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, June 21, 2018

Special treatment to  Gnanasara Thera can lead to serious complications – Govt.


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By Zacki Jabbar- 

The Mahanayakes have raised the issue of  Bodu Bala Sena (BBS) leader  Galagoda Atte Gnanasara Thera, imprisoned  for threatening the widow of  cartonist Prageeth Ekneligoda  with President Maithripala Sirisena, but the government said yesterday that special treatment for one prison could lead to others demanding same.

 Health Minister Rajitha Senaratne, addressing  the weekly  Cabinet Press Briefing at the Information Department, said that there  were 18  priests serving prison sentences for various offences, some of which were of a very serious nature. "Fifteen of them are Buddhists while the other three are from the Hindu, Muslim and Christian faiths. If  Gnanasara Thera is pardoned or given any special treatment, then the others would also want similar relief."

Asked why  Gnanasara Thera had been made to wear the prison uniform, Senaratne  said that  should have been asked when Somarama Thera was serving his term for killing Prime Minister S.W.R.D. Bandaranaike.

He pointed out that  the  authorities were only following the established practice and to make an exception in the case of the BBS leader, the law would have to be changed.

Admitting that the Mahanayakes had interceded on behalf of  Gnanasara Thera  with President Sirisena, the Minister said that he was not aware of the outcome of the talks.

Sri Lanka: A Shameful Land Like No Other? 


Lasantha Pethiyagoda
logoFirst, a question: If everyone in a given society directly or indirectly cheats everyone else, will there be any winners? A poor country practicing the values of grand capitalism have two groups of people. The industrialists and the political class on the one side and the ordinary citizens on the other. The former are the exploiters and the latter the exploited. The exploiters are well set for any contingency and will flee or escape any calamity. The exploited will be caught in any cross fire or disaster visited upon the state.
Tourism magazines referred to Sri Lanka as the resplendent isle, the pearl of the Indian Ocean. Ironically, it has been branded as “A land like no other” or even ridiculously “The miracle of Asia”. The exploited people of the land see it otherwise.
There is a relatively new hierarchy of values practiced in Sri Lanka which reverse the traditional order, and have infiltrated our fundamental institutional structures (education, labour, politics, economy) through which destructive social norms are endorsed and crystallized.
People now tend to take great pride in conforming to this socially-constructed emerging hierarchy of values, defining themselves, their worth and success in terms of volume of money and extent of power, proceeding blindly in a vain search for happiness, while the very foundations of the land are crumbling beneath their feet.
Rampant corruption in every conceivable sector has now become a curse in society, and is eating into its very foundations. Amazingly and absurdly, it is no longer a matter of shame, to be accused of corrupt practices. On the contrary, proponents of this despicable “art” are implicitly held in awe, and almost always rewarded for their ingenuity and duplicity.
The noble virtues of humility, love and compassion, foundations of our Buddhist culture have been replaced with crass hypocrisy, arrogant haughtiness and contemptuous behaviour towards people who represent compassion, honesty or integrity. This is done deliberately, to deter any resurgence of ethics or semblance of decency and thus promotes a culture that has already destroyed the land’s vital institutions.
In government offices, even ordinary officials and puny local politicians, strut about in self-assumed importance. This is in turn affecting the youth, who are emulating their peers, and indulging in masquerades that include lies and chicanery, to show off their ill-gotten possessions.
In other words, ordinary people have been overwhelmed by the pragmatics of the “corporate bottom line” that dominate our life-stage decision-making, turning money, which is essentially a means, into an end in itself, while turning fellow humans, ethically understood as “ends in themselves” into mere means of self-gain.

This engenders a constant state of jealousy, resentment and competition. It then triggers people with meagre means, to steal and indulge in antisocial activities like soliciting bribes, drug peddling and smuggling to finance their lifestyle.
It is the extreme depravity to which our moral values have degenerated, when we find people being murdered for small pecuniary gains. Everyone in this poor country seems pre-occupied with money. Our children seem encouraged by parents, peers and societal norms to embrace wealth accumulation as their prime objective. One dares not revolt against such paradigms created by the market culture although social costs are ongoing and most palpable to all.
These attitudes and behaviours are unpardonable in any religion. Nevertheless, people with such moral depravity, overtly seem to be religious.
Most of these people are “religious” in their daily routine, like offering daily prayers, worshipping at temples, and even engaging in philanthropic activities, like giving charities or donations to religious bodies.

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Strong trade agreements need 30-50 consultations



logoWednesday, 20 June 2018

Coming from a multinational working background, I strongly support free trade given that open competition tends to sharpen our skillset and thereby make us sharper in our work whilst meeting high ethical standards.
FTAs drive exports 
Given that Sri Lanka has just a few trade agreements under its belt whilst competitive countries like Bangladesh have over 10 FTAs, the recently-signed agreement with Singapore was a good move. The logic is that if we are to make Sri Lanka a 20 billion dollar export business from the current 11.4 billion dollar export performance, we must have more access to markets, driving market penetration.

Why Mahinda, or why not Mahinda?

Will those two faces endure, or will the fact that they are two faces, spell out the end of the Mahinda Force?
Support for Mahinda is broadly economic and cultural but is more often cultural.  
2018-06-22
Mahinda Rajapaksa is not the best thing that happened to Sri Lanka. He is not the worst thing that happened to Sri Lanka either. Popular culture and journalism have an unyielding habit of turning the most ordinary people into martyrs and devils, and judging by how they have operated in the last three years it is true that for a great many people, Rajapaksa is either a devil to be condemned to hell or a martyr to be beatified.

True, the man courts considerable charisma and this owing partly to the fact that none of his predecessors, who are alive can scrounge up and affirm at least half of the populism he so ably projects.  

Whether this warrants a comeback, a Rajapaksa Restoration on the lines of the Bourbon Restoration is of course for another debate altogether. For now, the question arises: Why Mahinda, or why not Mahinda?

Support for Mahinda is broadly economic and cultural but is more often cultural.  

This is natural. Mahinda is seen as the saviour of the Sinhalese, the Diyasen Kumaru who has evaded our notice for thousands of years.  

He is, to those who have turned him into a mythical figure, the definitive descendant to the kings of the Ruhuna Kingdom, who pioneered marvels of engineering and history which have been unparalleled ever since.  

While it’s not always easy to separate the mythical from the real, this image of Mahinda Rajapaksa has stuck on to him for the better part of his Presidential and post-Presidential career, and for better or worse, it is what courts votes at the grassroots level, particularly from the poorer regions of the country which, as his detractors like to (erroneously) believe it, are housed by idiots, half-wits, and in one word, baiyas.  

The truth is that the mythical aura surrounding Mahinda has been legitimised by what he has done and has persevered to do.  

The truth is that Mahinda had a clear advantage over his predecessors because he sought to do more, much more than what they had ever done.  

The truth is that in 2005, Mahinda was placed in a privileged position, so whatever he did, he did to the satisfaction of his electorate. It was simply a case of being in the right place at the right time. Everything clicked, to the advantage of those who wanted an end to the war and also to those who chose to head the war.  

This is why most of those who joined Mahinda from the opposing camp, during this time, have chosen to stay with him (Among them, Keheliya Rambukwella). They know, and know very well, that returning to that opposing camp would mean political suicide as far as their political careers are concerned. Mahinda is a force, more than a politician.  

Those who support Mahinda on the basis of his “economic programme” tend to hail from the metropolis, i.e. the suburbs of Colombo. This image of Mahinda, as an economic miracle man, derives for the most from the Viyath MagaProject, which is focused less on him than on his younger brother, Gotabaya. We do not know if Gotabaya has a cohesive economic plan (Shyamon Jayasinghe, in a witty aside, takes to task those who believe that he does have such a plan), but what we do know is that with Viyath Maga, the Rajapaksas intend on extending that mythical aura of themselves beyond the rural hinterlands and the South.  

These areas will anyway vote for them, come what may. 

The metropolis and the suburbs of Colombo, particularly those housed by a multicultural population, which is ethnically opposed to the Rajapaksas, are a harder, tougher nut to crack.  

If we are writing about Mahinda’s prospects in the next few years, I think it is imperative to examine his prospects among this urban setting and what Viyath Maga has done to combat the image of him as a village simpleton.

The Mahinda Rajapaksa phenomenon is split between the economic and the cultural.  

These two streams do meet, more often than not, but in terms of what drives them, what inflames them, the one is opposed to the other.  

The cultural Mahinda and the cultural Rajapaksas have been propped by the Sinhala Buddhist intelligentsia, chiefly hailing from the Jathika Chinthanaya School of thought.  

While the intellectuals from this movement have had their moment of reckoning with him, and have critiqued him on several occasions (In particular, Nalin de Silva), their support for him is on the basis of his supposed loyalty to the project, which was inaugurated by Anagarika Dharmapala and aborted by the expedient politics of S. W. R. D. Bandaranaike.  

They want to think beyond Sinhala Only or Sinhala in 24 Hours. They want to think beyond slogans and pamphleteering. Their figureheads, which include Nalin de Silva and Gunadasa Amarasekara, include also Gevindu Cumaratunga.  

These are intellectuals who wish to do away with a Sri Lanka that is run along the dictates of the IMF and the World Bank, who wish to be freed from the European Union and the US Embassy.  

But for a cohesive economic programme which seeks to emulate its rival programme from the incumbent Government, we must look elsewhere, at the Viyath Maga coterie.  

Key figureheads from this movement included (who else?) Dayan Jayatilleka and Nalaka Godahewa. They rationalised the synthesis of economic rationality and cultural nationalism through a key concept: Smart Patriotism, the patriotism which brings together the nationalism of the Rajapaksas and the internationalism of Fidel Castro.  

It seeks to be Rightwing but it is more Keynesian, more reliant on domestic consumption and production, than the Advocata-led thrusts of the opposing camp.  
(The best example I can think of here is the decision by the Viyath Maga group to promote Dr Howard Nicholas, a Keynesian, as an alternative to the Advocata-promoted Professor Razeen Sally, who speaks of investment, free trade, and libertarian economics.)  

The Viyath Maga programme does not sit in well always with the diehard nationalists, and many (including this writer) have accused of it being as uprooted as the Olcott Buddhism which has been written on and criticised by the likes of Nalin de Silva (briefly, a movement which emulates The Enemy, in this case, Western Economics, in a bid to combat and annihilate it and come up with an indigenous economic programme).  

Both these movements - the economic and the cultural - are, despite their obvious differences, similar in tone.  

They both look inward. Despite their veneer of sophistication, they are diehards in their insistence on coming up with an indigenous alternative to Western Paradigms of modernity and development.  

But there the similarities, I must say, end. The one woos a mostly Olcottised population, i.e. those who are enamoured of the same Western Paradigms they want to do away with.  

The former is led by diehard cultural nationalists. There are, admittedly, personalities because of whom these two movements meet, top among them Alle Gunawansha Thera (who has been seen in both Jathika Chinthana and Viyath Maga led conferences and seminars since their inception). But these personalities are not enough to bring about a coincidence of the two. They remain opposed to one another, while the only real factor which unites them is the figureheads they have hedged their bets on, i.e. the Rajapaksas.  

Even there the differences are stark: while the Viyath Maga crew woo Gotabaya, the Jathika Chinthanaya crew seem to have second thoughts of wooing and encouraging Gotabaya on the basis of his fidelity to Western economics. As Gevindu Cumaratunga has correctly argued, on several occasions, what we need is a national policy, and on everything: industry, agriculture, politics, economics. We are not going to get those with a movement which emulates everything Western and Keynesian.  

The Viyath Maga coterie have certainly managed to woo their intended crowd, a disparate crowd if ever there was one, but which consists, inter-alia, of the following specific demographics: former supporters of the Hela Urumaya (who hail from the suburban areas: Borella, Maharagama, Kirulapone); Sinhalese Catholics, who, contrary to the voting preferences of those who subscribe to their faith, are unabashed supporters of the Rajapaksas; and leading businessmen known for their nationalist views and, even if not, are tired of the policies of the present Government (which, ironically, is buttressed by the United National Party, the most pro-business party this country has ever had!).  

With the exception of the fore Hela Urumaya group, these are not demographics which will sit in well with the majoritarianism and the ethnically-driven narratives of the Jathika Chinthanaya School.  

But when brought together, they represent the two faces of the Rajapaksas, particularly Mahinda.  

Will those two faces endure, or will the fact that they are two faces spell out the end of the Mahinda Force?  

UDAKDEV1@GMAIL.COM     

Illness knoweth no boundaries; robed men spendeth time in prison

Cassandra Cry: A Woman’s Jaundiced View of the Past Week


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A good friend and more important, critic, asked Cassandra why she is so sharp toothed and scathing in her comments on the week gone by. She replied she is living up to her name which is associated with her cry – Cassandra cry of seeing blood. Cassandra, in Homer’s Greek epic Odyssey is the daughter of Priam - the last king of Troy, and his wife Hecuba. She was brought captive to Mycenea by Agamemnon who was one of the heroes who sacked Troy with their wooden horse leading to the opening of the doors of the city and bringing back Helen who had been frisked away by the Trojan prince Paris. Cassandra wailed when she foresaw Agamemnon’s death at the hands of his faithless wife’s paramour. Apollo loved her and promised her the power of prophecy if she complied with his desires. Hence the cries of ‘I see blood’ and castigation frequently on her lips.

I liked the following quote I came across. Its list of tragedies quite befits this column.

The three touchstones that woke Buddha up - sickness, old age, and death - are a pretty good place to start when crafting a tragic tale. And if we need to get more specific: heartbreak, destruction, miscomprehension, natural disasters, betrayal, and the waste of human potential. I add corruption, lies, political backstabbing and political evil games to the list that Paul Di Filippo compiled.Sickness

We heard only recently of the US First Lady's mysterious illness which has fuelled endless rumour and conspiracy theories in recent weeks - and President Donald Trump's latest comments have just deepened the mystery. Melania Trump, 48, had all but disappeared from public view after an announcement made by her staff on May 14 that she had undergone an embolisation procedure to treat a kidney condition, which was described as benign. The mother of one remained in a military hospital for five nights before returning to the White House on May 19 to recover.

Mr Trump spoke with the media as he departed the White House for the G7 meeting in Quebec, Canada - an event his wife was originally planning to accompany him to - by saying she had undergone "a big operation lasting four hours." Of course the first and last nasty tweet would be that she was leaving the Prez, unable to bear being First Lady any longer. A qualifier is needed therein. It should read ‘unable to be First Lady to President D Trump any longer.’ It is said she will accompany the President on his forthcoming visit to the UK. Let’s watch and see whether HRH the Queen removes her gloves as she shakes the Trump hand. Jokes floated around that the boast was she removed her top undergarment to shake hands with someone else. (Cassandra dare not mention names as her cry says she sees blood but does not want her own spilled).

Poor thing! Even the richest, most beautiful, apparently full-of-motherly-love woman is subject to illness as the slum dweller or the famine ridden child is. Illness and disease favour not the rich and powerful. All can be mowed down by Sickness’s scythe. As happened some time ago, when the Powerful Lady of India mysteriously sojourned in the US of America. Later it was reported she underwent major surgery at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Centre in New York, in August 2011. The most recent cry is for Rahul to assume the mantle of Congress Leader because it seems to be taking a toll on his mother. On March 23, Sonia Gandhi was hospitalized in Simla with breathing problems and transferred to New Delhi hospital. We truly feel for this noble woman, who turned herself Indian for the sake of her husband Rajiv and was very close to the formidable Indira Gandhi. In fact when the PM was shot by her Sikh guard, she was taken to hospital in New Delhi by Sonia with her head resting on her daughter-in-law’s lap. Such the fate of some unfortunate powerful persons.

The last week’s Local News

Controversy brewed and continues to brew over the incarceration of BBS Secretary Galagodaathe Gananasara Thera (I affix here the honour of being a member of the Buddhist Sangha with grave reluctance) for six months rigorous imprisonment on account of threatening Sandya Ekneligoda in no less a place than within the premises of a court of law. Yes, controversial reactions to the very justified punishment meted to the man in insincere robes. Cassandra for one is glad; this man had to get his desserts, actually a severer punishment for all the mayhem and racial hate he has generated. Conversely there are monks, and recognized ones at that, who are voicing sharp dissent that he should not have been imprisoned. On 19 June a news conference was convened at Abhayarama Temple, Narahenpita, (which has fast been converted to a political platform) when members of the Pevidi Handa (Voice of the Bhikkhus) protested and urged Government to pardon the said Galagodaatte Gnanasara. Two voices heard were those of controversial Murutthetuwe Ananda Thera (wasn’t he the monk who often led our local Nightingales and the government a dance as head of the nurses’ union?) and Uduwe Dhammaloka Thera, silent for some time now. We do not agree with them one jot!

Then ensued a discussion of treatment of clergy within prisons walls. The Centre for Human Rights said there are 18 clergymen of all four religions incarcerated for crimes ranging from plotting to kill Chandrika B K (Hindu pusari) to shocking rape and murder. Eighteen of our men in religion – only them caught; how many remain free? The talk on-going is whether these persons, with Gnanasara in the lead, be given special treatment starting with them not having to don prison clothes. Of course they must and if the punishment is of a rigorous nature, they must be made to do chores other prisoners do. Their crimes are extra heinous as they are men of religion and so need to be above ordinary men in every way. Remember how the Head of the ancient Kelaniya Rajamaha Viharaya, built on a spot the Buddha is supposed to have set foot in, was working in the prison laundry, incarcerated for masterminding the then prime minister SWRDB’s assassination. The man who shot him – Somarama in yellow robes – converted to Christianity under the infamous Father Matthew of midnight mass fame with young women in nighties! So prison terms for men in robes is not an entirely new phenomenon in this country that boasts of being the foremost Buddhist country of the purest Theravada tradition. Misdemenours and crime by monks must be stopped by the Mahanayakes taking a firmer stand on monks observing the vinaya rules or made to depart from being within the Sangha.

Cassandra will make one hoot of joy before she closes her look back on the week past. She applauds and gloats on the Health Minister’s newest move: to scrap VAT from private hospital bills on consultation and test fees. Room charges remain unchanged. It is hoped nursing homes will not find a loophole to make good what is lost on VAT. Healing sickness and death both cost astronomical amounts but at least in sickness, a government hospital can be gone to, where no charge is made, unless short of necessary drugs. The Minister of Health deserves kudos for this and reducing the cost of drugs which greatly benefit the pensioner particularly.

Blood Brother Bandits Of Blood Bank

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Dr Rukashan Bellana, infamous officer of the Ministry of Health, interdicted in the aftermath of the formation of the Yahapalana government in 2015 for engineering a false testimony regarding sexual misconduct of Maithripala Sirisena, Presidential Candidate is currently involved in fraudulent procurement at the National Blood Transfusion Services (NTBS) commonly known as the Blood Bank of Sri Lanka. Bellana, who was a Rajapaksa acolyte was a fierce campaigner against Sirisena stooping to the level of facilitating and executing a mud-slinging campaign against Sirisena entangling him in cooked up story of abduction of a young mother and sexual debauchery. 
Dr Rukashan Bellana
Further, Bellana also is known to be the person who authored and printed a stinker about Chathura Senaratne, son of Rajitha Senaratne, Minister of Health, referring to a medical condition of Chathura Senaratne which included leakage of possibly cooked up information referring to sexual dysfunction and opioid addiction. 
These serious and unethical actions, carried out in violation of the common law, the Hippocratic Oath and the code of conduct of the Sri Lanka Medical Association (SLMC) essentially warrant cancellation of Bellana’s  medical license if law and order were upheld. However in the natural style of the impotent Yahapalana Government, Bellana, instead of being penalized, was rewarded with an irregular appointment as Acting Deputy Director NTBS. Bellana resolved all enmity with the Senaratnes with an unholy alliance made for allegedly future financial gains for both Bellana and Senaratnes as this expose would elaborate. 
A soft loan project with the Government of Netherlands and NTBS, due to conclude on the 30th of June is left with 1 million US dollars which, if unutilized will be returned. The College of Transfusion Specialists of Sri Lanka, the apex professional body and the technical experts of the subject have requested for the HLA Matching unit and reagents to be bought with the monies. This machine will expedite the donor- recipient tissue matching for patients awaiting kidney transplant for chronic kidney failure. Currently, even after finding a donor, patients have to wait up to 2to 3 months for HLA matching that is done at the NTBS. Bellana has strongly opposed this move and is adamant that the remaining money should be used to buy a Next- Gen Sequencing Machine (NGS) which is used for bone marrow transplantation. Bone Marrow transplantation technology is currently in its infancy in Sri Lanka and the Ministry of Health is in its preliminary stages of holding meetings in planning such services. Bellana wants to buy the NGS with reagents for 3 years for a programme which is still in discussion stage. It is also interesting to note that the brother of Rajitha Senaratne is the underground front runner in the kidney dialysis industry in Sri Lanka with the insider support of Dr Rumi, the business gimp of Rajitha Senaratne within the Ministry. The Senaratnes would be financially affected if the kidney donor programme succeeded making dialysis less necessary for patients. Rajitha’s brother was infamously noted for his involvement in the cancer drug deals.

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16 up the creek What is in store for the Group of 16?

Prospects for the Group of 16 seems to be bleak

Not a policy decision. …an act of mice jumping out of the sinking ship

Voted in favour of the NCM against the PM

Treated Shabbily by the UNP, JO and the SLPP

Taken a decision, right or wrong, at a wrong time
2018-06-22
Will the 16 Parliamentarians, who left the Government recently become political destitute in the near future? They seem to have been left to themselves. They might have thought that they would receive a red carpet welcome by the Joint Opposition (JO) and the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) soon after they left the Government in the wake of their voting in favour of the No-Confidence Motion (NCM) against Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe in April, which was not to be.
Whatever they had said and done in order to justify their desertion of the Government and in a way the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP), it was not a policy decision. It was an act of mice jumping out of the sinking ship.

In the light of the fact that the Joint Opposition seeming to have let them down, it would be very difficult for them to find grounds to mend fences with the Government again on their part. And also the United National Party, the main party in the Government, is not in favour of them being taken into the Government’s fold.

The Group of 16, as they are now being called, is now up the creek.

The 16 SLFP Parliamentarians voted in favour of the No-Confidence Motion against the Prime Minister on April 4 while holding Ministerial portfolios and the post of Deputy Speaker in Parliament.

In spite of the main allegation contained in the motion having been linked to the infamous Central Bank bond scandal, there had already been issues that had created a wedge between the SLFP and the UNP.

Main among them was the UNP treating the SLFP members in the Government as second class citizensand ignoring the President in taking major decisions.
These were issues that had affected not only these 16 members but all the SLFP members in the Government.

If the decision to leave the Government was taken purely on policy grounds, they would have taken it long before. Besides, they were not prepared to leave the Government giving up their portfolios along with the privileges and perks attached to them until the Ministers of the UNP, the party that had the majority members in Parliament declared that they were not prepared to work with those who voted against the Premier.
After the SLPP swept the electorate at the recent Local Government Elections, they want again to join the winners
Even if they had reasons to leave the Government, they did not seem to have any issues with the SLFP to leave it and to team up with former President Mahinda Rajapaksa.

They had accepted the leadership of President Maithripala Sirisena and declared their unwavering support to him. Some of them were in the forefront when the SLFP, going against President Sirisena’s election pledge decided to field him as the SLFP candidate at the next Presidential Election.

They have been maintaining this stance throughout their stay in the Government.

Yet, they became hardcore disciples of the former President overnight after they were forced to leave the Government. Now, MP Dilan Perera, a leading member of the Group says that anybody who aspires to be the President must have the blessings of the former President.

This group, except for a few, worked against President Sirisena during the last Presidential Election and also during the subsequent Parliamentary Election.

Some of them joined his Government after he won the Election and the rest joined him after Parliamentary Elections at which the United People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA) suffered a humiliating defeat.

And now, after the SLPP swept the electorate at the recent Local Government Elections, they want again to join the winners.  

They cannot be blamed for this decision, as personal interests always take precedence over national or any other interests in politics.
It was the No-Confidence Motion presented by the Mahinda Rajapaksa loyalists that compelled the Group of 16 to bow out
It is on the same grounds that they are now being treated shabbily by the Joint Opposition.

It was the No-Confidence Motion presented by the Mahinda Rajapaksa loyalists against the Prime Minister that compelled the Group of 16 to bow out to their portfolios with privileges and perks.

And Mr Rajapaksa publicly said that he would welcome them to his fold when the UNP showed them the door.

However, a rude shock awaited them at the doorstep of the Joint Opposition and the SLPP. They are now being treated as outcasts by both the Mahinda loyalist groups.

Kumara Welgama who boasts to be the topmost leader of the JO next to Mahinda Rajapaksa said last week that the Group of 16 should shed their SLFP membership if they were to join the Joint Opposition and stand as individuals - not as a group- at the tail end of the queue.

He might have forgotten that Mahinda Rajapaksa still claims that he is still a member of the SLFP and was appointed a member of the Advisory Council of the party on June 3.

Welgama also alleged that the 16 MPs were attempting to divide the Joint Opposition. His reference to the “queue” points to the personal interests taking precedence over their own political grouping.

He was apparently making this reference mainly in respect of electorate organiser posts of the SLPP.

When Sudharshani Fernandopulle’s name was proposed for the Deputy Speaker Post last month, some of the members of the JO did not vote for her. SLPP Chairman Professor G.L. Peiris during an interview with the Daily Mirror justified it saying “They had certain reservations about doing it. It is human feeling.”
Professor Peiris, with regard to the differences of opinion in the JO over the accommodation of the Group of 16 said: “there is no reason for anyone to be astonished.”

He went on to say “these are the people who strongly backed President Maithripala Sirisena and accepted office under him. They were part and parcel of the Government, which carried out policies bringing down the country to the brink of ruin. They came only after public opinion became very clear from the results of the elections on February 10, 2018. ... They attacked the SLPP. They belonged to the Government that pursued the Rajapaksa family and the SLPP leadership. Therefore these feelings are to be expected”. His remarks are clearly hostile.

However, the desperation in which President Sirisena is in, has given the Group of 16 some solace. Even after they attempted to team up with the former President making references against President Sirisena’s Presidential aspirations, they were invited to the SLFP Central Committee meeting and some of them were given plum posts during the temporary reorganization of the party.
The desperation of the President was further evident at that meeting as the party had appointed Mahinda Rajapaksa as one of its Advisory Council members
The desperation of the President is further evident at that meeting as the party had appointed Mahinda Rajapaksa as one of its Advisory Council members.
Nevertheless, the prospects for the Group of 16 seem to be bleak, if they continued to be with the SLFP after the party’s poor show at the February 10 LG Elections.
On the other hand, they are being treated by the JO and the SLPP shabbily. Have they taken a decision, right or wrong, at a wrong time? 

Let’s educate ourselves for change!


Engage in science broadly and do not limit yourself to think doctor or engineer but think science! Then you will be knowing

science, mathematics, engineering and technology, what we today call STEM


logo Thursday, 21 June 2018

Ordinary Level Examinations are over. Results are in. What should I be doing at Advanced Level? Science, Commerce or Arts? And what subject combinations? This always is a burning question for some and also for parents.

This question is usually answered by checking with friends and doing what everyone else is doing. Sometime neighbourhood choices too may influence the decision. At times the choice is based on what profession is considered to have the perception of its ability to earn more, standing in the society and then the student decides or is forced to take a decision based on that opportunity.

Today parents receive many adverts through mail specifically targeting the children to be directed to start tuition immediately or paid courses, which may lead to professional pathways.

As you can see from what I present later, hurrying to classes from dawn to dusk is not the way to success. Advanced Level is intense and competitive, yes, but do not think that one’s entire life depends on the Advanced Level results. If you start thinking like that you will have nearly three more years of stress and economic pressure too.

What we would like to point out to you is, engage in science broadly and do not limit yourself to think doctor or engineer but think science! Then you will be knowing science, mathematics, engineering and technology, what we today call STEM.

Sri Lanka needs more students entering STEM streams with a broader mindset. It is parents’ responsibility to see beyond few numbers and support your child to enjoy while studying and not to pressurise only for a result. We also need every student knowing something about STEM and STEM appreciating arts and humanities. There is a need for change.


Freedom of choice and choice based on happiness

With tuition dictating what you study and how you study and finally how you end up facing examinations, we actually are conditioning students to go through a process rather than developing them. At times you even hear that there are classes to prepare students to enter into preferred streams of graduate study in universities. Unfortunately these efforts are completely counterproductive to the individual as well as to the country.

First and foremost the concept that I would like to stress is that a student must have an understanding of what he or she likes to do – the subject of interest and more so the area of interest. This is really critical.

In pursuit of options with monetary rewards as the sole objective, we actually harm ourselves and if a parent also pushes his or her son or daughter to do what you like rather than what they like, then you are actually doing real harm than good. This is really important to understand and we must change ourselves to put freedom of choice and choice based on happiness into practice today in Sri Lanka.


Understand what awaits us in the future 

As we are taking a decision today there is a need to understand what awaits us in the future as the choice that you make today has to prepare them to that emerging future. Before getting into some specific details, I wish to provide an example that I observed with two of our students, which actually indicated to me as two living examples of what I would like all students and parents to know.

I met these two students – Keheliya and Lakshan – recently during a visit to the Industrial Technology Institute, Malabe. They had come as research assistants and were engaged with a dairy microbiology experiment with a researcher at ITI.

Upon inquiry I was informed that one student has become a specialist in Bioinformatics through self-learning – in-fact studying the open courses available from MIT (world’s best university for engineering today), USA. All the courses are free and the student has known the opportunity and followed his passion. The other student actually is studying law.

I asked, “Why are you spending time doing this type of research?” Both said that they are doing what they like. I could see the benefit of bioinformatics with microbiology and also a lawyer understanding the importance of intellectual property that may come with doing advanced research. Your horizons are broadened and that is exactly what we should be asking our children when looking at study options.

Today with the internet one can learn any subject area and at your convenience. Hence there is nothing to worry if, for some reason, you are unable to secure the placement or the subject stream that you actually prefer. Take the second choice and engage with what you most prefer too in a different way as these two students have clearly demonstrated. One is actually working for Google from Sri Lanka now in his spare time!

The option then is to understand nothing is really lost but one can make use of the enhanced options that we have today and then also to seek ways to combine what you have learnt creatively.

Today we see innovations coming purely due to arts and science working together. With the technology stream today one has a combinational pathway to grow up in technology. Now this area expects someone to be more practical and operationally useful. Our society and industry will definitely seek these specialisations when they emerge. Hence my first recommendation – try to move into science but ensure you select what you really like to do. Do not despair if the first choice is not available too.


Many pathways opening up today 

What is happening with most of our students is that when their choice is not realised, there is overall depression and a serious lack of drive. The process is then on a downhill course. I really was happy to meet those two students at ITI and they actually personify what I am recommending here.

There are many pathways opening up today and the technologies are really transforming the workplace and hence some of the actual courses that we teach may actually be irrelevant as time moves on. Formal education systems are not that flexible and one cannot change curricula as per the rate the technology is changing!

Hence my second recommendation – ensure that one understands the basics well, really well. Why one recommends selecting a course that one likes to do is because then you will enjoy listening to the teacher, take extra interest in doing an experiment or even a sculpture and then it sticks in your mind. You are getting yourself transformed and that is what real education does to you.
We appear to make our decisions based on past while the future is going to be very different.

I think I need to recommend reading to our parents too! At least for the sake of their children

if not for the nation 




How can one self-learn?

Now how can one self-learn? One must make an effort to learn English of course as knowing more than one language is always beneficial and opens up new worlds. Today there are mechanisms coming up even in the mobile phone to listen to someone else with a different language but get instantaneous translation to your own language. You can speak with people who may speak 50 other languages easily with your mobile phone.

Do not think, as a student just getting into Advanced Level, what I am recommending is difficult – things become difficult when you do not try. You will enjoy and I can assure you. In Sri Lanka we have made the task of learning English especially a humungous task.

It is said that a successful person actually reads about 30 books per year and this should be kept in mind. Do not only read books that are relevant to your subject. It is actually sad in Sri Lanka to walk into bookshops and see mainly examination Q&A books available for sale. Reading with that purpose you will not learn much. I write here not only to the child but also to the parent as well as the family unit makes decisions today and I would be happy to see better decision-making.

The world of work is indeed becoming quite different as technology is changing so fast and that is why science is interesting and more are needed for science. As you know vehicles may not need drivers anymore. Surgeries will be done by robots, thus replacing surgeons and radiologists by computers as pattern recognition is quite easy with the use of computers.

Recently a visiting Professor of Accountancy from National University of Singapore was telling the audience here in Sri Lanka that Artificial Intelligence may mean the loss of significant number of accountancy jobs as well and in Sri Lanka we know that there are lots of students opting to do this study program simply considering the business rewards against a career in science.

Today lots of commerce is computerised and real drivers are from science. We appear to make our decisions based on past while the future is going to be very different. I think I need to recommend reading to our parents too! At least for the sake of their children if not for the nation.

Pix by Shehan Gunasekara

Digital Battlefield: Launch of Digital Security Wiki


GROUNDVIEWS- 
In the year 2018, the divide between online and offline worlds has become increasingly blurred. Behaviour seen in digital spaces and the language used in the dissemination of content mirrors offline practice to a great extent. This is why bodies like the Association for Progressive Communication and IT for Change recognise technology-based violence as an aspect of gender-based violence
Yet, this recognition is almost absent in Sri Lanka, with many institutions choosing to narrowly define such violence as ‘online harassment’ and treating it as a separate subject, as Programme Manager- Grassrooted Trust and English editor – Bakamoono.lk, Sharanya Sekaram noted. This can have serious consequences, including that the response mechanisms tasked to deal with the issue are entirely inadequate.
The language seen in the exchanges of leaked photos for instance, reflects the general structures of patriarchy that exist in the real world. The boys receiving these images feel that they own them, giving them the entitlement to do whatever they want with them. This leads to everything from impulsive sharing across chat groups to revenge porn, where intimate photos shared with consent are disseminated non-consensually after a breakup.
To make matters worse, the response to such violence is simply to ‘tell the girls not to send the photos’ – a form of ‘victim blaming’ that does not acknowledge the violation of privacy that the perpetrator has committed, she pointed out.
Sekaram was speaking at a discussion facilitated by Groundviews, marking the launch of a digital security wiki on May 22, held at the International Centre for Ethnic Studies (ICES) in Colombo. The trilingual wiki was created as part of a project researching into technology-based violence, particularly on Facebook. Groundviews found that this type of violence impacts a wide section of society including young girls, the LGBTIQ community, and female activists and politicians in Sri Lanka. In some instances, innocuous photos including profile photos had been shared on Facebook pages, with accompanying lewd and graphic commentary. The wiki attempts to create a repository of information, in all three languages, for those seeking to learn more about digital security and privacy.
The discussion at the launch focused on the underlying issues that allowed for technology-based violence– the wider socio-political context that ensured its continuing pervasiveness, the challenges in addressing this issue, and the experiences of those working to combat this issue more broadly.
The topic of digital security is often seen as ‘overly technical and daunting’ and yet, security is often not seen as a technical concept, said researcher and women’s rights activist, Subha Wijesiriwardene.
Wijesiriwardene was drawing from research conducted with Paba Deshapriya of Grassrooted Trust on the experiences of lesbian women online, part of a wider study titled “Disrupting the Binary Code: Experiences of LGBT Sri Lankans Online”.
There are other, unacknowledged issues in the institutions set up to respond to this violence, once discovered. For instance, the main body tasked to deal with technology-based violence, and especially photos disseminated online without permission, is the Cyber-Crimes Division of the CID. The CID has certain ominous associations for many in Sri Lanka. Its infamous fourth floor, used to interrogate suspects of terrorism, the long, narrow passageway at the entrance that everyone must pass through, would have different associations for minorities, and especially young Tamil women, Sekaram pointed out. Members of the LGBTIQ community might also shy away from reporting violations to the CID, fearing that it might invite further scrutiny, particularly due to Section 365 and 365a of Sri Lanka’s Penal Code, which criminalises same-sex conduct.
Those based outside Colombo must make the long journey to the CID in order to report the violence they have undergone – that is, if they are aware that there are bodies tasked to deal with the issue in the first place. The officers tasked with taking down case details often cause further trauma to survivors by the casual way they discuss survivor’s cases – which often includes implicitly shaming the person for sharing content online in the first place. All these factors ensure fewer people report cases.
These response mechanisms therefore continue to reflect the real world problem of the criminal justice system’s responses to women’s issues across the board. Online violence is just one point on this spectrum. A solely technical or technological solution therefore is not practical. Communities need to comprehend what justice looks like for survivors, and the factors that might keep survivors from seeking out this justice, participants at the discussion noted.
At times, there were shortfalls in the reporting mechanisms built into social media platforms, participants noted. For instance, content in Sinhala on Facebook, once reported, would often not be removed even when it contravened Community Standards. Facebook is training staff to identify inflammatory content flagged in Sinhala, and has committed to hiring more Sinhala speakers.
“Online spaces are far from black and white. They are often rife with contradictions. While standing in the space, people must be ready to negotiate and demand better,” Wijesiriwardene commented. As such, it was important that members of the LGBTIQ community for example continued to critique Facebook while using the platform, highlighting how the ‘real-name’ policy restricts queer expression online, Wijesiriwardene noted. “It is essential to be as vocal as we can while occupying the space.”
So what would a solution to technology-based violence look like? It might include more collaboration between digital security experts and community-based organisations, as one participant noted.
Another might be shifting attitudes through revamping the local education system.
Information Communication Technology is merely a subject, limited to the technicalities of programmes, machines and basic internet use, Sekaram pointed out. Yet, there is no education on responsible Internet use, and how to share content securely.
The lack of education on ethics online as well as on relationship education perpetuates this problem. Schools and teachers are reluctant to broach the topic of sex due to social taboos, and yet revenge porn is often shared by young schoolchildren. This may be because porn has become the default sex education tool in the absence of other educational material. Children who do find such material in their school syllabi notice that there is a gap in the conversations adults are willing to have with them. Bridging these gaps is important to ensure technology-based violence is addressed,
Globally, a new report by the Special Rapporteur to the Protection and Promotion of the Right of Freedom of Expression, David Kaye, noted that users of social media platforms flagged content promoting “violence and abuse against women, including physical threats, misogynist comments, the posting of non-consensual or fake intimate images and doxxing”. These disturbing patterns are consistent with those found during Groundviews’ research alongside Sri Lankan feminist initiative Ghosha and youth group Hashtag Generation into technology-based violence in Sri Lanka, and underscore the need for collaboration and innovative solutions, both online and off.
The trilingual wiki is live now, and can be found here.