The USA threw the strategic baby and kept the human rights bathwater

February 4th, 2021

Malinda Seneviratne

The Committee on Foreign Relations of the US presented an analysis on Sri Lanka to the Senate on December 7, 2009, i.e. almost seven months after the war on terrorism ended with the world’s most ruthless terrorist outfit, the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) being comprehensively defeated by the Sri Lankan security forces. The document was titled, ‘Sri Lanka: recharging US strategy after the war.’  It was presented by John F Kerry and Richard G Lugar on behalf of the Committee.

There was analysis and there were recommendations to the Obama administration, international financial institutions, the US Congress and the Sri Lanka Government. The main concerns regarding Sri Lanka were about resettlement of the internally displaced, i.e. the hundreds of thousands held hostage by the LTTE and duly rescued by the Sri Lankan security forces at heavy costs to personnel.

The rest of the recommendations were nothing more than the usual noises about democracy, nothing to make a song and dance about. No mention of ‘war crimes.’ Nothing of the need to haul Sri Lanka over the coals in Geneva, so to speak, as has been the case since an intemperate and maverick diplomat angered Israel and earned the wrath of Washington following heavy lobbying by the Jewish lobby in the USA.

Indeed, it brings to mind observations on Sri Lanka made by Lord Naseby, during the course of an intervention in the House of Lords debate on the ‘Overseas Operations (Service Personnel and Veterans) Bill, designed to protect British troops from ‘vexatious charges’ (or, provision of immunity for all excesses including crimes against humanity): ‘I made a Freedom of Information Act inquiry because I was told by the UN that there were 40,000 casualties. I asked the Foreign Office about Colonel Gash’s independent dispatches, which took two years to obtain. They made it clear that no war crimes were carried out in Sri Lanka.’

The Kerry-Lugar submission also observed, ‘Real peace will not come overnight to Sri Lanka and cannot be imposed from the outside.’ Such wisdom seems to have been tossed out in deliberations regarding Sri Lanka. Most importantly, the Kerry-Lugar report noted that the US focus on IDPs and ‘civil society’ (quotes mine) as opposed to the economy and security sector had isolated Sri Lanka economically and politically from the West. The recommendation for the then administration included support for Sri Lanka’s efforts in resettlement, reconstruction and rehabilitation, and assistance for development in all parts of the country. There is some mention of strengthening justice system by supporting police reforms, but certainly nothing about war crimes tribunals and the kinds of mechanisms that the US later pushed for at the UNHRC.

Following a fairly comprehensive analysis of geopolitical realities pertaining to the region, the committee proposed that the Obama administration ‘take a broader and more robust approach to Sri Lanka that appreciates new political and economic realities in Sri  Lanka and U.S. geo strategic interests.’ Such an approach, according to the Kerry-Lugar submission, ‘should be multidimensional so that U.S. policy is not driven solely by short-term humanitarian concerns but rather an integrated strategy that leverages political, economic, and security tools  for more effective long-term reforms.’
What happened though? The US essentially sought to secure its strategic interests by concocting a lie (as evidenced by the massive distance between the privileged narrative on human rights and the observations embedded in the Kerry-Lugar Committee, the International Red Cross and Colonel Gash), leveraging it to harass the then Sri Lankan regime to a point that would enable ‘regime change,’ i.e. to obtain strategic goals through a US-friendly regime. It worked. Perhaps in order to ‘press advantage home,’ the US used its Sri Lankan pawns to co-sponsor an anti-Sri Lanka resolution.

What happened then? A regime whose incompetence was compounded by the perceived sell-out was comprehensively defeated. The ‘bad guys’ were back.
And now what? Well, the Kerry-Lugar thinking is certainly not being revisited. Instead, it’s same-old, same-old. Well, not exactly, because the US of 2009 is not the US of 2021. The China of 2009 is not the China of 2021. The veiled threats issued by the US mission and that of the principal US ally, the UK, echoing the ‘tough words’ of the USA’s best friend in Geneva, Michelle Bachelet, the chief of UNHRC, are all based on lies agreed upon, lies which, the Kerry-Lugar committee, to be fair, had not thought fit to conjure back in December 2009. There’s talk of pushing for action in the UN General Assembly. There’s talk of sanctions. There’s talk of the matter being taken to the Security Council.

Now leaving aside the blatant disavowal of the principle of equality in treatment (the UK, for example, was found guilty of war crimes by the International Criminal Court and was let off ‘on account of demonstrating genuine interest in implementing correctives’ even as that country sought to provide constitutional cover for its forces who, let us not forget, have a considerable track record as criminals against humanity — the UK, ladies and gentlemen, will not be touched by Bachelet), these threats will certainly have repercussions. Sri Lanka will not be a happy recipient. However, leaving Sri Lanka with few choices, the USA will essentially push the island nation into the (waiting) arms of China and of course Russia.

So there was and is a baby: US strategic interests. It was bathed in toilet wash. The US and her allies have washed the baby so many times that when the baby was thrown there was only bathwater left. Maybe it seems warm. Maybe the preference for closed-noses and closed-eyes made for a kind of oblivion. The US is wallowing in the gooey stuff. 

We don’t know where John F Kerry and Richard J Lugar are right now. Sri Lanka, however, does know where China is. And it seems that the US has not ‘taken a broader and more robust approach to Sri Lanka that appreciates new political and economic realities.’ The ‘humanitarian concerns’ are no longer on the table, resettlement being done and dusted years ago, reconstruction outstripping development in areas outside the principle combat areas, democratization completed and livelihoods restored to levels on par with any other part of the country. It’s been ‘short term human rights concerns’. Well, ‘concerns’ (within quotes).

Sri Lanka will have to pay a price for refusing the inhabit the USA’s version of Sri Lankan reality. Sri Lanka will be made to pay, rather. The USA will also have to deal with some costs: the strategic baby that Washington has tossed out in ill-willed and ill-conceived fixations with bathwater.

malindasenevi@gmail.com

Cricket is language-blind!

February 4th, 2021

C. Wijeyawickrema, LL.B., Ph.D.

Note: Supreme Court judges are still not willing or not skilled to write their judgements in Sinhala. They have a mental blockade, a Eurocentric fever. So, they want their pupils to learn English. They ignored the 1956 Official Language Act for over 60 years. That is two generations of unfair privileged status! The gazette to go back to English by the council of legal education (CLE) had to wait until a non-Sinhala minister of justice lands as a national list MP. They better be ready with valid reasons to justify their stealth decision when the country gets this bad news.

Previous three essays, this essay and one more to come were written as responses to past attempts made by black-white souls to promote English as panacea for politician-generated problems in Ceylon (Sinhale)/Sri Lanka. The expectation is that CLE members and other Eurocentric NGO agents etc. would get an idea by reading these, what the other side think.

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The Island-Opinion, 2008/08/22

I thank Gamini Gunawardane for his article on the evolution of Sinhala Cricket (Island, 8/15/2008). If Ajantha had to pass an English language test before he could play cricket, he would have missed the bus, and with teams of English-speaking cricketers, Sri Lanka would not have won a place in world cricket. I see a personal connection here because I was able to become a college professor and a director of research in the USA because of the language-blind university entrance exam in 1960-61. In fact, I did not take even Sinhala as one of the four subjects!

Because of Gamini’s reply and because of Bandula Abeyewardene’s (BA) total misunderstanding of my response (Island, 8/2), my task is reduced to answering a few, below the belt personal and private issues raised by BA.

Because of his inability to understand the message in my letter, BA has now made another mistake by placing patriotism and fluency in English on a collision path (Island, 8/9). I see no direct connection between the two except that I know that some people stress the fact that when two Tamils meet or when Indians meet each other, they always speak in Tamil or Hindi respectively, but when two Sinhalyas meet, they tend to use English. I do not worry about such habits. SWRD who helped the Sinhala people had a grade three level student’s ability in reading and writing in Sinhala.

I was only challenging BA’s idea that “a Sinhala cricketer who might become a cricket hero at a future date could avoid the ‘embarrassment’ of not being able to speak in English if cricketer-training includes tutoring in English. I did not oppose English or people learning it as a second language. The gist of my letter was to tell people not to take the raft (English) on to your shoulders after using it to cross the river. Learning English or any language for that matter is like learning how to swim or how to ride a bicycle. We do not carry the bicycle on our backs when we walk.

The problem in the former colony called Ceylon is that those who had money could learn English and they used it as an extra weapon in their hands to oppress those who could not learn it. I wrote two essays previously on this subject: ‘Gurulugomi to the rescue: the re-enthronement of the English language’ (Island, 4/13/2001) and ‘Empowering law students with an English language education’ (Island, 3/19/2008)) and BA would be able to better understand my point, if he cares to read them.

I said he had a colonial mentality because of the statements I saw in his responses (I have not seen the response of Daya Ranasinghe as I do not know when it appeared in The Island) revealing a mind blocked with an English-based inferiority complex. He sank further and deeper with his new theory that the language of cricket is English. So, if Susanthika wins an Olympic gold medal, then what would be the language of running, according to BA? If an American wins 8 gold medals in swimming, then what will be the language of swimming?

I went to the Peradeniya University through the Sinhala medium and studied law later in English. Dr. Joe Silva, who was a past Law College principal, was my classmate. As a grade school student, I went to a night school in Panadura to learn English. My father used to tell me that he too learned his English by attending a night school.

This brings me to the question BA has about my name. Like Don Baron Jayatilleke, my father’s name was Gilton Don Manis. My mother’s name was Dona Baby Manamperi. My mother was a teacher and named me Chandrasiri (in the birth certificate it appears in English as Chandarasiri) not Conrad. What BA needs to understand is that the name given to one by his or her parents has nothing to do with what that person does later in his or her life. SWRD did so many things that his parents or relatives never expected him to do. Parents in the past gave their children one Sinhala and one English name—Chandra-Richard, Ananda-Edward, Cyril-Banda are examples. I knew personally how Cyril-Banda used his names, depending on with whom he was talking, he used what he thought was the appropriate name!

BA also needs to understand that because he was related to Sir DBJ, he cannot have an automatic share of DBJ’s past glory. BA has to earn his own place by his own work. No doubt the connection to DBJ helps, but it is not a free lunch. During the past 10 years, by way of marriage connections, I came to know about the second or third generation DBJ relatives, and I found that they had nothing of their own in serving the public that would have made DBJ feel proud of them. This is called “vanse kabal gaama.”

BA’s story reminded me of the stories I heard about Anil Moonesinghe when he was Chairman, CTB. He had a life-size picture of Anagaarika Dharmapala on the wall behind his desk. The uncle and nephew, however, were poles apart.

About eight years ago I helped to begin an evening English school (two days of the week) at the Siri Siddhartharamaya, Walana, Panadura for the poor children who did not have money for English tuition classes. It now has about 100 students. I did this because when I was growing up in Walana, my mother had a hard time in giving me the monthly tuition fee of Rs.5/- for my English tuition. Rather than feeling embarrassed, BA could have contacted Ajantha Mendis privately and offered him free tuition. I hope BA could find time to visit the temple at Walana (Ven. Walane Siddhartha was the person who began the Parama Dhamma Chethiya Pirivena at Ratmalana from which came the two monks who started Vidyodaya and Vidyalankara Privenas) and started a similar free English school in his temple.

According to BA, patriots are those who stay in the country. If that is the case, then Sri Lanka already has over 18 million patriots! Black whites frequently use two interrelated phrases—greener pastures and second-class citizens—to sling mud at people who for various reasons left Sri Lanka on a temporary or permanent basis. Those who went to universities in the swabasha mediums left Sri Lanka in frustration after failing to serve the motherland, and USA took them in without a language test. This group is now Sri Lanka’s Seventh Great Force (sixth force is janitors and maids toiling in Arab lands pumping money for the Colombo people to import BMWs). They became successful in their lives after hard work and personal sacrifices and if the Sri Lanka Government is ready, there will be thousands of them who will come. Whether or not one is a second-class citizen in a new country is a state of mind. For example, in my country of birth in Sri Lanka, with caste and class discrimination and nepotism, so many times I felt that I was a second-class citizen. I was often asked whether I was from Galle because of my last name. I had to tell them that my parents (if BA wants to know govigama caste) were from Horana and that my last name was spelt as Wije-ya-wickrema not Wijewickrema. In the USA, I was in an ocean of white people, but did not feel that I was second class. I have white and black Americans working under me and I got my jobs after a country-wide competition. If I go to a KKK meeting, may be they will be treat me as a second class citizen, but I can live freely selecting what I want or do not want to do.

Ceylon (Sri Lanka) has had two circuits, the English-speaking Colombo circuit, and the Sinhala and Tamil Speaking non-Colombo circuit. In 1956, this began to change. After 1959, both the UNP and the SLFP mismanaged the country and after 1977, the country fell into a hell. Fortunately, a reverse gear has been on since November 2005. BA is a person caught in this transition but making money out of it. I know some outrageous stories of how English tuition masters fleece money out of poor mothers who are led to believe that if their children know English, nirvana is just around the corner for them. If this is the case, then the English-speaking countries in the world should not have all kinds of problems, including poverty and misery. The plight of poor Americans around me is even worse than that of the Sri Lankan poor.

I feel sad when I see Sri Lanka copying bad things from the West, that the West itself is trying to get rid of Kentucky Fried Chicken, Coke and Hamburgers. The bath kade idea of BA is an example of copying the unhealthy American fast-food businesses. Save time to do what, watch TV? No wonder 30-40% of Sri Lankan people are now suffering from diabetes. Free trade, globalization, privatization took mung beans, kadala and kurakkan away from homes. We, the Seventh Great Force in Sri Lanka, not the English tuition masters, are in a better position to take an enlightened approach to help the Sri Lankan masses.

ශ්‍රී ලංකාවේ ජාතික උරුම නිශ්චිතව තීරණය කිරීම හා හඳුනාගැනීමේ අතුරු වාර්තාව අග්‍රාමාත්‍යතුමාට භාරදෙයි

February 4th, 2021

අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය මාධ්‍ය අංශය

ශ්‍රී ලංකාවේ ජාතික උරුම නිශ්චිතව තීරණය කිරීම හා හඳුනාගැනීමට සුදුසු ක්‍රමවේදයක් ඉදිරිපත් කිරීමේ අතරු වාර්තාව එම කමිටු සාමාජිකයන් විසින් විජේරාම පිහිටි නිල නිවසේ දී ගරු අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය මහින්ද රාජපක්ෂ මහතාට ඊයේ 2021.02.03 පස්වරුවේ භාර දෙන ලදී.

මෙම අතරු වාර්තාව අනුව ඉදිරිපත් කරන යෝජිත ක්‍රමවේදය මහජන අදහස් ලබා ගැනීම සඳහා ලබන 08 වැනිදා පුවත්පත්වල ප්‍රසිද්ධ කිරීමට නියමිතය.

ජාතික උරුම, ප්‍රාසංග කලා හා ග්‍රාමීය කලා ශිල්පි ප්‍රවර්ධන කටයුතු රාජ්‍ය අමාත්‍ය විදුර වික්‍රමනායක මහතාගේ ඉල්ලීම පරිදි බුද්ධශාසන, ආගමික හා සංස්කෘතික කටයුතු අමාත්‍යවරයා ලෙස ගරු අග්‍රාමාත්‍යතුමා ශ්‍රී ලංකාවේ ජාතික උරුම නිශ්චිතව තීරණය කිරීම හා හඳුනාගැනීමට සුදුසු ක්‍රමවේදයක් ඉදිරිපත් කිරීම සඳහා කැබිනට් අනුමැතිය ලබා ගත්තේය.

ඒ අනුව ජාතික උරුම නිශ්චිතව තීරණය කිරීම හා හඳුනාගැනීමට සුදුසු ක්‍රමවේදයක් සකස් කිරීම සඳහා ප්‍රවීණයන් 16 දෙනෙකුගෙන් සමන්විත විද්වත් කමිටුවක් පත්කෙරිණි.

අදාළ කමිටුව මහාචාර්ය ඉඳුරගාරේ ධම්මරතන හිමි, මහාචාර්ය මාලනී ඇදගම, මහාචාර්ය රෝහණ පී මහාලියනආරච්චි, ජ්‍යෙෂ්ඨ මහාචාර්ය රාජ් සෝමදේව, මහාචාර්ය යසාංජලී ජයතිලක, මහාචාර්ය මුදියන්සේ දිසානායක, ආචාර්ය මංගල කටුගම්පොළ, ආචාර්ය ජානකී ජයවර්ධන, ආචාර්ය ටී.සනතානන්, ජ්‍යෙෂ්ඨ කථිකාචාර්ය එම්.ඒ.එම් යසීර්, ජනශ්‍රැති විචාරක මහින්ද කුමාර දළුපොත, ජාතික උරුම, ප්‍රාසංග කලා හා ග්‍රාමීය කලා ශිල්පි ප්‍රවර්ධන කටයුතු අමාත්‍යංශයේ ලේකම්, පුරාවිද්‍යා, ජාතික ලේඛනාරක්ෂක, කෞතුකාගාර දෙපාර්තමේන්තුවල අධ්‍යක්ෂ ජනරාල්වරුන් හා සංස්කෘතික කටයුතු දෙපාර්තමේන්තුවේ අධ්‍යක්ෂවරයාගෙන් සමන්විත වේ.

මෙම අතුරු වාර්තාව භාර දීමේ අවස්ථාවට ජාතික උරුම, ප්‍රාසංග කලා හා ග්‍රාමීය කලා ශිල්පි ප්‍රවර්ධන කටයුතු රාජ්‍ය අමාත්‍ය විදුර වික්‍රමනායක මහතා ඇතුළු කමිටු සමාජිකයන් සහ අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය ලේකම් ගාමිණි සෙනරත් මහතා ඇතුළු රාජ්‍ය නිලධාරීන් පිරිසක් එක්ව සිටියහ.

පෙබරවාරි 4 දා ජාතික නිදහස් දින උත්සවය පැවැත්වීම මා දකින්නේ කිසිදාක නූපන් දරුවෙකු වෙනුවෙන් පැවැත්වෙන උපන්දින උත්සවයක් වැනි ව්හිලුවක් මෙනි. එසේම අපි තවමත් එන්ගලන්තයේ යටත් විජිතයක් බවද එලිපිටම පිලිගැනීමක්ද ඉන් ප්‍රකාශවෙයි.

February 3rd, 2021

ආචාර්ය සුදත් ගුණසේකර මහනුවර.

මා එසේ පවසනුයේ 1948 තබා අදවන තුරුත් මේ රටට හෝ ජාතියට කිසිදු නිදහසක් ලැබී නැති නිසාය.මට පෙනෙන ආකාරයට 1948 පෙබරවාරි 4 දා සිදුවුයේ  1947 දී ඉන්දියාව බ්‍රතාන්ය ග්‍රහනයෙන් ඉවත්වීමත් සමග කඩාවැටුණු ඉන්ග්‍රීසි බල අධිකාරීයට ලන්කාව හෝ හොදින් තබාගැනීම වාසිදායක බව සිතු බැවින් ඔවුන්ගේ ඔනෑ එපාකම් ඉටුකර ගතහැකි සුවච කීකරු ගෝලබාල පිරිසක් අතට මෙහි පාලන බලය දී තෝන් ලණුව තමන් අතේ ම තබාගෙන යාම සදහා අග්නිදිග ආසියාවේ සුදුසුම රට ලන්කාව බව බව ඔවුන් කල්පනාකල බැවින් යයි මට සිතේ. ඒ ඉන්දියාව නැති උනත් අග්නිදිග ආසියාවේ තම අධිරාජ්යයේ අනාගත වැදගත් කටයුතු කරගැනීම සදහා ස්‍රී ලන්කාව උපාය මර්ගයික වසයෙන් තබාගතයුතු බව ඔවුන් උපකල්පනය කල බැවිනි. ගෝලිය වශයෙන් එහි පිහිටීම මෙන්ම තමන්ට අවනත බෙදා වෙන්කල මානසික වශයෙන් බුද්ධිසෝධනය කල පාලක පැලැන්තියක් එහි සිටින බව ඔවුන් මැනවින් දැනසිටියාට සැක නැත. ඇත්ත වශයෙන්ම් ඔවුන් රටින් පිටවී ගියද ඔවුන් සිටි පුටුවේ  වාඩිවි ඔවුන්ගේ අවස්යතා අනුව ක්‍රියාකරන පිරිසක් ඒ වනවිටත් ඔවුන් විසින් මෙහි නිර්මාණය කොට තිබින. හමින් කලු වුවද සුද්දන්ටත් වඩා හොදින් ඔවුන්ගේ කටයුතු ඔවුන් සිදු කරන බව දිවැසින් මෙන් දැක ඇත. අදටත් මේ රටේ ක්‍රියත්මකවෙන දේශපාලනය දෙස බලන ඕනෑම කෙනෙකුට ඒ බව මැනවින් පැහැදිළි වේ.   

සෝල්බරී විවස්ථාව ජෙනින් විසින් නිර්මාණය කලේ එකී වැඩපිලිවෙල ක්‍රියාත්මක කරගැනීමේ තෝන්ලණුව වසයෙනි. අපේ මෝඩ දේශපාලකයින් එය ධාතු කරන්ඩුවක් මෙන් පිලිගත් බව පෙනේ. එහි අන්තර්ගතය දෙස විමසිල්ලෙන් බලන ඔනෑම කෙනෙකුට කපටි සුද්දන්ගේ එම යටි අරමුණ පැහැදිළිවම දැකගත හැක. ඔවුන්ගේම වෙස්ත්මින්ස්ටර් පාර්ලිමේන්තු කැබිනෙට්  ආණ්ඩුකරමය.  නිලතල ධූරාවළිය, අභියාචන කෙලවර ප්‍රිවිකෞන්සලේ තබාගත් අධිකරණ යාන්ත්‍රණය, රාජ්ය පාලනක්‍රමය, භාශාව, ආණ්ඩුකාරයා පත්කිරීමේ බලය,  විදේශ ගිවිසුම්වලට එළඹීමේ බලතල, යුද්ධය ප්‍රකාශ කිරීමේ බලය රැජිනගේ අතේ තබා ගැනීමට අමතරව 45 වන වගන්තිය යටතේ විධායක බලයද එන්ගලන්තයේ මහ රැජිනගේ/රජුගේ අතම තබාගැ නීම  මෙන්ම කටුනායක, ත්‍රිකුණාමල ගුවන් කන්දවුරද ඔවුන් අතම තබාගැනීම සහ පොදුරාජ්ය මන්ඩලය නැමැති බ්‍රතාන්ය අධිරාජ්යයේ  සාමාජිකයකු වශයෙන් රන්දවාගැනීම, මේ රට තුල ජාතීන්  කීපයක් සිටින බව විවස්ථාවෙන්ම ප්‍රකාශකොට 29 වන වගන්තියෙන් ලන්කා ඉතිහාසයේ පළමු වතාවට කිසිම දවසක මෙහි නොසිටි සුලුජාතීන් නම් අමුතුම ජාතියක් ඇතිකොට, ඒ අනුව 1832 මේ රට බෙදා පාලනය කිරීම සදහා ඔවුන් රට බෙදු පලාත් පදනම් කරගෙන සින්හල දෙමල හා මුස්ලිම් ආදී වසයෙන් ජනකොටස් බෙදා රට අවුල්කිරීම සහ සින්හලයින්ද සතුරු කන්ඩායම්වලට බෙදීමට පක්ෂ දේශපාලන ක්‍රමයද හන්දුන්වා දෙමින් සෝල්බරී විවස්ථාව නම්වූ මලතොණ්ඩුව අපේ ගෙලේ එල්ලා එය මාරුවෙන් මාරුවට දක්කා මේ රට විනාශකිරිමට අවශය සියළු විධිවිධාන යොදා ජාතියක පන්සකූලය දීමට පමණක් ඉතිරිකොටය,  ඔවුන් ගියේ.

මීට අමතරවව මේ රට සදාකාලිකව අස්ථාවර කිරීම සදහා ඔවුන්ගේ වියාපාර සහ වතු අදිරාජ්යයේ වහල් මෙහෙයට දකුනු ඉන්දියාවෙන් ගෙන ආ ලක්ෂ 12 කට වැඩි බ්‍රතාන්ය පුරවැසියන් ද මෙහි අතරමන්කොට යාමෙන් මේ රටේ අනාගත දේශපාලන, ආර්තික, සාමාජික හා සන්ස්කෘතික වසයෙන් මහා ගිනිකන්දක් නිර්මාණයකොට යාමටද සුද්දා අමතක කලේ නැත. 1948 පසුවී 73 වසරක් ගතව ඇතත් රටක් වසයෙන් ජාතියක් වසයෙන් අප තවමත් හිර වී සිටින්නේ ඒ අදිරාජ්යවාධී මාරාන්තික මළැපුඩුවේම නොවේද.1948 සුද්දන් මේ රට්න් පිටවී ගියත් රාජ්යතාන්ත්‍රික මට්ටමින් රිජුව කෙරෙන විවිධ බලපෑම් වලට අමතරව ඊනිය ජාත්යන්තර සන්විධාන හරහාද ඔවුන් විසින් කරණුලබන තර්ජන ගර්ජන දෙස ඇලීමෙන්ද අප තවමත් ඔවුන්ගේ යටත් විජිතයක් යන මා මානසිකත්වයෙන් කටයුතු කරන බව ඉතා පහැදිලිය. එපමණක්ද නොව මේ රටේ නිදහස් දිනය පැවැත්වෙන දවස පවා ඔවුන් අපට නියමකොටදී ගොස් ඇත. පෙබරවාරි 4 ජෙනින්ගේ බ්‍රිදගේ උපන්දිනය යයිද කියවේ. මේ රටට තවමත් කිසිදු නිදහසක් ලැබී නැතිබව මා ප්‍රකාශ කරණුයෙ මේ  නිසාය.

අප ලබා ඇති නිදහසේ නියම තත්වය එසේ වුවද වසරක් පාසා  පෙබරවාරි 4 දා නිදහස සැමරීමට යයි කියා ජාතික ධනය කෝට්ගනනින් මෙන්ම  රටේ  සන් වර්ධනයට ඵලදායක අන්දමින් යෙදියයුතු වටිනා මිනිස් සම්පතද නාස්ති කරමින් 73 වන වරටත් අපේ රටේ දේශපාලකයින් මේ පවත්වන්නේ කාට ලැබුණු නිදහසක් අරභයාදැයි මම අසමි.

මගේ අදහසේ හැටිය 48 නිදහස ලැබුනායයි කියන්ට අපට ඉතිරිව ඇත්තේ  නමෝ නමෝ මාතා සින්දුව පමණි. එයද 2015 සිට දෙමලෙන්ද ගැයින. 1815 දී ජාතියත අහිමිවූ අපේ ජාතික කොඩියද 48 දී නැවත් නොඉසවූ නිසා අපට ජාතියක් වසයෙන් කොඩියක්ද නැත. ඒ වෙනුවට දැනට ඇත්තේ 1953 දී පටිදෙකක් ගසා දේශපාලකයින් හදාගත් අපබ්බ්‍රන්ශ නිර්මාණයකි. මේ අතර යාන්තමින් ව්සර 24 කට පසු හෝ 1972 දී සිරිමා බන්ඩාරනායක මැතිනිය මේ රට ජනරජයක් බවට පත්කොට, බ්‍රතාන්ය ග්‍රහනයෙන් අධිකරණයද නිදහස්කොට එක්තරා අන්දමක ස්වාධීන බවක් ඇතිකලාය.  ඒ අනුව ඇත්තවසයෙන්ම මේ රටට දේශපාලන නිදහස ලබාගත්තේ 1972 මැයි මස 22 දායයි කිවයූතුය. එමනිසා මේ ර රටේ නිදහසේ මාතාව වසයෙන් උපහාර කලයුත්තේ ඇයට යයි මම සිතමි. එහෙත් අපේ දේශපාලකයින්ගේ කුහක කමේ මහත කොපමනදැයි කිවහොත් අද දක්වාම රටේ සුදුසු තැනක ඇයගේ පිළිරුවක්වත් පිහිටුවා නැත. මා හිතන අන්දමට 1948 ලබා නොගත්, එසේම 48 දී නොලැඹුණු  නිදහසක් සිහිකිරීම සදහා ගොඩනැගූ ඊනියා නිදහස් මන්දිරය  දෙන්වත් ජනරජයක් බවට පත්වූ දිනය සිහිකිරීම සදහා ජනරජ මන්දිරය වසයෙන් නම්කල යුතුය. ඒ අනුව එම චතුරස්‍රයද ජනරජ චතුරස්ස්‍රය වසයෙන් නම්කල යුතුයයි මම යෝජනා කරමි. මේ රතේ නියම නිදහසේ මාතාවවූ  බන්ඩාරනායක මැතිනියගේ පිලිරුව සෑදිය යුත්තේද එහිමය. 

නිදහසට පසුවදනක්

පුන්චි කාලයේ අපට කියා දී තිබුනේ ලන්කාවට නිදහස ලැබුනේ 1948 පෙබරවාරි 4 දා කියල. ඔහොම සුරන්ගනා කථා කියා අප රවටන්ට පුලුවන්කම ඒ කාලේ තිබුණා. නමුථ් හය හතර තේඉරෙනකොට අපට තේරුනා 48 මේරටට හා ජනතාවට සැබේ නිදහසක් නොලැබුණු බව. පාසැලේදීත් එහෙම එකක් 48 ලැබුනා කියා උගැනුවා. ප්‍රජාචාර පොත්පත්වලත් තිබුනා. වසරක් පාසා පත්තරවලත් මහත් උජාරුවට අතිරේක දැම්මා. වසරක් පාසා ඒ සදහා මහජන මුදල් කෝටිගනන් වැයකොට කලින් කල බලයට ආපු දේශපාලකයින්ගේ පුහු උජාරුව පෙන්වීමට  ගෝල්පේස් එක පැත්තේ ත්‍රිවිධ හමුදා ආචාර, රථ පෙලපාලි. ගුවන් සන්දර්ශන , පාසැල් ලමුන් සියදහස් ගානක් කට්ට අව්වේල වේලා පෙලපාලියේ ගෙන යමින් වසරක් පාසා අපේ රටේ දේශපාලකයින් කරන මෙ ජාතික ධන විනාසය මෙන්ම සේතාම්බර පඨසලු නාදගමක් බව තේරුනේ ලොකු මහත්වී රට තොට ගැන අවභෝධයක් ඇති උනාට පස්ස්. මම මේ ගැන පළමුවරට ලියන්ට පත්ටන්ගත්තේ 1997 දිවයිනේ නිදහස් දින අතිරේකයෙන්

එවකට දිවයින පුවත් පතේ ප්‍රධාන කතුවරයා වු මගේ මිත්‍ර උපාලී තෙන්නකෝන් මට ඇරයුමක් කලා ඒ වසරේ නිදහස් දින පුවත්පත් අතිරේකයට ලිපියක් ලියන්ට  කියල. ඒ අනුව යැවූ ලිපියෙන් කරුණු දෙකක් මට කියන්ට ඔනෑකලා. පලමුකරුණ 1948 මේ රටට කිසිම නිදහසක් ලැබුනේ හෝ ලබාගත්තේ නැති බව. දෙවැන්න ජී.ඇල්, පේරිස් ජයම්පති වික්ක්‍රමරත්න සුසන්යෝගයෙන් හදපු චන්ද්‍රිකාගේ,  රට කොටින්ට  පාවාදීමේ දේසපාලන පැකේජය  (ජේ ආර් පොට්ටනිය වසයෙන් නම්කල) ආදීනව පෙන්වා එය පරාජය කලයුතු බවට මගේ යොජනාවක් අනුව එවකට අස්ගිරි පාර්ශවයේ මහානායක හිමියන්වූ පලීපාන ශ්‍රී චන්දානන්ද හිමියන්ගේ ප්‍රධානත්වයෙන් ත්‍රයි නිකායික මහානායක හිමිවරුන් සහ රටේ ජාති හිතෂී උගතුන් 50 ක් පමණ අස්ගිරියේ චන්දානන්ද ශාලාවට ගෙන්වා සාකච්චාකොට මවිසින් සන්ස්කරනය කරනලද පොට්ටනිය පැරෙදවීමට මුලිකවූ ලිපියෙන් රට හා ජාතිය පාවාදීමක් සිදුවන බැවින් එය වහාම ඉල්ලා අස්කරගන්නා මෙන් ජනධිපතිවරියට දැනිවූ ලිපිය ඇතුල්කිරීම. එම ලිපිය දිවයින පත්තරයේ පලවීමෙන් පසු එය කියවූ කොලඹ වෝද් පෙදෙසේ වයිදවරකයකුවු ජයන්ත ගුනරත්න ජයතිලක මහතා මට දුරකතනයෙන් කථාකොට එම ලිපිය  පොතක් වසයෙන් මුද්‍රණයකල. ඒ අනුව පොත් 1000 ක් මුද්‍රණයකොට මට 900 එව්වා. මා ඒ වනවිට ජාතික ඒකාඛධ  කමිටුවේ  මහනුවර සාඛාවේ සභාපති.

මා පලමු වතාවට 1948 දී මේ රටට හෝ මහජන්තාවට කිසිදු නිදහසක් නොලැබුණු බව ප්‍රකාශකලේ එම ලිපියෙනි.  එදා සිට මේ දක්වා මට ලැබුණු හැම අවස්ථාවකදීම තවත් කරුණු ද එක් කොට මා මේ ගැන ලියා ඇත. විවිධ අවස්ථාවල රැස්වීම්වලදී කථාකොට ඇත. එහෙත් කිසිම රජයකට  මා කියන පනිවිඩය තෙරුම් ගැනීමට අද දක්වාම  පුලුවන්වී නැත. අපේ රටේ ජාතිකත්වය හන්දුනන, ඇත්ත තෙරුම් ගන්ට හැකි එසේම ජනමතයට කන්දෙන දේසපාලකයින් නැතිබව එයින්ම පැහැදිළිවේ. 1948 වන විට ආසියවේම ජපානයට පමනක් දෙවැනි වූ දියුනුම ආර්තිකය තිබුණු මේ රට වර්තමානයේ  ආර්ථික වශයෙන් ඇෆ්ගනිස්ථානයට පමනක් දෙවැනි වන තත්වයට වැටීම ගැන මේ අනුව අපි කිසිසේත්ම පුදුම විය යුතු නැත.

මෙවැනි අතිශයින්ම සෝචනීය තත්වයක් තිබියදී මේ වසරේත් 73 වන වරටත් මේ ප්‍රෝඩාව සහ රජ විහිලු සන්ධර්ශනය පැවැත්වීමතමට යලිත් සුදානම් වීමෙන්ම දසක දෙකකුත් වසර තුනක්ම  තිස්සේ මා කියන, ලියන  මේ කථාව දේසපාලන බීරි අලින්ගේ කන්වලට ඇසුණු බවක් නම් මට නොපෙනේ..

මේ වසරේත් ඉනියා නිදහස් උත්සවය පැවැත්වීම්මට දැන් ලහි ලහියේ රජය කටයුතුකරන බව ඇසේ. මේ ලිපිය පලවන විට සමහරවිටත් ඒ සේතාම්බර පටසලු සන්ධර්ශනය හමා හ රවී තිබිය හැක. එහෙත් මාගේ මේ තනි සටන කවදාහෝ දිනන බව මත ඉස්තිර වසයෙන්ම විස්වාසය. එබැවින් එය දිනන තුරු හෝ මා මැරෙනතුරු හෝ මගේ රට වෙනුවෙන්, ජාතිය වෙනුවෙන් සහ සාශනය වෙනුවෙන් මම දිගටම හුදකලාවම හෝ ඒකචාරි සින්කයකු මෙන් මෙම සටන  ගෙනයමි

මෙම ලිපිය අවසන් කිරීම සන්දහා අවසාන වසයෙන් මේ ඇස්නැති, කන් නැති දේසපාලකයින් සියලුදෙනාගෙන්ම පහත සදහන් ප්‍රස්න කීපාය මම අසමි.

විදේශ ආධිපත්තියකින් කිසියම් රටකට නිදහස ලබෙනවා කියන්නේ මොකක්ද.

1948 දී ඔය ලබුනායයි කියන නිදහස එසේම එදා සිට මෙදා දක්වා ජාතියේ අපමණ ධනස්කන්දයක් වැයකොට මහත් උජාරුවෙන් සමරණජාතික නිදහස් තියෙන්නෙ කොහෙද, එය  ලැබී ඇත්තේ කාටද.මාරුවෙන් මාරුවට දේශපාලනය කරන අයට පමනක් නොවේද

වසර 2500 කට වැඩි කාලයක් තිබී 1815 දී අපට අහිමිවූ 1815 දි සුද්දාට භාරදෙනකොට සින්හලේ රාජධානිය  සතුව තිබුණු, මාර්තු 2 උඩරට ගිවිසුමෙන් සුද්දාට භාර දුන් මාලදිවයින් ඇතුලු සිහලේ රාජධානිය 1948 දී අපට ආපසු ලැබුනාද.

1815 පැවති රටේ නම වූ සින්හලේ කියන නමවත් (සුද්දා සින්හලයින්ගේ රට යන අරුතෙන් එය සිලොන් කී) ආපසු 1948 දී ලබාගත්තාද.

1815 මේ රටේ රාජ්ය භාෂාව වූ සින්හල භාෂාව අදවනතුරුත් මේ රටේ රාජ්ය භාෂාව, පාලන හා අධිකරන භාෂාව වෂයෙන් ස්ථාපිත වුනාද.

රාජ්ය ආගම වූ බුද්ධාගමට  නිසිතැන ලබුනාද

1815 සුද්දට භාරදුන් ලක් පොලවේ නිරවුල් හිස් භුක්තිය 48 දී ලබාගත්තද, අදවනතුරුත් නැති බව ඔබ දන්නවාද

1815 වනතුරු රටේ ජාතිය වසයෙන් හැදින්වූ සින්හල ජාතිය යන නමවත් 48 දී ලබාගත්තද.

ඉතිහාසයේ වරින් වර පැමිනි සහ සුද්දන් ඔවුන්ගේ වතුවල සහ වියාපාරවල වැඩට ඉන්දියාවෙන් ගෙනා සුද්දන්ගේ වහල්ලු මේ රටෙන් සුද්ද්දන් යනවිට ආපසු ගෙනියන්ට කියා බලකොට සින්හලයාගේ ජන්ම භූමිය නිදහස් කරගත්තද.

සුද්දාගේ පාලනය සදාලිකවම තවදුරටත් මේ රටේ පවත්වාගෙන යාම සදහා අයිවෝ ජෙනින් විසින්, මේ රට බෙදා පාලනය කිරිම, දෙමල සහ මුසල්මානු සුලුජන කොටස් 29 වන වගන්තියෙන්  බලවත්කොට සින්හල ජාතිය සහ සම්බුද්ධ සාශනය මේ රටින් තුරන් කිරීමේ මරඋගුල වශයෙන් සකස්කල සෝල්බරය් විවස්ථාව අනුවම එන්ගලන්තයේ සුද්දන්ගේ නියොජිතයින් වන කලු සුද්දන් විසින්ම තවදුරටත්  මේ රට පාලනය කරන බව ඔබ දන්නවාද. ඒ මරuගුලෙන් ගැලවී මේ රටේ පාලනයට පදනම වියයුතු රටට ගැලපෙන රටේ  2500 සිස්ඨාචාරයේ  පනම මත ආණ්ඩුකරම විවස්ථාවක් හදාගත්තද පමනක් බව ඔබ දන්නවාද.  ඉන්දියව තම විවස්ථාව හදන්ට පටන්ගත්තේ 1935. ඒක භාර කලේ ස්‍රේෂ්ඨ භාරත පුත්ත්‍රයෙක්වූ ඇම්බෙඩ්කාර්ට බව ඔබලා    දන්නවාද

අපගේ දෙසයට හා සන්ස්කෘතියට ආවේනික වු සිස්ඨාචාරය මත පදනම්වූ නීති ක්‍රමයක හා පාලන ක්‍රමයක අවස්යතාව ගැන ඔබ සිහිනෙන් හෝ සිතා තියෙනවාද

1948 ඊනියා  නිදහස ලැබී වසර 73 ක් ගතවීත් 2500 පුරා මේ රටේ සිෂ්ඨාචාරය ගොදනෙගූ , ඉන්දීය සහ බටහිර ආක්‍රමනිකයින්ගෙන් සිය ජීවිත පුදා  රට ජාතිය බේරාගත් භූමිපුත්‍රයින්ගේ අහිමිවූ උරුමයන් හා අයිතිවාසිකම් ආපසු ලබා ගත්තාද. විශේෂයෙන්ම එවකට උදරට රාජධනියේ සින්හල මිනිසුන්ගේ ඉද කදම්.

ඊනියා නිදහසින් පසු 73 වසරක් ගතව ඇතත් ස්වාදීන, ස්වඉරි හා සැබෑ නිදහස් රටක් ඔබලා මේ පොලව මත ස්ථාපිත කරගතාද

1948 දී නිදහසක් ලැබුනානම් 1961 දි රජයට විරුද්ධව ලියනගේ ඇතුලු කන්දායම කල කුමන්තරණය සහ 1971 දී Jආවි.පෙ කැරැල්ලද රැජිනගේ ආණ්ඩුවට එරෙහිව කරනලද කුමන්ත්‍රණ වසයෙන් හැදින්වුයේ ඇයි? 1948  දී නිදහස ලබා තිබුනානම් 62 රාජ්ය විරොධී කුමන්ත්‍රණයේ විත්තිකරුවන් බ්‍රතාන්ය ප්‍රිව්ය් කවුන්සලයෙන් නිදහස් කලේ කොහොමද

1947 දී ඉන්ග්‍රීසිපාලනයෙන් නිදහස ලබාගත් භාරතය 1951 දී ජනරජයක් වසයෙන් ප්‍රකාශ කලානම් 1972 දී බන්ඩාරනායක මැතිනිය කරනතුරු හෝ  වසර 24 ක් තිස්සේ කිසිවෙකු එය නොකලේ ඇයි?. 

What is the language of cricket?

February 3rd, 2021

C. Wijeyawickrema, LL.B., Ph.D.

Note: The unreasonable, unfair, arbitrary, and undemocratic (anti-poor people) decision taken stealthily by the Council of Legal Education to take back law college to pre-1956 era, is nothing but one more step to try to give oxygen to the NGO supported black-white plan to harm the 2,600-year-old Sinhala Buddhist heritage of Sinhale (Ceylon).

Therefore, there is no wonder, a collection of lawyers known as the Council of legal education (CLE), a kind of lawyers’ trade union, wants to restrict lawyers from poor families populating rural areas and make legal services cheaper like in India. There one can find lawyers with a table under a huge tree practicing law. This reduces the gap between a lawyer and his client.

Gandhi once said lawyers are like barbers. They do an important social service. But how many lawyers in Ceylon today know why there is small pocket (pouch) back of their black coat? Clients in Roman times drop coins into this pocket and the lawyer does not know who put how much. A lawyer once asked my relative to pay Rs. 70K to draft a simple, half-page affidavit. Who is more human, a man who catches fish one by one using a fishing rod or this kind of lawyer?

The black-white mind is a shameless mind. Just imagine the situation covered in the essay below. When Ajantha Mendis, an army soldier, played international cricket and brought fame to Sri Lanka, a black white had the nerve to write that Ajantha was an ‘embarrassment’ to Sri Lankan cricket, because he could not answer in English questions asked by reporters.  I consider this assessment of Ajantha by a man of a delusional mind is in the same category of the action by the CLE to create lawyers made in English.

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Source: Island newspaper, August 2, 2008

Bandula Abeyewardene’s (BA) much hesitant response (Island, 7/23/2008) to Daya Ranasinghe’s (DR) reaction to BA’s view on the need to teach English to cricketers, provided more evidence of the colonial mentality of BA. English like any other language is a tool like a computer or a typewriter and nothing more.

Who is a black-white?

The black-white phenomenon is found in former colonies, which is a state of mind. This was why Carlo Fonseka had to engage in a series of debates in the recent past in trying to define who is a black-white. Whether one knows English (in the former French or Spanish colonies those two languages) or whether one lives abroad has no direct connection with it. Recently, I saw a poem written by DR about a female soldier on guard duty, and reading it gives one goose bumps of pride and patriotism. A black-white cannot pen such poems. We know the poems by the Tibetan monk S. Mahinda who was more Sinhala than the native Sinhalayas.

In Mexico, a black-white is called a coconut—brown outside, white inside. One of the tests one can use in this regard, if he or she is visiting Anuradhapura from Colombo, is whether he or she gets goose bumps or a chill running through the spinal code (the awesome feeling) at the first sight of the Ruwanvali Maha Seya or standing on the bund of the Tissa Vawa. Just think of the mental state of some Marxists who called the King Dutugamunu, a fool of bricks (gadol modaya) for erecting the Ruwanvali, but they take trips to see the pyramids in Egypt!

As a tuition master in English, BA has every right to promote English classes. But his mental status is summarized by his word “embarrassment.” Princess Diana had to take tuition to learn how to speak English. The current U.S. President has trouble in speaking English despite a Yale education. SWRD had a silver tongue but could not read or write in Sinhala. In USA, 40% of college students need remedial education in reading and writing. Humans must communicate and unlike animals they have developed languages. Why is it that in Sri Lanka not knowing English is an embarrassment?

In British colonies, English was the language of the ruler and those who acted as translators became powerful and privileged. The colonial master needed more people able to work in English and a class of people evolved who learned English and embraced Christianity, the religion of the master.

Lord McCaulay, in the 1840s in India, formulated an education policy to create a class of Indians who were brown in colour, but English in thinking and behaviour. More than Lord Nelson or Cecil Rhodes, it was McCaulay who helped the continuation of colonialism after giving the former colonies “independence”. We have a ruling class in Colombo, who are remote-controlled from London or Paris.

When language is power, it is more than a communication tool. At the time of independence, only 5% of people in Ceylon knew English. This group mostly living in Colombo or in big cities continued the white rule with minimum of changes, spatially or structurally, under the colonial open economy, exporting rubber and graphite and importing pencils and erasers. The attempt to change this policy began only after 1956, which BA brands as a mess and a sin. Poor people had no means to learn English.

Why people learn other languages?

Only rarely, people learn languages for the fun of it. They learn it if it benefits them. Taxi drivers and Colombo Ayahs or lads at tourist sites use it. Thus, in those days people learned how to sign a document in English because otherwise there had to be a witness to his or her non-English signature. Today people learn Japanese or Hindi for the market value of it. In USA, parents force their children to learn Chinese, Russian, Hindi, or Japanese and not German or French as was done in the past. Nurses going to USA needs English as patients they meet cannot speak Sinhala. That is why Tamil doctors in Colombo should know Sinhala not because of discrimination, but to earn money. If Ajantha Mendis wants to learn English or Hindi, it will be his decision and not others. Herein lies the mental status problem of BA. He should not be the person to decide or suggest it. I have no doubt that Mendis tried to learn English at school, but could not be, due to lack of competent teachers or not being able to afford private tuition.

In the 1936 Olympics when several black Americans won gold medals, Hitler said they ran fast because unlike the white athletes, blacks were closer to monkeys. The ability to become a good cricket player or a good dancer-drummer or a musician has nothing to do with one’s language skills. Some people learn so many languages effortlessly.

If the fans of Mendis want to communicate with him and Mendis also wants to communicate with them in return, they will find a solution of their own. I knew a Commissioner of Marketing who did not know English but used his deputy as the English link. To expect to start English classes as part of training in cricket is to devalue the skill of them as cricketers and to try to inject one’s inferiority or superiority complexes on to otherwise innocent army-serving, village-born poor youth by a Colombo black-white. Even in the legal field we find attempts to convert into English medium as if that will help the legal empowerment of the poor.

Just like learning a language is a matter of economics, leaving Sri Lanka for alternative life in another country is a matter of economics. Most people who live abroad did so due to economic reasons or due to the corrupt political system in Sri Lanka. They did not have pastures in Sri Lanka in the first place to look for ‘greener pastures.’ They were like Jinadasa in Gamperaliya who went to Sinhale looking for work. Those who live outside Sri Lanka are in a better position to help Sri Lanka to help change it from a corruption and criminal paradise to a land where peace and prosperity is possible so that those who went abroad can return with a pension because they will not be under the control of corrupt politicians or officers.

Opportunity versus access to opportunity

Providing equal opportunity without the necessary support is meaningless as we see in Sri Lanka today. People like BA can talk, but even within a radius of 20 miles from Colombo there are few schools that have teachers qualified to teach English as a second language. With a colonial drawback of laughing at a person who makes a mistake while speaking in English (this does not happen in making mistakes in learning Hindi or French), it is much better that Mendis speaks about his cricket skill in his mother tongue than in broken English without making his cricket skill secondary to his newly acquired “talent” in English.

Intentionally or unknowingly BA has done a disservice to village boys who have talent not blunted by an English barrier. Village boys play cricket with kaduru balls found at the edge of paddy fields with polpithi bats. They will never go to Royal, St. Thomas’ or to an international school to learn cricket, because Lord McCaulay did not play cricket. They say the language of science is mathematics, but the language of cricket is not English. Fluency in English does not make one a world class cricketer, but talent and skills one is born with and sharpened.

THE GOVERNING WAY AND STYLE OF MR. GOTABAYA RAJAPAKSA CONSISTENT WITH THE EXPECTATION OF THE PUBLIC (PART 1)

February 3rd, 2021

BY EDWARD THEOPHILUS

Before Mr. Gotabaya Rajapaksa was selected as the nominee of Pohottuwa for the presidential election in 2019, there were many misconceptions, manipulations, and vicious engineering against him, and the malice engineering was focused on personal attacks against Mr. Rajapaksa as he had gained strong confidence of people than the performance of the Yahapalana regime. Critically considering the comparative quality of Mr. Gotabaya with previous presidents who held the office, Mr. Gotabaya was attracted by people with a hope that he will do or give leadership to do what people expect.   The animosity of analysts on the points raised disclosed that they were organized attempts of dirty politics in Sri Lanka, which were motivated by financial incentives of political groups or international human rights activists with the funds of foreign governments. The best example was the court case filed by Gamini Viyangoda and Chandragupta Thenuwara.

The major focus of criticism against Mr. Gotabaya Rajapaksa was that he had been served in the Army and the critics did not concern about the work performed by Mr. Gotabaya Rajapaksa as the Defence Secretary and Urban Development Activities as the secretary of the ministry. The knowledge and skills gained from the Army supported him to dispose of the best performance during the regime of Mr. Mahinda Rajapaksa and the opposition was scared of the practical achievement of Mr. Gotabaya as people were fully aware of the performance. If criticism attempted to deny good work, it would have equivalent to a statement that there is no country called the USA”. Therefore, they manipulated the point, he served in Army and his characteristics are like army personnel or a dictator.  

The opposition critique before the presidential election in 2019 directly focused that Mr. Rajapaksa will act like a dictator because of his military background, but the opposition consigned to oblivion that the best presidents in many countries in the world had served in arm forces. In the USA and many other countries, presidents were served in arm forces before the election to the president position and it was a special qualification to lead countries, and why such a respectable experience used as a point to criticize Mr. Rajapaksa before an election to the position, might have a question to the general public. The advisors of the opposition did not catch the point, but they stuck with the point and ultimately failed.

The main reflection of opposition critiques against Mr. Gotabaya Rajapaksa was that they were not consistent with the expectation of the public, and in fact, the public of Sri Lanka was expecting a partial dictatorship from the president to clean the country where the underworld, corruption, and illicit liquor and drugs entirely devoured the country and the young generation is being attracted to evil things. The secret of the success of Mr. Gotabaya Rajapaksa was that the opposition had been in a wrong putting, and the mythical trend of cheap international politics that was based on human rights than any other significant points that are allured by people in Sri Lanka.  This trend has not been changed after the election and the human rights report of Ms.Michel Bachelor shows misconceptions are alive.

The public in Sri Lanka did not expect the quick economic revolution from Mr. Gotabaya Rajapaksa when they were voting for him in 2019 as it was not realistic in a situation where the country has been suffered from tremendous economic problems since the colonial administration.  The major expectation of the public was to give leadership to fight against corruption, drugs, the underworld, and the black economy. The greatest enemy of poor people in Sri Lanka was the black economy. If Mr. Rajapaksa has given leadership to control the underworld and related activities it would be the symbol of the success of Mr. Rajapaksa. When it analyses from the point of views of the working-class against the underworld there is no question that Mr. Gotabaya’s regime has taken satisfactory action consistent with the expectation of the public, and if Mr. Rajapaksa continuously associates with anti-underworld policy, he will be in a comfortable position to re-elect at the next presidential election in 2024.

In addition to the above point, the success of Mr. Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s performance will be depending on taking policy actions to make a production economy in the country. The truth in this globe that no country can be a developed nation without adopting the policy of production economy. The reign of Kings and queens in ancient Sri Lanka was considered the concept of production economy and became a developed country and the production economy as a major role need to consider broader area such as agriculture, industry, construction, and services.  The concept of production economy is broadly related to an inter-industrial economic plan with nationalism encompassing all ethnic groups with an attractive reconciliation process.

The attempt of the Gotabaya regime to draft a new constitution will be successful in the reconciliation process if it makes a good cultural design to the country.  The story of Mahavamsa in connection with the visit of Lord Buddha to settle the conflict between Chulodara and Mahodara shows an example to make a cultural design without harming any ethnic group in the country. The philosophical idea of B.F. Skinner, which is associated with human nature (this behavior reflects in Sri Lanka by Sinhala, Tamil, and Muslim communities) and the good society through a cultural design.  Human nature cannot change by force, and a cultural design strongly supports to control of human nature and unite the country to achieve the economic desires of people.

For a successful plan to achieve a production economy, the country needs a 98% accurate input-output analysis, and has the government bureaucracy did it, is not certain to people and the ministries of planning and finance seem to be less talking because the public will monitor the planning and implementation process of the government. According to newspaper reports, government officers are looking for when the government is going to relax import regulation to vehicles and other luxury items than promoting domestic production.  

However, the government attempts to create an economic zone in the area of Port City. It is good action subject to conditions.  Will a cultural design in the country be grappled with the legal structure of Port City? and will support to go from social dualism to technical dualism is a question of people.  The appreciation of people regarding the port city is creating a new piece of land for the country, nevertheless, people don’t expect legal dualism like in China and Hong Kong. This is a vital factor that should be considered by the regime of Mr. Gotabaya.

The concept of production economy might clash with the legal system that will be introduced in Port City, and it may be a point for the opposition to taking arms to fight against the government. Economic liberalization is an essential condition and ignoring macroeconomic variables, liberalization is not appropriate. On the other hand, the prime objective of the port city is to bring a massive volume of foreign investments and a considerable volume of such investment may be related to black money deals. King-ping of the underworld of Sri Lanka may associate with black money deals based on investments and the country needs a successful monitoring system to avoid such possibilities because it will be a major point to work against Mr. Gotabaya Rajapaksa.

It can be observed that China is closely monitoring the black economic activities of Hong Kong, Taiwan, and Macao, and the port city of Sri Lanka needs to be monitored with a team of highly skillful intelligence service.  The most dangerous matter would be Sri Lankan drug dealers might use Port City to make an international narcotic conglomerate and it will be a serious problem to Sri Lanka.  If it creates problems for India Sri Lanka must ready to defend the country as India will take various actions to disturb the operation of Port City.

THE GOVERNING WAY AND STYLE OF MR.GOTABAYA RAJAPAKSA CONSISTENT WITH THE EXPECTATION OF THE PUBLIC PART 2

February 3rd, 2021

BY EDWARD THEOPHILUS

The major issue during the next five years to Mr. Gotabaya Rajapaksa will be how to reconcile the technical dualism between the Port City and the rural economy. Port City is a good economic strategy for showing to the world, but the reality is the provincial economy which consists of more than 70% of the macroeconomy might clash with the project, and internationally, India might influence the operation of Port City as it associates with China. Although many people don’t understand this issue the recent manipulation regarding the East and West Terminals of the Colombo Port reflected the complex nature of the issue.  

To gain more votes the provincial economy is a critical factor for the Rajapaksa government. Before the election in 2019, Mr. Rajapaksa talked about a provincial development project, and no public service or planners of the government planned and made blueprints for the project. It is a mega-development project that could successfully address human nature related problems and arriving at a cultural design such mega projects which provide benefits to all ethnic groups.

The COVID-19 pandemic has negatively impacted the development policies of the Rajapaksa government. Foreign employment and the tourism industry have been played a key role in the economy since the 1970s, and the contribution from these two areas have declined with the effect of COVID_19, and regaining such areas is vital and how could regain the economic benefits have become a critical question. The changing of internal policy structure by reforming education and using the provincial labour to contribute a higher pace in the development process is vital through an inter industrial plan.

The opposition political parties prefer to talk about soda bottle opening type issues and they have no solid policy structure that massively attracts the support of the provincial community and Mr. Gotabaya Rajapaksa must focus on the use of provincial labour at an internationally competitive price. Why rural women go to the Middle East for domestic services because the price of labour of women in the country was comparatively lower and if Mr. Gotabaya Rajapaksa plans to give the right price to provincial labour and a reasonable value to Sri Lanka rupee, many issues at the provincial level will be changed without changing his power base at rural level.

The valuable practice of Mr. Gotabaya Rajapaksa is visiting interior rural villages and listing to poor people. This practice was done by previous presidents, but it was not a consistent approach or a productive way of public relations. The experience of Mr. Rajapaksa as an army person has motivated him to maintain good public relations and give quick solutions to the problems of rural people. Although the previous presidents visited rural people, they didn’t give solutions to highlighted problems. Mr. Gotabaya Rajapaksa demonstrates he is practical and give solution to problems. The significance of experience gained in the army reflects positively working with President Rajapaksa and the opposition parties have to close their opposition to Mr.Rajapaksa saying he was an army person.

The joke that appeared in the opposition is Mr. Sajith Premise also visits people in the rural area and his talk with the innocent peasant (Churi archaic, countrymen) that when he comes to power he will give a solution to the rural problems and when he will come to power is unsure. In such a situation the opposition cannot attract the support of the rural people. It showed that the opposition shouldn’t do all that the government is doing when it has no political power. Talking or promising to peasants is a style of politics in Sri Lanka, and the countrymen know that they are just talking than honest planning do so.

Many reforms in economic and social sectors are essential and Mr.Rajapaksa promised to people effectively launch reforms before the presidential election in 2024.  The education reforms, reforms in the financial system, and the reforms in the socio-economic structure to attract peasants to productively participate in the economic process are essential areas and the administration of Mr. Gotabaya Rajapaksa needs to expedite these reforms. People in Sri Lanka understand that these reforms could not perform overnight and they will take time.  Although nearly two years of completing in the power, talks on reforms are not sufficient and the short experience is suggested reforms are behind than people are expecting, and it seems the ball is passing one person to others and no changes are being eventuated in the economic and social system. Many view that although the president has changed the bureaucracy has not changed consistent with the policies of the president.

Education reforms are key to make many changes, one significant point Mr.Rajapaksa highlighted before the presidential election was incorporating vocational education to tertiary education and allowing rural kids to gain quality tertiary education and the level of tertiary education be practical with the vast area of fields.  However, bureaucracy in the education field has poor knowledge and skills in the area and Mr.Rajapaksa needs motivating bureaucrats to expedite reforms. 

The reforms relate to the financial system are crucial to converting Sri Lanka’s economy for attracting investors, and the experience since 2019 shows that a significant fluctuation in the financial system that is disadvantaged to the country. The banking and non-bank financial market require quick reforms to assure investors and users to stick in the system. As a regulatory authority, the Central Bank of Sri Lanka needs to introduce reforms, and many times it shows the Central Bank’s policies have limited to no actions talks only. I proposed in the late 1990s to make many reforms especially in the stock market and superannuation system,  but they were not effective and crooks were dominating in the system. The best example is recent records of the Colombo Stock Market which reported a quick boost and after few weeks the gains transferred to loose as short selling used by crooks to play the game, and why Mr.Rajapaksa doesn’t direct the Central Bank to change the legal structure and allow rural communities to participate in the market operations. As 70% of the economy of Sri Lanka is in the hand of rural people the Colombo Stock Market could be boosted with rural cash if the policymakers do the needful for changes.

Social reforms are essential to change the attitudes of people.  The government of Sri Lanka has failed to eliminate social dualism that leads to technical dualism. If we look at the Asian countries where achieved stable economic growth and development in Japan, South Korea, and others the achievements have been centered on changing the social system with modernization and elimination of social dualism and integrating all into one nation.  This fundamental concept has neglected policymakers in Sri Lanka.  What were the influential factors for this situation? Mr. Gotabaya Rajapaksa needs to concern about this matter. The attitude of people regarding schooling has not changed the mentality of colonialism dominates in attitudes.

Mr.Gotabaya Rajapaksa has a massive challenge and the deal with the challenge needs changing attitudes of people.   

අග්‍රාමාත්‍යතුමාගේ උපදෙසින් විදේශීය ශ්‍රමිකයින් මෙරටට ගෙන්වීමේ වැඩපිළිවෙළ කඩිනම් කෙරේ

February 3rd, 2021

අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය මාධ්‍ය අංශය

මෙරටට පැමිණීමේ බලාපොරොත්තුවෙන් පසුවන විදේශීය ශ්‍රමිකයින් ගෙන්වීමේ වැඩපිළිවෙළ ගරු අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය මහින්ද රාජපක්ෂ මහතාගේ උපදෙස් අනුව කඩිනම් කිරීමට පියවර ගෙන ඇත.

විදේශ රැකියා ප්‍රවර්ධන හා වෙළෙඳපළ විවිධාංගිකරණ රාජ්‍ය අමාත්‍ය ප්‍රියංකර ජයරත්න මහතා විසින් පත් කළ කොමිසමේ නිර්දේශ අනුව මෙම ශ්‍රමිකයින් මෙරටට ගෙන්වීමේ වැඩපිළිවෙළ ගරු අග්‍රාමාත්‍යවරයාගේ උපදෙස් අනුව ක්‍රියාත්මක වේ.

විදෙස්ගත ශ්‍රී ලාංකික ශ්‍රමිකයන් මෙරටට ගෙන්වා ගැනීම පිළිබඳව අරලියගහ මන්දිරයේ දී පැවැති සාකච්ඡාවකදී මෙරටට පැමිණීමට බලාපෙරොත්තුවෙන් සිටින විදේශගත ශ්‍රී ලාංකික ශ්‍රමිකයන් කඩිනමින් ගෙන්වීමට පියවර ගන්නැයි ගරු අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය මහින්ද රාජපක්ෂ මහතා පසුගිය  2021.01.26 දා උපදෙස් ලබා දුන්නේය.

ඒ අනුව සතියක කාලයක් ඇතුළත ජාත්‍යන්තර සංක්‍රමණ සංවිධානය (IOM) සමඟ සාකච්ඡා කර විදෙස්ගත ශ්‍රී ලාංකික ශ්‍රමිකයන් මෙරටට ගෙන්වා ගැනීම පිළිබඳව ඔවුන්ගේ ඥාතීන් හා මහජනතාව දැනුම්වත් කිරීමට කටයුතු කරන බව  විදේශ සේවා නියුක්ති කාර්යාංශයේ සභාපති කමල් රත්වත්තේ මහතා ප්‍රකාශ කළේය.

ආර්ථික අපහසුතාවලින් පෙළෙන විදෙස්ගත ශ්‍රී ලාංකික ශ්‍රමිකයන් විශාල පිරිසක් මෙරටට පැමිණීමට නොහැකිව පීඩාවට පත්ව ඇතැයි රාජ්‍ය අමාත්‍ය ප්‍රියංකර ජයරත්න මහතා පවසයි.

ඒ අනුව කොවිඩ්-19 වැළැක්වීමට අදාළ ජනාධිපති කාර්ය සාධක බලකාය සමඟ සාකච්ඡා කරමින් මෙම ශ්‍රමිකයන් කඩිනමින් මෙරටට ගෙන්වා ගැනීමට කටයුතු කරන බවට අග්‍රාමාත්‍යතුමා විශ්වාසය පළ කළේය.

මේ වනවිට විදෙස්ගත ශ්‍රී ලාංකික ශ්‍රමිකයන් 32000ක් පමණ මෙරටට ගෙන්වාගෙන ඇති අතර තවත් 22483 දෙනෙක් සිය මව්බිමට පැමිණීමේ අපේක්ෂාවෙන් පසුවෙති.

අග්‍රාමාත්‍යතුමාගේ ප්‍රධානත්වයෙන් ගම සමඟ පිළිසඳර – වැඩ සමඟ යළි ගමට යථාර්ථයක්වන ජාතික සම්බන්ධීකරණ අනු කමිටු පිහිටුවයි

February 3rd, 2021

අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය මාධ්‍ය අංශය

• සිංහල හින්දු අලුත් අවුරුද්දට පෙර විදුලිය හා ජල සම්බන්ධතා දී අවසන් කිරීමේ තීන්දුවක්

• පෙබරවාරි දෙවැනි සතියේ සිට බඩුමිල අඩුවෙයි

• කොවිඩ්-19 එන්නතින් මුළු රටම ආවරණය කළ  පළමු රට වීමේ ඉලක්කයක්

ගම සමඟ පිළිසඳර – වැඩ සමඟ යළි ගමට වැඩසටහන හා 2021 අය-වැය යෝජනා යථාර්ථයක්වන ජාතික සම්බන්ධීකරණ අනු කමිටු පිහිටුවීම ගරු අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය මහින්ද රාජපක්ෂ මහතාගේ ප්‍රධානත්වයෙන් අද 2021.02.03 දින අරලියගහ මන්දිරයේ දී පැවැත්විණි.

ආර්ථික පුනර්ජීවනය හා දරිද්‍රතාවය තුරන් කිරීම සඳහා වන ජනාධිපති කාර්යසාධන බලකායේ සභාපති බැසිල් රාජපක්ෂ මහතාගේ සංකල්පයක් අනුව ක්‍රියාත්මක මෙම ජාතික සම්බන්ධීකරණ අනු කමිටු සඳහා සියලුම කැබිනට් හා රාජ්‍ය අමාත්‍යවරුන් ඇතුළත්ය.

ප්‍රාදේශීය සංවර්ධනයට නව ප්‍රවේශයක් සඳහා කෘෂිකාර්මික අනු කමිටුව, ජීවනෝපාය අනු කමිටුව, යටිතල පහසුකම් අනු කමිටුව, සමාජ යටිතල පහසුකම් අනු කමිටුව සහ සමාජ ආරක්ෂාව හා සමාජ සංවර්ධන අනු කමිටුව ලෙස ජාතික සම්බන්ධීකරණ අනු කමිටු 5ක් පිහිටුවා ඇත. 

ඒ එක් එක් කමිටු සඳහා විෂයන්ට අදාළවන සේ කැබිනට් හා රාජ්‍ය අමාත්‍යවරුන් පත්කර තිබීම මෙහි විශේෂත්වයකි.

ජාතික සම්බන්ධීකරණ කමිටුව, දිස්ත්‍රික් සම්බන්ධීකරණ කමිටුව, ප්‍රාදේශීය සංවර්ධන කමිටුව හා ග්‍රාමීය කමිටුව ලෙස ඉහළ සිට පහළට තීරණ ගලා යාමත්, පහළ සිට ඉහළට අදහස් හා යෝජනා ගලා යාමත් සිදුවන වන ලෙස සකස් වී ඇති බව බැසිල් රාජපක්ෂ මහතා මෙම අවස්ථාවට එක්ව සිටි කැබිනට් හා රාජ්‍ය අමාත්‍යවරුන්ට පෙන්වා දුන්නේය.

ගම සමඟ පිළිසඳර අප විරුද්ධ පක්ෂයේ සිටින කාලයේ සිටයි ක්‍රියාත්මක කළා. ඒ කාලයේ අපි ගමේ අඩුපාඩු හදුනාගත්තත් ඒ සඳහා රාජ්‍ය නිලධාරී තන්ත්‍රය සහභාගි කරගන්න බැරි වුණා. නමුත් මුළු රට තුළම එම වැඩසටහන අතිගරු ජනාධිපති ගෝඨාය රාජපක්ෂ මැතිතුමාගේ ප්‍රධානත්වයෙන් දැන් ක්‍රියාත්මක වෙනවා.

ඔබ දන්නවා මේ රටේ ග්‍රාමසේවක වසම් 14000ක් තියෙනවා.  ගම් 36000ක් තියෙනවා. ඒ කටයුත්තත අප ඉදිරියට ගෙනයාමට ප්‍රාදේශීය සම්බන්ධීකරණ කමිටු ඔස්සේ කටයුතු කළ යුතුයි. ප්‍රාදේශීය සම්බන්ධීකරණ කමිටුවලට මහජන නියෝජිතයන් පත්කිරීම ප්‍රමාදවීම නිසා මේ කටයුත්ත බොහෝවෙලාවට සිදුවුණේ ප්‍රාදේශිය ලේකම් හෝ නිලධාරින් අතින්.

ඒ නිසා පසුපෙළ මන්ත්‍රීවරුන්ට වගේම ඔබටත් ගම හා ආසනයේ කටයුතු කිරීමේදී ඊට සම්බන්ධවීමේ ක්‍රමවේදයක් තිබුණෙ නැහැ. ඒ නිසා ඇතැම් වෙලාවට ප්‍රාදේශීය සංවර්ධන ව්‍යාපෘතිවලට දේශපාලන නායකත්වය නොලැබී ගියා.

උතුරු හා නැගෙනහිර හැර රටේ සෑම ප්‍රදේශයකම දිස්ත්‍රික් හා ප්‍රාදේශීය සම්බන්ධීකරණ කමිටු පත්කර අවසන්. ආණ්ඩු පක්ෂ තීන්දුවට අනුව ඒවායේ සභාපතිධූර පාර්ලිමේන්තු මන්ත්‍රීවරුන්ට පමණක් ලබා දී තිබෙනවා.

ඒ නිසා ඉදිරියේදී අමාත්‍යංශ ඔස්සේ ප්‍රාදේශීය සංවර්ධන කටයුතු ක්‍රියාත්මක කිරීමේදී ප්‍රාදේශීය සම්බන්ධීකරණ කමිටුව ඔස්සේ ඒවා ක්‍රියාත්මක කිරීම අවශ්‍යයයි.  ඒ සඳහා අද පිහිටුවන මෙම ජාතික සම්බන්ධීකරණ අනු කමිටුවල නායකත්වය හා උපදෙස් ක්‍රියාත්මක විය යුතුයි. ඉදිරියේදී අමාත්‍යංශ මට්ටමෙන් සිදුවන ඉල්ලීම් හෝ චක්‍රලේඛ ප්‍රාදේශිය සම්බන්ධීකරණ කමිටු සභාපතිට සෘජුව යොමු කරන්නැයි බැසිල් රාජපක්ෂ මහතා මෙහිදී ඉල්ලා සිටියේය.

බඩු මිල ඉහළ යාම පාලනය කිරීමෙ සම්බන්ධයෙන්ද මෙහිදී අවධානය යොමුවිය.

ඒ අනුව පරිප්පු, පිටි, සීනි, ලොකු ලූණූ සහ අර්තාපල් ඇතුළු භාණ්ඩ වර්ග 28ක් සඳහා පෙබරවාරි, මාර්තු සහ අප්‍රේල් මාස 3ට නිෂ්පාදකයන් හා සෘජු ආනයනකරුවන් සමඟ ඉදිරි මිල පිළිබඳව එකඟත්වයකට පැමිණ තිබෙන බව පෙන්වා දුන් වෙළඳ අමාත්‍ය බන්දුල ගුණවර්ධන මහතා, අද පවතින මිලට වඩා අඩු මිලට පෙබරවාරි මස දෙවැනි සතියේ සිට සතොස හා සමූපකාර ඔස්සේ එම භාණ්ඩ රටපුරා බෙදා හරින බව කියා සිටියේය.

දුප්පත්කම හේතුවෙන් නිවස ළඟට විදුලිය තිබුණද, ජලය තිබුණද ගත නොහැකිව පීඩාවට පත් සීමිත පිරිසක් සිටින බව අමාත්‍ය මහින්ද අමරවීර මහතා මෙහිදී පෙන්වා දුන්නේය.

මුලදි විදුලිය නොමැති නිවාස 35000ක් හඳුනාගත්ත ද එය 125000ක් පමණ වනබව ගණන් බලා ඇතැයි අමාත්‍ය දුමින්ද දිසානායක මහතා පැවැසීය.

එහිදී ලබන සිංහල හින්දු අලුත් අවුරුද්දට පෙර දැනට විදුලිය සහ ජල සැපයුම නොමැති සියලුම නිවාසවලට එම සැපයුම ලබාදීමට ක්‍රියා කරමු යැයි බැසිල් රාජපක්ෂ මහතා ගෙන ආ යෝජනාවට සියලුම කැබිනට් හා රාජ්‍ය ඇමැතිවරු මෙහි දී එකඟත්වය පළ කළහ. 

විදුලිය සහ ජල පහසුකම් නොමැති නිවාස හඳුනාගෙන ඒ සඳහා ලබන සිංහල අලුත් අවුරුද්දට පෙර විසඳුම් දීම ප්‍රාදේශීය සම්බන්ධීකරණ කමිටු සභාපතිවරයාගේ වගකීම බව බැසිල් රාජපක්ෂ මහතා මෙහිදී සඳහන් කළේය. ඒ සඳහා සමෘද්ධි අරමුදල් ඇතුළු රජයේ ප්‍රතිපාදන යොදාගත හැකි බව ද හෙතම පෙන්වා දුන්නේය.

රජයේ මෙන්ම පෞද්ගලික අංශයේ සෞඛ්‍ය වෘත්තිකයන් ද මහජනතාව ද කොවිඩ්-19 එන්නත ලබාගැනීම සම්බන්ධයෙන් උනන්දුවන බව අමාත්‍යවරු මෙහිදී අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය මහින්ද රාජපක්ෂ මහතාගේ අවධානය යොමු කළහ.

පෙබරවාරි මස මැද භාගයවනවිට සාමාන්‍ය ජනතාවටත් එන්නත ලබා ගත හැකිවනු ඇතැයි රාජ්‍ය ඇමතිනි සුදර්ශනී ප්‍රනාන්දු පුල්ලේ මහත්මිය මෙහිදී විශ්වාසය පළ කළාය.

කොවිඩ්-19 එන්නත් ලබා දීම තීව්‍ර කරමින් ශ්‍රී ලංකාව එන්නත් ලබා දී අවසන් කළ පළමු රට වීම වැනි ඉලක්කයක් කරා ගමන් කළ යුතුව ඇතැයි බැසිල් රාජපක්ෂ මහතා මෙහිදී අවධාරණය කළේය.

මෙම අවස්ථාවට කැබිනට් අමාත්‍යවරුන්, රාජ්‍ය අමාත්‍යවරුන්, අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය ලේකම් ගාමිණි සෙනරත් මහතා ඇතුළු රාජ්‍ය නිලධාරීන් රැසක් එක්ව සිටියහ.

නිදහස් දින පණිවුඩය

February 3rd, 2021

මහින්ද රාජපක්ෂ ශ්‍රී ලංකා ප්‍රජාතාන්ත්‍රික සමාජවාදී ජනරජයේ අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය

ශ්‍රී ලාංකේය සියලු පුරවැසියන් 73 වන ජාතික නිදහස් දිනය සමරනු ලබන්නේ ඉමහත් අභිමානයෙනි.

යටත් විජිතයක් බවට පත් වූ දින පටන් නිදහස දිනා ගැනීමට ලක්වැසියන් කළ කැපවීම හා සටන් ලෝක ඉතිහාසයේ නම් දරා තිබේ.

යුද ශක්තිය මෙන්ම දේශපාලන, ආගමික හා සංස්කෘතික මුහුණුවරින් ද උපක්‍රමික අරගලවල යෙදෙමින් නිදහස දිනාගත් අතීතයක් ශ්‍රී ලාංකේය ජාතියට හිමිය.

අද වන විට අපගේ මාතෘභූමියට අවශ්‍යව ඇත්තේ ලැබූ නිදහස අර්ථවත් කර ගැනීමේ ක්‍රියාවලියයි. ජාතීන් අතර සමගිය වර්ධනය කර ගැනීම හා ආගමික සංහිඳියාව ඊට දක්වන්නේ ප්‍රබල පිටුබලයකි.

විවිධ අභියෝග හමුවේ දේශියත්වය අගයන ආර්ථික ප්‍රතිපත්තියක් තුළින් මාතෘ භූමිය සංවර්ධනය කරා ගෙනයාමේ මාවතට අප දැන් ප්‍රවිෂ්ට වී තිබේ.

සෑම ක්ෂේත්‍රයකම සිදුවිය යුතු ප්‍රතිසංස්කරණ අවබෝධ කරගනිමින් ජනතාව මත තැබූ සෞභාග්‍යයේ දැක්ම ප්‍රතිපත්ති මාලාවෙන් නිදහස තවත් අර්ථවත් වනවිට ඉසුරුමත් හෙට දිනක් – සෞභාග්‍යමත් මව්බිමක්”  යන්න යථාර්තයක් වනු ඇත.

ඉතිහාසය පුරාවට මාතෘ භූමියට එරෙහි දෙස් විදෙස් බලවේග මෙන්ම ත්‍රස්තවාදය පරාජය කිරීමේ ස්ථිර ප්‍රතිපත්තියක අපි කටයුතු කළෙමු. කොතරම් අභියෝග පැමිණිය ද අපගේ මාතෘ භූමිය අප කිසි ලෙසකින් පාවා දී නැත.

කොවිඩ් – 19 දැන් ලෝකය හමුවේ ඇති විශාලම අභියෝගයයි. ජනතාව මෙම අර්බුදයෙන් නිදහස් කර ගැනීමේ සටනට අප දැන් උර දී සිටී. සතුරු බලවේග පරාජය කිරීමට මෙන්ම කොවිඩ් – 19 පරාජය කිරීමට ද ශ්‍රී ලාංකේය ජාතියක් ලෙස අපි නැගී සිටිමු.

අපගේ මාතෘ භූමියේ භෞමික අඛණ්ඩතාව හා ස්වෛරීත්වය වෙනුවෙන් ජීවිත පරිත්‍යාග කළ හා අපරිමිත කැපවීම් කළ සියලු දෙනාටත් වර්තමානයේ එම අභියෝගය හමුවේ නොසැලී කැපවන දෑ හිතකාමී සියලු දෙනාටත් මාගේ ගෞරවය පුද කරමි.

බංග්ලාදේශ මහ කොමසාරිස්තුමා අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය මහින්ද රාජපක්ෂ මහතා හමුවෙයි

February 3rd, 2021

අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය මාධ්‍ය අංශය

බංග්ලාදේශ මහ කොමසාරිස් තාරෙක් එම්ඩී අරිෆුල් ඉස්ලාම් (Tareq Md Ariful Islam ) සහ නියෝජ්‍ය මහ කොමසාරිස් මොහොමඩ් හස්රත් අලි ඛාන් (Mohammad Hazrat Ali Khan ) යන මහත්වරුන් අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය මහින්ද රාජපක්ෂ මහතා, විජේරාම නිවසේදී ඊයේ  (02-02-2020) හමුවිය.

හමුවීමට ලද අවස්ථාව පිළිබඳව අගමැති මහින්ද රාජපක්ෂ මහතාට ස්තූතිය පුද කළ මහ කොමසාරිස්තුමා, දෙරට අතර ද්විපාර්ශ්වික සබඳතා වැඩි දියුණු කිරීම සඳහා රජය සමඟ එක්ව කටයුතු කිරීමට බලාපොරොත්තු වන බව පැවසීය.

73 වන නිදහස් දිනය වෙනුවෙන් අග්‍රාමාත්‍යවරයාට සුබ පැතූ බංග්ලාදේශ මහ කොමසාරිස්තුමා, සිය අග්‍රාමාත්‍යවරියගේ  ලිපියක් අගමැතිතුමා හට භාර දුන්නේ ශ්‍රී ලංකාවේ නිදහස් දිනය වෙනුවෙන්  ඇයගේ සුබ පැතුම් ද එක් කරමිනි.

කෘෂිකාර්මික, ධීවර හා නාවික සම්බන්ධතා යන ක්ෂේත්‍රයන්හි දෙරට අතර සහයෝගීතාව ඉහළ නැංවීම තුළින් පවත්නා ද්විපාර්ශ්වික සබඳතා පුළුල් කිරීමට ඇති හැකියාව පිළිබඳව මහ කොමසාරිස්තුමා දැඩි උනන්දුවක් දැක්වූ අතර බංග්ලාදේශය දැනට මිරිදිය මත්ස්‍ය නිෂ්පාදනයේ 4 වන විශාලතම රට වන බවත් එහි හොඳම භාවිතයන් ලංකාව සමග බෙදාහදා ගැනීමට බලාපොරොත්තු වන බවත් පැවසීය. ගංවතුර හා නියඟයට ඔරොත්තු දෙන ඉහළ මට්ටමේ සහල් වර්ග නිපදවීමටත් එමඟින්  සහල් නිෂ්පාදනය වැඩිකිරීමටත්  බංග්ලාදේශය මේ වන විටත්  ශ්‍රී ලංකාවට සහාය වෙමින් සිටී. 

අධ්‍යාපන සහ ඖෂධ ක්ෂේත්‍ර සඳහා වසර ගණනාවක් තිස්සේ බංග්ලාදේශයෙන් ලබා දුන් සහය පිළිබඳව කෘතවේදීත්වය පලකළ අගමැති මහින්ද රාජපක්ෂ මහතා ශ්‍රී ලංකාවේ ඖෂධ නිෂ්පාදන ක්ෂේත්‍රය සඳහා බංග්ලාදේශයේ ආයෝජකයින් දිරිමත් කරන ලෙස මහ කොමසාරිස්තුමාට ආරාධනා කළේය. 

දෙරට අතර වෙළඳ සබඳතා පුළුල් කිරීමට හා සංවර්ධනය කිරීමට විශාල ඉඩ ප්‍රස්ථාවක්  ඇති බව අගමැතිතුමා  සහ මහ කොමසාරිස්තුමා සාකච්ඡා කළහ. 

බංග්ලාදේශය, මෙම වසරේ සිය ස්වර්ණ ජයන්ති නිදහස් දිනය සමරන බැවින් මහ කොමසාරිස්තුමා බංග්ලාදේශයට පැමිණෙන ලෙස අග්‍රාමාත්‍යවරයාට ආරාධනා කළේය.

දෙරට අතර දැනටමත් පවතින මිත්‍රත්වය වැඩි දියුණු කිරීම සඳහා බංග්ලාදේශ රජය සමඟ එක්ව කටයුතු කිරීමට තමන් අපේක්ෂා කරන බව පැවසූ  අග්‍රාමාත්‍යතුමා, මහ කොමසාරිස්තුමාට සිය ධූර කාලය තුළ සාර්ථකව කටයුතු කරගෙන යාමට සුභ පැතුම් එක් කළේය. 

මෙම අවස්ථාව සඳහා අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය ලේකම් ගාමිණී සෙනරත් මහතා ද  එක්විය.

India-Lanka Relations Strained Over Denial Of East Container Terminal In Colombo Port – Analysis

February 3rd, 2021

By  Courtesy Eurasia Review

New Delhi to issue statement on the Lankan cabinet’s decision to back out on the East Terminal deal and offer the West Terminal instead as a sop.

Colombo, February 3: India-Sri Lanka relations have come under strain following Sri Lanka’s withdrawal from its written commitment to give Colombo port’s Easter Container Terminal (ECT) to India, and to offer the West Container Terminal (WCT) in lieu of it as a sop.

A disappointed Indian High Commissioner Gopal Baglay met President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa and Foreign Minister Dinesh Gunawardena on Tuesday apparently to express India’s dismay about the breach of trust.  

Asked about the outcome of the discussions, the Indian High Commission said that India will issue a statement on it from New Delhi. The statement is awaited.

The suddenness of the Sri Lankan cabinet’s decision, without any prior discussion with India, had upset New Delhi, Indian sources said. The cavalier fashion in which a bilateral agreement and repeated verbal commitments were flouted is bound to have an impact on the relationship, though it is too early to say in what particular ways it will be impacted, the sources added.

As regards the offer of the West Container Terminal (WCT), the sources said that it had come out of the blue. Firstly the offer has to be made officially and with adequate details for India to consider it in depth, the sources said. As of now there is only a public statement, albeit official, that the WCT will be built and run by the Sri Lanka Ports Authority (SLPA) in collaboration with India and Japan for 35 years as a private public partnership to go by, Indian sources said.

Immediately after the February 1 cabinet decision, the Indian High Commission had issued a statement reiterating India’s position that all parties to the May 18, 2019 Memorandum of Cooperation (MOC) – Sri Lanka, India and Japan – over the ECT, should adhere to it. It was stated that the MOC had emerged from discussions at the highest national level and was backed with assurances from the Sri Lankan government subsequently, and even recently.

Earlier in January, the Indian Foreign Minister S.Jaishankar had indicated India’s deep interest in the ECT. India is interested in the security and development of Colombo port,” he said in explanation when asked about his talks on it with the Sri Lankan President here.

Just a few days prior to the cabinet decision, the government of India had gifted 500,000 doses of the COVISHIELD vaccine to Sri Lanka as part of its Neighborhood First Policy” and had committed itself to a steady supply of the vaccine. India was, as in many cases in the past, the first respondent to the virus pandemic in Sri Lanka. China has only promised to send 300,000 doses of its vaccine.

Support in UNHRC  

Earlier, Sri Lanka had made a request to India to support it at the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) where a hostile resolution is likely to be introduced in March by the Core Group led by Western nations backed by the US. The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Michelle Bachelet, had recommended targeted sanctions” against Sri Lanka and also referring it to the International Criminal Court (ICC) for alleged war crimes”. The US is at odds with Sri Lanka since the later rejected a grant of US$ 480 million for transport development and land registration under the Millennium Challenge Corporation Compact.

In the light of Colombo’s decision on the ECT, the question that is asked is: Would New Delhi’s approach to Sri Lanka’s case in the UNHRC change? However, informed sources said that there is still a lot of time for India to adopt a stand on this issue. Much would depend on the exact nature of Colombo’s offer of the West Container Terminal and the seriousness of its intention to stick to commitments solemnly made in regard to it, they added.

Reasons For Denial

While it was true that Sri Lankan nationalists, both within the government and outside, along with 23 workers’ unions and a section of Buddhist monks, were against giving the ECT to India, it was believed President Gotabaya Rajapaksa was himself in favor of the deal largely based on the May 2019 MOC.

It was believed that Gotabaya was considering several factors such as: geo-political factors, the importance of India for the defense of Sri Lanka, and the need to maintain a balance between China and India in economic and strategically important projects. The President was therefore expected to be able to convince the agitated port workers’ unions that the ECT was not going to be sold or leased out to India and that the SLPA would have majority stake (51%) in the terminal.    

But at the end of the day, the workers’ view prevailed. This was because they kept insisting that the President’s election manifesto Vistas of Prosperity and Splendor had explicitly mentioned Public-Private Sector Partnership only in the case of the development of the West Container Terminal (WCT), and not the ECT. What was implicit in the line on ECT was that the government will build and run the ECT.

Furthermore, key members of the President’s own think tank Viyathmaga” such as Dr.Nalaka Godahewa and Dr.Priyath Bandhu Wickrama had had discussions with the workers’ unions and had reported back to the President to say that the workers’ case was reasonable based as it was on the election manifesto. The interlocutors assured the President that the workers’ were in agreement with him on Public-Private cooperation in building and running the West Container Terminal.

So far, India has not indicated whether it will accept the Lankan proposal on the West Container Terminal. The proposed deal appears to be the same as that which related to the ECT broadly. But the WCT has to be constructed from scratch and the details as to the stakes are yet to be worked out.

Some hardline Lankan nationalists would continue to agitate against giving any port terminal to India even a 1% stake” as a union leader said.

The General Secretary of the Port Workers’ Union, Niroshan Gorakahenna, has been quoted in the Tamil paper Virakesari  as saying that the workers were opposed to giving any terminal to foreign countries whether it was ECT or WCT. The WCT could not be bartered away to get back the ECT, he stressed. The workers would now discuss what steps they should take to press their case, Gorakahenna added.

In its defense, the government could say that it is only implementing the President’s election manifesto faithfully, a manifesto for which 6.9 million Lankans (52%) voted to install Gotabaya Rajapaksa in power.

India will Mount Pressure

India is also expected to flex its muscles so that Sri Lanka does not take it for granted. It is already raising the Tamil-Sinhalese ethnic reconciliation issue especially the full implementation of the 13 th.Constitutional Amendment (13A) which stems from the India-Sri Lanka Accord of 1987.

The 13A, which established elected provincial councils, gave the Tamil majority province (as well as other provinces) a modicum of devolved power, which in India’s view, would led to the extinction of separatist tendencies among the minority Tamils. There is an apprehension that in the proposed new Lankan constitution, the provisions contained in 13A will not find a place.

On Tuesday, the Indian Deputy High Commissioner, Vinod.K.Jacob, met two Tamil leaders from the Eastern Province, former Chief Minister and current MP, Sivanesathurai Chandrakanthan alias Pillayan, and former Minister Vinayagamurthi   Muralitharan, alias Karuna Amman, and  discussed 13A.

Jacob had reiterated the position of the Government of India that meaningful devolution is the way forward for achieving the aspirations of the Tamil people and stressed full implementation of 13th amendment.

The other sensitive issue is the tough resolution which is likely to be moved in the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) in Geneva in March. While the Human Rights High Commissioner Michelle Bachelet has recommended targeted sanctions and hauling up Sri Lanka before the International Criminal Court for alleged war crimes” the Sri Lankan government has taken a defiant stand accusing the UNHRC of going by falsehoods and recommending remedies which violate the sovereignty of Sri Lanka.

Sri Lanka has asked for India’s support in the UNHRC since India has generally been supporting Sri Lanka in the council. Colombo hopes that with the grant of the WCT to compensate for the denial of the ECT, New Delhi will oblige Colombo at the UNHRC. Sri Lankans point out that China and Russia have already pledged support openly.

Govt. decides to reject UN rights chief’s report on Sri Lanka

February 3rd, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

The Government of Sri Lanka has decided to reject the report compiled by the United Nations Human Rights Commissioner Michelle Bachelet on alleged human rights violations in Sri Lanka, says Minister Udaya Gammanpila.

He said Sri Lanka’s response to the report, which has already been submitted in writing, will be made public when Foreign Affairs Minister Dinesh Gunawardena addresses the UN Human Rights Council.

The government decided to reject the report as it has been prepared in violation of the mandates given through resolutions 30/1 and 40/1 of the UN Human Rights Council, Minister Gammanpila noted.

Further, the 17-page report only contains 02 pages that are in accordance with the mandate conferred on the Human Rights Commissioner, the Minister explained. The remaining content of the report are maliciously aimed at the government, contrary to their scope, he added.

In addition, the report has failed to present credible evidence pertaining to the allegations levelled at Sri Lanka, Minister Gammanpila said further.

In the report published in late January, the UN rights chief had stressed that the failure of Sri Lanka to address past violations has significantly heightened the risk of human rights violations being repeated.

She also called for an International Criminal Court investigation into Sri Lanka’s Tamil separatist conflict and sanctions on military officials accused of war crimes.

Domestic initiatives for accountability and reconciliation have repeatedly failed to produce results, more deeply entrenching impunity, and exacerbating victims’ distrust in the system,” the report read.

It went on to say that the government of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa has reversed some advances made under previous administrations in protecting human rights.

Four more COVID-19 fatalities in Sri Lanka

February 3rd, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

The Director-General of Health Services as confirmed four more COVID-19 related deaths in Sri Lanka.

The new fatalities have pushed the death toll to 332, the Government Information Department said.

According to reports, one of the victims is an 89-year-old woman from Walgammulla area. She has fallen victim to the virus at her home on February 02. The cause of death was recorded as a lung infection due to novel coronavirus.

Further, a 67-year-old woman has died at her home in Devalapola area on February 01. Lung infection, severe diabetes and epilepsy exacerbated by COVID-19 infection, the Government Information Department said further.

Meanwhile, a man (66) from Negombo area also died on February 02 while receiving treatment at the Mulleriyawa Base Hospital. He had been transferred from Negombo District Hospital after testing positive for the virus.

In addition, a 70-year-old woman from Yatiyanthota area died while she was under treatment at Homagama Base Hospital. The cause of death was cited as COVID-19 pneumonia, uncontrolled diabetes, heart disease and kidney disease.

Sri Lanka’s COVID-19 cases count up by 357

February 3rd, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

Sri Lanka’s confirmed COVID-19 infections count saw another uptick today (February 03) as 357 more persons were tested positive for the virus.

Department of Government Information said the newly-identified patients are close contacts of earlier cases linked to the Peliyagoda cluster.

The country has registered 711 positive cases of novel coronavirus within the day. 

Following today’s development, total COVID-19 cases confirmed in the country have soared to 66,409.

Reports revealed that 59,883 persons who were previously infected with the virus have made complete recoveries to date.

In the meantime, 6,194 active cases are still under medical care at selected hospitals and treatment centres.

Sri Lanka sends purchase order for 18 million Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccines from India

February 3rd, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

The State Pharmaceutical Corporation (SPC) has sent the purchase order for 18 million doses of Oxford-AstraZeneca’s Covishield vaccines manufactured by India, says State Minister of Production, Supply and Regulation of Pharmaceuticals Channa Jayasumana.

Speaking on the matter earlier today, State Minister of Primary Health Care, Epidemics and COVID Disease Control Sudarshini Fernandopulle said the 18 million more doses of the vaccines are required for the inoculation of the remaining target groups and that a sum of Rs 10 billion has already been identified for purchasing the vaccines.

She also announced that the government has taken a policy decision to vaccinate the members of the public aged between 30 – 60 years as the majority COVID-19 infections in the country fall within this age group.

Under the COVAX facility, the World Health Organization (WHO) has agreed to provide Sri Lanka with 20 percent of the vaccine requirement to vaccinate 4.2 million of the population, she said further.

As per Sri Lanka’s COVID-19 figures, 10 percent of the total number of confirmed positive cases are above the age of 60, however, the majority belong to the age group between 30 – 60 years, the state minister explained.

On the 28th of January, a consignment of 500,000 Covishield vaccines was donated to Sri Lanka by the Indian Government under its Vaccine Maitri” (Vaccine Friendship) initiative, following a request made by the President to Prime Minister of India Narendra Modi.

Accordingly, Sri Lanka kicked off its inoculation drive on the 29th of January. More than 100,000 persons have been administered the vaccine so far. Under the first phase, Sri Lanka expects to vaccinate some 150,000 health workers, 120,000 members of Tri-Forces, Police and security forces who are at the frontline of COVID-19 prevention operations, on priority basis.

Covishield is the name for Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine manufactured in India. The shots developed by UK-based drugmaker AstraZeneca and Oxford University are being mass-produced at India’s Serum Institute – world’s largest vaccine manufacturer.

The vaccine, which is known as Covishield, is developed from a weakened version of a common cold virus (known as an adenovirus) from chimpanzees. This was approved for emergency use by Government of Sri Lanka last month.

AG forwards indictment against ex-directors of Swarnamahal Jewellers

February 3rd, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

Attorney General Dappula de Livera has forwarded the indictment against the former directors of Swarnamahal Jewellers Pvt. Ltd. for running a financial business without a licence.

Coordinating Officer of the Attorney General, State Counsel Nishara Jayaratne said the indictment was forwarded to the Colombo High Court under the Finance Business Act.

Allowance & interest-free loan to returning Lankan expats who lost jobs

February 3rd, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

Minister of Labour Nimal Siripala de Silva says the government is taking necessary steps to grant an allowance of Rs 100,000 to returning Sri Lankan expatriates who have lost their jobs.

Speaking further, he said the Sri Lanka Bureau of Foreign Employment has been directed to provide such returnees, who plan to stay in Sri Lanka, with an interest-free loan of Rs 50,000 in order to set up a business here.

We are already granting an allowance of Rs 50,000 to returning expatriates through the Foreign Employment Bureau, however, I have given instructions to increase the amount to 100,000,” he said.

Labour Minister, in the meantime, has directed the Foreign Employment Bureau to dip into the significant funds it holds in fixed deposit accounts to pay for repatriation air tickets.

Sri Lankan expatriates who wish to return to the country to register themselves with the respective consular divisions of Sri Lankan embassies or contact the Foreign Relations Division via 800119119 to provide their information.

Council of legal education, a black-white citadel, embraces the English panacea! Part-2

February 2nd, 2021

C. Wijeyawickrema, LL.B., Ph.D.

Introduction

This essay was written 20 years ago. It was a reply to an essay which had strange ideas such as JVP was wicked because its members did not know English. There were several such odd points covered in the essay. But strangely, the point on JVP and English does so closely with the decision to make law college English.

Only thing permanent in this world is impermanence or change. Therefore, after 20 years I do not think C. A. Chandraprema has not changed at least some of his views about this human world we live in. I must apologize to him for re-opening an old wound by re-printing it. My purpose is to let the council of legal education (CLE) know that the country is not full of idiots to accept this kind of stupid decisions.

The vice principal of the law college is teaching English to law students. Teaching a second language is not a joke, some way to get an extra-income. It requires professional training. There are degree programs to teach/train how to teach a foreign language. A pass or a credit p has ass is not how one becomes and English language teacher. I wonder if there was an assessment of this English teacher’s performance by his students, and the principal used students’ comments as feedback for the teacher to improve his service.

CLE has a duty to let the country know why it took this decision. The impact of this decision is to prevent rural, poor students entering law college and make it again an academy for the rich, English-speaking kids. Reading English books is good but how does it affect a Sinhala-speaking lawyer’s ability, skill, and power of interpretation of laws in Sinhala? Was the corruption we find in the legal establishment, the exploitation of poor and innocent clients done jointly by the two lawyers of the opposite sides under an adversarial system of justice and perhaps, with the implied consent of the judge, due to a lack of their English language proficiency?

CLE should develop a strong English teaching program with labs or make sure students go to such programs in another university and get them a working knowledge in English so that they can read and understand books written in English. They should not be allowed to proceed until they pass a test of translating a one or two pages of a law text into Sinhala and vice versa.

Important text could be translated into Sinhala (Tamil students have no such problem as Tamilnad is full of such books) by giving contracts to retired lawyers, teachers etc. who are fluent in both languages (legal background is not necessary for this).

The general question of giving students a working knowledge in English is a national problem that the officialdom has failed to do despite wasting tons of resources.

CLE’s attempt to take the nation back to pre-1956 era is like the plan (conspiracy) to make Sinhalaya, Sri Lankan, using the newly designed birth certificate, so that in 100 years there will be no Sinhala nation. All these fit in with the Orumitthanadu balkanization plan and the anti-Mahavamsa project.  With the rumors around that Born Again agents have infiltrated state machinery including the Aluthkade, CLE needs to tell the country why it took this unnecessary step to clear any unwarranted suspicions on it.

And, CLE should have non-lawyer members, just like the need for non-medical persons on the Medical Council.

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(This article appeared on the Island on April 13, 2001 (Sinhala-Tamil New Year’s Day).

Gurulugomi to the Rescue: re-Enthronement of the English Language

…Who could deny that a single shelf of a good European library was worth the whole literature of India and Arabia.”  Macaulay (1835) – Macaulay: The Shaping of the Historian, by John Clive, Random House, 1973, p.372

Mr. Chandraprema’s (CAC) paper titled In the footsteps of Gurulugomi..” (The Island, January 29), is an example of the sixteen dreams that puzzled the king Pasenadi Kosol. To understand the genesis of CAC’s paper I asked myself a question, Why was CAC picked up by an NGO to speak on this topic?” Several subsequent writings of CAC throw some helpful light in this regard. CAC was in the past an active socialist and had also served on the Chamber of Commerce (N.M., Leslie and Colvin did the same thing).  He maintains that the Sinhalayas are lazy (the Robert Knox complex). He thinks that Sri Lanka should copy the hire and fire” labour laws from the U.S. (he should ask Ralph Nader, the third-party candidate at the last U.S. presidential election on this matter). He implies that the JVP was a murderous clan because its members do not speak English, although he now accepts that Richard de Zoysa was behind the JVP killings of bus drivers. Apparently, the NGO did their homework.

The retired professor of education, Ranjith Ruberu, recently had an article on this topic titled Hasty changeover [is] unwarranted,” (The Island, January 19).  How did the professor reconcile this with his previous article in the Island, The need to make English compulsory for university admissions?” Because those who routinely promote English ignore two important concepts— proficiency in a second language and barriers to learning English in public schools— it is useful to ask a further question of who is promoting English and why? If English teachers trade union is promoting English, one can understand it, if they do not neglect their classroom duty before giving private tuition. But if globalization, McDonalds coming to Colombo, the mushrooming business of international schools, an ethnic war with a terrorist group, unemployment, youth suicide, corruption, bomb culture and enrichment of some via military supply contracts are some how connected with lack of English knowledge, then those promoters are simply dishonest. If ability to speak English is the path to Nirvana, then those countries where English is the mother tongue should not have poverty, unemployment or high school kids taking guns to schools!

Pali and Gujarati as Foreign Languages

Sinhala villagers have enough problems already and they do not need a new Pali problem created by an NGO seminar. They had a Mysore dhal/Bombay onion problem during Lalith’s time. But imagine the eerie feeling a Buddhist could go through by differentiating Pali as a foreign language? Recently, when my mother-in-law was dying, my wife and her brother were at the hospital bedside chanting pirith. I do not know whether any one of the three was thinking at that time that pirith was foreign object like Kentucky Fried Chicken or a McDonald’s hamburger. In the good old days people used to chant pirith when chased by a ferocious dog or walking past a cemetery in the night.  Do we consider the Buddha, or the children of King Dharmashoka, Arhants Mahinda and Sangamitta, as foreigners? The Tooth Relic was from a Pali and not from a Sanskrit mouth. For centuries Pali was the language of Buddhism just like math has been the language of modern science. It was a dead language required for those who wanted to become Buddhist priests.

The Diaries of Anagarika Dharmapala

If we look at languages from a utilitarian, proficiency perspective, instead of who is not a fool viewpoint, then we do not have to cite Ven. Anagarika Dharmapala’s diaries as evidence. The concept of proficiency strips English of its Kaduwa aspect from the Sinhala politics (Youth Commission Report, page xvii). It becomes just a language, a tool like a typewriter, fax machine, computer software or German. Did Anagarika Dharmapala (1864-1933) use English to show that he was an educated” person in the tradition of Gurulugomi or the senior civil servant Amara Hewa Madduma?  May be Mrs. Annie Besant- with whom the young David was pleading for a chance to go to the Himalayas to meet with secret adepts- asked him to do so, before she found the future Krisnamurthy in the beaches of south India. Or was there a police order for him to keep a record of his daily activities? The point is, we just cannot speculate on such things. For example, I prefer to write this essay in Sinhala and send it to Divaina, the Sinhala daily” but it is not practicable for me to do so. I did it once and did not know what had happened to it. Does this mean that my intention is to join the educated” class? Does this diary-business put him in the category of a present-day politician? Didn’t he play an honest game? Just like Simon Bolivar (1783-1830), the liberator of South America finally left his country of birth, Venezuela in frustration, Dharmapala, the peaceful fighter also left the then Ceylon in disgust, vowing never to come back, so I heard.

This diary business reminds a previous debate by one Mr. Amaradasa Fernando, who commented on the inability of the late Professor F. R. Jayasooriya to write in Sinhala (The Island, June/July 1999). Why is that a group of NGO-sponsored people are not writing about politicians such as R. G. Senanayake or K. M. P. Rajaratne, but target persons like Professor F. R. Jayasooriya, Dharmapala, Munidasa Cumaratunga or the Christian-born James D’Alwis (1823-78)? One in this group calculated the percentage of Mahavamsa kings who killed a father or a brother to get to the throne! Could we expect that one day this group will cite that Dr. Ananda Coomaraswamy was married four times, each time to a white woman? Or after done with the first list of targets, would they then cite G. P. Malalasekara, P. de. S. Kularatne and S. A. Wickremasinghe, for marrying white women?

Who is an educated person?

There was a famous case in which lawyers of an American newspaper tried to prove that Henry Ford was an uneducated” man. But Henry Ford changed the modern world. During the Premadasa regime some professors were talking about the clique of seven, seven ministers who had seventh grade education. When an apple fell on Newton’s head, fortunately he did not ask the wrong question, Why did this apple fall on my head?” in which case some say he would have written a long novel. Instead, he asked, Why do apples fall?” Because promoters of English do not ask the proficiency and barrier-related questions, they write about Pali, diaries and Gurulugomi.  The fifth verse in the Subhasitaya lists as stupid those who did not know Pali, Sanskrit plus TAMIL. Stupidity is also covered in the last verse of the Lokopakaraya.

But the question is whether one becomes an educated” person simply because he or she is bilingual. During the days of Sir John, there were many taxi drivers and Colombo seven Aayas (maids) who were bi-lingual. I knew people who spoke English at home but spell court of law” as coat of law.” Despite the story of Amawatura or Subhasitaya in the past, the pre-independence Ceylon treated those who knew Sinhala and English as stupid. Only a handful of white men did not agree with what Macaulay had to say about the Asian heritage. Rhys Davids (1881-1922) of the Ceylon Civil Service, son of a Christian minister, was one of them and was fired from his job because of his strange” views.  Sir William Jones (1783), the first president of the Asiatic Society of Bengal was another. Sir D. B. Jayatilaka was an Abittaya (temple servant) to Marxists because he had his early education in a Buddhist temple. Colonial rulers deported him to Delhi so that the seventh-grade, English speaking people who did not know Sinhala or Pali or Gujarati could rule the country. Cumaratunga Munidasa (1887-1944) was not qualified to entrust with the task of preparing the Sinhalese Encyclopedia. Ruskin Fernando who contested the Moratuwa seat was bi-lingual and he tried to say that he loved his urine-land (muthra) meaning his motherland (maathru)!

Until Colonel Olcott and the Buddhist Theosophical Society came to the forefront in the1880s, it was not Gurulugomi but Macaulay and the likes of Sir Ivor Jennings, trusted advisor to prime ministers, who influenced the education policy in Ceylon. In 1804, just two years after the coastal Ceylon became a crown colony, the London Mission Society started schools to convert children. Two other examples would be sufficient to show the Sir John-kicking-M.S. Themis-on the steps of the parliament building” (compare with the Ratnatunge attack on the Asoka Vidyalaya cricket players) mentality of Ceylon. If a person was sick for more than fourteen days a medical certificate from an Ayurvedic physician was not accepted. It must be from a western doctor or from a hospital [written in English?]. Those who came out of the English teacher-training college were paid a higher salary than those who came from the Sinhala medium training colleges. Sinhala became Bible Sinhala,” and a kitchen language, the same way that Buddhism became a kitchen religion. Among the many survival strategies, some Sinhala people had two first names, one Sinhala-Buddhist (Aryan?) and one western-English (Christian?). They were Christians in the office and Buddhists in the kitchen! The great religious debate at Panadura (April 1873) took place under such circumstances.

The International Irrigation Management Institute is in Sri Lanka because Sri Lanka had a sophisticated irrigation water supply system in the ancient world. Who were these ancient irrigation workers? Were they bi-lingual? Some Marxists branded king Dutugemunu as a fool of bricks” for building the Ruwanvali Maha Saya. Yet these same Marxists make trips to Egypt to see the great pyramids! I think a person who knows that he does not know is an educated person. An educated person knows the art of living in an impermanent world. Martin Wickremasinghe had so vividly described in his Apegama that the guru-gedara and the village temple were the centers of education and educated people in Sri Lanka, before, during and towards the end of the colonial period. Contrary to what the new NGO-oriented writers think, British governors took full advantage of such native institutions like the caste system, village council, village headman, village tanks and the temple-based village education, all in the name of peace and good governance of the colony.

Colonial Education Policy

As children we studied the colonial education policy from Horace Perera’s history textbook, Ceylon Under the Western Rule.” For a detailed history, the best source is chapter 12 Indian Education: The Minute” of Clive’s book on Macaulay. There were two opposing views. Engrafting” Western knowledge upon Indian cultural traditions by means of Sanskrit and Arabic and downward filtration,” the creation of an educated elite who would themselves become teachers to other great mass of poor Indian people. The latter policy had an evangelical and utilitarian bias.  So, Macaulay said, we must at present do our best to form a class who may be interpreters between us and the millions whom we govern; a class of persons, Indian in blood and colour, but English in taste, in opinions, in morals, and in intellect.” Who could deny that NM, Leslie, Colvin, Lalith, Gamini, JRJ, Dudley, Ranil, Neelan-GL and Chandrika did not qualify as grand children of Macaulay?

Since its top priority was making profits the colonial government left education in the hands of religious and private organizations. As summed up by Nehru, colonial masters supported a policy of education for clerks.” In 1851, Radha Kanta Dev, a progressive Calcutta merchant warned against a system, whereby, ..with a smattering knowledge of English, youths are weaned from the plough, the axe and the loom, to render them ambitious only for the clerkships for which hosts would besiege the government and mercantile offices…” Dev favored agricultural and industrial schools, where skills could be taught. For him, the prerequisite for these was a solid vernacular education. Lord Curzon who divided Bengal into two in 1905, made the same point half a century later (Clive, p. 416). We need to look at Sri Lanka’s economic problems today from Dev’s and Lord Curzon’s wisdom and not from CAC’s opinion of a vernacular disaster. In the USA alone, in each major city, dozens of vernacular educated Sri Lankans—engineers, doctors, chemists, physicists, professors and arts graduates— have successfully competed with those whose mother tongue is English in the latter’s own turf by acquiring a simple working knowledge in English. English did not give Sri Lankan Americans the brain, intelligence, creativity, or the power of analytical thinking. English was only a vehicle, and they do not carry this raft on their shoulders after crossing the river. Here then is a proven simple model that Sri Lanka should follow.

As Gandhi once said, it was nothing less than scandalous that people should devote the best years of their lives to mastering a foreign tongue.” Buddha said twenty-five hundred years ago that one’s mother tongue was the most appropriate medium of education. Those who think Sinhala is a poor language should try to translate into English the following line of a verse in the Subahsitaya, pin mada putun siyayak laduwat nisaru.” Sir D. B. Jayatilaka, who opposed the introduction of universal suffrage, was convinced that originality of thought was inextricably bound with one’s own mother tongue. He asked, we have had English education in this country over a century…but has anyone left a single book in English verse or prose which will survive a generation?” (Legislative Council Debates, 1928:368). As cited in Professor K. N. O. Dharmadasa’s book, Language, Religion and Ethnic Assertiveness (1992, p. 215), Ananda Coomaraswamy, who was fluent in ten languages, went even further to endorse strongly, the link between one’s creative and intellectual development and his/her mother tongue. Martin Wickremasinghe, who learned his Sinhala at Koggala showed so much creativity. What did the Peradeniya honours graduates who studied Sinhala language in English language produce? Some of them became civil servants such as Charles Abeysekera (English, Sanskrit and Latin?) who sat on top of all the state industrial corporations for decades.

Sri Lanka has no resources!

This brings us to CAC’s next theory that Sri Lanka has no resources. He should tell this to a Japanese or a Korean and ask them to buy the island! Resources are not, they become.” A geography professor could perhaps enlighten CAC on this topic. But after living in this resource rich USA for 21 years, I think Sri Lanka has more than enough resources to be a healthy-happy nation. The problem has been the UNP-SLFP leaders and the Colombo class. For example, when you think of the money paid to baby-sitters and to psychiatrists for mental stress in America, the extended family-net and the Buddhist way of life in Sri Lanka are two important resources. Agriculture and industry are the two legs of a country helping each other, and a garment industry based on shiploads of cloth or yarn converted to tons of exported shirts and pants cannot change this basic truth. About 30 years ago E. F. Schumacher, opened our eyes to the path we should have followed in his book Small Is Beautiful: Economics As If People Mattered. But politicians and their catchers and officers cannot get commissions unless they invite big projects.

Sri Lanka is poor, and the university educated are unemployed not because they do not know English, but the country is lacking leaders with wisdom and dedication. What the UNP and SLFP did to the country is candidly summarized by the Sri Lankan prime minister in the presence of the president .. All parties utter lies in their election manifestos and the party which utter better and more effective lies is the side that wins the election..” (Daily News, February 14, 2001). While the old Cinnamon Garden class is decaying, new types of classes are emerging in the Kotte-Nawala-Madivela area. Now people make money via politics, war supply contracts, NGOs, and commissions from foreign aid contracts. Their children could go at least to an Indian university and when they come back foreign companies prefer to hire them instead of the local graduates. The presumption is that those with an overseas education represent a higher class and are less radical and less nationalistic. It is an irony that poor Sri Lankans go to the Middle East as maids, clean toilets, and remit hard foreign exchange to Sri Lanka. Rich peoples’ children who cannot enter a Sri Lankan university use that money under the World Bank orders of a free-liberal economy to go to foreign universities.

Vernacular Disaster and the American Civil War

In Kent, Ohio I met a Physics student who got an assistantship to come for higher studies because he had a physics degree in the Sinhala medium. If his English was tested, he had no chance of coming here. But he was blaming SWRD for removing English from the university. A group of dedicated Sri Lankans fought to open the doors of the university to the common people of Sri Lanka. When the plug was removed, big-fat-rich kids from Colombo and other big cities had no chance. In the early days university admission decisions were made after a personal interview. And at the interview, as reported by Felix Dias B, Sir Ivor asked him, Since your father is a judge of the supreme court are you also planning to be a judge of the supreme court?” to which FDB replied, No, I want to be the vice chancellor of the university so that I could select students.” They were just scratching each other’s backs! While Royal, St. Thomas and St Joseph dropped out of the scene, village students with 8 distinctions at O.L. flooded the university. With so many qualified students the government added a second arts section in Colombo in 1962, nicknamed the Gopallawa faculty.” In 1962, those who were losing their post-independence privileges staged a military coup, allegedly with Dudley and Sir Oliver’s knowledge. P. de. S. Kularatne’s son-in-law, Stanley Senanayake saved the country.

What happened to the Philippine Islands, Africa or to some South American cultures did not happen in Sri Lanka, because of life-sacrificing acts of Walane (Panadura) Siddharta (1811-68), whose wisdom resulted in the establishment of Vidyodaya (1873) and Vidyalankara (1875) Pirivenas, Migettuwatte Gunananda (1823-90) Hikkaduwe Sumangala (1827-1911), Colonel Olcott, and many others.  It is true that a postal peon’s son could become a famous Sinhala Civil Servant (Ananda Guruge) or a poor school clerk’s son from Panadura could become a Peradeniya professor (I. D. S. Weerawardena), and some children of school principals, postmasters and village landowners had an opportunity to enter the University of Ceylon. But the Kannangara Free Education Reforms did not reach the masses until the people’s revolution in 1956 and the decision to teach in Sinhala and Tamil in the university. In the 1960s, to supplement the university bursary system, Dr. N. M. Perera, added a university students’ bank loan scheme through the People’s Bank.

But it was not an easy victory. We all know what Sir Nicholas, the dean of medical faculty told F. R. Jayasooriya when the former was approached to teach medicine in Sinhala, first go and teach your Sinhala in Sinhala and then come to me.” In this effort FR had the backing of I. D. S. W, who pioneered teaching political science in Sinhala, with the support of his English wife, until his untimely death by a misdiagnosis of chickenpox. But professor F. R. Jayasooriya, once told me that at a much later stage, when the movement had reached the point of no return, a person non other than R.G. Senanayake asked him, Is it really possible to teach science (medicine) in Sinhala?” FR should have cited the king Buddhadasa, the Russian doctors or the Jews medical researchers in Israel. Which is the language of medicine, English, Russian or Hebrew?  The language of medicine in Ceylon was class privilege and money. Private medical schools and private universities are not bad ideas per se if, we tell the real reason behind them. People who get rich by just means taking risks must be allowed to enjoy their wealth. Is this against Buddhism? But one should not say that the French enjoy justice and fairness under the French law because both the rich and the poor are allowed to sleep under the bridges in Paris.” One law for the lion and the ox is oppression.” Equality also did not come when minister Hamid sent trade representatives to the Sri Lankan embassy in Washington, D.C., who knew no other language except Sinhala. We did not know who was stupid, the minister or the ambassador?

There is a remarkable similarity between the period of Southern Reconstruction after the American Civil War (1861-1865) and what CAC brands as the Vernacular Disaster (1956-78). In the final analysis, the American Civil war was a war against slavery. Abraham Lincoln gave his life to save the Union. But after half a million deaths, the terms of surrender were so generous and gentle because that was what Lincoln wished. Slaves became free and in the South for a brief period former slaves enjoyed freedom and tasted little bit of political power. This was like what happened in Ceylon after 1956. But soon African Americans in the South succumbed to a reign of white supremacy, separate but equal laws,” and the Ku Klux Klan. Blacks had to wait until Dr. Martin Luther King, Junior led the civil rights movement in the 1960s. Legally and religiously backed racial discrimination was so rampant that when the Lincoln Memorial was dedicated on May 31, 1922, blacks were restricted to a section across the road from the white audience. Twenty-one black guests left the dedication in protest (Lies Across America, James W. Loewen, 1999, p. 334). In Sri Lanka, those who came to universities from remote villages had to think of buying at least a postage-stamp size plot of land somewhere near Colombo to send their children to Colombo schools. Sri Lanka needs to discard the Colombo paradigm and go towards Anuradhapura for a new capital city (The Island, April 21, 1998; Feb 7, 2001). The victimization based on English began with an English language provision in the JRJ constitution and now the department of education is issuing circulars to commence English medium public schools.

A Large Dose of English Therapy

According to Dr. (Mrs.) Kariyawasam, during minister Lokubandara’s time, English … was restored to its pride of place” (The Island, May 4, 2000). Among other things, with World Bank funds, a target was set to produce 1000 graduate teachers with English as a subject by the year 2000. Was this not an example of CAC’s therapy dose? What has happened in 2001? Sri Lankan president says over 40% of developmental funds in the state sector end in waste (Daily News, Feb 14, 2001). Despite talk about regional planning and the development of villages in remote areas for the past 60 years, Colombo is bursting with dust, filth, and corruption. The housing minister reports that half of Colombo’s population live in slum conditions. The problem is second only to San Salvador (Lacnet, March 7). That is why talk must be matched by walk. Otherwise talk ends up with Guinness Book records of youth suicide and international schools.

Macualay never played cricket, which most Americans brand as a lazy persons’ game.” We were taught that it symbolizes the British cabinet form of government. When the Royal-Thomian match was reported in the Ceylon Daily News, in villages we played cricket with coconut bats and Kaduru balls. Our Elle is America’s most popular game, the baseball. But to talk … make English so widespread that there is no status attached to it like cricket…” is misleading and cheating. According to this theory English-speaking countries have no ruling (Colombo) class and no injustice. If we take the predominance of African American in American sports, then if CAC is right, African Americans must also be presidents, CEOs, and senators by the dozen. In Sri Lanka nobody laughs at you if you cannot play cricket, but if you make a mistake in English, a language full of exceptions and few rules, you are ridiculed and condemned. Here we come to the question of denied access and opportunity, the class power of those who climbed up the English language ladder kicking down the Sinhala and Tamil-speaking majority. I often wonder why we do not consider learning English the same way we try to learn how to ride a bicycle. When the time comes, we do not give up it until we get the balance and able to take that first magic ride to freedom.

Colonialism and English

I think Ceylon was fortunate to come under the British in 1798, instead of any other colonial master. When the Portuguese finally abandoned Angola, there were no native stationmasters to man the few railway stations it had! In the streets of London, English workingmen and women fought for a fair deal for the colonies. This was why Gandhi said that except India he would prefer to live in London. When the stone heads of Lenin and Marx came tumbling down, starting with Lech Walesa’s Polish shipyard strike, Karl Marx’s was peacefully sleeping in his tomb in England without a single sentry to protect him. The old lion Prins Gunasekara, who could not return to Sri Lanka because of death threats, live safely in London in exile along with the JVP leader who is also in the same boat. The story was that a certain viceroy of India was behind the formation of the Indian National Congress.

Our admiration of the West and the English language need not become an obsession.  Blind faith in everything western and American could become a mental sickness. For example, why is that Colombo people embrace things coming from America, which even the Americans here are rejecting and protesting. A good example is the McDonald hamburgers notorious as an unhealthy fast food (The McDonaldization of Society, George Ritzer, 1993). It is widely believed for good reasons that the Buddhist India and the Greece of Socrates and Plato had exchanges of ideas. In Buddhist societies, both amongst layman and monks, one could find the existence of several modern democratic principles. The Buddhist temple with its own chief incumbent functions as one of the most decentralized and independent religious and civic institution in the modern world, at least before the ministry of Buddhism and its officers of the party in power started allocating government money to their favorite temples. In America, native American (e.g., Iroquois nations in the 1740s) ideas of liberty, fraternity, and equality found their way to Europe to influence social philosophers such as Thomas More, Locke, Montaigne, Montesquieu, and Rousseau. These European thinkers in turn influenced American such as Franklin, Jefferson, and Madison, the authors of the U.S. constitution (Lies My Teacher Told Me, James W. Loewen, 1995, p. 111).

The value of such knowledge is that it helps one to appreciate the lesson in a Buddhist Jataka story telling us not take the raft on to our shoulders after we used it to cross the river. English is only a raft and it need not be a Kaduwa. English is a very economical language. Because it is so widespread proficiency in English is a passport to see the world. It has a rich vocabulary, flexible and has relatively simple spelling and pronunciation. If a standard western typewriter keyboard were to expand to take in every Chinese ideograph it would have to be about 15 feet long and 5 feet wide (The Mother Tongue: English and How It Got That Way, Bill Bryson, 1990, p. 118). There is no reason to love English, and there is no reason to hate it. Politicians and their henchmen-officers are playing the same old game when they say that Sri Lanka is in a mess because English was ignored.

Barriers to English Proficiency

All what a Sri Lankan child needs is one class period of quality English every school day from grades 2-10. As Dr. Kariyawasam reported, of the 40,000 English teachers, nearly 19,000 recruited in 1972, came with a credit pass in English at the G.C.E. (O.L.). Three decades later are we doing a better job in solving this problem of quantity and quality of English language teachers? How many schools even within a 25- mile radius from Colombo could claim that they have enough qualified English teachers? Those officers in the education department who plan English medium schools must first complete the simple task of providing teachers who can teach English as a second language. Teaching English as a foreign language is not the same as speaking English. Sri Lanka had a reasonably good textbook translation service in the 1960s and who killed it?  There is no one path to make children proficient in English. But it can be done without killing their mother tongue.

The education department has failed miserably to develop an educational policy that helps the country. Instead, it became a service department to politician ministers giving jobs to party supporters. No wonder education has gone to the dogs. How can it develop English medium schools when it could not solve the English language teachers’ shortage for the past twenty to thirty years? Is it planning to import teachers from India to teach the other subjects in English?

Those days there were night schools attached to Temples where English was taught free. Who killed that concept? Why cannot this method be revived? This is a low cost, village level approach suitable for those genuinely concerned with helping the masses. We commemorate with gratitude what the American Olcott did for us in the 1880s. He helped to establish schools for the Buddhists at a time the government was not willing to help. Ironically, those who had the responsibility of continuing Olcott’s mission neglected teaching English to Buddhist monks attending temple- pirivenas. It is much harder to learn Sanskrit, but student-priests learned Sanskrit and Pali and not English. Buddhist priests had to rely on the English knowledge of the lay Buddhist leaders. Same thing happened with the Marxists. The leaders spoke English but the ordinary members, the laborers and clerks did not know it

Providing a working knowledge of English to those who study in their mother tongue should not be a matter of Anto-Jata-Bahi-Jata. There is low cost, more effective, user-friendly, community-based solutions people can do without getting under the iron heel of the education department or party politics. For example, two years ago a village temple at Walana, Panadura started an evening school to teach English to children who cannot go to English tuition classes. The school (Sri Siddhartha English School) is open Tuesdays and Thursdays from 4:00-6:30 p.m. and now has over 150 students. It is mainly for those who come to the temple’s Sunday-school, but no one is excluded because of his/her religion. The children are provided with basic learning materials and strict discipline is maintained regarding attendance. The chief priest of the temple is surprised and moved by the dedication of the retired and other voluntary teachers who made this a success. They are also planning to start a night school for the working adults. In this case everybody is a winner. Teachers do something meritorious. Parents feel they are recognized. Children receive free English tuition to supplement their regular school English class. This is self-reliance and this is what we call access and opportunity. This is also an example of the Global Paradox mentioned by John Naisbitt, – the bigger the world economy, the more powerful its smallest players (1994).  A small fraction of the World Bank money, used by Colombo officers for big projects, if diverted to night schools, evening and weekend schools, retired teachers and other dedicated citizens at village-level are able to propagate English like cricket. I sincerely wish that Mr. Chandraprema and professor Ruberu would take a leadership role in organizing an evening or night English school in their hometowns. It will not be difficult to find a thousand sponsors from the U.S.A. alone if they could find thousand temples to offer free English classes.

C. Wijeyawickrema was an assistant professor at Kent State University, Ohio

Outgoing Ambassador of Vietnam makes a farewell call on Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa

February 2nd, 2021

Prime Minister’s Media Unit

Outgoing Ambassador of Vietnam, H. E. Mrs. Pham Thi Bich Ngoc accompanied by Mr. Tran Trong Thanh, Counselor and Deputy Head of the Embassy met the Prime Minister at his residence in Wijerama this morning.

The Ambassador voiced her appreciation regarding the uninhibited support she received from the Government throughout her tenure. She highlighted few areas of bilateral developments achieved during her time in Sri Lanka.

Historically both nations have shared a strong bond over Buddhism, Ambassador Pham Thi Bich Ngoc said, and now along with religious ties both nations are also looking to strengthen other areas like trade relations.

Both the Prime Minister and Ambassador discusssed strengthening and sharing of know how and best practices between the two nations in the agricultural and fisheries sectors. Both Vietnam and Sri Lanka also have few student exchange programs that are currently ongoing.

The Ambassador recalled the Prime Ministers visit to Vietnam in 2009 during his Presidency and she invited him to visit Vietnam again. Whilst thanking the Prime Minister for the meeting, she said that she believed her successor would enjoy the same support she has received over the years representing her country in Sri Lanka and that the relationship between both nations will further flourish to mutually benefit both.

The Prime Minister wished the outgoing Ambassador the very best in all her future endeavors and thanked her for the continued support and friendship of the leadership and people of Vietnam.

Mr. Gamini Senerath, Secretary to the Prime Minister joined the Prime Minister for the meeting. 

TO HON ALI SABRY PC

February 2nd, 2021

RANJITH SOYSA.

Dear Hon Ali Sabry, the Minister of Justice.

I am addressing this note to you as I believe that you are man of the world with a road map for the Nation. I have listened to your pre-election speeches delivered in Australia and read your orations in Sri Lanka which outlined your vision for the country and the nation. And, I still believe that you have a lot to contribute to the Nation.

I am rather puzzled with two recent propositions made by you which fly in the face of the picture of you, I had in my mind. Still. I have implicit trust in you as I am of the view that which I discuss below will receive your close scrutiny.

Grasping the Nettle, I may point out that your proposal to ‘amend the Antiquities Ordinance, repealing the provisions therein preventing the courts from releasing persons charged with or accused of related offences on bail” (article in the Island by K Tiranagama) reminds me of the attempts of some to hunt with the hounds and run with the hare. As you no doubt agree the Antiquities are part of our living history which we have to protect and handover to our future generations. As a small country we have been cheated by a number of invaders who pillaged our invaluable treasures of historical value and stole many others which are now stored in prestigious museums of the West. Your efforts to tackle the prison congestion by tinkering with the Antiquities Ordinance is not acceptable to a nation which is at the receiving end of systematic robbery of her artifacts by the colonial powers and at present, by the greedy and the well-planned destructive forces,

So, the Hon Minister, you should consider looking elsewhere, if your objective is to reduce the prison congestion. If at all, you should introduce stringent measures to the Antiquities Ordinance to deter persons from robbing the nation’s history. We hear that yearly over 750 complaints are received annually by the police and the dept of Archaeology. about vandalism directed at our antiquities. If you do implement your misdirected proposal the such vandals will have a field day.

The second proposal which is equally or more damaging is included in the gazette notification no 2208/13 -2020 issued on council of legal education dated 30.12.21/

which says.

 Part I : Sec. (I) – GAZETTE EXTRAORDINARY OF THE DEMOCRATIC SOCIALIST REPUBLIC OF SRI LANKA – 30.12.2020 5A (d) the Special Entrance Examination shall be held during a specified month as determined by the Council, of the year preceding the year of entry to the Sri Lanka Law College. (2) immediately after rule 28 thereof, by the insertion of the following new rule:- 28A. (1) All courses conducted at the Sri Lanka Law College shall be conducted in the English Medium.

Why should the law be taught only in English vitiating the Official Language Act? As you no doubt agree law affects everybody in Sri Lanka and the opportunity should be made available to average Sri Lankan to understand and to act according to the law. Once the education is provided in English only as per the proposal the whole legal machinery including the hearing of court cases to will be conducted in English only. You may remember how the ordinary villager Silindu in the well know novel Village in the Jungle had to face the justice when he had to look up and accept the judgement against him delivered in English, a language which he did not comprehend! There will be many more Silindus in Sri Lanka who will have to come to the courts and suffer in silence  to the dictates in English if the proposed scheme comes into operation.  The law had been taught in Sinhala language for more than 25 years and is not a subject to be used internationally except with regard to special occasions which can be handled even by using official translators as in the case of  eminent international leaders who are not conversant in English. You are only attempting to turn the clock back to colonial period. Please reconsider and revert to the existing system in providing legal education as per the Official Language Act

RANJITH SOYSA

වෛද්‍යවරයෙකුගේ සිහි සටහන් – A Review by Dr. Newton Jayawardane FRCS

February 2nd, 2021

Dr. Newton Jayawardane  MBBS MS FRCS(Eng) – Consultant Surgeon

It is a great privilege to read Dr. Ruwan M Jayatunga’s book-වෛද්‍යවරයෙකුගේ සිහි සටහන්. It gave me enormous pleasure on reading this. There is no doubt he has been very honest in writing the facts. The simple straightforward language he used increases the appetite for reading. There is a lot to learn from this book. His school life is full of all types of boisterous and unfriendly behaviors. Some maybe not socially acceptable. During the teenage period had been an impossible character. At some stage, I was wondering how he escaped public punishment in the school chasing out of the school. He was fortunate to escape them. His teachers were tolerant. Probably they knew the psychology of teenage students and teenage problems. 

Ruwan’s life story as a student is a classic example where the so-called Hardcore” students can be well-balanced highly qualified professionals in the latter part of their life.! Amidst everything he continued to study and had participated in sports, Scouting, Cadetting. I think these disciplines have given him the strength for his mind and the inner core. There were lots of examples where this was obvious when he went to Russia to do medicine. 

He traveled to so many different countries during their vacation. Further, his batch mates were coming from many countries. They were belonging to different ethnic, religious, social groups. As a result, he was exposed to all environments and more so he has learned to adjust, compromise, and live with them. If our all citizens just follow this we wouldn’t have all the sufferings and the bloodshed in our country.  

Dr. Ruwan M Jayatunge has elaborately described the life of an intern medical officer. How stressful or how difficult they go through this. This the period that they lay a foundation to be a good quality doctor. Having finished the internship successfully he was exposed to other disciplines of medicine. Having had good exposure he has not ignored to write down all the dirty, wrongful unethical things taking place in the medical profession. 

I am much pleased he wrote about the yeomen service done by our nurses, midwives, public health inspectors. Often their work is ignored. They are very important members of the health care team. I use to say even the sanitary worker is a part of my team and he has to be respected. I recall at some stage who greeted me first in the morning when I got down from my car was the hospital scavenger or a disabled sanitary worker who collects all garbage into a cart and taking them for disposal.  

I am much happy he selected his carrier in mental health. He has a much wider knowledge in this field of medicine whereas most of the medical personals do not have much knowledge. In fact due to this knowledge deficiency these patients are not cared for properly. During the Elam war, he was able to detect and treat and so many servicemen who had to develop multiple mental illnesses due to the war.  

During his period as SHO in Obs and Gyne, he has described the drama involved in it so as an anesthetist. He has described very nicely the stresses of these jobs similarly to how they found time to enjoy. This is common to most of doctors but not written about them. 

Nicol Nathan and Sri Lankan Students. Page 848. Here Dr. Ruwan M Jayatunge correctly describes the radical attitude of Sri Lankan university students and the possible causes for them. This is the absolute truth. Youngblood with inner energy prevents them to understand the facts. I like to say a few things here. In the remote villages for poor AL school children, some JVP UV students come and conduct tuition classes. They are free or charge a very nominal amount. If these children were to select to the university they would be handed over to the senior JVP cadres on the campuses. These innocent children do not have any option other than becoming obedient servants of the senior members. 

In the killing of the Samantha Opatha undergraduate inside the Vidyodaya University, the fellow student who led the attack was carrying two mobile phones and giving instructions. A student who was coming from a very poor family had all this wealth but backed by a political party. Analysis and comment about Major General Kamal Gunarthnes’s book is a much needy thing. It was very sad to notice human attitude and treatment for the lower ranks by the higher ranks.  

Dr. Ruwan M Jayatunge has well red local and foreign all types of books. As a result, he has acquired a vast knowledge of almost everything I guess!!. This was amply shown right along with this book he quotes various books to show his point. A medical doctor having this type of knowledge is a rare phenomenon and it has to highly commended. 

Further different peoples as well as some highly prominent peoples behavior pattern he analyzed and displayed their psychological status. Consultant Umathuwa. Page 957. I am very impressed with everything he wrote in this paragraph. I must emphasize there are some Consultants who are working in Sri Lanka tirelessly with limited resources. Personally, I am aware of how difficult to get the bear minimal resources for the patients and to the hospital. There are so many red tapes. Having worked at Wathupitiwala base hospital for three months I went to the head office almost begging for the items to the operating theatre. One of the director’s reply was Ayeshe what are you talking. Your predecessor has told us this particular theatre is not suitable to do any surgery. We can not give you anything. After two weeks I returned to the same director with my major operation register and firmly I asked him to take a look at it. He was speechless. All because that dirty surgeon made this an excuse to not to operate but to engage in his private practice in Colombo. He never bothered to plan for a new operating theatre. 

Until I left Wthupitiwala I operated in the same operating theatre of course with some changes. I got a three-phase electricity supply and trip sutures and other facilities I needed. One more incident worth mentioning to show the idiotic stupid behavior of these so-called directors. Even we Sir them they do not know how to talk back with respect to a Consultant. Their language is Ayeshe, You fellow, etc. One day I was operating at the Matara Hospital. Our operating theatre sister came with a stupid director and sister said ‘sir me Colombin awilla apita adu padu monawk thiyanawada kiyala balanna’. We had a very old main headlight in the operating theatre. I have not seen a similar one in any other hospital in Sri Lanka and overseas. It consists of very powerful ordinary bulbs. not LCD or LED. The light could not focus to a point. This headlight can not have any lateral tilt-only raising and lowering was possible. It was with heavyweights balancing over it elevation and lowering of the light as possible. The Biggest problem was no heat filters and as a result, it was very warm under the light. In a few minutes’ time my all the clothes got soaked with my own sweat. Surgeon sweating while operating is a real disaster as the patient is having a real danger of getting his wounds infected. Anyway I called this man I told him I request only one item and I explained A to Z about this operating theatre headlight and showed my sweat-soaked body and requested a new light. 

He asked me how long it had been in use. I forwarded the question to my operating theater sister. Her reply was Visi theis ayruddak thisse apita mathaka kale indala thiyanawa sir. I translated it to English for him to understand better as his mother tongue was not Sinhala. Then hell broke up. This idiot told me Ayeshe All the surgeons who were here for the last 30 years could operate under this light without any problem. You are the only one who is grumbling” I was so annoyed and told him There is no point talking to a stupid idiot like you I am wasting my time” and went inside the theater. This man may have considered issuing a much-needed item to a hospital as a personnel favor. Further, this is the only time where they can show their importance to the professionals. 

The current day most of health administrators are consultants in their own discipline. IE Postgraduate degree holders in medical administration. This man did not have any qualifications but his name was linked to many corruptions. Further, as you very clearly pointed out most of these young consultants do not have the maturity and common sense. Some do not even get the patient to narrate his story. Having paid the money and having waited few hours for the consultant to arrive if he cannot spend little time of listening to his agony I feel it is a gross injustice to the patient. 

Some time patient will get a psychological benefit just by releasing his burning mental worries to someone else. Further patients are subjected to unnecessary investigations. Of course, they are the most favored consultants by the private nursing hospitals. They being patronized heavily by them. The consultants who do justice to the patients are not favorable consultants for them. 

 APPHAMIGE DUKA Page 977 It was very sad and heartbroken to read this chapter. I personally felt what was written here was a true story. I know some worse scenarios. GMOA will cover up any dirty game of its membership. All I can say is these culprits and their families will suffer not only during this birth but next births as well. 

Overall Dr. Ruwan M Jayatunga’s book-වෛද්‍යවරයෙකුගේ සිහි සටහන් is a  testimonial of a Sri Lankan Medical Doctor. 

Dr. Newton Jayawardane  MBBS MS FRCS(Eng) – Consultant Surgeon

Indian envoy meets Gotabaya, Mahinda as ECT deal falls through

February 2nd, 2021

Meera Srinivasan Courtesy The Hindu

In a flurry of meetings a day after Sri Lanka backed out of an agreement with India and Japan, to develop the East Container Terminal (ECT) at the Colombo Port, Indian High Commissioner Gopal Baglay met President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa and Foreign Minister Dinesh Gunawardena on Tuesday, official sources told The Hindu.

Colombo’s sudden decision to pull out of agreement sparks concern

The thrust of the Indian envoy’s message to the Sri Lankan leadership, sources said, was that Colombo must adhere to its commitments in the tripartite agreement of May 2019, to jointly develop the strategic terminal with the Sri Lanka Ports Authority (SLPA) holding 51 % stakes, and India and Japan, holding 49 % together. The Adani Group from India, along with Japanese companies, was to invest in the project expected to cost upto $700 million, as per official estimates.

The Indian side, it is learnt, conveyed that the signals emanating from Sri Lanka should boost the confidence of potential investors. President Gotabaya Rajapaksa has pledged to draw foreign direct investments to the country, rather than take loans.

The three high-level meetings follow the Sri Lankan government’s cabinet decision, in the wake of raging protests by port workers’ unions opposed to foreign investment in the facility, that the operation of the ECT would be 100 %” with the SLPA, while the West Container Terminal would be offered to India instead, on a 35-year arrangement for development.

This is the second instance of Sri Lanka reversing an agreement on a large infrastructure project involving Japan, after the government scrapped the $1.5 billion, Japan-funded Light Rail Transit system last year.

The development has sparked alarm in India and Japan, according to diplomatic sources, who said Sri Lanka had neither conveyed its decision, nor offered the alternative proposal to either of the partners.

The two countries learnt of it only after the Cabinet decisions were released,” a source said.

They were also surprised by Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa’s statement to port unions on Monday that the foreign company” did not agree with the proposals put forward by the negotiating committee from the Sri Lankan side, as discussions had commenced only last week.

The unions subsequently called off their protests.

Asked how Sri Lanka would mobilise funds to develop the SLPA, especially after the economic impact of the pandemic, Udaya Gammanpila, a Cabinet spokesman, on Tuesday said, SLPA is going to use its own funds, as well as borrow money from local commercial banks”.

On whether Sri Lanka had discussed the option of developing the West Container Terminal with India, he said, This is a sensitive diplomatic issue. Sri Lanka is always keen to maintain cordial diplomatic ties with India. Sri Lanka has commenced discussions with the Government of India, but I don’t think this is the stage to disclose those details.”’

While the ECT, which is in its first stage and awaits upgradation, has a 450-metre long quay wall, and water depth of 18 metres, equipping it to accommodate large vessels, the West Container Terminal (WCT) exists merely as a proposal, with no infrastructure yet. Further, the ECT adjoins the relatively shallow South Asia Gateway Terminal at the Colombo Port, allowing for economy of operations in handling cargo.

India’s geostrategic interest in the project is well known. On the other side of the ECT is the Colombo International Container Terminal (CICT) that the SLPA runs as a joint venture, in which China Merchants Port Holdings Company Limited holds 85 % stakes. The CICT, a deepwater container terminal, is the busiest among the three main terminals at the port, capable of handling large container vessels.

Not far from the Colombo Port, China has also invested in the Colombo Port City, a $1.4 billion land reclamation project by Galle Face, Colombo’s iconic seafront.

SL rehabilitated all 594 child soldiers instead of prosecuting them: UN Permanent Secy.

February 2nd, 2021

Courtesy The Daily Mirror

Sri Lanka rehabilitated all 594 of child soldiers recruited by the LTTE without prosecuting them, Permanent Representative of Sri Lanka to the UN, Mohan Peiris said.

He expressed this in his speech at the United Nations Security Council’s Arria Formula Meeting on Children and Armed Conflict held in New York on Friday (29).

He said the plight of children is worsened by the prolonged effects of poverty, all forms of violence and conflict.

Sadly, as most of us present today would know, my country Sri Lanka experienced the phenomenon of child soldiers at the hands of a group of non-state actors.

This group used intimidation and terror tactics to pressurize families of the Tamil community in Sri Lanka to give their sons and daughters for their military purposes. When families refused, the children were abducted from schools or taken forcibly from their homes. Parents who resisted such recruitment faced violence, detention and even death. We are all too aware of what happens to children in the hands of such groups.

As such, following the neutralization of this group in 2009, the Government of Sri Lanka had a substantial task in relation to rehabilitation and reconciliation. One of the first priorities of the Government was to look after these children who had been forced to adorn the cyanide capsule around their necks – to rehabilitate them, reunite them with their families, restore normalcy in their lives and help them become productive and proud citizens.

All of these child soldiers – 594 of them were rehabilitated and reunited with their families. Special attention was given to those whose education had been disrupted due to conscription and who were desiring to complete their formal education.

As a result, a number of former child soldiers participated in the national examinations. 11 children took up the university entrance examination and 03 went on to gain admission to university and university education. Many others underwent vocational training and are now in meaningful employment.

I’m just going to show you a little photograph, of a child soldier holding up the cyanide capsule. Here is another soldier, with one of her handlers, who is now actually living in the United Kingdom without any sanction whatsoever. Here is another picture of the child soldiers in the back of a tractor. Now these are things that we don’t want to see hereafter.

It is well recognized that involvement in violent conflict and loss of loved ones cause trauma and other psychological effects that affect a child’s growth and education. These children were provided with professional counseling. Those that were disabled, injured and required medical intervention were well looked after. National identity cards were provided to them, giving them a sense of belongingness.

As a matter of policy, no child solider was prosecuted with priority being accorded to their investigations and speedy disposal of their cases. This was done with the assistance of the United Nations agencies, the ICRC and civil society organizations. Sri Lanka had a success story to share with the world – unfortunately this is now a forgotten story.

It is deeply regrettable that certain sectors of the international community and even certain entities of the United Nations refuse to acknowledge such success stories. We continue to be hounded for defeating terrorism.

They continue to be misled by the misinformation being spread by the remnant elements of this group of non-state actors that had brought such misery to their own community and children.

They continue to remain hostage to the political benefits accrued with such double standards. If we are serious about sustainably dealing with the issues arising out of conflict, including that of children, we need to remove the wool over our eyes.

We need to work on common ground and face the reality – if we are to make any real progress for humanity.

Sri Lanka will continue to look after our own children and ensure that everyone will have a success story to tell and I wish that the other children suffering in the rest of the world would someday be emancipated from these miseries and would be free to live as members of a happy human family,” Peiris said.

Cabinet nods to develop Colombo Port’s West Terminal with Japan and India

February 2nd, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

The Cabinet of Ministers has approved a proposal to develop the West Terminal of the Colombo Port as a Public-Private Partnership with Japan and India.

Minister of Ports and Shipping had tabled a Cabinet paper with proposals as per the recommendations furnished by the negotiating committee appointed to evaluate the investment proposal by Japan and India to develop the East Container Terminal of the Colombo South Harbour.

The Cabinet has subsequently agreed to the following proposals:

– Operating the East Container Terminal as a wholly-owned container terminal of the Sri Lanka Ports Authority (SLPA).

– Taking necessary steps to develop the West Container Terminal of the Colombo Port on the basis of operating and developing as a public-private partnership and return it within 35 years together with the Government of India and the Government of Japan nominated parties and SLPA.

The decision regarding the West Container Terminal has been taken in compliance with the International Agreements signed by the Government of Sri Lanka with a view to developing the Port of Colombo as a competitive port in the region.

SLBFE to fund return tickets home for stranded Sri Lankan expats

February 2nd, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

Minister of Labour, Nimal Siripala De Silva, today offered a possible ray of hope for Sri Lanka’s expatriate workers, who have been stranded overseas without the means to return home.

The minister announced that directives have been issued to the Sri Lanka Bureau of Foreign Employment, to dip into the significant funds it holds in fixed deposit accounts to pay for repatriation air tickets.

U.S. commits USD 40M loan to support small businesses, empower Sri Lankan women

February 2nd, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

The U.S. Government committed a $40 million loan to Sri Lanka’s SDB bank to support small and medium enterprises (SMEs) and women entrepreneurs.

The loan from the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation (DFC), the U.S. Government’s development bank, aims to support private sector investment and economic growth in Sri Lanka.

DFC partners with the private sector to finance solutions to the most critical challenges facing developing countries, including in the Indo-Pacific region, the Embassy of U.S. said in a statement issued earlier today (February 02).

This loan represents the DFC’s first investment in Sri Lanka since its launch in 2019. DFC is a modernized, consolidated agency that brings together the capabilities of the former Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC) and the U.S. Agency for International Development’s Development Credit Authority, while introducing new and innovative financial products to better bring private capital to developing countries.

The SDB bank will use the $40 million to provide roughly 1,450 loans, ranging from 5 to 10 million LKR each, to SMEs throughout Sri Lanka. At least forty percent of those loans will be granted to businesses that are owned by women, led by women, or provide a product or service that empowers women, supporting DFC’s 2X Women’s Initiative. This support will bolster Sri Lanka’s post-pandemic economic recovery and empower hundreds of local women, a key development goal for both the United States and Sri Lanka.

U.S. Ambassador to Sri Lanka and Maldives, Alaina Teplitz said Countries that promote robust female participation in their economies are not only more just societies, they are more prosperous societies.  This initiative will encourage and support the aspirations of women entrepreneurs throughout the country.”

Thilak Piyadigama, CEO of SDB bank added This loan will go a long way towards ensuring a more self-sufficient country, where hardworking Sri Lankans, who are the engine of progress, realize their financial ambitions. We are also focused on utilizing these funds to create a new era of financial freedom and empowerment for female entrepreneurs.”

The United States is committed to helping women throughout the world reach their potential.  In 2020 alone, DFC’s 2X Initiative helped mobilize $7 billion in private sector investment towards women’s economic empowerment.

We are proud to provide financing that will increase opportunity for small businesses and women entrepreneurs in Sri Lanka, an important U.S. partner in the region,” said Acting DFC Chief Executive Officer Dev Jagadesan. Our investments aim to increase development and economic growth to benefit the people of Sri Lanka.”

Over 100,000 vaccinated against COVID-19 so far

February 2nd, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

A total of 23,217 frontline health workers have been vaccinated with the Oxford-AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccination within the day (February 02).

Accordingly, the total number of individuals who have received the first dose of the vaccine against the COVID-19 pandemic so far now stands at 118,767, the Ministry of Health stated.

Sri Lanka launched its inoculation drive against COVID-19 on January 29 after receiving Oxford-AstraZeneca’s COVISHIELD vaccine donated by the Indian government.

Sri Lanka’s COVID-19 death toll climbs to 330

February 2nd, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

Sri Lanka has witnessed 07 more COVID-19 related deaths, the Director-General of Health Services confirmed today (February 02).

Thereby, total lives claimed by the novel coronavirus pandemic in Sri Lanka climbed to 330.

According to the Department of Government Information, an 18-month-old baby from Colombo 02 is also among the victims. He had been under medical care at the Lady Ridgeway Hospital for Children at the time of his death on February 01. The cause of death was recorded as COVID-19 pneumonia.

In the meantime, a 32-year-old doctor from Ragama area also died of COVID-19 infection. He was first treated at a private hospital in Ragama and was later moved to Mulleriyawa Base Hospital after testing positive for the virus. He was then transferred to the Intensive Care Unit of Teaching Hospital in Karapitiya where he fell victim to the virus today. Reportedly, he died of severe COVID-19 pneumonia, high blood pressure and asthma.

Meanwhile, a woman aged 67 died of COVID-19 pneumonia and brain hemorrhage while receiving treatment at the Teaching Hospital in Karapitiya on January 29. She was identified as a resident of Weligama area.

An 82-year-old woman also succumbed to the virus on January 31 at her home in Colombo 15. The cause of death was cited as COVID-19 pneumonia, high blood pressure and stoke, the Government Information Department said.

Further, a 73-year-old woman from Waththegama area died while receiving treatment at the Theldeniya Base Hospital on January 31. She had been transferred from National Hospital in Kandy after testing positive for the virus. Reportedly, the victim has suffered from COVID-19 pneumonia, high blood pressure and diabetes.

Another woman, aged 80, also fell victim to the virus on February 01. She was transferred to Pimbura District Hospital from a private hospital in Colombo after testing positive for COVID-19. The Government Information Department said she died of COVID-19 pneumonia, blood deficiency, diabetes and heart disease. The deceased was identified as a resident of Nittambuwa area.

In addition, a 77-year-old man from Gelioya area died of pneumonia, blood poisoning diabetes, high blood pressure and kidney disease exacerbated by COVID-19 pneumonia.

Coronavirus: 715 new infections confirmed within the day

February 2nd, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

Sri Lanka’s confirmed COVID-19 infections count saw another uptick today (January 28) as 354 more persons were tested positive for the virus.

Department of Government Information said the newly-identified patients are close contacts of earlier cases linked to the Peliyagoda cluster.

The country has registered 715 positive cases of novel coronavirus within the day. 

Following today’s development, total COVID-19 cases confirmed in the country have soared to 65,698.

Reports revealed that 59,043 persons who were previously infected with the virus have made complete recoveries to date.

In the meantime, 6,332 active cases are still under medical care at multiple hospitals and treatment centres.


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