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Time to Think

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Part Two

by Michael Patrick O’Leary

In my previous article I reviewed Hannah Barnes’s excellent book Time to Think about the bizarre and horrific events at the GIDS (Gender Identity Development Service) clinic operated by the Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust in north London. The NHS has closed the clinic after a number of damning reports. Why did it take so long to close it down? An insider told Barnes: ” because it was bringing in so much money they could not challenge it.” This is the business-orientated NHS of 2023. In 2015/16, GIDS’s income was 5.9 % of the Tavistock Trust’s total. Within a year, it had almost doubled to 10.4 %. That proportion grew further. The Tavistock needed the income GIDS brought in.

GIDS was set up in 1989 to provide talking therapies for young people who were questioning their gender identity. The Tavistock used to be a centre of excellence for psychotherapy (the talking cure) but concerns started as long ago as 2005 that children were not being given any meaningful counseling but were being put on a fast track to gender reassignment through drugs or surgery. By 2011, it seemed that it was routine practice to refer children to endocrinologists for prescription of puberty blockers. In 2011, a child of 12 was on blockers. By 2016, a ten-year-old was taking them.

Barnes’s title is ironic. GIDS claimed that children did not have to make a snap decision about gender reassignment because puberty blockers would give them pause and time to think. GIDS falsely claimed that the effects of these drugs were reversible and that they were harmless. The drugs caused various problems on which data was not kept. There is evidence they affect bone density, brain development and sexual function. The children were being used as guinea pigs but they were rarely offered follow-up appointments. GIDS did not keep in touch with its patients in the long term or keep reliable data on outcomes. Keira Bell regretted transitioning from female to male and took the Tavistock to court. GIDS had referred her for blockers at 16 and she had a double mastectomy at 20. Then she had second thoughts.

Millenarian Madness

Sometimes a madness overtakes the masses. I have been reading Norman Cohn’s influential book, The Pursuit of the Millennium: Revolutionary Millenarians and Mystical Anarchists of the Middle Ages, which I first encountered in my student days in the heady 60s. Cohn’s book was published in 1957 and influenced many people such as the French Marxist philosopher and writer Guy Debord and the British author Richard Webster who wrote a book, which I found quite impressive, about false allegations of child abuse, The Secret of Bryn Estyn (2005). Webster helped find lawyers for Dawn Reed and Christopher Lillie, former Newcastle nurses who were falsely accused of sexually abusing children in their care.

Reed and Lillie, who were first accused of child abuse in 1993 and only found not guilty in 2002, say that they would probably be dead, through suicide or murder, without Webster’s assistance. Webster said of Cohn’s work: “All three books seek to establish the role played in history by collective fantasies and all three are concerned with “the urge to purify the world through the annihilation of some category of human beings imagined as agents of corruption and incarnations of evil.”

Here in Sri Lanka we had the “Grease Yaka “phenomenon. When we lived in Uva province, there were a number of attacks blamed on bhuthaya, grease yakas or grease devils. Historically, a “grease devil” was a thief who wore only underwear or went naked and covered his body in grease to make himself difficult to grab if chased. In 2011, the “grease devil” became a night-time prowler who frightens and attacks women.

As Sri Lanka was experiencing Grease Yaka mania, riots were erupting all over the UK. Contagion Theory was formulated by Gustave Le Bon in 1896. According to him, crowds exert a hypnotic influence over individual  members. In a crowd,  people abandon personal responsibility and surrender to contagious emotions. A crowd can drive people toward irrational, even violent action.

Today, we have social media to spread madness.

Epidemic of Dysphoria

Transsexualism was discussed in the mass media as long ago as the 1930s. Time magazine in 1936 devoted an article to what it called “hermaphrodites”, treating the subject with sensitivity not sensationalism. When I worked in a local social security office in Manchester in the early 70s, there was one client who wanted to change the gender on their official documents but was unable legally to do so. The office staff were a hard-bitten, cynical lot but were sympathetic, if nonplussed. It is good that society has evolved so that practical measures can now be taken to address such a problem. Unfortunately, sympathy has been distorted by activism. Even Joe Biden has contributed his confused view of the issue by saying that regulations to protect children from transgender medical interventions and to restrict classroom instruction in gender ideology were “close to sinful.”

Crowds of Gender Ambiguous

Ambiguity of gender at birth is very rare. Incorrect description and assignment on birth certificates is also rare. While one might sympathize with people in this situation, giving blocker drugs, hormones and irreversible surgery to children is a drastic response. It is indeed a reinforcement of gender stereotypes. Just because very small boys do girly things does not justify physically changing their gender. When I was about four years old, I was fascinated by the pomp and theatre of the Mass and played at being a priest. Thank God my parents did not pack me off to a seminary and force me into a life of celibacy.

Young people appeared to be experiencing internalized homophobia and some families would make openly homophobic comments. It is not wise to reorder society and suppress freedom of speech because of birth defects in an infinitesimal minority. It is even more foolish to reorder society and suppress freedom of speech at the behest of men who have decided they are women without going for the surgery. One should sympathize and protect the rights of minorities but not kowtow to bullies who want to act out outdated gender stereotypes.

The original founder of GIDS, Dominic Di Ceglie, said that only about 5% of the young people seen at his clinic would “commit themselves to a change of gender” and that “60% to 70% of all the children he sees will become homosexual”. Barnes write: “Many of the young people did not seem in need of a specialist gender service at all. But because they were being seen by a gender service, it created the expectation for physical interventions. Why on earth would you wait a year and travel miles to receive therapy? this therapist asked. Clinicians feared they may be seeing fabricated or induced illness (FII), a presentation previously referred to as “Munchausen’s by proxy”.

Mass delusion extended to the GIDS staff. As external criticism grew, the service developed a “siege mentality”. One clinician, Matt Bristow (who happened to be gay), told Barnes that doubts and criticisms were regarded “as a personal affront rather than people raising legitimate professional concerns”. He and others recount how :”It was difficult to voice legitimate concerns when these were construed as a personal attack on people you cared for and admired. ” “It’s tribal, isn’t it? Anybody who speaks out against a system that they’re part of inevitably is going to have a hard time.” Staff who raised concerns about the safety of children were labelled “transphobic.”

Kathleen Stock writes in her book Material Girls: “something called ‘gender identity’ gripped public consciousness, strongly influencing UK and international institutions, and causing protests and even violence.” According to Stock, “In 2004, it was estimated there were about 2,000–5,000 trans people in the UK. Back then, the popular image of a trans person was mainly of a ‘medically transitioned’ adult trans woman, or ‘male-to-female transsexual’: an adult person of the male sex who had taken hormones over a long period of time to change many aspects of appearance, and who had also had ‘sex reassignment’ surgery to refashion natal genitalia.” That is not the case today. Today, according to the LGBT charity Stonewall, their “best estimate” of the number of trans people in the UK is “about 600,000”. Referrals to GIDS grew rapidly – in 2009, it had 97; by 2020, this figure was 2,500. Many of them opt to keep their natal equipment but still want to use women’s changing rooms and call themselves lesbians

There was, between 2009 and 2020, a 4,700% increase in the number of girls referred to GIDS. When asked publicly why three-quarters of referrals to GIDS were female, a representative of the Tavistock Trust said they simply didn’t know. Stephanie Davies-Arai closely followed events at GIDS for many years and founded the organization Transgender Trend in 2015. She was worried about the increase in young people, particularly girls, identifying as trans. She wanted quality research about why girls arrived at GIDS with a set of beliefs.

Satanic Abuse

“The history of medicine is scattered with psychosomatic diseases that appeared, spread like wildfire and then disappeared”. In Creating Hysteria: Women and Multiple Personality Disorder, published in 1999, journalist Joan Acocella described how a disease so rare that most doctors never came across it turned into an epidemic. I had dealings with the Tavistock Clinic in the 1990s when they were promoting the idea of Satanic Ritual Child Abuse. Who believes in that now?

According to her website, “Dr Valerie Sinason was Consultant Child Psychotherapist at the Tavistock Clinic from 1987 … Valerie founded the Clinic for Dissociative Studies in 1998.” I met her in 1994. She had been pestering my bosses at the Department of Health (Tom Luce and Rupert Hughes) to do something about what she alleged was a serious problem. We agreed to meet her and it soon became clear that she had no evidence to support her claims. She was recycling a small number of anecdotes to fit different scenarios. As a concession to her, the Department of Health commissioned anthropologist Jean La Fontaine to investigate. I edited the subsequent book, Speak of the Devil, which was published in 1998.

Professor La Fontaine found that all of the cases of alleged satanic ritual abuse that could be substantiated were cases where the perpetrators’ goal was sexual gratification rather than religious worship. The satanic allegations by younger children were influenced by adults. She said that there were indications that most allegations were sparked by investigations supervised by social workers who had taken SRA seminars in the US. I attended a conference on child protection in Bristol where I was horrified at the religious zeal of the social workers promoting the idea of satanic abuse. It reminded me of a pyramid selling convention a neighbour took me to. These professional social workers seemed about to burn at the stake for heresy a police forensic psychologist who argued rationally against their zeal and said she had never heard of any evidence to support their case.

Hope for Common Sense?

Can we hope that the madness can be contained? I leave the last word to Helen Joyce: “liberal, secular society can accommodate many subjective belief systems, even mutually contradictory ones. What it must never do is impose one group’s beliefs on everyone else.”

Time to Think: The Inside Story of the Collapse of the Tavistock’s Gender Service for Children by Hannah Barnes is published by Swift Press (£20). I got mine from Kindle.



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From Manifesto to Action without delay

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The prison violence in Negombo has become the first major crisis to confront the government since it came to power. The government may or may not be responsible for creating the conditions that have accumulated over decades and made the prison system a powder keg. The fact is the government’s Ratama Ekata anti-drug crackdown boosted the countrywide prison population from 28,000, in late 2024, to 41,000, in 2026. The conditions of imprisonment include chronic overcrowding, poor infrastructure, inadequate staffing, the penetration of organised crime and drug networks into prisons, and the long neglect of prison reform by successive governments. The Negombo Prison was housing approximately 2,600 inmates at the time of the clashes although it was built for only about 650. By the time order was restored, 29 people, including seven prison officers, had lost their lives and more than 100 others had been injured.

Justice Minister Harshana Nanayakkara accepted responsibility before Parliament, visited the Prison and announced immediate measures, including legislative changes to facilitate bail and alternatives to remanding prisoners. The NPP government needs to accept responsibility for its failure to anticipate the danger, to respond with sufficient speed and competence once the problem had erupted. A dangerous situation can be observed countrywide with more than 42,000 prisoners being held in prisons designed to accommodate about 10,000 inmates. The magnitude of the Negombo Prison tragedy needs to be understood not merely as an isolated incident but as a warning that the government cannot postpone structural reforms indefinitely. A government elected on the promise of changing the system cannot justify repeating the failures of its predecessors on the basis that it is sincere and uncorrupt unlike them.

The failure to move beyond promises has become evident in several other sectors as well. Farmers continue to agitate over unresolved problems. Plantation workers continue to seek meaningful integration into national life. Many of them, who were victims of Cyclone Ditwah, continue to live in miserable conditions due to the government’s slowness in dealing with their problems of their lack of ownership of lands and homes. The Mylathamadu cattle farmers of Batticaloa have issues once again even after two presidents, President Ranil Wickremesinghe and now President Anura Kumara Dissanayake ordered evacuation of intruders in terms of court orders. But the local police and the Mahaweli Authority officials seem slow to take any actions, even to the extent of not complying with judicial decisions. Victims of past human rights violations and thousands of families of missing persons are still waiting for justice. The promised repeal of the Prevention of Terrorism Act has yet to materialise. Prison reform has now joined this growing list of deferred commitments.

NPP Pledges

The National People’s Power election manifesto promised not merely honest government but systemic transformation. Under the section dealing with prisons, it pledged to restructure the prison system, reduce overcrowding, expand open prison facilities, strengthen rehabilitation through education, vocational training and psychological support, establish a formal parole system and transform prisons from places of punishment into centres of rehabilitation and reintegration. Those promises reflected international best practice and recognised that a humane prison system is essential to a democratic society. Yet nearly two years into its term little visible progress has been made in implementing these reforms.

Sri Lanka has witnessed different types of prison violence. Some have erupted spontaneously because of intolerable prison conditions, overcrowding and frustration. Others have occurred under circumstances that raised alarming questions about state complicity. The massacre of 53 Tamil political prisoners inside Welikada Prison during the anti-Tamil violence of July 1983 remains one of the darkest chapters in the country’s history. Those prisoners were not protected despite being under state custody. The Mahara Prison violence of November 2020, in which 11 inmates were killed after protests over Covid conditions, similarly generated serious allegations regarding the targeted use of weapons and led to widespread calls for an independent investigation.

Following the deadly violence at Mahara Prison during the Covid pandemic, then Opposition party leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake declared in Parliament that “those who are remanded and imprisoned are under the custody of the state. Therefore, the primary responsibility for the safety of the lives of the prisoners and detainees who are in state custody lies with the government.” He further said that “it is entirely unacceptable in a democratic nation that upholds human rights for prisoners, who are under the protection of the state, to be gunned down while in government custody.” But in the Negombo tragedy once again the state, with President Dissanayake at the helm, was unable to protect the inmates though there is no evidence that the government orchestrated the violence. Being in power for two years there is a rightful expectation that it could have taken better preventive action.

Urgency Needed

There are two special conditions, however, that make the Negombo Prison tragedy a possible turning point rather than merely another episode in Sri Lanka’s long history of prison violence. The first is that until these events the country had enjoyed an extended period without major organised political or communal violence. This improvement was recognised internationally when Sri Lanka rose 30 places in the 2025 Global Peace Index to rank 67 among 163 countries. The Index measures countries on three broad indicators, namely the level of societal safety and security, the extent of ongoing domestic and international conflict, and the degree of militarisation. The improvement reflects the country’s recovery from the years of political upheaval and economic collapse and suggests that Sri Lanka is moving towards a more peaceful future.

The second distinguishing feature is that the present government has no known links to organised crime or the underworld that has so often been associated with sections of the political establishment in the past. This is one of its greatest strengths. President Anura Kumara Dissanayake has spoken publicly about the nexus between organised crime, drug trafficking, money laundering and politics, and has challenged political parties to take action against members who maintain links with criminal networks. That willingness to confront organised crime gives the government a credibility that previous governments lacked. But integrity by itself is not enough. Honest intentions must be matched by administrative competence and political will. A government that seeks to change the system must demonstrate that it can reform and manage the institutions of the state more effectively than those who came before it. The Negombo tragedy suggests that this remains a major challenge.

The government’s greatest asset remains the trust that the public has placed in its sincerity. Unlike many previous governments, it is not burdened by allegations of protecting organised crime or profiting from corruption. That gives it a unique opportunity to undertake reforms that others could not credibly pursue. But it must not rest on its laurels in the belief it is superior to the rest. The Negombo Prison tragedy should become the catalyst for implementing the wider programme of reform promised in the election manifesto. Prison reform cannot be viewed in isolation. It is part of the broader commitment to change the system, strengthen public institutions and ensure that the state serves the people with competence as well as integrity. The reforms promised to rice farmers, cattle herders, plantation communities, victims of past human rights violations and all those who looked to the government for a new beginning deserve the same sense of urgency. Other priorities cannot justify postponing the structural changes that the NPP promised and the country has waited for decades.

by Jehan Perera

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Chandi: The one-tusked rebel who defied captivity and became a symbol of Sri Lanka’s wild spirit

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The story of Chandi (T081), the legendary one-tusked elephant of Galgamuwa, is not merely the tale of a wild tusker. It is the remarkable chronicle of an animal whose lifelong struggle for freedom challenged conventional wildlife management, captivated conservationists and villagers alike, and ultimately became one of the most inspiring chapters in Sri Lanka’s wildlife history.

Known affectionately as “Chandi”—a Sinhala name signifying courage, toughness and fearlessness—the iconic tusker earned his place among the country’s most celebrated wild elephants through sheer determination rather than physical grandeur. Born with only one tusk, he repeatedly demonstrated that true strength lies not in appearance but in resilience.

Wildlife photographer and conservationist Chandika Lakmal, founder of Wild Tuskers of Sri Lanka, believes Chandi’s life offers valuable lessons for wildlife conservation and the management of human-elephant conflict.

“Chandi was much more than an elephant.

He became the embodiment of freedom. Every chapter of his life reflected an extraordinary determination to return to the forests where he was born. He showed us that elephants possess deep memories and emotional connections to their homeland that cannot simply be erased through translocation.”

Lakmal said Chandi’s story deserves to be preserved not only as wildlife history but also as a reminder that conservation strategies must be guided by science and compassion.

Unlike most Sri Lankan tuskers, Chandi possessed only his right tusk after being born without the other. Yet that single tusk became an extraordinary tool in his battle against electric fences and other barriers erected across his traditional range.

For decades, Chandi roamed the forests and agricultural landscapes surrounding Galgamuwa, including Mudiyannegama, Ehatuwewa, Kaduru Wewa and Siyambalangamuwa. As cultivation expanded and natural habitats became increasingly fragmented, his encounters with people became more frequent.

Authorities first captured him around 2009 and transported him nearly 200 kilometres away to the Somawathiya National Park in an attempt to reduce conflict between villagers and wildlife.

Many believed the relocation marked the end of Chandi’s association with Galgamuwa.

They were mistaken.

Displaying one of the most extraordinary examples of elephant navigation recorded in Sri Lanka, Chandi travelled through unfamiliar forests and settlements before eventually finding his way back to his birthplace.

“His return astonished everyone,” Lakmal recalled. “Very few animals could accomplish such a journey. Chandi demonstrated the incredible navigational abilities of elephants and their unwavering attachment to familiar landscapes.”

Years later, renewed crop-raiding incidents resulted in another decision to remove him from his home.

This time, he was sent to the Horowpathana Elephant Holding Ground, where elephants considered troublesome are kept under confinement.

For many wildlife observers, Horowpathana represented a final destination.

Numerous elephants transferred there had struggled to adapt to restricted movement and limited access to natural feeding grounds.

Few expected Chandi ever to return.

Yet the fearless tusker once again surprised the nation.

He escaped.

Breaking through barriers that were believed to be secure, Chandi returned to Galgamuwa, reclaiming the forests that had shaped his life.

His remarkable escape became one of the most talked-about wildlife stories in Sri Lanka.

As Chandi aged, deteriorating eyesight increasingly drove him towards cultivated lands in search of food.

Concerned about renewed conflict, authorities captured him once more around 2018 and transferred him back to Horowpathana.

This time, however, every conceivable measure had been taken to prevent another escape.

Massive reinforced concrete pillars were embedded deep underground. Heavy steel cables linked the posts while multiple rows of electric fencing surrounded the enclosure. Steel spikes were fixed atop the pillars.

It was considered escape-proof.

Nevertheless, within months Chandi once again appeared in Galgamuwa.

To this day, nobody knows exactly how he managed to escape.

“That second escape has become one of the greatest mysteries in Sri Lanka’s wildlife history,” Lakmal said. “Despite all the engineering, Chandi proved once again that the desire for freedom can never be underestimated.”

Lakmal believes Chandi’s repeated returns challenged long-held assumptions about elephant translocation.

“His life clearly demonstrated that moving elephants away from their traditional home ranges is not always an effective long-term solution. Many elephants attempt to return, sometimes travelling hundreds of kilometres and creating even greater risks for themselves and people.”

In his twilight years, Chandi became noticeably calmer.

Poor eyesight reduced his movements, and instead of covering extensive distances he remained within a relatively small range around Galgamuwa.

Villagers frequently encountered him standing quietly in reservoirs, resting beneath trees or walking peacefully along rural roads.

Despite his formidable reputation from earlier years, he rarely displayed aggression toward people.

His calm demeanour transformed him into one of Sri Lanka’s favourite photographic subjects.

Wildlife enthusiasts travelled long distances simply to witness the legendary one-tusked giant.

According to Lakmal, Chandi developed an almost mythical status among elephant lovers.

“People admired him because he represented resilience.

He survived repeated captures, difficult relocations and confinement, yet never surrendered. His determination inspired thousands who followed his story.”

Local folklore added another colourful chapter to Chandi’s reputation.

Villagers often joked that the giant tusker occasionally developed a taste for “goda”, the illicit liquor brewed near remote village tanks.

Whether fact or folklore, the tale only strengthened his legendary status among local communities.

Towards the end of 2023, proposals surfaced once again to relocate Chandi, this time to Maduru Oya.

The proposal was met with strong opposition from conservationists, wildlife photographers and local residents.

Many argued that after spending a lifetime defending his homeland, Chandi deserved the dignity of living out his final years where he belonged.

Fortunately, the relocation never took place.

Instead, Chandi remained in Galgamuwa until the end.

His final battle came not against humans but against nature itself.

In late 2024, he suffered fatal injuries during a confrontation with another dominant tusker, Ratta (T079), near Kaduru Wewa.

He was believed to have been approximately 55 years old.

His death marked the end of an extraordinary life that had captured the imagination of wildlife lovers across Sri Lanka.

Lakmal says Chandi’s greatest legacy extends far beyond his individual story.

“Future generations should remember Chandi as the elephant who repeatedly chose freedom over captivity. His life teaches us that conservation is not simply about fencing animals or relocating them.

It is about understanding their behaviour, respecting their natural movements and protecting the landscapes that sustain them.”

He added that Sri Lanka’s escalating human-elephant conflict requires more scientific planning, habitat restoration and landscape-level conservation rather than relying solely on translocation.

For many conservationists, Chandi will forever remain one of the greatest symbols of the island’s wild heritage—a fearless survivor whose determination inspired a nation.

His story is ultimately one of resilience, belonging and freedom.

Long after his footprints have faded from the dusty roads of Galgamuwa, the legend of Chandi—the one-tusked rebel who refused to surrender his homeland—will continue to echo through Sri Lanka’s forests, reminding future generations that the spirit of the wild cannot easily be confined.

By Ifham Nizam

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Rethinking retirement ages: A case for judicial and public sector reform

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The current debate on increasing the retirement age of judges has attracted considerable public attention. While some people support the proposal as a means of retaining experienced members of the judiciary, others argue that extending the tenure of senior judges would unfairly delay promotional opportunities for younger judges.

This argument, though frequently repeated, overlooks a far more important question. The issue is not whether promotions will be delayed. The real question is whether Sri Lanka should deprive itself of the services of highly experienced professionals simply because they have reached a predetermined age.

The judiciary exists to serve the people, not to provide a career ladder for judges. Every decision relating to judicial appointments and retirement must therefore be guided by one overriding principle – the public interest.

Sri Lanka currently requires Supreme Court judges to retire at the age of sixty-five, Court of Appeal judges at sixty-three, High Court judges at sixty-one and Magistrates and District Judges at sixty. These retirement ages are considerably lower than those found in many developed countries.

Canada requires federally appointed judges to retire at seventy-five. Australia, New Zealand, Belgium, Denmark, Ireland, Japan, the Netherlands, Norway and Spain generally prescribe retirement at seventy, while Germany and France have retirement ages around sixty-seven. The United States goes even further by granting life tenure to federal judges, including Supreme Court Justices, subject to good behaviour.

These countries have adopted such policies because they recognise a simple reality. The value of a judge lies not in physical strength but in wisdom, maturity, independence, integrity and decades of accumulated legal knowledge.

Unlike many occupations where physical ability may decline with age, judicial competence often improves through experience. Every constitutional interpretation, every commercial dispute and every criminal appeal benefits from the judgment of individuals who have spent decades applying the law under diverse and often difficult circumstances.

Life expectancy has increased significantly throughout the world. Advances in healthcare have enabled many professionals to remain mentally alert and physically active well into their seventies. Society has readily accepted this reality. Distinguished surgeons continue to perform complex operations. University professors continue to teach and conduct research. Engineers continue to supervise major infrastructure projects. Senior accountants, architects and consultants continue to advise governments and multinational corporations. There is no convincing reason why judges, whose principal contribution is intellectual rather than physical, should be treated differently.

Opponents of extending judicial retirement often argue that doing so would reduce promotional opportunities for younger judges. While understandable from an individual career perspective, this argument should not determine national policy.

Promotions are not an end in themselves. Nor should vacancies be artificially created merely to accelerate career advancement.

No successful private corporation dismisses its most capable Chief Executive Officer simply because younger executives are waiting for promotion. Universities do not ask distinguished professors to retire to create vacancies for lecturers. Hospitals do not remove highly respected consultants because junior doctors are ready to advance. International engineering firms do not compel their most experienced engineers to leave office solely to facilitate promotions.

The objective of every successful institution is to retain capable people for as long as they continue to perform effectively. The judiciary should be no exception.

Indeed, experienced judges provide an invaluable service beyond deciding cases. They mentor younger judges, preserve institutional memory, maintain consistency in judicial standards and uphold the traditions and independence of the courts. Their guidance helps shape the next generation of judges and contributes directly to the quality of justice delivered to the public.

Another important consideration is Sri Lanka’s substantial backlog of litigation. Delays in the disposal of cases continue to frustrate litigants and undermine public confidence in the justice system. Retaining experienced judges for a few additional years could contribute significantly to reducing these delays while ensuring continuity and stability within the courts.

Naturally, extending the retirement age should not mean automatic continuation in office. Every extension should be subject to periodic medical examinations, continued professional competence, impeccable ethical standards and satisfactory performance. Those who are no longer able to discharge their responsibilities effectively should retire regardless of age.

More importantly, this discussion should not be confined to the judiciary.

Sri Lanka should undertake a comprehensive review of retirement policies throughout the public sector.

Our country has invested enormous public resources in educating and training doctors, engineers, university academics, scientists, accountants, administrators and numerous other specialists. Many of these professionals remain exceptionally capable long after reaching the current retirement age. Yet the nation often loses their services at precisely the stage when their knowledge, judgment and experience are at their highest.

This represents not merely a loss to the individual concerned but a significant loss to the country.

The argument that senior officers should retire simply to create promotional opportunities for juniors is equally unconvincing in every sector.

Promotions should be based on merit, competence, leadership and organisational need, not merely on vacancies created by compulsory retirement.

A well-managed institution should be capable of retaining outstanding senior professionals while simultaneously identifying, training and promoting younger officers on merit. Effective succession planning, mentoring and professional development are the proper solutions, not the premature loss of experience.

Public institutions exist to serve the people. Their primary responsibility is to deliver efficient, impartial and professional services. Every policy decision relating to retirement should therefore be assessed according to one simple question: Will this improve the quality of public service?

If the answer is yes, reform should be seriously considered.

If Sri Lanka wishes to strengthen its institutions and improve governance, it must make better use of one of its greatest national assets—the experience of its senior professionals.

Retirement should no longer be viewed simply as a matter of chronological age. It should increasingly be based on continued competence, medical fitness, integrity and the ability to contribute meaningfully to national development.

Such a policy would strengthen the judiciary, improve public administration, preserve invaluable institutional knowledge and ensure that Sri Lanka benefits fully from the wisdom and experience of those who have dedicated their lives to public service.

The objective should never be to retain people because they are senior.

The objective should be to retain the best people for as long as they remain capable of serving the nation with distinction.

by K. R. Pushparanjan

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