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, August 2, 2018

President Gamarala to advance date of presidential elections ! Snap elections in two months ?


LEN logo(Lanka e News -02.Aug.2018, 9.00AM)  By virtue of   the legal rights vested in  president Gamarala , the latter is trying to go for presidential elections in 2019 and not 2020 ,according to reports reaching Lanka e news inside information division.
The president can call for presidential elections after he has completed four years of his official term . This is stipulated in the 19 th amendment. That is the president can hold presidential elections in 2019 – on 2019-01-08.  If that is so, the president has the legal right to announce the  presidential elections in September end or beginning of October this year.
The UNP faction  which is currently most strong within the consensual government is right now  most vigorously carrying on its projects with assiduous ardor  : Gamperaliya , generating 100, 000 entrepreneurs , augmenting the welfare activities of the education and health services are some of them   ,and if it maintains this momentum  it is going to be most popular among the people .
President Gamarala who is best noted for running with the hare and hunting with the hounds ,  is harboring  the  fear that the UNP will become popular , and also  being fully aware he will  definitely  not be the UNP presidential candidate , has entered into an agreement with the Rajapakse regime to advance the date of presidential elections, and is taking measures in that direction , based on reports reaching Lanka e News inside information division. 
President Gamarala who is always led by the most misled NGO crook and political outcast Shiral Lakthileke has offered another ‘D -rope’ to gullible most fallible Gamarala  . He had advised Gamarala because the Rajapkses are having a power struggle within and are without a suitable presidential candidate , Gamarala should step in to fill  that vacancy .
Hence if Gamarala is to be made the presidential candidate of that camp through Mahinda Rajapakse by Gota exerting pressure , and with that vain hope it is possible  , Gamarala has got ready  to advance the presidential elections to 2019 from 2020 so that the Rajapakse camp can clinch that advantage .
Both sides are now  exchanging views , and if Basil who is bitterly opposed can be won over , Gamarala is prepared  to make the announcement   in October  and hold the presidential elections in January 2019.
Be that as it may , it is a well and widely known fact it is  India which takes the  decisive stand and contributes heavily  as regards the power balance in SL . Sadly , based on information reaching Lanka e News inside information division , about two weeks ago , it had arrived at a carefully  considered conclusion  that president Pallewatte Gamarala is most undependable  and untrustworthy . 
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by     (2018-08-02 04:09:15)

Is It Too Late?

Rohitha Rajapaksa ‏@Rohitha_Chichi Jul 22 More Visiting #Moscow with my brothers was a great experience. @YoshithaR @RajapaksaNamal | Photo via Namal Rajapaksa’s twitter handle
Emil van der Poorten
logoRecent events on the political scene seem to suggest that it may be too late for the Yahapalanya lot to make what, in 21st century jargon is called a ”course-correction.” In fact, having taken longer than usual in putting this piece together, I am suddenly faced with the task of completing it as even more disgusting events intrude as each week progresses!
The slide into the morass of corruption and bribe-taking has reached a point where, as it was with the previous regime, it is the rule rather than the exception. Most significant, the parade of corruption goes on without the semblance of risk of consequences such as prosecution for what are, without a semblance of doubt, criminal offences. The degradation of governance by members on both sides of the House is almost beyond description and most important, perhaps, these are crimes against the national interest of the nation and its citizens. How else can the previous and recent shenanigans of MPs on both sides of the aisle be described?
That there is a very strong undercurrent of duplicity, leading to the undermining of what little is left of the justice system is obvious as the nose on one’s face. The most recent example of this is the seemingly endless line of judges of our highest court “recusing” themselves from occupying the bench at a time when a criminal offence allegedly committed by Gotabaya Rajapaksa is to be heard. From all accounts, this has reached the point when there are not enough judges of the required rank left to hear the matter. Period. If this is not INTERNATIONALLY WITHOUT PRECEDENT, would some reader please correct me? 
Sri Lankan politics, any politics anywhere in the so-called democratic world, have deteriorated and, in every instance, where a public has turned to some politician or politicians promising to replace what is seen as the “establishment” with governance no second to nirvana, the result has been even more corruption without even the semblance of a silver lining to the cloud.
The move to conservative, nay reactionary, agglomerations of politicians probably reached its peak (nadir?) with the ascent to power in the world’s most powerful nation of the “The Donald” and his minions.
The difference between the so-called “developed democracies” and Sri Lanka, though, is that in those jurisdiction the law prevails so that its citizens, irrespective of rank, can be investigated, prosecuted and even put in the crowbar hotel, as might conceivably happen to our Donald if the Mueller investigation goes where it’s expected to.
The smaller and less important nations of the world such as Sri Lanka have not been spared the same fate, though probably on an economically lesser scale. Because we do not have the mineral resources that have been the great magnet for the international bandits, we have been targeted for other reasons.

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Opinions wrapped in saffron robes


Did Ven. Athureliye Rathana Thera take a wise decision to vacate the post of presidential adviser?
  • Those country leaders who apposed the views of Buddhist monks or ignored their presence soon learned from their mistakes
     
  • But what must be taken note of is that these monks functioned in their roles in worldly affairs in an unofficial capacity
     
  • From the times of the British occupying Sri Lanka, monks clad in saffron robes have had a presence in almost all the struggles
2018-08-02

Monks have played pivotal roles in shaping the political face of Sri Lanka. From the times of the great kings to the many prime ministers and presidents who ruled this island, the opinion, more than the advice, of the Buddhist clergy has carried weight. 
Those country leaders who apposed the views of Buddhist monks or ignored their presence soon learned from their mistakes. One such leader was the late Ranasinghe Premadasa who initially ignored Ven Galboda Gnanissara Thera (fondly known as Podi Hamuduruwo) when he landed himself in the president’s seat. 
When Premadasa observed that things weren’t going too well regarding his political work in Colombo the president forged important ties with the priest and temple. 
One monk who has gone public with the displeasure he harbours because his views weren’t sought by the head of state is Ven. Athureliye Rathana Thera. The monk has conveyed that he no longer wishes to hold this post because he was never made use of in his capacity as presidential adviser. The monk is reported to have made this statement at the recent 30th Anniversary celebrations of the Sri Lanka Women’s Development Cooperative Society in Colombo. 


The Late Ven Sobitha Thera
This island’s history reveals that a monk’s role was never restricted to the temple. From the times of the British occupying Sri Lanka, monks clad in saffron robes have had a presence in almost all the struggles which were carried out to build a better and safer nation. But what must be taken note of is that these monks functioned in their roles in worldly affairs in an unofficial capacity. 
The monk must now start thinking whether his worldly views go well with the Yahapalana Government, which only wishes to work on its own ideas. This is despite seasoned politicians warning about where this Government is heading
Ven. Athureliye Rathana Thera was appointed officially to be the president’s adviser. Does all this indicate that the unofficial system works better for monks in Sri Lanka because the priests who functioned this way were powerful and got many tasks accomplished? One such priest who wielded much power was Ven. Seelankara Thera of Dimbulagala whose work was patronised by President Ranasinghe. 
We also had firebrand monk Ven. Sobitha Thera who played a key role in the National Movement for a Just Society which toppled the dictatorial Government headed by Mahinda Rajapaksa, in 2015. The late monk, who possessed a degree in history from the Vidyodaya University, was renowned for his oratory skills and most importantly for the change he made in society through his non-violent movement. 
But before the National Movement for a Just Society kicked off the ground, the Rajapaksa Government allowed a monk in the name of Ven. Galagoda Aththe Gnanasara to cause racial tension in the island through his activities. It was alleged that former Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa was backing this monk to the hilt. Gotabaya has denied this claim repeatedly. This monk claimed that he was on a mission to keep a check on the work of Muslim extremists, Christian fundamentalists and many unauthorised constructions that existed close to Buddhist temples. What worried people was how the monk wielded so much power, in an unofficial capacity, when there is a law and a police force operating in the country. 
This monk then was functioning as the Secretary of the Bodu Bala Sena, but that’s besides the point because according to the rules on discipline stipulated in the Buddhist order for monks, there is no provision for monks to engage in politics; a fact which questions Ve, Gnanasara’s journey in robes because he was a candidate for the Jathika Hela Urumaya at the 2014 Parliamentary Elections.
Monks have always preferred their unofficial roles in politics. Even at present politicians in the Government and the opposition make quick visits to the temples of of the Malwatte and Asgiriya Chapters when they get fresh appointments in ministries.
Monks have always preferred their unofficial roles in politics. Even at present politicians in the Government and the opposition make quick visits to the temples of Most Ven. Thibbotuwawe Sri Siddartha Sumangala Thera of the Malwatte Chapter and Ven. Warakagoda Gnarathna Thera of the Asgiriya Chapter when they get fresh appointments in ministries. This is because they need the blessings and approval of the clergy for their work. 


Ven. Galagoda Aththe Gnanasara Thera
Ven. Athureliye Rathana Thera has impressed many with his views on economic matters. He very recently aired his views on the use of Glyphosate in Sri Lanka. The monk has called for an internationally accepted legal document to be formulated for the regulation of Glyphosate. This is a monk who could have been one of those rare members of the Buddhist clergy whose views were sought by the law makers while functioning in an official capacity. This didn’t happen. The monk must now start thinking whether his worldly views go well with the Yahapalana Government, which only wishes to work on its own ideas. This is despite seasoned politicians warning about where this Government is heading. 
He very recently aired his views on the use of Glyphosate in Sri Lanka. The monk has called for an internationally accepted legal document to be formulated for the regulation of Glyphosate. This is a monk who could have been one of those rare members of the Buddhist clergy whose views were sought by the law makers
Ven. Rathana Thera must understand that monks have taken to entering parliament as the best option to air their views. He has also made an impact on the political platforms which feature representatives of Jathika Hela Urumaya. But it seems that the hierarchy in the Yahapalana Government don’t fancy what the priest can bring to the table at political discussions. It seems a wise move by this monk disembark from this ‘Yahapalana Ship’ which is right now looking into the Abyss.

Vijayakala’s statement: Can Government prevent another revolt in the North?


logoThursday, 2 August 2018 

Member of Parliament Vijayakala Maheswaran’s speech at a public meeting in Jaffna caused an uproar in the Parliament, forcing the Deputy Minister to resign from her post. The speech was made in Tamil, and no proper translation of the speech is available in public media. The locally banned website ‘Lanka e News’ presented an English translation. Had those MPs who caused an uproar in Parliament read a translation of the speech?

Sri Lanka: Port Authority and Customs discuss on anti-graft

A landmark meeting held between Sri Lanka Ports Authority (SLPA) and the SL Customs (SLC) to resolve industry issues

(August 2, 2018, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) A land mark joint meeting to discuss a number of maritime industry related issues was held recently, initiated by the Sri Lanka Ports Authority (SLPA) and Sri Lanka Customs (SLC) with the members of the Ceylon Association of Shipping Agents (CASA) and members of Sri Lanka Association of Vessel Operators (SLAVO). The meeting is also recorded the first of its kind in the history of the maritime industry in Sri Lanka. The meeting was co-chaired by the Chairman of Sri Lanka Ports Authority (SLPA) – Dr.Parakrama Dissanayake and the Director General of Sri Lanka Customs (SLC) – Mrs. P. S. M. Charles, with the participation of officials of the Sri Lanka Customs (SLC), SLPA, members of the CASA and SLAVO. The meeting was organized on advice by the Minister of Ports and Shipping – Mahinda Samarasinghe towards the importance of resolving issues of the maritime industry in Sri Lanka.

The meeting brought forward a number of issues that were discussed pertaining to the Anti-Corruption and Zero Tolerance Policy, detained containers, introducing a digital signature and electronic delivery order system.

At present, the Management Committee of Sri Lanka Ports Authority (SLPA) has approved the zero tolerance policy and this has also been endorsed by the Board of Directors of the institution. At a recent discussion, Ceylon Association of Shipping Agents (CASA), also Stakeholders and Sri Lanka Customs(SLC) have also agreed to follow the zero tolerance policy and the related authorities also expected to issue formal letters regarding this.

It was noted that due to several factors such as lack of exporter details or non-presence of the exporter and forged documentation, containers have been detained by relevant authorities for further investigation. A joint decision was reached at the meeting to establish a committee comprising of officials of Sri Lanka Ports Authority (SLPA), Sri Lanka Customs (SLC), Ceylon Association of Shipping Agents (CASA) and Sri Lanka Association of Vessel Operators (SLAVO) to look into the matter. The committee will submit a report on existing issues with recommendations and suggestions to resolve the matter.

It was informed by DG Customs that regulations will be gazetted for paperless documentation.
A committee was also appointed comprising of officials of SLPA, SLC and CASA to ensure the matter of resolving issues pertaining to implementation of digital signature and electronic delivery order systems.

The Chairman of Sri Lanka Ports Authority (SLPA) – Dr.Parakrama Dissanayake, expressed gratitude to the Director General of Customs, the Additional Director General and all officials of Sri Lanka Customs for attending the meeting to discuss the longstanding issues. He also specially mentioned and thanked the members of Ceylon Association of Shipping Agents (CASA) and Sri Lanka Association of Vessel Operators (SLAVO) for the tremendous contribution made by them towards the productivity of Sri Lanka Ports Authority (SLPA).


Officials of the Sri Lanka Ports Authority (SLPA), Sri Lanka Customs (SLC) with the members of the Ceylon Association of Shipping Agents (CASA) and members of Sri Lanka Association of Vessel Operators (SLAVO) at the meeting.

Micro-Financed Suicides

Dr. Ameer Ali
logoIn 2014, a report by the World Health Organization (WHO) revealed that Sri Lanka ranked fourth highest in suicide rate among a total of 172 countries. On October 2017, according to Tamil Guardian, a young mother with three children in the North, unable to cope with heavy debts, had committed suicide. A month before that her husband also took his life because of the same problem. On 16 may 2018, the same source noted seventeen suicides in the East, because of pressure from microfinance companies. Even though the reported incidents were from the north and east the plague of micro-finance-driven suicides is not endemic but threatening to become pandemic in the wake of increasing financialization of the economy. Already we see protest marches against the rapacity of microfinance companies. Perhaps, in realisation of this tragic development, in January this year, the Governor of Central Bank announced his plan to carry out an island wide household debt survey. How many more lives will be lost through suicide before this survey is completed and remedies implemented is anyone’s guess. While the country is sinking in national debt individuals are committing suicide and welfare of future generations is mortgaged to service debts incurred by short sighted economic policies drafted by corrupt politicians.  
Suicide is not something new and the causes of suicide are also complex. However, widespread debt driven suicides are relatively new and a product of financialized economies. This is an inconvenient truth that promoters of globalization and free market economics are not willing to concede. Yet, it is an ugly fact arising from the failure of the much touted trickle down benefits of free market competition, which in the name of economic rationalism is allowed to operate without any ethical and moral constraints. Sri Lanka after decades of welfarism and market regulation was dragged with vengeance into the free market swirl in 1977, and with frequent environmental disasters and a costly civil war, has now become a victim of free market capitalism.  Rising suicide rate is one of the negative sides of market propelled economic growth. Unregulated markets breed widening inequality, inequality breeds poverty, and poverty causes suicides. They are all systemic.     
One of the most momentous transformations witnessed globally since the 1980s is the increasing financialization of economies. Aided by revolutionary changes in transport and communication technologies, which broke down geographical barriers and squeezed the world into a global village, the financial sector, which until then played a subsidiary role as facilitator to the real economy overturned the structural hierarchy and usurped the role of the leading sector. The wealthy and their institutional financial care takers saw in this new world attractive and novel opportunities to earn higher rates of return by investing in financial products rather than in the real economy. Without getting into any extended explanation of this transformation one consequence of it should be pointed out that is relevant to Sri Lanka, i.e., the growth of finance companies that deal in financial products. According to one study an estimated 14,000 finance companies are providing microcredit in the country. Globally, microfinance is a growth industry that lends small amounts of credit to an estimated world population of nearly 2.5 billion who have no access to or the literacy required to deal with conventional banking. The Grameen Bank in Bangladesh founded by the Nobel laureate, Professor Yunus, was a microfinance and community development institution which greatly helped women in that country by providing an opportunity to get out of grinding poverty. No doubt, the idea of microfinancing is an applaudable invention but the way it operates in many places is utterly deplorable. 
Desperate families are enticed with charming offers and soothing words to fall into a debt trap, which instead of ameliorating their poverty often worsens it and becomes lethal. One needs only to fail one instalment of repayment to the company to realise how viciously the debt burden mounts. Incidents of suicide is an open manifestation of this insidious financing mechanism. The cure for this problem lies not in fine tuning regulations that govern lending institutions, which are the products of the financialised economic system, but to attack the system itself that creates poverty on one side while providing a remedy on the other which kills the patient. This is not to argue that Sri Lanka should give up the market and revert to dirigisme. There are economic areas where the markets can perform better and areas where the state can deliver a better and cheaper product or service. Ultimately however, even the market must be shaped to operate with a human face. In the context of Sri Lanka, we may call for a Buddhist compassionate face. 

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CFPs grumble over their qualifications being undermined



2018-08-02

Consultant Family Physicians (CFPs) are up in arms against the Health Ministry’s deliberate failure to place them in charge of primary care units in main hospitals in the country, but confining them to rural hospitals. In the event their services are undermined and if they are not allowed to discharge their duties in main hospitals, there is a looming danger of their being a brain drain of professional in primary care. 

Education, discipline & pragmatism

 
logoThursday, 2 August 2018

It was indeed an honour to be invited for a forum at CA Headquarters on 24 July on the topic: “Budget Proposals for 2019/20 for Human Capital Development”, under the aegis of the Chairman and the Governing Council of the National HR Development Council, together with the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Sri Lanka, the International Chamber of Commerce SL, and the Daily FT. The Chief Guest was Finance State Minister Eran Wickramaratne, and Guest of Honour Australian High Commissioner to Sri Lanka Bryce Hutchesson.

The panellists for discussion featured equally eminent personalities such as NHRDC & ICC Chairman Dinesh Weerakkody, who was also the moderator, World Bank Lead Economist Dr Harsha Athurupana, DIMO Chairman Ranjith Pandithage, EFC DG Kanishka Weerasinghe, Ministry of Education Permanent Secretary Sunil Hettiarachchi, CA Sri Lanka President Jagath Perera, P.I.M. Board of Management Director and Chairman and IPM President Prof Ajantha Dharmasiri, and the renowned NHRDC Council Member Dr. Chandra Embuldeniya, who also made a telling presentation with facts and figures which shocked many, and indeed set the tone for the lively discussion that followed. 
I would start by referring to Dr. Chandra Embuldeniya’s presentation, wherein one of the slides had it that out of a total of 30,819 who graduated from ‘Degree Programs and Graduated in 2016’, as many as 52% (16,000 graduates) passed out from ‘Arts & Oriental Studies’ streams, and another 19% (5733 graduates) passed out from ‘Commerce & Management Studies’. This means that as much as 71% of passed-out graduates from Sri Lanka’s universities had chosen non-technical, non-STEM subjects.

Accordingly, disciplines such as Veterinary Science (B.V. Sc.) had a mere 0.2%, along with Dental Surgery (B.D.S.) also 0.2%; Architecture & Quantity Surveying 0.7%, Indigenous Medicine 0.7%, Law (LLB) which broke the 0.1% ‘barrier’ with 1.3% (403 graduates), Paramedical Studies 1.8%, Agriculture B.Sc. 2.9%, then Computer Science/IT/ICT/MIT 3.4%, significantly Medicine M.B.B.S. just only 3.7% (1143 graduates); then came Engineering B.Sc. (Eng.) a pathetic 4.9% and B.Sc. in Science under 10% at 9.6%. 
So whilst the strident cry is to have more medical doctors, engineers, IT specialists, etc., Sri Lanka still naively and unwisely churns out over 70% whose knowledge is not in sync with the needs of the nation. With such damning data available, what have we done, or indeed, what are we doing about it? 
The popular saying that most of the graduates who have made it a virtual daily habit of inconveniencing the public by blocking major roads, especially in Colombo (and now even the Kandy Road), are mostly those pursuing Arts subjects, appears to have a ring of truth! After all, around 300,000 students sit for the GCE Advanced Level, and some 160,000 qualify, but only around 30,000 enter University – out of which some 71% follow non-tech, non-STEM subjects! How on earth could we fill the high demand for doctors, engineers, quantity surveyors, architects, botanists, agriculturists, and IT experts on cusp of digital age? 
It was stated at the outset that as much as well-carpeted roads, shiny bridges and impressive buildings are important, what is more urgent is to develop our Human Capital. And that entails educating and equipping our youth with the required skills, knowledge, and more significantly, correct attitudes. 
Obviously ‘Education’ as prevailing presently in SL needs a pragmatic paradigm shift, period! Jagath Perera, in his introductory address, said that ‘we need to learn, unlearn and re-learn’ – so true! So is our ‘Education’ oriented to the needs of the 21st Century? The answer is an emphatic ‘NO’. Sad, but true!
Australian High Commissioner Bryce Hutchesson disclosed how all plumbers, carpenters, masons, brick-layers, etc., whom we disparagingly call ‘baas unnahe’, are referred to as ‘tradesmen’ in Australia – they are effectively trained and duly skilled to take up assignments in construction and other relevant fields. So much so these ’tradesmen’ have prospered to emerge as millionaires and drive fancy cars in Australia! 
Trishaw drivers:
boon or bane?
Conversely, some 14% of the productive work force in SL become unskilled three-wheeler drivers. No wonder carpenters, electricians, masons, etc., are a dying breed here, as most potential carpenters, masons, etc., end up driving trishaws! Although feeble attempts are being made to refer to trishaw drivers as those involved in a valued profession, let us stop treating this lot with kid gloves! We must prevent late teens from drifting along and becoming three-wheeler drivers by default. Potential trishaw drivers should make a formal application to take up profession as one; after proper screening with physical, psychological, mental, and aptitude tests, and on passing with Diploma, let the Police Driving School take them on and give them a thorough training of Do’s & Don’ts. Those with aptitude to enter the Tourism sector, should be so trained in all relevant disciplines, where they would emerge as vital Human Capital assets of Sri Lanka. 
Back to reality: Is our archaic, and mostly irrelevant ‘Education’ only producing trishaw drivers, housemaids, lowly peons, and security guards? This is a national calamity, if not addressed immediately and pragmatically. Education, or lack of it, is gradually stifling SL’s progress. Seriously, no external threat is needed to destroy Sri Lanka! Poor quality and irrelevant education, and even turning a blind eye to blatant cheating, would only weaken and eventually destroy our beloved nation.
Let me reproduce below an apt WhatsApp message:
“Destroying any nation does not require the use of atomic bombs or the use of long-range missiles. It only requires lowering the quality of education and allowing cheating in the examinations by students.
“Patients die at the hands of such doctors; buildings collapse at the hands of such engineers; money is lost at the hands of such economists & accountants; humanity dies at the hands of such religious scholars; justice is lost at the hands of such lawyers and judges; governance is lost at the hands of such legislators.
“The collapse of education is the collapse of the nation.” 
 
What needs to be done?
For a start, we need to address the huge gulf in overall standards between so-called ‘established colleges’ in Colombo, Kandy, Negombo, Galle, Matara, Kurunegala, etc., and general standards in schools elsewhere. One of the core reasons why our students are mostly uncompetitive stems from this mismatch, period! 
1.We need to ensure that all schools have the fundamentals right – qualified and able teachers, computer and science laboratories, and relevant infrastructure conducive for effective learning. It sounds utopian, but unless our authorities make a concerted effort in bridging this gap, the desperate need to find ‘big schools’ will continue to be the primary aim of parents and their children residing away from urban areas.
1.1.The profession of teaching needs due recognition, and to be upgraded conforming to global standards. Isn’t it ironic that many present-day so-called teachers, especially in out-of-town areas, indulge in all sorts of questionable practices, far removed from their core area of imparting knowledge and being role-models for impressionable young students? If quality education is the primary goal, then ensuring quality teaching methods, and indeed quality teachers with the correct aptitude, is an absolute must.
Let me quote Lee Kuan Yew on teaching & teachers:
“If I have to choose one profession in which you give the most for the least, it is probably teaching – if you take it seriously. You have to have the temperament for it: to coax, to cajole, to discipline a young mind into good habits. You must have an aptitude.” – Lee Kuan Yew (1966)
1.2.Dr. Ajantha Dharmasiri even suggested that Heads of Schools/Principals of Colleges must be trained in all-round excellence associated with the skills of a CEO of a corporate entity. Such should be the ‘new thinking’, if we are to revamp and re-structure SL’s educational set-up as a matter of urgency.
2.At present, our ‘Education’ is ‘exam-centric’ stemming from the Primary stage. This may sound controversial, but we need to scrap the so-called 5th Standard ‘Scholarship Exam’ a.k.a. ‘Shisshathwa’ exam ASAP. In fact, much of our attitudinal woes associated with ‘Me First’ syndrome, where people are only concerned with themselves, simply being selfish, starts off with the ‘dog-eat-dog’ attitude from when our kids, subjected to this nonsense, have to ‘cram’ at age of a mere 9 or 10, just to beat all others and get over the Shisshathwa hurdle – and anyone who does not get thru is a considered a moron or ‘modaya’! This issue was brought up by Ranjith Pandithage, no less: a top corporate leader. Let’s listen to him!
3. In Japan, exams are taboo during the formative years of a child, who is instead taught to respect others, be it parents, family, colleagues or even strangers; to clean up their classrooms, how to use toilets properly, etc., - in short, all possible social skills. No wonder they would step aside when using elevators, bow when greeting others, and even clean up any room, hall or even a Football World Cup Stadium! Respecting others is in their DNA - surely is it too much to train our kids to be responsible members in society? They want to out-do others, overtake others at any cost, mirrored in the way we behave and act in classrooms, on roads and evident even in ‘kadeys’ and supermarkets, where it is anathema for some to wait in line at paying counters! Sounds familiar, doesn’t it?
4. Instilling Discipline – a core and urgent need 
Apart from respecting others, a fundamental and urgent need is to instil discipline at all levels, starting from Pre-School, Primary and Secondary school stages, so that by the time students enter the Tertiary part of their education, they would mostly display restraint and be adequately disciplined. Too much to ask? Then how on earth could we ever aspire to be another Singapore? For instance, in Singapore if you throw litter about on the street or consume food, smoke etc. whilst using public transport, you would be fined SGD 500. Similarly, jaywalkers would be apprehended and fined heavily. No wonder pedestrians will never dart or saunter across busy highways in Singapore. Why can’t authorities in Sri Lanka do likewise? Such change of behaviour must start from Pre-School/Primary stages.
4.1.1.The patent lack of discipline stemming from SL’s classrooms is clear everywhere one looks, literally – from our chaotic traffic, the scant respect for the rules of Highway Code, the irrational ‘death-wish’ that engulfs pedestrians when jaywalking, push cyclists riding on the centre of road, and motorcyclists zigzagging and weaving through traffic as if road rules do not apply to them. Indeed, senior school children must be taught the basics of riding/driving, apart from the Highway Code. The minimising of traffic-related fatalities is now a dire and critical need in the backdrop of some eight deaths per day. Shouldn’t the classroom also address this critical situation, or at least take steps towards creating awareness? Kids will make a change!
4.1.2.Verifiable research through global studies has it that there is a proven link between school attendance, punctuality, and school career growth. In short, those who are disciplined and punctual, and attend school 92% to 95% of the time, have shown positive growth which is sustainable all round. Conversely, those students who habitually absent themselves from attending school for the flimsiest of reasons, inevitably perform poorly. Consider these research findings: two days of nonattendance a month is equal to 10% absence, while four days equals 20%. Poor attendance can influence a child’s proficiency in reading by the end of Grade 3. Simply said – if a child cannot read, he/she cannot learn. 
Are school inspectors in SL regularly checking on student attendance? Or are some Principals and teachers content in ignoring this vital aspect? Some, we are told, are ‘quite happy’ in having virtually empty classrooms – after all they are paid the same salary as those dedicated school Principals and teachers who are constantly checking and monitoring attendance, punctuality, and overall discipline!
EFC DG Kanishka Weerasinghe suggested that we follow the German example of exposing, say, 15-year-old children to corporate/industrial environments through periodic visits, so that school kids would know what to expect when they eventually make that transition from classroom to work-life/job.  
5.Pragmatism: to equip students with English language skills
Although shunning of a global language such as English was considered politically expedient, reality has at last sunk in to those who matter. In fact, a gentleman from the audience related how he insists that all staff he employs – from the highest to the lowest – speak in English. We must salute that pragmatic contribution. Let us extend that vitally important business tool to all spheres and to the classroom: let’s learn English from the Pre-School and continue in the Primary, Secondary, Tertiary & University stages. 
What have most African states, Singapore, the West Indies, and even Bangladesh have in common? Most of its citizens speak and write English – the way a sizeable proportion of then Ceylon’s population did, until for reasons of sheer political expediency, some short-sighted leaders jettisoned English, and unwittingly helped to polarise both the Sinhala & Tamil races. The rest was the beginning of the end.
Here, let me quote Lee Kuan Yew on the evils of being monolingual, vs. the positives of being bilingual: 
“From my observation, the monolinguist is more likely to be a language chauvinist and a bigot. He only sees the world through one eye. He does not have binocular vision to see the world in depth, to realise that there are as rich, if not richer, worlds of human experience and knowledge, all expressed in beautiful words, elegantly, vividly and fluently in other languages. He does not understand other great civilisations which have expressed themselves in other languages.” – Lee Kuan Yew (1978) 
In short, Sri Lanka needs its people, and its students in particular, to be fluent in the one global language that is English. Let’s not kid ourselves that English is not important: such gibberish is pontificated by those who are ironically fluent in English, who have studied abroad and sent their kids overseas to master English, yet for some perverse reason want our children to be deprived of English. N.B., if any child wishes to aim high in a global context, let him/her be proficient in spoken & written English.
This writer is tri-lingual, thanks to his planting background. Ideally, all Sinhalese should learn Tamil, and vice versa, and both Sinhalese & Tamils should be able to speak and write in English. When citizens understand and appreciate each other, soon so-called differences will fade away in a generation or two. An integrated, disciplined society of Sri Lankans could then make that quantum leap towards all-round excellence.
We need to restore pragmatism if we are to embrace and establish a meritocracy. Indeed, English and discipline, along with the strict adherence to the rule of law by all, regardless of status, will be central to paving the way towards a real integration of races to finally emerge as one nation of Sri Lankans.
Summary
1.Raise standards and facilities of all schools to obviate necessity of parents seeking ‘Big Schools’.
2.The above should pave the way for abolishing 5th Standard Scholarship Exam. Sooner the better!
3.Take a leaf from Japan’s book to inculcate ‘respect for others’ and all possible social skills from Pre-School. 
4.Move away from ‘exam-centric’ rote learning to a holistic approach; encourage ‘creative thinking’; no doubt exams are essential, but should not be thrust upon formative minds especially in Primary stage; allow kids to enjoy their childhood instead of forcing them to study morning, noon and night with no time to play! The curriculum in mathematics and the sciences/IT, medicine, agriculture etc. should conform to global standards.
5.Punctuality and attendance enforce discipline. Execution of all areas of discipline is vital throughout school/campus life, to make them eventually become disciplined Human Capital assets, and not disloyal disruptors and saboteurs. What a waste of Human Capital to see these youth on roads, shouting themselves hoarse with placards in hand, perhaps on instigation of sinister political elements. 
6.Encourage bilingual studies, at least (ideally to be trilingual). The Sinhala and Tamil children must be proficient in English too, to pave the way for them to be globally competitive, apart from being suitable for the local corporate sector. Encourage reading from the Pre-School stage. If one cannot read, then one would be ‘knowledge deficient’. Say no to monolingual studies as it will only encourage chauvinistic bigots.
7.Gradually minimise studies/subjects that are not oriented to 21st Century job markets; curricula should be geared towards the needs of industry/corporate priorities.
8.Natural aptitudes should be identified during Primary school stages, and helped along to blossom, using their innate talents and such subjects they are passionate about; move away from force-feeding subjects to children, just because for instance of emotional choice of parents/grand-parents etc. 
9.Education and Human Capital enhancement must be interlocked at the planning stage and not in isolation, where earlier these vital areas have been allowed to drift along aimlessly their separate, irrational ways.
10.Education should not be confined to only the School years, but be a life-long passion where conditions should be on-going for life-long learning and adding value to self, and extended to society. Not only IQ but Emotional Intelligence (EI) should be a priority, as EI is considered vital for work-life. 
 
(Dyan Seneviratne is presently a sought-after corporate trainer whose forte is the entire gamut of Business Communication & Leadership. He was a former CEO of IPM, Sri Lanka; currently visiting lecturer, Colombo School of Business; served in World Bank Expert Panel Plantation reforms; also a former Governing Board Member of CMS which includes Ladies College, Hillwood & Morbrey Colleges, Kandy; St. John’s and Chundikuli Colleges, Jaffna where apart from academics and sports, discipline and all round personality development were emphasised – the positive all round results of these Colleges speak for themselves. He may be reached at dyan.sene@gmail.com or via www.speakupunlimited.com)

Lankapage LogoThu, Aug 2, 2018, 12:56 pm SL Time, ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka.

Aug 02, Colombo: The Ministry of Agriculture has decided to provide a fertilizer subsidy of Rs. 18,000 per hectare for the farmers using organic fertilizer for their cultivations.

Minister of Agriculture Mahinda Amaraweera has taken this decision in order to encourage the farmers using organic fertilizer and accordingly, has given necessary instructions to the officials to proceed with the measure.

Instead of the fertilizer subsidy offered to farmers using chemical fertilizers, the organic farmers will receive the money.

The progress review meeting of the first Agriculture Entrepreneurship Model Village in Kahattewela, Haputale was held yesterday at the Ministry of Agriculture.

At the meeting the attention was focused on directing the farmers to use organic fertilizer for fruit and vegetable cultivations in the model village as a measure to popularize the organic farming.

About 5000 farmers are engaged in organic farming and the Minister has received the cabinet approval to provide the necessary funds for the purchase of organic fertilizer from Maha Season in 2018.

The Ministry will also hold discussions with organic fertilizer producers and implement a program to encourage the production of organic fertilizer.

The government has allocated Rs. 33 billion for the farmers' fertilizer subsidy this year.

Organic farming, a lesson from Sikkim



2018-08-02

Agriculture has been a part if not the heart of Sri Lanka’s civilization for thousands of years. But in recent decades, the excessive use of imported chemical fertilisers, pesticides and weedicide has created a crisis where most people most of the time take a little poison with their meals. Experts say this is largely because the soil has been polluted by the excessive use of imported chemicals and even the ground water is known to have been poisoned. The experts also say this may be one of the causes for the kidney disease epidemic in the North Central Province and other areas. 

In recent years the government and organic farming movements have been trying to persuade farmers to use organic substances like cowdung fertiliser. The government intensified its effort to promote organic farming specially after virtually all countries signed the 2015 Paris climate change agreement but hundreds of farmers appear to be reluctant to switch to organic farming apparently because the imported chemicals often provide higher yields of rice and other grains, vegetables and fruits, though they come with a little poison. We hope that in the major development projects launched recently—including Gamperaliya, Grama Shakthi and the Enterprise Sri Lanka—the government while introducing new technology will also push for organic farming instead of giving into vested interest linked to multinational chemical fertiliser companies. 

If we need an example, the Indian state of Sikkim provides it. Sikkim became India’s first fully organic state in 2016. It took the state 13 years to fully implement organic farming since the idea was mooted in 2003, the Press Trust of India (PTI) says. 

2016 turned out to be a great year for Sikkim as it became India’s first fully organic state besides being adjudged the cleanest state, overall best in education and tourist destination while the famed Kanchenjunga National Park was inscribed in the UNESCO World Heritage List, PTI adds. Around 75,000 hectares of agricultural land was gradually converted to certified organic land by implementing practices and principles in terms of guidelines laid down in the National Programme for Organic Production. 

Sikkim was adjudged as the cleanest state in India by the National Sample Survey Office (NSSO) in September 2016. The result was announced by Union Rural Development Minister Narendra Singh Tomar based on a survey for 2015, according to PTI.

However Britain’s Guardian newspaper reported last year that Sikkim’s organic revolution was at risk as local consumers were failing to buy the products.  With 66,000 farmers’ livelihoods at stake, concern was growing over the Indian state’s organic farming experiment, with locals reluctant to pay higher prices. 

The Guardian in its report cites the dilemma of one farmer, “It is mid-morning, and Amrit Pradhan is repositioning the tomatoes on his market stall in Gangtok of the Himalayan state of Sikkim. He says people often want the biggest, reddest fruit. He tries to tell them, the flavour was in the smaller ones, but they don’t want to know.   The Guardian says, Pradhan is one of Sikkim’s 66,000 farmers who are part of a far-reaching experiment. Since 2016, the state’s farmers had become 100% organic – their produce was free of chemical pesticides or genetic modification. It also means their fruit and vegetables are smaller, less colourful, and more expensive than the imported, non-organic produce from the city of Siliguri in the neighbouring state of West Bengal. 

According to the Guardian, in 2016 Prime Minister Narendra Modi lauded Sikkim for its organic farming, a programme that had gradually been rolled out across the state since 2003 by its chief minister Pawan Kumar Chamling. Winning a fifth term in 2014 allowed him to oversee the organic project from start to finish. 

In 2016, Sikkim’s state government made the use of chemical pesticides a criminal offence, carrying a heavy penalty of 100,000 Indian rupees and up to three months in jail. According to Dr. S Anbalangan, executive director of the government-led Sikkim Organic Mission, it is part of Mr. Chamling’s wider vision for sustainable commerce in Sikkim. 

In Sri Lanka the consumer also needs to play a major role for the success of organic farming. People would like to buy a big red tomato without a spot or wrinkle unaware that so many chemicals have been sprayed on it to the extent that even an insect fears to touch it. Consumers need to be responsible eco-friendly citizens and ensure that the rice or grains, vegetables or fruits we buy have not been sprayed with imported chemicals, some of which are toxic. 

Wednesday, August 1, 2018

Israel halts fuel shipments to Gaza

#Occupation

Israel's defence minister says decision aims to stop Palestinians from setting balloons on fire


Palestinians say balloons set on fire are legitimate means of resistance (Reuters)

Wednesday 1 August 2018

Israel's Defence Ministry announced it was banning gas and fuel from entering Gaza via the Kerem Shalom crossing, the main point of entry of international aid into the besieged strip.
Defence Minister Avigdor Lieberman said on Thursday that the decision aims to stop Palestinians from using kites and balloons set on fire and flown over the fence to cause damage in Israel.
"The decision has been taken in view of the continued terror of incendiary balloons and friction along the fence," a statement by Lieberman's office said.
Palestinians say the balloons are a modest and legitimate means of resistance against Israel's deadly violence and blockade of Gaza.
Israel has stepped up its crippling sanctions on Gaza as Palestinians continue to regularly demonstrate along the fence separating Gaza from Israel as part of the Great March of Return.
The protest campaign calls for an end to the 11-year Israeli blockade on Gaza and for Palestinian refugees' right of return to the lands that their families fled during the establishment of the state of Israel in 1948.
Since the demonstrations began on 30 March, the Israeli army has killed at least 155 Palestinian protesters, according to Gaza's health ministry.

Israel had closed the Kerem Shalom crossing and reopened it partially last week after warnings from UN officials that emergency fuel supplies are running low in the Gaza Strip. Fuel shortages and power cuts have created a dire situation for hospitals and water sanitation systems.

When a sniper shot a surfer

Man wearing t-shirt and shorts holds a surfboard with one arm and supports himself with crutches using his other arm
Raed Jadallah was waving a Palestinian flag when an Israeli sniper shot him in his leg.
 Mohamed Hajjar

Amjad Ayman Yaghi- 19 July 2018

Raed Jadallah was regarded as one of Palestine’s best surfers. From his home in the Beach refugee camp of Gaza City, he dreamed of traveling abroad to hone the skills he had developed through constant practice.

Israel prevented him from realizing his ambitions.

In 2017, Raed was invited to a training course for surfers in Italy. He was unable to go. The Israeli authorities refused to allow him to leave Gaza.

Much worse was to come. On 6 April this year, Raed was badly injured as he participated in the Great March of Return in an area to the east of Gaza City.

Raed stood about 100 meters from the boundary between Gaza and Israel, waving a Palestinian flag. He was demonstrating in support of the right to return for refugees expelled from their homes by Zionist forces during the Nakba, the 1948 ethnic cleansing of Palestine.

As he demanded that basic right, he was attacked by an Israeli sniper.

“I was shot with an explosive bullet in my left leg,” the 26-year-old said. “Doctors have told me that I will not be able to go back to surfing because my muscles will not be as strong as they were. Surfing requires strong muscles and being able to balance on the surfboard. At the moment, I cannot move my leg.”

Passion for the sea

The injury has multiple consequences.

Because of it, Raed has lost his job as a construction worker.

The job had provided an important source of income for his family, some of whom have disabilities. They include his brother Rafiq, who was injured during an Israeli airstrike in Gaza in 2006.

Another brother, Medhat, who was 17, was killed by Israeli forces in 2000. He was taking part in a protest east of Gaza City at the time.

Raed was passionate about the sea. He had worked as a fisher but gave that up because it was too dangerous. Israel frequently attacks fishers, sometimes fatally.

Surfing provided him with opportunities to escape – if temporarily – from the hardships of everyday life. Now his opportunities to savor a little freedom have been shattered.

Israel killed more than 150 Palestinians in Gaza between 30 March – the date of the first protest in the Great March of Return – and 12 July.

Approximately 8,000 people have been taken to hospital with injuries in that period. Nearly half of them were wounded with live ammunition.

“Volleyball made life beautiful”

The wounded have included more than 50 athletes.
Abd al-Hameed Fayad is among them.

A 26-year-old volleyball player, Fayad was injured on 14 May, the day Israel committed its worst massacre of 2018 so far. He was shot with three explosive bullets – two in his left leg, the other in his right.

The medical team treating him at al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City initially thought that his left leg would have to be amputated. Fortunately, they determined that the leg could be saved. He has subsequently undergone a number of operations.

“I have platinum in my legs now,” he said. “I hate how they look because they restrict my movement. The doctors have told me that I will have difficulty walking for the time being because my foot was damaged and I lost 15 centimeters of bone.”

Young man with metal brace on leg smiles as he throws a volleyball in the air while sitting on a small bed
“My story is the same as that of many athletes in Gaza,” says Abd al-Hameed Fayad.
 Mohamed Hajjar
Fayad also lives in Beach refugee camp and played volleyball for a local club. His injuries mean that he has to give up his beloved sport.

“I used to run on the beach every day,” he said. “Volleyball made life beautiful. Through it, I could forget my worries. My story is the same as that of many athletes in Gaza.”

He has performed a number of jobs over recent years – working in construction, in a barbershop and, just before he was wounded, in a shoe shop. His earnings were vital for his family, helping to sustain his six brothers. As he cannot work at the moment, the family has to try and survive on less money.
Muhammad Abu Ghaza from Rafah, a city near Gaza’s border with Egypt, had been the breadwinner for his family since his father, a blacksmith, became unemployed two years ago.

Abu Ghaza worked as an accountant in a household appliance store. Each evening, he practiced playing handball with a club from his area.

Young man wearing long tunic lifts fabric to reveal leg with metal brace on itIsrael has not allowed Muhammad Abu Ghaza to trave lto Jordan for specialized medical treatment.Mohamed Hajjar

On 6 April, he joined the Great March of Return. He was more than 300 meters from the boundary separating Gaza and Israel, when he was shot in his right knee. An Israeli sniper had struck him with an exploding bullet.

His nerves have been damaged as a result and the surgery he requires is not available inside Gaza. An application was submitted in order for him to receive treatment in Jordan. Israel, however, has refused to allow him to travel.

The thought that he can no longer play sport distresses Abu Ghaza. Each night, he visits the seaside, trying as hard as he can not to think about his pain.

“Israel destroyed my dream to be a professional handball player,” he said. “It is normal for the Israeli occupation to hold back a young man with a dream. It is not strange at all. The occupation and the siege kill us every day.”

Amjad Ayman Yaghi is a journalist based in Gaza.
By  | 1 August, 2018
CHINA has a reputation for making and selling counterfeit goods. It’s something that got the country’s economy going in the early days.

However, in the past decade or so, as China has climbed the economic ladder and become a global geopolitical superpower.

As a result, it has started to face criticism for failing to crack down on counterfeit goods which damage the brand and image of some of the world’s biggest fashion and technology companies.
So far, the country’s regulators didn’t take action against those creating the products. However, all that may change soon, especially as Chinese companies are going global.

Just last week, social commerce platform Pinduoduo listed in the US. The success of its IPO made its CEO Colin Huang Zheng a billionaire.

Unfortunately, it seems as though coming into the spotlight on the global stage wasn’t the best thing for the company or its CEO.

People who were curious about the platform quickly realized the fact that the company allows the sale of counterfeit goods – which drew the ire of several companies and forced China to pay attention to the problem.

When the IPO was announced, it caught the attention of Daddy’s Choice, who had been battling the counterfeit goods being sold by Chinese companies using its trade name on the platform for over a year.

As a result of the then-proposed IPO, Daddy’s Choice got a chance to file a trademark infringement lawsuit in a US federal court alleging that Pinduoduo allowed the sale of knockoff products bearing the Daddy’s Choice name.

According to the suit, the e-commerce platform removed some of the unauthorized goods when Daddy’s Choice, reported them last year. But the items quickly reappeared, and Pinduoduo took no action when notified of them again this year, their complaint said.

According to latest reports by local news outlets, Chinese regulators are now scrutinizing the platform’s sale of counterfeit goods.

The State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR) has called for an investigation into the sale of counterfeit products and items that infringe copyright on Pinduoduo’s platform.

In a statement posted on its website, the regulator called for the Shanghai Municipal Administration of Industry and Commerce (SHAIC), as well as other relevant market regulators, to investigate Pinduoduo, which is headquartered in the city.

In a recent interview, Pinduoduo’s CEO said that the company is committed to fighting fake goods, however, he pointed out that there was a difference between “counterfeit” and “imitation products” which didn’t go down well with media and the regulators.

However, the company has pledged to put into place a better mechanism to fight fakes within a month.

Pinduoduo certainly has the resources to survive the new push from regulators to fight fake and counterfeit goods. However, strong action from the government will signal to local businesses and the world that China is ready to change its image and make amends with international brands battling Chinese copycats.