Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Only 40 passengers used Mattala

Wednesday, 24 April 2013
Since the opening of the Mattala Rajapaksa International Airport on March 18th only about 40 passengers have used the facilities of the airport, sources from the airport said.
The airport was opened by President Mahinda Rajapaksa claiming that it would be used as a hub to the South.
However, over a month later, the dismal number of passengers that have used the airport has compelled the administration to keep silent about the passenger movements at the airport.
Airport sources said that the number of immigration and emigration documents handed at the immigration counter would prove the number of passengers.
The poor passenger turn out and the threat of birds crashing on the aircraft have resulted in some airlines that had initially agreed to land in the airport deciding not to include Mattala in their route.
President Mahinda Rajapaksa has even made several visits to the airport to personally promote it among the people.

Government takes Rs. 410 billion from banks at 17% interest

Wednesday, 24 April 2013 
The Mahinda Rajapaksa government has taken Rs. 410 billion from local banks at a 17% interest rate.
Head of the JVP’s Inter Company Employees’ Union (ICEU), Wasantha Samarasinghe says the government has borrowed these monies mainly to pay salaries for the state sector.
He explained that the banks are therefore unable to lend monies to the private sector that is heavily engaged in the country’s production process.
“The private sector use the monies borrowed from banks for the production process. However, the monies borrowed by the government are not used for any production purpose. They are mostly used to pay state sector salaries,” he noted.
According to Samarasinghe, the government and institutions like the CPC and CEB have taken loans from the banks and even cashed in on fixed deposits.
Citing an example, Samarasinghe said that Lanka Mineral Sands Limited has had a Rs. 1,250 million fixed deposit that gave the company Rs. 75 million as annual interest and it was used to pay the staff salaries.
“This fixed deposit was taken by the government and the company is now heading towards a financial crisis,” he observed.

On The Not So Natural Rise Of Electricity Prices

By Kath Noble -April 24, 2013
Kath Noble
Colombo TelegraphOne of the many conspiracy theories that has emerged with regard to the anti-Muslim campaign of the Bodu Bala Sena and others is that it is an attempt by the Government to distract people from other concerns, primarily the state of the economy.
If so, it isn’t working. Last week’s increase in electricity tariffs hasn’t been overlooked by anybody in Sri Lanka.
However, the Government has succeeded in convincing a fair share of the electorate that it isn’t really its fault. Keheliya Rambukwella summed up its argument at the regular media briefing on Thursday. He explained that the tariff increase was unfortunate but unavoidable, since ‘no administration can subsidise utilities forever’.
This sounds reasonable, but it isn’t actually true.
The concept of ‘breaking even’ doesn’t make sense when discussing a public enterprise. The CEB is not a company. We have come to talk of its ‘losses’, but this is to accept the neo-liberal logic that the Government claims to reject. The Ministries of Health and Education also spend more than they earn, but we don’t consider them to be ‘indebted’.
In that sense, the Opposition is right in pointing out that the Government is neo-liberal, as its economic affairs spokesman Harsha de Silva did in response to the hike. Of course he should have said ‘also neo-liberal’, since the credentials of the UNP as the vanguard of neo-liberalism in Sri Lanka are unquestionable, thanks toRanil Wickremasinghe. Unfortunately, he combined that accurate observation with a totally misguided suggestion as to what to do about it, saying that if the economy is in so much trouble, what is needed is austerity.
Even the IMF is having second thoughts about ‘cuts’ as a response to a downturn, as its advice to the UK just days ago shows, with that country on the verge of an unprecedented ‘triple dip recession’.
Austerity isn’t the same as tackling waste and corruption. There is a difference between ensuring that expenditure is productive and targeting an overall reduction in expenditure.
In the same way, there is a difference between targeting subsidies so that the right people benefit and reducing the level of subsidies.
This is not to suggest that there is no problem with the amount that the Government spends on the CEB. It comes to 0.8% of GDP, which is an awful lot in comparison with the 1.9% that it allocates for education and the 1.3% that it gives to health.
Efforts should certainly be made to reduce this amount.
In terms of costs, Tilak Siyambalapitiya has produced a very succinct analysis (‘Talk sense about electricity costs and prices’, The Island, March 6th). He says that the approved cost of Rs. 2.56 for distributing a unit of electricity, which includes the cost of investment and maintenance of the distribution network and the supply of electricity, including metering and billing, is comparable with international norms, but could be brought down by 1% per year in real terms. A similar conclusion is reached for the transmission of a unit of electricity, with an approved cost of Rs. 0.73. He makes the same assumption as Keheliya Rambukwella that expenditure should be met by income to conclude that a unit of electricity has to be generated for Rs. 10.74, taking into account 12% losses and a total income of Rs. 15.50 per unit (10.74 = 0.88 x [15.50 - 2.56 - 0.73]), which is the case only for the CEB owned hydro and coal power stations.
An equally helpful discussion of prices is needed. The Rs. 15.50 per unit charged by the CEB is an average, and the way in which the burden should be shared is not obvious.
In response to the hike, everybody from bakers to the manufacturers of bathroom tiles have said that they will have to increase the prices of their products to compensate. This has to be taken into account in deciding who should pay how much.
Unfortunately, this is not going to happen by itself.
The Government carefully avoids debate of ‘zero-sum games’. It doesn’t want to admit that it makes choices between different groups in society, since that would mean alienating somebody. It prefers us to believe that all situations are ‘win-win’ or at least ‘lose-lose’.
This is equally true of taxation, and we should remember that the 0.8% of GDP that the Government spends on the CEB is only a problem because the share of taxation is so low and falling.
We may assume that the reason the Government has still not published the report of its Presidential Commission on Taxation, submitted to Mahinda Rajapaksa way back in 2010, is that it doesn’t want to upset people who really ought to be paying more. It thinks that it can get away with collecting almost everything from taxes on goods and services, rather than taxes on incomes, which is very bad news for people with low or no incomes.
High income earners not only pay relatively little in taxes on goods and services, they also pay relatively little for electricity.
The JVP raised another important point with regard to the electricity tariff hike. Its spokesman asked why the Public Utilities Commission bothered to hold a ‘consultation’ when it paid absolutely no attention to the opinions of anybody who participated.
Its report makes amusing reading. An unfortunate employee clearly wasted a very long time summarising the suggestions of the 275 people who either sent a written submission or made a presentation at the public hearing. Every single one of them is marked ‘no’ or ‘no comment’. Even proposals to ‘reduce corruption in the CEB’ are ruled out.
Given that the public has to pay for the opportunity to express their ideas, this is more than a little disappointing.
However, it is hardly surprising.
The Public Utilities Commission was established by the administration of Ranil Wickremasinghe, as part of its effort to privatise the CEB.
By now, everybody knows that this is a policy that has failed in many countries.
Even the Government has accepted that the private sector cannot help with electricity. At the media briefing, Keheliya Rambukwella also confirmed that it would be progressively reducing its purchases from the private sector, in favour of CEB owned power stations. If only it had worked this out earlier!
Also, it doesn’t seem to have understood why, since it is cheerfully pursuing exactly the same policy of privatisation in even less appropriate sectors of the economy.
Most extraordinarily, last week it was reported that the Government is to sign agreements with companies interested in investing in medical equipment such as MRI and CT scanners to be installed in public hospitals. The Secretary to the Ministry of Health was careful to explain that these services would continue to be free at the point of use – the Government will pay the owners of the machines according to the number of patients treated. How on earth they can’t see that this will end up in the Government spending more than if it had bought the machines itself is a mystery.
It may not be long before the Government thinks that the country’s health needs can just as well be met in private hospitals, in much the same way as it is so eager to have private universities cater to its education needs.
A little more attention to the state of the economy is therefore most certainly needed.
That doesn’t mean that the Bodu Bala Sena and others can be neglected, since they present a very serious immediate danger to society. However, what could very easily be ignored are the rest of the conspiracy theories that surround the anti-Muslim campaign. Far more likely than it being the work of Norway or Israel or India or the United States or any other country is that Sri Lankans have created this problem all by themselves. In any case, nobody else is going to solve it.
*Kath Noble’s column may be accessed via http://kathnoble.wordpress.com/. She may be contacted at kathnoble99@gmail.com.
Related posts;

UNP calls for polls commission

April 23, 2013
Karu
The United National Party (UNP) has urged the government to establish the Elections Commission according to the 17th amendment prior to the Northern Provincial Council Elections.
UNP MP Kau Jayasuriya said that with the absence of an Independent Elections Commission several incidents reported during elections after 2005 had proved that there is a truth in the allegations that none of the elections conducted since then were free and fair.
“It is reported in the media that the President Mahinda Rajapaksa has stated at a meeting with Media Chiefs, elections could be held under the Commissioner of Elections without an Elections Commission.  An Elections Commission was established by the 17th Amendment which was passed in Parliament by 2/3 majority, to achieve certain goals which included restraining powers surrounding the Executive Presidency, establishment of a strong democracy and good governance.  17th Amendment was repealed by introducing the 18th Amendment, which was passed by 2/3 majority obtained by winning the Members of Parliament of the Opposition by offering various benefits and other devious methods, not by the mandate of the people. In the first round of this exercise Attorney General’s Department and Police Department was taken under the President.  By centralizing more and more powers round the Executive President, the position of the Executive Presidency was converted to a Constitutional Monarch.  Department of Elections Commission which is a very vital Institution for the democracy of this country too is taken under the President,” he said.
The UNP MP recalled that there were direct allegations against the government for using state resources, helicopters, state bungalows, offering meals inside state bungalows and spending public funds during the 2010 Presidential Elections to the benefit of their candidate.
”We recognize the incumbent Commissioner of Elections as an efficient and honest officer.  But those who respect democracy in this county have a doubt in their minds whether it is possible to overcome the influence of the political authority.  The President himself has announced that the Provincial Council Elections for Northern Province will be held in September also it is reported that elections will be held for North Western and Central Provincial Councils,” he said.
Jayasuriya says the statement of the President that an independent elections commission is not essential creates a very serious issue whether it would be possible to conduct free and affair elections at least in the future.  (Colombo Gazette)
Abolish 13A
By Sithara Pathirana


Minister of Construction, Engineering Services, Housing and Common Amenities and Leader of the National Freedom Front (NFF), Wimal Weerawansa, has announced that calling for the repeal of the 13th Amendment to the Constitution will be the main theme of his party's May Day rally this year.


He also said it was his intention to create awareness among the working class that would voice against the formation of another Tamil Eelam in the North. Minister Weerawansa was speaking at a media briefing yesterday to announce his party's May Day rally programmes.


Elaborating on the 13th Amendment and the Northern Provincial Council elections, Weerawansa said, if the Northern Provincial Council poll was held without any changes made to the 13th Amendment , the creation of another powerful Eelam cannot be prevented.


The minister also warned the main outcome of this election will be the creation of another era of unrest in the North, along with the inculcation of racial ideas in the minds of the general public. "This will also create a situation similar to the 1980s when the Sinhalese and Muslims will be forcefully removed from their habitats," he said.


The minister expressed his concerns over the powers that would be vested with the Northern Provincial Council and pointed out the excessive powers to the Northern PC will lead to exploitations. He also mentioned the powers to handle land and police will fall into the hands of the Northern Provincial Council. "If we are to protect the unity that our country gained with much difficulty, there are certain steps that needed to be taken," he said. He opined the 13th Amendment should be abolished, and if the majority in Parliament does not agree, then the government should either remove or modify the clauses that may lead to the formation of a possible second Tamil Eelam. "We are not satisfied with the response of the government with regard to the 13th Amendment, but let us believe the attitude of the government will change," he added.


Detailing on his party's May Day rally he said, this year they will be holding the May Day procession and rally independently, with the aim of motivating the working class to go against the formation of a second Tamil Eelam. The procession will commence at the Dematagoda St John's School playground and will end at the Maligawaththa P.D. Sirisena playground covering the distance of 3 km.
2013-04-24

Speaker switches off Parliament!

  • Heated arguments and confrontations between Government and Opposition legislators over electricity tariff hike force suspension of sittings for a day
By Ashwin Hemmathagama –April 24, 2013 
Our Lobby Correspondent

Heated arguments and confrontations between the Government and Opposition legislators yesterday on the increase in electricity tariffs forced Speaker of Parliament, Chamal Rajapaksa to adjourn the house till 1 p.m. today.
Speaker Rajapaksa presided over the first session of parliament since the Sinhala and Tamil New Year holidays at 1 p.m. yesterday, but the proceedings were marred by disturbances and uproar with lawmakers approaching the Table of Parliament where the Mace rests during a heated debate on a Government decision to raise electricity rates.
Following the presentation of papers and questions for oral answers, Chief Opposition Whip John Amaratunga raised his concerns on the recent increase in the electricity tariffs under Standing Order 23 (2) prompting Minister of Power and Energy Pavithradevi Wanniarachchi to respond.  
The Minister justified  the upward revision in tariffs to improve CEB's financial health whilst insisting 75% of the households arent seriously affected.
Opposition MPs jeered during the Minister's speech prompting the Leader of the House Nimal Siripala de Silva to request the Speaker to adjourn claiming that UNP was trying to disrupt the parliamentary session. Siripal said a debate on the issue can be scheduled at next party leaders meet.
UNP said Government members left the Chamber as Minister Wanniarachchi was speaking, with opposition having a greater number of MPs in their ranks at one point during the proceedings. 
UNP MP Dr. Harsha de Silva said that the business of Parliament is a serious matter. “The Speaker should have suspended sittings and convened party leaders to decide the next course of action instead of suspending parliament en bloc till 1 p.m. the next day,” he said.  
In his speech Opposition Whip Amaratunga slammed Ministers who only paid Rs.2000 for electricity in their official residences irrespective of usage.  
He charged that the tariff increase was an attempt by the Government to cover up its sins with regard to the complete mismanagement and corruption at the CEB. The Chief Opposition Whip said that the increase in electricity costs will impact every single economic activity in the country.
“The petrol that is pumped into our vehicles is not hand-pumped. The baker’s oven is electricity driven. The dentist no longer uses a foot pedal. To be economically viable they will all have to raise their rates adding to the spiralling cost of living. Soon it will be not electricity that the poor people will enjoy, but the heat of the electric chair,” he said in a hard hitting statement in the House. Amaratunge said that in some instances, the electricity tariff increase amounted to more than 70%.
He charged that the policy of the Government appeared to be to confine the poorest in the country to lives in darkness while allowing the rich to live in the lap of luxury.
“The poorest consumers living in small houses will have tariffs increased as high as 75%. The middle income consumers’ rates will be increased by 50% while the very rich who live in air-conditioned luxury houses will be forced to pay less than 25% increased rates,” Amaratunge charged.
“Why is the Minister not making statements, but rather depending on the Minister of Mass Media to make statements on her behalf? What does the Government propose to do to help the people who will suffer from this increase in electricity rates?” he demanded.
UNP MPs Dayasiri Jayasekera and Ajith Perera were most energetic during the commotion in the well of the house.
The UNP’s Parliamentary Group is expected to meet ahead of today’s session to decide on its next course of action.

WikiLeaks: Sinhalese Extremist Sihala Urumaya – A Small Party That Packs A Political Wallop

April 24, 2013 |


Colombo Telegraph“The Sihala Urumaya (SU) party is minuscule as an electoral force. The party packs a political wallop, however: its leadership is articulate and generates press coverage; its cadre are devoted to the party’s extremist views; and it maintains strong support in the influential Buddhist clergy. While unlikely to gain electoral power anytime soon, the SU — in a sign that Sinhalese extremism cannot be written off as a force — has shown the ability to get its anti-peace process message across and mold the public debate.” the US Embassy Colombo informed Washington.
Champika
The Colombo Telegraph found the related leaked cable from the WikiLeaks database. The cable discusses the rise of the Sihala Urumaya. The cable is classified as “CONFIDENTIAL” and written on November 20, 2003. The cable is signed by the US Ambassador to Colombo Jeffrey J. Lunstead.
The ambassador wrote; “Sri Lanka’s Sihala Urumaya (‘Sinhalese birthright’) party is minuscule as an electoral force, especially when compared with Sri Lanka’s big four parties (the United National Party ‘UNP’, the People’s Alliance ‘PA’, the Tamil National Alliance ‘TNA’, and the Janantha Vimukthi Peramuna ‘JVP’). The SU holds no seats in Parliament and in the last parliamentary elections in December 2001 it won only .56 percent of the total vote. The party also holds only a small smattering of seats in the country’s provincial and local councils. Moreover, the party’s membership base is quite limited, with an active cadre numbering in the hundreds and actual dues-paying party members numbering in the low thousands.”
Under the subheading “NOTEWORTHY POLITICAL INFLUENCE” the ambassador wrote; “While the party lacks electoral muscle, however, it does maintain a fair degree of political influence. One factor in its favor is that its major leaders, chief secretary Tilak Karunaratne and national organizer Champika Ranaweke, are young and articulate. They manage to generate a fair amount of press coverage for the party’s Sinhalese Buddhist extremist point of view through interviews in which they often make radical statements. Karunaratne stated to the press earlier this year, for example, that the SU was ready to train suicide bombers in order to defeat the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). While Karunaratne quickly backtracked on this statement, he netted a lot of publicity for his party in the process. To some extent, in showing the ability to get in the press, the party is benefiting from press outlets, such as the ISLAND and DIVAINA, English-and Sinhala-language dailies respectively, which routinely take an anti-peace process, pro-Sinhalese editorial slant. In the meantime, SU cadre are fanatically dedicated to the parties’ anti-peace process, anti-LTTE platform, and they consistently show up for its rallies (see below). At the same time, the party maintains a high degree of support within Sri Lanka’s influential Buddhist clergy. Commenting on the SU’s influence, Rohan Edirisinha, an analyst for the Center for Policy Alternatives (CPA), a local think-tank, told polchief on November 18 that the SU ‘while small, has shown the ability to nudge the political debate in its direction.’”
Placing a comment the ambassador wrote;  Despite its best efforts, the SU appears unlikely to gain mass support anytime soon. After 20 years of conflict, the Sri Lankan public strongly supports the peace process and is unlikely to turn to the often shrill SU. That said, the SU has shown the ability to mold the debate. In doing so, the SU could make things easier down the road for mass parties that are skeptical toward the peace process, such as the People’s Alliance, or out-and-out opposed, such as the radical JVP. Moreover, the fact that the SU is able to get its anti-peace process, anti-LTTE views across, tends to underscore the point that Sinhalese extremism cannot be written off entirely as a force in Sri Lanka.”
Read the cable below for further details;

Beyond collective egos: Our relational grounds of belonging and faith

Groundviews
-24 Apr, 2013
While racial hatred burns, with fires so ably lit by the ignorant on both sides of Palk Straits, there is another source of energy – hidden from view but none the less real – that burns deep inside.
For the Sinhala Buddhist today, regaining identity and faith is necessarily bound up with reclaiming a lost inheritance. This inheritance is our cultural relationship with India or Maha Bharata which shaped and moulded our broad sense of “Sinhalese-ness” and “Buddhist-ness” for 16 centuries through a line of 134 monarchs up to Vijayabahu I (1055-1110 AD).
But Vijayabahu liberated a dying state. His brilliant nephew Parakramabahu (1153-1186 AD) represented a glorious end to a glorious culture. More importantly for us – he also represented an abandoned and failed beginning of a new culture that might have been. The physical remains of this abandonment can be seen at the Demala Maha Seya in Polonnaruva and the Suthigara Chaitya in Dedigama – ambitious works that Parakramabahu commenced but could not complete. His vision of a strong centralized state and strong economy – modernized to move with changing times, was not shared or realized by any of the kings who succeeded him. Within 30 years of his death rajarata lay in ruins, destroyed by a usurper from Kalinga (modern day Orissa State in India) named Magha who ruled for 19 years from 1215 and brought a proud society to its knees. Lanka never recovered from the multiple losses that took place around this period. What were these great losses?
  1. Loss of the rajarata irrigation culture – and a way of life organized around tanks
  2. Loss of the function of Abhayagiri Viharaya which connected local Buddhists with India and other progressive minded Buddhist centres around Asia
  3. Loss of the Order of Buddhist Nuns, loss of the meditation tradition and critical tradition in Buddhism
  4. Loss of social cohesion reflected in
    • the weakening of village democracies especially in the south after the three devastating campaigns of Parakramabahu. This turned the island into an authoritarian, top down system with weak communities, competing regional systems and a central government that from British times derived legitimacy through force and not consent; and
    • a growing alienation between a cosmopolitan elite and common people; as Martin Wickramasinghe said ‘from about the 12th century our rulers and the educated urban minority lost their cultural independence and became imitators of Sanskrit culture.’
  5. Loss of depth in culture accompanied by the loss of the Buddhist critical tradition and independence of thought which led to a slavish culture of imitation of foreigners from the Portugese to the British and beyond. This inability to separate form from substance meant that no effective cross cultural exchange or learning would take place except at the most superficial level. In modern times the idea of human rights has received the same superficial treatment in Sri Lanka.
  6. Gradual loss of economic sovereignty and with it political autonomy to manage our own affairs without external interference
In this way a cycle that originated with the brutal Kalinga campaign of Emperor Asoka ended with a royal connection with the same land fostered by the House of Vijayabahu in Polonnaruva – bringing home to the Lankans the Buddha’s teaching on impermanence. The principal challenge that faced them at the spiritual level was to let go of the past and begin afresh.
As the Wikipedia write up on Kalinga Magha comments:
“The bitter memory of Magha’s invasion also tainted the previously close relationship between the Sinhalese and the Chola, Chera and Pandya inhabitants of southern India. Whereas the great families of Rajarata had invariably been polity-spanning clans, with extensive intermarriage between Indian and Sri Lankan branches, the royal families of the Middle Ages became more distinctive and recognisably Sinhalese in the modern sense of the word. This is not to say however that south Indian influence in Sri Lankan politics ended altogether – witness the Nayakkar dynasty ofKandy. However the age of the great, Indo-Lankan clans like the Moriya and Lambakanna was over.
Native authority over Sri Lanka, already in decline before Magha’s invasion, never fully recovered from the invasion; the next three centuries were marked by near-anarchy. This period of Sri Lanka’s history ended only with the arrival of a foe that would eventually subsume both the great empires of south India and the kingdoms of Sri Lanka under its authority – the forces of colonial Europe.”
Geographically an island, culturally we shared a larger space and a deep underlying unity with India in the growth period of Sinhalese culture in the Anuradhapura and Polonnaruva Kingdoms. But traumatized and shaken by the terror of Magha a new breed of Sinhalese who re-grouped in Dambadeniya set their faces against this cultural relationship. As the centuries wore on the old sense of respect, connection and solidarity became more and more distant and the centre of Sinhalese culture moved from East to West – or remained suspended without finding a home in either.
The cultural shift from cooperative to adversarial religion became a prominent feature of the relations with the westerner starting with the Portugese. Race, religion and caste became more and more rigid and inflexible categories – a process that reached its zenith in the Kandyan Highlands where the Sinhalese would stage their last stand in defence of their ancient culture and civilization.
Modern monument to the 16th century defeat of Portugese at Mulleriya Wela] From Dambadeniya to Colombo military victories did not necessarily lead to peace.
PortugeseThe shift of our cultural centre from East towards the West commenced long years ago within theSangha itself. In the First Century BC the Buddha’s path of freedom was converted to a religion of the book with the codification of the pali canon. This was accompanied by an election upon a great debate between meditating rag robe wearers (pamsukulikas) and preaching village monks (dhammakathikas) won by the latter that learning and not practice is the essential foundation of the Sasana in Lanka. With this great deviation from the word of the Buddha the Dhamma andSangha became the preserve of scholars and priests rather than the living example and striving of practitioners and wandering mendicant monks.
Buddha located the sangha (note – in lower case) outside society and established small groups of monks who would share close personal relations and perform their bi-weekly uposatha ceremony reciting the code of discipline within their common sima. Most importantly these monks would be a ‘state within’ who would not share any racial or caste identities with their lay supporters. The Sinhalese located the Sangha within society with a great measure of economic security. They would follow the secular state in creating a hierarchical organization. Has the bi-weekly uposatha observance – the cardinal tenet in vinaya (also referred to as vinaya pohoya karma), disappeared from monastic practice in Sri Lanka? This is an inquiry that must penetrate the smoke screen set up with the popular slogan ‘piliwethin pelagesemu’.
Historically the Buddhist priests became fully integrated monastic landlords at the hierarchical apex of a feudal caste based society. They would thus exercise power and influence and enjoy wealth behind a spiritual facade like any conventional western Christian Church.
The Buddhist ego that emerged from the encounter with western colonialism was based on such an external and worldly foundation. When Anagarika Dharmapala began his fearless crusade to revive Buddhism in Lanka in the 19th century and also moved to regain Buddhagaya for the Buddhists this same separate ego became a point of discord and division with ‘Hindu’ India.
Thus Jinarajadasa – one of the early Lankan Theosophists who remained true to its eclectic spirit said:
“Speaking frankly to the young generation, who are doing much work today, I would like to mention one profound cause for my dissatisfaction when I tried to do something for Buddhism and for Ceylon. It is the complete mental separation which exists between Ceylon and the great tradition of India. Anyone who has had even a glimpse into Hindu traditions knows at once that all that is of real significance in Sinhalese civilization is closely linked to Hindu civilization, if not fully derived from it … All those who consider themselves intelligent Buddhists – particularly the leading priests – never seemed to realize that it was scarcely possible to understand any Buddhist philosophical term without a thorough knowledge of the Hindu philosophies of the time of the Lord Buddha.”
Similar ideas were expressed by Ananda Coomaraswamy. But the vast majority of Sinhala Buddhists remained indifferent to this ‘great tradition’ of India.
And in an interview with Anagarika Dharmapala reproduced in the 1892 Journal of the Maha Bodhi Society the Thai Prince Dhamrong cautioned him in the following terms:
“Mr. Dharmapala,” the Prince said, “Buddhism is not brick and mortar; you may spend a lac of rupees in buying up the sacred temple, but before you do that, you ought to prepare the way for the dissemination of the moral truths of Buddhism. Later on, you may direct your attention to the Temple…By all means carry on your good work, and try to work in harmony with the Hindus. Concentrate your efforts on the diffusion of knowledge, for that constitutes Buddhism. The British government is taking care of the temple, and it could not be in better hands. I have watched with interest your movement and no better work could be done. I saw the High Priest Sumangala in Ceylon, and I may say that I have hardly met so good a priest.”  [Emphasis added]
Thus today Sri Lanka remains fundamentally alienated from her Indian roots – unable to achieve harmony with the source energies of spirituality that sprang from its fertile soil. Our fingers grasp greedily for Indian rupees, blind to the face and significance of Gandhi that adorn them.
Gandhi came closer to Buddha’s message of peace and compassion than any Sinhala Buddhist has in centuries. Other Asians who trod his path – Dalai Lama of Tibet, Aung San Sukyi of Burma and Thich Nhat Hanh of Vietnam have raised a standard that infused politics and social work with sanity and intelligence in an age of great arrogance, insanity and greed for power and money. An American preacher called Martin Luther King and the South African Nelson Mandela were all inspired by Gandhi’s creed of non violence. 
Indian rupee notes adorned by a single human face symbolizing the spiritual inheritance of India
INRIn other words his message has now transcended the narrow confines of race, religion and country. To the ordinary Sri Lankan trapped by these divisions these ‘international icons’ may seem very distant ideals.
In fact they are not. The only reserve these non violent leaders tapped was the depth of their own humanity. Our transition from childhood to adulthood can mark us with permanent scars when experience deprives us of our innocence. This happens to all of us and we become reckless and cynical and short sighted and forsake happiness in our search for happiness. History can help us understand how ideas were shaped by circumstances and how those ideas went on to shape people – how they identified themselves and related to others. These are all shifting sands that we must negotiate with skill if past mistakes are not to be repeated.
Tamils in Sri Lanka committed moral suicide when they embraced racism. The Sinhalese followed suit. Two deaths don’t add up to a victory for anyone. We await the re-birth of innocence and gentleness that helps us to re-connect and appreciate each other socially and culturally. Unknown to many of us our political perspectives are shaped by two great men who strode the world stage in the 20th century – Gandhi and Churchill. The latter was a humanist who rejected religion and he found it impossible to relate to or have sympathy with the quaint Indian naked fakir. But at the end of his life when Gandhi was no more he uttered his greatest insight into their relationship (as narrated by Arthur Herman)
“When I was subaltern the Indian did not seem to me equal to the white man,” Churchill recalled in 1952. It was an attitude that, he had belatedly come to realize, had hurt the Raj.
Then he said something unlike anything he had ever said about India: “if we had made friends with them and taken them into our lives instead of restricting our intercourse to the political field, things might have been very different.” That regretful musing was a final landmark on a long journey. The opening that Gandhi had wanted had finally appeared – but too late for either of them.
The same lesson that Prabhakaran learned – that military power confers only a temporary and limited advantage against a bigger adversary must now be learned by Sri Lanka as well. True safety and prosperity lies in a genuine friendship of respect and mutual appreciation with our neighbour. This warmth must be shared between peoples of both countries both rich and poor. Where this foundation is absent neither clever politics nor clever diplomacy will be of any avail.
There is no permanent ‘Sinhala’ or ‘Buddhist’ identity to be found, whether we look at the past or present – and there will not be such an identity in future. The attributes and qualities of identity have always been defined relationally and contextually. The original and most powerful relationship was with ‘India’ – and this influenced the Sinhala and Buddhist identities both positively and negatively. With the arrival of ‘Europeans’ we found the same mixed bag, subject however to the condition that by the ‘Kandyan Period’ the negatives outweighed the positives. The most recent interaction of the state has been with insurgency and terrorism and we should not be surprised to see the fallout of these interactions on human relations and human identity. Again, while Buddhist revivalism in the 19th century followed a Christian protestant format with a controlled adversarial spirit the post war Buddhist activism of BBS seems to be taking the intolerant Islamic model of Arabian countries as its guiding model. Taking on the fundamental attributes of those whom we hate, resist and oppose seems to be the fate of all oppositional warriors in the end….
For the ‘Sinhalese’, ‘Tamils’ and ‘Muslims’ for whom identity still remains a matter of importance in negotiating a sense of meaning the challenge is to realize there is only sharing, rather than separate existences – with sharing negatives or positives being the sole choice.
To sum up we can unite with the other in conflict and share our negatives. Or we can unite in peace and share our positives. Like an onion, identity goes on an on, with an “I” in the middle – but that I is empty and contains nothing. Ultimately there are no countries or nations either – just dominant ideas and influences that keep changing from time to time. This is my understanding of the truth of anatta. Not knowing this we take what is transient as permanent; and what is suffering as happiness. In the name of patriotism and religion, all that we are celebrating is naked egoism. The whole world can see this even as the ego deceives us – as it is wont to do, that we are basically ok.
As we all stagnate (together) in this quagmire of our own making, Buddha (the pure and awakened mind) is waiting… and of course we must pull ourselves out. There will be no divine intervention.
Dalada Gold Buddha statue gifted as B’day present to Namal- is this hora lawyer that worth and Lord Buddha that cheap?


http://www.lankaenews.com/English/images/logo.jpg(Lanka-e-News -23.April.2013, 10.30PM) A Buddha statue made of gold that was gifted to the Dalada Maligawa had been given as a birthday present on the sly by the Nilanga Dela Bandara, the Basnayake Nilame of the Maligawa to synthetic lawyer Namal Rajapakse, according to reports reaching Lanka e news.

It was Thailand that had gifted this gold Buddha statue to Dalada Maligawa. When this hora (synthetic) lawyer Namal visited the Dalada Maligawa on his birthday to pay homage to the tooth relic , the Basnayake Nilame had ‘sold’his soul and that of Lord Buddha by gifting this statue by hora means not in the interest of religion or country , rather to score plus points selfishly and ingratiate himself with the Rajapakses who are to him more important than his religion, Dalada Maligawa and Lord Buddha.

Nowhere in history is there any mention since the day , that is 1712 years ago when Prince Dantha and princess Hemamali brought and gave the tooth relic to King Megawarna , that any of the sacred precious assets which were in the Dalada Maligawa had been given as gifts to riff raffs like this hora lawyer on his birthday as a birthday present or to any other even of noble birth. It is well to recall that it was this same corrupt Basnayake nilame Nilanga Dela Bandara, now selling his soul and office of honor who also used the gold that was gifted to the Dalada Maligawa by devotees to convert his honeymoon vehicle nickel buffers and beadings into gold. Though Lanka e news exposed these irreligious cravings and anti Buddhism gold mania of this corrupt Nilame with photographs , intriguingly not one Buddhist prelate took any action against it until today.

In order to suppress these corrupt and irreligious activities , from the media , this Basnayake nilame had fed the Kandy media personnel belly full and supplied enough drinks to them . In addition, last new year he had also given bribes of Rs. 5000/- to each media personnel, it is learnt. Lanka e news is also in receipt of reports that this corrupt self seeking scoundrel of a Basnayake Nilame Nilanga Dela had invested the Dalada maligawa sacred funds and assets in businesses . Await more succulent news in detail of the sordid and unscrupulous activities of Dalada Maligawa Nilame.