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Vintage Lankan cars used in East of Elephant Rock

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by Roger Thiedeman

In 1976 the British movie East of Elephant Rock was filmed entirely on location in Sri Lanka. Although stodgy and forgettable for the most part, perhaps redeemed only by Sri Lanka’s stunning scenery, the movie opens with a sequence eerily reminiscent of the assassination of Malaya’s British High Commissioner Sir Henry Gurney near Fraser’s Hill in then Peninsular Malaya’s Pahang State in October 1951.The plot is best summarised in a synopsis (abbreviated and reproduced below) by an erstwhile Rolls-Royce enthusiast friend of mine, the late David Harding of Sydney, Australia.

But first, for the benefit of Sri Lankan motoring aficionados in particular, some information about the cars playing significant roles in the movie. Beginning with the British Governor-General’s official ‘chariot’, 1949 Bentley Mk. VI Standard Steel Saloon, chassis no. B170FV. Since 1933 Bentley motor cars had been built by Rolls-Royce Limited, as a subsidiary brand of the latter company, in the same factories alongside their slightly more prestigious Rolls-Royce stablemates.

The pre-owned Mk. VI B170FV was imported to Ceylon in 1955 by Sir Cyril de Zoysa, the well-known bus company magnate, industrialist, senator and philanthropist, in whose name the Bentley was registered EL 4764. Much later the car was bought by another famous bus, tourist coach and car operator, Mr. Ebert Silva, whose family retains possession of the Bentley to this day.

Another classic car that featured even more prominently than the Bentley in East of Elephant Rock is the 1936 Riley 12/4 Lynx ‘Special Series’ 4-door tourer, reg. no. Z 2776, owned since 1966 by Mr. Ali Azeez. For several decades Azeez has been a passionate ‘driving force’ behind Sri Lanka’s vintage car movement, and remains actively interested in researching, and sharing his encyclopaedic knowledge of, the country’s motoring history.

Other noteworthy motor vehicles in East of Elephant Rock are: a circa 1951/52 Daimler DB18 Consort six-light saloon, reg. no. EY 2625, owned at the time by Mr. Vere de Mel, a motoring enthusiast, successful businessman, innovator of the ‘radio-linked’ taxicab company Quickshaws, tourism entrepreneur, and first Chairman of the Ceylon Transport Board (CTB) in 1958; and a Humber Hawk saloon reportedly formerly owned by prominent criminal lawyer Sir Ukwatte Jayasundera KCMG KBE QC.

The Daimler DB18 Consort departing a prison in a scene from the movie

Here now is David Harding’s compilation on East of Elephant Rock:

East of Elephant Rock

Origin:

1977 (Colour) UK

Director:

Don Boyd

Producers:

Don Boyd, Rick (Richard) Boyle & Gerry Harrison

Cast:

John Hurt (Nash); Jeremy Kemp (Harry Rawlins); Judi Bowker (Eve Proudfoot); Christopher Cazenove (Robert Proudfoot); Anton Rodgers (Mackintosh); Tariq Yunus (Inti); Vajira Cabraal (Sharmani); Sam Poythress (1st Governor-General); Edward De La Mare (2nd Governor-General); Geoffrey Hale (Commissioner); J.B.L. Gunasekera (Sharmani’s uncle); Upali Attanayake (Rawlins’s houseboy); Philip Grice (man in rickshaw)

Synopsis

(WITH SPOILER ALERTS) adapted and edited by David Harding from an anonymous viewer’s comment in imdb.com website:

“An obvious adaptation of Somerset Maugham’s play ‘The Letter’, directed in far more satisfactory fashion by William Wyler in 1940, this film features John Hurt (Nash) as a British Embassy official in an unnamed Southeast Asian British colony of 1948, manifestly patterned after post-war Malaya with its massive rubber plantations of that era. Hurt – who later achieved worldwide fame and acclaim in the title role of The Elephant Man (1980) – plays Nash, whose empathy for the King’s misused colonial subjects is hailed with a deafening thud by the plantation and administrative elite, chiefly embodied by Harry Rawlins (Jeremy Kemp).

1949 Bentley Mk. VI chassis no. B170FV, reg. no. EL 4764

“Nash, who has a native mistress Sharmani (Vajira Cabraal), finds time to woo Eve Proudfoot (Judi Bowker), the young wife of First Secretary Robert Proudfoot (Christopher Cazenove), all of which leads to murder and other unpleasantness. A strong impression is given that this is a work in progress, with director Don Boyd not knowing or caring quite what to make of the material at hand, with editing flaccid at best, a consistently obtrusive soundtrack (including some unintentionally humorous placement of songs), conventional handling of critical scenes, and with abrupt modifications upon characters’ personalities enfeebling any logic which may be hiding within the script.

“Filmed entirely in Sri Lanka, much resembling Malaysia, which latter is laden to this day with Indian workers imported by the English, the work is adequately cast, although Hurt is hindered by his lines, Bowker is far too unseamed and seraphic for her bitchy role, and perhaps the best actor of the cast, Anton Rodgers, has but sparse opportunity during his brief appearances to utilize his pungently dry manner.

“The Bentley is seen in the opening scenes, driving away from the Governor-General’s mansion with only G-G (ensconced in rear seat) and chauffeur on board, and followed by a Ford Thames army truck with armed escort. On a lonely and narrow country road, the car’s passage is blocked by an elephant with mahout. (This scene is reminiscent of one in the 1953 movie Elephant Walk, also filmed in Ceylon/Sri Lanka, where the passage of 1925 Rolls-Royce Phantom I Barker tourer 122HC, with passengers Peter Finch and Vivien Leigh, is impeded by a wild bull elephant.)

“When the chauffeur alights to tell the mahout to clear the road, he is set upon and attacked by a gang of machete-wielding nationalist rebels. The Governor-General then steps out to the aid of his chauffeur, but he too is attacked. Both men are then dragged away to a nearby rice field, where the insurgents hack them to death and make their escape seconds before the army truck’s tardy arrival on the scene. (The scene is even more chillingly evocative of the ambush and murder, by Malayan-Chinese Communist insurgents, of British High Commissioner Sir Henry Gurney while travelling with his wife and secretary in 1950 Rolls-Royce Silver Wraith Park Ward limousine WHD52 on October 6, 1951.)”

The photos below of the principal cars in East of Elephant Rock are, with one exception, screenshots from the YouTube video of the movie in its 90-minute entirety: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KnFO_YD8brw&t=301s



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Fractious West facing a more solidified Eastern opposition

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An Iranian attack on a neighbouring Gulf state. Image courtesy BBC.

Going forward, it is hoped that a reported ceasefire agreement between the US and Iran would provide a basis for a degree of stability in the Middle East and pave the way for substantive peace talks between the powers concerned. The world is compelled to fall back on hope because there is never knowing when President Donald Trump would change his mind and plans on matters of the first importance. So erratic has he been.

Yet, confusion abounds on who has agreed to what. The US President is on record that a number of conditions put forward by him to Iran to deescalate tensions have been accepted by the latter, whereas Iran is yet to state unambiguously that this is so. For instance, the US side claims that Iran has come clear on the point that it would not work towards acquiring a nuclear weapons capability, but there is no official confirmation by Iran that this is so. The same goes for the rest of the conditions.

Accordingly, the peace process between the US and Iran, if such a thing solidly exists, could be said to be mired in uncertainty. Nevertheless, the wider publics of the world are bound to welcome the prospects of some sort of ceasing of hostilities because it would have the effect of improving their economic and material well being which is today under a cloud.

However, questions of the first magnitude would continue to bedevil international politics and provide the breeding ground for continued tensions between East and West. Iran-US hostilities helped highlight some of these divisive issues and a deescalation of these tensions would not inevitably translate into even a temporary resolution of these questions. The world community would have no choice but to take them up and work towards comprehending them better and managing them more effectively.

For example, there are thorny questions arising from the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT). Essentially, this treaty bans the processing and use of nuclear weapons by states but some of the foremost powers are not signatories to it.

Moreover, the NPT does not provide for the destroying of nuclear arsenals by those signatory states which are already in possession of these WMDs. Consequently, there would be a glaring power imbalance between the latter nuclear-armed states and others which possess only conventional weapons.

Such a situation has grave implications for Iran’s security, for instance. The latter could argue, in view of the NPT restrictions, that the US poses a security threat to it but that it is debarred by the Treaty from developing a nuclear arms capability of its own to enable it to match the nuclear capability of the US. Moreover, its regional rival Israel is believed to possess a nuclear weapons capability.

Accordingly, a case could be made that the NPT is inherently unfair. The US would need to help resolve this vexatious matter going forward. But if it remains, US-Iran tensions would not prove easy to resolve. The same goes for Iran-Israeli tensions. Consequently, the Middle East would remain the proverbial ‘powder keg’.

Besides the above issues, the world has ample evidence that it could no longer speak in terms of a united NATO or West. Apparently, there could be no guarantee that US-NATO relations would remain untroubled in future, even if the current Iran-US standoff is peacefully resolved. US-NATO ties almost reached breaking point in the current crisis when the US President called on its NATO partners, particularly Britain, to help keep open the Hormuz Straits for easy navigation by commercial vessels, militarily, on seeing that such help was not forthcoming. Such questions are bound to remain sore points in intra-Western ties.

In other words, it would be imperative for the US’ NATO partners to help pull the US’ ‘chestnuts out of the fire’ going ahead. The question is, would NATO be willing to thus toe the US line even at the cost of its best interests.

For the West, these fractious issues are coming to the fore at a most unpropitious moment. The reality that could faze the West at present is the strong opposition shown to its efforts to bolster its power and influence by China and Russia. Right through the present crisis, the latter have stood by Iran, materially and morally. For instance, the most recent Security Council resolution spearheaded by the US which was strongly critical of Iran, was vetoed by China and Russia.

Accordingly, we have in the latter developments some marked polarities in international politics that could stand in the way of the West advancing its interests unchallenged. They point to progressively intensifying East-West tensions in international relations in the absence of consensuality.

It is only to be expected that given the substance of international politics that the West would be opposed by the East, read China and Russia, in any of the former’s efforts to advance its self interests unilaterally in ways that could be seen as illegitimate, but what is sorely needed at present is consensuality among the foremost powers if the world is to be ‘a less dangerous place to live in.’ Minus a focus on the latter, it would be a ‘no-win’ situation for all concerned.

It would be central to world stability for International Law to be upheld by all states and international actors. Military intervention by major powers in the internal affairs of other countries remains a principal cause of international mayhem. Both East and West are obliged to abide scrupulously with this principle.

From the latter viewpoint, not only did the West err in recent times, but the East did so as well. Iran, for instance, acted in gross violation of International Law when it attacked neighbouring Gulf states which are seen as US allies. Neither Iran nor the US-Israel combine have helped in advancing international law and order by thus taking the law into their own hands.

Unfortunately, the UN has been a passive spectator to these disruptive developments. It needs to play a more robust role in promoting world peace and in furthering consensual understanding among the principal powers in particular. The need is also urgent to advance UN reform and render the UN a vital instrument in furthering world peace. The East and West need to think alike and quickly on this urgent undertaking.

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Science-driven health policies key to tackling emerging challenges — UNFPA

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Dr. Dayanath Ranatunga

Marking World Health Day on April 7, health experts have called for a stronger commitment to science-based decision-making to address increasingly complex and evolving health challenges in Sri Lanka and beyond.

Dr. Dayanath Ranatunga, Assistant Representative of the United Nations Population Fund, stressed that health is no longer confined to hospitals or traditional medical systems, but is shaped by a broad spectrum of social, environmental, and technological factors.

“This year’s theme, ‘Together for Health. Stand with Science,’ reminds us that science is not only for laboratories or policymakers. It is a way of thinking and a tool that shapes everyday decisions,” he said.

Dr. Ranatunga noted that modern health challenges are increasingly interconnected, ranging from infectious diseases such as COVID-19 to climate-related risks, demographic shifts, and emerging forms of online violence.

He warned that maternal and newborn health continues to demand urgent attention despite progress. Globally, an estimated 260,000 women died from pregnancy and childbirth-related causes in 2023 alone—many of them preventable through timely, science-based interventions.

“In countries like Sri Lanka, where fertility rates are declining and survival rates improving, every pregnancy carries greater significance—not just for families, but for the future of communities and economies,” he said.

The UNFPA official also highlighted the growing threat of Technology Facilitated Gender-Based Violence (TFGBV), including cyber harassment and online abuse, noting that these forms of violence can have deep psychological consequences despite lacking visible physical harm.

He emphasised the need for multidisciplinary, science-informed approaches that integrate mental health, digital safety, and survivor-centered care.

Turning to demographic trends, Dr. Ranatunga pointed out that increasing life expectancy is bringing new challenges, particularly the rise of non-communicable diseases such as diabetes, cardiovascular illnesses, and cancers.

In Sri Lanka, nearly 13.9% of mothers develop diabetes during pregnancy, a trend attributed to obesity and unhealthy lifestyles, underscoring the urgent need for preventive healthcare strategies.

“Are we investing enough in prevention?” he asked, noting that early intervention and healthier lifestyles could significantly reduce long-term healthcare costs, especially in a country with a free public healthcare system.

He underscored the importance of data-driven policymaking, stating that scientific research and analytics enable governments to identify gaps, anticipate future needs, and allocate resources more effectively.

The UNFPA, he said, is already leveraging tools such as Geographic Information Systems (GIS) to improve access to maternal healthcare, including mapping travel times for pregnant women to reach health facilities.

Digital innovation is also transforming healthcare delivery, from telemedicine to real-time data systems, improving efficiency and ensuring continuity of care even during emergencies.

In Sri Lanka, partnerships between the government and development agencies are helping to modernise training institutions, including facilities in Batticaloa, equipping healthcare workers with both clinical and digital skills.

However, Dr. Ranatunga cautioned that technology alone is not a solution.

“It must be guided by evidence and grounded in equity,” he said, pointing out that women’s health remains significantly underfunded, with only about 7% of global healthcare research focusing on conditions specific to women.

He also drew attention to the growing health impacts of climate change, including extreme weather, food insecurity, and displacement, describing it as an emerging public health crisis.

“Health does not begin in hospitals. It is shaped by the environments we live in, the choices we make, and the systems we build,” he said.

Calling for renewed commitment, Dr. Ranatunga urged stakeholders to invest in prevention, embrace innovation, and ensure that science remains central to policy and practice.

“Science is not just about knowledge—it is about ensuring that everyone has the opportunity to live healthy, dignified lives, and that no one is left behind,” he added.

 

By Ifham Nizam

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Sharing the festive joy with ‘Awurudu Kaale’

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The visually impaired who make up Bright Light Band in Awurudu attire

Melantha Perera is well known as a very versatile musician.

He was involved with the band Mirage, as their keyboardist/vocalist, and was also seen in action with other outfits, as well, before embarking on a trip to Australia, as a solo artiste.

I now hear that he has plans to operate as a trio.

However, what has got many talking about Melantha, these days, is his awesome work with the visually impaired Bright Light Band.

They have worked out a special song for the Sinhala and Tamil New Year, aptly titled ‘Awurudu Kaale.

Says Melantha: “This song has been created to celebrate the spirit of the Sinhala and Tamil New Year and to share the joy of the Awurudu season with all Sri Lankans”.

Yes, of course, Melantha composed the song, with the lyrics written collaboratively by Melantha, Badra, and the parents of the talented performers, whose creative input brought the song to life during moments of inspiration.

Melantha Perera: Awesome work with Bright Light Band

This meaningful collaboration reflects the strong community behind the Bright Light Band.

According to Melantha, accompaning the song is a vibrant video production that also features the involvement of the parents, highlighting unity, joy, and togetherness.

Beyond showcasing their musical talents, the visually impaired members of Bright Light Band deliver a powerful message, through this project, that their abilities extend beyond singing, as they also express themselves through movement and dance.

Melantha expressed his satisfaction with the outcome of the project and looks forward to sharing it with audiences across the country during this festive season.

He went on to say that Bright Light Band extends its sincere gratitude to Bcert Australia for their generous Mian sponsorship, the CEO of the company, Samath Fernando, for his continuous support in making such initiatives possible, and Rukshan Perera for his personal support and encouragement in bringing this project to completion.

The band also acknowledges Udara Fernando for his invaluable contribution, generously providing studio space and accommodating extended recording sessions to suit the children’s availability.

Appreciation is warmly extended to the parents, whose unwavering commitment from ensuring attendance at rehearsals to supporting the video production has been instrumental in the success of this project.

Through ‘Awurudu Kaale’, Bright Light Band hopes to spread festive cheer and inspire audiences, proving that passion and talent know no boundaries.

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