Features
Eugenio Barba’s Living Archive & Floating Islands – II
“A living memory is a living library, a living museum: a place of metamorphosis.
The past as proof of the impossible that has become possible. ” Eugenio Barba
by Laleen Jayamanne
(First part of this article appeared in The Island of 28 June 2023)
Formation of Odin Teater, 1964
Back in Norway, in 1964, Barba tried to enter the drama school to study directing but when rejected, along with several actors, together, they formed a small theatre group called Odin Teatret, and began to rehearse a play immediately. During this work, the group received an invitation from Denmark to do theatre there. The Mayor of a small rural township, called Holstebro, invited them to come and live there and do theatre for the community. They were offered a regular salary and a farm, with an old cowshed, to convert it as they wished, to a theatre work-shop space. Such were the strange beginnings of what became the world-renowned institution, the Nordisk Theatre Laboratorium and Odin Teatret of Denmark, turning the provincial town of Holstebro into a unique community, making global theatrical history.
A Third Theatre
In 1976, in Belgrade, Yugoslavia, Barba delivered a short keynote address, titled Third Theatre, at the Belgrade International Theatre Festival, on a UNESCO platform. The Third Theatre speech was quickly adopted as a manifesto by a broad base of theatre groups, especially in Latin America, and enabled networking across countries with a common vision. It was also in Belgrade, in 1961, that Marshal Tito launched the famous ‘Non-Aligned Movement’ of the recently de-colonised Asian and African countries. Lanka and India also participated in this event which had the high ideal of not taking sides in the emerging Cold War launched by the US and the Soviet Union. It’s, therefore, reasonable to think that the choice of Belgrade for this theatre event was not entirely coincidental, given that the idea of Third Theatre explicitly addressed theatre folk who lived in, what was then called, the ‘Third World’, a term referring to the newly independent nations. Barba has also reminded us that the French Revolution created the ‘Third Estate,’ the free press. So the idea of ‘thirdness’ was conceptually rich with new potentials. This is the historical origin of what Barba now calls Floating Islands, the numerous nameless theatres of the world.
The idea of the Third Theatre has been the subject of many scholarly debates and writings, some of it a bit arid, scholastic. But, to put it simply, according to Barba, the First Theatre is the institutionalised professional theatre, with its permanent buildings and infrastructure, contracted trained actors and a business model of providing the performance of canonical and new plays on a regular basis. The Second Theatre is what came to be known as Experimental Theatre that came out of the European avant-garde movements of the 20th Century, starting with the Soviet experiments. Many Drama Schools in America have Experimental Theatre Wings which teach students techniques derived from these traditions and newly devised ones, too.
Now, Third Theatre is neither of these and springs up like mushrooms, says Barba, when there is a felt need, an urgency and desire to present a performance to whoever might want to watch it, even on a street corner. They are done by people for whom doing theatre is what is essential for them and they stay together with a group for this very reason. Often, it’s not possible to make a living doing this, so they do paid work and make theatre in their free time. Some train all day, creating a practice and perform, if they have some means of living, without full time work.
This is a very open, quite precarious idea of a way of living which is almost unthinkable, without theatre. I think that the robust ’60s theatre in Lanka was done by people (mostly middle or lower-middle-class), who may be called amateurs, lovers of theatre, not Third Theatre. Perhaps Gamini Hattotuwegama’s Street Theatre group was a Third Theatre.
The International School of Theatre Anthropology (ISTA)
The only other book of Barba and Savarese I want to mention here is their best-selling, The Dictionary of Theatre Anthropology: The Secret Art of the Performer, which has now gone into several editions. This and Five Continents are, I think, indispensable texts if one wants to be educated about global theatre history and theory in what they call EURASIA in the long Twentieth Century. In their theatre history, they prefer to use the concept of ‘Eurasia,’ rather than the usual simplistic categories of ‘East and West’. In this way they focus on the exchanges that have occurred between geographical zones for well over a century. This Eurasian history will become more popular and intelligible to the many nations of the emerging multi-polar world, working against the US-led unipolar capitalist world dominant after 1989 after the dissolution of the Soviet Union.
The idea of the International School of Theatre Anthropology was launched in 1980 in Bonn, Germany. Barba had invited some of the great masters of classical Asian dance-drama to set up exchanges and demonstration of their techniques and practices.
He had also invited a group of Italian historians of theatre to document the proceedings and some of them have stayed on and worked with Barba over the decades. The Italian scholarly community, dedicated to the study of theatre in Universities, seems to be very robust. ISTA gathers regularly to carry out workshops and performances. In the early days, Masters of Japanese Noh Theatre, Balinese dancers, and an Indian Odissi dancer, were invited. Together they have created ambitious theatrical events, such as Ur Hamlet (a proto-Hamlet text), on the grounds of the infamous haunted Elsinor Castle in Denmark, the site for Shakespeare’s play. The different Asiatic classical performances were integrated as part of the open-air spectacle.
The main pedagogic aim of ISTA was to explore how the actor’s body was prepared, strengthened and trained in a precise way, from a very young age, in the great classical theatrical dance forms. Barba discovered that there were a series of, what he named, ‘pre-expressive forms’ of actions that all performers worked on, common to all Eurasian actors. This basic unity of purpose was possible because of the nature of the human anatomy and the nervous system. They developed a series of exercises that could be repeated, internalised and transmitted as the preparatory training for all actors, that they could then build on to develop their unique, idiosyncratic styles.
The dancer-actor I followed at Odin was the late Sanjukta Panigrahi, an Odissi dancer, because she also appears in Kumar Shahani’s film Bhavantharan (1992), a tribute to her guru Kelucharan Mohapatra. She has spoken of her sense of disorientation on encountering a different set of demands and techniques at Barba’s workshops. She, who trained also with Rukmini Devi, the pioneer of Bharathanatyam, at the tender age of 10, took up the challenge to not only demonstrate her exercises but also to participate in Barba’s performances. She said how difficult it was to learn to move differently, to unlearn, so to speak, routines memorised from early childhood.
The Odin actors rarely perform pre-existing plays, instead, they develop their own theatre pieces through a very long process of training and composition of the body, materials, ideas, language, music, song, anecdotes, stories and so on.
Recently, they did a spectacular show at a Theatre Olympics in Budapest, Hungary, called Resurrection (2023), and a performance in Paris called Thebes in the Time of Yellow Fever (2022), with Oedipus Rex in mind but also the painter Van Gogh who explored colour, yellow especially. The floor was layered with reproductions of Van Gogh’s yellow flower paintings. While the title recalls Oedipus Rex and the plague in Thebes as punishment for the crime of incest, Thebes in the Time of Yellow Fever was done at the end of the Covid-19, which plagued the world and appears to be also about creativity under duress. So, their work seems to be made of images, rather than plots, both very free and imaginative and also very rigorously composed. Images of these productions are again on YouTube and also on the Barba-Odin Teatret website, for anyone curious to see them.
Banishment, 2022
In December 2022, Barba was forced to resign from the Danish Theatre Laboratorium he established in 1964. At that time his Odin Teatret legally separated itself from the Nordisk Theatre Laboratorium which was the umbrella institution. Over nearly six decades they had built there a theatre and rehearsal spaces, a research library, a printing press and much else, but the new neoliberal management was impatient and wanted to make saleable shows with quick turn over. Barba’s work and life, thanks to the State subsidy, were built in resistance to this logic of capitalist consumer culture.
He was refused a small sum of money required to publish the third issue of the Journal of Theatre Anthropology, which again is on the website for free. Essential reading for those interested in Barba’s theatre, it is multilingual, in French, Italian, Spanish and English. He was also refused money to continue the annual summer festival of international theatre groups, performing for the Holstebro Township, whose identity now is integrally linked with the Odin Teatret. Their Festuge, a thematic global theatre Festival mounted every three years, is of considerable magnitude drawing in the entire community; schools, churches, the police, hospitals, nursing home, the library, the beach, etc. There is a superb film of this, as well. I am not sure if Barba could mount a festival of such scale without the support of the Nordisk Theatre Laboratorium. One festival was dedicated to theatre done by children’s theatre groups of the world. However, Barba continues to live in Holstebro, which is where his home is.
There is a set of 10 lecture demonstrations for free online, outlining key concepts of Theatre Anthropology and methods of training in different classical Asian theatre cultures. The way a South Indian father trains his little son is a marvellous lesson in how repetition works in mastering the ragas, tuning the ear. Seated cross-legged on the floor, the little boy’s utter focus and effort and the father’s immense patience and care, accompanying him with the harmonium, is moving and at times made me laugh. It was funny in the way small children’s earnest, massive effort to imitate adults are funny. But it’s the sense of rigorous training and utter dedication to a craft that shines through.
Resurrection, 2023
While being brutally pushed out from the theatre institution Barba and his band of theatre folk have created over a lifetime was undoubtedly traumatic for all, it must have been especially hard on Barba at 85. But Italy rose up with open arms to receive her illustrious son and Barba landed running, doing performances, lectures, workshops and promoting of other artists and human rights groups, through their Barba/Varley Foundation in Rome. He is rehearsing two new plays, as well.
Odin had bought a plot of land in the Holstebro cemetery for their theatre folk who wish to be buried there. Exiting stage left, Barba says lightly, ‘No one can chase us from there!’But I still hear the German Jewish writer Walter Benjamin saying (just before committing suicide on the Spanish border, fleeing the Nazis), ‘not even the dead will be safe any longer’. Alas! Lankans who suffered the 25-year civil war know this to be still true. (Concluded)
(Here’s the link to Eugenio Barba’s Course on Theatre Anthropology, in 10 Lessons: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLK8iTIUPsd3jHl8NZFDsW7tEDHuMPbRZt)
Features
Who Owns the Clock? The Quiet Politics of Time in Sri Lanka
(This is the 100th column of the Out of the Box series, which began on 6 September, 2023, at the invitation of this newspaper – Ed.)
A new year is an appropriate moment to pause, not for celebration, but to interrogate what our politics, policies, and public institutions have chosen to remember, forget, and repeat. We celebrate the dawn of another brand-new year. But whose calendar defines this moment?
We hang calendars on our walls and carry them in our phones, trusting them to keep our lives in order, meetings, exams, weddings, tax deadlines, pilgrimages. Yet calendars are anything but neutral. They are among humanity’s oldest instruments of power: tools that turn celestial rhythms into social rules and convert culture into governance. In Sri Lanka, where multiple traditions of time coexist, the calendar is not just a convenience, it is a contested terrain of identity, authority, and fairness.
Time is never just time
Every calendar expresses a political philosophy. Solar systems prioritise agricultural predictability and administrative stability; lunar systems preserve religious ritual even when seasons drift; lunisolar systems stitch both together, with intercalary months added to keep festivals in season while respecting the moon’s phases. Ancient India and China perfected this balancing act, proving that precision and meaning can coexist. Sri Lanka’s own rhythms, Vesak and Poson, Avurudu in April, Ramadan, Deepavali, sit inside this wider tradition.
What looks “technical” is actually social. A calendar decides when courts sit, when budgets reset, when harvests are planned, when children sit exams, when debts are due, and when communities celebrate. It says who gets to define “normal time,” and whose rhythms must adapt.
The colonial clock still ticks
Like many postcolonial societies, Sri Lanka inherited the Gregorian calendar as the default language of administration. January 1 is our “New Year” for financial statements, annual reports, contracts, fiscal plans, school terms, and parliamentary sittings, an imported date shaped by European liturgical cycles and temperate seasons rather than our monsoons or zodiac transitions. The lived heartbeat of the island, however, is Avurudu: tied to the sun’s movement into Mesha Rāshi, agricultural renewal, and shared rituals of restraint and generosity. The result is a quiet tension: the calendar of governance versus the calendar of lived culture.
This is not mere inconvenience; it is a subtle form of epistemic dominance. The administrative clock frames Gregorian time as “real,” while Sinhala, Tamil, and Islamic calendars are relegated to “cultural” exceptions. That framing shapes everything, from office leave norms to the pace at which development programmes expect communities to “comply”.
When calendars enforce authority
History reminds us that calendar reforms are rarely innocent. Julius Caesar’s reshaping of Rome’s calendar consolidated imperial power. Pope Gregory XIII’s reform aligned Christian ritual with solar accuracy while entrenching ecclesiastical authority. When Britain finally adopted the Gregorian system in 1752, the change erased 11 days and was imposed across its empire; colonial assemblies had little or no say. In that moment, time itself became a technology for governing distant subjects.
Sri Lanka knows this logic. The administrative layers built under colonial rule taught us to treat Gregorian dates as “official” and indigenous rhythms as “traditional.” Our contemporary fiscal deadlines, debt restructurings, even election cycles, now march to that imported drumbeat, often without asking how this timing sits with the island’s ecological and cultural cycles.
Development, deadlines and temporal violence
Modern governance is obsessed with deadlines: quarters, annual budgets, five-year plans, review missions. The assumption is that time is linear, uniform, and compressible. But a farmer in Anuradhapura and a rideshare driver in Colombo do not live in the same temporal reality. Monsoons, harvests, pilgrimage seasons, fasting cycles, school term transitions, these shape when people can comply with policy, pay taxes, attend trainings, or repay loans. When programmes ignore these rhythms, failure is framed as “noncompliance,” when in fact the calendar itself has misread society. This mismatch is a form of temporal violence: harm produced not by bad intentions, but by insensitive timing.
Consider microcredit repayment windows that peak during lean agricultural months, or school examinations scheduled without regard to Avurudu obligations. Disaster relief often runs on the donor’s quarterly clock rather than the community’s recovery pace. In each case, governance time disciplines lived time, and the least powerful bend the most.
Religious time vs administrative time
Sri Lanka’s plural religious landscape intensifies the calendar question. Buddhism, Hinduism, Islam, and Christianity relate to time differently: lunar cycles, solar markers, sacred anniversaries. The state acknowledges these mainly as public holidays, rather than integrating their deeper temporal logic into planning. Vesak is a day off, not a rhythm of reflection and restraint; Ramadan is accommodated as schedule disruption, not as a month that reorganises energy, sleep, and work patterns; Avurudu is celebrated culturally but remains administratively marginal. The hidden assumption is that “real work” happens on the Gregorian clock; culture is decorative. That assumption deserves challenge.
The wisdom in complexity
Precolonial South and East Asian calendars were not confused compromises. They were sophisticated integrations of astronomy, agriculture, and ritual life, adding intercalary months precisely to keep festivals aligned with the seasons, and using lunar mansions (nakshatra) to mark auspicious thresholds. This plural logic admits that societies live on multiple cycles at once. Administrative convenience won with the Gregorian system, but at a cost: months that no longer relate to the moon (even though “month” comes from “moon”), and a yearstart with no intrinsic astronomical significance for our context.
Towards temporal pluralism
The solution is not to abandon the Gregorian calendar. Global coordination, trade, aviation, science, requires shared reference points. But ‘shared’ does not mean uncritical. Sri Lanka can lead by modelling temporal pluralism: a policy posture that recognises different ways of organising time as legitimate, and integrates them thoughtfully into governance.
Why timing is justice
In an age of economic adjustment and climate volatility, time becomes a question of justice: Whose rhythms does the state respect? Whose deadlines dominate? Whose festivals shape planning, and whose are treated as interruptions? The more governance assumes a single, imported tempo, the wider the gap between the citizens and the state. Conversely, when policy listens to local calendars, legitimacy grows, as does efficacy. People comply more when the schedule makes sense in their lives.
Reclaiming time without romanticism
This is not nostalgia. It is a pragmatic recognition that societies live on multiple cycles: ecological, economic, ritual, familial. Good policy stitches these cycles into a workable fabric. Poor policy flattens them into a grid and then blames citizens for falling through the squares.
Sri Lanka’s temporal landscape, Avurudu’s thresholds, lunar fasts, monsoon pulses, exam seasons, budget cycles, is rich, not chaotic. The task before us is translation: making administrative time converse respectfully with cultural time. We don’t need to slow down; we need to sync differently.
The last word
When British subjects woke to find 11 days erased in 1752, they learned that time could be rearranged by distant power. Our lesson, centuries later, is the opposite: time can be rearranged by near power, by a state that chooses to listen.
Calendars shape memory, expectation, discipline, and hope. If Sri Lanka can reimagine the governance of time, without abandoning global coordination, we might recover something profound: a calendar that measures not just hours but meaning. That would be a reform worthy of our island’s wisdom.
(The writer, a senior Chartered Accountant and professional banker, is Professor at SLIIT, Malabe. The views and opinions expressed in this article are personal.)
Features
Medicinal drugs for Sri Lanka:The science of safety beyond rhetoric
The recent wave of pharmaceutical tragedies in Sri Lanka, as well as some others that have occurred regularly in the past, has exposed a terrifying reality: our medicine cabinets have become a frontline of risk and potential danger. In recent months, the silent sanctuary of Sri Lanka’s healthcare system has been shattered by a series of tragic, preventable deaths. The common denominator in these tragedies has been a failure in the most basic promise of medicine: that it will heal, not harm. This issue is entirely contrary to the immortal writings of the Father of Medicine, Hippocrates of the island of Kos, who wrote, “Primum non nocere,” which translates classically from Latin as “First do no harm.” The question of the safety of medicinal drugs is, at present, a real dilemma for those of us who, by virtue of our vocation, need to use them to help our patients.
For a nation that imports the vast majority of its medicinal drugs, largely from regional hubs like India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh, the promise of healing is only as strong as the laboratory that verifies these very same medicinal drugs. To prevent further problems, and even loss of lives, we must demand a world-class laboratory infrastructure that operates on science, not just sentiment. We desperately need a total overhaul of our pharmaceutical quality assurance architecture.
The detailed anatomy of a national drug testing facility is not merely a government office. It is a high-precision fortress. To meet international standards like ISO/IEC 17025 and World Health Organisation (WHO) Good Practices for Pharmaceutical Quality Control Laboratories, such a high-quality laboratory must be zoned into specialised units, each designed to catch a different type of failure.
* The Physicochemical Unit: This is where the chemical identity of a drug is confirmed. Using High-Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC) and Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry (GC-MS), scientists determine if a “500mg” tablet actually contains 500mg of the active ingredient or if it is filled with useless chalk.
* The Microbiology Suite: This is the most critical area for preventing “injection deaths.” It requires an ISO Class 5 Cleanroom: sterile environments where air is filtered to remove every microscopic particle. Here, technicians perform Sterility Testing to ensure no bacteria or fungi are present in medicines that have to be injected.
* The Instrumentation Wing: Modern testing requires Atomic Absorption Spectrometers to detect heavy metal contaminants (like lead or arsenic) and Stability Chambers to see how drugs react to Sri Lanka’s high humidity.
* The injectable drug contamination is a serious challenge. The most recent fatalities in our hospitals were linked to Intravenous (IV) preparations. When a drug is injected directly into the bloodstream, there is no margin for error. A proper national laboratory must conduct two non-negotiable tests:
* Bacterial Endotoxin Testing (BET): Even if a drug is “sterile” (all bacteria are dead), the dead bacteria leave behind toxic cell wall products called endotoxins. If injected, these residual compounds cause “Pyrogenic Reactions” with violent fevers, organ failure, and death. A functional lab must use the Limulus Amoebocyte Lysate (LAL) test to detect these toxins at the parts-per-billion level.
* Particulate Matter Analysis: Using laser obscuration, labs must verify that no microscopic shards of glass or plastic are floating in the vials. These can cause fatal blood clots or embolisms in the lungs.
It is absolutely vital to assess whether the medicine is available in the preparation in the prescribed amounts and whether it is active and is likely to work. This is Bioavailability. Sri Lanka’s heavy reliance on “generic” imports raises a critical question: Is the cheaper version from abroad as effective as the original, more expensive branded formulation? This is determined by Bioavailability (BA) and Bioequivalence (BE) studies.
A drug might have the right chemical formula, but if it does not dissolve properly in the stomach or reach the blood at the right speed, it is therapeutically useless. Bioavailability measures the rate and extent to which the active ingredient is absorbed into the bloodstream. If a cheaper generic drug is not “bioequivalent” to the original brand-named version, the patient is essentially taking a useless placebo. For patients with heart disease or epilepsy, even a 10% difference in bioavailability can lead to treatment failure. A proper national system must include a facility to conduct these studies, ensuring that every generic drug imported is a true “therapeutic equivalent” to the brand-named original.
As far as testing goes, the current testing philosophy is best described as Reactive, rather than Proactive. The current Sri Lankan system is “reactive”: we test a drug only after a patient has already suffered. This is a proven recipe for disaster. To protect the public, we must shift to a Proactive Surveillance Model of testing ALL drugs at many stages of their dispensing.
* Pre-Marketing Approval: No drug should reach a hospital shelf without “Batch Release” testing. Currently, we often accept the manufacturer’s own certificate of analysis, which is essentially like allowing students to grade their own examination answers.
* Random Post-Marketing Surveillance (PMS): Regulatory inspectors must have the power to walk into any rural pharmacy or state hospital, pick a box of medicine at random, and send it to the lab. This could even catch “substandard” drugs that may have degraded during shipping or storage in our tropical heat. PMS is the Final Safety Net. Even the best laboratories cannot catch every defect. Post-Marketing Surveillance is the ongoing monitoring of a drug’s safety after it has been released to the public. It clearly is the Gold Standard.
* Pharmacovigilance: A robust digital system where every “Adverse Drug Reaction” (ADR) is logged in a national database.
* Signal Detection: An example of this is if three hospitals in different provinces report a slight rash from the same batch of an antibiotic, the system should automatically “flag” that batch for immediate recall before a more severe, unfortunate event takes place.
* Testing for Contaminants: Beyond the active ingredients, we must test for excipient purity. In some global cases, cheaper “glycerin” used in syrups was contaminated with diethylene glycol, a deadly poison. A modern lab must have the technology to screen for these hidden killers.
When one considers the Human Element, Competence and Integrity, the very best equipment in the world is useless without the human capital to run it. A national lab would need the following:
* Highly Trained Pharmacologists and Microbiologists and all grades of staff who are compensated well enough to be immune to the “lobbying” of powerful external agencies.
* Digital Transparency: A database accessible to the public, where any citizen can enter a batch number from their medicine box and see the lab results.
Once a proper system is put in place, we need to assess as to how our facilities measure up against the WHO’s “Model Quality Assurance System.” That will ensure maintenance of internationally recognised standards. The confirmed unfavourable results of any testing procedure, if any, should lead to a very prompt “Blacklist” Initiative, which can be used to legally bar failing manufacturers from future tenders. Such an endeavour would help to keep all drug manufacturers and importers on their toes at all times.
This author believes that this article is based on the premise that the cost of silence by the medical profession would be catastrophic. Quality assurance of medicinal compounds is not an “extra” cost. It is a fundamental right of every Sri Lankan citizen, which is not at all subject to any kind of negotiation. Until our testing facilities match the sophistication of the manufacturers we buy from, we are not just importing medicine; we are importing potential risk.
The promises made by the powers-that-be to “update” the testing laboratories will remain as a rather familiar, unreliable, political theatre until we see a committed budget for mass spectrometry, cleanroom certifications, highly trained and committed staff and a fleet of independent inspectors. Quality control of therapeutic medicines is not a luxury; it is the price to be paid for a portal of entry into a civilised and intensively safe healthcare system. Every time we delay the construction of a comprehensive, proactive testing infrastructure, we are playing a game of Russian Roulette with the lives of our people.
The science is available, and the necessary technology exists. What is missing is the political will to put patient safety as the premier deciding criterion. The time for hollow rhetoric has passed, and the time for a scientifically fortified, transparent, and proactive regulatory mechanism is right now. The good health of all Sri Lankans, as well as even their lives, depend on it.
Dr B. J. C. Perera
MBBS(Cey), DCH(Cey), DCH(Eng), MD(Paediatrics), MRCP(UK), FRCP(Edin), FRCP(Lond), FRCPCH(UK), FSLCPaed, FCCP, Hony. FRCPCH(UK), Hony. FCGP(SL)
Specialist Consultant Paediatrician and Honorary Senior Fellow, Postgraduate Institute of Medicine, University of Colombo, Sri Lanka.
Joint Editor, Sri Lanka Journal of Child Health
Section Editor, Ceylon Medical Journal
Features
Rebuilding Sri Lanka Through Inclusive Governance
In the immediate aftermath of Cyclone Ditwah, the government has moved swiftly to establish a Presidential Task Force for Rebuilding Sri Lanka with a core committee to assess requirements, set priorities, allocate resources and raise and disburse funds. Public reaction, however, has focused on the committee’s problematic composition. All eleven committee members are men, and all non-government seats are held by business personalities with no known expertise in complex national development projects, disaster management and addressing the needs of vulnerable populations. They belong to the top echelon of Sri Lanka’s private sector which has been making extraordinary profits. The government has been urged by civil society groups to reconsider the role and purpose of this task force and reconstitute it to be more representative of the country and its multiple needs.
The group of high-powered businessmen initially appointed might greatly help mobilise funds from corporates and international donors, but this group may be ill equipped to determine priorities and oversee disbursement and spending. It would be necessary to separate fundraising, fund oversight and spending prioritisation, given the different capabilities and considerations required for each. International experience in post disaster recovery shows that inclusive and representative structures are more likely to produce outcomes that are equitable, efficient and publicly accepted. Civil society, for instance, brings knowledge rooted in communities, experience in working with vulnerable groups and a capacity to question assumptions that may otherwise go unchallenged.
A positive and important development is that the government has been responsive to these criticisms and has invited at least one civil society representative to join the Rebuilding Sri Lanka committee. This decision deserves to be taken seriously and responded to positively by civil society which needs to call for more representation rather than a single representative. Such a demand would reflect an understanding that rebuilding after a national disaster cannot be undertaken by the state and the business community alone. The inclusion of civil society will strengthen transparency and public confidence, particularly at a moment when trust in institutions remains fragile. While one appointment does not in itself ensure inclusive governance, it opens the door to a more participatory approach that needs to be expanded and institutionalised.
Costly Exclusions
Going down the road of history, the absence of inclusion in government policymaking has cost the country dearly. The exclusion of others, not of one’s own community or political party, started at the very dawn of Independence in 1948. The Father of the Nation, D S Senanayake, led his government to exclude the Malaiyaha Tamil community by depriving them of their citizenship rights. Eight years later, in 1956, the Oxford educated S W R D Bandaranaike effectively excluded the Tamil speaking people from the government by making Sinhala the sole official language. These early decisions normalised exclusion as a tool of governance rather than accommodation and paved the way for seven decades of political conflict and three decades of internal war.
Exclusion has also taken place virulently on a political party basis. Both of Sri Lanka’s post Independence constitutions were decided on by the government alone. The opposition political parties voted against the new constitutions of 1972 and 1977 because they had been excluded from participating in their design. The proposals they had made were not accepted. The basic law of the country was never forged by consensus. This legacy continues to shape adversarial politics and institutional fragility. The exclusion of other communities and political parties from decision making has led to frequent reversals of government policy. Whether in education or economic regulation or foreign policy, what one government has done the successor government has undone.
Sri Lanka’s poor performance in securing the foreign investment necessary for rapid economic growth can be attributed to this factor in the main. Policy instability is not simply an economic problem but a political one rooted in narrow ownership of power. In 2022, when the people went on to the streets to protest against the government and caused it to fall, they demanded system change in which their primary focus was corruption, which had reached very high levels both literally and figuratively. The focus on corruption, as being done by the government at present, has two beneficial impacts for the government. The first is that it ensures that a minimum of resources will be wasted so that the maximum may be used for the people’s welfare.
Second Benefit
The second benefit is that by focusing on the crime of corruption, the government can disable many leaders in the opposition. The more opposition leaders who are behind bars on charges of corruption, the less competition the government faces. Yet these gains do not substitute for the deeper requirement of inclusive governance. The present government seems to have identified corruption as the problem it will emphasise. However, reducing or eliminating corruption by itself is not going to lead to rapid economic development. Corruption is not the sole reason for the absence of economic growth. The most important factor in rapid economic growth is to have government policies that are not reversed every time a new government comes to power.
For Sri Lanka to make the transition to self-sustaining and rapid economic development, it is necessary that the economic policies followed today are not reversed tomorrow. The best way to ensure continuity of policy is to be inclusive in governance. Instead of excluding those in the opposition, the mainstream opposition in particular needs to be included. In terms of system change, the government has scored high with regard to corruption. There is a general feeling that corruption in the country is much reduced compared to the past. However, with regard to inclusion the government needs to demonstrate more commitment. This was evident in the initial choice of cabinet ministers, who were nearly all men from the majority ethnic community. Important committees it formed, including the Presidential Task Force for a Clean Sri Lanka and the Rebuilding Sri Lanka Task Force, also failed at first to reflect the diversity of the country.
In a multi ethnic and multi religious society like Sri Lanka, inclusivity is not merely symbolic. It is essential for addressing diverse perspectives and fostering mutual understanding. It is important to have members of the Tamil, Muslim and other minority communities, and women who are 52 percent of the population, appointed to important decision making bodies, especially those tasked with national recovery. Without such representation, the risk is that the very communities most affected by the crisis will remain unheard, and old grievances will be reproduced in new forms. The invitation extended to civil society to participate in the Rebuilding Sri Lanka Task Force is an important beginning. Whether it becomes a turning point will depend on whether the government chooses to make inclusion a principle of governance rather than treat it as a show of concession made under pressure.
by Jehan Perera
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