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

Friday, March 15, 2019

The TNA and Budget 2019 - EDITORIAL




15 March 2019
The Tamil National Alliance (TNA) complains bitterly that the Budget allocations for the North and East aren’t sufficient. However the TNA offered its support to the Government a few days ago when the second reading of the Budget was made in Parliament. 
The TNA has been a Government ally since the Wickremesinghe regime took over administration in the country. But the representatives of the collective of many political parities have had to face the criticisms of the Tamil people because not enough has been done in terms of development in the north and the east after the war concluded. 
Before the second reading of the Budget there were doubts whether the 13 TNA parliamentarians would have supported the Government. But probably knowing the fact the Government would have pulled through even without their support, the TNA reps backed the Wickremesinghe Government at the second reading of the Budget. 
The TNA’s argument is that despite allocations being made in previous Budgets no satisfactory work has been done in terms of development in the north. 

Minister of Finance Mangala Samaraweera said that the Budget was a development oriented one. But what concerns the TNA is the fact that nothing has been specifically mentioned in the Budget in terms of post-war development. 
For the record, there are elections scheduled this year and there are quite a number of displaced people still in the country who need to have permanent addresses to be eligible for a polling card. 
However the Government through its 2019 Budget has made some allocations in the area of housing which can give those living in the northern and Eastern provinces some hope of having a roof over their heads in the future. 
Finance Minister Samaraweera has said that the development taking place in the country is akin to a work site. But one must keep in mind that the contributions by the minority community are as important as those made by the majority Sinhalese towards the Gross Domestic Product. The future journey of a country like Sri Lanka however can be stifled if it doesn’t keep the minorities happy. 

Samaraweera has been quoted in newspapers saying that the depreciation of the rupee stands at 2.8% per annum as at now. But he also states that the rupee deteriorated only by 39% during the period 2015-2018, adding however that the Government has been able to raise US$ 3476 million in terms of foreign exchange. 
The TNA with its numbers in Parliament is still not a force. The 13 members in the Cabinet are of course vital in terms of a block vote. Hence the TNA needs to act wisely and obtain the maximum from the Government when offering its support to pass this Budget. But there are other Tamil politicians who are backing other mainstream parties like the UNP and a collective like the United People’s Alliance. There is also Mano Ganesan’s Democratic People’s Front and and former Northern Province Chief Minister C.V Vigneswaran who is now offering leadership to the Tamils through his newly formed Tamil People’s Alliance. Each of these political parties has its own agenda, but the Tamil people expect them to work towards the welfare of the Tamil minority. 

The TNA is also in the meantime working closely with the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) in bringing in the 20th Amendment to the Constitution. This change will largely help abolish the Executive Presidency. It is interesting to see how these two minority parties muster the support of all other parties in the Cabinet to get this amendment passed in parliament. 
Be that as it may the Ceylon Chamber of Commerce (CCC) in a release has aired its concerns regarding the GDP growth estimates of the 2019 Budget; which covers the period 2019-2024. Going by the Budget speech made in Parliament, the CCC states that growth is expected to gradually rise from 3% in 2018 to 4.8 % in 2024. Hence CCC states that the estimated growth in the economy for the given period doesn’t give a signal for a positive business climate. 
Following the committee stage debate of the Third Reading of the Budget, the vote on the Budget will take place on April 5. 

President drops plan to send separate delegation to Geneva

Marapana takes over, MS opts out


article_image
By Saman Indrajith- 

President Maithripala Sirisena will not be sending a separate delegation to represent him at the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) sessions in Geneva, UPFA MP Mahinda Samarasinghe told Parliament yesterday.

 Speaking during the committee stage debate on the Budget, MP Samarasinghe said that following discussions held yesterday President Sirisena had agreed that the government’s delegation to Geneva would be led by Foreign Minister Tilak Marapana.

 UPFA MP Dr Sarath Amunugama, who is currently sitting in the Opposition, would also be included in the official delegation. "He will go as President Sirisena’s special representative," Samarasinghe added.

 The five member government delegation also included Northern Province Governor Dr Suren Raghavan, the MP said. 

Samarasinghe said that the President had planned to send his own delegation as the government had initially not named an official government delegation and tasked the country’s mission in Geneva with articulating the government’s stance at the sessions.

 MP Samarasinghe, who was initially due to be part of the delegation, said he had withdrawn as he told President Sirisena that it was important to send a single delegation to represent the country.

 While there would be no change in the government’s stance on co-sponsoring the resolution submitted by the ‘core group’ led by Britain, MP Samarasinghe said the speech Foreign Minister Marapana would  deliver at the UNHRC sessions in Geneva, on March 21, would be a joint text that conveys a "unified stand." Accordingly, Dr Amunugama would also make the draft as the President’s special representative, Samarasinghe added.

The draft of the Foreign Minister’s speech would be submitted both President Sirisena and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe for approval, he said. "You can’t do this by sidelining the President," MP Samarasinghe stressed. 

 Earlier, TNA MP M. A. Sumanthiran asked whether President Maithripala Sirisena was empowered to send a delegation to the UNHRC sessions in Geneva to represent him.

MP Sumanthiran queried whether such a delegation was indeed being sent and questioned the legality of the "unofficial" delegation comprising two Opposition MPs and the Governor of the Northern Province. He asked whether the government could allocate funds for the delegation’s visit. He insisted that Parliament reject allocating funds for such a delegation.

Alcoholic beverages and ganja

 The price of a bottle of arrack in Sri Lanka, compared to the average income level of the country is relatively high and is almost equal to that of a bottle of a good brand of whisky in Europe – Pic by Shehan Gunasekara
logo   Friday, 15 March 2019
I hope to begin this article with arrack and end up with ganja. Since I have chosen to write about arrack, I think it is fair that I should clarify my relationship with it for the knowledge of the reader.

Frankly speaking, I consume a moderate amount of 100-150 ml alcohol daily only in the night. I must also admit that this habit has no way affected my life or that of the members of my family adversely because it is being pursued with a high sense of discipline and self-control. So much so, my habit of drinking alcohol has not caused my children to become alcoholics themselves.

The blue collar workers or tired and overworked manual labourers usually consume alcohol as a means of finding relief from physical fatigue. It is also likely that those who are engaged in intellectual pursuits to incline to do the same as a relief from intellectual fatigue. In my opinion, consumption of alcohol in moderation and in responsible, safe and sensible manner will not cause any harm to health of a person or the society. However, addiction to alcohol and neglect of one’s wife and children on account of alcohol consumption can be considered a grave offence.

It is natural for people to disengage themselves from humdrum routine and mechanical way of life they lead, at least for a short while, and seek some relief in engaging in apparently useless but pleasant activities. I don’t think there is a big difference between the inspiration one derives from enjoying an exquisite piece of art, literature or music and the pleasure derived from having a meaningful discussion with selected companions while sipping a drink. The civilised world though does not encourage alcoholic drinks, nor does it not impose rigid taboos on it.


Alcohol policy in Sri Lanka 
But Sri Lanka has a very rigid policy on alcohol. The price of a bottle of arrack in Sri Lanka, compared to the average income level of the country is relatively high and is almost equal to that of a bottle of a good brand of whisky in Europe. The price of a bottle of all types of arrack except ‘Gal’ arrack (molasses based) is approximately Rs. 2,000 or more. The excise duty that the Government earns from a bottle of arrack can be nearly Rs. 1,500.

Sri Lanka can be described as a lethargic and stupid country that depends on tax money derived from sale of arrack under the pretext of a vociferous Government’s campaign against the use of alcohol (‘Mathata Thitha’). Last year the tax on liquor earned by the Government had been Rs. 72.6 billion.

Increase of price of liquor has not resulted in people reducing consumption. It only results in a change in alcohol consumption pattern and more and more consumers shifting to ‘kasippu’ or illicit liquor when the price is not affordable. The outcome of this trend is more dangerous and destructive. On the other hand, the increase in price might cause a corresponding reduction in the income the arrack drinkers share with their families. This is a situation equivalent to taking revenge from innocent family members.

According to research done by Dr. Priyanga Dunusingha of Colombo University, the share of kassipu in the liquor market is 49%. As per a paper submitted by G.D. Dayaratne of the Institute of Policy Education, this share is as high as 65%; 30% of the remainder constitutes of hard liquor and the balance 5% of beer. The alcohol policy of the Government of Sri Lanka can be considered an extra thrust to increase the demand for kasippu.


History of liquor consumption 
Alcoholic beverages have been used by most cultures and its history can be traced back to old civilisations that prevailed in the world. Archaeological research has revealed that Persia or ancient Iran had consumed wine as far back as 5000 BC. By 3400 BC Egypt had a distillery which could produce 300 gallons of beer per day. The workers who built the Great Pyramids, for example, were allotted a daily beer ration.

India, since the times of Indus valley civilisation (3000 BC-2000 BC) had a kind of alcoholic beverage called Sura manufactured from rice, corn, cane sugar and grapes. ‘Ramayana’ and ‘Mahabharata,’ the two great Indian epics, carry references to the use of Sura. In Greek civilisation too, wine had a great recognition. Socrates, who could be considered the first martyr who sacrificed his life in the name of the right to express truth, was not an alcoholic. But, according to Plato, Socrates drank wine on rare occasions and had proved to be a prolific drinker without ever faltering. An impressive feat, indeed.

The Mayan civilisation had a popular kind of wine made of bees’ honey. In the ancient past Mexico had its alcoholic beverages made of pineapple. Spain and Brazil had manufactured their liquor with cassava. Ancient Africa had its liquor made of banana and thanahaal or foxtail millet.

Though spirit-based liquor was introduced to Sri Lanka by the Europeans, the natives knew the art of distilling toddy from the sap of kithul palm, coconut and palmyra. But they did not know the art of distilling alcoholic beverages from rice or any other grains.

According to the ‘Mahavamsa,’ the great chronicle, King Aggabodhi VIII who ruled Sri Lanka in the 9th century AD had prohibited carrying meat and alcoholic beverages to the city on Poya days. King Sena V had been addicted to alcohol and after taking drinks he had behaved like an animal and due to excessive consumption of alcohol had succumbed to death while he was still young. This illustrates that the consumption of meat and alcoholic beverages was common in Sri Lanka long before the country was captured by the Europeans. We must therefore accept the fact that the ancient and medieval Sinhalese were neither vegetarian nor teetotal.

Chewing betel, too, has some intoxicating effect. Betel chewing had been an age-old practice associated with the cultural milieu of the country. Not only men, even women and bhikkhus were addicted to this practice.


Sri Lanka and arrack 
It was John D’Oyly who launched a subversive scheme to make Sri Wickrama Rajasinghe, the last King of Kandy, an alcohol addict. With the support of his secret agents, he managed to introduce European alcoholic drinks to the king. It constituted a part of the shrewd stratagem employed by him for the British to capture the Kandyan kingdom.

It was the great grandfather of J.R. Jayewardene who had served as the main spy of John Doyley in this scheme while the great grandfathers of Ponnambalam Ramanathan and S.W.R.D. Bandaranaike had served as the language interpreters. The British Governor had donated to them a large extent of land in appreciation of the contribution made by them in facilitating the British to capture the king and the Kandyan kingdom. These can be considered the facts hidden by the historians who wrote the modern history of the country.  Arrack had played a unique role in shaping the modern history of Sri Lanka. It can be considered the main economic source of the rise of the Sinhala capitalist class during the 19th century. The Buddhist revival movement had been mostly financed by the arrack renters. Except for a few (Anagarika Dharmapala and D.B. Jayatilleke), most of the leaders of the temperance movement were the children of arrack renters. It is they who eventually become the pioneers and the leaders of the independence movement of Sri Lanka.

A book written on Selestina Dias by Manel Thampoe which can be considered a unique biography of the former notwithstanding it being a small publication refers to an interesting incident involving a question of conscience arisen in an arrack renter who had performed a leading role in the temperance movement.

Visakha Vidyalaya of Colombo can be considered a school founded by the generosity of Selestina Dias who was popularly known as ‘Renda Nona’. It was she who managed the plantation, liquor and property interests of Jeremias Dias, her husband, upon his death. Arthur Dias, the second son of Selestina Dias, was a prominent leader of the temperance movement. He served as the manager of his mother’s liquor business while being engaged in the temperance movement.

The book says that Arthur Dias, having realised the moral contradiction between the two mutually-conflicting roles that he had been playing as an arrack renter and a leader of the temperance movement, managed to persuade his mother to abandon the arrack business. But the other leaders of the temperance movement lacked the conscience that Arthur Dias possessed. Even Anagarika Dharmapala does not seem to have been concerned about this issue in selecting leaders for the temperance movement.

The arrack renters were rich business men and what they sought was recognition in national level. This will help us form an opinion of our own on the true character of the leaders of the independence movement of Sri Lanka and the independence itself that we gained eventually.


About ganja 
Now I wish to switch from arrack over to ganja. The terms kansa, cannabis, hashish, and hemp are also used to denote ganja. The term ‘kansa’ is used to refer to the plant as a whole, while ‘ganja’ is used to refer to the flowering head. The proposal I am going to put forward here might annoy some people. It is not a proposal by me but a proposal submitted to me by a learned youth. Though he agreed to write about it, he did not do it. He now lives in a foreign country, where he has been for some time. Here, I have chosen to defend his proposal, of which I am in very much in favour.

Before presenting his proposal, it is important that some background information is produced as a prelude to it. Ganja, too, has a very long history going back to over more than 10,000 years. Ganja or cannabis is indigenous to Central Asia and the Indian subcontinent. Both India and China had recognised ganja as a plant species having psychoactive properties that had an impact on the mind of the people.

Archaeological excavations in Oki island of Japan have revealed that the history of ganja in this island goes back to 8000 BC. Ganja had been used as a food item, medicine and alcohol as well as hemp for manufacturing strong copper. The Chinese had later used hemp to make clothes, shoes, ropes, and an early form of paper. Hemp is called ganja in Sanskrit and other modern languages. Some scholars suggest that the ancient drug known as soma, mentioned in the Vedas, was made of cannabis.  Ganja is referred to as ‘thrailokya vijayaa pathran’ in Ayurveda which means that it can conquest the three worlds. It was ancient Assyrians who had used ganja for smoking for the first time. During Napoleon’s invasion of Egypt in 1798, being an Islamic country, alcohol was not available in Egypt. In lieu of alcohol, Napoleon’s troops resorted to trying hashish, which they found to their liking.

In Sri Lanka too, ganja appears to have been used as a kind of medicine. The people of the dry zone used ganja as an ingredient in cooking ‘dhada mas’ or the flesh of game. They used a kind of aggala or a sweet ball made of flour and sugar mixed with ganja as a worm treatment for children. They had also eaten a kind of kurakkan roti mixed with ganja.

In the late 1800s, several countries in the Islamic world banned ganja for the first time. Thereafter, during the19th century, ganja was banned in the countries which came under colonial rule. At the start of the 20th century, more countries continued to ban ganja. Along with that, the cultivation, possession, use and sale of ganja had been outlawed and declared criminal offences.


The new world trend 
The international scenario about ganja began to change in the 21st century. The Government of Netherlands launched a research program in 1972 to distinguish between harmful and less harmful alcoholic products. It revealed that ganja was the least harmful (negligible) of all other narcotics and alcoholic products.

Along with these findings, the law that prohibited consumption and possession of ganja was repealed and the right to keep 30 grams of ganja in possession was granted. This led many countries relooking their policies on ganja and revoking laws against possession and consumption of ganja and inflicting punishments.

This trend did not stop at that. It gathered momentum in Uruguay. In 2013, the State of Uruguay legalised the consumption, possession, selling and cultivation of ganja. In 2017, Canada joined the bandwagon. Thereafter, 33 States of America followed suit. Belgium is the latest addition. New Zealand has already fixed a date for a plebiscite before it being legalised. India is also in an imminent stage of legalising ganja.

This trend is spreading rapidly all over the world. It is an unavoidable trend that cannot be reversed. The day in which the laws against ganja will be removed from all over the world will not be very long. Along with that, it will be unavoidable for the demand for strong drugs like heroin and cocaine and alcoholic beverages of spirit type to go down, giving way to the increased demand for ganja.

Sri Lanka is still in the dark as far as the rapid changes taking place in global level are concerned. It remains at a stupid level without having any idea about the global trends, still continuing to impose fines which include imprisoning for possession and consumption of ganja. The punishment that can be imposed by the Judiciary for possession of one kilogram of ganja is life imprisonment.

More than this situation, what is really important is the point of view of the youth I mentioned above. What I am going to put forward here is a proposal which is a combination of his view as well as that of mine. The farmers of Sri Lanka are in a dire state of poverty and misery. The agricultural sector including paddy and tea cultivation is also in an equally unfortunate level.

It is unavoidable that the demand for ganja will go up in the near future in an atmosphere in which other countries are engaged in a process of repealing laws against ganja. Shouldn’t Sri Lanka make plantation of ganja a lucrative commercial crop to generate income, capitalising on this new trend?

Sri Lanka has an ideal climatic and soil conditions favouring cultivation of ganja. Removal of laws against ganja alone would be a thrust to make it a commercial crop. It will invariably become a good source of income and foreign exchange earner for the country, which at present is buried in a massive burden of debt. Further, it will become a cash crop that would help make a revolutionary change in the life of the farmers. Shouldn’t we make use of this opportunity?

I must say that I am not the first person or the only person in Sri Lanka to write about the importance of ganja. I know very well that the late Professor Gunapala Dharmasiri, retired Chair of the Philosophy Department at the University at Peradeniya and one of Sri Lanka’s foremost Buddhist scholars who was passionately interested in Sri Lanka’s Ayurvedic tradition and was a strong advocate for preserving Sri Lanka’s medicinal plants, in his book titled ‘The Nature of Medicine’ has presented an interesting analysis of the mistaken views that prevail about ganja and the importance of preserving the Ayurvedic medical tradition.

Unfortunately, the copy of the book I had in my collection had been either misplaced or lost and I came to know of it only when I looked for it to obtain some information to write this article. Manik Sandrasagra, a well-known cinematographer, was another person who had expressed his views on ganja boldly.

The Head Of State Of A Country Of Lies & Damn Lies 

Tush Wickramanayaka
logoWe are extremely disappointed, although not surprised by The President’s endorsement of corporal punishment. As the Head of State, The President is responsible for the welfare of all citizens of mother Lanka. Article 11 of the Constitution states ‘No person shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment’.  
But how can we expect a man who violated the constitution just three months ago to honor the commitment he made to our younger citizens when he endorsed the ‘Pentagon Proposal’, the blue print of the National Action Plan to End Corporal Punishment and  agreed to work towards providing a happier and safer learning environment for all children on 30th September 2018 at ‘Walk for Real Change’, organized by Stop Child Cruelty, the ONLY civil society organization committed and recognized internationally by Global Initiative to End All Corporal Punishment. 
The United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC), to which Sri Lanka is a signatory since 1992, issued a RED ALERT in February 2018. In the Concluding observations on the combined fifth and sixth periodic reports of Sri Lanka, “The Committee would like to draw the State party’s attention to the recommendations concerning the following areas, in respect of which urgent measures must be taken: violence, including corporal punishment (para. 21)…” 
Sri Lanka is the only South Asian path finder Country that is a signatory to Global Plan to End Violence Against Children towards achieving the Sustainable Developmental Goal 16.2 in 2030.
The President should be ashamed to be the Head of State of a country that has promised much and achieved little to protect the future generation.
There are several alarming revelations by The President. 
MYTH 1 – I was hit so much and I am a better man for it. I still feel the pain
FACT – The irony of this statement is that, if a child needs continuous beating to modify behavior, either the chosen method of discipline is ineffective or the child has developmental delays making it incredibly difficult for him to follow simple commands. If the caning that he experienced was such a joy that he felt necessary to glorify, then why does he still feel the pain? This supports the scientific evidence that the mental agony of punishment is embedded in the limbic system of the brain. At a later stage in life, when the individual is stressed, these feelings are resurfaced. Either the person becomes aggressive themselves or they become delusional. It appears that his aggressive character is coming alive with his determination to inflict pain on others by introducing the death penalty. The President fits the text book description of a victim of corporal punishment.
MYTH 2 – beating a child is part of our culture and ending it is the cry of Western influences
FACT – Though corporal punishment is commonly practiced in Sri Lankan schools and homes alike (De Zoysa, 2006), there is evidence that certain Sri Lankan kings of the past – such as Voharaka Tissa (214-236 AC), Vijayabahu II (1186-1187) and Vijayabahu III (1232-1236) – had prohibited any bodily harm by way of punishment, of children and adults (Moldrich, 1986). However, with the advent of colonial rule in the country, this attitude appears to have changed where it was especially promoted to facilitate its rule (De Silva, 2001; 2007), and has persisted into the present-day society. These colonial rulers have returned to their own motherlands where they have banned such heinous crimes whilst we proudly embrace it as our culture. 

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Quota given to Education not spent - Bimal Rathnayake



 MAR 15 2019
The JVP today (15) apprised Parliament that in the last three years there was a stark contrast in money being allocated for Education and the actual amount spent. This came to light before the Committee on Public Finance (COPF).

JVP MP Bimal Rathnayake who opened the Committee Stage Debate of the Appropriation Bill 2019 on the Education and Higher Education Ministries informed the House that the real expenditure for education from the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) was 1.04 per cent, 1.34%, and 1.27%  in 2016, 2017 and 2018 respectively.

He pointed out that “When COPF was analyzing as to how these allocations were spent for Education, Higher Education and Skills Development and Vocational Training Ministries it was revealed that the actual spending contradicted the undertaking on the amount to be spent.”

Rathnayake noted that the budgetary allocation for education is limited mainly to textbooks.

 However, about 50-60% of that allocation is not being actually spent, he added.

He also said that according to the COPF report, the amount of spending by the Higher Education Ministry on scholarships and subsidies had been curtailed by Rs 882 million in 2018 when compared to 2017.

Budget 2019: Fantasies for short term debate

 15 March 2019 
What is a collection of fantasies called?   
Fantasy is defined in the Oxford English Dictionary as “….Imagining impossible or improbable things”.   
But what is a ‘collection’ of such imaginations called? Here in Sri Lanka it simply is a Budget.   
The latest budget for 2019 now debated in Parliament proposes to give full scholarships to fourteen (14) students who come on top at the Advanced Level examination this year.   
All island firsts in all five streams and the first in all nine Provinces are offered scholarships to Harvard, MIT, Oxford, Cambridge etc.Next year the numbers will be increased to 28 scholarships, the Parliament was told.   

“The only condition is, they will have to return to serve the country for 10 years,” said Finance Minister Mangala Samaraweera.   
The first lie in this is, for such excellent achievements, all these universities offer international scholarships and the SL Government does not have to fund them.
Apart from the fact that this would in no way help improve the quality of education in Sri Lanka, it also proves, this Government knows little about our education.   
How would they choose the all-island top five students for this Scholarship for Educational Excellence (SEE)?   
Would they be the top five in Sinhala medium? Aren’t their firsts in Tamil and English medium as well?   
There is an all-island first in every stream in all three media of education and therefore the number would be 15 (fifteen). To say the first from the nine Provinces are also eligible for SEE, proves neither the Minister nor his advisors know that in all nine provinces students sit for the same A/L exam which is a national exam.   
Therefore, in every province, there is a first in each stream and in all three media of education.   
It would be 135 firsts from all nine provinces.   

At every A/L exam there is always a total of 150 firsts.  
This in a way shows the dominant Sinhala mindset, that decides everything Sinhala as National.   
Most of the people forget that national education in Sri Lanka is provided in three media.   
What do these miscalculations in a Sinhala mindset say?   
It says the government is not serious. It doesn’t don’t have to, for the budget is about rattling out fantasies. 
Rattling out what people want to believe as good for them.   
The SEE was one such fantasy on education, middle-class spoke well about. One Sinhala FB post liked and shared by hundreds, introduced it as unseen side of the budget concluding by saying, the best in the budget.   

None ever wondered why old American and British universities were used to market the proposal.  
Those who drafted the proposal are way behind time.   
Those universities do have very rich histories. But what these advisors here do not know is, there are many competing universities in our neighbourhood that now stand as equally or even more recognised than those Ivy League universities and are certainly very modern.   
The Indian Institutes of Technology (IIT), the Nanyang Technological University in Singapore and the prestigious Chinese Tsinghua University are ranked among the best in the world.   
A study compiled by PitchBook Data, US-based private equity and VC Research firm says:  
“IITs are ranked fourth (just ahead of Harvard) in a new ranking of the top 50 universities that have produced venture capital (VC), -backed founders.”   
And the study that sifted data and information over a period of five years from 2009 to 2014 goes on to say why IIT products are in demand.   

“They have one of the toughest entrance-exams in the world and possess a close alumni network. Their top tech talent has been emigrating to the US for over three decades, they have a globally recognised brand name, and their students are entrepreneurial and risk-takers.”
All other proposals on education are no better. The budget allocation for education and higher education totalled at Rs.344 billion for 2019 says, “Envisaged education reforms will help nurture the analytical and creative skills required to thrive in the modern economy”.   
What these “education reforms” are and who formulated and decided them is unknown.   
We need far-reaching Reforms in education no doubt, but not a few bamboo sticks for a broken barbed wire fence to lift it from here and there. We need a White Paper on reforms for social discourse before they are tabled in Parliament.   
These reforms the 2019 Budget is talking of are perhaps foreign-funded projects and would not have the rural poor within delivery range.   
Those reforms apart, the budget proposals say,   
“Rs.16 billion is allocated to upgrade overall school facilities including laboratories, libraries, classrooms and sanitation facilities.”   
For most urban children, a water bottle has become an integral and important inclusion with the heavily loaded school bag. Schools don’t have drinking water. In the vast majority of rural schools, water is a major issue. 

"The first lie in this is, for such excellent achievements, all these universities offer international scholarships and the Sri Lanka Government does not have to fund them"


So are toilet facilities. 
Before allocations were decided the most important necessity was to have estimated the required toilets and washrooms for each school with children and teachers counted and separately for girls and boys in “mixed schools”. Wonder if the most important aspect with such facilities, a system for good and clean maintenance had ever been thought of. Mere talking of “upgrading” only proves the Rs.16 billion allocation if available, would be decided by the school Principal and the politician in how the money would be spent.  
It was the same in the year 2018. Most have forgotten those proposals. There was a proposal to establish high end technical colleges with assistance from Germany and Switzerland.   
Another above the cloud proposal was to introduce subjects like genetics, robotics and nanotechnology to the school curriculum to prepare students for jobs in the future.   
Rs.750 million was allocated for the Smart Class RoomProject. They remain failed projects to date.   
Introducing genetics, robotics and nanotechnology is out of reach for even most Colombo schools.   
These highbrow subjects cannot be introduced to the school curriculum on budget allocations alone. They need carefully prepared syllabi and at least 200-300 trained teachers on the subject to begin even a pilot project.   

Smart Class Rooms are also for popular city schools.   
For schools that can afford to gather resources. This would further discriminate children in rest of the urban and rural schools leaving over 60 per cent of pupils from over 9,000 “Types 1C, 02 and 03 schools” aliens in a heavily city-oriented school system that caters to the middle class.   
Another Rs.1.25 billion was allocated to establish medical faculties in Wayamba, Sabaragamuwa and Moratuwa universities. Special health insurance was proposed for university students. Vidhya Peeta (National Colleges of Education) students were provided with an increased stipend from Rs.3,500 to Rs. 5,000 per month. The status of these 2018 budget proposals is not discussed with 2019 budget proposals.   
Nor does the present 2019 budget say, how those 2018 proposals would continue this year. They go without explanations.   
This is one major reason the populist demand by FUTA for an annual allocation of 06 per cent of GDP for education, is irrelevant to date. In Colombo and probably in economically large cities like Kandy, Galle, Matara and Kurunegala the norm though not the rule is, Past Pupils decide and bring in funds for what they decide for the school; a playground, a tech lab, a swimming pool or a multi-storeyed building with classrooms for more intake at Grade I. Rural   
schools depend on State allocations. How State funds are channelled to schools have no priorities and accepted criteria.   
Very often around 4,000 “Type 03 schools” get overlooked. Allocations depend on how politically influential the Principal is and what interest the governing party local politician has in the school.   

Politicians don’t go for the construction of toilets and no Principal proposes toilets for the school. 
There is no glamour in declaring open a toilet as declaring open a playground, a laboratory or a two-storey building with a big engraved stone slab to unveil.  
Yet, another serious issue with allocations is inefficiency and corruption in the State.   
State institutes have no capacity to utilise allocations efficiently and within timeframes. There are instances where the second quarter allocation is not even asked for and often allocations stop with the third quarter.   
If the Finance Minister can provide a breakdown of monies utilised from 2018 budgetary allocations, it would show how (in)efficient the State is.  
That leaves all 2019 proposals as fantasies.   
There is Rs.100 million for continual professional development for teachers. With what resources available is a mega question. Another Rs.500 million for Tamil teacher training. 
Again, the same issue; resources for such training. Another Rs.1.1 billion for early childhood development with no indications of who is responsible and what plans there are to handle them efficiently and effectively. For universities, an allocation of Rs.25 billion for upgrading and improving facilities necessary.   

There are many such proposals and the worst out of them is to have the military for petty skills development. No democratic government would use a battle-hardened military for civilian activities. 
In fact, the LLRC concluded this country needs immediate de-militarisation for better and more space for civil life.   
This proposal denies opportunities for civilians to develop and employ themselves in these trades and disciplines while allowing the military to decide what their impact in civil society should be.  
That is what the budget 2019 is for parents, teachers and students. Fantasies for short term debate. With the approval of the budget comes the end to these fantasies.  
And the urban, in particular, would move on, looking for possible presidential candidates.

JVP exposes ‘rape film industry’ in the North


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By Saman Indrajith- 

Women and children in the Northern Province were being exposed to a sinister racket of producing rape films sponsored by members of the same community who were resident abroad, JVP MP Bimal Rathnayake, yesterday, told parliament. 

Participating in the Committee Stage Debate of the Appropriation Bill 2019 on the Ministry of National Policies, Economic Affairs, Resettlement and Rehabilitation, Northern Province Development, Vocational Training and Skills Development and Youth Affairs, MP Ratnayake said that there was now a ‘rape film industry’ in the area.

"This is a tragedy. I think you all can remember the rape and murder of a school girl in Punguduthivu. That was not just a rape. The rapists filmed the brutal incident and they got paid for that similar to what is happening in the Northern Province and it is an open secret now. The real tragedy is that the racket is sponsored by the members of their own community who live abroad and return to the country, occasionally. They pay maniacs to rape women and children and to film those savage incidents. Then they sell those video tapes for large amounts of money."

MP Ratnayake said the government’s definition of a ‘war widow’ was erroneous.

"It is recorded that in the North there are 90,000 widows and 38,000 of them are in Jaffna. When I consulted a women’s activist in the area she said that at least 50,000 of them are below 40 years of age. They are undergoing great hardships and sexual harassment daily. During the years of the bloody war men and women got married when they were very young, many of them were just teens to avoid being conscripted by the LTTE.

"Now, the government says that a war widow is a person who has lost her husband during the war and is entitled to state assistance. It could be a militant or other person. Let me point out the errors in this definition. Some of these widows got married during war; they did not have time to sign papers. Therefore, they did not have government documents to prove that they were married. The same goes for divorcees."

These definitions should be changed because the actual female headed households in the North might increase by more than 30,000, Rathnayake added.

Furthermore, alcoholism, sexual abuse, domestic violence and poverty were high in the North, he said.

"This is because the government did not have a plan to address social and psychological issues of the people living in war torn areas. At least from now on the government should set up a special task force and pay extra attention to social and psychological problems of these people."

Alcoholic beverages and ganja

 LEANING TOGETHER: As far as the larger polity is concerned, the political super-class as a whole comprises mainly straw men. So is it time for a new generation of genuinely national-minded leaders who can respond to a land at a civilisational cross-roads? Time will tell – Pic by Shehan Gunasekara
logo Friday, 15 March 2019 

I don’t despair easily. But a sense of desolation has overtaken me. Since it is abundantly clear that the last of the statesmen is dead and gone in Sri Lanka today. However much you may hold out hope that some knight in shining armour or street-wise Hercules will come to deliver us from all evils, it is pie in the sky. Therefore let us resolve ourselves to our fate with a sense of humour and the traditional resilience that helps us islanders cope with the realities of political hubris and hypocrisy.

I don’t know where to start. Not in jest but in truth and reality. There are a thousand ills that civics and governance today seem heir to that it’s hard to get started on anything remotely resembling critical engagement with the powers that be. Just go with the flow and hope and trust that as a consummation devoutly to be wished, it will all come out clean in the wash…


UNP
Firstly the party of the prime minister’s part: I never cease to find it equally funny and exasperatingly fatuous that the UNP is so good at business carried on as usual during alterations to the map of Sri Lanka. Be it southern ports, western port cities or northern citadels, the GOP of local politics has decided only to be undecided, resolved to be irresolute, is adamant for drift and solid for fluidity.

Surely to jaw-jaw is always better than to war-war. But we must draw the line at the verbal inanities spouted by this creaky crumbling oligarchy and ask that it retire hurt. Despite that nagging sensation that it is the only thing that stands between us and the fall of night at the hands of the barbarians baying at the gate…


SLPP
Secondly, those very Huns. From southern Kataragama to which it returns to appeal to dark gods; through saddened Kilinochchi which it razed with unholy fire; to Sri Jayewardenepura Kotte where it raises Cain… the former president’s present opposition is nothing but a hideous apparatus of aggression which once gashed Sri Lanka into slavery and ruin… and threatens – no, promises – to do so again.

Where once many Sri Lankans may have welcomed a Rajapaksa to his rightful place, or cheered his flag upon the troubled seas of sovereignty and territorial integrity, today he and his regime as well as the machine of a man and his former movement are rag-tag tatters reduced to a motley crew. Where once an Iron Curtain descended on the land, today the mask has slipped and we see the joint opposition and its leader’s countenance revealed as empty-faced chicanery. In promising to defeat the budget and failing, they have shown themselves – not for the first time – to be hollow men leaning together, their headpiece filled with straw.


SLFP
Last but by no means least on the scale of fatheaded hollowness is the uneasy head on which the crown of state lies… if not for much longer, at least nauseatingly in these present doldrums through which our ship sails.

Hailed as a leading light in the late great revolution of over four years ago, he has done nothing but usher in a new Dark Age made more sinister by the lights of perverted pseudo-philosophy and bankrupt religiosity.

The love of peace, the toil for plenty, the strife for significance, the pursuit of growth and development and progress with justice – all these have eluded us thanks to his utterly vain and even narcissistic fatuity.


End
As far as failed revolutions go, however, this is not the end. It is not even the beginning of the end. But it is, perhaps, the end of the beginning. Out of the ashes of these three leaders, a new leader – no, a new political culture and all its proper accoutrements – can, must, shall, arise like the proverbial phoenix.

Where shall we find such leaders and such a culture? It is a consummation devoutly to be wished. For far too long we have customarily relied on the established political parties to provide national leaders. Well no longer! Let’s look beyond the pale… to sports, certainly academia and professionalism, perhaps even business, or maybe a favourable concatenation of all these spheres of opinion and influence.

If we are together in this enterprise, nothing is impossible. If we are divided now as then, once again we shall all fall.


Cry
This then is the lesson for each and every one of us. Let us leave the infancy of cheap posturing chauvinistic self-serving self-seeking self-interested self-indulgent politics behind us. As polls of all stripes loom on the horizon, let us send out a clear strong loud signal to the powers that be and would be all over again. We are done with your tripe and type!

If you field your usual suspects and unrepentantly criminal elements again, we will not vote or support your leadership (oh, let us make that service) efforts ever again. We will never give in to your vain ambitions or false promises or agendas to feather the nests of family and friends ever again. Never again, let us cry my beloved country and fellow citizens!

And never give in. Never give in to vile petty partisan perverted politics ever again. Never ever! Never give in. Never give up. Never ever give up or give in.

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

Tuk Tuk Drivers’ Sexual Harassment Gives Women & Tourism A Rising Headache

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Several women who have recently fallen victim to sexual abuse especially at the hands of sexually frustrated male tuk tuk drivers, have taken to social media to vent their frustrations, as the epidemic continues to grow uncontrollably on the streets of Sri Lanka.
Both foreigners and local women have fearlessly stepped forward to share their sickening experiences some with startling video evidence.
A Policeman when contacted by Colombo Telegraph and who spoke on condition of anonymity said “yes, I do agree that this epidemic is on the rise. Unfortunately the Police force does not have enough manpower to tackle this type of crime. The number of registered three wheelers on the roads of Sri Lanka is now well over a million vehicles.”
This rampant curse that women in Sri Lanka are forced to endure needs to be curbed immediately, as it is fast affecting even the tourism industry in Sri Lanka.
Sri Lanka is fast getting widespread criticism globally firstly for the harassment women continuously face on the streets of Sri Lanka and moreover where the local government law enforcing officers go on to deal with such complaints in a lackadaisical manner.
A land like no other, the miracle of Asia or whatever fancy name Sri Lanka wishes to call itself, it will certainly have to curb this menace soon before the tourism sector is severely affected.
Meanwhile two ladies who were subject to harassment by three wheel drivers recently had the courage to film the two perverts in action and in doing so created huge public awareness and a plethora of social media responses in Sri Lanka.
One woman wrote that she was made to feel extremely embarrassed when the three wheel driver was masturbating during the journey she took on her way to drop off her three year old in school.
In the second instance the lady whilst travelling in her own private vehicle was taunted by a three wheeler driver who continued to make gestures driving alongside her vehicle. The tuk tuk driver whilst pointing to his genitals with one hand was using his other hand to maneuver his tuk tuk through the winding traffic.
Writing to a group on Facebook known as EPFS Community Vraie Cally said “I had to take my daughter to nursery today and hailed a Trishaw on the street. It didn’t take me long to realize this man kept touching his penis (over his clothes). At first I wasn’t sure. But once he started doing it with more frequency, I realized that he was masturbating.

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FR petition filed challenging non appointment of CA President

Four senior attorneys representing ‘Lawyers for Democracy’ yesterday filed a Fundamental Rights petition in the Supreme Court seeking an Interim Order desisting the President from making further acting appointments to the position of President in the Court of Appeal.

The petitioners Lal Wijenayake, Sunil Jayaratne, Luxman Jothikumar and Namal Rajapaksa are seeking a declaration that the decision to consecutively make acting appointments to the office and position of the President  in the Court of Appeal without the approval of the Constitutional Council is violative of the Constitution and in particular Article 41C of the Constitution read with Article 12(1).

They also sought a declaration that the petitioners’ Fundamental Rights under Article 12(1) have been and continue to be violated by the actions of the President.

This petition had been filed through Attorney-lat-Law Raj Mohan Balendra practicing in the name style and firm of Sinnadurai Sundaralingam and Balendra.

The petitioners have cited the Attorney General, Speaker Karu Jayasuriya, Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, Opposition Leader Mahinda Rajapaksa, Parliamentarian Mahinda Samarasinghe, MP Bimal Rathnayaka, MP Thalatha Atukorale, Jayantha Dhanapala, Naganathan Sellvakumaran, MP Chamal Rajapaksa, Javed Yusuf (members of Constitutional Council), Justice Deepali Wijesundara and Secretary to the President Udaya Ranjith Seneviratne as respondents.

The petitioners state that since January 9, 2019, no appointment has yet been made to the office and position of the Court of Appeal. The petitioners are aware that such has resulted in the Constitution of the benches of the Court of Appeal being unconstitional and disrupted.

They state that there is a constitutional duty on President to duly recommend names to the Constitutional Council for approval for appointment by him to the office and position of President of the Court of Appeal.

The petitioners state that no acting appointment can be made without approval of the constitutional council and such acting appointment sans approval is contrary to Article 41 of the Constitution. They further maintained that continued delay and failure to make nominations to the Constitutional Council violates the Rule of Law and adversely impact on the Independence of the Judiciary.