සහ සමගියෙන් එකිනෙකා සමඟ කටයුතු කිරීමට උත්සාහ කරයි.

විශ්ව සාම සම්මේලනය මේ දක්වා කොරියානු අර්ධද්වීපයේ සාමය ප්‍රවර්ධනය කිරීමට විවිධ ආකාරවලින් සැලකිය යුතු උත්සාහයක් ගෙන තිබේ. ආගම් සහ සංස්කෘතික  භූමිකාව ප්‍රතිසංවිධානය කිරීම සහ ඊළඟ පරම්පරාවේ නායකයින් වර්ධනය කිරීමත්, කාන්තා නායකත්වයන් අත්හදා බැලීම සහ නිසි බලගැන්වීමත් ලෝක සාමය සඳහා අගයක් එක් කර තිබේ.

ලෝක සාමය යනු තවත් ආකාරයකින් ප්‍රකාශිත සතුට පිළිබඳ සංකල්පය සහ අදහසයි. සියලු ජාතීන් සහ ජාතීන් අතර නිදහස  සාමය උදා කිරීමටත් ගැටුම් සහ යුද්ධ අවම කිරීමටත් දායක වී ඇත.

ලෝක සාමයේ පැවැත්ම  රටවල් සහ ජාතීන් අතර අභ්‍යන්තර ගැටුම් ද අවම කරයි.

ආර්ථික වර්ධනය සහ මානව වර්ධනය වෙනුවෙන් අප ගන්නා සාම මාවත  ගෝලීය සාමය ගොඩනැගීම මෙන්ම සමාජ සමෘද්ධිය උදෙසා පැහැදිලිවම දායක වී තිබේ.

සාමය සහ සංහිඳියාව නොපවතියි නම් හෝ නිසි ලෙස ස්ථාපිත නොවූයේ නම් ආර්ථික ස්ථාවරත්වය සහ සංස්කෘතික වර්ධනය සාක්ෂාත් කරගත නොහැකි වනු ඇති බව මාගේ විශ්වාසයයි.

තවද, සාමය ගොඩනැංවීම සඳහා භාවිතා කරන ක්‍රියාකාරකම් පිළිබඳ ඉතා සියුම්ව විග්‍රහ කර ගත යුතු අතර, කල්පවත්නා සාමය සඳහා වන මාර්ගය හොඳින් සැලසුම් කර පරිපූර්ණ ප්‍රවේශයකින් සැලසුම් කළ යුතු වේ.එක්ව ඉදිරියට යෑමේ කැමැත්ත අනුව  සහෝදර සහෝදරියන් ලෙස කරට කර සිටිමින් අපට සාමය සඳහා අපගේ බලවේගය ඉදිරියට ගෙන යා හැකිය.

කොරියානු අර්ධද්වීපයේ සාමය ඔවුන්ගේ දේශසීමාව තුළ සහ ඉන් පිටත සිටින සෑම දෙනාගේම ජීවිතය වෙනස් කරන එකක් බව මම නැවත වරක් සිහිපත් කිරීමට කැමැත්තෙමි.

මෙම ලෝක සමුළුව 2022 තුළින් අපට එක්ව නිවැරදි සාමකාමී අනාගතයකට නැවුම් ලෙස ඉදිරියට යාමේ ප්‍රවේශය තවත් තීව්‍ර කර ගත හැකිය.

මෙහි සිටින ඔබ සැම ඔබගේ කුසලතා මනුෂ්‍යත්වය සහ එහි අභිවෘද්ධිය වෙනුවෙන් කැප කරනු ඇතැයි විශ්වාස කරමි යැයි අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය ආර්යාව ප්‍රකාශ කළාය.

මධ්‍ය මහා විද්‍යාල විශ්ව විද්‍යාල පද්ධතියට අනුබද්ධ කර උසස් අධ්යාපන පහසු කම් ඉහළ දමමු 

February 13th, 2022

ජයන්ත හේරත්

ශ්රී ලංකා ජනගහණයෙන් 98%කට දැන් විදුලි සැපයුම  ඇත. එය 1970 ගණන්වල තනි ඉලක්කම්වලට

සාපේක්ෂව දැවැන්ත ප්රගතියකි. මුළු ජනගහණයටම   අන්තර් ජාලා ස්මාර්ට් ෆෝන් සැපයුම ඇත. එය 1980 ගණන්වල 80,000 ට සාපේක්ෂව විශාල ප්රගතියකි.

උසස් අධ්යාපනය සඳහා එම 98-100% ඉලක්කය සාක්ෂාත් කර  ගැනීම වැදගත්ය.

අපට  ප්රායෝගික ඉක්මනින ක්‍රියාත්මක  කළ හැකි ප්රතිපත්ති සහ විසඳුම් අවශ්යයි.

දේශපාලන පක්ෂ තුල ප්රායෝගික එනම් ක්ෂණිකව  ක්රියාත්මක කළ හැකි ප්රතිපත්ති සහ විසඳුම් තිබිය යුතුය.

රජයක් හෝ පක්ෂයක් ශ්රී ලංකාවේ විශ්වවිද්යාල ප්රවේශය වැඩි කිරීමට ප්රායෝගික  ක්රම සහ විධි

සෙවීම කෙරෙහි අවධානය යොමු කළ යුතුය.

උදාහරණයක් ගනිමු.  2020 දී සිසුන් 194,297 ක් විශ්ව විද්යාලවලට ඇතුළත් වීමට සුදුසුකම් ලබා ඇත.

43,000 ක් පමණක් ඇතුළත් කර ගැනීමට උසස් අද්යාපන අමාත්‍යාංශය කටයුතු කරයි .

සිසුන් පිරිසක් ඇමරිකානු ඩොලර් ගෙවා උසස් අධ්යාපනය සඳහා විදේශ රටවලට පිටත් වෙති

මෙය ඉතා හොඳය.

විශාල පිරිසක් උපාධියක් ලබා ගත නොහැකිව අනාථ  වෙති. මෙය වටිනා තරුණ මිනිස් සම්පත අපතේ යැවීමකි.

විශ්ව විද්‍යාල යට ප්‍රවේශ වන සිසුන්  සංඛ්යාව අඩුම තරමින් ලක්ෂය  දක්වා වැඩි කිරීමට රජය

දේශපාලන පක්ෂ, පුද්ගලික අංශය හෝ මිලිටරිය කුමක් කළ යුතුද?

දැනට රට පුරා තිබෙන තිබෙන මධ්‍ය මහා විද්‍යාල, උසස් පෙළ පාසල් සහ කාර්මික විද්‍යාල 100 ක් උපාඩි ප්‍රදාන කරන ආයතන බවට උසස් කිරීම එක විසඳුමකි. එක ආයතනයකට සිසුන් 100 ක් බඳවා ගැනීමෙන් නව සිසුන් 10,000 කට අද්යාපන කටයුතු දිගට කර ගෙන යා හැක. එක ආයතනයකට සිසුන් 1000 ක් බඳවා ගැනීමෙන් නව සිසුන් 100,000 කට අද්යාපන කටයුතු දිගට කර ගෙන යා හැක.

උසස් පෙළ පාසල් සහ කාර්මික විද්යාල විශ්ව විද්‍යාල වලට අනුබද්ධ කිරීම ඇමෙරිකා එක්සත් ජනපදය සහ ජපානයේ භාවිතා කරන ජනප්‍රිය ක්‍රමයකි.

ඔබේ අදහස් ප්රතිපත්ති යෝජනා බෙදා ගන්න. ඔබේ පක්ෂය නිවැරදි දිසාවට ගන්න.

විජයග්රහණය ඇත්තේ සටනේය.

Scribe beaten to death in India, three arrested, PEC demands stringent punishment

February 13th, 2022

Nava Thakuria

Geneva: Press Emblem Campaign (PEC), the global media safety and rights body, demanded stringent punishments to perpetrators of the murder of a young scribe in central India’s State of Uttar Pradesh some days back. Condoling the demise of Sudhir Saini (30), the PEC also urges the UP government in Lucknow to adequately compensate the reporter’s impoverished family.

It may be mentioned that Sudhir, who worked for a local newspaper titled Shah Times, was physically attacked by three individuals while travelling by a car in Saharanpur locality on 26 January 2022. They had a quarrel with Sudhir, who was on a two-wheeler, following an issue of overtaking the vehicle. The car passengers not only stopped the reporter, but also thrashed him and finally threw to a water channel.

Seriously wounded Sudhir was taken to a nearby hospital by the locals, where he succumbed to injuries. The eye-witnesses provided vital inputs to the police about the vehicle and those passengers. The police team accordingly arrested Jahangir, Farman and Mannan accusing them of murdering the reporter, who was only son to the elderly parents.

It’s so unfortunate that the life of a promising scribe had ended in such a way. India continues to be a dangerous country for working journalists as the populous nation lost six journalists to assailants last year,” said Blaise Lempen, secretary-general of PEC adding that year 2021 witnessed murders of 79 media workers in 29 countries, where Afghanistan emerged as the most dangerous country with 12 journo-casualties, followed by Mexico (10) and Pakistan (7).

Days back, another young scribe named Rohit Kumar Biswal died in a landmine blast, informed Nava Thakuria, PEC’s India representative.

Biswal (40), who used to work for an Oriya daily titled Dharitri, stepped on the mine planted by left-wing rebels in Odisha’s Kalahandi locality and died on the spot. The incident took place on 5 February as the reporter went to cover a local election related developments where the ultra-left extremists threatened people to boycott the forthcoming polls.

Man Stoned to Death Over Alleged Desecration of Quran in Pakistan as Police Fail to Protect Him

February 13th, 2022

Courtesy Sputnik

Last December, hundreds of Islamists lynched and set fire to the body of a Sri Lankan factory manager in Pakistan’s Sialkot district after he removed stickers of an extreme right-wing party featuring Quranic verses from factory machinery. Prime Minister Imran Khan had called the incident a “day of shame for Pakistan.”After Punjab police failed to save a man who allegedly burned pages of the Quran from the fury of hundreds of villagers in the district of Khanewal, Pakistan PM Imran Khan on Sunday demanded the local authorities ensure the “full severity of the law” is imposed on those responsible for the mob lynching.

“We have zero tolerance for anyone taking the law into their own hands, and mob lynchings will be dealt with [the] full severity of the law,” Khan said on Sunday.Khan also sought a report from the Punjab police concerning the officers who “failed in their duty” to protect the factory manager.On Saturday, hundreds of people gathered in the remote village of Mian Channu village in the district of Khanewal following an announcement from the mosque that a middle-aged man had torn pages from the Quran pages and burned them.Police said officers rushed to the scene and arrested the alleged perpetrator. However, the crowd snatched the man from police custody and lynched him.In a series of tweets, the police claimed that they demanded that the angry crowd hand over the man, but to no avail.”The suspects hung his body from a tree which spread immense fear,” the police report said, adding that the body was recovered hours later.Punjab Province police have launched massive raids across the region and detained 62 suspects so far. A case against 33 known suspects and 300 unknown people has been registered.

“Punjab government must immediately take action against the Police that watched it happen & the perpetrators. Laws exist – the Police must enforce these laws and not allow mobs to rule the day,” Shireen Mazari, federal minister for Human Rights, said.The incident is a stark reminder of the lynching of Priyantha Kumara, a Christian from Sri Lanka who was set on fire by mobs in the Sialkot district of Pakistan on 3 December 2021.Kumara had allegedly removed stickers linked to an extreme Islamist party from inside the factory where he worked as a manager. The perpetrators claimed that Quranic verses were featured on these stickers.

Mohini, the-She-Devil, Insisting Her Baby on Nepal

February 13th, 2022

By Shivanthi Ranasinghe Courtesy Ceylon Today

Mohini, the-She-Devil, Insisting Her Baby on Nepal

Mohini is an old popular ghost story. Apparently, she convinces men who are on the road at odd times to hold her baby until she adjusts her wraparound cloth. However, the minute the man picks the baby Mohini transforms into a fearsome monster. The story is so thrilling with the man either getting frightened to death or unhinged that no one pays attention to the baby’s fate. It becomes obvious that the baby was just an illusion used to trap the man into a defenceless position. 

A perfect parallel can be drawn between this timeless ghost story and the Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC), which came into being through an act of the US Congress soon after 9/11. This was supposedly to be the improved version of the already functioning but inefficient USAID that is mired in endless red tape and suffering from a superiority complex. 

The stated objective was to neutralise the growing global hostility against the US from developing nations. The MCC was to be the modus operandi that was to offer grants to countries that meet a certain set of criteria. These grants were to fund development projects that would be led and administered by the host countries. It is noteworthy though this criteria was not honoured in the grants offered to Sri Lanka and Nepal. Instead, violating its own criteria, the US was to administer these projects.  

The USD 480 million grant offered to Sri Lanka discussed two projects. One was to create an economic corridor that would cut across the Island from its East coast to the West coast. The second was to improve public transport systems and upgrade provincial roads so farmers can get their goods to market. It also offered to provide secure land titles to smallholder farmers and other Sri Lankan landholders.

The USD 500 million grant offered to Nepal is to set up a 400KV transmission line along with related infrastructure allowing Nepal to trade in electricity with India. Nepal too is to contribute USD 130 million to be used in the maintenance of the country’s most important highway.

Impossible Conditions 

On the face of it, these grants appear to be innocent — quite like the baby entrusted on unsuspecting men by Mohini. However, not only the US intended to be the boss of these projects, the US also reserved the right to exit from the agreement at any time of their choosing, without taking responsibility for the repercussions. Even though Nepal contributes USD 130 million, Nepal as the supposed beneficiary is not allowed a say on the project’s administration. 

The conditions that the bald eagle’s MCC talons extract are highly subjective and would not be easy for the recipient country to honour. For instance, the Grant insists on the host to uphold its human rights values. 

Most unfortunately, human rights have become a highly politicised tool to bludgeon countries with weaker economies into the bidding of economically stronger countries. The western nations are forever stoking disharmony and instability in other countries. They thus at their convenience deliberately misinterpret crucial steps taken by other Governments to strengthen national security as an undermining of human rights. 

A case in point would be the allegations levelled at Sri Lanka by entities as the UNHRC over the arrest and detention of radicalised Muslim youth since the Easter attack. Intent on discrediting Sri Lanka, this effort to eradicate Islam extremism has been misconstrued as marginalisation and intimidation of minorities. 

The MCC Compact (MCCC) was announced by the then Finance Minister Mangala Samaraweera just four days after the Easter attack. He thought the USD 480 million was the golden nugget we got out of this attack. If the timing of the announcement was in bad taste, then the congratulatory mood of the Yahapalana Government Ministers was worse. 

This sequence of events brings forth an important question: could there be a link between the Easter attack and the MCCC? Even the best laid plans can go awry and it appears that it is so with the Easter attack as well. To date, motive has not been established and thus we do not know if those who planned these attacks even achieved their goals. 

However, if we allow ourselves to consider the alternate reality, we may be able to appreciate the harrowing trap we narrowly escaped. That is, 

n instead of the calm and peace that prevailed in the aftermath, had riots followed;

n Suppose these riots allowed those who were behind the Easter Attack to launch the other acts of violence that they had prepared to unleash; 

n In the midst of this confusion and violence that the MCCC was signed. 

Had this sequence followed, then the country would have been in an unenviable twist with extremism and terrorism back in action. We would have been unable to move a finger with US threatening to pull the plug on the MCCC if we do not manage our internal affairs as per their dictation. 

Even without such speculation, it is obvious that the MCC would be a ruse. Even if the projects under the Grant were managed by the host country, that country would not be able to escape from foreign powers meddling into internal matters through other guises as human rights concerns. As Governments these countries would be unable to meet their obligations to the people and would have to be on bended knee and bowed head to the US until the project is completed. However, whether the misadventures for the recipient countries would end with the MCC projects is questionable. 

Hidden agendas

These grants, offered to both Sri Lanka and Nepal, had a time limit of five years. At the end of the five years, irrespective of the project’s status, the Grant ceases. If the project fails to be completed by this time, the full weight of the incomplete project would be on the recipient country. This however is likely to be the least of the country’s concerns. 

For instance, granting land titles to smallholder farmers and other landholders was only seemingly humane in intent. In actuality, the real agenda was quite devilish. 

Most of Sri Lankan farmers and landholders are living off Government property for generations without owning an inch of land to their names. Thus the property that they live on cannot be divided among their children nor offered as mortgage to a bank to seek monetary assistance. They also do not have the freedom to grow the crop of their choosing. Therefore, gifting them with a title deed to the land they have been living for generations appears to be a most humane act. 

However, a farmer needs more than a land to his name to establish his independence. The Government policies too must be conducive to the farmers’ requirements. As these farmers are now cultivating Government land, the State is obliged to provide or subsidise seeds, fertiliser, technology and even control market prices. 

Once the farmer has his own land, whether supporting the farmer will continue to be an obligation a Government is willing to undertake will depend entirely on its beliefs. The UNP, headed by Ranil Wickremesinghe and in which Opposition Leader Sajith Premadasa was its deputy, do not see the point in supporting agriculture in Sri Lanka. As far as the UNP is concerned, agriculture is a failed venture in Sri Lanka despite 60 per cent of the population engaged in the agrarian industry. 

The Yahapalana Government that was in power at the time the MCCC was trying to make its way into Sri Lanka certainly did not support the farmer. Instead, as ardent followers of neo-liberal principles their policy was to allow market forces to act freely. Hence, importing food products at cheaper prices than protect the domestic farmer was logical to these politicians. 

The economic corridor that the MCCC was trying to push into Sri Lanka was not for small or medium enterprises or farmers. It was for conglomerates. This means that our farmers would have to compete against corporate farmers sans Government support. 

Had Sri Lanka accepted the MCCC, the likely scenario would end with the farmer struggling to get a fair price for his produce. Between the cheaper imports and produce from corporates enjoying economies of scale, the small farmer would not be able to compete and survive. 

As the owner of the land, the farmer would be able to mortgage it. However, without a good return on investment whether he will be able to release it from the bank is highly doubtful. Consequently, the alternative before the farmer would be to sell his land to a corporate or allow it to be foreclosed by the bank. This would be later auctioned by the bank to corporates. 

This will leave the farmer landless. A repetition of the displacement of our citizens that took place with the Waste Land Ordinance by the British forced occupiers. Our farmers without land to cultivate would be forced to work as labourers in the corporate sector ushered in by the MCCC. 

The MCCC might have delivered on the two projects as specified in it. However, it does not take a genius to realise that the yield would be poisoned fruits. 

Why is Nepal balking over MCC? 

It was Nepal that pursued the MCC Grant since 2012. Nepal finally qualified for it in 2014. The MCC was signed in 2017 and a Government entity Millennium Challenge Account-Nepal (MCA-Nepal) was set up to implement the account. 

However, since then the Nepali Government and people had shown extreme reluctance over the Compact. Hence, despite pressure from the US the Nepali Government had been sitting on it. This was only presented to Parliament in 2019. Even though more than two years have lapsed since then, this remains without being ratified in Parliament. 

The US is getting impatient and has even set the deadline to have it ratified by 28 February. The US has assured the Nepali Government that it has the freedom to accept it or reject it. With the same breath the US warned Nepal of dire consequences if they reject this Compact. The US has promised that in such an event all aid with the US interest that Nepal has been enjoying thus far will cease. In a thinly disguised veiled threat, the US has even indicated that their attention will lock on Nepal’s human rights records. 

Nepal’s hesitation is truly surprising as Nepal had been enjoying the US patronage since 1947. With the ‘Quit India’ movement, Nepal needed a strong force to replace the departing British. US, who was concerned over the rising communism, became a willing partner as Nepal’s neighbour, Tibet is a country that has strategic interest to China. 

Over the years, with tensions between India and China rising, Nepal feared for its sovereignty. Hence, Nepal found it a relief to have US’s strong support. Therefore, when MCC was been signed, the Nepalis did not blink. 

This all changed when then-Acting Deputy Assistant Secretary for South Asia David J Ranz and then Assistant Deputy Secretary of State Alice Wells made the mistake and revealed that the MCC is an integral part of the Indo-Pacific Strategy to neutralise China. It was this point that alarmed Nepal. 

The fact that Nepal is risking the wrath of the US indicates a change in perspectives with regard to global power. For obvious reasons, Nepal does not want to be caught in this power struggle. However, there is more to the story. 

Nepal’s reluctance must be viewed alongside the diplomatic boycott US is calling over Olympics Winter 2022 to be held in Beijing. Only 14 nations have backed US. Even New Zealand has pinned their absence on Covid-19 and not the boycott. This is a contrast to Moscow Summer Olympics in 1980 when 66 countries, including athletes, headed the US led boycott. 

Mohini & the MCC

Countries like Sri Lanka and Nepal are also like Mohini’s victims. Instead of strengthening the home front, we loiter trying to latch onto a superpower. Conversely, countries like China worked with single-minded determination to be where they are today. It is not its size or population for tiny morsels like Singapore too have grown to be formidable forces. 

Like Mohini uses a baby, the MCC too is enticing countries like ours with projects that if we agree to carry will leave us in a helpless mess. Just like this ghost story where a beautiful young woman transforms into a devil, we will see the US’s monstrous side as they will hound and harry us into their bidding while they adjust the geopolitical powers to their liking. 

We have to be grateful to this Government for letting the MCCC to lapse without  signing it. This was done despite the pressures exerted from bodies as the UNHRC. Consequently we can expect a few punches at this forthcoming session as well. That is alright for we will survive. 

Today, Nepal is in a similar situation we were in 2019-2020. Hopefully, Nepal will draw inspiration from Sri Lanka and stand its ground. After all, the projects that the MCC is promoting have anyway been in Nepal’s pipeline. 

(ranasingheshivanthi@gmail.com)

WindForce Powers into 2022 with New Plants

February 13th, 2022

Courtesy Adaderana

  • Solar Universe in Vavunathivu adds 10MW; Hiruras Power in Mannar 15MW
  • 3Q Group consolidated revenue LKR 3.6 Bn; bottom line increase of 4% YoY
  • Hydro power revenue up by 25%; solar has growth of 22%

WindForce PLC, the largest renewable energy developer in Sri Lanka which released its 3Q results for 9 months ending 31st December 2021, reinforced its commitment for greener energy choices by also unveiling plans for commissioning of a 10MW solar power plant in Vavunathivu in May, and 15MW Hiruras Wind Power Plant in Mannar by the end of the year.

In the 3rd Quarter 2021/22 financial results, the Group recorded a consolidated revenue of LKR 3.6 Bn, with Profit After Tax posting an increase of 4% to LKR 2.05 Bn from LKR 1.97 Bn YoY. WindForce, which debuted on the Colombo Stock Exchange in April 2021, has since declared an unprecedented dividend pay-out of LKR 1.76 Bn.

WindForce, one of the first companies in Sri Lanka to enter solar power generation saw its foresight reap astute results when the solar sector posted a significant growth of 22% in the comparable nine months.  This was due to notable contributions by the newly commissioned Tororo Solar Plant in Uganda in August 2020 and the newly acquired rooftop solar plant, Sky Solar (Pvt) Limited in September 2021.

The hydropower sector saw an impressive volume increase of 28% in hydropower generation which is reflected in the YoY revenue growth of 25%.  The consistently high rainfall experienced in catchment areas augmented a commendable performance by the Terraqua International, Energy Reclamation, HPD Power and Peak Power Delta plants which all benefited from the favourable weather conditions.

The wind sector recorded a higher output generation compared to last year but with both Daily Life and PowerGen entering its second tier in operation and seeing a drop in tariff rate, a 10% revenue decline YoY in the nine month period is observed.

WindForce, named the Fastest Growing Renewable Energy Company in Sri Lanka 2021 by GBO is adding a pioneering initiative into its newly acquired Solar Universe which is a triparty deal with Vidullanka PLC and HiEnergy Services (Pvt) Limited.  In its bid to introduce global best practices in sustainable energy to Sri Lanka, WindForce is initiating a pilot Agrivoltaic Plant infusing Agrovioltaic technology which has the potential to add significant benefits for farmers, especially in mitigating climate risk and global warming impacts.  Agrivoltaic systems place solar panels above agricultural crops, and provides a good ratio between the use of arable land and production of solar power.

WindForce has also launched the initial stages of construction of the 15MW Hiruras Wind Power Plant in Mannar.  The plant, billed for completion by end 2022, will use state-of-the-art gearless technology, which allows a greater efficiency and is in line with global standards on Wind production.

With this additional capacity, WindForce will add a total output capacity of 25 MW to the national grid this year, resulting in a saving of over 10 million litres of fuel annually and in tandem, the saving of valuable foreign exchange, while furthering energy security in the country.

Sri Lanka-India ties at high point – Prof. GL Peiris

February 13th, 2022

Courtesy Adaderana

In an interview to The Indian Express, Sri Lanka’s foreign minister G L Peiris said India and Sri Lanka had reached a high point in their relations, and that concerns about the Chinese presence in his country had been consigned to the past”. 

Peiris, who was in Delhi from February 6-8, said the fishermen’s issue – Indian fishermen trespassing in Sri Lankan waters and getting arrested – was now a serious” flashpoint in ties with India. 

He also blamed the Tamil National Alliance for the hiatus” in the implementation of the 13th Amendment because of its support to the previous Maithripala Sirisena government’s decision to change electoral laws.

Read excerpts of the interview below:

Thank you for doing this interview, Mr Peiris. What introduced you to New Delhi?

We need to take inventory of the present scenario, consolidate the achievements which have already been made with regard to remodeling the character of the connection, elevating it from a transactional stage to strategic partnership.

What components are you making an attempt to place in place with the intention to elevate it to a strategic relationship?

The foremost factor is a realisation in each international locations that nearer integration of the financial system of India and Sri Lanka is of mutual profit to each.. For instance, ports and harbours are each essential for us. We need to develop Colombo and Hambantota as a transshipment hub, digital hub, manufacturing hub and so forth.

More than 70 per cent of that is transshipment is from or to India. So, India is pivot and lots of the Indian ports are Adani-owned, Adani-connected. The dredging work on the West Container Terminal [of Colombo Port, being developed by India’s Adani group, after Colombo cancelled a previous agreement with India for developing the East Container Terminal, subsequently handed over to China] will start within the subsequent two or three months and the important thing participant is Adani. There is little doubt that larger connectivity with Indian ports is completely important.

The similar is true of the electrical energy sector. Third is oil petroleum and fuel. India is the world’s third largest client of oil. It will likely be potential for Sri Lanka to safe oil at extra aggressive and decrease charges, if we act along with India moderately than in isolation. Recently the Tricomalee oil tank farm transaction [with India] was accomplished. You’re speaking 99 tanks – the storage capability is beneficial for India and for Sri Lanka as a result of when the world market costs are low we are able to buy oil and retailer it.

Then there’s Indian funding in tourism. One third of the vacationers who come into Sri Lanka are from India and there’s the Ramayana prepare which we’re engaged on that thrilling idea. And we hope to develop about 52 potential tourism websites to draw extra Indian vacationers and odd vital Indian funding into the hospitality sector.

Also prescribed drugs. In Sri Lanka we’ve got three funding zones for the manufacturing of prescribed drugs. We are already producing saline to be used in Sri Lanka. There’s additionally a marketplace for pharmaceutical merchandise made in Sri Lanka, within the Maldives in East Africa. Indian corporations have a really substantial substantial experience in pharmaceutical manufacturing. So, it’s a promising space for Indian funding. There’s additionally meals processing cement.

Did these particular sectors determine in your conversations right here in Delhi?

I had an in depth assembly with [External Affairs Minister] Dr. S. Jaishankar yesterday (February 7), and we mentioned all these potential areas for collaboration. Now {that a} sturdy basis has been laid, we mentioned intimately a few of what we may do additional collectively for mutual benefit. And I adopted up in the present day with a really fruitful dialogue with the nationwide safety adviser Shri Ajit Doval. We have mentioned specifics about the place we’re and the way we proceed additional.

Can you present some extra perception into these specifics?

The underpinning is a elementary consideration that people- to- individuals connectivity is in the present day very sturdy between the 2 international locations. There are a number of Memoranda of Understanding within the pipeline, considered one of which has to do with $15 million fund which Prime Minister Modi has arrange for the event of Buddhist temples, the event of the Buddha Sasana in Sri Lanka.

Buddhism, after all, is the best reward that India provides Sri Lanka. It is a really sturdy bond between the general public of the 2 international locations.

India is a tried and examined pal that’s all the time there for us. It is not only the present monetary package deal. When COVID-19 hit us, India was the primary on the scene with 500,000 vaccines. When we had that very surprising maritime catastrophe, the oil spill, India doused the flames of that ship. Otherwise the calamity would have been way more severe proportions.

Then we’ve got present fiscal difficulties, now for the time being notably international alternate difficulties. India got here up with a package deal to assist us which consists of a number of pillars as they had been referred to as. The first was a line of credit score 1 billion US {dollars} for the acquisition or meals and pharmaceutical merchandise (nonetheless being negotiated). The second pillar was oil safety that’s $500 million revolving funds made accessible to us by the ExIm Bank of India. The third pillar needed to do with the steadiness of funds 515 million US {dollars} with the Asian clearing union for which we got a deferral and sought foreign money swap of 400 million. In whole roughly 1.9 billion US {dollars}, which helped us enormously to tide over this momentary interval of problem.

So this this entire monetary package deal that you simply outlined – the fourth pillar was the Trincomalee oil storage settlement?

No the fourth pillar was substantial Indian funding into Sri Lanka the personal sector. Now the Trincomalee oil tank farm was actually part of the power safety pillar, as a result of it was going to assist retailer oil and the association was labored out that’s there are 99 tanks in all — 24 for the Ceylon Petroleum Corporation, 14 for Lanka Indian Oil Corporation. The 61 remaining can be a three way partnership through which Sri Lanka would have 51% and India would have 49%

Would you agree with the studying that this was a quid professional quo for the monetary help?

No, it was not a quid professional quo as a result of Indian help has been accessible constantly over the past 15 years. There have been as many as 11 Indian traces of credit score, primarily for the event of our railway sector. As not too long ago as January 2022, there was the railway that was resumed between Colombo and Kankesanthurai. That is with Indian diesel engine a number of items. So that’s not right. It shouldn’t be as if if you’ll do that for us, after which we’ll begin releasing the funds that you simply want.

In the well being sector, the Indian ambulances [given] so a few years in the past, there was no quid professional quo.

Then Prime Minister Modi’s water programmes, sanitation within the faculties – this was a dire requirement. So that was accomplished about 5 months in the past when [foreign secretary] Harsh Shringla got here to Sri Lanka. Then we’ve got the Grama Shakti programme, underneath which about 45,000 homes had been handed over to households. In all these examples thhere was no quid professional quo, no strings or situations connected to guys.

The Trinco oil farm goes to require some huge cash. Each of these tanks goes to price thousands and thousands of {dollars} to refurbish and get began. Have there been any dialogue with India about this cash goes to be raised? And how is Ceylon Petroleum Corporation going to boost the cash for its facet of the deal in these 14 years?

The very first thing was to get the transaction accomplished. Now the essential contours of which were agreed upon, however there are nonetheless a few steps to be taken. But these are the minor steps, the lease agreements must be executed. So we at the moment are targeted on these preparations, which must be accomplished earlier than the factor truly will get off the bottom.

CPC additionally has to boost cash for its share of 14 tanks. It may increase cash from a international participant. Does that must be in session with India?

No, we haven’t obtained to the stage of contemplating intimately preparations of that nature, as a result of it truly is just a little untimely. We must get all of the authorized preparations in place, which is now nonetheless not been accomplished. We’ll try this after which we’ll deal with the operational preparations.

You spoke about cooperation within the power sector. There was purported to be an settlement between NTPC and Sri Lanka to begin a photo voltaic farm solar energy farm in Sampur [near Trincomlaee]. Is that coming by means of?

That’s additionally underneath dialogue. Immediate issues within the pipeline – one is that this $15 million MOU about Buddhist temples, then we’ve got one other one between the Sushma Swaraj Institute of Foreign Service right here and the Bandaranaike Diplomatic Training Institute, then there’s one more one a few 4000 metric ton, floating dock. There are a number of within the pipeline. And we hope to finish as many of those as potential.

There can also be proposal for the acquisition of two Dornier plane. There isn’t any finality, nothing has been agreed upon. There are proposals and counterproposals and it’s a matter underneath dialogue. There isn’t any settlement or finality.

In about two weeks time the Sri Lankan Finance Minister Mr Basil Rajapaksa will likely be coming right here once more [he last visited in December 2021] to agency up all of that. Then we count on Dr. Jaishankar to go to us across the second or third week of March. And it’s nonetheless not confirmed, not confirmed in any respect. But we hope that it could be potential for the Indian Prime Minister Shri Modi to return to us for the BIMSTEC summit on March 31. Sri Lanka is presently the chair of BIMSTEC, we’re handing over to Thailand. The summit is in a hybrid format. Leaders who can come will achieve this others can take part on-line. There’s a lot that has occurred throughout the previous couple of months [on the India-Sri Lanka front] that there may very well be an actual substance to that go to.

Regarding BIMSTEC, there’s a problem about Myanmar’s participation. What dialog have you ever had with India on the invitation to Myanmar? Where does BIMSTEC stand on that?

It can be mistaken for Sri Lanka to make a unilateral choice. We wish to do it in a collegial spirit, you already know, discuss to all the opposite international locations and attempt to arrive at a consensus on what would all of them love to do. It’s a really tough scenario. So we wish to seek the advice of with everybody, come to a conclusion that a lot of the international locations are prepared to simply accept, after which make that call recognized to others and have an inner session earlier than asserting a closing choice. And that appears the fitting option to sit about it.

On the Sri Lankan financial scenario, there’s been a number of debate about going to the IMF or not going to the IMF. Is that one thing that you’re contemplating?

There isn’t any agency choice to that impact that there was some session, however that’s all technical issues. The IMF has made an announcement they’d that they’d be completely happy that they’ve used the phrase prepared. They stand prepared to help if approached by Sri Lanka, however Sri Lanka has not made any overtures to the IMF.

During your go to to Delhi, did you additionally search any assurance from the federal government of India on the upcoming session on the United Nations Human Rights Council, which is able to happen this month finish?

In September final 12 months, there was an oral replace [on the situation in Sri LAnka]. Now, on the 49 session which begins on the twenty eighth of February, there will likely be a written report. In the 51st session in September, there will likely be a complete report by the advert hoc mechanism, which has been established underneath the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet.

We will likely be given a complicated copy on February 14 and we’ve got 5 days through which to reply proper. But we’re in shut contact with the Indian authorities. And India may be very a lot conscious of all of the progress that has been made within the current previous, notably with regard to the work which has been accomplished on the bottom by the so referred to as Local mechanisms, such because the Office of lacking individuals, the Office of reparations, the workplace of National Unity and Reconciliation, the SDG Sustainable Development Goals 16 Council and the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka.

In truth, about two weeks in the past, in Colombo, I addressed all of the members of the diplomatic group. Each of those establishments was requested to make their very own presentation concerning the work which they’ve accomplished, not expectations or plans for the long run, higher outcomes which had been proven on the bottom seen, verifiable, measurable outcomes.

Isn’t this a U flip from what we noticed when President Rajapaksa stated we’re withdrawing from the earlier commitments to the Human Rights Council. Is this since you’re frightened concerning the withdrawal of preferential tariffs by the EU, which will likely be an enormous setback to your financial system?

We didn’t repudiate obligations. We are members of the UN. We can’t reject the Office of the High Commissioner. We withdrew from co- sponsorship of the decision. This was a decision introduced by the US and another international locations [in 2015] and the then international minister of Sri Lanka Mr Mangala Samaraweera determined to co sponsor. So that was a moderately extraordinary scenario. The nation was co sponsoring a decision that was very strongly vital of its personal armed forces. So when the federal government modified in November 2019, President Gotabaya Rajapaksa took the place that we can not try this. We due to this fact withdrew from the co-sponsorship of the decision.

But there are some issues that we should do, not underneath compulsion, for example, the reform of the Prevention of Terrorism Act.

There are considerations about how far reaching these reforms are.

That criticism may be very unfair … [I]t might be convincingly established to the satisfaction of any dispassionate observer that there actually is a elementary distinction between the 2. So it’s a vital enchancment on the prevailing regulation. I’m not saying it’s excellent, however it’s actually a considerable advance on the prevailing regulation. And we’ve got additionally made it plain that we’re doing it in two levels, we’re making ready a totally new regulation. But since that’s going to take a while, among the pressing amendments must be delivered to parliament earlier than the excellent laws is
prepared.

Why not abolish it altogether?

No, that may be accomplished as a result of all through civilization, there was an try and strike the fitting steadiness between safety and liberty. You can not completely jettison safety in pursuit of liberty or vice versa, the important problem is to strike to treatment an equilibrium between the 2. And the the scenario in Sri Lanka within the area on the earth is such that safety can’t be forgotten about. The new laws brings SriLanka in step with worldwide requirements till the excellent laws is prepared and we’re engaged on that and will probably be delivered to Parliament as quickly as potential.

On the EU GSP, how involved are you about that?

If GSP plus is withdrawn from Sri Lanka, which which we think about exceedingly unlikely – however let’s take the hypothetical chance that it will occur — who’s going to bear the brunt of it? The most weak segments on the Sri Lankan inhabitants, specifically ladies working in garment factories. 90% of the workers working in garment factories are ladies, they’ve accustomed to a way of life. Many of them are supporting their households, they’re educating themselves. All of this will likely be affected. Then the fishing communities, as a result of there are 7,100 gadgets that discover their method into the markets of Western Europe underneath the GSP plus scheme, and it’s price roughly 3.5 billion US {dollars} per 12 months to Sri Lanka. So should you take it away, it’s not a punitive measure in opposition to the federal government, it’s a punitive measure directed in opposition to the poorer sections of the Sri Lankan communities least in a position to bear that added burden. It merely is mindless.

One of the one of many points that has come up repeatedly between India and Sri Lanka, and one which Sri Lanka has not been in a position to settle, is the Tamil political query. Doesn’t it fear Sri Lanka that this stays a supply of pressure between the 2 communities , with a possible of turning into a much bigger concern sooner or later?

The thirteenth Amendment is an integral a part of Sri Lanka’s Constitution of 1978. The primary characteristic of the thirteenth modification is a division of powers between the central authorities and the provincial councils. What has occurred now, for the final two years? There have been no provincial council elections. As we communicate, now, there’s not one single elected member of a provincial council. Does that imply the features of province or councils have reverted to the middle? When you come to consider it, a tremendous growth in constitutional historical past in any a part of the world. Without legislating one phrase the thirteenth modification has been nullified. Who is accountable? None apart from the Tamil National Alliance. Why do I say that? The administration of 2015 to 2019 didn’t maintain these elections. They knew that they’d be routed, it could be a very humiliating defeat. So they had been decided to not maintain that election. At the identical time, they couldn’t defy the courtroom order [that the election should be held]. So then they hit on an ingenious resolution. The resolution was to say, Okay, we’ll maintain the election, however the electoral system is unacceptable.. we’ve got to alter the electoral system. They abolished the system that existed, however intentionally avoided substituting it with a brand new system. So you intentionally create a lacuna, a hiatus. How are you able to maintain the election [when] there’s no electoral system. So it’s a self induced self created downside for no different objective, then pushing aside the elections indefinitely.

The TNA was at the moment an uncritical supporter of that authorities. A two thirds majority was given by the TNA, they’d 16 seats. It is supreme irony for the individuals who created that scenario and disadvantaged all of the individuals of Sri Lanka, not solely the North and the East, however all people of the fitting to have their elected representatives and provincial councils. Having accomplished that intentionally now to enchantment to the Government of India. to extricate them from this predicament, are you able to consider a greater instance of supreme irony? They created the scenario.

But they’re additionally saying that thirteenth modification shouldn’t be sufficient, and now there’s a have to transcend that…

Yes. But no matter was given was nullified. completely and completely, by this aware and deliberate motion state and now, they’re asking for extra, no matter there was they destroyed. It’s now right down to zero.

So what’s the method ahead?

There is a choose committee of Parliament which is functioning underneath the chairmanship of the chief of the House. And the mandate of that committee is to make suggestions concerning the reform of electoral legal guidelines in any respect ranges, that’s parliament, provincial councils and native authorities. It is making appreciable headway it’s assembly generally twice, 3 times every week.

But there’s additionally the opposite growth of 1, one nation one regulation even that has created some unease that it will be extra centralizing.

Whatever the brand new structure goes to be, no person is aware of but. Whatever kind that’s going to take, if it will be extra centralizing, moderately than devolving that’s pure hypothesis. Because the preparation of the draft is the duty of a committee of specialists. And the draft of the brand new Constitution, they’ve been engaged on this for a few 12 months and so they’re now reaching the ultimate levels of their work, however they haven’t submitted their report back to the federal government. So all of the hypothesis concerning the nature of the proposed Constitution, its primary provisions, it’s all conjecture, pure guesswork.

India has stated Sri Lanka should implement the thirteenth modification. Did the problem come up within the in your conversations now?

No, as a result of the electoral reforms are nonetheless work in progress.

Is the thirteenth Amendment going to be a part of the brand new Constitution? There are calls for that it ought to be struck out?

Well, there are a selection of factors of view. That is democracy. We can not cease it. So there are totally different factors of view, some will need it strengthened, some will need it weakened – there can be a range of views emanating from totally different sections of society.

The committee’s personal suggestions usually are not a matter that’s recognized for the time being, as a result of the report remains to be being ready by the committee has been submitted.

Sri Lanka is in the course of this rivalry between China on one facet with which it has very shut relations, and India, which has an enormous downside with you Chinese presence iin Sri Lanka. We have seen that. Now the Quad has introduced issues nearer Sri Lanka…

That’s not a brand new downside, however rivalry has been there for a very long time. That is a part of the geopolitical realities of the Indian Ocean. Itt’s is a truth of life, it is a matter that we’ve got discovered to deal with over a really lengthy interval. And for us, it’s not actually a vexed downside. Because there isn’t a exclusivity in Sri Lanka international relations. There’s no exclusivity,

But it did develop into an issue. You had tensions with India earlier than this speedy interval of the final three months over exactly this.

That is because of sure misconceptions. There is, after all, the Belt and Road Initiative with China. And there isn’t a denying that this has resulted in vital advantages for Sri Lanka, particularly with regard to the event of infrastructure, highways or railroad programs, ports and harbours and so forth. India was by no means threatened. There was this notion, which didn’t accord with the truth. Because if there was Chinese funding into the nation, so was the Indian funding into the nation. Indian funding. What concerning the resort sector, as I stated, the ITC, then this HCL holdings that’s very giant. Don’t overlook that India is the second largest buying and selling accomplice of Sri Lanka, and the third largest supply of funding into Sri Lanka. So if there’s a Chinese footprint, there’s additionally an Indian footprint. And we had by no means, underneath any circumstances, enable any nation to make use of Sri Lankan territory or territorial waters or facets to the detriment of every other nation that may be a pal of Sri Lanka’s. So India by no means had motive to really feel threatened. But in any case, now India is a really energetic participant in our financial system. And as I see it, we don’t suppose that there was actually a rational foundation for these apprehensions. Because there’s something very particular about Sri Lanka’s relationship with India. It has a particular high quality about it. So it was inconceivable that Sri Lanka would have allowed our nation for use in opposition to India, it was by no means ever going to occur. But now in any case that’s consigned to the previous, as a result of there’s very vigorous cooperation with India in an entire vary, an enormous array of financial actions throughout the spectrum. We at the moment are reaching a excessive level within the relationship. The one flashpoint is a fisheries concern. Yeah. But other than that, it’s an unreservedly optimistic relationship at this cut-off date.

Source: The Indian Express

–Agencies

Sri Lanka yet to find a firm power-sharing mechanism after war ended – former President

February 13th, 2022

Courtesy Adaderana

Former President Maithripala Sirisena says that despite 12 years passing since the end of the conflict, Sri Lanka has still not found a firm power-sharing mechanism or fulfilled total reconciliation as expected by international standards.

He said this while delivering the keynote address at the 2022 World Summit for Peace on the Korean Peninsula which was held in Seoul, South Korea. The former Sri Lankan President attended the summit at the invitation of former UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon. 

Sirisena said that Mr. Ban Ki-Moon as the Secretary-General of the UN did his utmost to bring peace, reconciliation, democratic control of the situation after the conflict in Sri Lanka was over in May 2009. 

I believe in peace and avoidance of war, and conflict should not be the answer to any aberrations. What we require at such a point is confidence-building between parties and rebuilding the economies,” he said. 

Therefore, Sri Lanka stepped into reconciliation, basing our actions on the internationally acclaimed four pillars of reconciliation,” the SLPP parliamentarian said.

He said the international community anticipated and demanded extremely revolutionary and immediate remedial actions. They are lofty expectations, but unfortunately, the expected speed does not reflect in the execution of reconciliatory mechanisms.” 

He said Sri Lanka’s was a conflict of more than 25 years and Korea is about 70 years. Sirisena said reconciling competing interests and horrific pasts do not happen quickly, because scars are deep-rooted and thus adamancy rules. Egos prosper.” 

Hence, patience is required, which the former President said reminds him of the statement made by the Japanese business tycoon Konosuke Matsushita Storms may pass, patience is a virtue.”
 
Our conflict was over in May 2009. Still, twelve years later we have not found a firm power-sharing mechanism or fulfilled total reconciliation as expected by international standards.” 

He said the experiences in the unification of Germany and Vietnam show how two contrasting political ideologies could positively merge. It could happen even in Korea similarly since the two political systems differ, he added. 

Sirisena said though such conflicts may occur regarding Korea, one may reconsider the situation in the light of common language, culture, traditions, living patterns which are binding glues for sustainable integration.


Keynote Address by President Maithripala Sirisena:

Excellencies, Distinguished Participants, Ladies, and Gentlemen, I am happy to be here at this Summit and to deliver a Keynote address. Thank you.

When a South Korean invite is mentioned, beyond the invitation, Sri Lankans reminisce the long-standing friendship between our two countries. As a sibling, South Korea has treated us especially in the fields of economic assistance, investments, technology, employment for our labor, youth affairs, and international transactions. At the outset, I mention them with great happiness and gratitude.

To start with, let me with deep respect recognize the hosts – Excellency Ban Ki-Moon, the former UN Secretary-General, whom I have personally known well since 2015, Cambodian Prime Minister Excellency Samdech Hun Sen, Dr. Thomas G Walsh, the Chairman, Universal Peace Foundation (UPF), and the Director-General of the UPF, Dr, Yun Young-ho.

Secondly, as a lover of peace, I recognize the pious objective of the Summit, which is of universal concern, which is Peace on the Korean Peninsula.”

Thirdly, I respectfully recognize the intended outcome of the Summit, which in simple terms is to bring together collective experiences, wisdom, and insights critically required to build mutual understanding, sustainable peace, and prosperity to the world.

In addition, I recognize the setting of the Summit in Seoul. In addition to the beauty of Seoul, it is because of the historical importance of reunification of Korea- the North and South. There is a long history of efforts to unify the divided two geographical units, created by internal and external involvements. This status has created economic downturns and suffering, especially in the North, though revival has happened voluminously in the South.

This had been the case in some other non-reunified troubled countries too. Unified states have triumphed. The German experience is a good example of collapsing of the separating wall and building a strong economy. Vietnam exhibited another novel political institutional arrangement, and now a bubbling economy. These two countries achieved unification in two ways.

I quote Kohler, a commentator who stated four takeaways from the German experience of reunification: They were: First: Get ahead of developments, prepare to expect the improbable, and have the guts to lead, second: Keep your promises and make sure others are aware of it. Three: Foreign policy begins at home, and, finally, do not go it alone. I hope those who are following unification would note these learned lessons.

Due to the potential political and economic downturn, sometimes certain populations resist unification. It happens mostly in the sector or unit where economic status is affluent. Studies have proved this status even in the case of Koreas. It is due to migration that may be caused by a unification exercise that could negatively affect the lives of the affluent people. However, economic affluence is also predicted due to unification. In such a background, some argue that other factors such as shared history, culture, language, traditions, etc. should motivate unification.

The historical perimeters of the two Koreas are complex, though well known to this noble audience. I may approach the issues from our experiences in Sri Lanka, less known to many over here. It is because the Summit expects sharing collective experiences, wisdom, and insights.

Our ethnic communities were united for generations throughout the history of Sri Lanka. Though there were aberrations in relationships, total segregation was prevented, and they remained as friends, upon culture, religion, traditions, and beliefs-wise, etc. When foreign powers were ruling Ceylon, which is now known as Sri Lanka, especially towards the mid-twentieth century, our leaders fought unitedly for independence from the British, irrespective of the languages they spoke, religions they professed, ethnic groups they belonged to.

However, due to several domestic reasons, sometimes fueled by foreign influences who wished to divide and rule, hatred, jealousy, animosity was developed, and unity was compromised and jeopardized. This led to political conflicts which were later converted to violence against the state and to open violence in the streets, cities, villages, and jungles. Though we are a small island of 65,000 square kilometers the demand by an ethnic terrorist group was for a separate state. Certain arrangements were made by our governments several times to settle this issue, and even had a ceasefire brokered by Norway in 2002, but ultimately everything failed. This is another lesson we can share on failures one could experience, on the way to peace or unification.

This type of failure is observed even in the Korean environment. I may quote a commonly known episode to prove my stand. The spring and summer of 2018 saw an extraordinary rapprochement between the two Koreas. It led to successive face-to-face meetings. They culminated with a visit of South Korean President Moon Joe-in to Pyongyang. This visit followed several joint declarations, agreements, hotlines, and other confidence-building measures, including an inter-Korean liaison office in Kaesong, close to the demilitarized zone. It was the first full-time communication channel and was an ‘embassy’ between the two sides, still at war. In June 2020 it was blasted by North Korea, which resulted in blasting much of the progress made in two years. This is the complexity and unpredictability one experiences in unification or finally peacebuilding.

The terrorists in Sri Lanka did similar things to us and consequently the peace processes we carried out failed. Instead of peacemaking, we did battle it out. It is not a good lesson to learn., because war is the bitterest treatment of people. However, this is the way politics, war, egos, personalities sometimes react to certain peacebuilding, reunifying efforts.

Excellency Ban Ki-Moon as the Secretary-General of the UN did his utmost to bring peace, reconciliation, democratic control of the situation after the conflict was over in May 2009. I believe in peace and avoidance of war, and conflict should not be the answer to any aberrations. What we require at such a point is confidence-building between parties and rebuilding the economies. Therefore, Sri Lanka stepped into reconciliation, basing our actions on the internationally acclaimed four pillars of reconciliation.”

Of course, the internationals anticipated and demanded extremely revolutionary and immediate remedial actions. They are lofty expectations, but unfortunately, the expected speed does not reflect in the execution of reconciliatory mechanisms. Ours was a conflict of more than 25 years. Korea is about 70 years. Reconciling competing interests and horrific pasts do not happen quickly, because scars are deep-rooted and thus adamancy rules. Egos prosper. Hence, patience is required, which reminds me of the statement made by the Japanese business tycoon Konosuke Matsushita Storms may pass, patience is a virtue.” Therefore, step-by-step movement may be preferred here too. But what we need is not a step backward, but always a consistent step forward.

The economic impact on us was severe and we are still paying for such sectarian behavior. This too is not only a lesson to us in Sri Lanka. Many experiences are observed in proximity and far away too. United efforts always give better yields. Of course, the need may arise for people to sacrifice certain conveniences and comforts enjoyed before reunification or peacemaking, especially in socio-economic spheres. This was the German experience just after the unification and will happen elsewhere too.

However, governments, bilateral and multilateral internationals must find solutions to integrate, make peace, unify quarreling groups, militaries, and countries. It is because war, conflict does not have winners. There are no short or instant solutions. Ours is an excellent example. I have learned that there had been studies done even in Korea and opposition to reunification has been observed. Though short-term difficulties could be observed, one must look at the long-term effects.

Our conflict was over in May 2009. Still, twelve years later we have not found a firm power-sharing mechanism or fulfilled total reconciliation as expected by international standards. The experiences in the unification of Germany and Vietnam show how two contrasting political ideologies could positively merge. It could happen even in Korea similarly since the two political systems differ. Though such conflicts may occur regarding Korea, one may reconsider the situation in the light of common language, culture, traditions, living patterns which are binding glues for sustainable integration.

Possession of resources and technology to manufacture long-range missiles and shoot them from deserts or sub-marines, etc. is insufficient for integration or unification. Threatening nuclear attacks is insufficient for the same. What good such missiles and nuclear armaments serve the people positively? Similarly, it is not drawing a line on the 38th latitude. Marking boundaries based on surveyor’s lines have not solved issues with our neighbors as seen even today from the Radcliffe Line between India and Pakistan, and Chief British negotiator, Sir Henry McMahon’s line dealing with the boundaries of Tibet, China, Bhutan, and even India. Conflicts continue for decades and even today on these boundary lines. Again, I say, it is not an easy task, especially when such threatening warmongering hawks control decision-making.

I may quote the greatest Indian next to Lord Buddha- Mahatma Gandhi who said, Was not war itself a crime against God and humanity, and therefore, were not all those who sanctioned, engineered and conducted wars, war criminals?” We have the choice in front of us. Do we sanction, engineer, and conduct wars and become war criminals or go by Martin Luther King Junior who said It is not enough to say we must not wage war. It is necessary to love peace and sacrifice for it?”

Let us swear that we will not be warmongers and war criminals but peacemakers and sacrifice in whatever way required because the effects will be universal and benefit humanity forever with bestowed peace. I remain wishing sincerely that such a strong willingly sacrificing group will emerge also from this Summit.

Thank you very much for listening to me patiently.

Basil to visit India again to finalize agreements

February 13th, 2022

Courtesy Adaderana

Finance Minister Basil Rajapaksa is expected to visit India once again within the next two weeks to finalize the agreements on the financial assistance extended by the neighboring nation. 

Speaking to reporters in Anuradhapura, Sri Lanka’s Foreign Minister Prof. G.L. Peiris said that the Finance Minister’s recent visit to India for talks was highly successful and delivered fruitful results for the country. 

He said that India’s has pledged USD 2.4 billion in financial assistance to Sri Lanka and that Minister Basil Rajapaksa had created the foundation for this during his last visit. 

He said Sri Lanka will first receive a USD one billion loan from India to import goods from the country such as food and medicine. 

Prof. Peiris said finance minister Rajapaksa will travel to New Delhi once again within the next two weeks or so in order to sign the final agreement on that loan. 

This all goes to show that due to the success of our foreign policy, we will not be isolated when facing these problems,” he added. 

COVID: Sri Lanka confirms 1,150 new cases and 31 deaths

February 13th, 2022

Courtesy Adaderana

The Director General of Health Services has confirmed another 31 coronavirus related deaths for February 12, pushing the country’s death toll due to the virus to 15,808.

The deaths reported today include 20 males and 11 female patients while two of the victims are below the age of 30 years.

Eight of the deceased are between the ages 30-59 years while the remaining 21 are aged 60 years and above. 

Meanwhile the Health Ministry reported that another 1,150 persons have tested positive for Covid-19 within today (13).

This increases the total number of confirmed cases of the virus registered in the country so far to 628,116 while over 17,000 infected patients are currently undergoing treatment. 

Garlic scam at Welisara Sathosa Warehouse: “How can a whistle-blower become a suspect?” – Hard talk | Daily Mirror

February 12th, 2022

Mahinda Gunasekera Toronto, Canada

Honourable Minister,

This appears to be a politically spun web to make the whistle blower a suspect in a clear case of wrong doing by the corrupt officials and politicians in charge of the operations at the Lanka Sathosa by cooking up some false allegations against Mr. Thushan Gunawardena, former Executive Director of the Consumer Affairs Authority who initiated action to expose the racket taking place involving a consignment of 56,000 kg of Garlic that had been sent to the Sathosa Warehouse.  The LINK to the article carried in the Daily Mirror on February 7, 2022 is given below for your easy reference:
LINK:  https://www.dailymirror.lk/hard-talk/Garlic-scam-at-Welisara-Sathosa-Warehouse-How-can-a-whistle-blower-become-a-suspect/334-230566#.YgB0fYabJfw.mailto


Mr. Thushan Gunawardena who is a well educated person having held a responsible position in a large establishment overseas had left his employment to come and work in Sri Lanka at the request of Mr. Gotabhaya Rajapakse who at the time was making preparations to contest the post of President of Sri Lanka.  He had come to discover that a corrupt set of officials, politicians and their relatives working at Sathosa along with a mafia of corrupt traders were carrying on a well organized racket of supplying items to Sathosa, having these condemned as being unfit for human consumption, and thereafter taking back the stock and reselling the same lot at twice or three times the price at which they take the condemned stock back to Sathosa thereby cheating the consumer of receiving these goods at reasonable prices.

In fact, I watched another video discussion with Chamuditha where representatives of the original importers of the Garlic said that two containers of the 17 or so containers of Garlic brought to the country by them awaiting clearance pending release of US Dollars to cover the LC’s opened for same had been taken over by the mafia of suppliers with the knowledge or complicity of the Customs authority and shipped to Sathosa to be repurchased after the bogus condemnation and resold at an excessive price back to Sathosa for distribution to the public. They too have complained of the unauthorized release of part of their shipment of imported Garlic, and are today under death threats they assume is from the mafia of traders to the three executives of the importing firm and their families asking them to withdraw their case.  Chamuditha Samarawickrema had also previously interviewed Mr. Thushan Gunawardena after he had taken steps to report the racket to investigating authorities at the initial stages on being tipped off by an unnamed source, and his having documents to prove the charges.

The whistle blower who acted in good faith later becoming a suspect in the whole affair is subsequently stopped from boarding a plane at the Katunayake airport at the Immigration Desk in the Departure Lounge, and his baggage already delivered by him at the airlines counter has to be offloaded from the plane, and he is compelled to cancel his prearranged trip overseas.

It is a disgrace that such corruption and racketeering takes place in Sri Lanka with the knowledge of politicians who are influential enough even to have the Police name the original whistle blower who took action to have the matter investigated declared a suspect and his freedom of movement to be so blocked and baggage to be pulled out of the airplane.  Even he did state that he had death threats coming to him over the telephone apparently by the racketeering mafia of traders or the politicians involved who wish to cover up their being exposed of corrupt dealings at Sathosa. I find it difficult to understand how the Police proceed to make this gentleman a suspect without even notifying him purely on the basis of senior politicians interfering in the work of the service.

Mr. Thushan Gunawardena did state in one of his video interviews that he had even brought his detections to the attention of H.E. the President, Mr. Gotabhaya Rajapakse, and made suggestions to having the establishment reorganized to run for the benefit of the consumer.  I too personally wrote to H.E. the President asking him to have the Sathosa audited in respect of all operations and take action to clean up all irregularities and get rid of the wrongdoers.  Trust you will look into this matter on an urgent basis and ensure that the Police follow the rules in the conduct of their affairs without bending the rules to wrongly frame persons to please their political superiors.

Yours sincerely,

Mahinda Gunasekera
Toronto, Canada

SINHALADEEPA  (Sri Lanka) AS SWITZERLAND OF THE EAST -Reply to Dr. Jehan Perera

February 12th, 2022

Jayantha Liyanage, General Secretary – Sinhaladeepa Jathika Peramuna

I refer to the article that appeared in the Island Newspaper dated 08.02.2022 titled First step cannot be the last especially if reversed at the start”, by Dr. Jehan Perera from the National Peace Council (NPC) states the following.  Leonard Wolf, the British civil servant, who wrote” Village in the jungle” saw the newly independent country as a future Switzerland of the East if it found a way to share political power amongst its different ethnicities and regions in the way that Switzerland had.

Switzerland was created about 700 years ago by an agreement.  Four groups of people from four different countries agreed to create Switzerland. Before that, the mountainous area had no ancient civilization. The four groups are all white people with a common religion, By contrast Hela – Sinhaladeepa has an ancient civilization, hence a unique Sinhala nation.

The minority ethnic groups presently living in Sinhaladeepa namely the Tamils, Moors and Burgers are not indigenous ethnic groups. The Tamils are descendents of south Indian invaders, slave labors brought for tobacco, coffee and Tea cultivations by the Dutch and the British and illegal encroachers (Refer to Nehru – Kothalawala Pact for evidence) The Moors, the Arab descendents who came to Sinhaladeepa as traders but failed to return or assimilate into the local culture. Their loyalty is only to their religion and has no respect for any other religion or culture.

It was British who gave those foreign ethnic groups legal rights after the year 1815 under their Divide & Rule” policy to keep the infighting between the indigenous Sinhalese people and the minority ethnic groups. The Tamils, Muslims & Burgers have acquired the present citizenship under a governmental system enforced by the British. The British ruled this country, by the power of their advance military technology and a legal & an administrative system that was designed to protect the British political servants (D.S & SWRD family clans), the Burgers, the Tamils and the Muslims while keeping the majority Sinhala Buddhist community under a perpetual subjugation and discrimination.

When about 75% of the Burgers & Tamils were the civil servants and military officers in 1956, then that was a plural society for the coup leaders of 1962. When the indigenous Sinhala Buddhists regain their rights, then that is Sinhala Buddhist dominance. The NPC with foreign funding was trying to divide the county during the 30 year LTTE terrorist war by propagating the idea that there should be a political solution with the LTTE. Had the LTTE won the war, Sinhaladeepa would have become a hell to live with and not the Switzerland of the East. If the Tamils were granted self-rule even now, the North would revert back to a society based on feudal cast system. The low cast Tamils would be treated like animals. 

Now Dr. JP is trying to propagate a new Switzerland dream by highlighting Swiss prosperity. This is nothing but trying another avenue to infuse a false dream to the majority of the people who are already trapped in a political vicious circle created by the two bogus Sinhala leaders, namely D.S & SWRD and now protected by the highly corrupted present MGB regime.  

Sinhaladeepa does not need to become a Switzerland or a Singapore. The Sinhala people can find their own Hela Ravana civilization once again. If the members of the NPC are unhappy living here, then they are free to leave to Switzerland of the west.  Over to you, Dr. JP.

Jayantha Liyanage, General Secretary – SJP – 10.02.2022.

විරාගයේ අරවින්ද පිලිබඳ භෙළිදරව්ව

February 12th, 2022

වෛද්‍ය රුවන් එම් ජයතුංග

විරාගය නවකතාව සිංහල සාහිත්‍යයේ හැරවුම් ලක්‍ෂයක්ලෙස සැලකිය හැකිය  මාර්ටින් වික්‍රමසිංහ, විරාගයේ අරවින්දගේ චරිතය ඔහුගේ අභ්‍යන්තර අධ්‍යාත්මය ගැඹුරට හාරමින් සජීවී ලෙස නිරූපණය කරයි. අරවින්ද ගේ හැඟීම්, සවිඥානික සහ අවිඥානික මනෝවිද්‍යාත්මක ගැටුම් කතුවරයා විසින් සාහිත්‍ය ශෛලියකින් විස්තර කරයි. විරාගය සිංහල සාහිත්‍යයේ ප්‍රථම සහ හොඳම මනෝවිද්‍යාත්මක නවකතාවලින් එකක් ලෙස සැලකිය හැකිය.

මානව චරිත විනිවිද දැකීමේදී මාර්ටින් වික්‍රමසිංහ විශිෂ්ට විය. නිදසුනක් වශයෙන්, ඔහු පියල් (ගම්පෙරළියේ) ඉදිරිපත් කරන්නේ ජීවන අරගලයක් හරහා පෞද්ගලික වර්ධනයක් අත්විඳින වටකුරු චරිතයකි. පියල් යනු Type A වර්ගයේ පෞරුෂයකි – අභිලාෂකාමී, ඉහළ තත්ත්‍වය ගැන සැලකිලිමත්, සංවේදී සහ නොඉවසිලිමත් ය. අනෙක් අතට සවිමන් කබලාන (යුගාන්තයේ) යනු සෞභාග්‍යයේ ඉණිමඟට නැගීමට ආත්මාර්ථකාමී අවශ්‍යතා ඇති ආත්මාර්ථකාමී බුද්ධිමය ව්‍යාපාරිකයෙකි. විරාගය තුළ මාර්ටින් වික්‍රමසිංහ හඳුන්වා දෙන්නේ අරවින්ද නම් වූ විෂම, සංවේදී නමුත් සාපේක්‍ෂ වශයෙන් ක්‍රියාශීලී නොවන වීතරාගී චරිතයකි.

අරවින්ද සහරුසියානු සාහිත්‍යවේදී ඉවාන් ගන්චරොව් විසින් හඳුන්වා දෙන  Oblomov  චරිතය අතර යම් සමානකම් ඇත –  Oblomov    1859 දී ප්‍රකාශයට පත් කරන ලද නවකතාවකි. ඊල්‍යා ඉලිච් ඔබ්ලෝමොව් යනු කිසිවක් ඉටුකර ගැනීමේ අභිලාෂය සොයා ගැනීමට නොහැකි සහ වැදගත් තීරණ ගැනීමට නොහැකි බව පෙනෙන රුසියානු වංශාධිපතියෙකි. අරවින්ද මෙන් ඔබ්ලොමොව්, ඔල්ගා ඉලින්ස්කායා කෙරෙහි තම ආදරය ප්‍රකාශ කිරීමට අපොහොසත් වේ. අරවින්ද සහ ඔබ්ලොමොව්  “Oblomovism”    ලෙස හඳුන්වන ආවේණික ලාමකතාවක් බෙදාහදා ගනී. Oblomovism යනු උදාසීනත්වය සහ උදාසීනත්වය කෙරෙහි ඇති නැඹුරුවයි. ඔබ්ලොමොව්ගේ චරිතය ශෝකයෙන් පෙළෙන මිනිසෙකුගේ නැඹුරුව නියෝජනය කරයි. අරවින්දගේ චරිතයේ ද එවැනි ප්‍රවණතා තිබේ.  

මාටින් වික‍්‍රමසිංහයන්   අරවින්දගේ අභ්‍යන්තර පෞරුෂය මානය  විස්තර කරයි. අරවින්ද යනු දෙගිඩියාවෙන් හා ආවර්ජනය කරන අභ්‍යන්තරිකයෙකි. ඔහු උත්තේජනයේ බාහිර මූලාශ්‍රවලට වඩා අභ්‍යන්තර හැඟීම් කෙරෙහි අවධානය යොමු කරයි. ඔහුගේ සංයමයෙන් හා අභ්‍යන්තර මානසිකත්වය ඔහුගේ ඉරණමට මඟ පෙන්වයි. ඔහු දුර්ලභ චරිතයක් වන අතර ඔහුගේ  චිත්තවේගීය, අන්තර් පුද්ගල, අත්දැකීම්, ආකල්ප සහ අභිප්‍රේරණ විලාසයෙන් සාමාන්‍ය පුද්ගලයන් ගෙන් වෙනස් වේ. 

වික‍්‍රමසිංහයන්  විස්තර කළ පරිදි අරවින්ද යනු ජීව විද්‍යාත්මක සහජ බුද්ධියට සහ සංස්කෘතික පීඩනයට කොටු වූ දැහැමි චරිතයකි. අරවින්දගේ චරිතයේ සංකීර්ණත්වය සිංහල බෞද්ධ ගැමි සම්ප්‍රදායට අනුව හැදී වැඩුණු මිනිසෙකුගේ අභ්‍යන්තර ලෝකය සහ නාට්‍යාකාර පරිවර්තනයකට තුඩු දෙන ඔහුගේ සැඟවුණු ජීව විද්‍යාත්මක ආශාවන් ඉටු කර ගැනීමට අරගල කරන ආකාරය හෙළි කරයි. සාමූහික සංස්කෘතියක ජීවත් වන ඔහු ඉහළ අනුකූලතාවයක් පෙන්නුම් කළේය. මීට අමතරව අරවින්දට විශ්වාසයක් නැති, පහසුවෙන් කලකිරීමට පත්වන සහ සබඳතාවලදී අනාරක්‍ෂිත ය. එහෙත් ඔහු තුල දෙබිඩි බවක් නොමැත.

John Donne පැවසූ පරිදි කිසිම මිනිසෙක් දූපතක් නොවේ. මිනිසා සමාජ ජීවියෙකු වන අතර, එබැවින් ඔහුගේ සහජ අවශ්‍යතාවයන්ගෙන් එකක් වන්නේ අනෙකුත් මිනිසුන් සමඟ අන්තර් පුද්ගල සම්බන්ධතා ඇති කර ගැනීමට ඇති ආශාවයි. වෙනත් වචන වලින් කිවහොත් සමාජීය වීම සියලු මිනිසුන්ට මූලික වේ. කෙසේ වෙතත්, ජීව විද්‍යාව සහ සමාජය මිනිසුන්ට ඇති එකම බලපෑම නොවේ: සංස්කෘතියේ බලපෑම ද මීට අයත් වෙයි. සිංහල බෞද්ධ ගැමි සංස්කෘතිය අරවින්ද කෙරෙහි විශාල බලපෑමක් ඇති කළේය. ඔහුගේ අදහස්, සදාචාරය සහ හැසිරීම හැඩගැසී ඇත්තේ ප්‍රචණ්ඩත්වයෙන් තොර, සුඛෝපභෝගී නොවන සහ ශක්තිමත් සදාචාර ප්‍රතිරාවය කරන සංස්කෘතියකිනි.

මාර්ටින් වික්‍රමසිංහ සංස්කෘතියේ වැදගත්කම සහ පුද්ගලයාට එහි බලපෑම දැන සිටියේය. සංස්කෘතික අන්තර්ක්‍රියා, සංස්කෘතිකමය වශයෙන් තීරණය කරන ලද හැසිරීම් සහ පුද්ගල ලක්ෂණ ගැන ඔහු දැන සිටියේය. වික්‍රමසිංහ අරවින්දගේ හැසිරීම් රටාව පාලනය කළ සමාජ සංස්කෘතික සාධක පෙන්වා දෙයි.

සංස්කෘතිය යනු මනුෂ්‍යත්වයේ සාමාන්‍ය ප්‍රකාශනයයි, එහි නිර්මාණශීලීත්වයේ ප්‍රකාශනයයි. සංස්කෘතිය අර්ථය, දැනුම, කුසලතා, කර්මාන්ත, ශිෂ්ටාචාරය සහ වටිනාකම් සමඟ සම්බන්ධ වේ. සංස්කෘතිය සහ සිරිත් විරිත් විවිධ ප්‍රජාවන් තුළ සමාජ ක්‍රමයේ කේන්ද්‍රස්ථානය වේ. Hogan (1996) විසින් විස්තර කරන ලද පරිදි සමාජ භූමිකාවන්, ජීවිත සිදුවීම් සහ සමාජ පරිසරයන් ජීවන ගමන් මග තුළ වෙනස් වන අතර, එවැනි සාධක මූලික පෞරුෂ ලක්ෂණ කෙරෙහි වැදගත් බලපෑම් ලෙස යෝජනා කර ඇත. අරවින්ද ගේ ජීවිතය සහ පෞරුෂය සිංහල බෞද්ධ ගැමි සංස්කෘතික හා සදාචාර සම්ප්‍රදායන් අනුව හැඩගැසී ඇත. කෙසේ වෙතත් අරවින්ද්ගේ ළමා වියේ අත්දැකීම් සහ ජීවිතයේ සිදුවීම් ඔහුව තවත් පරිවර්තනය කළේය. සංස්කෘතිය සහ ළමා අත්දැකීම් ඔහුගේ සදාචාරාත්මක හැසිරීම් වලට බලපායි.

ඇතැම් සමාජ විද්‍යාඥයින්ට අනුව සදාචාරය යනු සංස්කෘතික වශයෙන් කොන්දේසි සහිත ප්‍රතිචාරයකි. මානව සදාචාරය ප්‍රධාන පරිණාමීය අනුවර්තනයකි. සදාචාරාත්මක හැසිරීම යනු පරිණාමීය අතීතයක උරුමය වන අතර එහි දී සමාජ ගැති ලෙස හැසිරෙන පුද්ගලයින් අනෙකුත් කණ්ඩායම් සාමාජිකයින්ට වඩා ඉහළ යෝග්‍යතාවයකින් යුක්ත වන අතර එබැවින් ඔවුන්ගේ සමාජ ගැති හැසිරීම පරාර්ථකාමී නොවන ආත්මාර්ථකාමී ය.  මෙම සන්දර්භය තුළ  මාර්ටින් වික්‍රමසිංහ    ප්‍රශ්නයක් මතු කළේය: යහපත් ජීවිතයක් යනු කුමක්ද? තපස (asceticism)  පිළිපැදීම ද ලෞකික සැප අත්හැරීම ද එසේත් නැතිනම් එය වැළඳ ගැනීම ද? අරවින්ද තවුස්බව උත්සාහ කරන නමුත් ඔහුගේ ජීව විද්‍යාත්මක ඉල්ලීම් ක්‍රියාත්මක වන විට ඔහු න්‍යායික සදාචාරය සහ සජීවී සදාචාරය අතර මාරු වෙමින් අවසානයේ සදාචාරාත්මක අපැහැදිලි භාවයට පත් වෙයි. එහෙයින් අරවින්ද  තපස  අසාර්ථක විය.

ලෞකික උපකල්පනවලට අනුව අරවින්ද අසාර්ථකය. වෛද්‍යවරයකු වීමේ ඔහුගේ අභිලාෂය රුධිර භීතිය සහ මළ සිරුරු විච්ඡේදනය කිරීමට ඇති අකමැත්ත ඔහුගේ ඉලක්කය හඹා යෑමෙන් වළක්වන ලදී. අරවින්ද  ගේ නෙක්‍රොෆෝබියාව (Necrophobia)  නොහොත් ශවභීතිකාව සැඟවුණු නොනවතින බියක් ලෙස අනුනාද විය. අරවින්දගේ ඉරණමට බලපාන සමාජ සාධක ගණනාවක් තිබේ. ඔහුගේ පියාගේ අකල් වියෝව සහ පසුව ඇති වූ ආර්ථික ගැටලු නිසා ඔහුට අධ්‍යාපනය අතහැර සුළු රැකියාවක් කිරීමට සිදු විය. එබැවින් ඔහුගේ සමාජ හිණිමඟට නැගීමේ අභිලාෂය කඩාකප්පල් විය. සරල නොවැදගත් ජීවිතයක් ගත කිරීමට අරවින්දට බල කෙරේ. අභ්‍යන්තරව ඔහු ව්‍යාකූල වෙයි.

අරවින්දගේ මුල් ජීවිත අත්දැකීම් සංකීර්ණ වූ අතර ඔහු වඩාත් කැමති බැඳීම් චරිතය වූයේ ඔහුගේ පියාය. නවකතාවට අනුව අරවින්දට තම මව සමඟ ඇත්තේ සීතල සම්බන්ධයකි. කුඩා කාලයේ අරවින්දගේ අනාරක්ෂිත බැඳීම ඔහුට විශාල බලපෑමක් ඇති කළ බව විශ්වාස කිරීම සාධාරණ ය. අරවින්ද කවුද? ඔහු සදාචාරාත්මක ස්වපීඩාකාමීයෙක් ද ?   (moral masochist)   මෙය බරපතල ප්‍රශ්නයකි. සමහරවිට අරවින්දට දඬුවම් කිරීමේ අවිඥානික අවශ්‍යතාවක් තිබුණු බවට උපකල්පනය කල හැකිය.  නවකතාව පුරාවටම පාඨකයන්ට අරවින්දගේ ක්‍රියාවන්හි ස්වයං වධ හිංසා සහ ස්වයං කඩාකප්පල්කාරීත්වය ( self-sabotage)  සොයාගත හැකිය. අරවින්දට මග පෙන්වූයේ අවිඥානික වරදකාරී හැඟීමයි. එය උමතු ස්නායු රෝගයක ආකාරයක් ලෙස මතු වේ.

ලැකාන් අවධාරණය කරන පරිදි උමතු ස්නායු රෝගය මනෝ ව්‍යාධියක් ලෙස සායනිකව වරදවා වටහා ගත හැක. රොසෙන්බර්ග් (1968) පවසන්නේ මානසික අවපීඩනය උමතු ස්නායු රෝගයේ පොදු සංකූලතාවයක් බවයි. නවකතාවේ විස්තර කර ඇති පරිදි අරවින්ද තම ජීවිතයේ අවසාන අවධියේදී විෂාදයේ  (Clinical Depression) ප්‍රධාන රෝග ලක්ෂණ පෙන්නුම් කළේය. අරවින්දට   චිත්තවේගීය වේදනාව විඳදරාගැනීමට අවිඥානික masochistic ආශාවක් ඇත.ඔහුගේ සදාචාරාත්මක ස්වපීඩා කාමය දෘශ්‍යමාන ලක්ෂණයකි. ඔහුට අන් අයගෙන් විවේචනයට ලක් වීමේ අවිඥානක අවශ්‍යතාවයක් ඇත. ඔහුගේ වැඩිමහල් සහෝදරිය ඔහුට පරුෂ වචනයෙන් බැන වදින විට අරවින්ද දක්වන්නේ දැඩි උදාසීනත්වයකි. ඊට අමතරව ඔහු බතීට සහ ඇගේ මවට තම නිවසේ රැඳී සිටින ලෙස ආරාධනා කරන්නේ දැනටමත් ගමේ කුණු කටකතා පැතිර යන බව දැනගෙනය.

ඔහුගේ පෙම්වතිය ,සරෝජිනී තම ආදරය  අරවින්දට ලබාදී ඔහු සමඟ ජීවත් වීමට (living-together) කැමැත්ත දුන් විට අරවින්ද සදාචාරමය උභතෝකෝටිකයකට මුහුණ දෙයි. ආගමික හා සංස්කෘතික සම්ප්‍රදායන් අනුගමනය කරමින් ඔහුට එකට ජීවත්වීම පිළිගත නොහැකි විකල්පයකි. සමාජ සංස්කෘතික හා ආගමික තහංචි අරවින්දට රැඩිකල් තීරණයක් ගැනීමට සහ ඔහුගේ පෙම්වතිය සමඟ සිටීමට බාධා කරයි. එහෙත් ඇයට යෝජනා කිරීමට ඔහුට වෙනත් ශක්‍ය විකල්පයක් නොතිබුණි. අරවින්ද අභ්‍යන්තර සහ බාහිරව ලිංගිකත්වයෙන් ඉවත්ව ගියද, ඔහුගේ අවිනිශ්චිතභාවය විශ්වාසයේ ඌනතාවය සරෝජිනී සමග සම්බන්ධතාවය අනතුරේ හෙළීය.  සරෝජිනී   ඔහුගේ හොඳම මිතුරා සමඟ විවාහ වන අතර අරවින්ද ඔහුගේ ජීවිතයේ ඉතිරි කාලය හුදෙකලාව ජීවත් වෙයි. 

මේ අවස්ථාවේදී වික්‍රමසිංහයන්  පෙන්වා දෙන්නේ අරවින්ද සරෝජිනීට වඩා අඩු ආත්ම විශ්වාසයක් පෙන්නුම් කරන බවයි. ගැහැණු ළමයෙකු ලෙස සරෝජිනී දෙමාපියන්ගෙන් සහ අරවින්දගේ ඥාතීන්ගෙන් විරුද්ධත්වයට මුහුණ දුන් විට එකට ජීවත් වීම  යෝජනා කිරීමට තරම් නිර්භීත වූවාය. නමුත් අරවින්ද අක්‍රිය හා අපැහැදිලි වෙයි. ඔහු අවිනිශ්චිතය. එය අලුත්වැඩියා කළ නොහැකි තරමට ඔවුන්ගේ සම්බන්ධතාවය බිඳ දමයි.  සරෝජිනී තම හොඳම මිතුරා වූ සිරිදාස සමඟ විවාහ වූ විට අරවින්දට තිබුණේ ඉරිසියාවක් නොව හද කම්පාවකි. ඔහු අතීතය අමතක කර වර්තමාන වෙහෙසකර ජීවිතයට හැඩගැසීමට උත්සාහ කරයි. ඔහු තම ජීව විද්‍යාත්මක ආශාවන් යටපත් කර තාපසයෙකු මෙන් ජීවත් වේ.

අරවින්ද ක්‍රමක්‍රමයෙන් පෞරුෂ වෙනස්වීම්වලට මුහුණ දුන්නාද? Seivewright, Tyrer and Johnson (2002) පෙන්නුම් කරන්නේ ස්නායු ආබාධවලදී පෞරුෂ තත්ත්වය වෙනස් විය හැකි බවයි. අරවින්ද තුළ ක්‍රමක්‍රමයෙන් පෞරුෂ වෙනස්වීම් සිදු වන අතර අවසානයේ ඔහු චිත්තවේගීය වශයෙන් හිරිවැටුණු – නිද්රාශීලී චරිතයක් බවට පත් වේ. අරවින්දට ඔහුගේ අවසන් වසරවල උදාසීනත්වය (apathy)  සම්බන්ධ සලකුණු ගණනාවක් තිබේ. උදාසීනත්වය සාමාන්‍යයෙන් නිර්වචනය වන්නේ පෙළඹවීමක් නොමැතිකම සහ දෛනික ජීවන කාර්ය සාධනයේ ක්‍රියාකාරකම්වල අඩුවීමක් ලෙසිනි. ඔහුට උත්සාහයක් නොමැතිකම, ඉලක්කගත හැසිරීම් අඩුවීම, වෙනස් නොවන බලපෑම් සහ ධනාත්මක හෝ සෘණාත්මක සිදුවීම්වලට චිත්තවේගීය ප්‍රතිචාරයක් නොමැතිකම දක්නට තිබේ.සරෝජිනී අහිමි වූ පසු  අරවින්දගේ උදාසීනත්වය වැඩි විය. අරවින්ද සමාජ හුදකලාව මෙන්ම චිත්තවේගී හුදෙකලාව අත්විඳියි. සමාජ ක්‍රියාකාරකම්වලට සහභාගී වීමට අරවින්දගේ ආශ්වාදය අඩු වී ඇත.  ඔහුගේ චිත්තවේගීය වෙන්වීම සහ උදාසීනත්වය melancholic මානසික අවපීඩනය නිසා විය හැකිය. 

අරවින්දට  සීමා සහිත සමාජ-ලිංගික දිශානතියක් ඇති බව පෙනේ.සීමා සහිත සමාජ-ලිංගික දිශානතියක් ඇති පුද්ගලයින් අනියම් ලිංගික හැසිරීම් වල යෙදීමට අඩු කැමැත්තක් දක්වයි; ඔවුන් ආදර සහකරුවන් සමඟ ලිංගිකව හැසිරීමට පෙර වැඩි ආදරය, කැපවීම සහ චිත්තවේගීය සමීපත්වයට කැමති වෙති.   අරවින්දගේ   ලිංගික අවරෝධනය sexual repression ඔහුව හුදකලා පුද්ගලයෙකු බවට පත් කරයි.   අරවින්දගේ අවරෝධනයට වරදකාරීත්වය පදනම් කරගත් ඉතිහාසයක් ඇත. එය  ඔහුගේ  සිංහල බෞද්ධ ගැමි සංස්‌කෘතික සම්ප්‍රදායන් මගින් තවත් ශක්තිමත් වෙයි.  

ප්‍රංශ දාර්ශනික Michel Foucault විශ්වාස කළේ බටහිර සමාජය 17 වැනි සියවසේ සිට 20 වැනි සියවසේ මැද භාගය දක්වා ලිංගිකත්වය යටපත් කළ බවයි. බ්‍රිතාන්‍ය යටත් විජිතයක් ලෙස ශ්‍රී ලංකාව වික්ටෝරියානු සදාචාරයේ බලපෑමට ලක් විය. වික්ටෝරියානු සාහිත්‍යයේ ප්‍රබල සදාචාරය අවධාරණය කළ ද, 1956 දී මාර්ටින් වික්‍රමසිංහ විරාගය තුළ ලිංගිකත්වය පිලිබඳව නිර්භීතව කතා කළේය. අරවින්දගේ පෙම්වතිය වන සරෝජිනී වික්ටෝරියානු සදාචාරයට සහ ආකල්පවලට අභියෝග කලාය. වික්‍රමසිංහ, සරෝජිනීගේ චරිතය හරහා ස්ත්‍රී ලිංගිකත්වය සහ සංවේදන විස්තර කරයි. එහෙයින් සරෝජිනී ඒ යුගයේ සාමාන්‍ය ගැමි දැරියකට වඩා දියුණු චරිතයක් බව පාඨකයාට වැටහේ.

සරෝජිනී ඔහු හැර ගිය පසු අරවින්දට ලෞකික සැප සම්පත් හෝ ධනය රැස්කිරීමේ ආශාවක් තිබුණේ නැත. ඔහුගේ පාළුව සහ නොස්ටැල්ජියාව වර්ධනය වීමට පටන් ගනී. ඔහුට ලිංගිකත්වය අහිමි විය. අරවින්දගේ තනිකම නිසා ඔහු, තමන් ගේ තරුණ සේවිකාවක් වන බතීට සමීප විය. ඔහු ඇය කෙරෙහි සැඟවුණු කාමුක ආශාවක් ඇති කර ගැනීමට පටන් ගනී. බතීගේ අලංකාරය ඔහුගේ  අවරෝධනය   කළ අන්තර්ගතය මතු කරවයි. අරවින්ද සදාචාරය සහ ජීව විද්‍යාත්මක සහජ බුද්ධිය අතර අරගල කරන අතර එය ඔහු තුළ බලාපොරොත්තු සුන්වීමක් ඇති කරයි.

බතී කුඩා කාලයේ අරවින්දට තිබුණේ පිය සෙනෙහසකි. එය ක්‍රමක්‍රමයෙන් කායික ළෙන්ගතුකමක් නොමැතිව සැඟවුණු ආශාවකට පරිවර්තනය විය. කෙසේ වෙතත් සමාජයෙන් ආචාරධර්ම සහ සදාචාරාත්මක පීඩනය හේතුවෙන් ඔහු තම කාමුක ආශාවන් යටපත් කළේය. මෙම තත්ත්වය මනෝවිශ්ලේෂණ මෙවලම් භාවිතයෙන් පැහැදිලි කළ හැකිය. මෝසෙස් සහ ඒකදේවවාදය තුළ, ෆ්‍රොයිඩ් පෙන්වා දුන්නේ ආචාර ධර්ම ආරම්භ වන්නේ “දෙවියන් වහන්සේ කෙරෙහි යටපත් කරන ලද සතුරුකම හේතුවෙන් දැනෙන වරදකාරී හැඟීමකින්” බවයි.

බතී ඔහුගේ ජීව විද්‍යාත්මක ආශාවන් අවදි කරන බව ඔහු සොයා ගත් විට, ඔහු ක්‍රම ක්‍රමයෙන්  සමාජ තහනම බිඳ  දමමින් ඇයට  ළං වීමට උත්සාහ කරයි. බතී සහ අරවින්ද අතර විශාල සමාජ සහ වයස් පරතරයක් ඇත, කෙසේ වෙතත් ඔහුගේ කාමුක ආශාවන් මෙම වෙනස්කම් වසන් කරයි. එහෙත් බතී මේ සඳහා දැඩි ප්‍රතිරෝධයක් පෙන්නුම් කරයි.  එය ඇතැම් විට රළු හැසිරීම් මගින්  ප්‍රදර්ශනය කරයි. බතීට පෙම්වතෙක් සිටින බව දැනගත් අරවින් ද      කෝපයට පත් වේ. අරවින්දගේ ලිංගික ඊර්‍ෂ්‍යාව යනු කාංසාව, කනස්සල්ල, දුක, කෝපය, වෛරය, පසුතැවීම, දොස්, තිත්තකම සහ ඊර්‍ෂ්‍යාවෙන් පිරුණු සංකීර්ණ චිත්තවේගී තත්ත්වකි. බතී ඔහුගේ නිවසේ රැඳී සිටීම ප්‍රතික්ෂේප කිරීම සහ ඇගේ පෙම්වතා සමඟ විවාහ වීමට ඇය ගත් තීරණය අරවින්දව තවත් අසතුටට පත් කරයි. බතීගේ නික්මයාම  ඔහු තුල  ත්‍යජනයක්  ( abandonment) සනිටුහන් කරයි  . බතී ඔහුගේ පසුබිම් වස්තුව විය. දැන් වස්තුව නැතිවී තිබේ . අරවින්දට තම ලිංගිකත්වය දෙවැනි වරටත් ප්‍රකාශ කිරීමට නොහැකි විය.    

මේ අවස්ථාවේදී අරවින්දගේ කායික හා මානසික සෞඛ්‍යය අනතුරේය. ඔහුගේ වරදකාරිත්වය සහ තමා විසින්ම ඇති කර ගත් දුක් වේදනා වර්ධනය වේ. චිත්තවේගීය අර්බුදය මනෝ කායික මෙන්ම කායික රෝගයන්ට  මග පාදයි. සරෝජිනී සහ බතී අහිමි වූ පසු අරවින්ද තුළ යම් යම් මානසික අවපීඩන අංගයන්  ගොඩ නැගෙන අතර    ඔහු තවදුරටත් සමාජ සබඳතාවලින් ඈත් වෙයි. ඔහු මානසික සහ කායික හුදකලාව අත් විඳියි.  ඔහු විදූරණ (alienation) හැඟීම් සමඟ පොරබදමින් සිටී. අරවින්ද දරුණු ලෙස රෝගාතුර වූ විට බතී නැවත පැමිණේ. ඇය තම මහලු ස්වාමියා පියෙකු මෙන් රැකබලා ගනී. ඇයට ඔහු කෙරෙහි ඇත්තේ පිය සෙනෙහසකි. මේ අවස්ථාවේදී අරවින්දගේ හැඟීම් ඉමහත් ලෙස හිරිවැටෙයි. ඔහු බතීගේ රැකවරණය ලබමින් සිටියදී මිය යයි.

වික්‍රමසිංහගේ විරාගය අර්ථ විරහිත බව සහ විකාර බව ඉස්මතු කරයි. ප්‍රංශ දාර්ශනික  ඇබෙයාර් කැමූ විසින් වර්ධනය කරන ලද absurdity  සංකල්පය වික්‍රමසිංහ ග්‍රහණය කර ගන්නට ඇත. කැමූ අර්ථ විරහිතභාවයට හා   absurdity   සඳහා  එරෙහිව සටන් කිරීම සඳහා පාරභෞතික කැරැල්ලක් යෝජනා කළේය. අරවින්ද තම පාරභෞතික කැරැල්ල දියත් කළේ පෙම්වතිය අහිමි වූ විටය. නමුත් ඔහු අසාර්ථක විය.අරවින්ද සමාජයෙන් ඈත් වූ අතර සමාජ සම්ප්‍රදායන් සහ සමාජ ආයතන පිළිබඳව විවේචනාත්මක විය. ඔහුගේ විරසකය නිහඬ විරෝධයක් විය. සමාජ සංස්කෘතික තහංචි අනුගමනය කරමින් ඔහු සිය ජීව විද්‍යාත්මක ආශාවන් යටපත් කළේය. එහෙත් ඔහුව කොටු කර ගත් සමාජ හා සංස්කෘතික බිත්තිවලට එරෙහිව සටන් කිරීමට ඔහුට සදාචාරාත්මක තන්තු තිබුණේ නැත.  

ඔහුගේ ජීවිතයේ අවසාන අවධියේදී අරවින්ද අර්ථ විරහිතභාවය සහ ඔහුගේ ඉරණම පිළිගත්තේය. අවසානයේ අරවින්ද මිය යන්නේ තම අභ්‍යන්තර ආශාවන් පුරවා ගත නොහැකි හුදකලා මිනිසෙකු ලෙසය. ද්‍රව්‍යමය ජීවිතයෙන් අසාර්ථක වුවද ඔහු කිසිඳු බියකින් හෝ චකිතයකින් තොරව තම මරණයට මුහුණ දුන්නේය.  අවසානයේ අරවින්ද වීරයෙක් වෙන්නේ මරණ සාංකාව පරාජය කිරීමෙනි.

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February 12th, 2022

ආචාර්ය වරුණ චන්ද්‍රකීර්ති

යම් ආරවුලක්, ව්‍යාකූල තත්ත්වයක්, වරදක් සම්බන්ධයෙන් විනිශ්චය ලබාදීමට අධිකරණවල පිහිට පැතීම අතීතයේ සිට ම සිදුවිය. ත්‍රිපිටකය තුළින් ද අධිකරණ ක්‍රම පිළිබඳ කරුණු දැනගත හැකි ය. විනය පිටකයේ චුල්ලවග්ග පාළියෙන් අධිකරණ වර්ග සතරක් පිළිබඳව විස්තර දක්වා තිබේ. විවාදාධිකරණය, අනුවාදාධිකරණය, ආපත්‍යධිකරණය, කාත්‍යාධිකරණ යනු එම අධිකරණ වර්ග සතරයි. එම අධිකරණ මූලික වශයෙන් අදාළවන්නේ භික්‍ෂූන්වහන්සේලාගේ විනයට ය. කෙසේ වුව ද, එම ක්‍රම තුළින් ඉගෙනගත හැකි දෑ ද බොහෝ වෙති.

ඛුද්දක නිකායේ මහානිද්දේසපාළිය තුළ මොසවජ්ජ” (මුසාවාදය) යන වචනය විග්‍රහ කරනු ලැබ ඇත්තේ අධිකරණයක සාක්‍ෂි විමැසීමේ අවස්ථාවක් නිදර්ශන වශයෙන් දක්වමිනි. මෙලොවැ කිසිවෙක් සභායෙහි සිටියේ හෝ ගම් සභායෙහි සිටියේ හෝ නෑයන් මැද සිටියේ හෝ සේනා මැද සිටියේ හෝ රදොල් මැද සිටියේ හෝ ශාක්‍ෂියට කැඳවනු ලදුයේ ‘එව එම්බා පුරුෂය, දන්නා දැය කිය’යි ශාක්‍ෂි අසන ලදුයේ හෙතෙම නො දනිමින් හෝ ‘දනිමී’ කියයි, දනිමින් හෝ ‘නො දනිමී’ කියයි, නො දක්මින් හෝ ‘දක්මී’ කියයි, දක්මින් හෝ ‘නො දක්මී’ කියයි; මෙසේ තමා නිසා හෝ මෙරමා නිසා හෝ ධනය නිසා හෝ මඳ වූ අල්ලසක් නිසා හෝ දැනැ දැනැ බොරු කියයි. මේ ‘මොසවජ්ජ’ යී කියනු ලැබෙයි” කියා එහි දැක්වෙයි.

ආරවුලක්, ව්‍යාකූල තත්ත්වයක්, වරදක් පිළිබඳව විනිශ්චයක් ලබාදීමේ දී මැනැවින් කරුණු විමැසිය යුතු බැව් ත්‍රිපිටකයෙහි අන්තර්ගත මෙවැනි කරුණු තුළින් පැහැදිළි වෙයි. එහෙයින්, ත්‍රිපිටකය සහ අටුවා ග්‍රන්ථ හොඳින් විමර්ශනය කර ජනරජයේ අධිකරණ ක්‍රමය ස්ථාපනයකිරීම අපහසු කාර්යයක් නොවේ.

සුළු ප්‍රමාණයේ ආරවුල් ගම් සභා මට්ටමේ දී ම විසඳාගත හැකි ය. එවැනි කාර්යයක් සඳහා අවශ්‍ය විනිශ්චය සභා මෙම ප්‍රවාදයෙන් යෝජිත ගම් සභා සහ නාගරික සභා ආශ්‍රිතව පිහිටුවිය හැක්කේ ය. ආරවුල් සහ වැරැදි වර්ධනයවීමට ඉඩ නො දී මුල් අවස්ථාවේ ම ඒවා විසැඳීම එම ආයතන විසින් කළ යුතු වෙයි. ඒ සඳහා වන වගකීම් ගම් සභා සහ නාගරික සභා වෙතට ම පැවැරිය හැක්කේ ය.

ජාතික මට්ටම දක්වා වර්ධනය නොවුණු සෑම වියවුලක් ම කෝරළ මට්ටමේ දී විසඳා අවසන්කිරීමේ හැකියාව ජනරජයේ අධිකරණ පද්ධතිය විසින් වර්ධනය කරගත යුත්තේ ය. මෙම ප්‍රවාදයෙන් යෝජිත කෝරළ බුද්ධි මණ්ඩලය” සහ එයට අනුබද්ධ නීති අංශය වෙත ඒ පිළිබඳ වගකීම් පැවැරෙයි.

ආරවුල්, ව්‍යාකූල තත්ත්වයන් සහ වැරැදි පිටුදැකිය හැක්කේ ඒ ඒ කාරණය තනි තනිව විමර්ශනයට ලක්කිරීමෙන් පමණක් නොවේ. දැනට පවතින අධිකරණ ක්‍රමය තුළ කෙරෙනුයේ විනිශ්චයට භාජනය වන කාරණය සමඟ සෘජුව බැඳුණු මතුපිට සාධක පමණක් විමසීම ය. යම් විත්තිකරුවකු විසින් වරද කර තිබේ ද, ඔහුගේ හෝ ඇයගේ මානසික තත්ත්වය කෙබඳු ද වැනි කරුණු වරදක් පිළිබඳ විනිශ්චයක දී සළකා බැලෙයි. එයින් ඔබ්බට ගොස් අදාළ වරදට පසුබිම් විය හැකි සමාජ – ආර්ථික කරුණු විමසීමක් වර්තමාන අධිකරණ ක්‍රියාදාමය තුළ සිදු නොවෙයි.

විනිශ්චයට අදාළ කාරණයට පසුබිම් වූ හේතු” විමර්ශනය සඳහා ප්‍රමුඛත්වයක් බෞද්ධ විනිශ්චය තුළින් ලබාදිය යුතු ය. මෙම කාර්යය නො කර එක ම වරද නැවත නැවතත් සිදුකිරීම වැළැක්විය නො හැකි ය. බටහිර ඕස්ට්‍රේලියානු ජනපදයේ සිදුවන මනුෂ්‍ය ඝාතන අතරින් සියයට 48 ක් ගෘහස්ථ ආරවුල් මුල් කරගෙන ඇතිවන බවක් පසුගිය දා වාර්තාවිය. මෙවැනි කරුණු හඳුනාගත හැක්කේ ඒ පිළිබඳ නිශ්චිත විමර්ශනයක් සිදුකෙරෙන්නේ නම් පමණකි. අදාළ විමර්ශන සහ ඒ අනුව කරනු ලබන නිරීක්‍ෂණ නොමැතිව විනිශ්චයට ලක් කරනු ලබන කාරණයට පසුබිම් වූ හේතු හඳුනාගත නො හැකි ය. හේතු හඳුනා නොගෙන අදාළ වැරැදි නැවත නැවත සිදුකිරීම නො වැළැක්විය හැක්කේ ය.

බෞද්ධ විනිශ්චයේ අරමුණ වනුයේ සමාජය සුවපත්කිරීම ය. මේ සඳහා වන විසඳුම් නිර්මාණය කරගැනීමට නම් සෑම ආරවුලකට, ව්‍යාකූල තත්ත්වයකට, වරදකට අදාළ පසුබිම් හේතු සෙවීම සිදුකළ යුත්තේ ය. මෙම කාර්යයේ වගකීම ගම් සභා සහ නාගරික සභාවලට ද, කෝරළ බුද්ධි මණ්ඩලයේ නීති අංශයට ද පැවැරෙයි. එම නිරීක්‍ෂණ ද සැළැකිල්ලට ගෙන විනිශ්චය ලබාදීම අධිකරණවල වගකීම වන අතර, මෙවැනි ආරවුල්, ව්‍යාකූල තත්ත්වයන් සහ වැරැදි නැවත නැවතත් ඇතිවීම වැළැක්වීම සඳහා විසඳුම් යෝජනාකිරීම කෝරළ බුද්ධි මණ්ඩලයේ සහ අදාළ අනෙකුත් ආයතනවල වගකීම වෙයි.

මේ ආකාරයෙන් හඳුනාගන්නා විසඳුම් ක්‍රියාවට නැංවීම ජනරජයේ සෑම මට්ටමක ම පවත්නා ආයතනවල වගතීම වන අතර එයට අදාළ දැනුම විධිමත් සහ අවිධිමත් ආකාරවලින් සමාජගතකිරීමේ වැඩපිළිවෙළක් ද ක්‍රියාත්මක කළ යුත්තේ ය. මෙම කටයුතුවල සාර්ථකත්වය මැන බැලිය යුත්තේ ආරවුල්, ව්‍යාකූල තත්ත්වයන් සහ වැරැදි නැවත නැවතත් සිදු නොවන බව තහවුරුකිරීමෙන් පමණකි.

ආචාර්ය වරුණ චන්ද්‍රකීර්ති

Sri Lanka-India ties at high point, concerns about Chinese presence in country ‘consigned to past’: G L Peiris

February 12th, 2022

Written by Nirupama Subramanian Courtesy The Indian Express

Peiris said the fishermen’s issue – Indian fishermen trespassing in Sri Lankan waters and getting arrested – was now a serious” flashpoint in ties with India.

Sri Lanka’s foreign minister G L Peiris with External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar. (PTI/File)

In an interview to The Indian Express, Sri Lanka’s foreign minister G L Peiris, who was in Delhi from February 6-8, said India and Sri Lanka had reached a high point in their relations, and that concerns about the Chinese presence in his country had been consigned to the past”. Peiris said the fishermen’s issue – Indian fishermen trespassing in Sri Lankan waters and getting arrested – was now a serious” flashpoint in ties with India. He blamed the Tamil National Alliance for the hiatus” in the implementation of the 13th Amendment because of its support to the previous Maithripala Sirisena government’s decision to change electoral laws.

Roshan Mahanama and proof of vaccination

February 12th, 2022

By Dr D. Chandraratna Courtesy The Island

Issuing a statement to the media Mr Mahanama has urged the airport authorities to take steps to mitigate inconvenience to passengers in the future. According to his word our ex-cricketer has taken two out of the three vaccines in the UK.

In the media statement he has released, he states that, ‘ I took my second and third vaccinations in the UK. Having been responsible and taking the vaccine on time did not necessarily help me, as the health authority in Sri Lanka refused to issue me the full vaccination certificate as I had not taken the second and third vaccines in Sri Lanka’. What appears to a cursory observer is that the Sri Lankan authorities correctly refused him to board the plane as he had not presented the certificate that he should have obtained from the UK authorities which is Mahanama’s responsibility. It is unfair to blame Sri Lankan health for it is the responsibility of the traveller to do so. Mahanama ought to be aware of the incident involving the world’s Number One Tennis player Novak Djokovic in Australia. No one is above the law as the Australian Prime Minister has said.

There is always some friction between the strict adherence to the rule and the exercise of appropriate discretion in instances when formal law becomes an obstacle in the speedy delivery of justice. But here is a clear and impersonal rule which was correctly adhered to by the BIA authorities.

Mahanama’s request to the BIA authorities to do otherwise does not make sense other than asking them to adjust the rule to his particular circumstance which borders on corrupt practice.

On a personal note, I remember that while on a UN assignment, at the Male airport, an airport police officer ‘planted’ a European traveller and his family and stood them in front of me, breaking the long line of tired passengers waiting for clearance. Slightly aggrieved, I mentioned this to my host who came to the airport to take me to the hotel. The host took the matter so seriously that the police officer was given a warning, I was later informed by letter. It has been mentioned that some countries need to reduce discretion and impose more rules while others should do the reverse. But Sri Lanka is not in the latter category because we have often noticed that discretion minus accountability ends up as corruption, which we must contain in order to be modern.

Mahanama has every right to assert his stance and is free to use every opportunity to seek redress. But the big picture must be kept in mind. The purpose of the rule is to make transparent the society’s rules and to use them even handed. The vast procedural apparatus which is the speciality of the legal profession is a means to deliver such even handed justice.

We do understand that procedures at times take precedence and stymies the substantive ends of justice. Such worship of procedure over substance is a source of political decay in modern democracies but worst is the case when rules are bent to suit individuals.

We know that in our country powerful interest groups can take advantage of existing procedures narrow gains and hinder broad public interest. In those circumstances public interest claims fail to receive adequate representation.

In developing countries it is often the case that those in authority favour friends and family members in violation of procedures.

Striking health workers ignore court ruling, vows to meet govt. challenge

February 12th, 2022

By Rathindra Kuruwita Courtesy The Island

Striking health sector trade unions yesterday (11) declared that they wouldn’t call off their trade union action in spite of a Court ruling issued the previous day. Top spokesperson for the trade union grouping Government Nursing Officers Association (GNOA) head Saman Rathnapriya emphasised that they hadn’t been informed of enjoying orders issued by Court.

District Judge of Colombo Aruna Aluthge has issued two enjoining orders preventing unions from continuing its trade union action.

We have only heard of such an order from the media. We were not called before the Court; nor have we been informed of such enjoining orders. Trade union action is a right guaranteed by the Constitution. If we had been called before the courts, we would have explained why we were doing this,” the former UNP National List MP said.

Countrywide hospitals were severely affected by the strike, launched on 07 Feb.

Rathnapriya said that if the Court had actually issued enjoining orders and his union had been officially informed of them, it would convene a meeting of their executive committee and taken a decision.

The College of Medical Laboratory Science (CMLS) President, Ravi Kumudesh, told The Island that they would file a case against the Secretary to the Ministry of Health, Maj. Gen. Sanjeeva Munasinghe for failing to take tangible measures to prevent them resorting to trade union action.

This strike could have been easily averted. We had given ample time for the government to address our seven demands. However, they did nothing. Secretary to the Ministry of Health could have discussed with us during the past three months. He ignored the demands of 65,000 health sector professionals and that is what has led to a union action. He is responsible for the inconvenience that the people are experiencing,” Kumudesh said.

The CMLS head said that, they were ready to meet any attempts of oppression head on. Instead of making false allegations to undermine legitimate trade union action, the Health Ministry must solve the issues faced by its employees, Kumudesh said.

Now, they are claiming that a person has died at Bibile and they are trying to blame us. Apparently, an ultra sound scan had to be performed and those who perform ultra sound scans are not on strike. If the life of a patient was lost due to conducting surgery, under inadequate facilities; those who took that decision must be held responsible.”

Meanwhile, the Minister of Health Keheliya Rambukwelle said that he expected the health workers to return to duty, respecting the Court order.

Sri Lanka identifies 1,162 new cases of Covid-19 and death toll moves up with 23 new fatalities

February 12th, 2022

Courtesy Adaderana

The Health Ministry says that another 1,162 persons have tested positive for Covid-19 today, as the daily count of new cases continues to rise in the country.

This brings the tally of Covid-19 cases registered in the country thus far to 626,966. 

According to official figures, 594,738 positive cases have recovered.

Following the new development, the number of virus-infected people who are undergoing treatment moved to 16,451. Meanwhile, the death toll stands at 15,777.

The Director-General of Health Services has confirmed 23 new coronavirus-related fatalities for February 11, moving the death toll in the country from the virus to 15,777.

This includes 12 males and 11 females, according to the Department of Government Information.

Four of the deceased were in the age group of 30-59 years. Another one was aged below 30 years and the remaining 18 victims were aged 60 years and above

රාජකාරියට නොපැමිණෙන සුව සේවකයින් සේවය හැරගියා සේ සැලකේ – නීතිඥ ප්‍රතිභා මහානාමහේවා 

February 12th, 2022

Hiru News

Strikes – another form of terrorism

February 11th, 2022

S. Akurugoda

A leading news item appeared in the Divaina dated 08 February 2022, under the title (translated to English) The people must stand up against strikes – Dr Rukshan Bellana” has quite rightly exposed the hidden agenda of the strikes are being carried out by some trade unions affiliated to political parties (https://divaina.lk/ මේ-වර්ජනවලට-එරෙහිව-ජනතාව/) .  As per the news item, Dr. Rukshan Bellana, President of the Government Medical Officers’ Forum, has told that the health service is maintained by the taxes levied on the people of the country and if they have any problems, a civilized society will not allow them to take the patients hostage without resolving them through negotiations. He also said that this was being done as a trade union struggle to do what the political parties wanted and that the trade unions affiliated to the political parties’ should be banned and that the people should unite against such rallies. He said that some of the trade union-based instances and attempts to base themselves on various demands such as going to parliament from national lists and requesting ministerial posts in ministries.

Although Dr Bellana has not named the individuals who are currently posing as trade union leaders, we are fully aware of how a trade union activist attached to the health sector entered the parliament for a week or two via the national list for his political services rendered to the Yahapalana government. What he did to the duty free vehicle license thus obtained has become an interesting issue. The easiest way to find out how they even contributed to the continuation of terrorism in the past is to search their records on line. Interestingly, I found a list of names of the trade union activists attached to the Health services among the list of politicians, so-called civil societies and trade union activists, who were promoting LTTE as an integral part of ‘the solution’ and campaigning in support of the CFA in 2006, in a pro LTTE website (https://www.tamilnet.com/art.html?artid=19261&catid=13).  

Freedom to involve in strikes were very limited (or not at all) for the government employees prior to 1956. As a result of granting some freedom to the government and public sector employees affiliated to political parties  in 1956, we remember how trade unions of ‘comrades’ political parties who called upon workers to ‘establish an administration of the working class’  started strikes throughout   the country even for extremely minor issues.  While addressing a public meeting during the 1960 elections held after the assassination of SWRD,  Mrs Sirimavo Bandaranike  stated how  those ‘comrades’ parties, ‘politically killed him without physically killing’  (‘’nomara maruwa’’)  her husband by promoting strikes.  By allowing politicians of successive governments to interfere with the appointments of various positions within the public service, the government servants and their trade unions are politically divided to an uncontrollable extent today. I remember, as a former employee, how those ‘comrades’ started their first ever strike in the then Ceylon Steel Corporation in 1969 and how they attempted to achieve their dream of ‘an administration of the working class’ by chasing away forcefully the non union members and the leading administration including the Chairman and the General Manger from the site, after their failed strike and return back to work. Some of the officers had to runaway for fear of life and finally, the then the Minister of Industries Mr Phiip Gunawardana had to interfere and ensure their safety for them to reenter the Corporation site.

Although right to strikes is considered as a human right and recognized in almost all so-called democratic champion countries, they have introduced legislations to regulate the strike actions. In particular; they impose limitations for the strikes of workers in public essential services, such as health, security, movements, assistance and welfare, education, and communications. 

In the UK, strike action organized by a trade union is legal provided some tough conditions are met. For example: The union must have conducted a lawful ballot of all the members it believes will be called upon to take part. In Australia, there may be a right to strike in limited circumstances, but in practice there is no right to strike, except for exceptional circumstances.

Under Australian laws, strikes can only happen during bargaining. At all other times they are unlawful.

Even during bargaining there are too many hurdles. Before workers can take a bargaining strike they must prove that they are genuinely trying to reach agreement, hold a secret ballot, give their employer three clear days notice of the strike etc.  If a strike happens outside of bargaining then workers and their unions face dire consequences.

The employer can:

  • Gets an automatic order from the Fair Work Commission requiring a return to work. 
  • Get injunctions from Federal and State Courts.
  • Discipline workers or sack them.
  • Sue unions and workers for contempt of court if orders or injunctions are not followed to the letter.
  • Sue the workers and their union under various laws for fines up to $10,800 for workers and $54,000 for unions.
  • Seek compensation against workers and their unions for lost revenue.

Even if the employer doesn’t want to take legal action, government agencies, such as the Fair Work Ombudsman and the Australian Building and Construction Commission can initiate such actions.

I spent  almost half of employment life outside Sri Lanka including African and Pacific regions, I have not come across or even seen a single strike in those countries similar to what is going on in Sri Lanka. Considering the inconvenience caused to the general public, while accepting the right to strikes, the government should take necessary steps to regulate   the strike actions, at least, in public essential services similar to what the other countries do in the world.

S. Akurugoda

The Challenge to get Sri Lanka on the right track to face  the economic problems of today.

February 11th, 2022

Garvin Karunaratne, Ph.D. Michigan State University

The Editorial of The Island tells it all: The challenge before us is to retrace our steps, figure out where we took wrong turns, and forge ahead in the right direction as many other nations have already done. Easier said than done, but there seems to be no other way.”

The problem is that even to retrace our footsteps there is no consensus in learned opinions. Addressing the Tenth Annual Conference of the Sri Lanka Forum of University economists on 27 th January 2022, Professor Premachandra Atukorale has said that it is impossible to heavily rely on import and exchange controls without compromising on a massive economic collapse and social upheaval.”(Ceylon Today01022022)

Perhaps some detail of how we once handled the economy of Sri Lanka, may be useful to think of how we can retrace our footsteps to the days when we did not have food queues and social upheaval, all the while handling development very  successfully..

In 1968 February I was posted as the Additional Government Agent at Kegalla District. I worked there for two years. I knew of no queues for any essential food during that period. In fact,  I was in charge of providing essential food- as the Deputy Food Controller for the District. At that time every area was covered with a cooperative society and in each division there were Cooperative Unions that were equipped with stores and lorries and on a clockwork basis all essential food was distributed through the cooperatives. This included a measure of rice per person per week, entirely free, under the Rice Ration Scheme, which was done away by President Jayawardena in 1978. Then there was a major Department at work- the Food Commissioner’s Department,  managed at the helm by a senior civil servant, a department that had very large stores full of rice and flour and also attended to imports when necessary.  At the district level there was an Assistant Food Controller who worked directly under me and it was our duty to see that food was always available without any interruption. Importing essentials like dhall, chillies etc was handled by the CWE because depending on the private sector has proved unreliable – the private sector has making a profit as its aim, service to the people comes next.

Even in other Districts there were no food queues

Kegalla District included the electorates of the prime minister Mr Dudley Senanayake, Minister NH Karunaratne, Deputy Ministers Imbulana, Vimala Kannangara, Beligammana and also Dr NM Perera of the Opposition. There was never a delay in providing essential food- and that included rice, lentils, chillies and other curry stuffs.. I had the unenviable task of meeting the hon prime minister every Saturday and Sunday morning at around nine at the Warakapola Rest House and to accompany him to a host of meetings in his electorate, ending in the late evenings, and there was never a person that had a complaint. The Divisional; Secretaries had to work to perfection and they were meticulous. . There were a few bad eggs that I had to get rid of. Had there been any interruption in food supplies, the ministers would have complained to the Prime Minister and Dr NM would have raised the matter in Parliament.

This was also the situation in Matara when I was the Government Agent in 1971 to 1973. There were no Ministers in any electorates and only one Deputy Minister, Mr Tudawe. There were no shortages except during the  JVP insurrection of April 1971.

In those day there was no foreign exchange problem because there were effective controls over the little foreign exchange that came in through exports and other sources. There were no currency dealers who handled foreign exchange like today and the intake of foreign currency was a guarded property, that was used first for importing essentials, and small allocations were made to import useful non essential items like automobiles and fridges.. This was the situation even when we had ample funds – when we financed the Gal Oya Development Project- a massive project building a tank three times the size of Parakrama Samudra at Amparai, bringing 60,000 hectares under cultivation and creating many industries all done with foreign funds we had. We had effective controls- even then. 

In 1970 I worked as the Deputy Director of Small Industries and one of my tasks was to ensure that every small industrialist had an allocation of foreign exchange to import any particular item they required for their manufactures. I can state that every application was inquired into by my inspectors of industry- I had some twenty of them and assessed by me, every genuine small industry received an allocation. Then no foreign funds were allowed for foreign study but an exception was made to provide foreign  funds  for Sunethra and Chandrika Bandaranayake,  and I had the occasion to question the prime minister as to why he did it, That was the only request I had from an earlier prime minister and I felt like allowing it.” was his reply.

Foreign exchange was then a guarded item. When I left the Administrative Service and moved abroad in April 1973 I did not get a single penny. My wife and three children were given only three pounds and five shillings. We had to earn and spend for studies.

 It was by effectively controlling by import and also controlling foreign exchange that all Third World countries managed their economies without any economic collapse. The economic might of India itself is indicative of an economy that did not follow the IMF and used funds borrowed from the IMF to bring about development  by controlling the economy. .

Sri Lanka managed its foreign exchange effectively till President Jayawardena was fooled by the IMF to follow the Structural Adjustment Programme, which advised President Jayawardena to allow the rich to spend foreign exchange as much as they want- for endless foreign travel, to educate their children abroad, import all luxury items and the IMF provided loans for this purpose and mind you to entice the leaders, even provided grace periods when the service and interest charges were not to be paid. The then leaders enjoyed and the rich played with the funds leaving the future leaders to bear the brunt of repayment. That is the process that led us to the present abyss.

Then there were two budgets a local Rupee budget for handling all work in the country including major development tasks, funded with printed money and a foreign exchange budget to handle the foreign exchange that was collected. Recently the Central Bank Governor Cabral had decided that all foreigners staying at hotels should be charged in foreign currency. This is a decision that should have been taken long ago. Other countries like India and Thailand took similar action over decades ago. We unfortunately do not collect even fifty percent of the foreign exchange that comes in today and it is time that we put a dragnet like in the period before 1977.  

Of the period 1948 to 1977, an exception is the period 1974to 1977 when there were shortages due to the Government de emphasising agricultural development in order to have their own Divisional Development Councils Programme and embarking on land reform which stifled development and caused foreign sanctions. Even then Prime Minister Sirimavo managed to make all demanded payments and managed without falling into foreign debt. 1976 and 1977 happen to be the last years when our country was run without a deficit. Since then annually our foreign debt has increased  and is at  $ 56 billion today. .

Thus the manner in which we handled the economy in the pre 1977 period is a tried and tested blue print that was successfully implemented for close upon two decades, which offers us the only path to follow to get out of the present  abyss.

Garvin Karunaratne, Ph.D. Michigan State University, 08022022

Author of :

How the IMF Ruined Sri lanka and Alternative Programmes of Success: Godages, 2006   

How the IMF Sabotaged Third World Development: Kindle/Godages, 2017)

Should Bangladesh Lease Land from South Sudan?

February 11th, 2022

Nandita Roy Bangladesh

For a long period of time, Bangladesh has been striving to ensure food security at home by planning to shop farmland abroad. Recently, South Sudan, an African country, has expressed interest in leasing a vast area of its fallow land to Bangladesh in order to collaborate in agricultural production, processing, and marketing in the central African countries. This is not the first time Bangladesh is going to lease foreign land and earlier, two Bangladeshi companies leased 40,000 hectares of farmland in Tanzania and Uganda. This move of Dhaka in leasing foreign land is one of the various initiatives undertaken to increase food production in the wake of the growing population and decreasing arable land. But this time, citing the feasibility of this proposal, critics raise the question, “Should Bangladesh accept this offer?” “What benefits Bangladesh will get if it accepts this offer?”  

South Sudan, a landlocked country of Central Africa, has a total 644,329 sq KM land area with a total population of 11.06 million. Most of the land of this country is fallow and not being used for cultivation or for any other productive purposes. Undoubtedly, there is a huge untapped possibility that can be accrued by utilizing these lands for agricultural production. The government of South Sudan has been discussing the issue of cultivating crops in their land with the Bangladesh government for a long time. Luckily, the issues have started seeing light as many Bangladeshi entrepreneurs have agreed in considering the proposal seriously to invest there. 

In recent years, Bangladesh is focusing largely on industrialization but the agricultural sector remains the lifeblood and irreplaceable driving force for Bangladesh’s economy. In FY 2020-21, the contribution of agriculture to Bangladesh’s GDP was 13.47 percent. Though the contribution of agriculture to the GDP is gradually declining, it is still the major employment source with 40 percent of total employment. Bangladesh is now self-sufficient in food production with net food produced in 2021 being over 4.53 crore metric tons. The agriculture-friendly policies of the country have contributed greatly to this success. Besides, the skills and expertise of our farmers cannot be ignored while preparing the ledger of success of our agricultural productions. The agricultural scientists, researchers, faculty members of agricultural universities in Bangladesh have been working relentlessly to bring innovative ideas and latest technologies in this sector to ensure maximum output utilizing the limited arable land available and with minimal effect on the environment. 

There are several factors that attract a pointed direction towards why Bangladesh should accept the proposal of leasing land in South Sudan. First, we know that Bangladesh is one of those countries in the world that has one of the lowest rates of arable land per citizen. Leasing land from abroad will help the country to meet the growing food demand of 1.65 million people at home. Second, if Bangladesh can successfully start cultivating agricultural crops in South Sudan, it will bring economic gain for Bangladesh not only by selling the agricultural goods to the local market but also by exporting to 27 other Central African countries. Third, Bangladesh has sufficient expertise in agricultural sectors which can be optimally utilized, and possibly further be expanded, if Bangladesh can successfully start producing in the land leased from South Sudan. Fourth, there are many renowned agricultural scientists in Bangladesh who are doing excellent research work on the country’s agricultural sector. If Bangladesh leases land in South Sudan, these researchers can also contribute to boosting agricultural production in African countries. This is how Bangladesh can contribute, to some extent, to finding a sustainable solution to the prolonged food crisis in Africa.

Fifth, Bangladesh has huge labor, mostly notably farmers, who have expertise and experience in agricultural sectors. If Bangladeshi investors invest in the agricultural sector in South Sudan, it will create huge employment opportunities for Bangladeshi migrant labor, and ultimately contribute to increasing Bangladesh’s foreign exchange reserve. Sixth, once Bangladesh leases land from South Sudan, it will increase Bangladesh’s brand image as it is a sign of the country’s capability and financial strength. Seventh, once successfully implemented, this project will open a new window of opportunities for Bangladesh in other African countries which can be further utilized for increasing financial return for Bangladesh. Eighth, both countries can jointly produce lentils, oil, cotton, and other crops on the leased land and share the products which will bring fortune for both of them by helping them to avoid future food shortages.

The above discussion shows the projected benefits that Bangladesh may avail if it cooperates with South Sudan in the agricultural sector. As it will require hefty investment, Bangladesh should conduct a feasibility study and seek the opinion of the experts of the relevant field before making the final decision. Also, Bangladesh should send a team of multi-sector specialists including agro researchers, agricultural scientists, agricultural extension officials, and marketing and financial experts to examine the potential and financial viability of investing in the agricultural sector of South Sudan. But there is no doubt that it is a great achievement for Bangladesh as it has brightened the country’s image and testified to the country’s increased financial strengths and growing agricultural capacities. Not to mention, if Bangladesh can build agricultural infrastructure in a correct and responsible way, it will create a win-win situation for both countries.

Ambassador Chaminda Colonne highlights citizens’ national responsibility to work together to build motherland

February 11th, 2022

The Embassy and Permanent Mission of Sri Lanka Bangkok, Thailand

Commemorating 74th Anniversary of Sri Lanka’s Independence,

Ambassador Chaminda Colonne highlights citizens’ national responsibility to

work together to build motherland

On 04th February, 2022, Ambassador of Sri Lanka to the Kingdom of Thailand and Permanent Representative to UNESCAP, C.A.Chaminda I. Colonne, Spouse  and Embassy staff proudly celebrated the 74th Anniversary of Independence of Sri Lanka at Ambassador’s Official Residence at Fairview Tower in Bangkok.

The programme comprised of hoisting of the national flag by the Ambassador Chaminda Colonne, singing the national anthem, followed by a two-minutes silence in memory of all patriotic Sri Lankans who sacrificed their lives for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the country. Ambassador Chaminda Colonne read the speech delivered by President Gotabaya Rajapaksa at the National Independence Day Celebration in Colombo. Independence Day Messages of Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa and Foreign Minster Prof. G.L. Peiris were read by First Secretary and Head of Chancery Saritha Ranatunga.

Delivering her remarks at the occasion Ambassador recalled that beloved motherland was under colonial power for 443 years, and ruled by  Portuguese, Dutch, British, from 1505 to 1948 and the political struggle for independence was unitedly led by our Sinhala, Tamil and Muslim leaders, and the lost freedom was finally won back on 4th February in  1948.

Ambassador stated that ‘we can also overcome today’s  COVID-19 pandemic challenges, as His Excellency the President Gotabaya Rajapaksa is ready to give the necessary leadership. At this difficult time, we all as responsible citizens of Sri Lanka have a national responsibility to work together and build our motherland and support the Government to create a productive citizen, a happy family, a disciplined society and a prosperous nation’.

While recalling Sri Lanka – Thailand bilateral relations based on shared history and common spiritual heritage, guided and nurtured by the timeless message of the Lord Buddha, Ambassador added that her earnest hope is that those excellent bonds of friendship and cooperation will be expanded into new avenues of cooperation, especially in trade, economic fields and investment with the blessings of His Majesty the King Maha Vajiralongkorn Phra Vajiraklaochaoyuhua of the Kingdom of Thailand.

Commemorating Sri Lanka’s 74th Anniversary of Independence, on 04th February 202, Thailand’s National Radio, Radio Thailand World Service and Thailand Elite+ Magazine carried out special messages from the Ambassador and Expat Life magazine published an interview with the Ambassador on Sri Lanka.

The celebration was followed by a lunch hosted by Ambassador Chaminda Colonne and Spouse Stephan Nishantha Senanayake. Country Manager of SriLankan Airlines in Thailand Tharaka Galahitiyawa and family members of the Embassy staff also attended the event.

The Embassy and Permanent Mission of Sri Lanka

Bangkok, Thailand

07th February 2022

වෙල්ඩින්  ක්ෂේත්‍රයේ නව රැකියා අවස්ථා වෙනුවෙන් VTA සහ Tantri Trailers සමාගම අවබෝධතා ගිවිසුම් අත්සන් කෙරේ.

February 11th, 2022

නිපුණතා සංවර්ධන වෘත්තීය අධ්‍යාපන පර්යේෂණ හා නව නිපැයුම් රාජ්‍ය අමාත්‍යාංශය

Tantri Trailers සමාගම සහ නිපුණතා සංවර්ධන, වෘත්තීය අධ්‍යාපන, පර්යේෂණ හා නව නිපැයුම් රාජ්‍ය අමාත්‍යාංශය යටතේ ක්‍රියාත්මක වන ශ්‍රී ලංකා වෘත්තීය පුහුණු අධිකාරිය (VTA) සමඟ අවබෝධතා ගිවිසුම් අත්සන් කිරීම රාජ්‍ය අමාත්‍ය විශේෂඥ වෛද්‍ය සීතා අරඹේපොල මැතිණියගේ ප්‍රධානත්වයෙන් 10 දින සිදු කෙරිණ.

Tantri Trailers සමාගම විසින් ට්‍ර‍ෙලර්, ඉදිකිරීම් යන්ත්‍රාගාර හා උපකරණ, සන්නිවේදන කුළුණු, දොඹකර ඇතුළු උපකරණ හා නිෂ්පාදන රාශියක් නිපදවන අතර රටවල් 30කට අධික සංඛ්‍යාවක් වෙත ඔවුන්ගේ නිෂ්පාදන අපනයනය කරනු ලබයි. මේ අනුව පුහුණු අධිකාරිය සතු පහළ යාගොඩ පිහිටි මධ්‍යස්ථානය Tantri ආයතනය හා එක්ව ක්ෂේත්‍රයේ තුළ පවතින තාක්ෂණය සහිත ආයතනයක් ලෙස වැඩි දියුණු කරන අතර වැඩිදුර පුහුණුව Tantri Trailers කර්මාන්තශාලා තුළින් ලබා දෙයි. එමඟින් වඩා යාවත්කාලීන පුහුණුවක් දරුවන් සඳහා ලැබෙන අතර රැකියා සුරක්ෂිතභාවය ද ඇති වේ

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මෙහිදී වැඩිදුරටත් අදහස් දක්වමින් ගරු රජ්‍ය අමාත්‍යතුමිය සඳහන් කරන ලද්දේ පුද්ගලික අංශයේ කර්මාන්තකරුවන් සමග එක්ව වෘත්තීය පුහුණු අවස්ථා ඇති කිරීම තුළින් රැකියා සඳහා අවශ්‍ය උසස් තාක්ෂණය දරුවන් හට ලබා දිය හැකි බවයි.

මෙම අවස්ථාව සඳහා ශ්‍රී ලංකා වෘත්තීය පුහුණු අධිකාරියේ සභාපති එරංග බස්නායක මහතා, Tantri Trailers සමාගමේ අධ්‍යක්ෂ මයාන් හපුතන්ත්‍රී මහතා, කලමනාකරණ අධ්‍යක්ෂ අතුල හපුතන්ත්‍රී මහතා, මෝටර් රථ ධාවන ශූර ඩිලන්ත මාලගමුව මහතා ඇතුළු පිරිසක් සහභාගී විය.

මාධ්‍ය ඒකකය

නිපුණතා සංවර්ධන වෘත්තීය අධ්‍යාපන පර්යේෂණ හා නව නිපැයුම් රාජ්‍ය අමාත්‍යාංශය

සමස්ත ලංකා ශාසනාරක්ෂක මණ්ඩලයේ ගැටලු විසඳන්නැයි අග්‍රාමාත්‍යතුමා නිලධාරීන්ට උපදෙස් දෙයි

February 11th, 2022

අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය මාධ්‍ය අංශය

සමස්ත ලංකා ශාසනාරක්ෂක මණ්ඩලයේ දැනට පවතින ගැටලු විසඳීමට කටයුතු කරන්නැයි අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය මහින්ද රාජපක්ෂ මහතා ඊයේ (10) පස්වරුවේ අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය ලේකම්තුමා සහ බුද්ධශාසන ආගමික හා සංස්කෘතික කටයුතු අමාත්‍යාංශයේ ලේකම්තුමා ඇතුළු නිලධාරීන්ට උපදෙස් දුන්නේය.

අරලියගහ මන්දිරයේ දී පැවැති සමස්ත ලංකා ශාසනාරක්ෂක මණ්ඩලයේ සාකච්ඡාවේ දී ඉදිරිපත්වූ කරුණු සැළකිල්ලට ගනිමින් අග්‍රාමාත්‍යතුමා මෙම උපදෙස් ලබා දුන්නේය.

නාගදීප රජමහා විහාරස්ථානය පූජා භූමියක් බවට පත්කිරීමේ සන්නස් පත්‍රය ප්‍රදානය කිරීමේ උත්සවය එළැඹෙන මාර්තු මාසයේ පැවැත්වීමට ද අග්‍රාමාත්‍යතුමාගේ ප්‍රධානත්වයෙන් රැස්වූ මෙම සාකච්ඡාවේ දී තීරණය කෙරිණි.

දහම්පාසල් කොඩි දිනය,දහම් පාසල් දින ජාතික උත්සවය සහ දහම් පාසල් සිසු නිපුණතා ජාතික උත්සවය පැවැත්වීම සම්බන්ධයෙන් ද මෙහි දී අවධානය යොමු විය.

දහම් පාසල් පොත් බෙදා දීමේ ප්‍රවාහන කටයුතු සඳහා දිස්ත්‍රික් ලේකම්වරුන්ගේ සහය ලබා ගන්නැයි අග්‍රාමාත්‍යතුමා මෙහි දී දැනුම් දුන්නේය.

සිවුපස ආධාර ලබා දීමේ වැඩසටහන තමන් ජනාධිපතිවරයා ලෙස කටයුතු කරමින් සිටිය දී ආරම්භ කළ වැඩසටහනක් බව සිහිපත් කළ අග්‍රාමාත්‍යතුමා, දුෂ්කරතා තිබෙන විහාරස්ථානවල ස්වාමීන්වහන්සේලා වෙනුවෙන් එම වැඩපිළිවෙල අඛණ්ඩව ක්‍රියාත්මක විය යුතු බව පැවසීය.

උතුරු හා නැගෙනහිර පළාත්වල පූජා භූමි හා පුරාවිද්‍යා ස්ථානවල දැනට පවතින ගැටලු නිරාකරණය කරමින් ඒවායේ ඇති ශිලා ලේඛන අනාගත පරපුර වෙනුවෙන් සංරක්ෂණය කළ යුතු බවද අග්‍රාමාත්‍යතුමා මෙහි දී අවධාරණය කළේය.

සමස්ත ලංකා ශාසනාරක්ෂක මණ්ඩලය නියෝජනය කරමින් පූජ්‍ය මහාචාර්ය තුඹුල්ලේ සීලක්ඛන්ධ නායක ස්වාමීන්වහන්සේ, පූජ්‍ය මුගුණුවෙල අනුරුද්ධ නායක ස්වාමීන්වහන්සේ, පූජ්‍ය මැදගම ධම්මානන්ද ස්වාමීන්වහන්සේ, පූජ්‍ය මැදගමුවේ විජයමෛත්‍රී අනුනායක ස්වාමීන්වහන්සේ ඇතුළු මහා සංඝරත්නය මෙහි වැඩම කළහ.

මෙම අවස්ථාවට අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය ලේකම් අනුර දිසානායක, බුද්ධශාසන ආගමික හා සංස්කෘතික කටයුතු අමාත්‍යාංශයේ ලේකම් මහාචාර්ය කපිල ගුණවර්ධන මහත්වරු ඇතුළු අමාත්‍යාංශ කිහිපයක ලේකම්වරු, අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය අතිරේක ලේකම් නිශාන්ත වීරසිංහ මහතා සහ රාජ්‍ය ආයතන රැසක ප්‍රධානීහු එක්ව සිටියහ.

Sri Lanka: Government’s Badly Planned Organic Farming Policy Upsets Rice Farmers

February 11th, 2022

By R.M. Samanmalee Swarnalatha Courtesy Eurasiareview

sri lanka farm rice

Sri Lankan government’s badly planned organic farming policy that has banned the use of chemical fertilizer in farms has upset farmers in this rice-growing heartland and a political stronghold of the ruling coalition. The policy has also drawn criticism from agricultural experts, who warn that Sri Lanka’s food security is at stake.

Chairman of Minneriya Integrated Farmer Organization, Anil Gunawardhna argues that the government organic fertilizer program is an utter failure because it was announced without any proper program and work plan to achieve its aims.

The government’s original plan was to achieve this organic cultivation in ten years time.  However, without any discussion with farmers they banned the import of chemical fertilizer,” he complains.

Writing in The Sunday Times in May last year just after the government banned chemical fertilizer imports, agricultural scientist Saman Dharmakeethi criticized the decision predicting that it would cause loss of forests and a food crisis. 

In his election campaign in 2019 under the theme of ‘ Vistas of Prosperity and Splendour’  President Gotabaya Rajapakse, clearly mentioned that building up a community of citizens who are healthy and productive, we need to develop the habit of consuming food with no contamination with harmful chemicals”. In order to guarantee the peoples’ right to such safe food, the entire Sri Lankan agriculture will be promoted to use organic fertilizers within ten years, the election policy platform said.https://googleads.g.doubleclick.net/pagead/ads?client=ca-pub-7107515782730935&output=html&h=280&slotname=8800050277&adk=1815670793&adf=4170075671&pi=t.ma~as.8800050277&w=336&lmt=1644611173&psa=1&format=336×280&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.eurasiareview.com%2F11022022-sri-lanka-governments-badly-planned-organic-farming-policy-upsets-rice-farmers%2F&flash=0&wgl=1&uach=WyJXaW5kb3dzIiwiMTQuMC4wIiwieDg2IiwiIiwiOTguMC40NzU4LjgyIixbXSxudWxsLG51bGwsIjY0IixbWyIgTm90IEE7QnJhbmQiLCI5OS4wLjAuMCJdLFsiQ2hyb21pdW0iLCI5OC4wLjQ3NTguODIiXSxbIkdvb2dsZSBDaHJvbWUiLCI5OC4wLjQ3NTguODIiXV1d&dt=1644622260645&bpp=1&bdt=2339&idt=100&shv=r20220209&mjsv=m202202070101&ptt=9&saldr=aa&abxe=1&cookie=ID%3D491c2db089893330-22801faedece003c%3AT%3D1641084031%3ART%3D1641084031%3AS%3DALNI_MbcH5XVOp3A-2a1zAvcMfC7fIWd4g&prev_fmts=0x0%2C336x280&nras=1&correlator=7634018995415&frm=20&pv=1&ga_vid=44937498.1641084070&ga_sid=1644622261&ga_hid=703749957&ga_fc=1&u_tz=0&u_his=2&u_h=1080&u_w=1920&u_ah=1032&u_aw=1920&u_cd=24&u_sd=1&dmc=8&adx=397&ady=1603&biw=1903&bih=929&scr_x=0&scr_y=0&eid=42531397%2C31064806%2C21065724%2C21067496&oid=2&pvsid=546248655667300&pem=614&tmod=26331352&uas=0&nvt=1&ref=https%3A%2F%2Fc.newsnow.co.uk%2F&eae=0&fc=1920&brdim=0%2C0%2C0%2C0%2C1920%2C0%2C1920%2C1032%2C1920%2C929&vis=1&rsz=%7C%7CeEbr%7C&abl=CS&pfx=0&cms=2&fu=0&bc=31&ifi=3&uci=a!3&btvi=2&fsb=1&xpc=2kkYlPYBXi&p=https%3A//www.eurasiareview.com&dtd=105

When President Rajapakse banned the importation of chemical fertilizers and pesticides in April 2021, he cited health concerns. The ban on its importation was imposed through an Extraordinary Gazette Notification on May 6th last year, following the Cabinet endorsement of the plan under the theme of  Creating a Green Socio-economy with Sustainable Solutions for Climate Change”.  The document admitted that the use of chemical fertilizers has led to better harvests but has also contaminated lakes, canals and groundwater.

For more than two decades a mysterious kidney disease has been spreading among farmers in the mainly rice-growing areas, which has baffled both hydrologists and medical experts. It is suspected that the overuse of chemicals in farming may be the cause.

Weaning Away From Green Revolution” Technology

With many vested interests at work, the government is learning a bitter lesson that it is not easy to wean away farmers from the use of chemicals in farming. It needs careful planning and closer consultations with farmers.

The agricultural production system in Sri Lanka consists of two traditional and well-defined components. One is the plantation section, established during the colonial period, consisting of large units, and producing perennial crops such as coffee, tea, rubber, and coconut mainly for export. The other is the smallholder sector comprised of small farms, which produce most of the country’s rice, vegetables, legumes, tubers, spices, and fruits.

While, fertilizers and pesticides have long been used for the production of plantation crops in Sri Lanka, until several decades ago, most of the smallholder operations were farmed with little or no input of agricultural chemicals. Wide use of chemical fertilizer was introduced to the country during the so-called ‘green revolution’ in the decades 1960-70 along with high-yielding” seeds.

Costly Fertilizer Imports and Subsidy

In 2020, Sri Lanka imported (both state and private sector) foreign fertilizers worth  $259 million, representing 1.6 percent of the country’s total imports by value according to Central Bank statistics. Sources indicate that the 2021 import bill could potentially total in the range of $300-$400 million given current international prices. By limiting and/or banning costly foreign exchange draining fertilizer and agrochemical imports, the Sri Lankan government aims to generate significant import cost savings.

But, Professor Buddhi Marambe, a former Dean of Agriculture Faculty at the University of Peradeniya in recent newspaper articles has warned that an overnight shift to organic fertilizer could lead to crop declines that in turn cause huge food shortages within months. We have spoken based on science. Without going for evidence-based decisions, nothing will go right,” he argues, refuting claims by the government that they are being manipulated. Food security is national security,” he stresses, adding, we must have sustainable policies to ensure food security because there is no point relying on food imports from outside”. 

Rice Farmers’ Grievances

Some rural farmers have already decided not to cultivate Sri Lanka’s staple rice in the ongoing ‘Maha’ or next ‘Yala’ cultivation seasons, because of the government’s failure to supply necessary fertilizers. Farmers here are deeply unhappy at the sudden banning of the import of chemical fertilizer. They mainly cultivate paddy, low country vegetables, cereals, grains, and onions. However, in this ‘Maha’ season, they could not use chemical fertilizer, If the government promised to supply the required organic fertilizer, farmers say they didn’t receive it at the correct time.

Rice farmers have thus used different fertilizer that is normally used for tea, cinnamon, and coconut. They say this season’s rice harvest is very disappointing with resulting low incomes.

Piyarathna, Chairman, Eksath Sulu Farmer Organization, representing farmers from Dehiyannewela, Divilunkadawala ,Viharagama, Medirigiriya areas told IDN that there are 142 farmers in their farmer organization and they cultivate more than 190 acres using minor irrigation  water. Our farmers normally harvest 100- 120 bushel (2500-3000 kg) per acre using chemical fertilizer. However, this time farmers can’t expect such harvest due to improper fertilizer usage” he says, adding, farming is now a business enterprise, (and) farmers cultivate not only for (their)consumption”.

Paddy plants take around 3–6 months to grow from seeds to mature plants, depending on the variety and environmental conditions. They undergo three general growth phases: vegetative, reproductive, and ripening. Our farmers cultivate two groups: the short-duration varieties which mature in 105–120 days and the long-duration varieties which mature in 150 days”, he explained.  They (farmers) use hybrid seed and not traditional varieties. These hybrids varieties need quality fertilizer to increase the harvest. By using organic fertilizer farmers can’t expect high yield”.

 Piyarathna says that farmers in the Polonnaruwa area have complained that the compost they have received is of inferior quality with most of the purchased compost having debris, seeds and stones.

Kapila Ariyawasnsa, a 38 year old farmer from the Ekamuthu Bedum Ela Farmer Organization in Mahaweli river irrigation System B told IDN that he cultivate 8 acres of low land  both in Yala and Maha seasons – mainly paddy – and there are also 206 rice farmers belonging to his organization. He thinks that the proposed organic fertilizer program is not practical in their area.

There are not enough resources to make compost in our village. Greenery vegetables can be cultivated using compost, not paddy,” he argues, because  there is no traditional varieties and only have all hybrid seeds (and) these hybrid seeds need required fertilizer for bumper harvest”. Further, he said that he had to spend Rs 23000 (USD 115) to purchase Yuria in black market.

Ariyawasnsa, predicts that the rural economy will collapse after the coming rice harvest. Farmers won’t have the yield this time, they would get only 30 per cent of the harvest” he predicts.  Most of the people in Mahaweli area depend on agriculture”. He added that not only Mahaweli B zone, but most farmers in the Polonnaruwa District, would face bad harvests due to the government’s organic fertilizer program. The current government’s policy (has been based on) unplanned policy decisions” he laments.

Farmer’s Expectation

There is also growing interest among farmers for producing organically-grown food products and they understand the export potential for it. Some farm production units have already experienced considerable success in such ventures. Organic food production and marketing could be greatly expanded in Sri Lanka. But, research is needed to develop organic farming systems and practices that are efficient, productive, and profitable. This is the criticism the government is facing at the moment.

M.G. Dayawathi Chairman of Kalukele People’s company said that banning of chemical fertilizer has affected their company’s microfinance system too. We have given more than 52 lakhs (5.2 million) of cultivation loans to 75 farmers for this Maha season. Unfortunately, farmers would not make the expected income and they are not in position to repay loans” she told IDN Moreover, farmers mortgage their gold and their vehicles to purchase chemical fertilizer in the black market. They are trapped in a loan cycle.  Government cannot expect livelihood improvement (among farmers) with this kind of unplanned program”. 

Sri Lanka says it won’t rush to IMF despite rising economic risks

February 11th, 2022

By Uditha Jayasinghe and Devjyot Ghoshal Courtesy Fxempire

COLOMBO (Reuters) – Sri Lanka’s foreign exchange reserves are plummeting, essential imports are stalling and opposition leaders and some experts warn that time is running out to avoid a sovereign default that would further upend the economy.

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But Finance Minister Basil Rajapaksa is focused on helping the domestic economy shake off the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic before he seeks assistance from the likes of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), a close aide said.

We should not be in a hurry to run here and there without sorting out local issues,” said Milinda Rajapaksha, who works closely with the finance minister and is an additional director general in the media ministry.

It could take up to four to five months to fix issues like local supply chains and restart businesses, which alongside a pickup in tourism and remittances – both major foreign exchange earners – would help stabilise the economy, Rajapaksha said.

You have to look at the external debt crisis separately,” he told Reuters. That’s what we are going to do. Are we going to look at a package like the IMF? Are we going to work with our neighbours and supporters for more swaps and loans?”

Sri Lanka’s foreign exchange reserves are down to $2.36 billion, according to data from the Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) released earlier this week.

In a note on Monday, Citi Research said that confidence in the Sri Lankan government’s external repayment position remains weak and foreign exchange reserves were declining faster than expected.

Sri Lanka has outstanding sovereign bonds amounting to $12.55 billion, with $1 billion of the bonds maturing in July, according to the CBSL. This year, the island’s government has to repay debt of around $4 billion.

We stick to our base-case scenario that international bonds will need to be restructured by July,” Citi Research said.

On Wednesday, the CBSL said there was currently no need for discussions on debt restructuring as the government would be able to ensure the settlement of its sovereign debt without any interruption or default.”

The government and the CBSL are committed to honour all forthcoming debt obligations,” the central bank said in a statement.

‘VERY DANGEROUS LEVEL’

The lack of dollars is already holding up goods from coming into the import-dependent country of 22 million people, which typically spends about $1.6 billion every month for imports of fuel, essential food and medicine.

In Sri Lanka’s main port of Colombo, thousands of containers packed with essentials like rice and sugar have been stuck for weeks because importers are unable to get hold of foreign exchange.

On the streets of Colombo, prices of everything from milk powder and fuel to auto spares and mobile phones are rising.

Headline inflation rose to 14.2%, the highest in more than a decade, with food inflation hitting 25% in January, according to government data.

Sri Lanka is left with usable foreign exchange reserves of around $800 million, which could be exhausted in a matter of weeks, said Murtaza Jafferjee, Managing Director of stock broker JB Securities.

The amount of reserves basically have come down significantly to a very, very dangerous level,” he said.

To meet the shortfall, Sri Lanka’s government has sought help from India with a $1 billion credit line. It is also in talks with Pakistan and Australia for two credit lines of $200 million each for imports of rice, cement, grains and medicine.

In January, President Gotabaya Rajapaksa sought debt relief from China and assistance to pay for imports. Sri Lanka imports about $3.5 billion worth of goods from China every year.

POLITICAL FUTURE

The government, led by the influential Rajapaksa family, faces a choice between moving immediately to restructure its debt or continuing to scrape by even as it hits ordinary Sri Lankans, said Nishan de Mel, Executive Director of Verité Research think-tank.

So, it is really a question of how much pain the society can bear and how much pain the government is willing to inflict before it changes the path,” he said. It is not a path that looks to be sustainable.”

The IMF on Thursday said the Sri Lankan government had not initiated talks for financial support.

Of course, we stand ready to discuss options if requested and we continue to closely monitor economic and policy developments,” IMF spokesman Gerry Rice said in an online briefing.

For finance minister and veteran lawmaker Rajapaksa, the decision to go to the IMF or another external agency will also depend on political considerations, his aide Rajapaksha said.

The powerful politician is the younger brother of the president and of Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa, and took over the finance portfolio in July, 2021 as the economic crisis gathered steam.

His political future is on the line,” Rajapaksha said, referring to the finance minister. And his political party’s future is on the line.”

(Reporting by Uditha Jayasinghe and Devjyot Ghoshal; Editing by Mike Collett-White)

SJB says its economic experts formulating solution to economic crisis

February 11th, 2022

By Ajith Siriwardana and Yohan Perera Courtesy The Daily Mirror

Sajith Premadasa 

The main Opposition Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) together with its economic experts are currently in the process of formulating a solution to the present economic crisis and are discussing with local and international experts on restructuring Sri Lanka’s debt, the Leader of Opposition Sajith Premadasa told Parliament yesterday.
We are proud to say that the SJB through its economic experts, including MPs Harsha de Silva, Kabir Hashim and Eran Wickramaratne, who have walked the talk, is currently formulating a plan to resolve the economic crisis and are talking to local and international experts to restructure Sri Lanka’s debt with the participation of international political and monetary institutions,” Premadasa said.
Of course we shall oppose any move to bring in more hardships on people of this country who are already in dire straits because of the current corrupt administration,” he added.
The Opposition Leader called for unity among all parties to overcome the current crisis. 

My fellow countrymen, it is time for everyone to unite. We have to unite for a purpose, we have to unite to put a pause to the current deteriorating situation of the economy.  You cannot solve the economic crisis by holding seminars or publishing booklets. We have to convert our policies into action,” he stressed.

Gagan Malik enters 15-day monkhood in Bangkok

February 11th, 2022

Courtesy Ceylon Today

Gagan Malik enters 15-day monkhood in Bangkok

Indian movie superstar Gagan Malik entered the monkhood at a temple in Bangkok yesterday (10).

Malik was ordained at Wat Thatthong and will spend the next 15 days as a monk.

“One of the most important moments of life is going to come tomorrow [Thursday]. Becoming a monk for 15 days in Wat Thatthong (Royal Monastery) Bangkok,” the Bollywood actor said in a Facebook message on Wednesday.

“All other friends and fans can bless me.”

He said in another post on Tuesday that he wanted to learn Dhamma and to promote the religion in India.

“Time to learn Dhamma. Time to understand Impermanence. Time to gain knowledge. Time to roll the wheel of Dhama in India,” he wrote.

Malik is one of the most popular actors in India.

He has fans in many Asian countries, including Thailand.

One of the Malik’s best-known roles was as Prince Siddhartha in the movie Sri Siddhartha Gautama in 2013, which depicted the life of the Lord Buddha.

The movie soundtrack was dubbed in several languages, including Thai, and won several awards, including the best actor and best movie at the UN Vesak Buddhist Film Festival in Hanoi in 2014.

(Bangkok Post)


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