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

Monday, June 17, 2019

Indo-Sri Lankan Policies In Arabic Language And Arabic Colleges

When will our Sri Lankan Sinhalese community wake up from their deep sleep? 

 
by Dr SLM Rifai-2019-06-17
 
Sri Lankan political leaders must follow Indian political leaders today in helping minority communities. As soon as Modi is elected for his second term, Surprisingly he announced that he would like to upgrade all Arabic colleges in India, He wanted to see that all Arabic college graduates are trained in modern education. This includes some dramatic changes in Arabic college syllabus, Arabic college teaching and Arabic college education. It is reported that each Arabic college will be given computer facilities and other modern teaching facilities. Moreover, drop outs from Arabic colleges will be trained in educational and vocational training. He wants to concentrate his second term in supporting poorest of poor in India. This includes helping all minorities. What a brilliant idea this? what can Sri Lankan political leaders learn from Indian PM today? I think PM Modi of today is different Modi of the past. He appreciates the richness of Indian human resources. Indian human potentiality is very much rich in this modern digital world. Indians are dominating IT sectors in the world. They are better than Chinese in IT. .Today, most of US IT companies hire Indian IT professionals. PM Modi can no longer ignore the human potentiality of 200 million Indian Muslims. He understands well the potentiality of Indian Muslims and their connection with Arab countries. He wants make use of this Indo-Arab connection to develop India. PM Modi knows well that millions of Indians work in Middle Eastern countries.
 
 
PM Modi has rightly grasped the potentiality of Arabic college graduates at this movement in this modern world. He is not only a clever politician but also a successful businessman too. He uses his business skills to make use the potentiality of Indian Arabic college graduates. Indian Arabic colleges produce thousands of graduates each years. These Indian Arabic colleges graduates could make a fortunate for India if they were well trained in IT sectors and send to work in Middle East. He has taken some right decisions to make use of their potentiality for Indian economy. I really appreciate the brain behind this project. This shows Indian policy makers and economists are shrewd and very much cleverer than other Asian countries. I think that Indian government gets more remittances from Middle East than any other countries in the world. This shows Indian politicians are business minded and they know well how make use of golden opportunities. Rather than sending drivers into Middle East countries, India could send qualified IT professionals. This is a brilliant Idea.
 
What about Sri Lankan politicians? what do they think about Arabic language and Arabic colleges? what do they think about the human potentiality of Sri Lankan Muslim community today? While Indian policy makers are promoting Arabic language and Arabic college Education, Sri Lankan policy makers are demoting Arabic language. In fact, Sri Lankan politicians are thinking how to wipe out Arabic colleges and how to close down Arabic colleges? How to wipe out Arabic language from Sri Lankan soil? what a difference between Indian policy makers and Sri Lankan policy makers. In India a team of good policy makers and experts advise Indian PM and yet, in Sri Lanka a team of monks and racists advise Sri Lankan president? Otherwise, How could Sri Lankan government make some grave policy mistakes?
 
Some Sri Lankan politicians want to ban the use of Arabic language in public offices. Today, European universities are promoting Arabic language. Because, the Arabic language is a gateway for Middle East job market and yet, our narrow minded politicians want to wipe out Arabic and Arab cultures. By doing this, we make some grave mistake and harm for Sri Lankan economy. Today, more than 2 million Sri Lankans work in Middle Eastern countries. Most of them do odd jobs. Suppose they are fluent in Arabic language, they could get good professional jobs in Middle East. In return, these Sri Lankan people who work in Middle East could contribute to Sri Lankan economy. yet, some narrow minded monks do not read this from this perspective.
 
Humanity would not have seen the European renaissance and enlightenment ages without Arabs translating Latin and Greek books into Arabic in the middle ages. The European scientists and philosophers learned all kinds of knowledge from the works of Arabic translation from Spanish Muslims. The Arabic language had greatly contributed to the development of modern science and technology.Arabic is taught in many western universities for many reasons. Above all, millions of books have been written in Arabic and Moreover, Arabic is spoken by 400 million people today in the world.
 
Yet, some political idiots in Sri Lanka do not like to see Arabic letters anywhere in Sri Lanka. Compare the shrewdness of Indian politicians and the stupidity of some Sri Lankan politicians today. The Arab tourism is booming everywhere. Indians are many times cleverer than Sri Lankan politicians in promoting Arabic language. Japanese hotels not only give Halal food to its Arab tourists but also give prayers mates and prayer direction compasses. That is the business mind of Japanese people and yet, what is wrong with some Sri Lankan Sinhalese minds? why they want to close down all avenues of income generating opportunities. As a result of this narrow-minded policies, Sri Lankan people will suffer.
 
When will our Sri Lankan Sinhalese community wake up from their deep sleep? All countries around us are competing one another for international markets in business and services sectors. Yet, our Sri Lankan politicians are misguided by some monks.Sorry to say, Sri Lankan economy will suffer hugely if good economists and policy makers do not take some strong decision on this matter in the great interest of this nation. We will miss out some golden opportunities in business and tourism industries. What a missed opportunity for Sri Lanka was this? likewise, Sri Lanka is losing out many ways due to policy failures in many areas.

Yogi Sadhguru On Inner Engineering, Memory, Consciousness & An Expanded Intellect

Dr. Siri Gamage
logoThose of us with Sri Lankan heritage, among others, approach matters relating to mind and body, life and death, human sufferings of various types, and the means to happiness through Buddhist teachings. For this purpose, we tend to use teachings of Buddha in various forms.  Buddhism has evolved from a philosophy of life meant for better understanding of our reality relating to the self and other as well as the universe to a religion largely consumed by ritual practices meant for daily relief from sufferings.  In the process, various forms of practice from other faith traditions have also entered our way of life –some not necessarily relating to the fundamental or core problems of life. In the meantime, problems facing the world and people have intensified. Many are seeking solutions of one kind or another and some are pushed toward radical and violent solutions while many adopt a lethargic attitude simply contend with daily living. 
The Buddhist teaching, analysis and interpretation focuse mainly on one set of concepts, theories and explanations to the exclusion of others. Since it is believed that the Buddha in his early life explored other Indian religious/philosophical traditions and did not see a value in them, later attempting to discover the ultimate truth about life process, its failings and the way to nibbana by himself, we have generally focused on his teachings to the exclusion of other religious religions even from India (Hindus of course follow Hinduism). I wonder if we can still find other sources of wisdom from Indian intellectual traditions -if not religious traditions- that can assist us to comprehend today’s problems better?  In this context, the conversations by mystic and visionary Sadhguru from South India is highly relevant and useful. After my son alerted me to his talks available on the internet and u-tube, I have been listening to the ideas, explanations and reasoning that Sadhguru presents across the continents in universities and world forums based on his understandings achieved through Aadi Yoga.  I believe those of us concerned with contemporary issues facing the humankind need to listen to Sadhguru so that we can move away from narrow interpretations and also develop our inner self and intellect better.
He talks about the way our body is made physically and the power of intellect beyond the memory we have accumulated. According to him, mind is not limited to the memory and the brain. It is everywhere in the body. Human beings as blessed we are in comparison to other animals with the power to think, meditate, reason, compare etc.are not using all components of intellect.  According to Sadhguru there are four elements to our intellect. If we are constantly reacting to what we receive via our senses, then we are bound to be anxious, stressed, and not live the life as it meant to be.  We need to take steps and strive to develop our consciousness, as he calls it, in order to take control of our mind and body rather than succumb to compulsive behaviour.
Yogi Sadhguru engages with a range of scientists, medical specialists, academics, youths in universities across North America, UK, India and elsewhere on contemporary topics including leadership, environment, education, and priorities in life. He points out the limitations of science and technology in the process while acknowledging the advancements they have achieved in terms of providing for necessities of material life. He is very articulate, and communicates his ideas and responses in an easily understood way. He is on a mission to educate the world on the need to take active steps for self-engineering if we are to preserve the planet as it is for next generations. He has established two centres in South India and one in Tennessee, USA manned by volunteers. Indian government has recognised his contributions to Indian society and the world. Instead of promoting ritualistic behaviour, he promotes self- understanding or inner engineering as the solution to contemporary problems of life and society.

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Poson ponderings on positional power: ‘Authority vested’ vs. ‘authority wasted’


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Monday, 17 June 2019

We witnessed a serene Poson Poya, in a far more improved security setting in Sri Lanka. Whilst the Sri Lankan life slowly returning to normal, political fronts do not appear to show the same. Has the political power become the people ‘pava’ (sin) in Sri Lanka? Do we see the much-needed congruence among key people leaders in navigating the nation? Let me share some salient thoughts through my 350th column of Humane Results.

Overview

Poson Poya is associated with the arrival of Buddhism in Sri Lanka. It is widely hailed as the beginning of a new era in Sri Lankan civilisation. It commemorates the occasion of Arahat Mahinda, son of Emperor Asoka of India arriving here. The way he converted King Devanampiyatissa to Buddhism is an amazing story to depict the subtle difference between an ‘owner’ and a ‘servant’.

When referring to the dialogue that took place between the King Devanampiyatissa and Arahat Mahinda, a logical testing of the intelligence of the king can be seen.

“…And are there, besides other mango trees and those trees which are not mango trees, yet other trees?”

“There is this mango tree Sir.”

With that insightful answer, Arahat Mahinda has apparently appreciated the king’s wisdom in advising him, as a ruler to act as more as a servant of the land than the owner of it.

“O King, mighty as you are, it is well to remember that total ownership of the environment is not yours. You are, but the trustee of the mountains, the rivers, the forests and the oceans which enrich our lives, and it is your bounden duty to hand these down to posterity in the condition in which you inherited them from your forefathers.”

Do we see such a mindset among the modern-day managers and administrators, particularly in the governing circles? Much soul-searching is required in the spirit of Poson towards the search of not only being authoritative but authentic.
Power and authority 

In typical management context, the term ‘power’ refers to a capacity that one person has to influence the behaviour of another, so that the second acts in accordance with the first’s wishes. It is more a capacity or potential as it may exist but not be used. Probably the most important aspect of power is that it is a function of dependence.

Let’s take two persons A and B. The greater B’s dependence on A, the greater is A’s power in the relationship. Dependence, in turn, is based on alternatives that B perceives and the importance that B places on the alternative(s) that A controls.

Authority is the legitimate power. The typical dictionary defines it as the institutionalised and legal power inherent in a particular job, function, or position that is meant to enable its holder to successfully carry out his or her responsibilities.

It also refers to the power that is delegated formally. It includes a right to command a situation, commit resources, give orders and expect them to be obeyed, it is always accompanied by an equal responsibility for one’s actions or a failure to act.

King Devanampiyatissa had the authority vested in his rulership being the head of the State. The advice of Arahat Mahinda was to use that authority with better meaning and broader understanding. When the authority vested in the key public sector positions is not properly used to prevent corruption or to promote commitment, it in fact becomes authority wasted.

Giving excuses in highlighting limitations whilst pointing fingers at one another which is the prevalent political phenomena, signifies the same sad scene.
Authority vs. Authenticity

As we already saw, authority is legitimate power. What about authenticity? It is simply being genuine in one’s all words and deeds. There is a degree of principle-centred behaviour implied here. You show your real values in action by being authentic or otherwise. We have plenty of live examples in the political front these days.

How can authority and authenticity meaningfully be related? We can see four possible options. Figure 1 illustrates it in detail.
Based on figure 1, we can describe the four possible scenarios as follows:

1.Exhausting: A clear struggle with both aspects being low is meant here. It directly points to a poor attitude and aptitude. Sad to see some prominent political figures through their utterances reveal their lack of authenticity in ‘wasting the authority vested’

2.Exhibiting: This is the common tribe we see in the political circles. Showing the society, a virtuous outlook while being vicious in misusing the vested authority. No political party can absolve itself from this. Gross abuse of power we heard in multiple instances can be summed up in this category. Again, the authority vested is wasted

3.Exerting: Another interesting category of ‘people representatives’ who attempt to do a genuine job but lacking the required authority. The bountiful backbenchers who occasionally complain about missing the needed authority. One positive aspect is the decency some of them demonstrate in having patience despite being overlooked for deserving positions

4.Excelling: This is the ideal place to be where you have the much-needed authority whilst showing the expected genuineness to the fullest. King Devanampiyatissa demonstrated this in his meaningful dialog with Arahat Mahinda. We had this rare breed in the political circles in the past. Malcolm Cardinal Ranjith aptly demonstrated the appropriate blend of authority and authenticity in his words and deeds in the recent past

It reminds me what was shared with me by my friend Mano about William Gopallawa, the first Buddhist Governor-General and First non-executive President of Ceylon/Sri Lanka. Relating to an incident where he was insulted by a golf caddy in Nuwara Eliya. “The grace of power, is not using it but knowing when not to use it”. That is the sure way to ensure that the authority vested is not wasted.
A recent initiative

I was humbly happy to get involved in a recent initiative where we reflected on the ‘authenticity and authority’ in a deeper sense, in the aftermath of the Easter Sunday tragedy.

“As educationists and professionals, we propose an urgent manifesto for peace, harmony, safety, and security for all Sri Lankans”. That is the ethos of the outcome of a series of deliberations of a set of ‘likeminded individuals’. It was unity in diversity as we represented all races and religions.

The initial list of proposers included (apart from me), Dr. Harsha Alles (the main initiator), Rev. Fr. Marc Billimoria, Nirmali Wickramasinghe, Prof. Priyanjali de Zoysa, Prof. Aloka Pathirana, Dr. Vijith Kannangara, Nelum Senadira, Nayana Karunaratne, Shea Wickramasingha, Ali Sabri, Mano Sekaram, Udena Wickramasooriya, Ameer Ahamed, Suren Kannangara, Hussain Sadique, Fouzul Hameed, Kumar Nadesan, Reyaz Mihular, Moksevi Prelis, Adel Hashim and many others who endorsed.

Our proposal had two parts, viz, education of children and make Sri Lanka safe and secure.

Educate our children to live in peace and harmony
  • Develop a policy to prevent fulltime schools that teach religion and/or a specific language only, during the 13 years of a child’s education
  • Whilst enabling the learning of one’s own religion, develop a policy that facilitates the learning of other religions and peace studies
  • Consolidate, enhance and ensure implementation of trilingualism, to facilitate cross-ethnic communication and employability. A link language should be made a compulsory core subject that should be examined at some level
  • Develop a policy to prevent establishment of new schools branded directly or indirectly by a specific religion/ethnic group. Encourage existing schools branded directly or indirectly by a specific religion/ethnic group to admit a minimum of 10% children of other faiths/ethnic groups to ensure a multi-religious/ethnic school environment
  • Enact laws to regulate all schools, universities and institutes of education; monitor their sources of external funding; and have a system of authorising/licensing teachers
Make Sri Lanka a safe and secure country
  • Establish a cyber-intelligence unit that can track and monitor anti-social, extremist, and criminal behaviour or any other threat to national security on the internet
  • Make citizens better aware that the sole law of the land is the Sri Lankan Law stipulated in the Constitution; and encourage citizens to demand that the rule of law is upheld without fear or favour
  • Establish a news verification centre where citizens could verify the accuracy of news they are presented with through any medium. Enact new laws to criminalise all forms of extremist content, hate speech, and incitement of violence, in whatever medium it may be including those who facilitate the medium
  • Bring all religious affairs under a single ministry. Encourage self-regulation of religions
  • However, establish a religious council under this Ministry to monitor emerging trends that could pose a threat to national security
  • Political parties should only be based on Policy. No new political parties based on religion or ethnicity should be given registration. Existing political parties based on religion or ethnicity should be required to conform to this policy
At least there is a sense of satisfaction that the sanity prevailed in reaching a consensus of collaboratively committing towards the betterment of the nation leaving aside racial and religious differences.
Way forward 

In coinciding with the Poson pondering, there is an interesting thought from John Wesley. “Do all the good you can. By all the means you can. In all the ways you can. In all the places you can. At all the times you can. To all the people you can. As long as ever you can.” If we diligently do so, the authority vested will surely not be wasted.

(Prof. Ajantha Dharmasiri can be reached through director@pim.sjp.ac.lk, ajantha@ou.edu or www.ajanthadharmasiri.info.)

The Blundering Cardinal

By George Braine


LEN logo(Lanka e News -16.June.2019, 5.40PM)  Sri Lanka’s first Cardinal, Thomas Cooray, passed away in 1988, and for decades, he was not replaced. In 2007, President Rajapakse and his wife Shiranthi, a Catholic, visited the then Pope, who asked Rajapakse what he could do for Sri Lanka. Rajapakse replied. “Give us a Cardinal”. (I heard this from a trustworthy source.)

The appointment of a top cleric, such as a Cardinal, to a non-Catholic country like Sri Lanka, has to be weighed carefully. When a suitable name comes up, the Vatican would consult the head of state to ensure that the person is acceptable to the government before the appointment is made. For instance, I don’t think a Tamil would ever be appointed a Cardinal in Sri Lanka. I assume that, when Rajapakse was asked, he perhaps recommended Malcolm Ranjith, or gave his approval to the nomination. Malcolm Ranjith knows this, is ever grateful to Rajapakse, and, since he became Cardinal in 2010, has shown his loyalty to Rajapakse in a number of ways.

Thousands of civilians died at the end of the Eelam war. No disputing this fact. But Rajapakse, fearing reprisals, has denied this. The issue keeps coming up, especially during the annual UN human rights meetings in Geneva. Once, following the Rajapakse line, Malcolm Ranjith declared that (I paraphrase) “No civilians were killed during the final stages of the war”. How would he know? He wasn’t at the front. Among the civilians killed were Tamil Catholics, perhaps in their hundreds if not thousands.

During the “constitutional coup” last year, when Rajapakse briefly became the illegitimate Prime Minister, Malcolm Ranjith was seen at Rajapakse’s official residence. What on earth did he think he was doing?

The Cardinal, quite foolishly, usually jumps on the bandwagon on popular but controversial issues, especially when these issues align with the Rajapakse/nationalist leanings.

1. Quick support for the death penalty for drug dealers proposed by President Sirisena. Two weeks after he spoke, the Pope delivered him a slap in the face by publicly declaring that the Catholic Church was opposed to the death penalty.

2. “Human rights is a Western concept”, another declaration, this time during a sermon. What was he thinking? He probably wanted to align himself with the Sinhala nationalist idea that no human rights were violated in Sri Lanka. He quickly backtracked, but, as usual, the damage control didn’t succeed.

3. Declaring that Sri Lanka is a Sinhala Buddhist country. We do have a majority of Sinhala Buddhists here, but we are the “Democratic, Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka”. Again, Malcolm Ranjith was in tune with the racists/nationalists.

4. Rushing up to Kandy to hold Rev. Rathana’s hand while the latter was “fasting unto death”. The monk is a known racist, and the fast was a political stunt. The Mahanayakes ignored the stunt. But Malcolm Ranjith was in excellent company: the race mongering, Muslim-hating monk Galaboda Gnanasara.

Gullible Sri Lankans have nominated the Cardinal for the Nobel Peace Prize. True, he preached restraint after the Easter bombings, but, did he have a choice? The Bible says “If anyone slaps you on the right cheek, turn to them the other cheek also.” Malcolm Ranjith could not have asked Catholics to go out and slaughter Muslims. In any case, knowing his unpredictable ways, I have no doubt that the Pope, or an aide, called Malcolm Ranjith after the bomb blasts and told him exactly what to say and how to react.

In Sri Lanka, we have militant monks coming out of temples and causing havoc in the country. What we don’t need is a publicity seeking Cardinal behaving impulsively. Malcolm Ranjith should hold his tongue and watch where he goes before the Catholic Church in Sri Lanka becomes the object of ridicule and scorn.

By George Braine

(Dr. George Braine, PhD (University of Texas at Austin) has more than 40 years of experience in teaching English as a second/foreign language at the primary, secondary, and tertiary levels. He has taught students and teachers from a variety of language backgrounds in Sri Lanka, the USA and Hong Kong.)
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by     (2019-06-16 12:21:30)
 

Shaping up: Undoing of a Democracy



Influencing an enforcement

17 June 2019
In Sri Lanka, anything unlawful we are caught doing, can be “shaped up.” It is the “Asian Way” we say proudly, indirectly alluding to upholding the law as the “Western Way.” In that self-congratulation we forget that we bury our democracy in our feudal grave where our past belongs. For who can shape-up any crime they commit? It is our elders – our clergy like Ven. Rathana and Gnanasara Theras, the Prime Minister, the President, and our ruling class. Our 71 years of independence are wasted on us as we vote and re-vote for our politicians who openly take bribes, and kill our kith and kin, just because they are our feudal elders. 

Voting right held to ransom

Several complaints have been received that Grama Nildaris (GNs) are collecting information on Muslim residents beginning June 1. The GNs have refused to work only with our form saying they must use the second unauthorized form. That gross insubordination has been “shaped up” letting GNs do as they wish because it is some bigwigs who drafted their Nazi form. In effect, it is saying “If you want to vote, follow us and our communal leadership in disfranchising the Muslims of this country by driving in the fear to register and reveal where they live.”

Parliamentary and PC polls

PC elections are long overdue except in Uva Province. The government passed the new PC Elections Act after the Attorney General (now the Chief Justice) pulled some shenanigans through wrong advice to the Speaker on changing the Act in Committee when it was against the Standing Orders. He thereby shaped up some problems for the government. The new law, nevertheless, is a good law going by similar changes to the Local Government Act. It provides for mixed elections combining first past the post with the old preferential vote. It gives women quotas.  The men in Parliament did not like the new law because many of them do not want to give up their places to women. Perhaps for that reason when the electoral boundaries were drawn up by the Delimitation Commission, Parliament balked at approving them. At that point a Committee under the Prime Minister had to modify and approve it within two months. That committee we were told was working on it but our sources informed us they had met only twice. We were being strung along. 
"We vote and re-vote for our politicians who openly take bribes, and kill our kith and kin, just because they are our feudal elders"
As the Speaker told us, Ministers Mano Ganeshan and Rishad Bathiudeen had asked the Committee to wait as they had sought two clarifications from the President. The Speaker did not know what they were. As he put it, they were in deadlock. Then the question arose if the new Act was operational and if not whether the old Act was still valid under the Interpretation Ordinance. On one side the argument was that since the new Act was stuck without delimitation – to hold elections we need electorates – that new Act was nonoperational. The counter argument was that the delimitation process was begun under the Act so it was already operational. 
The Commission wrote to the President reminding him of his constitutional duty to create a climate for free and fair elections by gazetting the delimitation report. He did not respond. Then we asked for an appointment and asked him to seek the opinion of the Supreme Court (which only he can do) as to whether we can hold elections under the old Act. He promised to instruct the Attorney General but so far no news. We also wrote to the Prime Minister who promised to convene a Party Leaders’ meeting on going back to the old Act. No news. 
For the Election Commission to call for PC Elections, either the government must approve the delimitation report for us to go with the new Act, or legislate the abolition of the new Act and the revival of the old Act. Till then we must assume the government wants no Provincial Council elections. With the government refusing to do neither, we cannot have PC elections. 

Presidential poll: Proverbial parrot

We have waited for PC elections like the proverbial parrot waiting for a fruit that never ripens to ripen. No one except women and those of us who want to empower women wants the new Act. Even if the conditions for PC elections get ready, ever, by the government deciding to go ahead with the old act, it will take at least a month for parliament to enact the necessary legislative changes. And then we will want 10-12 weeks to prepare. That will take us to the end of September. However, if the presidential elections are to beheld in November, the call for nominations and preparation of ballot papers for that will clash. 
The presidential elections are declared by the EC and no one else (although the president has unlawfully declared December 7 as the date). The laws are in place for those elections and have been implemented successfully.  I doubt that the government will change those laws to seek a delay because if there is a delay the current President will go out of office in December and there is no law under which he can stay on without a fresh mandate.If he resigns before his term ends on January 15, parliament will vote in a person within a month till January 15. The President will not relish that. Instead of being the proverbial parrot, let us shoot for the presidential elections which the EC has control over, and let the people speak at the earliest possible date. No more shaping up.

Upholding election laws

For the people to speak, the election laws and their violations must not be shaped up. Consider the numerous violations we saw during last local government elections: there was only one successful prosecution from Kurunagala leading to loss of civic rights. That too by accident in Mawatagama. The leader of an independent group had been charged with a minor violation. 

Seminar on election dispute resolution (EDR)

Are the people free to speak? An eye-opener for many was the EDR Workshop on June 12 sponsored by IFES, Australian Aid and us. One session was led by our officials heading our 25 district offices. It was no-holds-barred. We empower our officials through the millions we are spending on technology to monitor election law violations. But real empowerment is of the heart of our officials bravely refusing any shaping up. Among their grouses were
a. In the 2015 parliamentary elections, Asst. Commissioner Sajith Welgama referred for investigation  how, as he alleged, the SLMC Eastern Chief Minister Naseer Ahmed’s Secretary Aseez made 50 labour grade appointments through the Health Ministry. Welgama sent all details to the then Election Department in a file. He believes the matter was ‘shaped up’ and the file disappeared or buried.
b. Waiving the Law: While parliament is supreme, it is now common practice from Commissioner Dayanada Dissanayake’s time to be generous in waiving the law as a favour to party leaders. Thus while the law disallows something, a Party Leaders’ meeting convened by the Elections Department and now the Commission claims the right to waive laws as it wishes. That group has agreed to override Parliament which does not allow cutouts – that we may violate the law and allow cutouts of certain dimensions which seem to change from time to time. Our officials on the field then produce one circular while the parties in violation of the law produce another. The law allows no cutout. Similarly the law allows only one party office per polling division. When the then District Commissioner for Colombo, Achchuthan Sivasubramanaim, ordered during the 2015 presidential election that all unlawful offices be removed immediately, Dinesh Gunawardena argued that they had the permission of the Party Leaders’ meeting. Kamal Pathmasiri, the GA and Returning Officer, had not been communicated that decision (which had no standing even if the Election Commissioner agreed to let the law be violated). Pathmasiri stood by Achchuthan. 
c. Assistant Commissioner R. Saseelan of our Batticaloa office caught then-Minister M.L.A.M. Hizbullah allegedly distributing gifts at a parliamentary rally going on after 11.00 pm using loudspeakers (which too is a Party Leaders’ fiction in violation of sound-pollution laws). The police did not stop the meeting. Sasilan went with another police party, stopped the meeting, confiscated a gift pack, and filed a report with OIC Wethagethara, giving him the confiscated pack. Wethagethara charged Hizbullah supporters with threatening a public officer rather than treating for elections which would have put Hizbullah in trouble. He urged Sasilan unsuccessfully to admit himself to hospital to sustain the false charge which under law is sanctioned by the Attorney General. In time the OIC informed court that there is no evidence and told Sasilan that he had not given him the pack. Similarly when I gave evidence of the Tamil Congress threatening me with assault, the Jaffna Police failed to produce it in court for a year, allowing the special acting judge to throw it out. It is natural to wonder who collaborated in shaping-up.
d. In the 2014 Uva elections, Rs. 2,500 was given per family in the name of drought relief. In the face of attempts to shape up, the courts had to intervene but by then a lot of money had been used to bribe voters.
"The men in Parliament did not like the new law because many of them do not want to give up their places to women:"
e. Assistant Commissioner Soumia Fernando in the 2015 Presidential Elections, asked for the dismantling of a UPFA office in the centre of Matara invoking regulations about the 48-hour silence period preceding voting. But he was allegedly abused by UPFA’s Chandima Rajaputhra. Assistant Commissioner Bandara Mapa who had his camera broken by UPFA thugs. None paid for his camera. At the request of the then President, says Kandy’s Deputy Commissioner Namal Talangama, no press statement followed. Namal reports that in Uva’s provincial elections when he stopped an illegal parade, UPFA’s Anura Withanagamage alleged to have told him, “This is Mahiyangana, not Kandy. We can kill you and your family.” UPFA officials filed a police complaint against our officials, whose Welfare Society had to pay for their lawyer, the department having declined to pay Rs.12,000 for a private lawyer. Nissanka of the presidential security detail assaulted Mervyn Perera’s son, but no police charge. f. In another shaping up of the 48-hour silence rule, parties are allowed to make any propaganda speech just before 48 hours like “vote for so-and-so” and then publish that as news during the silent period. This waiver of the law, shows intent to do favours. Let’s not wait like parrots for the never ripening fruit. Let’s give teeth to our laws with no shaping up for anyone. Let the people speak at the presidential elections. I ask our rulers to ensure that the laws will be enforced impartially and election officials truly empowered. 
”When we defend the franchise, there is no one to defend us,” wails Talangama.
The author is a member of the Election Commission of Sri Lanka

SRI LANKA SC ISSUES 20 STRICT GUIDELINES FOR LAW ENFORCEMENT



Landmark ruling raps Police over Matara schoolgirl unlawful arrest case.

Sri Lanka Brief17/06/2019

Reacting to the growing abuse of power by law enforcement authorities, the Supreme Court, in a landmark ruling, has issued 20 guidelines to be followed by law enforcement authorities for the secure and advancing the rights of the public. This came as part of the SC judgement in a Fundamental Rights petition filed by a minor girl who was a grade 10 student at the time the alleged fundamental rights violation by police took place in 2012.

The Supreme Court ruled that Chief Inspector Waruni Bogahawatta of Matara police station was responsible for the minor girl’s unlawful arrest and deprivation of her liberty, unjustified detention without producing her before a Magistrate and subjecting her to degrading treatment while she was questioned as to whether she was sexually molested by the Chairman of the Akuressa Pradeshiya Sabha.

A three-judge bench comprising Justices Buwaneka Aluwihare, Priyantha Jayawardena and Vijith K. Malalgoda, ordered the Inspector General of Police to follow following guidelines securing and advancing the rights of the public that are recognized under the Constitution and under the law. The Supreme Court observed that the Guidelines must reflect the legal safeguards in our law, international instruments and global best practices.

(01). Law Enforcement Officials shall respect and protect human dignity and maintain and uphold the human rights of all persons.

(02). Law enforcement officials shall respect the principles of legality, necessity, non-discrimination, proportionality and humanity.

(03). Law enforcement officials shall at all times protect and promote, without discrimination, equal protection of law. All persons are equal before the law, and are entitled, without discrimination, to equal protection of the law.

(04). They shall not unlawfully discriminate on the basis of race, gender, religion, language, colour, political opinion, national origin, property, birth or other status.

(05). It shall not be considered unlawful or discriminatory to enforce certain special measures designed to address the special status and needs of women (including pregnant women and new mothers), juveniles, the sick, the elderly, and others requiring special treatment in accordance with international human rights standards.

(06). Children are to benefit from all the human rights guarantees available to adults. In addition, children shall be treated in a manner which promotes their sense of dignity and worth; which facilitates their reintegration into society; which reflects the best interests of the child; and which takes into account the needs of a person of that age.

(07). Detention or imprisonment of children shall be an extreme measure of last resort, and detention shall be for the shortest possible time.

(08). Children shall be detained separately from adult detainees.

(09). Detained children shall receive visits and correspondence from family members.

(10). Law Enforcement Officials shall exercise due diligence to prevent, investigate and make arrests for all acts of violence against women and children, whether perpetrated by public officials or private persons, in the home, in the community, or in official institutions.

(11). Law Enforcement Officials shall take rigorous official action to prevent the victimization of women, and shall ensure that revictimization does not occur as a result of the omissions of police or gender-insensitive enforcement practices.

(12). Arrested or detained women shall not suffer discrimination and shall be protected from all forms of violence or exploitation.

(13). Law Enforcement Officials shall not under any circumstance use Torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment.

(14). No one shall be subjected to unlawful attacks on his or her honour or reputation.

(15). Law Enforcement Officials shall at all times treat victims and witnesses with compassion and consideration.

(16). Law Enforcement Officials shall at all times promptly inform anyone who is arrested of reasons for the arrest.

(17). Law Enforcement Officials shall maintain a proper record of every arrest made. This record shall include: the reason for the arrest; the time of the arrest; the time the arrested person is transferred to a place of custody; the time of appearance before a judicial authority; the identity of involved officers; precise information on the place of custody; and details of the interrogation.

(18). Anyone who is arrested has the right to appear before a judicial authority for the purpose of having the legality of his or her arrest or detention reviewed without delay.

(19). Law Enforcement Officials as far as possible shall take every possible measure to separate juveniles from adults; women from men; and non convicted persons from convicted persons.

(20). Law Enforcement Officials shall at all times ensure to obey and uphold the law and these rules.

DN / Lakmal Sooriyagoda

Above image from HRW.

How poisonous our meal is


Amal Wimalasena-Tuesday, June 18, 2019

In Part 1 of this series of articles it was described how chronic toxicity tends to get overlooked or ignored by people. It was also explained that chronic toxins provoked the immune system to cause inflammation and an overwhelmed immune system causes autoimmune action – a continuous state of high inflammation. Inflammation is now believed to be the cause of almost all chronic diseases. In this article the intention is to show what and how changes happen with a limited spectrum of chronic toxins. In order to do so in a methodical manner, chronic poisons will be divided into five groups as follows.

* Elemental metals
* Elemental non-metals
* Chemicals
* Foods and beverages
* Miscellaneous
Elemental metals - Aluminium, Mercury, Thallium, Lead, Copper

Aluminium

Some of the main problems caused by aluminium were dealt with in Part 1. Three more problems need to be discussed. The first is Alzheimer’s Disease (AD), the second is aluminium in vaccines and the third is aluminium in cosmetics and antiperspirants.

Aluminum is the most abundant metal in the earth’s crust. It is widely distributed in soil, water and air, albeit its tiny quantities in the latter two mediums. It cannot be avoided. But life has evolved and survived with naturally available aluminium. It was not mined then; it is mined and produced now in the mega-tonnage scale. Problems arise from the fact that we have come to use it on a very large scale – in food, beverages, medicines and vaccines. At this level of exposure, the assurance that the aluminium absorbed is very insignificant becomes untenable. It is a fact that aluminium has been found in brain tissues of people who have died of Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) and Autism, and aluminium salts in cosmetics and antiperspirants have been linked to breast cancer.

In regard to the brain, aluminium as a neurotoxin causes inflammation and damages and kills neurons (brain cells), and their “communication cables”, the synapses. According to research studies published around six years ago, inflammation of neurons is linked to more than a dozen causes; that inflammation triggers a defensive autoimmune reaction, which is the formation of B-amyloid plaque (B-AP) – the hallmark of Alzheimer’s.

The biggest collection of neurons is in the brain and the second biggest collection, according to new research, and surprisingly as well, is in the gut microbiome, not in the central nervous system. That shows the fundamental importance of the gut microbiome – which can be topic to follow.

Current western medicine has no cure for AD. Its research aim was the removal of the B-AP. Not surprisingly that has failed – because even if B-AP is removed, the body will replace it, probably at a higher rate, like with cancer. It is a medical process aimed at the middle of a disease process – not at the root cause. In fact a major pharmaceutical company, Pfizer, ceased research on AD as non-productive. Doctors can only predict when you will die of it. Drugs prescribed to “manage” it have no effect whatsoever – except make you poorer and sicker. However, a new arm of western medicine is stopping, reversing and curing AD from about five years ago.

In regard to the gut microbiome, which is called the second brain, if not the first, inflammation of neurons disrupts essential communication between the gut and the brain via the vagus nerve and an emergency communication route. This disrupts normal metabolic functions related to the brain. Inflammation of other cells affect the production of essential brain chemicals like the hormones serotonin and melatonin, leading to stress, anxiety and depression; severe inflammation leads to a “leaky gut” or - increased intestinal permeability to give the condition its formal name. This is a condition in which improperly digested food, bacteria and toxins can pass through the gut wall into the blood stream and give rise to severe inflammation all over the body. The gut wall is only one cell thick. It is meant to work like a very fine strainer, not as a sieve.

In regard to cosmetics and antidepressants, some of them have aluminium derivatives. Since they are applied in specific locations they cause local inflammation. They have been linked to breast cancer. They get absorbed into the skin, go into the bloodstream and get distributed all over the body, causing overall inflammation, but mostly in the area of application.

Lastly for aluminium in this essay, we’ll take the case of aluminium in vaccines. An undisclosed aluminium compound (trade secret) is used as an adjuvant in vaccines – to increase the potency and activity of the injected partially deactivated virus. This is aluminium directly injected into tissue and bloodstream; it is more inflammatory and disease causing than ingested aluminium.

Mercury

Mercury is a strong poison. The tiny amount of mercury in a clinical/household thermometer can kill a large tree of about 3 feet in trunk diameter in about 6-8 weeks. A whole 3-4 inch thick slab of the trunk at the level at which mercury was inserted, dies and ends up similar to cork.

If a mercury thermometer breaks in a house in the USA, it is mandatory to get down a Haz-Mat (Hazardous Material) Team to clean up. They come fully covered in special suites and gear! In my boyhood I have collected by hand most of the mercury from a broken thermometer and later used it on the tree mentioned above. The residual mercury remained out of sight in the thin gaps of the wooden upstairs floor. That is how ignorant and poorly informed we were then.
There are more glaring examples of ignorance.

Liquid mercury (about 50%) well mixed with Tin, Copper and Silver (an amalgam) is used to fill dental cavities. They are the “silver” fillings in your mouth. They give out mercury vapour every second. They give out more with the intake of hot drinks. It is very advisable to remove them, but that must be done by a properly qualified, trained dentist because none should go down the gullet, the vapour produced must be the absolute minimum and every speck must be removed. This exercise might be impossible in Sri Lanka, and even in some developed countries.
 
Methyl mercury is another example. A very glaring one. The story can be said to have started in Minamata in Japan, with what came to be called the Minamata Disease. It was described as a neurological condition due to poisoning of the central nervous system, deeply affecting the sense of balance, and muscle control. Videos of afflicted people are too painful to watch as they seem to be in a permanent state of acute convulsions. Serious cases suffered very high fever, convulsions, psychosis, loss of consciousness, coma, and finally a quick death. It has been called the most horrific mercury poisoning disaster the world has ever seen.

Within 50 years of the setting up of a factory near the city the inhabitants experienced and reported unexplained illnesses. Tardy investigations by a nearby university laid the blame on an organic mercury compound which was later identified as methyl mercury in waste water led into the bay by the factory and transferred to people through their seafood. Seafood from the bay was banned. This clearly shows the cumulative effect of chronic toxins manifesting in a sort of crescendo after decades – in this case by mercury, a strong poison, accumulating in tiny quantities.

That was about 60 years ago. Now we are cautioned about eating seafood from almost anywhere. We are advised to eat small fish as their mercury content is low because they do not live long enough to accumulate high concentrations of mercury. How have our freshwater and seawater food sources got so contaminated? They say it is due to vaporized mercury emanating from coal burning power plants and cement kilns. This stands to reason. In Sri Lanka pollution from the Norochcholai power plant has been detected in Nawalapitiya – almost half-way across the island as the crow flies. There is plenty of similar proof from other countries too.

In regard to vaccines, an organic mercury compound is added to multi-dose vaccine vials as a preservative. The preservative used was methyl mercury.

One cannot help wondering whether those responsible haven’t heard of or forgotten the Minamata disaster because there are many reports of children and adults suffering serious reactions including violent convulsions and death after certain vaccinations.

In the book “Toxicological Effects of Methylmercury” put out by the National Research Council (US) Committee on the Toxicological Effects of Methylmercury, it is stated that;

MERCURY (Hg) is a persistent substance that comes from natural and anthropogenic sources. Hg that enters our oceans, lakes, and rivers is converted to methylmercury (MeHg) by aquatic biota and bioaccumulates in aquatic food webs including fish and shellfish. Humans and wildlife are exposed to MeHg primarily through the consumption of contaminated fish, particularly large predatory fish species such as tuna, swordfish, shark, and whale. In humans, MeHg is known to be neurotoxic. The fetus is more sensitive to those effects than the adult (EPA 1997a).

And, in a study reported from Korea, Young-Seoub Honga et al. states “Methylmercury is highly poisionous and the toxicity varies according to its form, inflow path, exposure amount, and individual susceptibility. When a pregnant woman is exposed to methylmercury, it may increase the risk of silent birth and the birth of babies with deformities or severe nervous system diseases, even when the mother does not show any symptoms of poisoning. Accordingly, most developed countries including the US, Canada, and Japan, set and manage recommendation standards for fish and shellfish intake as a part of the protection of vulnerable classes such as pregnant women and infants from methylmercury.”

Then, why add more through vaccines? How can it be assured as safe? Due to severe protests and agitation by the public, methyl mercury has been replaced by an ethyl mercury based preservative called thimerosal. It is said that there is a hardly any difference in toxicity.

According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control “Thimerosal use in vaccines and other medical products has a record of being very safe. Data from many studies show no evidence of harm caused by the low doses of thimerosal in vaccines.”

This is not entirely true. It may be for the majority, but there are plenty of studies showing women not conceiving for months after a ‘flu shot, of spontaneous abortions – as well as risks mentioned in the Korean study and reactions in children as was seen in Minamata.

The best solution for mercury accumulation is to give up hot drinks if you have amalgam dental fillings, and to detoxify the body regularly. This calls for a little control and discipline. Otherwise it is a relatively cheap and simple process. Many toxic metals can be removed similarly.

If you have to get a vaccine for yourself or a loved one, do not let anybody push you into it. Ask for the package leaflet, read and understand it. Then decide whether to take the vaccine or give it a miss. Better, be informed before the event and decide. Truly, it is a difficult decision.

Thallium

Thallium is also a toxic metal pollutant spread from burning coal. Thallium poisoning symptoms are not well defined because several organs are affected simultaneously, but they are very complex and serious.

In Sri Lanka it is produced in coal power generation and coal fired cement kilns. It deposits as salt derivatives on plants and soil; most salts are highly soluble. The highly soluble salts are more toxic than the less soluble ones. Due to their solubility they are a danger in food crops and groundwater.

Thallium tends to replace potassium in our bodies, disrupting important potassium activated processes. It causes fever, delirium, convulsions and coma, neurological and gastric disorders as well as rapid organ damage particularly of the heart, liver and kidneys. Along with several other disorders, development of psychotic behaviour with hallucinations and dementia has also been reported. A specific symptom is almost total hair loss.

Thallium has been used in cosmetics too as thallium acetate – particularly in hair removal creams in the early 1930s. Women who used it for upper lip hair removal lost hair all over, suffered paralysis and damage to eyes. This use was in spite of the fact that thallium acetate was used as a rat poison too. Thallium salts have been banned in many countries because of their strong toxicity, the dangers of accidental exposure and tendencies to use them for murder. This is an example that should warn consumers NOT to believe health assurances from manufacturers and marketers.

However, even the latest and best cosmetic brands have thallium in some products; these are not additives but are impurities present in traces. No one knows what effects they have on health because no safety tests have been carried out. Ladies are referred to the following article for more details on this research. https://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2011/06/04/new-study...

It is assumed that readers are well aware of the toxicities of lead and copper. They are not in very wide use now, too, especially in daily life. Therefore they will not be discussed. 

Our Cricket – A Parable Of Our Political Dysfunction


By Noel Berman –
Noel Berman
logoOn Saturday our Lions showed that they are indeed capable of great things. They began the run chase and it appeared that they were heading for an upset victory. The commentators were impressed. They described the run chase using adjectives reserved for a champion team and many were anticipating a great Sri Lankan victory over their Australian opponents.
Facebook and other social media were full of praises and hopes were running high. A glorious future was finally dawning and there would be no turning back. The ominous dark clouds of the past were being banished in the hope of a magnificent victory.
And then the inevitable happened. One by one the wickets tumbled and hope slowly turned into despair. Sidharth Monga, a writer for ESPN Cricinfo, summed it up in a headline, “Dysfunction, hope, more dysfunction; Sri Lanka’s World Cup rolls on.” He describes petty politics, too many players and captains in between Word Cups, coaches, unexpected victories and a host of other things that make the team bring both hope and despair to the fans. 
“It all ends in dysfunction, though. Senior players take zero responsibility of a run-a-ball chase. They crash all hope spectacularly” says Monga.
So now the disenchanted, disillusioned and despairing fans are left licking their wounds and the little pride that’s left in them makes some lash out in anger and resentment. Their collective soul has been beaten to pulp and all that some can do is to retreat to our past glory. They talk about the 1996 World Cup win against Australia in Lahore, the finals in 2007 and 2011 and of greats like Sangakkara, Sanath, Murali and Mahela. Like a man reaching the end of his life, he has no more dreams of a future just the nostalgia of a past he tries to re-live. 
Blue skies are replaced by dark clouds and once again, hope is gone to be replaced by despondency and depression while a dysfunctional cricketing administration reigns supreme.
And like our cricket so is our politics. Seventy years of dysfunction, hope, more dysfunction; Sri Lanka as a nation rolls on. And the question is, is there even any hope this time around or are we consigned, doomed or cursed to live in a state of dysfunction or as a political scientist may call it, a failed state. 
Like our cricket team we have no limit of people we can blame. We can blame the coach, the selectors, the senior players, the ICC, the hotels, the grounds and even the weather. 
Our seriously high level of dysfunction is such that we can never blame ourselves for all the cheap racist politics of bankrupt politicians who have nothing else to offer the electorate but promise of “racist hegemony” We can only fuel and then pander into their base natures by playing the racist card and blaming the “other” for our stupid decisions and policies, our impotency in acting as statesmen and our myopic vision.
It is never “us” or “we” who are to blame. It is not we who brought about our own downfall when JR Jayewardene first mooted the idea of “Sinhala Only” in the National State Assembly in 1944 and SWRD Bandaranaike (whose ancestors were Tamils) for implementing it. (His daughter Chandrika now says it was a big mistake, but she did nothing to change it while she had all the power to do so). We don’t blame J R, Cyril Matthew and others for the anti-Tamil pogrom of 1983 and after defeating the separatists in 2009 we had a Kalinga Moment but squandered it. We found it easier to identify a new enemy rather than forge a Sri Lankan identity. Nor did we try to uplift the educational standards or the economic opportunities of the poor Sinhalese rather we found a new enemy to blame for the state they were in.

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Those who go by social proof are easy prey to crafty schemers

  • Enemies of Democracy 6
Going after social proof

logoMonday, 17 June 2019 

Swiss writer and novelist, Rolf Dobelli, in one of the essays in his 2013 book ‘The Art of Thinking Clearly’, has given a fine warning to his readers. He has warned against going by ‘social proof’ or ‘majority view’ if one is interested in making logical and constructive decisions. 

Social proof simply means searching for truth and correctness by looking at the number of people who subscribe to a particular view. If the number is large, then, it is taken as the barometer of truth and accuracy. That is because the social proof followers are guided by the notion that ‘not so many people can be wrong at the same time’. Or, in its mirror image, it means that if the herd says something, that is infallibly correct.

Thus, by accepting social proof as the guide, they elevate themselves to the ‘lazy man’s (or lazy woman’s) paradise’ where one does not have to labour to find truth. That is because searching for truth by oneself is costly in terms of both time and money. It also involves a laborious exercise in which one has to expend one’s intellectual energy, a stressful act which one would choose to avoid if a chance is given.
Foolish is foolish, no matter the number believing it

Hence, if others make the choice for him, it is considered the easiest way to find truth. What they do not realise is that this laziness on their part make them easy prey to others who are bent on exploiting their ignorance. But the reality is, as the English novelist W. Somerset Maugham has said and Dobelli has liberally quoted, ‘if fifty million people have said something foolish, it is still foolish’.

Maugham’s masterpiece ‘Of Human Bondage’, a title borrowed from the 17th century Jewish-Dutch philosopher Baruch Spinoza, connotes that when people are unable to control their emotions, they get bonded to views which are coloured by what they believe to be good or bad in terms of what they have been told by others. But, it deprives them of the chance to develop their brains to arrive at logical and rational choices by themselves.
Common sense should be the master

What is being killed by social proof is the ability of people to master and use common sense. When common sense is absent, a few crafty people can change one’s perceptions and goals. A good example is provided by a fable which has been presented in different forms in different cultures but can be traced back to the 13th century Arab writer Ibn Said for its modern version (available at: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_miller,_his_son_and_the_donkey).

In this fable titled ‘The Miller, His Son and Donkey’, a father and a son go on a journey with their donkey. They meet criticisms of passers-by who have their own opinion on how they should travel. When the father and the son walk on either side of the donkey, one blames them for not riding it. When the son gets on to the back of the donkey, another passer-by blames the son that he is cruel and does not care for the father who has to walk. When the father gets on to the back of the donkey, they are blamed again that they do not use the donkey fully. When both of them get on to the back of the donkey, they are blamed again by another passer-by that they are cruel to the donkey. Then, both of them get down and carry the donkey on their backs.

Thus, by listening to everyone who has different opinions on an issue, one cannot make a correct choice. It also causes him to deviate from his goals. The moral of the fable is that one should use one’s common sense rather than listening to others who have different views of their own on an issue.
If peers are wrong, the followers are also wrong 

Dobelli presents the results of an experiment done in the 1950s by psychologist Solomon Asch in support of his point. Says, Dobelli: ‘A subject is shown a line drawn on paper, and next to it three lines – numbered 1, 2 and 3 – one shorter, one longer and one the same length as the original one. He or she must indicate which of the lines corresponds to the original one. If the person is alone in the room, he gives the correct answers because the task is really quite simple. Now five other people enter the room; they are all actors, which the subject does not know. One after another, they give the wrong answers, saying “number 1”, although it is very clear that number 3 is the correct answer. Then, it is the subject’s turn again. In one third of cases, he will answer incorrectly to match the other people’s responses’. Thus, when one follows the peers, one’s choice set is warped.
Follow the herd only if it moves in the right direction

The reason why people behave in this illogical manner is that they are hard-wired to follow the others for survival. Thousands of years ago, when a group of people walk in Savannah looking for foods, if one suddenly starts running, all others would run after him without bothering to inquire why the first one has done so. Any time spent on that exercise would be quite risky. Hence, the easy way for survival is to follow the herd, without bothering to find out whether the herd is rational and logical or not. When this gets imbedded in the system, even after thousands of years, people still follow the herd, thinking that it is the best way to survive in a risky world.
People today cannot keep themselves out of news that is floating around them all the time in the cyber space. However much you try to insulate yourself from news, fake or valid, you are not free from their influence since you live in a society that loves especially sensational news. The correct way to address the issue is not to shun news completely but to gain the skills to convert news into wisdom 
But whether they would survive depends on whether the herd moves in the correct direction or not. In the case of the Central Bank bomb blast of 1996, those, including this writer, who followed the herd to the middle of the hall and ducked themselves under tables survived. In the opposite, those who followed the herd to the windows to see the spectacle below in the street perished. It is therefore important to know, before one follows the herd, whether the herd moves in the correct direction or not.
Buddha’s message in Kalama Sutta

This offers the crafty people – politicians, religious leaders, media men, marketers and civil society activists – to create a herd and get the unsuspecting people to contribute to their cause. In this instance, people temporarily lose their common sense and logic when they hear the concocted news. Falsely believing that the majority is correct and it pays them too to follow the majority, they start following the fake lead created by the crafters. This need not be the case in a country like Sri Lanka where the majority of the people – about 70% – are followers of the Buddha.



The Buddha had advised a section from the Kalama clan that they should not ‘go by reports, by legends, by traditions, by scripture, by logical conjecture, by inference, by analogies, by agreement through pondering views, by probability, or by the thought, ‘This contemplative is our teacher.’ When you know for yourselves that, ‘These qualities are unskilful; these qualities are blameworthy; these qualities are criticized by the wise; these qualities, when adopted & carried out, lead to harm & to suffering’ — then you should abandon them’ (available at: https://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/an/an03/an03.065.than.html). But the behaviour of the majority of the Buddhists in Sri Lanka in the past shows that the wisdom of the Buddha enshrined in Kalama Sutta has not changed the hard-wired illogical system in them.
A doctor convicted by the herd

This is pretty much evident in the episode relating to the alleged professional misbehaviour of a medical practitioner of Islamic faith attached to the General Hospital in Kurunegala. Some sensational news was created in the first instance by a leading Sinhala daily in its front page headlines that a medical doctor belonging to an Islamic organisation connected to ISIS had illegally sterilised 4,000 odd Sinhala Buddhist women. It was vague news and there was no mention of the hospital or the doctor in the report.

But, soon after the news was out, many Sinhala Buddhists got cold feet about the news and got instantly alerted to the imminent danger to their race. This was similar to the behaviour of the people in thousands of years ago in the Savannah when one person suddenly rose and bolted, the others too without inquiry bolted after him.

There was a general acceptance by people in other parts of the country that Muslim doctors are on a mission to annihilate the Sinhala Buddhist race in order to make them the minority and convert Sri Lanka to an Islamic state. This sensational news was spread via social media causing fear and fright among even the Sinhala Buddhists living in foreign countries. It was communicated to those who have no access to that media by word of mouth.

Within days, it became a national alert and no one bothered to examine whether such a thing could happen in reality in an operating theatre in a government hospital when several others were also present.

When some people started questioning the veracity of the news, they were put to silence by an academic attached to the Medical Faculty of the Rajarata University. He publicly opined that when caesarean operations are performed by a specialist gynaecologist, he could surreptitiously damage the fallopian tubes of the woman making her permanently sterile. This academic was a lecturer in pharmacology and not in gynaecology, but since he was a university don, his voice gave credence to the vague news already created for consumption of gullible people.
Witch-hunting a medical practitioner

Then, the hospital administrator attached to the Kurunegala General Hospital appeared before the press and named the medical doctor in question, one Dr. Mohamed Shafi, not a specialist gynaecologist but a general MBBS holder functioning as the Senior House Officer at the hospital on account of his seniority in the service.

The hospital administrator revealed that Shafi had admitted to him that he had performed 8,000 odd caesarean operations in the hospital, a number that was pretty much above the capacity of that hospital to handle within a period of 10 years. But, he did not reveal any illegal sterilisation of women by the medical doctor in question. Now, the apparently created news got its wings and spread like a wildfire igniting fire in the minds of all those who were vulnerable to such news. The pattern was that when several of your neighbours believed it, you also begin to believe it going by the social proof.

A few days later, Shafi was arrested by the Police not on the charge of conducting illegal sterilisation of women when he performed legal caesarean operations but on the charge of amassing wealth that was beyond his normal earning capacity. This is in fact a subject that should have been inquired into by the Bribery or Corruption Commission if illegal graft had been accepted by Shafi or by the Inland Revenue Department if he had not reported his income accurately in his annual income tax returns. But arresting him on either count would have been done only after a proper inquiry by the authority concerned.
Arrest first and then look for arrestable criminal charges

After his arrest, a window was opened at the General Hospital in Kurunegala for any woman who had been operated by Shafi to come forward and make a complaint. Several hundreds of women who also believed the story came forward and made a complaint. The Ministry of Health quickly appointed an investigative team of experts to inquire into the sterilisation acts alleged to have been performed by Shafi but it was soon objected to by the Government Medical Officers’ Association or GMOA on the ground that it was a ruse by the government to sweep it under the carpet.

It is strange on the part of GMOA to react in that manner because it is the credibility of its members that was at stake. Now the inquiry is going on but the final results are not yet known. However, in the meantime, most of the Sinhala Buddhist Sri Lankans, guided by social proof, have accepted the news as correct.
All should develop the skills to convert news to wisdom

What this means is that interested parties can create news and herd people around it to attain their goals. Dobelli believes that it is the news and media at fault and recommends in a TED lecture that people should shut themselves completely from newspapers, TV and social media (Access it here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-miTTiaqFlI ). But, that is a prescription worse than the ailment.

People today cannot keep themselves out of news that is floating around them all the time in the cyber space. However much you try to insulate yourself from news, fake or valid, you are not free from their influence since you live in a society that loves especially sensational news. The correct way to address the issue is not to shun news completely but to gain the skills to convert news into wisdom.

To learn that skill, the founding Vice Chancellor of the Vidyodaya University of Ceylon – Ven Weliwitiye Sri Soratha – advised the undergraduates to challenge, probe and criticise the existing knowledge. A manual explaining how it should be done was published by two academics – A.M.G. Sirimanne and Wijayathunga Somapala – in early 1960s in Sinhala under the title ‘Kiyaweema Saha Vichakshanaya’ (Reading and Intelligent Learning). It explains in fine details how one should listen to news, read newspaper reports and respond to advertisements.

The manual is out of print today and old copies are worn out. But, its approach to intelligent reading is valid forever. If the Ministry of Education is interested in creating an intelligent nation in Sri Lanka, it should run a reprint of this book, take all the teachers through its methodology of intelligent reading and get them to coach students to practice the same. It is worthwhile making this subject mandatory in school as well as university curricula.
Democracy getting warped

Democracy gets warped when people lose common sense and ability to appraise news logically and intelligently. As long as people go by social proof, it gives opportunity for rulers to create herd news and get people to rally around it in a bid to win their support for their causes. Hence, people must master the art of logical and intelligent thinking to support democracy to work in the field.
(The writer, a former Deputy Governor of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka, can be reached at waw1949@gmail.com.)