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Editorial

Vaccines save lives

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Wednesday 19th July, 2023

Sri Lanka’s public health sector is in the news always for the wrong reasons. Allegations that some Health Ministry panjandrums cut corrupt deals with foreign pharmaceutical companies and procure substandard medicinal drugs to enrich themselves have created quite a stir. Health Minister Keheliya Rambukwella, who is under fire for the rapid deterioration of the free healthcare system on his watch, has appointed a seven-member expert committee to probe complaints that low-quality drugs have caused several deaths in some state-run hospitals during the past few months. The government has for once handpicked some experts to conduct a probe! One can only hope that the expert committee will be able to conduct an investigation free from political pressure, ascertain the truth and reveal it to the public.

Head of the Epidemiology Unit of the Health Ministry, Dr. Samitha Ginige, has issued a dire warning. He has said unconfirmed claims that a vaccine has caused the death of an infant are fraught with the danger of causing an erosion of public faith in the National Immunisation Programme (NIP), which is one of the few things Sri Lanka can be truly proud of. He has called upon everyone to act responsibly lest parents should be hesitant to have their precious ones vaccinated, and dangerous diseases the country has eliminated with the help of vaccines should raise their ugly heads again in such an eventuality. This, we believe, is a timely warning, which must not go unheeded, for there occur certain situations where logical reasoning and sound judgement desert most Sri Lankans, who have also earned notoriety for mass hysteria, which leads to irrational behaviour. In spite of its admirably high literacy rate, Sri Lanka is no stranger to groupthink, frequent breakdowns of critical thinking and the people’s strong reliance on social dynamics, shared beliefs, etc., disseminated via social media. The ease with which a shaman called Dhammika Bandara took them for a ride and made a killing by selling a concoction touting it as a cure for Covid-19 may serve as an example.

It has not been scientifically proven whether the aforesaid infant’s death was due to the administration of a vaccine. Here is a matter that is best left to medical experts, who alone are knowledgeable and experienced enough to conduct a thorough investigation and get at the truth. Health authorities insist that other infants who received vaccine doses from the same phial as the victim are in good health, and there have been no complaints of complications due to the vaccine in any other part of the country. In our book, their argument is tenable, but unfortunately the Health Minister and his bureaucratic lackeys, who do his bidding, have lost credibility, and nobody believes anything unless it is officially denied.

Immunisation is one of the few things Sri Lanka has got right. The NIP, which has a coverage of nearly 100%, according to the World Health Organization (WHO), has been internationally acclaimed as a huge success. The Asian Development Bank has also praised the NIP.

Vaccines save lives. Period. This is the message that should reach the public, especially the less informed sections of society, who tend to fall for fake news. WHO has rightly said that Sri Lankan parents, ‘especially mothers, queue up early morning at grass-root level MOH offices on the specified date to give their little ones the vaccines … the children’s immunisation cards are safeguarded like gold even in the humblest homes in Sri Lanka.” It is the responsibility of everyone to ensure that Sri Lankans continue to do so, without losing faith in the NIP, and reap the life-saving benefits of vaccines.



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Editorial

When juggernauts bear down on democracy

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Sri Lanka’s legal fraternity has woken up to threats to democracy and embarked on a campaign to neutralise them. The Bar Association of Sri Lanka (BASL) is leading the battle against the incumbent government’s efforts to undermine democracy and judicial independence. It deserves praise for its laudable mission, whose success however hinges on the cooperation of all other stakeholders.

Former BASL President Saliya Pieris, speaking at the launch of Dr. Jayampathy Wickramaratne’s book, Constitutional Conversations, in Colombo on Thursday (16), inter alia, pointed out that democracy had to be protected from the elected representatives of people as well. He must have struck a responsive chord with the discerning public when he said democracy faced graver threats under governments with steamroller majorities.

The wellbeing of democracy is inversely proportional to the concentration of unchecked political power, as evident from the experience of countries like Sri Lanka, where legal and institutional constraints are absent or inherently weak and ineffective. However, a distinction has to be made between state capacity and arbitrary, unchecked state power. Mature democracies often combine extensive democratic freedoms with highly capable states, rather than weak ones, as some political scientists have argued.

So, one may say, with apologies to Shakespeare, the fault is neither in state capacity nor in our stars, but in ourselves and the legal and institutional safeguards in place to protect democracy. President Anura Kumara Dissanayake has failed in his constitutional duty by leaving four vacancies each in the Supreme Court (SC) and the Court of Appeal (CA) unfilled for months, as legal experts have pointed out, but there is nothing that can be done to ensure that he does what the Constitution requires him to do. Who says the culture impunity came to an end with the 2024 regime change?

Mammoth parliamentary majorities not only undermine democracy but also become the undoing of the governments that command them. This has been Sri Lanka’s experience since 1970, when the SLFP-led United Front government secured a two-thirds majority (with the help of the JVP, which conducted its propaganda campaign). That administration bulldozed its way through and even extended its parliamentary term by two years. The UNP, which obtained a five-sixths majority at the 1977 general election, debilitated all legal and institutional constraints, and democracy suffered immensely under its rule as never before. Political violence and election malpractices came to be institutionalised. That regime made a general election disappear in 1982 with the help of a heavily rigged referendum. The SLFP-led UPFA government mustered a two-thirds majority after winning the 2010 general election and went to the extent of amending the Constitution to further the interests of the then Executive President by weakening the constitutional safeguards that had been introduced to ensure the independence of vital state institutions. The SLPP government, elected in 2020, abused its two-thirds majority to amend the Constitution to strengthen the executive presidency at the expense of democratic institutions. The arrogance of power made that regime impervious to public opinion and economic reality, and the economy went into a tailspin, leading to political upheavals. That supermajority turned out to be the SLPP government’s undoing as well as a curse for the country.

The JVP-led NPP, which capitalised on public anger and came to power on the back of a massive protest vote, in 2024, thinks no end of itself mainly because of its two-thirds majority. President Dissanayake has been accused of planning to amend the Constitution to increase the retirement ages of the superior court judges with an ulterior motive. He continues to ignore calls for abandoning his ill-conceived plan and filling the vacancies in the SC and the CA.

Democracy suffered extensive damage under previous governments with supermajorities, which were abused in every conceivable manner to advance the political agendas of the political leaders of the day. Now, another juggernaut is bearing down on democracy. The political Opposition is too pusillanimous to stand up to the powerful JVP-NPP government; its leaders bellow rhetoric but baulk at taking up the cudgels for democracy. Their bark is worse than their bite. Only a few individual Opposition politicians have had the courage to oppose the ongoing assault on democracy and educate the public on the excesses committed by the present-day leaders. As a result, the BASL, the independent media, and some civil society outfits have had to act as a countervailing force against the government, which is now doing exactly what it condemned previous governments for doing.

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Editorial

Conspiracies galore!

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Saturday 18th July, 2026

US President Donald Trump has accused China of interfering in the 2020 US presidential election and alleged “shocking vulnerabilities” in American voting systems. Speaking from the White House on Thursday, he repeated unsubstantiated claims about voter fraud and foreign meddling in the 2020 election, which he lost.

Trump claimed he had declassified hundreds of intelligence files which supported his claim that Beijing tried to sway the election in his rival, Joe Biden’s favour. However, the US intelligence agencies have concluded that China did not interfere in the 2020 election. One may recall that there were allegations of Russian interference in the 2016 US presidential election, which Trump won. After securing the presidency, Trump insisted that those allegations were false, politically motivated and an attempt to delegitimise his victory.

Trump’s allegation against China has come three months ahead of crucial US midterm elections, where the Republicans are expected to suffer a setback. Trump is doing everything in his power to prevent a situation that will make his position as a lame-duck President even weaker. So, it is only natural that he is concocting conspiracy theories and resorting to hard power projections, such as using military force, and economic coercion to influence other nations, in a bid to shore up the crumbling image of his government. However, it is doubtful whether his tactics will pay off.

Meanwhile, US Vice President JD Vance has accused a section of the Israeli government of trying to sway US public opinion against a peace deal to end the Iran war. He said so in an interview with a podcaster on Wednesday. Defending a deal that the US reached last month to end the war with Iran, Vance said, “I know beyond a shadow of a doubt that there have been people within the Israeli government who are trying to, like, actually shift us away from that policy because they want to continue the military campaign,” according to media reports. Vance’s allegation followed a Time magazine story that a former Trump campaigner had been hired to influence US views of Israel and the Iran war. Vance’s allegation is damning; he has called the Israeli efforts “very discreet, extremely well-funded campaign to try to derail the negotiation and try to derail the deal”.

That Israel does not want the US to enter into a peace deal with Iran is obvious. It wants the US to go on attacking Iran until there is a regime change in Tehran. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu makes no bones about the fact that he was not well-disposed towards the interim peace deal signed between the US and Iran. The resumption of hostilities must have gladdened his heart as well as those of all other hawks in Washington and Tel Aviv.

There is no way Israel can prevent the US from signing a peace agreement with Iran if President Trump so desires strongly. What has stood in the way of efforts to end the Iran war is Trump’s intransigence. Iran is not without blame, but the US is to be blamed more for the resumption of war. Trump knows he cannot go on attacking Iran indefinitely for economic and strategic reasons. The US weapons stockpiles have to be replenished, and the economic cost of war is escalating. The war has also driven oil prices and the cost of living high in the US, much to the consternation of the US public, the majority of whom are against the ongoing war, which they think Israel manoeuvred the Trump administration into. Trump only made a virtue of necessity when he agreed to a ceasefire, but wanted to end the war on his own terms; he failed because Iran did not give in to US pressure.

As for the aforesaid ‘conspiracies’ Trump is in a position to order a thorough probe into the alleged Chinese interference in the 2020 US election and get to the bottom of it, and instead of blaming Israel, Vance can ask his boss, Trump, to stop attacking Iran.

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Editorial

Overwhelming fire power and stubborn resilience

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Friday 17th July, 2026

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu must be on cloud nine. The US is now doing exactly what he wanted it to do; it is attacking Iran without Israeli involvement. Israeli officials have told the media that they do not expect Israel to become directly involved in the new phase of fighting though the Israel Defence Forces remain on alert should the conflict expand. This can be considered another dream come true for Netanyahu, who said after the first round of US-Israeli airstrikes which killed Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei that he had been dreaming of attacking Iran for 40 years.

What is unfolding in West Asia is an asymmetric conflict where the US firepower is far superior to that of Iran, which is resisting Trump’s “Epic Fury”. Tehran’s resilience is remarkable. The US cannot go on carrying out airstrikes indefinitely. Only a ground war will determine a clear winner.

Trump has threatened a ground assault in Iran, but he has the war powers resolution passed by the Congress recently to contend with. A ground operation won’t be a walk in the park. Deploying ground troops is a high-risk gamble that did not pay off for the US in Vietnam and Afghanistan. A steady flow of body bags from a foreign theatre of war that lacks popular support at home has the potential to unsettle any government.

Weapons stockpiles are not unlimited for any nation however mighty and wealthy it may be. The ongoing conflict has depleted the weapons inventories of both sides to it. However, it can be considered a matter of greater concern to the US than Iran in that Washington has to fire a large number of missiles at multiple targets in Iran as part of its strategy to keep Tehran under pressure. Michael O’Hanlon, who leads the Brookings Institution’s foreign policy research, has been quoted by the media as saying that the US weapons stockpiles are doubtlessly lower than Washington would prefer.

The Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington-based think tank, has reportedly said that by the time full-scale fighting between the US and Iran stopped in April, the Pentagon had fired at least half of its THAAD ballistic missile interceptors, nearly half of its Patriot air defence interceptors, and around 30% of its Tomahawk land-attack missiles. This revelation runs counter to President Trump’s boastful claim that the US has a never-ending supply of missiles. Besides, in March, Trump said that his officials had met the heads of US arms manufacturing companies and they had promised to increase production.

Military analysts are of the view that it could take between one to four years for the US to replenish its vital munitions stockpiles and restore them to the pre-Iran war levels, according to an Al Jazeera report. Speculation is rife in international defence circles that if the depletion of the US weapons stockpiles continues at this rate, Washington may find it difficult to face a military conflict elsewhere.

Global oil prices are rising again due to the closure of the Hormuz Strait. A US naval blockade will be of little use. The global economy will be the biggest loser. Oil supply disruptions will take a heavy toll on the US economy as well. The first phase of the Iran war sent the US fuel prices up, and the closure of the Hormuz chokepoint will make the situation far worse. Trump is fighting a war that a vast majority of Americans are opposed to, according to opinion survey results. US farmers have been complaining of production cost escalations due to the knock-on economic effects of the West Asia conflict, according to media reports. US midterm elections are due in a few months and the Republicans are not doing well on the political front.

The White House will have to justify the colossal amounts of funds being spent on the current war. The financial cost of the conflict is still being calculated, but according to some estimates the direct military cost ranges from about USD 40 billion to more than USD 100 billion, with equipment losses, base repairs and weapons replenishment being taken into account. The cost continues to escalate. These politico-economic factors will also have a bearing on Trump’s military campaign.

 

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