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

Thursday, May 24, 2018

Towards The “Jana” & Away From The “Janaya”

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Uditha Devapriya
When Jothipala died somewhere in 1987, people wept. His funeral, like the funeral of Rukmani Devi years earlier, was attended by thousands of fans, who braved the soon-to-erupt JVP-UNP bheeshanaya. If we are to assess the worth of a singer on the basis of how prabuddha (highbrow) he is, then there’s nothing to help us rationalise why so many could weep at this particular singer’s funeral. And yet, many did weep. So many, in fact, that after the funeral no less a person than Sarath Amunugama wrote an article on what he termed as the “janapriya sanskruthiya”, where he implied that Jothipala, despite his pandering to populist sentiments, had emerged as a singer of the nation. Having read this essay, Nalin de Silva, by his own admission an admirer of the “prabuddha sanksruthiya” back then, wrote a reply demeaning Amunugama’s stance and explicitly batting for the culture that was opposed to these populist sentiments. Decades later, having repented and turned around as the face of the Jathika Chinthanaya, de Silva eschewed his fascination with the highbrow culture and penned the following: “When Jothipala died, thousands of fans flocked to Kanatte and no ‘prabhuddha’ artiste had ever been respected by so many people at his/her funeral.” It took no less a figure than Amaradeva, the de facto symbol of that prabuddha sensibility here, to compel the same outflow of grief at his passing away.
Clement Greenberg’s analysis of art and non art doesn’t hold much water in Sri Lanka because, as with all colonial societies, we never made the transition from art to kitsch through an intermediate stage; we just transited from the one to the other. As such, instead of art and kitsch, we have what we can broadly term as “jana” on the one hand and “janapriya” on the other. Both these cultural sensibilities, as I wrote last week, neglected the folk culture, the culture regenerated by the efforts of Lionel and Sahan Ranwala as well as the likes of Piyasiri Wijeratne and Rohana Baddage. Rationalising this split requires an explication of how, and why, jana and janapriya remain wedded to each other, as strands of one holistic sensibility, and how and why the folk culture, when it evolved into the formal culture, had to waste away half its essence to the dust in a bid to appeal to mass or elite audiences. Was it because of the fact, which holds valid in virtually every society, that once you attempt to preserve folk art forms through a process of refinement, you inevitably contort those same art forms? And if so, does that explain why Jothipala and Amaradeva occupy the same pedestal, though from opposite ends?
The art forms which evolved after 1956 was smeared, necessarily, by the three art movements the Western world brought out in the 20th century: realism and naturalism, modernism, and postmodernism. The novels of Martin Wickramasinghe, the songs of Amaradeva, and the films of Lester James Peries belong squarely to the first and second of these movements. Out of these pioneers only Martin Wickramasinghe tried to go beyond their confines and parameters, and while Bawatharanaya (his last) is considered a lesser work, as a blatant act of depicting the Buddha the same way Nikos Kazantzakis depicted Christ (The Last Temptation was published around the time Wickramasinghe was writing Viragaya), it nevertheless attempted to go beyond the limits of modernism. Inasmuch as these artistes discovered a way through which the folk culture could be communicated to lay audiences, they ended up forming a substantial fan base among the milieu aspiring to become a petty bourgeoisie: as a result of free education and the social mobility it enabled among this milieu, the patrons of the Amaradevas and the Perieses and the Chitrasenas came from a bilingual, half-sophisticated crowd. Preservation of the folk culture, at the hands of this crowd, required Westernisation and Sanskritisation.
In postcolonial societies, particularly one with a dispossessed peasantry on the one hand and an uprooted, apathetic landowning bourgeoisie on the other, it was left largely to the petty bourgeoisie to act as intermediaries between the two. They were more or less cultural ambassadors, who intended to transform if not transubstantiate the art forms they had grown up with in the same villages they left later on, as with the Kaisaruvattes from the Koggala trilogy. This was true of societies in which industrialisation had not already enabled a sizeable population to leave those villages: in other words, the society we had, and the society Britain, France, and Germany (where the abstract concepts of autonomy and sovereignty, as well as the people’s will, came to be respected through the wave of literacy enabled by the Industrial Revolution) did not have. Sri Lanka in that sense lagged behind: we didn’t have a proper industrial revolution of our own, only a half-baked, neither-here-nor-there society of imperialists and their lackeys versus their countrymen. 
In the early days, it was the offspring of these lackeys who idealised the folk culture, the peasantry, and tried their hand at preserving folk art forms no matter how imperfect their attempts were. Devar Surya Sena, formerly Herbert Charles Jacob Peiris, son of Sir James Peiris (the first non-European to be appointed President of the Cambridge Union), was the first of these offspring. They came from the Anglican elite, and in their efforts at spawning a national consciousness, they found a meaning for their own uprooted lives.
The generation of Amaradeva and Chitrasena came from a more intermediate social milieu, which belonged at once to both the formal and the folk and yet was at home with neither. They were affluent, but not affluent enough to rake up the sort of leisure and privilege essential for the formation of a refined cultural sensibility. The groundwork laid down by the likes of Sena proved to be crucial to them, and what they had discovered, the petty bourgeoisie added to. But what Sena and Rajapakse lacked, as their recordings of songs we mistakenly allude to as Sinhalese and Buddhist today (“Danno Budunge”) indicate, was the requisite Sinhala-ness to strike a chord with popular audiences. The petty bourgeoisie, at once linked to and disdainful of the peasantry, found their icons with a set of artists who could leap over this limitation. They could not go back to the village, nor could they completely turn away from it. This at times contradictory streak is what makes up much of our cultural revolution, from the forties and fifties onwards.
Free education liberated the masses from the necessity of a bilingual education. Until then, bilingualism remained a definitive mark of the petty bourgeoisie and the rural bourgeoisie, who sent their children to English speaking schools. Sinhala Only sought to do away with English altogether, and what resulted was a whole generation of audiences who were, proverbially speaking, never rooted in anything substantive. Once a cultural sphere evolves to this sort of audience, the artists tend to make a distinction between the folk and the formal while attempting to assimilate the former into the latter. Towards the end of the sixties, with the appointment of C. de S. Kulatilake as the head of the Folk Music Research Unit at Radio Ceylon, this process of assimilation began. It was through the attempts of Kulatilake that the likes of T. M. Jayaratne and Neela Wickramasinghe (who were tasked with singing and refining that quaint Sinhala ballad, “Badde Watata”, as part of their first assignment) emerged. These performers, who came after Amaradeva and Khemadasa had unleashed their musical revolutions (sourcing them to India and West, respectively), inadvertently brought about the fusion of one culture with the other.

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Politicking rain and thunder

  • Floods, landslides should not be publicity stunts for Governments

  • People need to come out of this regular tragedy, without allowing Governments and politicians to play around with human life.

Thus far, according to the Meteorology Department, 18 out of the 25 Districts of the country were badly affected by the rains.  



2018-05-25
The NBRO said nine Districts had extended warnings of landslides and warning on floods in areas downstream Kelani, Kalu, Gin, Nilwala, and Mahaweli Rivers and also Maha and Attanagalu Oya.  
People in those areas have been asked to evacuate at the time of writing this ‘brief’ on Wednesday (23 May) evening.  
At least 11 people have lost their lives, while over 105,300 people have been affected in 18 Districts. Perhaps the numbers would increase during the next 24 hours, but the situation may subside by the time this appears on Friday and there will be wrapping up work left for politicians to gain some media coverage. 
The easiest and most convenient statement for the Government is to dismiss all such disasters as “natural”.  
President Sirisena was reported as saying, rains were needed as seasonal cultivation was badly affected from long drought in most agricultural areas, but it so happens, heavy rains bring disaster too for people. 
Uncontrollable rains across the country lead to ‘landslides and floods’ is what we are therefore made to believe and continue to believe.  
This Government, no different to the past Government sits comfortably on such social perceptions that instantly jerk society to rush with food, clothing and support for evacuation.  
As with any issue that demands immediate State intervention, the President made a public announcement, that he had ordered authorities to take immediate steps to provide necessary relief to the flood-affected.  
  • Can all these disasters that took the life during four years after Meeriyabedda, be simply ruled as “natural”?

  • Should they be allowed to go with an inefficient State administration that cannot deliver emergency relief?   

  • Landslides and floods experienced in the past few years were not natural, as they carried with them the ferocity of all the blunders and neglect in governance 

The Prime Minister too got his Ministers to move quickly on relief work. People are expected to believe they are busy getting everything in order.
Some electronic media crudely exploit this emotional jerk in society to project themselves as saviours of the affected poor at the expense of charitable souls.  
There are also CSR projects launched by the Corporate Sector, again at the expense of emotional people. Are these disasters ‘that natural’ to go with such hyped drama almost every year?  
With every such disaster, relevant State organisations keep issuing “warnings” to people. No doubt they are necessary and should come as well disseminated “early enough warnings”. What nevertheless needs to be asked is how valid are these “early warnings” issued by the NBRO and the DMC in a context of regular disasters?  

"This major disaster is due to unplanned exploitation of land and natural resources over many decades under every government that totally neglected environmental factors and safety of life in lieu of economic advantage"


Their relevance and validity were no different from now when the major landslide that washed off 150 houses and left a conflicting number of deaths and missing, on October 29, 2014, in Koslanda, Meeriyabedda.  
The NBRO claimed it issued an early warning the previous day, but the DMC had failed to deliver it to authorities in Badulla. The Disaster Management Center (DMC) denied it saying the people had no time to leave.  
Responding to that, the then Minister of Disaster Management, who is presently the Minister of Agriculture told media, people were warned to leave the place twice due to landslide risks; once in 2005 and again in 2012. Close to two years after the Meeriyabedda disaster and exactly two years ago in May 2016 cames the Aranayake disaster that accounted for 127 deaths. 
Again, there were early warnings, but not for Aranayake in Kegalle District. It was said, Colombo, Gampaha and Puttalam were worst affected from floods, while Ratnapura and Kegalle were affected by landslides.  
Thereafter the collapse of the Meethotamulla garbage mountain after heavy rains in April 2017, was followed by heavy floods in Colombo and Gampaha in May 2017.  
These areas that went under six feet of water are called “low lying” and hence accepted as prone to flooding.  
Can all these massive disasters that took life in hundreds and left thousands of people destitute during four years after Meeriyabedda, be simply ruled as “natural”? 

"These people who were seriously affected were all plantation sector workers and poor rural people, whose economic and social life is tied to areas where they live and have been living for many generations"

Should they be allowed to go with an inefficient State administration that cannot deliver emergency relief that is prompt and quick enough and compensation thereafter for rebuilding the life that gets entrenched in political rhetoric? 
Should they be left aside after compensation that came belatedly, without due research into possible future disasters and answers to minimise damage to life and property?
After the Meeriyabedda and then Aranayake disasters, the FTZ and General Services Employees’ Union made a public statement that said, there was no rational and no permanent answer in asking the people to evacuate with every landslide warning.  
They said these people who were seriously affected were all plantation sector workers and poor rural people, whose economic and social life was tied to areas where they lived and have been living for many generations. Made to carry a heavily burdened life, these people cannot be asked to move out on their own, the FTZ union said.  
“They have to be supported in housing, their children need schools and health facilities as basic needs, said the FTZ union stressing and emphasising there has to be serious planning by the Government and State agencies to relocate all people who are recognised as living in disaster-prone areas before another landslide leaves people dead and desolate.  
Another collective of social interest activists initiated by me as “DecentLanka2015” also made a public appeal on 22 May 2016, echoing similar sentiments. 
This statement very clearly said landslides and floods experienced in the past few years were not natural, as they carried with them the ferocity of all the blunders and neglect in governance over decades.
“This major disaster is due to unplanned exploitation of land and natural resources over many decades under every Government that totally neglected environmental factors and safety of life in lieu of economic advantage,” it said in bold letters.  
After that very strong and serious statement in May 2016, to have two disasters in April and May 2017, followed by another exactly two years later in this month, proves how insensitive and irresponsible the State and the political establishment are, in planning and implementing solutions to issues that are all about life and death of people.  
Thus, it is now important to reproduce relevant parts of that statement. 
“Once again, no different to all previous Governments, this Government and the authorities want people to be ‘more vigilant’ over possible disasters, leaving all these tragedies as wholly ‘natural’. No responsibility is thus taken for the safe and secure living of people living in threatened areas.
“This is not what is expected from a responsible Government. Every single citizen (including those whose lives are devastated) is being taxed direct and indirect for work the Government has to plan and implement for the benefit of the people. The National Building and Research Organisation (NBRO), the Disaster Management Centre (DMC) and other line agencies are paid by people’s tax money for their work. All the monies spent on collecting data and mapping of “dangerous zones” are meant to be used for the benefit of the people and not for mere “early warnings” on landslides……
“We are very firm that the Government should stop playing with innocent lives.  ...It is the responsibility of the Government to provide these people with decent locations out of danger and with adequate opportunities for livelihood. That’s what the NBRO maps should be for.”
What is more important, are the demands listed in this statement that go parallel to what the FTZ union too wanted the Government to immediately implement, but have not been even looked at. They are:-


1. Immediately appoint a high powered committee of professionals with social acceptance specialised in geology, water management, environment, etc. to study and furnish recommendations for sustainable solutions within 06 months  
2. Committee recommendations to be used through a consultative process in drawing up a holistic relocation programme for all people identified as living in “danger zones” prone to landslides.  
3. The Megapolis Programme to be redesigned to include flood prevention plans for Colombo and Gampaha Districts that would serve people’s needs and provides safe alternatives to those living along the Kelani River.  
4. Announce details of all local and foreign aid and donations received exclusively for flood and landslide relief work and how much compensation was given out in each Divisional Secretarial area.  

"Should they be allowed to go with an inefficient State administration that cannot deliver emergency relief that is prompt and quick enough and compensation thereafter for rebuilding life that gets entrenched in political rhetoric?"

This was what went missing after the 2004 December Tsunami, during the first year when Sri Lanka was inundated with foreign donor funds, expertise and volunteers that sucked up all local initiatives.  
There were no holistic planning and no detailed accounting of what came and what went where. It has always been the case with every local disaster.  
It is time, therefore, to demand serious and holistic planning with public consultations to make Central, Sabaragamuwa and Uva Provinces environmentally safe and human life secure in those provinces, for it is their disasters that get washed downstream regularly and drag the whole country into heavy annual floods and into long periods of drought.  
We as people need to come out of this regular tragedy, without allowing Governments and politicians to play around with human life. 

Nebulous in Never-Never Land



logoFriday, 25 May 2018

A wag said on social media recently that the inhabitants of our Blessed Isle must have liked the royal wedding so much that the good lord gave them a double dose of British weather. He didn’t put it quite so well, o ye gods above. And the trolls who inhabit Facebook below gave him a full blast of the double barrelled sanctimoniousness that passes for a conscience on antisocial media.

Be that as it may, our blasphemous commentator made a jolly good observation. It’s raining, men. And his critical interlocutor made some equally. Only the powers that be remain as blasé to the plight of the inundated as much as they seem more than capable of turning a blind eye to the flood of transitional justice.

May is the cruellest month. Breeding lotuses out of the dead land, mixing presidential memory with premier desire, stirring dull rooters for a former strongman bureaucrat with borrowed plans, covering a fed up citizenry in forgetful bull-dust, feeding a little life to hungry egos grabbing at straws.

Strongman surprised us, coming over like that with a seemingly brilliant plan like a shower of rain. But it’s raining men already, Mr. Ex Secretary, in case you hadn’t noticed. And by the way, as that indefatigable defender of the family’s senior branch of the faith would say, you’ve forgotten such trivialities as poverty reduction, inequality, social justice, social upliftment, peasantry and landlessness. True, he’s majored on law and order – but the iron fist in an iron glove is a thing of the past, isn’t it.

Alles klar?

If all or some of the above is as clear as mud – well, that’s the point or part of it that I’m trying to make in my normally dense manner compounded by this deluge. Things are nebulous (clear as mud) in nephelokokkygia (cloud cuckoo land)!

In words of one syllable:

nIt rains in May. It always rains in May. It rained last year. It rained the year before that. It will rain in May next year too. In terms of plain speak, the rain stays mainly in the month of May.

nBut folks still die. And get washed out of house and home. Big guns have plans. All are the same. Or so they say. But small folks still drown in the flood.

nSeems the state has lost the plot. Peace that was fair to all was once the plan. But no more. For now is not the best time. Or so they say. There will come a time once more to talk of mice and men. Till then we’ll muddle through with talk of this and that and how all have the same plan but ours is better coz we said it first and he’s out of the scene. A has-been. And there is still a charge-sheet to be brought to book him. So let’s bide our time until our lords make up their minds if they’re going to bag him or not or what…

(OK, I cheated a bit. But so have Govt. and Gota to boot…)

Nicht war?

Let me try that once again. To gain the middle ground between those who speak English and those who feel words of one syllable make it cleaner/clearer, smarter/sharper, lighter and more lucid, etc. That so many stranded members of the citizenry are striving to do the same – get to safe high ground – is neither here nor there. At least to some imperious folks among the powers that be who wave their hands as if they were magic wands and expect Kalutara District to be as dry as Kansas before Dorothy got caught up in the tornado.

On the one hand, a former power in the land is rattling sabre like he and his brood of brothers are famous for doing when under threat. He had the name, game-changing plan once upon a time, and the personal will to make it stick. The problem is he walks softly now but carries a big stick. The rule of law and order under his mantle will be more like the rule of law by order but much more about orders than lawabidingness. Yes, I guess by what happened in the past. Present concerns about the state of the nation militate no less to him than the political powers he served just because he won the war but big bro lost the peace – together with, it seemed at the time, his marbles.

On the other, the present lot in power are being shaken like rats in a cage because they didn’t go the full monty in dealing with that infamous band for whatever reason. They had time, opportunity, motive and perhaps most importantly the goodwill of the people behind as well as the full force of the law before them.

The problem is that while in marriage the two become one, in a political marriage too it is unclear which one they are becoming. A rift in the lute put paid to both the reforms agenda and the transitional justice vehicle is kota uda for the moment until the divinities that drive our destiny think they can discern a chink in the armour of the juggernaut we call the Rajapaksa Regime – a ghost of which still haunts town hall and marketplace as much as the public imagination in May.

Be the month of pluvial vicissitudes and pyrrhic victories as it is, it looks as if government is bogged down in the mud of its own pragmatic making or the mire of realpolitik. This sucks balls for a citizenry trapped between a raging war hero and democratic-republican stalwarts who have lost their testicular fortitude and got the cringing taxpayer to fork out for the privilege of constitutional castration followed by transitional trauma.

Ah, ja! ja! bitte – danke

So we’re cold, wet and once again drowning in May. To be fair, as has been observed in the alternate reality that is social media, things are not as bad as they were last year. To be true, this is about the best to be said for the future of our blessed isle under the present dispensation. But “not as bad as it could be” is hardly the lifeboat we expected, is it. And there’s apparently rescue on the way – except that it’s a U-boat with a hold full of torpedoes bought on the never-never together with those MiGs…

There is a saying in a guttural language that captures the climate contrarily. “Mann kann sich nie auf das wetter verlasseen…” – one can never be sure when it will rain, loosely translated. Ah, ja! ja! but one can, nicht war? And it doesn’t take a German rocket scientist or Sri Lankan meteorologist to tell us that if we don’t mind the issue that matter over our own political survival, it’s going to be war-war not jaw-jaw once again.

(Journalist | Editor-at-large of LMD | Writer #SpeakingTruthToPower)

More than 124,000 people affected by adverse weather - DMC

More than 124,000 people affected by adverse weather - DMC


logoBy Yusuf Ariff-May 24, 2018 

The Disaster Management Center (DMC) says that a total of 124,733 persons belonging to 31,822 families have been affected by the prevailing adverse weather condition in the country so far.

It said that 137 divisional secretariat divisions in 19 districts have been affected by the floods and landslides triggered by Southwestern Monsoon rains.

Meanwhile the death toll due to the disaster situation has risen to 12, according to the latest update.
Reports said that 56,472 persons belonging to 14,500 families are presently sheltered in 246 temporary camps and safe locations.

At least 43 houses have been completely damages by the inclement weather while 3,172 houses have been partially damaged. A total of 751 cases of property damage have also been reported so far.

The Irrigation Department says that the water level of the Kelani River is returning to normal, however the area near Nagalaganweediya is still at risk of flooding.

Sluice gates have been opened at the Kukule Ganga Dam (01), Udawalawe Reservoir (01), Lakshapana Reservoir (01), Deduru Oya (02), Rajanganaya Reservoir (02) and Tabbowa Tank (06).

Waxing eloquent will not help disaster victims

Do we have a long-term plan to face the situation with lasting solutions? At least do we have proper short-term disaster preparedness?

On Tuesday, around noon, on the bank of the Kelani River at Kohilawatte, about a hundred people had thronged to see the rising river.  


2018-05-25
The river had swollen up to the level of the Colombo Ambatale Road. A thin layer of water was slowly overflowing under their feet towards their houses, on which side the overflowed water had made a small stream.  
Having experienced a huge flood two years ago, which had devastated their lives and from which some of them had not recovered yet, fear, frustration and disappointment had drawn on their faces.  
Will it be a perilous flood as the one that had inundated the entire lower Kelani valley area in May 2016, leaving tens of thousands of people in the area between Avissawella and Thotalanga destitute for months?  
While uncertainty was killing, people were translating their hopes and prayers into positive predictions. 
There was no reason or knowledge on meteorology and irrigation involved in their predictions, but only their fervent hope and prayer was the only rationale behind their words. They were innocently attempting to deceive each other saying “It won’t be a flood of the magnitude of the last one.”  
With one group replacing another, the men, women and children belonging to various communities including Abaya clad Muslim women were visiting the river on foot, cars, bicycles and motorcycles.  

"No solution for the problem of landslides and floods is at least thought of, except for the authorities waxing eloquent"


With the river swelling further, the crowds too swelled by the evening. Now, pessimism slowly creeping into their predictions replacing their fragile optimism, while some were still firm that it would not be a major flood.  
Among the pessimists were the sadists and supporters of the Opposition political parties, who were ludicrously seen praying for the river water to gush through their own houses, so that they can humiliate their neighbours who are still supporting the ruling parties.  
Inside the villages of Kohilawatte, Brandiyawatte, Wennawatte and Sedawatte, people in single-storey houses were carrying their valuables to the two storeyed and three storeyed houses belonging to their relatives and friends.  
Those who had no such relatives sat devastated in their houses. By the experience, they had two years ago they knew that everything that can be termed as their wealth would be gone in case of a major flood.  
Those living in storeyed houses have started to empty the ground floor while travelling to the river bank now and then to gauge as to how much their preparedness corresponded with the water level in the river. 

  • Will it be a perilous flood as the one that had inundated the entire lower Kelani valley area in 2016

  • Through experience, they knew that everything that can be termed as their wealth would be gone   

  • No solution for the problem of landslides and floods is at least thought of, except for the authorities waxing eloquent


Some residents started to leave the area to safer areas, leaving their abode and the valuables to the mercy of those deities they believed in.  
This was the modal of the agony people were undergoing with the announcement by the Meteorological Department on a possible flood. 
One has to imagine the real situation in areas on the banks of the Kelani Ganga, Kalu Ganga, Nilwala Ganga and other rivers that had already been marooned in flood waters.   
The anguish in landslide-prone areas is worse, as nature would not provide such a grace period for them to move away from the danger. They would have to pay the price for their indifference, delay or helplessness with their lives.  
This has been the norm of the people living in river valleys and steep slopes. Pathetically and ridiculously only thing the Sri Lankan Governments do and apparently know in such situations is to tell the people to evacuate the hazardous areas and toss off a small number of relief items to the victims after the disaster struck them. 
In the meantime, the Opposition parties would look for holes in those relief activities, not out of the love for the people but to take political mileage out of the real and perceived indifference, shortcomings, blunders and lethargy in the government machinery in rescue and relief measures.  
This time also the Joint Opposition demanded a Parliamentary debate on floods, interestingly while the water level was still rising in several rivers. 
Going by the previous experience, people know that the Government would let them down in case of disasters. 

"Sadists and supporters of the Opposition political parties, who were ludicrously seen praying for the river water to gush through their own houses, so that they could humiliate their neighbours who were still supporting the ruling parties "



During the major flood in 2016 in the Kelani Valley ordinary people, as well as religious and voluntary organisations, were far ahead of the Government in rescuing and providing relief to the victims.  
Fishermen from faraway places such as Beruwala and Wattala had sent in their boats to rescue the marooned people in Kotikawatte, Kohilawatte and Sedawatte and to provide food for the marooned people before the government authorities did so. And the navy continued the effort thereafter for about a week.  
The disaster warnings by the authorities in most of the times did not make sense for the victims or the would-be-victims. Rainfall in millimetres or the water level in rivers in feet does not inform a particular family whether it is really in danger. 
There must be a specifically localized warning mechanism.
In last two years, while showing on TV the shiploads and planeloads of relief items being unloaded the authorities provided only a pack of essential food items worth Rs. 1,500 (valued by them) for each affected family for the whole first two months after the tragedy, while getting the victims to fill so many forms with promises to pay compensation for their losses and damages.  
It was after two months and after a poster campaign by the JVP demanding the payment that had been promised to cover their immediate needs a sum of Rs. 10,000 was provided to each family.  
After distributing several forms over a period of 18 months, on the eve of the last year’s Local Government Elections Government authorities paid compensation to the victims ranging from Rs. 25,000 to Rs.200,000, on a criterion well-known to them.

"On the eve of the last year’s Local Government, Elections Government authorities paid compensation to the victims ranging from Rs. 25,000 to Rs.200,000, on a criterion well-known o them"


High-level meetings were held during the 2016 disasters where politicians and officials waxed eloquent on short-term and long-term plans for the prevention of floods, especially in the Colombo District and mitigating landslide damages.  
They talked about removing unauthorized structures that hampered the waterways and their maintenance, clearing of all canals in the downstream of Kelani Ganga, stopping forthwith the unauthorized filling of wetlands in Colombo and the suburbs.  
Interestingly, they exposed their credence this time by again calling for the removal of unauthorized structures in the same areas.  
The Daily Mirror had editorially discussed this issue last year and following is a very pertinent paragraph of it.  
“Are the same people in the Kelani Valley to carry their belongings to safer places with the onset of next year’s South Western Monsoon as well? This applies to the people living on the banks of other rivers flowing through the wet zone, as well. Are people in many landslide prone hills to run away with their children and feeble old parents to a school or temple building every time authorities alert them of landslides? 
“With environmentalists and the scientists predicting that the severity of precipitation and the drought would mount with the climate change affecting every country in the world, (They say “dry get drier, wet gets wetter” (DGDWGW) ”) we would also have to expect more and more floods, landslides and droughts in Sri Lanka as well.” 
Do we have a long-term plan to face the situation with lasting solutions? At least do we have proper short-term disaster preparedness? 
No solution for the problem of landslides and floods is at least thought of, except for the authorities waxing eloquent. 

Parliament seat reduced to level of lottery prize



By Shamindra Ferdinando- 

In the absence of clear guidelines in respect of the issuance of duty-free vehicle permits to MPs entering parliament halfway, newcomers too can receive the benefit though they aren’t entitled to the pension. Interestingly, those resigning without completing five-year term they are elected/appointed to are also entitled to duty free vehicles though they lose pension rights.

Sudden resignation of All Ceylon Makkal Congress (ACMC) National List MP M.H.M. Navavi has paved the way for another to receive a new permit worth over Rs 33 mn.The ACMC is yet to name Navavi’s successor.

Navavi received a tax exemption amounting to Rs. 32,361.796 when he imported a super luxury Toyota Land Cruiser, seven seater, diesel vehicle. The Island is in possession of the data pertaining to the import and the sale of vehicles by current members of parliament courtesy attorney-at-law Nagananda Kodituwakku, who used RTI law to secure hitherto confidential information.

Denying that he had quit parliament suddenly, Navavi told The Island yesterday that he was given an opportunity to represent the people of Puttalam District following his defeat at the August 2015 parliamentary polls. "I missed a seat by less than 1,300 preferential votes," the former MP said.

Responding to another query, Navavi appreciated that his leader Rishad Bathiudeen had spoken to UNP leader Ranil Wickremesinghe and secured him a parliamentary seat through the UNP National List.

Navavi handed over his letter of resignation to Secretary General of Parliament Dhammika Dassanayake on Wednesday (May 23).

Dassanayake wasn’t available for comment.

However, authoritative sources told The Island that there had been many instances of members quitting seats after receiving duty free vehicle permits.

Navavi said that he was aware he couldn’t serve the full term at the that time he received UNP National List slot.

Minister Bathiudeen confirmed the arrangement.

The Island sought an explanation from SLMC member Mohamed Hafeel Mohamed Salman, who quit his UNP National List seat in January, 2018 to pave the way for his party to appoint another member, on his decision to leave parliament. Salman, too, acknowledged that he knew he was not going to serve a full five-year term. Asked whether he, too, had preferred super luxury Land Cruiser like most of his colleagues, Salman confirmed importing much desired Toyota Land Cruiser which he described as a vehicle with good second hand value.

Salman was replaced by Mohammed Nazeer from Addalachenai.

Former Attorney General Sarath Mayadunne, too, received an opportunity to secure a duty free vehicle permit though he immediately resigned after having named JVP National List MP. Mayadunne refrained from abusing the facility though he, too, was tempted to do so, The Island learns.

In addition to them, former Army Chief Sarath Fonseka entered parliament in Feb. 2016 after the demise of National List MP M.K.D.S. Gunawardena. Fonseka, too, availed himself of the duty free facility like his predecessor.

Galle District MP Geetha Kumarasinghe’s successor Piyasena Gamage, too, received a duty free permit after the former actress lost the legal battle to retain her seat. Kumarasinghe was expelled from parliament for being a dual citizen of Switzerland and Sri Lanka contrary to the 19th Amendment to the Constitution.

The parliament enacted the 19th Amendment in April 2015 with the support of the Joint Opposition comprising UPFA MPs loyal to former President Mahinda Rajapaksa.

Attorney-at-law Kodituwakku said that he moved the Supreme Court against the CIABOC(Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption) for turning a blind eye to the blatant abuse of duty free permits by MPs. The public litigation activist, in his submissions to the Supreme Court estimated the loss of state revenue due to this scheme at Rs 7 bn.

Additional Commissioner of Elections (Legal) M.M. Mohamad yesterday told The Island that once the Secretary General of Parliament informed NEC of a vacancy due to death or resignation of an MP, action would be taken to fill the slot. In case of a death or resignation of a National List MP, the NEC would inform the General Secretary of the particular political party he or she represented whereas in case of elected MP, the respective Chief Returning Officer of the district concerned consulted to fill the vacancy.

Mohamad said that the NEC or the previous Election Department had nothing to do with criterion as regards the issuance of duty free permits.


Thu, May 24, 2018, 09:28 pm SL Time, ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka.


Lankapage LogoMay 24, Colombo: Sri Lanka's Minister of Finance and Mass Media, Mangala Samaraweera says that he expects to reduce the 15% Value-Added Tax (VAT) rate to 12.5% by the year 2020.

Minister Samaraweera noted that since all the people are indirectly paying taxes, he hopes to reduce the VAT by 2.5% by 2020 to free the people from the burden of indirect taxes.

Minister of Finance made this disclosure at an event held at the Finance Ministry today to hand over letters of appointment to 68 newly recruited Assistant Superintendents of Customs.

The 68 new Custom officers have been selected after an extensive selection process out of 227 candidates who passed a competitive examination, which was taken by over 10,000 applicants.

"Unlike in the past, there was no political intervention and the new recruits were selected purely on merit," the Minister noted.

Speaking at the occasion, the Finance Minister said the countries such as Thailand, Korea and Malaysia that were behind Sri Lanka 70 years ago are now ahead in economic development.

"In the past our people used to call shanties "Korea". Today Korea is developed to the point that our young people are looking for jobs in that country," he remarked.

Sri Lanka however has become a country divided by racism, religious and political differences, he said.

"When Singapore's first Prime Minister Lee Kwan Yew published his life story, about ten pages have been allocated for Sri Lanka. He noted that when gaining independence Sri Lanka is the most exemplary country in the Commonwealth. The Peradeniya University was seventh in the world's ten best universities. The best police service, state service in Asia were in Sri Lanka. On the day when Sri Lanka received Independence, the Times of England stated that soon Sri Lanka would be Switzerland of Asia. The reason was that Sri Lanka is an island full of human and natural resources."

"However, after Independence, Sri Lanka walked not only towards communalism, religionism, and caste discrimination but also towards the political division. The result was two youth insurrections and a protracted civil war. Those who died in the South or North were the young people who could have been productive to the country," the Minister pointed out.

"Although, at the end of the war after 30 years, some attempted to take the country towards dictatorship on the guise of war instead of entering the road to peace, that attempt failed in 2015," Minister Samaraweera said.

Today Sri Lanka is moving forward on the three pillars of democracy, reconciliation and development and a seven star country of democracy, he said.

"An environment has been created in the country where it is possible to criticize even the President and the Prime Minister. Journalists have the freedom to run their pens free. No white vans are coming after them. University students protest for anything. When the Prime Minister has to go before a commission he did not evade it. For the first time since 1980 two ministers resigned," the Minister recalled.

"What all these remind is that Sri Lanka has a democracy comparable to the West," he emphasized.
"Reconciliation is a necessary factor in the development of the country. That is why an environment has been created for the Sinhalese, Tamil, Muslim, Burgher, Malay, and others to coexist. However, there are still many different ethnic ghosts such as Sinhalese blood, lion blood and Muslim blood. But they should never be allowed to turn back the country," Minister Samaraweera stressed.

"In 2015 we were given a country with a debilitating debt. But by the end of December 2017, we were able to record a surplus of the primary account after sixty years. We recorded the highest exports in history last year. We have received the highest amount of foreign investment in history. We recorded the lowest unemployment rate after 13 years. All of this was done with a huge debt burden.

 This year alone we have to pay Rs. 2.845 trillion. That is more than 90% of our income and 63% of this money was to pay for loans taken before 2015," the Minister pointed out.

He said the situation will be worse next years since the loan amount to be paid for the next year is Rs. 4.285 trillion and 77% of these loans were obtained before 2015. The total loans needed to be paid by 2020 is Rs. 3.768 trillion and 78% of the loans were taken before 2015.

He pointed out that the revenues need to be increased to pay off these loans and the new Inland Revenue Act was introduced as a means. As a result, 46,000 new tax files were opened last month alone.

Minister Samaraweera explained that 82% of country's income is from indirect taxes and income from direct taxes is at a low of 18%.

"Indirect taxes are paid by poor people. The money they pay for day-to-day consumer goods become Indirect taxes. It is not fair that the poor consumer pays the same amount of Indirect taxes as the one who comes in a Benz. This is a very unfair situation for a country. Accordingly, the government's objective is to reduce the ratio of indirect to direct taxes to 40:60 by 2020," he said.

"My expectation is that by 2020 the VAT should be lowered at least by 2.5%."

Speaking about the Customs Department, the Finance Minister said the Customs is a big revenue stream. However, there is corruption in the department comparable to the income receives and the loss of income to the country is equal to the current revenues, he said adding that the need for a new Customs Act is growing.

The government's aim is to present a new Customs act to parliament before the next budget, he said.

Secretary to the Ministry of Finance and Mass Media Dr. RHS Samaratunga, Deputy Secretaries to the Treasury Chandra Ekanayake, A.R. Deshapriya, Director General of Customs PSM Charles and the parents of the new recruits were also present at the occasion.

UNP will prevent return of military type regime - PM


Friday, May 25, 2018
Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe yesterday said the sole endeavour of the UNP was to prevent another military type regime coming into power.
“As such, the decision confronting the people was whether they needed democracy or a second Rajapaksa regime in power,” the Premier said.
The Prime Minister was addressing a meeting held at Sirikotha UNP headquarters, Pitakotte to mark the assumption of duties by Minister Navin Dissanayake in his post as UNP National Organiser, yesterday.
The Premier added that when UNP leaders addressed Parliament with pride and honour, Pohottuwa members only shouted and disrupted the proceedings.
“Their sole objective was to bring back the Rajapaksa regime to power”, the Prime Minister said.
“The question was as to whether they wanted to safeguard democracy if they returned to power.
Lasantha Wickrematunga was murdered and Ekneligoda was abducted during their rule,” he said.
The Premier warned the few journalists who tried to foist the Rajapaksa regime back in power that they would face the same fate if that regime was returned.
The Prime Minister while congratulating the new UNP office bearers and wishing them well,requested the people to assist the new youth leadership installed as office bearers of the party.
“Minister Navin Dissanayake who assumes duties as the National Organiser of the UNP today has rendered a great service towards the progress of the party as a young parliamentarian and Minister. He had made a major contribution towards the party’s victory in the Nuwara Eliya district. Youthful leaders like him are a vital need of the hour for party reorganisation,” Prime Minister Wickremesinghe said.
The Prime Minister said young leaders like Navin Dissanayake was the need of the party to take it forward.
The Premier recalled the great services rendered by Navin Dissanayake’s father late Gamini Dissanayake to reorganise the UNP after its 1970 debacle. He (Gamini Dissanayake) contested and won the Nuwara Eliya seat in Parliament,but, he was unseated in an election petition. Later, he again won Nuwara Eliya and took an active part to re-organise the party along with late President J.R.Jayewardene. People like late President Ranasinghe Premadasa, Minister Lalith Atulathmudali, Cyril Mathew and several others assisted the party reorganisation enabling it to win the General and the Presidential elections which followed.
“The fact that late Gamini Dissanayake paid with his life to uplift the party while contesting the Presidential election as the party candidate should never be erased from memory,” Prime Minister Wickremesinghe said.
Wickremesinghe said Navin Dissanayake too had displayed leadership traits of the calibre of his late father.
“The UNP had a team of youthful leaders like him to carry forward the party re-organisation work. The party Deputy Leader, Assistant Leader, General Secretary, Treasurer and Trade Union Secretary were all youthful leaders included in a new team who had been vested with responsibilities in the party,” Premier Wickremesinghe said.
“There was also a long line of youthful MPs and Provincial Council members who are waiting to fill party positions in the near future. A decision on this would be taken by the party working committee at its meeting to be held next week,” he said.
“This youth generation should come forward as the next tier of leadership. The UNP was the only party which could display a second and third tier of leadership in 2020 as well as in 2030,” the Premier added.
“The UNP could proudly claim that it would rebuild the country with a new generation of leadership. No other party could make this claim. The Pohottuwa party had the same old faces including certain retired army officers. They were the same people who helped to install the Rajapaksa regime,” the Prime Minister said.

President seeks cabinet approval for a Rs. 20 billion corrupt tender bid under investigation at FCID and Bribery Commission !

Expose` with copious and cogent evidence !

LEN logo(Lanka-e-News - 24.May.2018, 11.45PM) While the tender for the supply of food to the security forces for the year 2018 has been confirmed as absolutely corrupt , and complaints have been made to the Bribery and Corruption Commission as well as the FCID in that regard following  an adjournment debate in parliament , yet most shockingly and unbelievably , president Gamarala the highest in the hierarchy of the country himself has presented  a paper to the cabinet on the 21 st to get approval for this most corruption tainted tender.
 (The relevant section of the cabinet paper is herein ). What is even more shocking is ,this is a tender which  involves a sum of over Rs. 20,000 million ( Rs.20  billion !)  which is in excess of the amount  last year by a whopping Rs. 3000 million! Fortunately, this corruption ridden tender of the president was not approved by the cabinet on that day though the president tried to steer it forward with vim and vigor by submitting a cabinet paper. 

Gamarala beats Rajapakses‘  inglorious records !

As Lanka e news pointed out in its reports earlier on , though this tender should have been concluded by 31 st December  2017  ,this corrupt controversial tender had been dragged on  into this year (2018) , and even after 5 months have elapsed this year , it had not been possible to arrive at a final decision on it.
This is solely and wholly because of  the sly plans  to collect bribes via this tender by  the infamous  crooked bribe taker group of  the president     were foiled , and they therefore  making attempts  to explore every other available avenue  to somehow achieve their dastardly and diabolic  designs.
It is because Buddhika Pathirane M.P. lodged complaints with the Bribery and Corruption Commission as well as the FCID , and the COPE Committee too making a request , the Auditor General is conducting a separate investigation .
Even during the most notorious corrupt regime of Rajapkses while the war was on and forces had a bigger number of  members, never did the tender for the supply of food exceed Rs. 2 billion . Therefore Gamarala has broken that corrupt record too to the detriment of the country.
As soon as this government was installed in power , with the halting of bosom pals of corrupt Rajapakses alone making tender bids , and allowing anyone to take part in the tender bids , in 2016 ,  the tender bid  could be reduced by about Rs. 1550 million  which meant , until that time that amount was pocketed by the ‘Rajapakse  regime’.  But now shockingly , the tender bid has shot up by about Rs. 3000 million , and the full tender amount   now in the grip of ‘Gamarala regime’ has exceeded Rs. 20 billion !

A most detestable disgraceful endeavor…

It is significant to note , in the cabinet paper presented by Gamarala on the 21 st , in addition to the tender bid  being corruption tainted, he shamelessly and despicably  had moved heaven and earth to get approval for this  corrupt endeavor.   
This is the modus operandi..
Calling for tender bids first comes under the purview of the Procurement Board. Subsequently , it is turned over to the Technical Committee . Based on the latter’s  recommendations ,  the procurement committee  awards the tenders to the deserving bidders. 
However in this instance the Procurement board had not  abided by the recommendations of the Technical committee, and awarded the tenders to their favorites and cronies , owing to which  those genuine bidders  who were deprived had turned rebellious.
The defense concocted by Gamarala’s two stooges , namely Waidyaratne the defense secretary , and Ms. Kamani Hettiarachchi the accountant was , the low tender bids of the  deserving  bidders  were  not reliable. In this connection the appeal committee in the defense ministry was requested to investigate and deliver a decision. Accordingly , the appeal committee delivered a verdict that the decision of the procurement board was erroneous.

Gamarala’s moronic explanation after kicking off  the appeal ..

Sadly , it is despite  this backdrop, in the cabinet paper submitted to the cabinet on the 21 st it was  stated , the tenders shall be awarded to those in favor of whom  the Procurement board has again decided .(Read page 5 –the section regarding  approval sought )
This is the biggest joke of the century. Anywhere in the world when a decision given  is heard in an appeal , and if in the appeal a verdict is delivered  , it is the decision based on the  appeal that is followed , and not the earlier decision. However according to our president  Gamarala Sillysena ,  it is not the decision of his own  appeal committee but  it is the previous decision  of the procurement board that should be followed. If that is so , why on earth is he having an appeal committee ? Is it to hear the appeals made by the lunatic pals  of  Gamarala’s  loony bin from which he alone has managed to escape  ?  
By analogy , this is akin to  Sillysena saying , though  the appeal court decision is delivered, it is  the earlier High  court decision which   overrides.

Gamarala’s camouflage tactics ….

Gamarala ‘s  camouflage tactics  in relation to the  cabinet paper unfolds another story . Under 4.1 and 4.2 of page 6 ,this camouflage  is tantamount to  a massive crime. Yet the request has been  made to bring this tender process under the defense secretary with the approval of the procurement board , and its operation under the commanders of the forces with the permission of the defense secretary. Nothing can be more ridiculous and ludicrous than this.  The Procurement board is under the defense secretary , and the commanders of the three forces are members of that committee. That means  Gamarala has duped the cabinet by requesting it to entrust the task to the same group while using different names.
In the ‘charming’ cabinet paper of Gamarala , its tail end – the fifth part  of page 6 is most fascinating. It  says , if the approval cannot be granted to this tender (corruption tainted), without following the old prices  of 2017 ,  to  give the approval  only to  the part that is corruption tainted , and if necessary let the whole tender process be commenced again.
If that is adhered to  , since half the year 2018 is almost over , it will not be possible to remedy the  tender process until this year is out. That is , tenders will have to be called for the year 2019. Besides , while being fully aware the whole scenario is  corrupt, isn’t it absolute madness to  request to  give approval to a part of it ? In the circumstances , can there be a more self degrading and shameless president  on this planet ?
The only reasonable inference that can be drawn from these donkey antics and monkey acrobatics of Gamarala is , he has no ability to  rule this country , and he only excels in committing  daylight robbery through tenders.
Connected report …
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by     (2018-05-24 22:54:36)