Two of the three important presidential candidates have, by the
time of writing, October 28, unveiled their election manifestos. SLPP’s
Gotabhaya Rajapaksa and National People’s Power candidate JVP’s Anura Kumara
Disanayake (AK) did so on October 25 and 26 respectively. Be that as it may,
the contest is actually between two of the three, Gotabhaya Rajapaksa (GR) and
Sajith Premadasa (SP), the UNP-led New Democratic Front (NDF) candidate;
but the latter hasn’t yet made known the agenda he expects to implement in case
he is elected as president. AK, obviously the lowest seeded contestant, seems
to be playing for ensuring a return of the justly rejected. Funnily enough, the
inane statements and gestures that SP has been making on the campaign trail so
far do not suggest that he has any coherent vision or plan of action. He seems
to be trying to compensate for this glaring lack by beginning to parrot some
ideas (merely as meaningless slogans) stealthily adapted from GR’s meticulously
drafted text. GR marks a clear path out of the present unholy mess to the
prosperous future that the much harassed, but highly disciplined and patient,
people of the natural-resources-rich Sri Lanka deserve.
The GR vision for dealing with the short term and long term crises
the country is facing can be outlined in terms of ten points: strengthening
national security, adopting a foreign policy that does not compromise Sri
Lanka’s sovereignty and independence, eliminating corruption, developing an
employment oriented education system geared towards training productive
citizens, creating a people centred economy, building a society that is based
on knowledge and technology, development and enhancement of physical resources,
maintaining a stable environment management system, introducing constitutional
reforms that are accountable to the people, and establishing a just society
that is law abiding, disciplined and decent. While explaining his broad vision
and mission, he stressed two key principles, one in positive terms, and the
other in negative terms. He assured the patriotic people of Sri Lanka that none
of the pledges he makes in the manifesto are empty political promises. What he
put in positive terms was this: he pledges himself to a righteous mode of
governance that will be compatible with the ethical principles advocated by the
dominant Buddhist religious culture and other mainstream religions followed in
the country. GR also emphasized that no extremism of any kind will be
tolerated, and that there will be only one legal system for the whole country.
The upcoming presidential election on November 16 may be described
as the most unusual and at the same time, the most decisive, presidential
election ever held under the 1978 Constitution, that is, ever since the
introduction of the the executive presidential system. It is going to be the
most decisive presidential poll because on its result will depend the very
survival of the country as an independent sovereign state of which the
institution of the executive presidency is the lynchpin: If the UNP candidate
wins, the incumbent dysfunctional parliament itself will be able to push
through the legislation that is necessary to remove that vital constitutional
safeguard; a change that involves the removal of the executive presidency will
be irreversible. This presidential election is also unlike any other ever held
during the past forty years because of a number of factors like the following:
The ridiculous multiplicity of candidates – 35 – is one. This, however, is sure
to be seen by the seasoned voting public as an ingenuous strategy designed to
eat into the well known front runner GR’s vote bank, though obviously, the
dummy tactic won’t work; it will probably be counterproductive instead. The
outgoing president’s decision to keep out of the fray remains an unexplained
matter; no one knows what’s up his sleeve; Sirisena is notorious for nasty
surprises. The prospect of the incoming president having to work with a
prime minister who is determined to challenge him as a supposedly emasculated
executive (weakened as a result of the controversially passed 19A) is also an
unusual situation; however, such a challenge is not likely to materialize if GR
is elected in view of the precedent that the Yahapalana president Sirisena
himself created when he unconstitutionally swore in, soon after his own taking
of oaths, the then Opposition leader Wickremasinghe with only 44 seats in the
225 member parliament as prime minister, ignoring the incumbent pm Jayaratne
supported by some 140 members. The apparently deliberate undermining of
national security and the decline of economic development to beyond the
pre-2005 levels reflects the unenviable legacy of the anarchic Yahapalanaya.
These are some of the unique circumstances that make this presidential election
one of its kind.
Just over nine years of Rajapaksa presidency (November 9, 2005 –
January 9, 2015) left Sri Lanka a secure, peaceful country that was
economically looking up with a healthy growth rate of over 6.5, having overcome
three decades of terrorist violence. The end of the civil war in May 2009
brought the different racial and religious communities together. The majority
Sinhalese and the minority Tamil and Muslim communities resumed their normal
lives as citizens of one country as before, free from fear and mutual
suspicion. Unprecedented vistas of progress opened before the nation. However,
the euphoria lasted for a short five years. Perennial problems like corruption
which need to be tackled through collaboration rather than conflict between the
government and the opposition, false allegations levelled against the leaders
by political rivals, and the anti-Sri Lanka actions taken by vested interests
abroad exploiting these concocted issues led to an externally engineered regime
change in January 2015. This was followed by the the installation of
Yahapalanaya now on its last legs. Its abject submission to virtually
unconcealed intimidatory foreign interference directed at subverting the
public will characterized the Yahapalanaya. The leaders were beholden to those
external forces for their hold on the levers of domestic power. The brand of
democracy they boast of having protected is such that they felt obliged to
please the agents of interventionist powers, while completely ignoring the interests
of the ordinary Sri Lankans who were made to vote them into power.
The Island of October 9,
2019 carried, on its front page, a picture of Speaker of Sri Lanka Parliament
Karu Jayasuriya at a discussion he had with Canadian High Commissioner in Sri
Lanka David McKinnon at the Parliament Complex on Monday (07) in the
company of Secretary General of Parliament Dammika Dasanayake and ‘Foreign
Secretary and advisor’ to Speaker (Jayasuriya) Prasad Kariyawasam. The
‘advisor’ part of his designation offers no ambiguity. But the other part is
not clear. Is Kariyawasam the current secretary to the ministry of foreign
affairs doubling as advisor to the Speaker simultaneously, or does he serve as
the latter’s foreign affairs consultant as well? What had a civil servant of
one country to do with the the head of the august house of representatives of
another sovereign country? These questions occurred to me on seeing that
picture. Be that as it may, the caption to the picture notes that ‘The
Joint Opposition protested both inside and outside (the Parliament) against
Kariyawasam’s appointment as he was paid by the USAID’. Most Sri Lankans will
tend to view what appears to be brazen interference in the country’s internal
affairs (of which the picture is graphic proof) with a sense of outrage. The
picture might remind them of how a number of foreign diplomats clapped from the
parliamentary gallery when the Speaker, Karu Jayasuriya, announced the
controversial passage of a no confidence motion by voice vote in 2018. Jayasuriya,
a so-called champion of democracy, to his eternal shame, allowed the
sovereignty of the Sri Lankan people to be thus slighted by some salaried civil
servants from the West.
The SLPP’s assured anti-Yahapalanaya result is expected to lead to
an inevitable change of the composition of the next parliament. The election of
its candidate as president is already treated as a foregone conclusion. The
sweeping victory of the SLPP at the Elpitiya Pradeshiya Sabha election held on
October 11 reflects the public mood throughout the country.The Elpitiya verdict
(all 17 wards won by the Joint Opposition led by the SLPP) is a harbinger of
its eventual emergence as the ruling party at the parliamentary election
that will follow around March in 2020.
That is the longer term indication of the October 11 Elpitiya PS
election result. But its immediate effect was that it gave the lie to the
costly pro-government Galle Face rally held the previous afternoon. The
apparently large Elpitiya election eve gathering at Galle Face reminded me of
the UNP demonstration held in the centre of Colombo on October 30, 2018
in which an effigy of the unexpectedly appointed Prime Minister Mahinda
Rajapaksa was burnt, and that of President Maithripala Sirisena was torn up, by
party loyalists against the dismissal, four days before, of the then sitting
premier UNP’s Ranil Wickremasinghe; Sirisena had appointed Rajapaksa prime
minister after suddenly dissolving parliament in what came to be dubbed a
‘constitutional coup’ on October 26 last year. Like that seemingly impromptu
protest event in 2018, the Galle Face gathering on October 10 a couple of
days ago was not a spontaneous or convincing enough show of public support for
the incumbent regime. From the public’s point of view there was absolutely
nothing the government did to inspire such confidence in it in either case. The
vast majority of common Sri Lankans breathed a sigh of relief when they heard
about the sudden change of government and the appointment of Rajapaksa replacing
Wickremasinghe. Although it was later successfully challenged in court by
Wickremasinghe for him and his cabinet to be reinstated, Rajapaksa’s interim
government of 51 days subsequently led to the achievement of some positive
results including the long delayed recognition of Rajapaksa as the leader of
the Opposition by the Speaker, and the suffocation of indecently hurried
parliamentary legislations meant to placate global powers that are inimical to
the country.
Gotabhaya Rajapaksa is not a politician by his nature. He was
drawn into the vortex of presidential politics due to popular demand in place
of Mahinda Rajapaksa because the 19A deprived the latter of contesting for a
third term. The people became suddenly aware of the deception played on them in
January 2015 within a month of the event. Since the massive pro-Mahinda rally
held at Nugegoda in February the same year, people have been demanding his
return. But Yahapalanaya democrats have blundered on, while relentlessly
carrying on their immoral unjustified campaign of demonising the Rajapaksas in
order to keep them away from power in contradiction of the popular will.
Several senior government officers revealed recently how they were pressured to
incriminate them somehow and incarcerate them though there was no evidence at
all to do so. One cabinet minister even asked the people to elect his party to
power again so they would be able to complete avenging themselves on the
Rajapaksas! This was probably a slip of the tongue, but it hints at what was
really passing through his mind. The Yahapalana government did little
more than Rajapaksa bashing, in addition to doing everything to undo what the
country achieved under them in the ten years before the January 2015 regime
change.
The fair minded Sri Lankans instinctively know that the
Rajapaksas, with their traditional Buddhist upbringing will never think
of paying their rivals in the same coin when they are elected to power again on
November 16. They will exclusively expend their energies on the implementation
of the GR Vision, while giving the highest priority to restoring national
security in all its aspects, managing foreign relations without surrendering
the country’s sovereignty, independence and national dignity, eliminating
corruption and crime, and building a prosperous society through knowledge and
technology. Education is going to receive unprecedented attention. No other
presidential hopeful in history past or present has evinced so much interest in
the welfare of the young as GR. He is the best by a mile compared to his
closest rival in this contest to be president.
So the October 2018 ‘protest rally’ in Colombo was a fake event.
The UNP traditionally has ways and means of attracting crowds in spite of
themselves. On that occasion it inflated the numbers who attended nearly
fourfold . The Australian of October 31, 2018 reporting on this
demonstration, suggested a much lower figure: The
party (i.e., the UNP) said about 100,000 people took part in the protests while
police sources gave a figure of 25,000 before more arrived”. Information
exchanged in the social media makes it clear that crowds for the rally in the
Galle Face Green were bussed in from the provinces by the organizers. The
established tradition is to transport its supporters to the venue of the rally
and back, with their day’s upkeep looked after (Today’s young may not know that
the nickname ‘bath gottas’ – rice-packet recipients – was used exclusively for
UNP supporters in the past because of this demeaning practice). Provincial
leaders of the party felt compelled to make this an opportunity to demonstrate
their power and popularity among the people to the party hierarchy.
It is usually the Opposition that takes to the streets against an
malfunctioning government in power. The absurdity of the government having
begun to abuse that oppositional strategy in order to distract public attention
from its own failures is part of the general topsy-turvydom that characterizes
the state of anarchy that has come to stay under the Yahapalanaya. The speeches
that the UNP presidential candidate makes and the election promises he dangles
before audiences suggest that he has strategically forgotten that he is a
powerful minister of the government with the ability to demonstrate his
credibility by actually doing something about at least some of the problems
that he pledges himself to solving (like looking into what is happening at
Muhudu Maha Viharaya and Kuragala, or ensuring that workers on the Upcountry
tea estates get the Rs 1000 daily payment they have been demanding for so long
).
Today Sri Lanka is facing, arguably, its worst survival crisis
since independence, following the two armed JVP insurrections (1971 and
1986-90) and the long drawn armed LTTE separatism (1976-2009), both terrorist
movements. A considerable number of good but ill-informed or misinformed young
Sri Lankans believe that the past seven decades of independence have seen
nothing but a steady degradation of the country as a nation (in terms of
governance, economy, and social standards, etc.) due to something intrinsically
wrong with the established (political) system and the alleged depravity of all
the politicians of the country having been given to corruption and abuse of
power without any exception. But the truth is that there have been and there
still are good honest politicians, though they are surrounded by a host of very
bad ones. Sri Lanka has achieved a number of positive changes through
parliamentary democracy under both the original UNP- and SLFP-led governments,
the most conspicuous of these being those made in 1956, 1970, 1978, 1994 and
2009. (The regime change engineered with foreign involvement in 2015 that
replaced the best performing post-independence government Sri Lanka had had
until then cannot be included in this list.)
The above negative assumption, therefore, is not totally valid,
though superficially it may appeal to the young sections of the electorate who
tend to generalize on the basis of what they have been experiencing in the name
of ‘good governance’ during the past four and a half years. That is, this most
pessimistic verdict on post-independence politics to date is largely a reaction
to the Yahapalanaya, which may be described as an absolute kakistocracy (rule
by the worst people) unmatched by any government that ruled before.
Paradoxically, the indiscriminate judgement might make the democratic
dislodgement of the most undemocratic and corrupt administration ever in
post-independence Sri Lanka more difficult than it should be in the prevailing
circumstances and it is being slyly promoted by the Yahapalanaya’s erstwhile
supporters who are hellbent on preventing the patriotic forces now poised to
replace it from doing so.
On the departure in 1948 of the British who had ‘possessed’ Sri
Lanka as an imperial territory and exploited its resources, the country was
deemed to have been returned to the people of Ceylon (as the country was then known
internationally), the Ceylonese, comprising the majority Sinhalese and the
Tamil, Muslim, Burgher and other minorities. The famous ‘Divide and Rule’
policy had created an English speaking, Westernized, almost totally Christian,
‘elite’ – a miniscule minority of colonial parasites – that was beholden to the
colonizers for favours granted as a reward for their servile allegiance to the
invader. With the grant of universal franchise in 1931 the numerical strength
of the communities began to have an impact on deciding which community was to
have the greatest share of ruling power. The minorities, particularly the
racist Tamil leaders from the elite class, feared that the political ascendancy
the Sinhalese majority acquired through the grant of universal franchise meant
an inevitable loss of the special privileges that they had been enjoying under
the British. Their attitude was reflected in the notorious 50-50 demand of G.G.
Ponnambalam in the allocation of seats in the first legislature to be
established under the Soulbury Constitution of 1948. That is, Ponnambalam
wanted the seats in the new parliament to be equally divided between the
Sinhalese and the Tamils ignoring the discrepancy between their percentages in
the population (75% and 15% respectively), a ridiculously unconscionable demand
that the Soulbury commissioners rejected with contempt. The Sinhalese leaders,
like today, were never racist. D.S. Senanayake, the first prime minister, asked
by them how many Tamils he wanted to have in his cabinet of ministers, replied
that he didn’t mind if all of them were Tamils, provided they served as
Ceylonese (as Sri Lankans in modern parlance). But Tamil leaders were
different. SJV Chelvanagam founded the separatist Ilankei Tamil Arasu Kachchi –
Lanka Tamil State Party – misleadingly called the Federal Party (to camouflage
its unrealistic separatist agenda) in 1949. Ratnajeevan Hoole, a member of the
three member Elections Commission, in a recent Colombo Telegraph article,
described Chelvanayagam as the greatest statesman that Sri Lanka ever had!
Perhaps there is no other nation in the world that is more
naturally inclined to protect and cherish secular democracy, the best (i.e. the
most civilized and humane) form of government so far evolved, than the Sri Lankan
people. This is because of its dominant Sinhalese Buddhist cultural tradition
that has survived unbroken for over 2300 years. There is no other historic
moral-spiritual tradition than the Buddhist establishment in Sri Lanka that is
more compatible with secularism in governance that is so admired in the West.
If ‘Christian nations’ like America and Britain can boast of being secular
democracies, why can’t Sri Lanka with its long prevailing Buddhist culture be
accepted as a secular democracy. (It is unfortunate that politicians who
profess various religions equate secularism with rejection of religious values
without bothering to find out what the ‘Western’ concept of secular governance
really means.)
The
simple truth about inter-communal relations in majority Buddhist Sri Lanka is
that there is no better guarantor of the safety, the wellbeing and the peaceful
coexistence of all communities, large or small, male or female, heterosexual or
homosexual than this most humane unobtrusive Sinhalese Buddhist cultural
background. Buddhist monks have been the traditional nonviolent protectors of
the country, the nation, and the Buddhist establishment that has defined its
binding, inclusive culture ever since Buddhism was introduced or established in
Sri Lanka under royal patronage over 2300 years ago. It is natural that
whenever these three ‘treasures’ are in danger as now the monks take it upon
themselves as their historic responsibility to offer moral guidance to protect
them in peaceful nonviolent ways. In the past, when peaceful approaches failed,
they did not disapprove of responding to armed aggression in the appropriate
manner. Sometimes monks temporarily or permanently disrobed to fight as
warriors, and this happened during the recent civil war. It has always been the
case that the majority Sinhalese fight for the country and its people without
racial or religious discrimination.
It is the politicians who want a separate state, not the ordinary
Tamils, who live scattered in all provinces of the country, with only less than
half of their number concentrated in the north and east, where they wanted to
establish their separate state. The majority of Tamils are Hindus, like the
majority of Sinhalese are Buddhists. Both are peaceful, non-violent,
non-proselytising religions. The recent advent of Islamic extremist violence
will inevitably drive the Hindus and Buddhists into each other’s embrace for
protection. The peaceful coexistence between the Buddhist and Hindu religious
communities is the greatest force for national unity. Islamic fundamentalist
violence targets people of all religions including Muslims who do not accept
their version of Islam. The defeat of Tamil separatist terrorism brought all
the communities together, and ushered in the dawn of a new era of peace and
prosperity. But this was not to last. Strategic positioning of the
geopolitical space where Sri Lanka is located by the global powers means
trouble for Sri Lanka. The principal global power involved here, America is
exploiting the so-called Tamil national problem and the surreptitiously
introduced fundamentalist religious activity over the recent decades to
destabilize the country in pursuit of its strategic ends in the
region.
The success achieved by the previous government between 2005 – 2014
became a casualty of this trend. Sri Lanka’s survival as a sovereign nation
with a written history of over 2500 years, indisputably a unique achievement in
human civilization, which the whole of humanity can hardly write off overnight
and consign to oblivion, is hanging in the balance. This is the biggest problem
the country is facing at the moment, though it receives scant attention from
the currently embattled politicians. Only two or three politicians (they are
from the Joint Opposition) are articulating the problem. A former army
commander with an excellent service record, the one before the previous one,
well known for his uprightness as a military officer, his patriotism, and
his non-partisan approach in discussing national problems made a special appeal
through the social media to all adult Sri Lankans to understand this problem
clearly and use their vote intelligently at the coming presidential election
(so the correct person will be elected for dealing with it as a priority). It
is the responsibility of ordinary voters to judge which of the two main
contenders is capable of facing the challenge successfully. The present
government seems to be inviting foreign meddling as a means of guaranteeing
their own survival in power at any cost.
I am prompted to write about what was achieved in development since Sri Lanka achieved independence because some of our presidential aspirants have said that Sri Lanka had no development from the time we got independence 71 years ago. It is sad to note that some of our presidential aspirants happen to be that ignorant.
Industrial Development began in the early Fifties. It was a two-pronged programme with the Ministry of Industries pursuing large scale industries like Cement, Paper, etc, while the newly established Department of Rural Development and Cottage Industries established Handloom Training Centers in rural areas with the idea of training womenfolk in handlooms. With the appointment of Demonstrators in Handlooms, this Programme took off with many women taking to have handlooms in their homes. Instructions were also provided in traditional crafts. This activity was supervised by the Rural Development Officers and by the Divisional Secretaries. As the Additional Government Agent at Kegalla and as the Government Agent at Matara I have been in charge of the Department of Rural Development..
This industrial activity got a shot in the arm when the
small industry functions of the Department of Rural Development and Cottage
Industries were taken over by a new Department of Small Industries. I
worked as a Deputy Director of Small Industries in 1970. This Department
provided foreign exchange allocations to small industrialists to import any
requirement for their production. At that time imports were restricted and
special allocations were required to import.. This Department also imported
yarn and gave it to handloomers.. The handloomers made bespoke textiles
like sarees as well as elegant textiles for general sales and these were sold
by Cooperatives.. The establishment of Lak Sala, a sales outlet run by
the Department of Small Industries, with branches in many cities, gave a
boost to the sale of small industrial items made by small industrialists.
This effort to create incomes in rural areas got a boost with the
establishment of Powerlooms in the Sixties by the Department of Small
Industries. These powerlooms were brought down from China and installed in many
rural arreas. These functioned as cooperatives, managed by the Divisional
Revenue Officers and these Powerlooms were helped in all technical matters by
Velona a research and technical institute based in Moratuwa. The Power
looms produced all sorts of textiles. The textiles produced were of high
quality. Sri Lankans who had settled down in Britain, when they came to Sri
Lanka for holidays were searching to buy suiting material made at the Hakmana
Powerloom.
The Department of Small Industry had a few wood work training
centers where furniture was made while also training youths to handle machinery
for wood work.. Similarly there were a few ceramic centers which made
porcelainware., In fact the ceramic centers produced high quality items which
made me when I was Deputy Director try to embark on making cups, saucers,
plates etc. This was not approved because the kilns at these centers were not
firing to the required high degree to make tableware.
In large scale industry the Ministry of Industries pursued
the establishment of many industries. A Paper Factory was imported and
established at Valachchenai in Batticaloa District, It was meant to use illuk
grass as a basic raw material. However as illuk ran out, our scientists did
find the method of using straw as a base and in its heyday the Valachenai Paper
Mill was functioning making around half the amount of paper that Sri Lanka
needed. It was so successful that a second factory was established at
Embilipitiya. Both Valachenai and Embilipitiya succumbed, the first due
to the insurrection by the LTTE while Embilipitiya succumbed due to
mismanagement. Industries were established to make high quality bricks and
tiles. In Ceramics a Ceramic Corporation was established which initially made a
host of ceramicware, like toilets and wash basins. However later on this
Ceramic Corporation lost ground. In the private sector Noritaki came in and
established a tableware factory, producing very high quality tableware that was
sold worldwide. However in this case, it functioned on a tax holiday and paid
no taxes to Sri Lanka but produced elegant ceramic items using our deposits.
The country benefited only from the employment the industry created. Later the
Government set up a Ceramic Factory at Dankotuwa which too turned out elegant
tableware.
The Government also established a number of Textile
Factories making textiles out of imported yarn. The Textile Factory
established in the Sixties at Tulhiriya was hailed as a State of the Art
Industry, the best in South Asia. By the Seventies Sri Lanka was making
all its textiles..
The State Hardware Corporation made many hardware
goods like knives, forks etc.
A Tyre Factory was installed with aid from
Russia. This made tyres for local use.
Cement was made at the Kankesanturai Factory till it was taken over by
the LTTE. A few other industries were established at Paranthan which too ceased
after the LTTE took over the area.
In the rural areas the Department of Small Industries was able to
encourage entrepreneurs to establish small scale industries making
traditional items. Many industrialists made items which enabled the country to
reduce imports. Import substitution industries were a success.
In the Seventies the Divisional Development Councils
Programme(DDCP) was established to provide employment for the youth.. Many
small industrial units were established under the DDCP which
enabled employment to youths. Of significance were the Mechanized
Boatyard making 40 foot seaworthy boats, a Paper Factory at Kotmale
in the Nuwara Eliya District, a Crayon Factory at Morawaka in the Matara
District. In addition there were many Smithys making tools, many small units
like Batic and Sewing Centers. In detail, the Boatyard was established
at Matara, making 40 foot inboard motor boats. This was the first attempt to
establish a cooperative industry making seaworthy boats. Till then it was a
stray carpenter making a boat and that happened all over the country.
This was a great success making around thirty boats per year. The boats were
sold to Fishery Cooperatives and was instrumental in increasing the fishery
boat fleet.
Special mention is due of the Crayon Factory, established at
Morawaka in the Matara District. This is important because of the sophisticated
nature of the manufacture as well as its success. It was begun as a protest
against the decision of the Ministry of Plan Implementation not to approve
import substitutions type of industry. I instructed my Planning Officer a
chemistry graduate to conduct experiments to unearth the art of making Crayons.
The Science Laboratory at Rahula College the leading secondary school was
obtained after hours. My Planning Officer aided by some of the science teachers
at the Rahula College tried to find the art of making crayons every evening
from six to around mid night. Even after attending to experiments for around
five hours a day for two months we never got anywhere near making a good
crayon. Then the Planning Officer decided to seek the assistance of the
Department of Chemistry at the University of Colombo, from which he had
graduated a year earlier. The Planning Officer beseeched his lecturers and
professors for three days and was turned away, telling him that they had no
time. We then sat down to continue our own experiments with greater zeal and finally
found the art of making crayons of high quality.
Then the question of establishing the industry cropped up. As the
Government Agent though I had a number of Departments under me I had no
authority in anyone of them to establish an industry. I finally selected the
most efficient Cooperative Union in the District, the Morawaka Korale
Cooperative Union to finance and establish the crayon industry as a
cooperative. It so happened that this Cooperative Union was headed by
Sumanapala Dahanayake, the member of parliament for Deniyaya who was
efficient and could be trusted. The Crayon Factory was established at
Morawaka in three weeks’ time working day and night. The Minister of Industries
Mr TB Subasinghe was surprised at the quality of the crayons and readily
agreed to open sales. In a few months Coop Crayon was sold islandwide.
Currently Sri Lanka imports almost everything. Many doubt whether
we can make import substitution type of industry. Making a Crayon is a
sophisticated task and my Planning Officer succeed in it. It is a
foregone conclusion therefore that we can make almost everything we
import.
Import substitution type of industries serves to save foreign
exchange. To make crayons, dyes have to be used and dyes are imported. Our
Crayon industry was denied an allocation of foreign exchange to import by the
Ministry of Industry because ours was a cooperative. At that time, the Import
Control Department allowed allocations of foreign exchange to import crayons
for sale. Sumanapala Dahanayake and I decided to meet the Controller of
Imports Harry Guneratne. It did not take long for Harry to figure
out that by giving us an allocation of foreign exchange he could stop the
import of crayons, saving valuable foreign exchange. He wanted us to get the
approval of the Minister of Imports, Mr Illangaratne, who readily agreed. Harry
was able to stop the import of crayons and Coop Crayon was sold islandwide.
In the late Fifties and Sixties paddy production was increasing
and the Government had to attend to the milling of paddy. The Government
then imported a few rice mills and established them in certain areas. I was in
charge of the Ambalantota Rice Mill one of the three largest rice mills
established. These were state of the art rice mills. Re the Rice milling
industry I was in charge of rice milling for over five years working as an
Assistant Commissioner for Development of Marketing. A few of us Assistant
Commissioners were trusted more than the Rice Milling Expert from Australia. By
1970 Rice Milling was a fully developed industry in the public sector-the
Department of Agrarian Services and later the Paddy Marketing Board..
In addition, the Department drafted plans and specifications to
establish rice mills and invited applications from local investors. Many
people submitted applications and were given allocations of foreign
exchange to import the machinery and the entrepreneurs had to construct the buildings
according to the specifications that were laid down by the Department. In the
Southern Province which I covered there were some one hundred and ninety
entrepreneurs who established rice mills under my supervision. This was done
very quickly and the rice mills established were very successful in
milling paddy. This is in contrast to President Jayawardena handing
over wheat milling to Prima, a foreign company. In the case of Prima, the full
profit in wheat milling goes out of the country to Singapore, while in Rice
Milling the full profit comes to local millers and they pay taxes while Prima
works on a tax holiday. Many rice millers became industrial magnates.
Harischandras is one of them.
Long ago in the late Forties and early Fifties, Sri Lanka was making
all its lorries and bus bodies. Then we imported chasis of buses and
lorries and thousands of carpenters were involved at the bus depots. At
Ratmalana where the South Western Bus Company had its workshop the rattling and
reverting noise could be heard for an easy quarter mile. At Moratuwa the
Railway Workshop made all its coaches on imported chasis. There was a state of
the art workshop at Werahera, Maharagama where buses were made.
Never were any buses, rail coaches or lorries imported.
The Marketing Department established a Cannery that enabled Sri
Lanka to become self sufficient in making fruit preparations like Jam and
Juice. This will be dealt with later under Agricultural Marketing
Industries were pursued to the maximum and thousands were found
employment.
Even though Governments changed hands, industries continued to be
concentrated on.
The death knell of industrial development came to Sri Lanka with
the IMF. When the government of President Jayawardena requested the IMF for
financial assistance in 1978, the IMF insisted that Sri Lanka had to follow the
Structural Adjustment Programme provisions.
The policies enforced under the Structural Adjustment
Programme included the provision that the Government should not attend to
any commercial undertakings. This meant that all Government commercial
undertakings had to be either abolished or privatized. With this decision out
went most of the industries that had been established with great care at a
tremendous cost. In detail, the functions of the Small Industries Department
importing yarn and having a technical support service in the Department at
Velona was axed. Out went the 98,000 handloomers and the Powerlooms. The
country was flooded with textiles from imports.
. The Crayon Factory that was run by the Morawaka Cooperative
Union was a pain in the neck of the UNP Government. It was the best industry
established by the DDCP and had to be discredited. The Government sent a Deputy
Director of Cooperatives, A.T. Ariyaratne on a special mission to find fault
with the Crayon Factory and to discredit the MP Sumanapala Dahanayake who
established and guided it. The Deputy Director after days of fact finding had
to conclude that the industry was well run and all documents were found
perfect. Once in the Eighties when I went back to see the Ambalantota
Rice Mill. I could not believe my eyes. I saw the five acre land in
tatters, apportioned to a few Departments strewn with parts of the rice mill
machinery which we had carefully maintained. It was a sorry sight that moved
me. In its heyday it provided employment for over a hundred and milled 4000
bushels of paddy a day. That was also the fate of other Rice Mills at
Anuradhapura and Amparai. In making rail coaches the Railway Workshop
Industry at Moratuwa was closed down and thousands lost their jobs.
Thenceforth till today all rail coaches are imported. In making buses
and coaches, the Werahera Factory was shut down and its
precious machinery was sold for a song and thousands were laid off. Henceforth
busses were imported. The Hardware Corporation was closed down and
I have seen knives and other metal products imported from as far as Mexico. The
Weaving and Textiles Mills were privatized. The Tulhiriya Mill, once the
best in South Asia was sold to Kabool a Pakistani firm that ran it to death and
decamped leaving unpaid bank loans. The Tyre Factory donated to us by
Russia, was privatized and now it is managed by CEAT an Indian
multinational. Hector Perera the Chief Chemist who was trained in
Russia, who established it once told me that the Tyre factory had the capacity to make all the
tyres Sri Lanka needed. It is sad that though we produce the best rubber in the
world we do not yet make all our tyres.
Following the IMF’s advice thousands were laid off, their lives
were ruined and the State of the Art Machinery was neglected and left to
be ruined. The full effort of administrators and technocrats to make Sri lanka
self sufficient in industrial products and find employment for thousands
achieved in three decades from 1947 to 1978 was totally sacrificed..
It is a sad story of losses and imports taking their place. Being
very conversant with rice milling machinery and having handled major
construction work I can figure out that the lost industries can never be
replaced even if the funds are found.
I happened to have played a
fairly major role in the planning and execution of a part of this great
programme. In every case the machinery was built up over decades in a
most painstaking manner by our administrators and engineers.. I was
an essential part of the saga of industrial development and can assure
that the industries worked efficiently. I can state emphatically and with
certainty that there is no one on earth who can re establish the lost
industries.
That is unfortunately the legacy of pillage and plunder President
Jayawardena’s UNP Government left for our country. For the IMF and the
Superpowers it was their victory to ruin our industries so that we have to
import from them, become indebted so that we become ‘colonies’ once
again. It is a burden that a country cannot bear, a burden to which we
have to succumb.
A comparative assessment can be made with India and
Bangladesh. I think that in Sri Lanka we did better in industry till the IMF
came on the scene in 1978. But we totally succumbed to the IMF from 1978, while
Bangladesh and India did not accept the Structural Adjustment Programme of the
IMF. The IMF tried to get hold of Bangladesh to adopt the Structural Adjustment
Programme in 1986 and again in 2007 but was totally rejected by the Government.
In India some provisions of the Structural Adjustment Programme have been
followed in 1991, but the full provisions have not been accepted as yet. In
1976, Sri Lanka was not an indebted country. Working on the IMF’s tutelage we
have run up an international debt of around $ 56 to 60 billion due to
curtailing local production, sacrificing our industries and getting in imports
and liberalizing the use of foreign exchange which India and Bangladesh did not
do. They continued to manage their economies with low interest rates-helping
entrepreneurs, creating employment for their people with import controls and
national planning. Sri lanka gave up its national planning in 1978. . In
the early 1970s before the IMF stepped into Sri Lanka our currency the Rupee
was on a par with the Indian Rupee and the Bangladeshi Taka. Today after
following the IMF’s prescriptions, the Sri Lankan Rupee is devalued at Rs.
182 to the dollar while the Bagladeshi Taka is valued at Taka 85 to the
dollar and the Indian Rupee is valued at Rs. 71 to the dollar.
It is a sad conclusion that the IMF ruined Sri lanka’s
economy with Sri Lanka’s Government under President JR Jayawardena
playing poodle, as documented in my Book: How the IMF Ruined Sri Lanka and
Alternative Programmes of Success. (Godages)
2006.
Garvin Karunaratne, former Government Agent Matara, Ph.D. Michigan State University Author of How the IMF Sabotaged Third World Development (Kindle/Godages, 2017)
This appendix
contains information which amplifies the observations in PART IV (A) AND PART
IV (B)
LOCAL GOVERNMENT ELECTIONS
Yahapalana tried but failed to prevent Local government elections, so Yahapalana distorted local government representation. The number of councilors and representatives in local government doubled and the cost too doubled. Multi-member wards were created for the first time, bringing in ethnic and religious factors into a segment that did not have this before. The media reported that Councils has encountered difficulty in forming the Council and electing the Mayor or Chairman.
RECRUITMENT TO STATE ADMINISTRATION.
From 2017
competitive examinations for the Sri Lanka Administration Service, Education
Administration Service, Foreign Service, Competitive Examination to recruit
officers for the Inland Revenue Department, Examination to recruit executive
officers for the Central Bank, People’s Bank and Bank of Ceylon, Examination to
recruit Assistant Superintendents of Police have not been held. The government delays competitive
examinations designed to absorb graduates to public service. But to sit for
those examinations, the applicants should be less than 28 years of age.
There is over 7500 personnel employed in government institutions above the Cadre positions approved by the Treasury. In July 2018 Yahapalana issued a circular that prohibited public and semi-government institutions from recruiting cadres and making payments to them without the prior permission of the Treasury. All ministries and public institutions, including institutions under the Provincial Councils, were to inform the Treasury about employees recruited outside the approved cadres.
CORRUPTION IN APPOINTMENTS
Friends were appointed to high offices of state and their corrupt activities were overlooked. Incompetent and corrupt persons were accommodated and a blind eye was shown to malpractice. Those who opposed corruption were removed from the office.
MINISTRIES.
The manner in which subjects were allocated to Ministries, defies all logic, said, critics. Examples are Ministry of Education and Highways; Ministry of Livestock Development Public Administration; Ministry of Higher Education, City Planning and Water Supply; Ministry of Industry, Commerce, Resettlement of Protracted Displaced Persons, Co-operative Development, Vocational Training & Skills Development.
A Yahapalana minister had said to eat manioc and Wattakka as they were cheap. The public suggested that new ministries be created such as ‘Thanakola Amethi’, ‘Bathala Amethi’, ‘manioc Amethi’.
19TH
AMENDMENT
Yahapalana passed
many laws in Parliament which were strongly criticsed by the public.
The 19th Amendment, created two power centers. It
reduced the power of the President and transferred them to the Prime Minister
and created what Udaya Gammapila has delightfully described as a Bherunda
Pakshiya.
The 19th amendment also created the outrageous Constitutional Council , consisting of on Parliamentarians. Chandraprema commented, what happened was that all ten members of the Constitutional Council were Yahapalanites and they, in turn, stuffed all the so-called independent commissions and high posts of the state with Yahapalanites. This was exactly the opposite of what was supposed to happen.
Dushana Vidu Nethin, (DVN) , condemned the appointment of Power and Energy Minister Ravi Karunanayake’s lawyer Sandun Gamage to the vacant position of Commissioner at the Public Utilities Commission of Sri Lanka. Gamage’s name was approved by the Constitutional Council. Gamage represented Karunanayake multiple times during hearings into the Central Bank bond scam before the Presidential Commission appointed to inquire into the case, DVN said.
ENGINEERING COUNCIL BILL
Proposed Engineering Council bill inimical to the profession. Of the 17 persons, 13 are to be nominated by the PM, said the media.
SECURITY
The Prime ministerial security division took
into custody a youth for videoing the
motorcade of Ranil while was driving past Kollupitiya. He had done so with his
cellular phone.
FINANCIAL CRIMES
INVESTIGATION DIVISION
The establishment of the non-democratic and
extra-judicial institution of FCID to
carry out politically motivated investigations
WELFARE SERVICES
One way of crushing the people was by hitting the key social services. The social welfare state (free health and education, pensions, allowances for the elderly and disabled, the milk and mid-day meal for school children, etc.) is being dismantled, said Tissa Vitarana in 2018. In three years of the Yahapalana regime, the socio-economic conditions of the masses have rapidly deteriorated, said Tamara Kunanayagam in 2018. There is a general decline in welfare services said, analysts. Instead of strengthening public education and health, the government is moving towards privatizing education and health, pensions and social welfare funds.
The government had disrupted the payment of poor relief, distribution of school uniforms material and the fertilizer subsidy.
A large section of the people was unable to afford even essential food items. The poverty and malnutrition rates have gone up, and many people are having two meals a day and some only one. The poverty (over 30%) and malnutrition levels are soaring. Vegetable prices are going through the roof, complained to the public.
All Island Private Pharmacy Owners Association opposed the 400% increase in registration renewal fee.
Fishermen said that they have to provide files
to obtain allowances given to them.
Health
Health Ministry budget allocation was reduced from Rs 175 billion in 2016 to Rs 160 billion in 2017.
Structural changes were carried out in the health services since 2015 which will totally destruct the system in five or ten years, said the media.
The minimum standard for medical entrance was lowered from 3B passes to two C and one ordinary pass.
Yahapalana was gradually moving the health sector towards privatization.
The free health service is to be phased out and an insurance-based service put in place.
Yahapalana has not shown any interest or readiness to combat the prevailing Dengue epidemic. Reported cases of Dengue all island for 2019 were 55,894 as of Oct 18.
Low-quality drugs were bought, also drugs that were close to the expiry date.
There were drug shortages, these included drugs for diabetes, asthma, heart disease, urinary infection and emergency medicine. Several cancer drugs were in serious shortage.
There was a severe shortage of phaco machines in hospitals and doctors had halted eye surgery. Some hospitals were unable to perform any cataract surgeries.
National Eye Hospital usually performed 80 to 100 cataract surgeries per day. When the use of private phaco machines was prohibited, the number dropped to 23.
Kantale hospital ICU closed for the past three years.
Bandaragama government hospital had no eye surgeon in February 2017. Eye surgeries were done there earlier.
No water or electricity at the newly constructed health service center at Mawala, Kalutara.
Malnutrition among mothers and children in the Anuradhapura and Polonnaruwa districts is on the rise said North Central Provincial Health Secretary. 15,000 children under the age of five years were suffering from acute malnutrition complications.
Education
The budget allocation for education was reduced drastically from Rs. 185.98 billion in 2016 to Rs Rs.76.94 billion in 2017.
Yahapalana government was trying to scuttle free education.
Vouchers were substituted for the free uniform material. The sum was not enough for more than one uniform and parents had to spend two days away from work to collect the voucher.
Textbooks offered free by the government were not printed in time.
Teachers and principals were harassed in various ways.
Salary arrears of principals and teachers were not paid, or they were delayed.
Staff promotions were delayed.
3856 appointment letters were given to those who had passed the competitive exam of recruitment to Class 3 of the Principals service, but Yahapalana then planned to give the appointments to the acting principals who were political appointees and had not even sat the exams.
Teachers serving ten years in the same national school were transferred. Teachers in leading schools in Kandy and Colombo were among the first to be transferred. There was a mass transfer of teachers in Kandy schools. The best teachers of Dharmaraja and Mahamaya were the first to be transferred out. Dharmaraja and Mahamaya are the two leading Buddhist schools in Kandy.
Higher Education was one of the main avenues for social mobility. Yahapalana government issued a circular that said that the number of external students enrolled must not exceed twice the number enrolled as internal students.
Derana 6.55 news 22.3.19 showed school children studying by candlelight due to a power failure.
Derana 6.55 news 4.8.19 showed that the lights go off in a classroom where students were studying for grade V
For three years there was no class teacher for grade V at St Mary’s Vidyalaya, Mabole, Wattala. Parents had met education officers ‘in vain’ in 2018.
Balahuruwa Kanishta Vidyalaya had a shortage of about 18 teachers while urban schools in the province had excess teachers.A group of 300 parents arrived in buses and surrounded the Chief Ministers’ office refusing to disperse until a solution was provided.
In one school selected for improvement, the building contractor had broken down one set of classrooms, completely and had removed the roof of another set of classrooms and departed. Television news showed children taking lessons under umbrellas in the roofless classrooms.
LOSS
OF EMPLOYMENT
The second way to crush the people” was to take away their livelihood. They would then become impoverished and politically weak. Mass unemployment could be achieved quickly by hitting the whole industries. Yahapalana targeted the micro industries and the SMEs. The government was not allowing the local industrialists to survive, said the media..” Small businesses have been hit hard by the policies adopted by this government, said, critics. Here are some observations.
Micro enterprises account for 91.8% of the total business establishments on the island and employ 44.6% of the total labor force.
Small businesses have been hit hard by the policies adopted by this government.
Businesses are finding it increasingly difficult to survive. Some startups have gone bankrupt. People who took loans are unable to pay the installments.
Yahapalana increased the interest on loans given to the local industrialists.
Many local industries are being bought by their foreign competitors.
Small and medium scale industries are getting closed down.
Unemployment is increasing.
Foreign goods are flooding the market.
Local industries cannot compete with them owing to heavy taxes.
All industries are on the verge of collapse.
The tax on vehicles made it difficult, if not impossible, for the small businessman to buy a vehicle. Mini trucks and three-wheelers were among the worst hit. The selling price of mini trucks jumped from Rs 1 million to around Rs 1.8 million. The loan-to-value ratio on a three-wheeler was capped at 25%, making the initial down payment jump from Rs 200,000 to Rs 485,000. Mini trucks and three-wheelers were mainly used by micro enterprises like small retail stores, garages, and bakeries. The purchase of mini trucks crashed to 298 from around 1,400 units a month, and three-wheeler registrations crashed from around 6,000 a month to 900 in February 2017.
SOME TARGETED INDUSTRIES
Yahapalana removed price control on sugar in March 2017. An owner of two large scale sweet shops at Pettah market said they try to make at least a five rupee profit from each product. But this time they won’t be able to do so. Also, orders were not coming their way this Avurudu season.
Lanka Confectionery manufacturers Association employs over 50,000 direct and 500,00 in indirect employment. Government has increased the import levies of confectionery fats from 60% to 160% in its 2016 Budget. The industry faced closure. Our products are good. We export to over 55 countries. This levy increases the cost and price and affects production. Cheap, inferior imports will now flood the market.
The government has failed to import gunpowder and other necessary chemicals required for manufacturing safety matches.
11 safety matches manufacturing companies, with staff numbering nearly 5000 have had to close down. They think that the authorities wanted to shut down the safety matches industry in preparation for the importation of foreign-made safety matches.
The firecracker makers had similar complaints. Imported crackers were invading the local markets and affecting their business. There was also a shortage of chemicals. Many of the small-scale firecracker producers had their shops shut down in 2018, by police. These illegal firecracker makers, work mostly out of their homes. The whole village of Kimbulapitiya, around 15,000 families, depend on this occupation. It was passed down through generations. Because of the license restrictions, they were unable to purchase all the chemicals they needed.
In 2018 Yahapalana had placed a 15 percent tax on gold imports. The industry is being forced to lay off workers. Some 25,000 workers are employed in more than 1,000 shops registered to carry out gold and jewelry trading in the Colombo city limits. There are more than 12,000 goldsmiths in the city limits.
Yahapalana has also meddled in the poultry trade. There are around 6,000 poultry farmers and 450,000 persons employed directly and indirectly in Sri Lanka. Sri Lankan farms are producing an excess of eggs. Sri Lanka produces around 8 million eggs a day with the demand being only 6.5 million a day. The surplus was due to the imports of excess parent chickens in 2017. in 2017, the Livestock Ministry imported 200,000 parent chicks when we needed only 75,000 chicks and this has led to the excess production of eggs,’’ Despite this, six container loads comprising 2.8 million eggs were to arrive from abroad in March 2018, Local poultry farmers said they will be driven to suicide if government continues to import eggs from India when the country already had egg stocks exceeding the local demand,.
Sri Lanka has a long-standing mature shipping agency/freight forwarding industry. There are over 750 local shipping and freight forwarding and clearing agents, mostly SMEs, employing over 12,000 direct staff with agents representing all major container lines and non-container vessels calling at all ports of Sri Lanka. If shipping agency/freight forwarding functions are opened to foreign shipping agencies like Maersk, it will lead to the death of the local industry. Enterprises may have to close down. The jobs of a workforce of 12,000 will be at stake. They will lose their livelihood.
RAIDS
AND INSPECTIONS
*The Consumer
Affairs Authority (CAA) Southern Regional Office Investigation Officials have
earned Rs. 10,090,500 in court fines from fraudulent traders through raids and
inspections conducted in 2018 in the South. The total number of raids carried
out in the Southern region during that period was 2,584. The number of raids
carried out in the Galle district was 793 and the revenue collected was
4,100,000. Raids conducted in the Matara district were 891 and the income was
3,144,000. The number of raids conducted in the Hambantota district was 900.
Rs. 2,846,500 was obtained by way of court fines.
Errant
traders were prosecuted in the Magistrates’ Courts of Galle, Matara, and Hambantota.
Charges framed against them were selling rice at exorbitant rates, hoarding of
essential consumer items, sale and display of food items unsuitable for human
consumption, sale and display of expired food items, selling food decayed and
eaten by rats, weevils and insects, altering set prices on labels and selling
them at excessive rates, selling electrical appliances without issuing warranty
cards, sale of cement above the set price, non-display of price tags and
violating orders, rules and regulations imposed by the Consumer Affairs
Authority.
* In Galle, in 2018, there was an inspection of vehicles transporting schoolchildren from home to school and back. 110 vehicles which were found to be not roadworthy were issued prohibition notices, Galle district Motor Vehicle Examiner said. The inspections were carried out in four Divisional Secretariat divisions during November and December 2018..Twenty-three such vehicles in Neluwa, 16 in Nagoda and 40 in Galle Four Gravets and 31 in the Tawalama Divisional Secretariat were issued prohibition notices. Many mechanical and maintenance defects including overused tires, faulty foot, and hand brakes, use of improper motor spare parts contravening the provisions of the Motor Traffic Act, corrosion on the body of the vehicle, and faulty signal lights were detected in the vehicles which were issued prohibition notices.
TAXES
The tax policy is one of placing the burden on
the people, leading to a huge increase in the cost of living, while allowing
the very rich, a small section of local and foreign multi-billionaires, to get
richer and live a life of luxury.
The present government is unleashing a vicious cocktail of unconscionable taxes on struggling businesses and hapless people, while effecting major increases in prices of public utilities as well. .Increased taxes, loan interest, and debt have hit small producers and traders. The masses were severely burdened with excessive taxes and prices have increased manifold.
Yahapalana is hitting the public with taxes.
In 2016, Yahapalana increased the value added tax (VAT). Small hardware, clothing, shoe and
furniture shops, bakeries and eateries and shops selling mobile phones and
other such consumer durables will be affected by VAT
In 2015, the
taxes collected from the people were increased from Rs. 1,050 billion in 2014
to Rs. 1,355 billion in 2015 – an increase of Rs. 305 billion in a single year.
Such an increase would have been spread out over at least three years under my
government, said Mahinda Rajapaksa. As a matter of policy, we kept the
year-on-year increase in taxes within the range of Rs. 50 to 100 billion a year
so as not to oppress the public.
ENERGY
The petrol milasutraya”. This is probably unique to Sri Lanka and Yahapalana
Colombo Municipality had got 61 proposals last year for waste energy which could generate 30 MW of power.
Three successive national blackouts rocked the establishment in 2015-2016, showing how vulnerable our supply is. The last time Sri Lanka had emergency power was 2004, and what was that government?
By January 2015 there was 4,042 megawatt of generating capacity; by January 2020 there will be an abysmal 4,148 megawatt. Between 2014 and 2018, electricity sales increased from 11,000 to 13,400 million units (a 22% increase), while the generating capacity increased only by 3%, and that too in renewable energy. Where does the balance come from, to serve the increased sales?, by running the aging oil power plants of CEB and from emergency diesel generation.
Yahapalana is playing around with the electricity needs of the country, said critics. During the Rajapakse regime, there was a plan to have a coal powered electricity plant at Sampur. CEB had already started preparing for the Sampur power plant by setting up transmission towers for it. Yahapalana cancelled the on-going Sampur power generation project as well as the Sampur No 2 project that was also in the pipeline.
Yahapalana Government could have easily commenced physical construction work on the 500MW Sampur CEB/NTPC Coal Power Plant by mid-2015 if it had diligently followed the on-going process. If it had done so, the Sampur Coal Power Plant would have been ready to commence generation by end 2018.
The CEB has no plan to meet the increase in energy needs. It is unlikely that a large power plant will come up until 2025. The only plan they have is to purchase emergency power as a stop-gap measure. This will be a massive financial cost to the CEB and the people. The estimated cost of purchasing emergency power in 2019 alone is estimated to be Rs. 101 and the accumulated cost over the next seven years would be Rs. 1187 billion, most of which will be paid for fuel imports.
Yahapalana has approved emergency diesel power plants Diesel is fuel for vehicles, not meant for power generation.
By careful design by politicians (not by planning professionals), Sri Lanka will have about 300 megawatts of diesel generation (floating or otherwise), very soon.
Yahapalana government also favors gas terminals.
The share of electricity produced from oil reached a 20-year low of 18%, in 2015, and now it has risen back to 34% by 2017, and will surely exceed 50% by 2020.
The retired oil power plants are been revived. Companies are writing reports on how one oil power plant is more expensive than the other. The PUCSL is not approving contracts as regards oil power plants. There are accusations and counter accusations against oil power plants. In the end, it is oil and more oil. Gas costs more than coal and renewables.
Securing LNG is perhaps the most hilarious drama of the 2015-2019 Era in the backward movement of the energy sector. A feasibility study by CEB in 2014 confirmed that Sri Lanka should import LNG. Sri Lanka needs only one LNG terminal. Apparently, there have been more than ten cabinet papers to build LNG terminals not even an agreement has been signed. , Although Sri Lanka has no LNG or even an LNG terminal project on the horizon, energy ministry, and CEB have issued bids to build a power plant to run on LNG. Actually, power plants cannot be run on LNG but on re-gassified LNG, which may be called R-LNG. So Sri Lanka wants to have a power plant to run on a non-existent fuel.
The Solar Industry Association expressed its dissatisfaction in June 2019 over the sudden decision taken by the Ceylon Electricity Board and the Ministry of Power and Energy to stop the installation of country’s future solar power projects that could add 200 MW to the national grid other than small size solar power projects.`
INDUSTRIES
WINKLER INTERNATIONAL Geological Survey and Mines Bureau (GSMB) had committed a serious offense by granting permission to Winkler International Pvt. Ltd to export 294 MT of gold mixed soil, valued at USD 88,200 in July 2019, said the Presidential Commission of Inquiry probing alleged corruption in the current administration.
Managing Director of Winkler International had written to the head of the Geological Survey and Mines Bureau (GSMB) to determine whether they needed the permission of the GSMB to export a large quantity of gold mixed soil. Sri Lanka Customs had apprehended 15 containers of gold mixed soil that Winkler was trying to export. The answer was” yes”. GSMB approval was essential for exporting gold mixed soil. However, following several meetings at the Presidential Secretariat, the GSMB decided to give Winkler permission to export this consignment as a special case. Since Winkler had no mining or trade license we decided to get recommendations from the President’s Secretary also, GSMB said.
CEYLON GRAPHITE Foreign companies have been trying to get full mining rights to Sri Lanka‘s graphite mines several years.. In August 2019, under the Yahapalana rule, extensive mining rights were awarded to a Canadian company Ceylon Graphite. This company with headquarters in Vancouver was in the business of exploring and developing lump vein graphite mines in historic resource jurisdictions in Sri Lanka. The contract was awarded to Sarcon Development Ltd, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Ceylon Graphite.
DEDURU OYA SCHEME
The government had stopped all ongoing development work of the old government when it took office. Said DEW Gunasekera. Yahapalana had failed to complete the Deduru Oya irrigation scheme to give water to the whole of Wayamba which he started said Mahinda Rajapaksa. ( CONCLUDED)
By Noor Nizam – Peace and Political Activist, Political Communication Researcher, SLFP Stalwart and Convener – The Muslim Voice”, October 29th., 2019.
IT WAS NOT A STATEMENT OF PROBABLE THREAT BY THE SLPP/SLFP OR
MAHINDA PELA TO THE MUSLIMS.
During the Presidential Elections and general elections of 2010,
20% of the total Muslim votes were polled in favour of President Mahinda
Rajapaksa and the UPFA. In the 2005 presidential elections, the Muslims played
a major role in the victory of Mahinda Rajapaksa, it was reported.
The late T.B. Jaya said that the Muslims should not put all their
eggs in one basket”. What did this mean? It meant that the Muslims should be
represented in both the National Sinhala political parties. Today, for some
reason, there is only one Muslim elected representation in the SLFP/ Mathri
pela”, Hon. Fowzi and NONE in the Ekkabadde Vipaksaya” (the Mahinda Rajapaksa
group) a political force of nearly 51 SLFP/UPFA elected” parliamentarians.
Therefore the Muslims do not have a political voice. It is true that we have
allowed the affairs of our community to be taken control of unscrupulous,
dishonest, deceptive, self-motivated, selfish, corrupt and manipulating Muslim
politicians, Muslim political party leaders, Ulema and Media personnel, that
has led our community to be considered as a 2nd., class community in Sri Lanka.
In politics, we are considered as the community of political naanaas who turn
the way their Fez Cap turns” to support any political party that comes to power
for the personal gains of the political leaders of the Muslim parties.
The Muslim politicians have hoodwinked and betrayed the Muslim
Community wholesale. In the aftermath of the Aluthgama/Beruwela incidents, the
decision taken by the Muslims to steer clear from these politicians and to take
their own political moves was the most appropriate. But the Yahapalana government
has betrayed the Muslim Community by still NOT making the probe on the violence
of Aluthgama and Beruwela which happened as a result of the communal racist
actions of the so-called nationalist Buddhist clergy organization and Sinhalese
groups, which is suspected to have taken place with the connivance of a
Rajapaksa family member, OR is the Yahapalana government was trying to cover-up
the involvements of a prominent former Mahinda Government Minister of the
UNFGG’s in the Kalutara District at the 2015, and left the country on the eve
of the violence? Rumours say it was Dr. Rajitha Seneratne the most
“violent opponent of Gotabaya” in the presidentail campaign
2019.
Mahinda might have been a bad example of a leader for the Muslims,
between 2010 and 2015, but we cannot discard him as a political power and
his brother now – a would be next President of Sri Lanka as Attorney-at-Law Ali
Sabri had stated/states. The rest we have to leave to God AllMighty Allah.
Therefore the decisions for the Muslims to support Gotabaya Rajapaksa fits
correctly to the thinking of the late Muslim political leader at that time –
late T.B. Jaya. Attorney-at-Law Ali Sabry had highlighted the need for the
Muslim voters to think in the same manner and take the advice given by the late
Muslim Politician Dr. T.B. Jaya that “The Muslims should NOT put all their
eggs in one basket”, is what is appropriate for the present times, Insha
Allah. Muslims should look for Muslim politicians with the “ROLE
MODEL” of persons like late T.B. Jaya, S.L. Naina Marikkar, Cassim
Ismail, Cassim Umar, Mactan Ismail, Ash Sheik Mohamedu Fazi, S.N. Ismail, L.M.
Sapur, M.K. Saldin, N.H.M. Abdul Cader, Makan Makar and A.R. Razcik (later
referred to as Sir Razick Fareed) in National/Local Politics, Insha Allah.
This is also what The Muslim Voice” was also advocating, since
June 14, 2014, Insha Allah. This is what “THE MUSLIM VOICE” was
striving to do from the wilderness of the Muslim political arena, Insha Allah.
It is time up that a NEW POLITICAL FORCE that will be honest and sincere, to
stand up and defend the Muslim Community politically and otherwise, especially
from among the YOUTH, and safe guard the DIGNITY of our community has to emerge
from within the Sri Lanka Muslim Community to face any new election in the
coming future, Insha Allah. THE STATEMENT MADE BY ATTORNEY-AT-LAW ALI SABRY
– ambanaikku kidaikkum” Ambanakata hambuwei” HAS TO BE SEEN
AS A “METAPHORIC” STATEMENT. IT WAS NOT A STATEMENT OF PROBABLE
THREAT BY THE SLPP/SLFP OR MAHINDA PELA, Insha Allah.
KUALA LUMPUR, Oct 29 — Eight men, including two state assemblymen, were charged in the Sessions Court in several states today for their alleged connection with the LTTE terrorist group.
Two charges were filed by the prosecution for their alleged involvement, one of which is for giving support to the terrorist group, framed under Section 130J (1) (a) of the Penal Code which provides an imprisonment for life, or for a term not exceeding 30 years, or with fine, and shall also be liable to forfeiture of any property used or intended to be used in connection with the commission of the offence, if found guilty.
The other charge is for possession of items associated with the terrorist group, which is an offence under Section 130JB(1)(a) of the Penal Code whereby those found guilty shall be punished with imprisonment for up to seven years, or with fine, and shall also be liable to forfeiture of the items concerned.
At the Sessions Court in Melaka, Gadek assemblyman G. Saminathan, 34; Seremban Jaya assemblyman P. Gunasekaran, 60 and a chief executive of a corporation, S. Chandru, 38, were charged with giving support to LTTE during an event at Dewan Kasturi Ayer Keroh, Jalan Utama, Taman Ayer Keroh Heights here from 8.30 pm to 10.50 pm on Nov 28, 2018.
Saminathan was also charged with possessing items connected to the terrorist group in a handphone at the office of the State Executive Councillor (Exco) in charge of Unity, Human Resources and Consumer Affairs at the Chief Minister’s Office, Kompleks Seri Negeri here at 10.25 am last Oct 10.
At the Kuala Kangsar Sessions Court in Perak, technician S. Arivainthan, 27, and taxi driver V. Balamurugan, 37, were charged with giving support to the LTTE at an event held at Kuala Kangsar Municipal Council Hall between 6.30 pm and 11.45 pm on Dec 28, 2014.
At the Selayang Sessions Court here, scrap metal collector A. Kalaimughilan, 28, was charged with two counts of possessing items related to LTTE at a house and in a car at Jalan Anggerik 5D, Bukit Sentosa, Rawang at 9.30 am and 12.35 pm, respectively, last Oct 10.
The items included compact discs, video compact discs and stickers on the LTTE terrorist group.
In Segamat, Johor, dispatch rider S.Teran, 38, was charged with a similar offence, allegedly committed at an address, 10M, Jalan Genuang, Kampung Paya Pulai, about 6.30 pm last Oct 10.
In Selangor, an English and Physics teacher at a national secondary school in Telok Panglima Garang, Selangor, Sundram Renggan @ Rengasamy, 52, was charged at the Sepang Sessions Court, with a similar offence, allegedly committed at No. 21, Jalan 6, Taman Telok, Telok Panglima Garang in the Kuala Langat district at 2.30 pm last Oct 12.
No plea was recorded from all the accused as they were all detained under the Security Offences (Special Measures) Act 2012 (SOSMA) which comes under the jurisdiction of the High Court.
As SOSMA detainees, they were also not allowed bail.
The Sessions Courts set either Nov 18 or Dec 16 for mention of the respective cases.
The United National Party (UNP) has decided to remove MP Wasantha Senanayake from the party with immediate effect.
UNP General Secretary Akila Viraj Kariyawasam stated that the UNP decided to strip party membership from Senanayake immediately and later remove him from his ministerial portfolio.
Wasantha Senanayake, great grand son of UNP founder D. S. Senanayake, is the current State Minister of Foreign Affairs in the UNP-led government.
He had recently written a letter to UNP deputy leader and NDF presidential candidate Sajith Premadasa, expressing his concerns with regard to the latter’s election campaign.
Holding a press conference recently, he also demanded answers from Premadasa for questions put forward by him regarding the role certain ministers will play in a future government.
Senanayake has also been visibly absent at the election rallies of Sajith Premadasa.
President Maithripala Sirisena is reported to have told the Cabinet today that he would not accept the report compiled by the Parliamentary Select Committee (PSC) that probed the Easter Sunday carnage.
The PSC presented its report to parliament last week. In its findings, the PSC blamed the incident mainly on the lapses on the part of the State Intelligence Service and government leaders for failing to take action to prevent the attack that killed more than 250 people.
The PSC report was presented to the Cabinet at its meeting chaired by President Sirisena yesterday. According to informed sources, the President said he would not accept the report and asked the Cabinet not to record it as approved by the Cabinet whatsoever and instead asked the government to look into areas where security lapses had been highlighted.
By Chamly Ekanayaka and Thameenah Razeek Courtesy Ceylon Today
United People’s Freedom Alliance Parliamentarian and Pivithuru Hela Urumaya Leader Udaya Gammanpila yesterday (29) alleged that the United National Party (UNP) has formulated a five phase conspiracy to transfer the blame over the 21 April, Easter Sunday, terror attacks, to Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna Presidential candidate and former Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa.
He made this allegation at a Media briefing in Rajagiriya. He said: “The UNP which is currently behaving like a mad dog over being unable to face up to its soon to become most humiliating election defeat ever in history, has thus planned to place the blame, over the Easter Sunday carnage, on the shoulders of Rajapaksa having titled it as the ‘Big Revelation’ and over five steps.”
Gammanpila alleged that as its first phase, a video has been made containing a confession made by a terrorist attached to the National Thowheed Jama’ath (NTJ) at a house owned by a person called Thushara in Battaramulla.
“This person in the video says that in the run up to the 16 November Presidential Poll, the country’s national security will be placed in danger and that the Easter Sunday attacks had been carried out by international terror groups at the behest of Rajapaksa,” he further alleged.
He further claimed that in the fraudulently produced video, the NTJ terrorist had further talked about the names of two Sri Lankans and that through them Rajapaksa had maintained links with terror groups in the Middle East and Europe.
Gammanpila also alleged that the second phase of the plot suggests that eight Catholic MPs had held a Media briefing and that they had charged that Rajapaksa should be held accountable over the Easter Sunday bombings and that he should be apprehended forthwith.
He further alleged that the third phase of the UNP conspiracy against Rajapaksa would consist of staging a protest demonstration opposite Catholic Churches here displaying banners ‘Arrest Gotabaya’.
He alleged further that the fourth phase of the plot will include Catholic Priests and Very Important Catholic Persons making requests to conduct an impartial and unbiased probe into last April’s carnage.
Also, he alleged that the fifth and final part of the conspiracy would include publicising a bogus letter to suggest that Rajapaksa has maintained close links with international terrorists.
UPFA Parliamentarian Mahindananda Aluthgamage, claimed three powerful UNPers will get on stage with Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) Presidential candidate, Gotabaya Rajapaksa.
He also alleged former President Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga is busy fulfilling the UNP’s personal agenda, instead of protecting the SLFP identity.
Criticising Kumaratunga’s planned SLFP Convention, which is to be held on 5 November, SLFP General Secretary, MP Dayasiri Jayasekara, told the Media yesterday (29) that those who participate in the Convention would be UNPers masquerading as SLFPers. He urged the people not to be fooled by Kumaratunga’s actions.
“Since it has been revealed that the New Democratic Front Presidential candidate, Minister Sajith Premadasa’s Presidential campaign is ruined, now he is trying to create unwanted tension within the community that is supporting Rajapaksa. The UNP-led team headed by Ministers Mangala Samaraweera, Premadasa and Malik Samarawickrama are preparing to ruin Rajapaksa’s campaign, by bringing out false videos and spreading rumours,” Aluthgamage alleged, adding that these plans will be activated from 1 to 14 November.
Five Northern groups yesterday (29) decided against voting for any Sinhala candidate at the forthcoming Presidential Election.
The groups that took such a decision were: Former Northern Province Chief Minister C. V. Vigneswaran’s Tamil Makkal Kootani (TMK), Suresh Premachandran’s Eelam People’s Revolutionary Liberation Front (EPRLF-Suresh Wing), Gajendrakumar Ponnambalam’s All Ceylon Tamil Congress (ACTC), University Lecturers and a Civil Society Organisation.
Vigneswaran, issuing a statement, said that since the postal voting for the Presidential Election is scheduled to be held tomorrow (31), he decided to announce his stand.
In the statement, he had emphasised that he cannot direct his people to vote for any Sinhala politician at the Presidential Election.
“We don’t have any ethical right to ask Tamil people to vote for Presidential candidates who, don’t want to discuss the 13 proposals that were put forward.”
“Under no circumstance will we give up those 13 proposals, which have been a need of Tamil people for a very long time,” Vigneswaran stressed. An official statement from the five groups was scheduled to be issued last night.
Former head of the Financial Crimes Investigation Division (FCID) Retired Senior DIG Ravi Waidyalankara today issued a statement in response to the recent media reports on allegations of financial fraud and money laundering directed at him and his family.
He claims that there had been recent negative media publications by print and electronic media, subsequent to his revelation on the hazardous conditions” he faced during his tenure in office.
Thus, I have the right to reply in a legitimate manner, by issuing a statement prior to resort to any legal actions. I issue this statement for public consumption as well as to the entities who try to tarnish my image by resorting to character assassination,” he said.
The former FCID chief stated that his original statements pertaining to this matter appeared on the ‘Aruna’ newspaper on 27th October 2019 and on daily news broadcast on Derana & other television channels.
However, it is disappointing to note that some parts of these statements have been taken out of context to reinforce political strategies, he charged.
Subsequently, there had been allegations leveled against me, my wife and my son regarding a nexus between some of the individuals who are under the investigation by the FCID. Since this matter is still being investigated I don’t intend to elaborate any details as a former police officer and investigator who has handled over 300 investigations professionally.”
The retired Senior DIG said that his son, Mr Asela Waidyalankara has clarified his position very clearly with a public statement, and that he fully endorsed his factual position in this regard.
In relation with the company of SOORIYA FOUNDATION, an organization, where my wife is only a signatory, which was established for charity based activities not relating to any profit make businesses. Only the address of an asset under my son’s company was given for mailing purposes which is not contrary to the law,” he said.
He categorically stated that it was merely confined to a paper and not a single transaction, investment, any account, any economic transaction, or any transaction or activity was conducted since incorporation.
On this backdrop, myself, my wife and my son totally deny and reject any allegations of any illegal activity as published, and wish to state that we will extend our utmost co-operation to any investigations conducted by any agency, established under the laws of Sri Lanka.”
New Democratic Front (NDF) Presidential Candidate Sajith Premadasa says the only complex” he has is superiority complex” and that he has the utmost belief in his own abilities, skills and intellect.
What I believe is that I take decision from the standpoint that ‘no one can compete with me’,” he said, during a meeting organized with lecturers and tuition teachers.
He also stated that those who criticize him and take digs at his comments of working tirelessly and without rest, they don’t like to make sacrifices and do not want to work hard. They can’t even get close to me.”
Addressing an election rally in Divulapitiya today (29), Premadasa assured that a government established under him would provide solutions to the women’s health and hygiene issues on a national level.
He promised to provide sanitary hygiene products free of charge to those unable to afford them, if elected. Premadasa said he remains committed to women’s rights and will not shy away from the conversation.
He said more than half of adolescent girls in Sri Lanka miss school when on their period and thousands suffer stigma and put themselves at risk every month.
Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) Presidential Candidate Gotabaya Rajapaksa today accused the ruling government of destroying the professionalism of the country’s police service.
He said that under the former government during his tenure as Defence Secretary the strength of the police department was increased to 75,000 personnel and that all their discrepancies were removed and promotions were given.
Addressing an election rally in Kantale, Rajapaksa said that police officers have presented to them certain requirements and existing discrepancies and that once again under their government these issues will be rectified as they have always taken care of security service personnel in the country.
He also said that they will bring glory to the police service once again.
Rajapaksa further said that the intelligence officers who have been arrested and imprisoned based on false accusations” will be released from those charges and that the intelligence services will be brought into action once again for the security of the nation.
October 29 (Reuters) – Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi’s underpants were obtained by an undercover source and DNA tested to prove his identity before an operation by U.S. forces to kill him, an advisor to the Syrian Democratic Forces said on Monday.
Polat Can, a senior advisor to the Kurdish-led SDF, gave details on Twitter about how SDF intelligence work had helped locate Baghdadi, whose death was announced by U.S. President Donald Trump on Sunday.
Our own source, who had been able to reach al-Baghdadi, brought al-Baghdadi’s underwear to conduct a DNA test and make sure (100%) that the person in question was al-Baghdadi himself,” Can said.
Trump has said that the Kurds provided some information helpful” to the operation.
Can said the SDF had been working since May 15 with the CIA to track Baghdadi, and managed to confirm that he had moved from Deir al-Zor in eastern Syria to Idlib, where he was killed.
Baghdadi had been about to change location to the Syrian town of Jarablus when the operation happened, he said.
All intelligence and access to al-Baghdadi as well as the identification of his place, were the result of our own work. Our intelligence source was involved in sending coordinates, directing the airdrop, participating in and making the operation a success until the last minute,” Can said.
Colombo, October 29 (AIR/DD): The former Chief Minister of Sri Lanka’s Tamil-majority Northern Province C.V.Wigneswaran has said that his organization the Tamil Makkal Koottani (TMK) will be neutral stand at the upcoming Presidential election and will not ask people who to vote for.
In a statement issued in Jaffna on Tuesday he said that both the main candidates viz. Minister Sajith Premadasa and former Defense Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa have not accepted the demands jointly put forth by the Tamil parties.
Wigneswaran said that he is asking the people to make the decision on their own and cast the vote considering the past history, and the present internal and external conditions.
A group of five Tamil political parties recently signed a memorandum containing 13 demands including a demand for self determination, political solution and abolishing the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA).
It notes the acceptance of the political aspirations, recognition of the merged Northern and Eastern Provinces as the historical habitat of the Tamils and the realization of the fact that the Tamil People under the provisions of international law are entitled to the right of self-determination.
The parties had declared that their support to any candidate will be based on the support they receive for the demands but a meeting of these parties on the issues yesterday had remained inconclusive.
Illangai Thamil Arasu Katchi (ITAK), People’s Liberation Organisation of Tamil Eelam (PLOTE), Eelam People’s Revolutionary Liberation Front (EPRLF), Tamil People’s Council (TPC) led by former chief minister and Tamil Eelam Liberation Organization (TELO) signed the memorandum.
The statement by the TMK asked the Tamil voters to weigh and consider which of the candidates are likely to meet their 13 point demands and vote accordingly. It pointed out that in its efforts to get the demands accepted the TMK had failed to secure a positive response from any of the candidates.
However the TMK hopes to continue the talks with the winner in the election to get its demands met and expects the international community to stand by its commitment to safeguard the rights of the Tamils in Sri Lanka.
Victor Ivan, the
founder Editor of the popular Ravaya – a Sinhala tabloid
launched particularly to target President Ranasinghe Premadasa with the backing
of the Western and Indian embassies and, of course, Lalith Athulathmudali and
Gamini Dissanayake — has written an article in the Financial Times
(25/10/2019) arguing that Gotabaya Rajapaksa is not fit to be a
presidential candidate. His last two lines summarises his case against Gota.
After listing the names of mainly journalists killed when Gota was in power (he
doesn’t say Gota killed them) Victor passes his censorious judgment. He says: I am of the view that
it is not proper for a person with such serious allegations to be elected
leader of the country, even nominally, until he is fully acquitted and
exonerated of those charges. It is also not right for a person with such
allegations to even contest for such a position.”
Phew!
I have selected Victor
from the usual mob of anti-Gota denigrators because he is typical of the
current scare-mongering that goes on in the so-called civil society. In his
statement Victor takes the high moral ground of a pious political priest with
no blemishes in the past, or accusations / allegations of killing, or any
alignments with mass murderers who killed innocent civilians for
committing the only sin of opposing his leader’s brand of Pol Potist
politics. In his article he poses, as he normally does these days, as a
born-again human rights activist policing the conduct of political criminals
and sentencing them to the various kinds of hells defined by the Western
masters who patronise his media/political ventures.
After his leap from
the Pol Potist JVP to Ravaya, his primary political mission was
to demonise the Premadasa regime in his Ravaya parroting the
human rights mantras which was the most lucrative job of the day, financed by
the Western masters. Ravaya was, more or less, the mouthpiece of
the Western and Indian embassies, which were behind Lalith-Gamini duo doing
their damndest to overthrow President Premadasa. Ravaya was
dancing to the drumbeat of this anti-Premadasa lobby. Their investments paid
off well but not to the extent of achieving their goal of ousting President
Premadasa.
It was this stage that
Victor donned the costumes of a righteous human rights activist. After killing
and being a key instrument in the killing machine of the JVP – he was a
bomb-maker — Victor reinvented himself as a knight in shining armour and is
now parading as a human rights activist in the civil society. Being
anti-Premadasa none of the other foreign-funded NGOs with whom he hob-nobs now,
raised any objections to his murderous past. He has listed in his article the
number of journalists alleged” to have been killed when Gota had power. Has he
forgotten the number of journalists killed at the time he wielded power in the
JVP?
The JVP used some of
the bombs he manufactured to blast innocent newspaper vendors eking out a bare
living in wayside outlets in the villages. Victor and his gang were out to bomb
and kill their way into power in the name of revolutionary justice. Victor
gladly provided his expertise to manufacture bombs that killed those who
opposed his Pol Potist leader. He was committed to the task of bombing and
killing the nation into submission of his Pol Potist leader’s will. What moral
credibility / right has he now to pontificate against any other state
authority using his kind of violence / methods to prevent the rise of Pol
Potist fascism?
The central issue here
is the use of violence in politics. There are many theories ranging from
Machiavelli and Marx to Gandhi. Leaving those theories aside, it can be
asserted that Victor and Gota both used violence. But there is fine difference
between the two. To Gota it was a moral necessity to protect the lives of
people facing Pol Potist violence of a gang of killers with no licence to kill,
except their perverted doctrine of Marxist revolutionary justice. To Victor
indiscriminate killing, at the whims and fancies of his doctrinaire masters,
was also a necessity to destroy the elected state which was operating within a
democratic framework, however flawed it may have been.
The doctrine of
turning the other cheek was not applicable to Gota. It is valid in
inter-personal relations but not in facing organized criminal gangs using
pretentious moral theories and dogmas to kill those who oppose them. The JVPers
were released hoping that they would give up violence and return to non-violent
politics. But their obsession with violence made them believe that they could
win with brutality. Premadasa had no choice but to save his people and the
democratic institutions. And he won. Today the civil society continues to
accuse President Premadasa and embraces the killers that forced Premadasa to
crush them. If, for instance, a JVP terrorists broke in to rape a feminists is
it moral for her to open her legs or kick the bastard to thy kingdom come?
Premadasa kicked the JVP bastards to thy kingdom come. He did not let the
JVPers to rape the state.
The morality of using
violence has been twisted to suit the political agendas of the parties in
conflict. So if Victor found it valid to engage in inhuman violence to impose
his Pol Potist regime led by Rohana Wijeweera why is it invalid for a
democratically elected state to use his kind of violence to prevent Pol Potism
and maintain the democratic framework, with all its infirmities? What moral
credibility / right would Hitler, the prime architect of Auschwitz and Belsen,
have if he came out defending the human rights of the Jews?
It was also a time
when the entire media had ganged up against President Premadasa. Only
Tissaranee Gunasekera, Dayan Jayatilleke and yours truly were defending the
indomitable struggle of President Premadasa to save the nation from two fascist
terrorists – the JVP fathered by the likes of Victor Ivan and his gang of
cold-blooded murderers and their Tamil counterpart in the LTTE. Their sole
objective was to attack the democratically elected state which, of course, had
many infirmities. It was a time when the anti-Premadasa media
went bananas, blaming him for anything that moved, good, bad or indifferent.
For instance, led by
Lalith and Gamini the media went bonkers attacking the Kandalama Hotel project
as a venture that would pollute the environment and cause serious damage to the
tank nearby and the villagers. Even the Catholic Church and the Sarvodaya
leader, A. T. Ariyaratne, joined the bandwagon. Premadasa could do
nothing right – not even promote a tourist hotel. Ravaya, for
instance, not only attacked Premadasa relentlessly but also those associated
with him. Anti-Premadasa Victor did not like my backing Premadasa all the way,
without any reservations. I was editing the Observer at the time.
Victor had nothing to say against me. So he ran a news snippet alleging, like
the way he alleges against Gota, that I was paid not by Lake House but by the
Maharajas. He knew he was lying. He knew he had no evidence to back it up. But
this political pundit, full of righteousness today, had no qualms about
publishing lies to blacken the image of those who were with President
Premadasa.
I am glad that Victor
is no longer instrumental in preparing weapons of mass destruction on a
domestic scale and turned his hands – or what’s left of it — to champion human
rights. That makes it one less murderer in the killing fields of the nation.
But his logic goes awry when he questions the competency of Gota to be the
presidential candidate on the basis of his allegations.
What he doesn’t
realise is that he opens himself to be taken to task on the basis of his own
logic. It is important to take his logic of sentencing individuals on mere
allegations seriously because the same yardstick can be applied to test the
validity of his righteousness. So, applying his logic, will he demand the
sacking of Ranil Wickremesinghe because the Batalanda allegations are yet to be
cleared? The Sunday Times (21/3/2004) reported: President Chandrika Kumaratunga has
said that if the Batalanda Commission recommendations related to the 1988-90
period were implemented properly, Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe would not
have been a free man today.” Since Victor believes in his own logic it is
necessary to ask why Ranil is fit to be the Prime Minister while Gota is unfit
to be the President?
When Ranil contests for the
Premiership next time will he raise objections on the grounds of crimes
committed against the media that opposed him? When the Maharaja Headquarters
near the Gangaramaya was attacked the day he won Parliamentary vote of
confidence the UNP thug who led the attack against the Maharaja was shown
immediately after standing behind Ranil and worshipping at Gangaramaya. This is
not an allegation. This is documented evidence. Has Victor, the Righteous,
raised any objections on any known principle against the UNP thugs violating
human rights to keep Ranil in power?
He also accuses Gota on
allegations” of crimes that occurred when he was in power. But the public
knows for certain that Victor was a killer, or instrumental in killing with his
expertise in bomb-making. This is no allegation”. When a known Pol Potist
killer, or a willing manufacturer of bombs to kill his fellow-man without any
qualms, can be a human rights activists why can’t Gota be a President? What we
are asked to judge is the past of both. Which is more criminal? Victor’s? Or
Gota’s? And whose violence served and saved the people best? Victor, when he
had power, was not in the top ranks of the JVP to protect human rights. He was
one of the committed cadres to kill on behalf of the JVP. What neerds to be
stressed here is that when Victor points one finger at Gota four fingers are
pointing in his direction.
This leads to a serious moral issue:
Is there anyone in Sri Lanka who is not tainted with guilt to take the moral
leadership? Take the case of the Yahapalanaya. It was a movement that was
launched on the promise of delivering pure moral leadership. But it went down
the sink into depths of moral depravity within the first few months in office,
with Ranil leading the gang that robbed the Central Bank. He imported his
special crook, dressed in Saville row suit, to run the biggest heist in
banking. These are not allegations. The available evidence has proved the guilt
of the Ranil. So is why isn’t Holy Victor not declaring that neither Ranil nor
nominee Sajith is fit to hold the highest public offices of the nation? Isn’t
Sajith who is in the Cabinet that robbed the Central Bank and supported his
leader faithfully all the way as guilty as his leader?
Of course, it cannot
be denied that Victor did a brilliant job in exposing the moral and political
corruption of Chandrika Bandaranaike and other political leaders. But his
essential political ideologies, including the distorted and adulterated
five-lecture Marxism, and the fascist terror he unleashed, make him a first
class hypocrite and a theoretician of sheer bunkum.
Consider, for
instance, the latest political formula he propounds in his article to save the
nation. He had suggested to Mahinda and Ranil that they should have joined
hands after the war ended. To begin with, anybody suggesting that anyone should
join hands with Ranil to work for the good of the country must have his head
examined. Ranil can work only by himself and for himself. CBK and Sirisena have
openly revealed that they could not work with Ranil who was undercutting them.
Sajith too knows it only too well. At the height of the internal
power struggle to win the presidential candidacy, he hinted at it
obliquely though he did not go all out to blast Ranil with this accusation.
In any case the time
to work together was during the war and not after the war. National unity was
most needed at that time to face the enemy. Ranil was all out to sabotage the
national efforts to defeat the LTTE. As everyone knows, he ridiculed the heroic
efforts of Sarath Fonseka and his brave men. Victor’s theory is laughable
because there wasn’t a chance in hell for Ranil to join Mahinda after the war
when he had not joined Mahinda at the greatest hour of need. Ranil held a sword
in his hands which he could have used for the good the nation. But he didn’t.
This tragic situation is summed up in the wisdom of Sinhala
folklore:Yud-day-ta nathi kaduwas kos kotan-da-the? (Is
the sword not available for war to cut the jack fruit?. A realistic example is UK in World
War II. Churchill (Conservative) and Attlee (Labour) joined hands to defeat the
fascist terror of Hitler. After the war they went their separate ways and
people elected Attlee and not Churchill who won the war. Victor’s punditry
preached to the political leaders in power is as ridiculous as his Marxist baloney that led
thousands of youth to an early and unwanted death without any political gain to
anyone.
He says that he put
the idea of working together after the war to both Ranil and Mahinda The reply
he received from Ranil is quite telling. Victor says: Ranil Wickremesinghe
listened carefully to the views expressed by me. We didn’t think that far,” was
his reply.”
With all his claims of
being a political analyst Victor missed the most salient point in Ranil’s
reply. He missed Ranil’s confession which admits that he can’t think far. This,
by far, is the most sensible statement found in Victor’s article. Everyone
knows that if Ranil could think far he would not be in the pickle he is now!
Victor’s bankruptcy is
revealed in his scare-mongering. There is nothing new in his thinking except to
parrot the slogans of the anti-Gota bandwagon. Like most of his ilk he is
raking up a past to say that Gota is going to be the monster that they think he
was – only on allegations, as stated by Victor. One prediction that can be made
with certainty is that Gota will never commit the acts that he is alleged” to
have done in the past when he become the next President. It is certain not
because he has denied these allegations with conviction but because there is
no necessity for him to go down that track (assuming that he did it) now
that he and his Commander-in-Chief had liberated the nation from the
Tamil terror unleashed by the JVP counterpart in the North.
It is civil society activists like
Victor that give a bad name to cause of human rights. They don’t have the
credentials to be accepted as genuine defenders of human rights. Any day I
would take human rights from Gota than from Victor. The state violence he used
– and he was no different from Churchill, Roosevelt and Truman who led World
War II – was to defend and protect the state elected by the people.
Besides, the Rajapakse regime was
far more humane than the Allied forces who occupied Germany and Japan. The
Allied victors went all out to eliminate Nazism and
Tojoism (Japanese fascism) root and branch. There wasn’t a building
standing in Dresden and Nagasaki when the
democratic Allies finished the war. Mothers turned to prostitution to
feed their kids. Nazis were hunted and persecuted. Etc. Etc. Manik Farm, which
I had visited, was a paradise compared to the Germans and Japanese prisons
under the vaunted democrats of the West.
Gota’s actions, however tough it may
have been, would not have demolished the democratic state. Unfolding events
have proved it. After comprehensively defeating the fascist forces of the North
and the South not even Gota, if he tried, could impose an authoritarian rule.
The greatest triumph of the Sri Lanka polity is that it has defeated all
fascist forces that came from the Left, Right, Centre and, most all, from the
North. But the fascist terror of Victor and his counterparts in the Tamil North
would have certainly demolished the democratic state if they succeeded and
imposed the most brutal reigns of fascism.
Finally, if the civil society can
believe in Victor as a human rights activist, knowing his proven brutal past,
why can’t they believe in Gota, facing only allegations? In any case, Gota
should know, with all his experience, what would happen to him if he does what
Victor had done with his kind of Pol Potist politics.
I am willing to place my faith in
Gota any day than in Victor – a Sinhala Prabhakaranist willing to kill any
dissident at the drop of a bomb made by him. I believe in democracy, however imperfect it
may have been, than in the fascism of
violent bomb-makers. This is one of the main reasons why I’m willing to back
Gota all the way
Sri Lanka is a Unitary State. We will not at any time allow anyone to
segregate this country. This is a sovereign
nation and we will not permit any foreign power to interfere in the affairs of
this country.
This motherland of ours will be protected and safeguarded against terrorism, extortion, drug menace, all sort of crimes and foreign threats;
Will protect and safeguarded the War Heroes of the tri forces, Police personnel, and the Civil protection forces;
An urgent people’s concession package to reduce the cost of living and the day to day expenses;
Courses of the nursing schools will be extended for a 4 year period and thereby they will be provided a Degree which is acceptable for foreign employment;
Courses of the Teachers’ Colleges will be raised to degree-awarding levels;
Outdated rules and regulations which hinders business activities will be updated;
Economic services tax and retention tax will be abrogated;
The VAT will be reduced to 8% ;
Taxes levied on religious places will be abolished;
A simple form of tax structure will be introduced in place of various forms of taxes being on motor vehicles;
The PAYE tax applicable to Government and Public sector employees will be abolished;
Steps will be taken to create 1 million employment opportunities within the next five years;
No agricultural product will be exported without value addition;
Fertilizer subsidy will be given free of charge;
Use of carbonic fertilizer will be encouraged;
Fertilizer required for the country will be locally produced and within a few years all fertilizer requirement will be covered by carbonic fertilizer;
Re-export of agricultural products will be totally banned;
All agriculture loams will be canceled;
All irrigation networks and small and large tanks will be renovated expeditiously;
Estate employees will be given a wage of Rs.1,000 per day,
Development of [A1] [A2] [A3] [A4] the fisheries sector by regulating it using modern technology;
Provide modern technology to the fisher folks, farmers and milk farmers to become entrepreneurs in their respective sectors;
Encourage maximum use of renewable energy in the power and transport sectors;
Employ scientific methods for garbage management;
Women with small children will be allowed to engage in their duties for a certain period while staying in their residences;
Steps will be taken to eliminate the drug menace within a short period;
A mechanism will be introduced to curb corruption and expeditiously prosecute the corrupt people.
No room will be provided for corruption.
The people of the country anticipate having a righteous rule. They look forward to having a rule that is a haven for all religions and for all nationalities. Its foundation will be the faith propagated by the Lord Buddha. I hail from a Buddhist family in the South and received my education from the well known Buddhist school, the Ananda College. Therefore, Buddhist philosophy has always mixed with my wishes and aspirations and in my behavior.
I would like to tell you in the outset that special attention was given to religious concepts in the preparation of our policy framework Vision of Prosperity” which has been entrusted to the people. The Vision of Prosperity policy framework is an ‘agenda of people’s policies’ prepared by the people for the people. It is a programme of work that would safeguard the sovereignty of our nation, would give priority to nationalism, dedicate for the welfare of all the citizens and repose trust in the youth. It consists of basic concepts required to rise up as a proud sovereign nation deriving maximum benefits from global developments, and possessing a strong economy.
Sri Lanka is a sovereign unitary nation. We will never allow to segregate and divide
it. Also, we would not allow any foreign power to interfere in the affairs of
this sovereign nation.
We consider national
security as a prime and foremost responsibility of the government. We will once
again build strongly the government mechanism required to protect and safeguard
our motherland from terrorism, activities of underground operations, threats of
robberies, extortions, the drug menace, torture as well as from foreign
threats.
Accumulated in courts for
long periods, to increase the number of judges, and restructure the
institutions that assist in the implementation of Law and order to increase
their efficiency. This manifesto will be
valid for the total period of our rule.
It is our objective to provide economic stability to everyone in this Country through measures outlined in our people-centered economic system. We will put an end to taking political advantage on the poverty status of the innocent poor people and take steps to completely eradicate poverty in the country. What we want is to make our future generation to live as plenteous citizens not depending on others to meet their needs.
The 21st century is considered a knowledge-centered century. The global economic trend turning towards Asia is very important for us to make our future plans We must create a young future generation who could get the maximum benefit from the new developments in the global economy. The education becomes very vital to produce prosperous citizens performing productive employment or becoming successful entrepreneurs.
We plan to introduce reforms to our Education system enabling or younger generations to obtain employments that have the highest demand in the global employment market. Within the first year itself of our rule, we will make necessary investments to the educational infrastructure to curtail our younger generation becoming neglected within the educational structure and enable all students to pursue up to a university degree. We will all three-year diploma courses up to 4 years and to provide the relevant students a Degree acceptable for overseas employments.
Similarly, all teacher training colleges will be upgraded enabling that institution to award degree certificates. It is essential to develop aptitudes of our children in line with the development of inventiveness, and the development of the knowledge of the English language and Maths.
It is the local industrialists who have to perform a major task in uplifting our economy which has been collapsed. We will create a conducive atmosphere for these business people to conduct their business activities with pleasure. We will upgrade the outdated business rules and regulations which hinder their activities. These outdated rules and regulations deter the productivity of the businessmen as well as the people. Our people are sternly affected by tax burdens. Therefore we will revise the present Inland Revenue Act which is unsuitable for our country and reduce the tax burden on the people. Tax levied on manufacturing industries will be reduced.
Economic Services charges and retention taxes will be abrogated. The VAT will be reduced to 8%. Taxes applicable to religious places of worship will be abolished. Various taxes applicable to motor vehicles will be simplified with one tax system instead. In addition to this, the ‘PAYE’ levied on the salaries of government and private sector employees will be abolished. Along with this, we intend to regulate revenue collections in the Inland Revenue Department, Customs and the Excise department and minimize the tax anomalies. We anticipate a significant development in the service economy through our future development plans.
We have drawn up a plan by which we can earn an income of U.S.Dollars 10 Billion per year from the tourist industry. Similarly, there is a surfeit of industries that we can develop to international standards. They include many sectors such as transport services, warehousing services, and port and airport services which could provide convincing revenue to our country due to our geographical location.
We also anticipate creating more than one million employment opportunities during the next 5 years through the development of our tourism industry, and other industries such as information technology, transport, health services, education, rubber, sports, and other industries. We thereby expect to become the business hub in South Asia.
In the industrial sector, our full attention will be focussed on producing value-added products. No resources of Sri Lanka should be exported without value addition. Similarly, our industrialists will be encouraged to introduce our value products to the international markets. At the same time, we expect to encourage our farmers to use carbonic fertilizer and maximize within a few years the use of carbonic fertilizer by our farmers. Our aim is to become pioneers in the world of turning out Agri products exclusively produced with carbonic fertilizer.
We would totally ban the re-export of Agri products which have become a major burden for our farmers. Then only we can get a greater demand and a higher value for our Agri products. As a concession to farmers affected by disasters in the dry zone, we envisage waiving their cultivation loans. Lack of irrigation and drinking water is a major problem faced by the dry zone farmers. We have drawn up plans to address these problems by expeditiously renovating all sable irrigation canals, as well as large and small scale tanks.
We also will introduce a national and modern technical programme to use water economically, to get the maximum use of the available lands, and to reap a maximum high-quality harvest. We have already agreed to provide Rs, 1,000 daily wages for plantation workers who render a valuable service to our economy.
Similarly. We envisage obtaining maximum benefit from the maritime resources of our country which is surrounded by the sea. Steps will be taken to improve the fishing industry with the introduction of modern technological methods. Similar to farmers, and milk farmers we also want to provide modern technology and training to the fisher folks and make them entrepreneurs in their field.
It is a major responsibility of ours to provide the environment on behalf of future generations. Therefore, we will encourage the use of renewable energy in the transport and power sectors. Our priorities will include the maximum use of carbonic fertilizer and scientific management of garbage disposal.
Not only within the employment market, but
the contribution of our ladies as private entrepreneurs is very important for
our economic development. We would encourage both the public and private
sectors to increase the opportunity of ladies with small children to carry out
their duties from their residences. Under our government increased attention
will be focused to provide loan facilities, training and raw materials required
by women entrepreneurs.
We will take increased and major steps to curb and alleviate the narcotic menace which has become a major problem today. We will take steps to eradicate the drug menace which has become a major national disaster. We envisage removing the era of your persisting fears from your hearts that your children may become victims of this drug menace.
We envisage to introduce and implement a powerful mechanism to prevent political and institutional corruption. We would strengthen the mechanism for preventing corruption as well as mete out expeditious punishments to those involved and those who aid and abet for corruption. I strongly emphasize that within a government under my leadership I will never leave room for corruption. I also state with responsibility that none of the ideas outlined in the Vision of Prosperity” are blank political promises.
I always performed all responsibilities entrusted to me without lapse. Similarly, I will perform this responsibility as well to the best of my ability. I anticipate the cooperation and assistance of all of you to implement this responsibility of rebuilding our nation. It is not vital and immaterial as to which party, which ethnicity or which religion you belong to. The only condition is that you should be a citizen who really loves the country. If all of us determinedly perform our duties and responsibilities it will be possible for us to transform Sri Lanka as a country with a powerful economy and that can command the respect in the world instead of the present status of being backward and weak nation. Let us build a prosperous nation to which return admiringly instead of being a nation from which people continue to leave. Let us all get together on 16th November and make the first step towards building a prosperous nation.
Meanwhile. addressing a public meeting held in the Meegahakiwula area on Saturday, 26th October, the conquering candidate Mr. Gotabhaya Rajapaksa said that the incumbent government will never be able to ensure the security of the country.
He pointed out that this is because the
current government has a Cabinet of ministers who subjugated to influences of
foreign nations and Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) that are against the freedom
struggle and war heroes and only an SLPP/SLFP government can ensure the
security of the country. He promised that
their government will definitely take measures to protect the tea industry and
those who are involved in the industry.
At a meeting held with members of the Ceylon Workers Congress at the Bandarawela Hindu Cultural Centre, Mr. Rajapaksa said that it is not conducive to look only at the day to day economy at all times. He said that the plantation workers have always been demanding a wage increase Rs. 50 or. Rs. 75 and the avaricious politicians have kept the plantation tied to estates without offering them a bright future. He said that he was told by some plantation youth that they go to Colombo and work in Wine Stores, restaurants, groceries and as drivers for better salaries. Mr. Rajapaksa emphasized that the plantation youth too should be provided with better educational opportunities for them to enter Universities and acquire competency in modern technology.
Speaking further Mr. Rajapaksa said that a Tamil medium University will be established in the upcountry and in addition to that a Technical College will also established to produce masons, carpenters, plumbers and those required for the tourist industry. He pointed out that personnel in these trade could earn handsome wages. He said that the tea industry is a good industry but they should look for employment diversification opportunities and said that they can also get involved in the cultivation of vegetables that can provide them additional income and alleviate their economic burdens. Similarly, he said that his government will take steps to address their housing and schooling problems as well, while the daily wage will be increased to Rs. 1,000. He said that the plantation community put an end to getting misled by greedy politicians.
Addressing the Mahara/Kadawata meeting on 13th October Mr. Gotabhaya Rajapaksa said that his main objective is to dorm a secure and disciplinary country, He said that we should be exemplary, and the contemporary political culture should be changed and reformed. He stated that they cannot do things emotionally, in a myopic way, or to get personal objectives achieved. Mr. Rajapaksa emphasized that he will not permit behaving rudely or indecently in response to our opponents ‘conspiracies or misbehavior.
Speaking further, Mr. Rajapaksa said that all parties in their alliance have joined them on the strength of their clear cut non-ambiguous policies.
He said that the Sri Lanka
Freedom Party joining with them is a massive boost for them, and it would help
increase their power from 60% to 72%, and the SLPP cordially welcome them.Mr.
Rajapaksa said that the Sri Lanka Freedom Party is the party formed by Mr. S.W.R.D.Bandaranaike
and his father Mr. D.A.Rajapaksa and it was the party that successfully
launched the people’s revolution in 1956.
He stated that the people-friendly policies being enjoyed by them are
policies that were introduced by the Sri Lanka Freedom Party and it was the
party that twice made Mr. Mahinda Rajapaksa as the President of this
country.
Mr. Rajapaksa emphatically
assured that foremost priority will be given to national security and the
security mechanism that has been collapsed will be revived and strengthened,
and thereby this country will be a country in which everyone could live without
any form of fear and suspicion devoid of party, ethnicity and religious differences.
He said that members of the intelligence services will be given adequate power
and legal protection.
Referring to the present
government Mr. Rajapaksa said that a government swelled with neo-liberals,
servile to foreign dictates, and depending on foreign sustained NGOs, and who
do not respect national thinking can never ensure national security.
The winning candidate said that the21st century is a knowledge-based century and his economic policies are totally knowledge-based and they always trust the capabilities of human resources. It is on account of this that he said, his economic policies have been formulated based on information technology and computer technology. He said that through these policies the country will be able to create several million employment opportunities for our young generations. Mr. Rajapaksa said that his government will create infrastructure facilities and government patronage for these activities. Also, he said that it is a government responsibility to provide vocational training for this purpose by introducing modifications to our education system.
During his first year of presidency, Mr. Gotabhaya said that he will make a huge investment in education. Today or youth have got stranded due to the fault of the existing education system. Every year although around 200,000 students pass the A/L examination only about 35,000 become eligible to enter Universities. He said that under his government steps will be taken to admit all students to Universities. Steps will also be taken through Technical Colleges to qualify the students for good employments, for employments suitable for our economy and for them to get very attractive salaries. We will not allow the youth to get stranded. There is every possibility to take the country forward through technology. The companies dealing in computer technology brings about one billion US. Dollars. This can be increased to about 3 billion. But the lack of competent personnel has hindered this opportunity. We will interfere in this matter and will provide the necessary competency for our youth.
Also, the tourist industry has collapsed due to lack of security. We will eradicate this situation and make the country a safe haven for tourists.
This government has forgotten about the agricultural industry. Our history and culture indicate that we had a commendable irrigation network. These have been destroyed today. There is a necessity to provide good living conditions to our farmers. We are prepared to make the country and provide good living conditions for the farmers. Still, we have poor people in our country. The development of a country does not mean a section of people in the country becoming rich. We much create a pro-people economic system to alleviate poverty throughout the country.
Dr Sudath Gunasekara Former Secretary T PM Mrs B and one time President Sri Lanka Administrative Services Association (1991-1994)
1 Abolition of
the Provincial Councils that have been a white elephant and that has wasted
billions or even trillions for the past 33 years with no benefit at all for the
country or the people and has become a political and Administrative disaster
for this country, aggravating separatism laying the foundation for a Federal
State in this country and
Abolishing the
Rajiv /JR Accord of 29 July 1987 whish has almost nullified the Sri Lankan
Constitution of 1987 by compelling us to
1) Accept the North and East as the
Traditional Home land of the Tamils (1/3 of the country and 2/3 of the coastal
belt plus the marine resources for just less than 5 % of the nations population
wo are claiming a separate Rata EELAM)
2) Making Tamil also a National
Language in this country and
3) Granting Sri Lankan Citizenship to
all Estate Tamils contrary to the Nehru/Kotalawala Pact of 1954 and thereby paving the way for India
to convert the entire Central Hill country of this country in to an overseas
Indian Protectorate in future.
2 Reducing the
Cabinet to maximum of 20 and the number of Politicians in Parliament and
Pradesiya Sabhas, abolishing the National list and going back to earlier
electoral system abolishing the District system and PR.
Pruning exorbitant
Public institutions and Public Service to manageable levels to cut down public
expenditure.
3 Creation of a
new Political Culture by laying down minimum educational and other
qualifications and a Strict Code of Conduct to Politicians and making
attendance in Parliament compulsory
4 Abolition of Pensions
and excessive privileges to politicians
5 Ending the tragic
House Maids trade with Middle East countries and replacing it with
a) Avenues of domestic employment for
them within the country and
Instead start a programme of
sending professionals and technicians
6 Ending the
menace of University ragging by addressing their grievances
7 Declaring all
lands over 5000 ft above Sea level as strictly protected natural reserves and
prohibiting any form of settlement above 3500 ft MSL to protect the water
resources of the country as water resources decides the entire life system in
the country and all economic activities like Agriculture, Hydroelectricity
potentials and industries
8 Making
Buddhism the State Religion
9 The question
of Official Language, National Anthem, one Law
and National flag
10 Proposed
Action Plan to solve the plight of the Kandyan Peasants (all Sinhalese) heaped
up from 1815, not rectified for the past 72 years by any Government
11 To free
Public service and Judiciary from Politics and Recruitments to Public Service
and Judiciary only on merit.
12 To create an
Independent, efficient, productive and People centered Public Service
13 A national
programme to develop and diversify the economy to increase productive
employment instead of trying to pack all men and women to an already excessive
government service that has become a big burden to the tax payers
14 Professional Foreign
Service that can take Sri Lanka to the world and bring the whole world to Sri
Lanka to develop this country
15 A programme
to make Sri Lanka number 1 in the world in Fishing Industry by making use of
the Ocean that stretches from Africa in the West to Australia in the East and
South Pole in the South making it naval power by using our strategic location
on the globe in relation to the East and West and its enormous potentials of
fabulous ports around the Island. The Indian Ocean is the third-largest of the
world’s oceanic divisions, covering 70,560,000 km² or 19.8% of the water on the
Earth’s surface. It is bounded by Asia to the north, Africa to the west, and
Australia to the east. Wikipedia
16 To reduce the
excessive public holidays to about 12, the world average, and religious
holidays to be confined only to the respective religious groups. This is very
necessary to increase productivity and accelerate development to catch with ta
competitive world.
§ Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad calls for respect and tolerance
between people of different faiths and beliefs
§ His Holiness stresses importance of education for girls
§ Caliph says access to education is key to world peace
§ His Holiness says Holy Quran inspires Muslims towards
intellectual advancement and the pursuit of knowledge
§ His Holiness says that there is no contradiction between science
and religion
The World Head of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community, the
Fifth Khalifa (Caliph), His Holiness, Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad delivered
an historic keynote address on 8th October 2019 at the United Nations
Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) Headquarters
in Paris.
The event was attended by over 80 dignitaries and
guests, including diplomats, politicians, academics and the
representatives of think tanks, as well as business leaders and various
other professions.
During his address, the Head of the Ahmadiyya Muslim
Community commended the foundational objectives of UNESCO, which included
developing sustainable peace, promoting the rule of law, the protection of
human rights, safeguarding the cultural heritage of different groups and
communities and seeking to ensure the future prosperity of the world.
Thereafter, His Holiness said that over 1400 years ago, Islam instructed
Muslims to pursue these same goals in the interests of the peace and
prosperity of mankind.
His Holiness stressed the importance of education
across society. He said that access to education was the means of ensuring
peace and stability and that Islam emphasised the importance of ensuring
that girls were educated and given equal opportunities as boys.
Furthermore, His Holiness refuted the allegation that
Islam was a religion that failed to encourage intellectual advancement.
Rather, he emphasised how from the very outset Islam taught that human
beings should continually seek to push the boundaries of human knowledge
and that there was no contradiction between science and religion.
Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad spoke about the utmost
importance of education for the establishment of peace and how the
teachings of Islam have laid down the foundations for a model society.
Such teachings had motivated and inspired generations
of Muslim scholars and philosophers who had advanced the cause of the
intellectual progress of mankind through the Middle Ages. Now, in the
modern era, it was the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community that sought to draw on
that rich intellectual history by encouraging learning and the pursuit of
human knowledge.
At the outset, His Holiness praised the founding
principles of UNESCO. Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad said:
The founding objectives of UNESCO are excellent and
praiseworthy. Amongst its objectives, are fostering peace and respect,
promoting the rule of law, human rights and education across the world.
UNESCO also advocates for press freedom and protecting different cultures
and heritages. Another of its stated goals is to eradicate poverty and to
promote sustainable global growth and development and to try to ensure
that humanity leaves behind a positive legacy from which future
generations can benefit.”
Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad continued:
You may be surprised to learn that Islamic teachings
require Muslims to work towards fulfilling these same objectives and to
continually strive for the progress of humanity.”
His Holiness said that the Holy Quran has stated that
Allah the Almighty is the ‘Lord of All the Worlds’, and hence Muslims
believe him to be the Creator and Provider for all humankind, regardless
of creed or colour.
As a result, it was an incumbent religious obligation
placed on Muslims to serve humanity without distinction of their
religious, social or ethnic background.
Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad said:
The very first chapter of the Holy Quran states that
Allah the Almighty is the ‘Lord of all the Worlds’. This verse is central
to the Islamic faith whereby Muslims are taught that God Almighty is not
just their Lord and Provider but He is the Provider and Sustainer of all
humankind. He is the Gracious and Merciful and so, irrespective of caste,
creed or colour, God Almighty fulfils the needs of His Creation.”
Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad continued:
Given this, true Muslims firmly believe that all
humans are born equal and that regardless of differences of belief, the
values of mutual respect and tolerance must be firmly embedded within
society.”
His Holiness said that the Prophet of Islam, the Holy
Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings be upon him) was the perfect
manifestation of the teachings of Islam. Following his migration to
Medina, and under his leadership, a thriving, multicultural society was
established which continued to serve as an example for mankind.
Speaking of the reasons for his migration and what
transpired thereafter, Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad said:
After he founded Islam, the Holy Prophet Muhammad
(peace and blessings be upon him) and his followers were subjected to
brutal and inhumane treatment by the non-Muslims of Makkah, which they
endured with patience and restraint. Finally, after suffering years of
relentless persecution, they migrated to the city of Medina where the Holy
Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings be upon him) formed a covenant of
peace between the Muslim migrants, the Jewish people and the other members
of society.”
Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad continued:
According to its terms, the divergent groups pledged
to live peacefully, to fulfil the rights of one another and to foster a
spirit of mutual sympathy, tolerance and cooperation. The Holy Prophet
Muhammad (peace and blessings be upon him) was elected as the Head of
State and, under his leadership, the covenant proved to be a magnificent charter
of human rights and governance and it ensured peace between the different
communities
Thereafter, His Holiness very carefully analysed and
discussed the key characteristics and achievements of that first
government of Medina.
His Holiness said that its system of governance was
underpinned by an entirely impartial system of law and order and justice,
wherein all people were equal under the law of the land.
Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad said:
The Prophet of Islam (peace and blessings be upon
him) established an impartial judiciary for dispute resolution. He made it
clear that there would not be one law for the rich and powerful and
another for the poor and weak. Rather, in what was a revolutionary
concept, all people were treated equally according to the law of the
land.”
Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad explained how the Holy
Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings be upon him) established various
programmes and schemes designed to ensure the progress and stability of
society.
These included establishing an education system, a
taxation system designed to raise the standards of the poor, a public
health system focused on sanitation and educating citizens about health, a
transport system and a code of conduct for business and financial ethics
leading to tremendous social progress.
Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad said:
During the 7th Century, under the government led by the
Prophet of Islam (peace and blessings be upon him), astonishing progress
was made in Medina to advance the cause of individual and collective
rights. Indeed, for the very first time amongst the Arabs, an orderly and
civilised society was established. In many ways, it was a model society –
in terms of infrastructure, services and, more importantly, in terms of
the unity and tolerance displayed in what was a multicultural society.”
His Holiness expressed ‘profound sadness’ that a
concerted effort had taken place in the modern world to malign and defame
the character of the Holy Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings be upon
him)
Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad said:
The Holy Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings be
upon him) has been branded as a belligerent leader – when nothing could be
further from the truth. The reality is that the Prophet of Islam (peace
and blessings be upon him) spent every moment of his life championing the
rights of all people and, through the teachings of Islam, he established
an incomparable and timeless charter of human rights.”
His Holiness condemned those who sought to attack or
mock religion and the Prophets of God.
Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad said:
In my view, it is deeply regrettable, that the
principle of mutual respect, which is the means of establishing love and
unity, has been sacrificed in the modern world in the name of so-called
freedom and even in the name of ‘entertainment’. Even the Founders of
religion are no longer spared mockery and contempt, even though their
derision causes anguish and pain to millions of their followers around the
world.”
In stark contrast to how he was oft portrayed by the
opponents of Islam, His Holiness explained that the Holy Prophet Muhammad
(peace and blessings be upon him) set a timeless example of compassion and
humanity. He forever sought to care for the weak and vulnerable members of
society and established many schemes to ensure their welfare.
Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad also spoke about the Holy
Prophet’s (peace and blessings be upon him) continuous efforts to
eradicate slavery. In an era when slavery was rampant and considered a
fundamental part of society, the Prophet of Islam (peace and blessings be
upon him) sought to emancipate those who were shackled by the chains of
bondage and servitude.
Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad said:
The Prophet of Islam (peace and blessings be upon
him) repeatedly advocated the freeing of slaves and instructed that if it
was not immediately possible for them to release them, then at the very
minimum, they were to feed and clothe them in the same way they fed and
clothed themselves.”
His Holiness said that another allegation often raised
is that Islam fails to protect women’s rights or advocates discrimination
between the sexes. However, this was entirely false and unfair. From the
start, Islam prescribed the equal rights of women and taught that
educating girls was of primary importance and a religious requirement for
all Muslims.
Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad said:
Islam established the rights of women and girls for
the first time. At a time, when women and girls were discriminated against
and often looked down upon, the Holy Prophet of Islam instructed his
followers to ensure that girls were educated and respected. Indeed, he
said that if a person had three daughters who they educated and guided in
the best way they would be sure to enter Paradise.”
Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad continued:
Based upon the teachings of the Prophet of Islam (peace
and blessings be upon him) Ahmadi Muslim girls across the world are
educated and are excelling in various fields. They are becoming doctors,
teachers, architects and entering other professions through which they can
serve humanity.”
Answering the allegation that Islam is a religion that
promotes violence or permits violence in the name of religion, His
Holiness said that the wars in the early period of Islam were defensive
and fought as a last resort in order to protect the rights of Muslims and
non-Muslims alike.
Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad said:
The truth is that, as is stated in the Holy Quran,
permission to fight back was granted to (the early Muslims) to establish
and preserve the principles of freedom of belief and freedom of conscience
for all mankind. The Quran states that if the Muslims did not defend
themselves against the Meccan army, then no church, synagogue, temple,
mosque or any other place of worship would be safe because the opponents
of Islam were determined to eliminate all forms of religion.”
Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad continued:
In reality, if the early Muslims engaged in warfare
it was always defensive and fought for the sake of establishing long-term
peace and to protect the right of all people to live with freedom. If
today, there are Muslims who have adopted extremist tactics or who preach
violence it is because they have abandoned Islam’s teachings or are wholly
ignorant of it.”
As he graced the audience at UNESCO, His Holiness
refuted the suggestion that Islam was an ‘archaic and backward religion’
and one that did not promote intellectual advancement. His Holiness
branded such a claim as a lazy stereotype that is based on fiction rather
than fact”.
His Holiness presented an extensive array of
historical examples illustrating the contribution of Muslims to the cause
of intellectual enlightenment.
Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad said:
The truth is that the Holy Quran and the teachings of
the Holy Prophet of Islam (peace and blessings be upon him) inspired the
works of generations of Muslim intellectuals, philosophers and inventors
in the Middle Ages. Indeed, if we look back more than a millennium we see
how Muslim scientists and inventors played a fundamental role in advancing
knowledge and developing technologies which transformed the world and
remain in use today.”
Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad mentioned ground-breaking
contributions to medicine, technology, chemistry, physics, ethics,
philosophy, mathematics amongst others.
In this era, it was the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community
that had taken up the mantle of promoting education and furthering the
cause of intellectual progress.
His Holiness mentioned the distinguished contribution
to science and human knowledge Professor Dr Abdus Salam and how he had
been inspired by his faith.
Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad said:
With the Grace of Allah, the very first Muslim Nobel
Laureate was an Ahmadi Muslim, Professor Dr Abdus Salam, an eminent
physicist who won the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1979. Throughout his
life, Professor Salam spoke of how Islam, and the Holy Quran in
particular, was the inspiration and guiding light behind his work.”
Later, His Holiness spoke of the charitable endeavours
of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community which sought to alleviate the suffering
of mankind. He also stated that breaking the cycle of poverty that
afflicted generations of families in economically weak nations was the
means of establishing peace in the world.
Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad said:
In remote and poverty-stricken parts of Africa, we
have established primary and secondary schools and we have also opened
hospitals and clinics. We are providing clean running water in remote
villages, which mean that children are free to go to school, instead of
spending their days travelling for miles seeking to collect pond-water for
their domestic family use. We have also set up a project of building model
villages, which include community halls, access to clean water, solar energy
infrastructure and various other facilities.”
Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad continued:
Where, out of human sympathy, we seek to eradicate
poverty and destitution, we also consider it to be the key to developing
sustainable peace in the world.”
Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad further said:
Only if people have food to eat, water to drink,
shelter, schooling for their children and healthcare will they be able to
live in peace and escape the deadly clutches of frustration and resentment
that lead people towards extremism. These are all basic human rights and
so until we help people flee poverty and destitution we will not see true
peace in the world.”
Concluding, His Holiness called for a change in the
priorities of mankind.
Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad said:
At the end, I pray with all my heart that mankind
forsakes greed and forgoes the pursuit of narrow self-interests and
instead focuses on relieving the pain and anguish of those who are
suffering in the world. Ameen.”
Before the keynote address, several distinguished
speakers took to the stage and spoke of their admiration of the Ahmadiyya
Muslim Community and its efforts to propagate Islam’s message of peace
across the world, as well as its commitment to serving humanity.
Ambassador Oumar Keïta, Delegate of Mali to UNESCO,
said:
Your Holiness, the Caliph (Hazrat Mirza Masroor
Ahmad), we salute all the contributions you have made (in Mali) such as
the building of hospitals mosques and schools and the various projects you
have set up through Humanity First… Your Holiness, I congratulate you for
the message of peace that you propagate, it consolidates our society in
Mali and is in line with the ideals of UNESCO.”
Religious Advisor of Foreign Affairs Ministry, Mr Jean
Christophe Auge said:
I am happy to welcome His Holiness the Caliph (Hazrat
Mirza Masroor Ahmad) here today… We are very familiar with what the Caliph
and the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community represent both in this country and
around the world. I would like to salute the visit of His Holiness to this
country and I wish you every success for this visit.”
Director of the Central Religion Advisory Board to the
Interior Ministry of France, Mr Clément Rouchouse said:
I am very pleased to be here today to salute the
Caliph of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community’s visit to France. I would like
to welcome you to France in this country which has a tradition of
welcoming different religions based on the principle of secularism.”
Mayor of Eaubonne, Mr Guillaume Dublineau, said:
Despite the differences in colours and cultures and
languages we are all pursuing the same principles wherever we live and in
whatever town we are.
We aspire to live in peace and justice, with tolerance
and a sharing of our values. I would like to praise the Ahmadiyya Muslim
Community, as it is a community that brings love and warmth but also
friendship and brotherhood.”
President of the NATO Memorial, Mr Willy Breton also
spoke and commended the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community for its continued
efforts to promote peace.
An introduction to the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community and
the Promised Messiah (peace be upon him) was given by the National
External Affairs Secretary of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community in France, Mr
Asif Arif.
The event concluded with a silent prayer led by His
Holiness.
Full address of His Holiness – the link of which is: