Editorial
Chasing will-o’-the-wisp
Monday 5th February, 2024
Another ‘Independence Day’ has come and gone. Hours of pomp and circumstance complete with thunderous cannon fire were over and the sobering reality was dawning on Sri Lankans as this comment was written yesterday. Independence Day celebrations are replete with irony; beaming from ear to ear and singing the national anthem with gusto, at such spectacles, are the political ‘leaders’ who are responsible for ruining the economy of this country, which has become dependent on the rest of the world, as a result.
If yesterday’s event of grandeur had been cancelled or at least scaled down on account of the economic crisis, a lot of funds could have been saved and utilised for some useful purpose, such as the procurement of medicinal drugs for the state-run hospitals or the provision of sanitary facilities for underprivileged schools. However, the celebration of imaginary Independence is a time for reflection on how other countries have achieved progress and why Sri Lanka has remained underdeveloped since 1948.
South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol finds himself in the line of fire owing to an allegation that his wife improperly accepted a designer handbag as a gift from a controversial Korean-American pastor. The First Lady was secretly filmed receiving a Dior handbag worth more than USD 2,200. This revelation, which has triggered a media feeding frenzy, could not have come at a worse time for President Yeol and his party; elections to South Korea’s national assembly are only months away.
Thankfully, Sri Lanka currently has a respected First Lady, who is above board, but sadly it cannot be said that her husband does not suffer fools and crooks gladly, so to speak. With the next presidential election about eight or nine months away, President Ranil Wickremesinghe stands accused of shielding the corrupt.
The Auditor General himself has exposed corruption in cricket administration, which has not only ruined cricket but also tarnished the image of Sri Lanka. Worse, President Wickremesinghe sacked Sports Minister Roshan Ranasinghe, who took on the crooked cricket administrators. Thereafter, the government embarked on a political witch-hunt against him.
The perpetrators of the sugar scam are still at large because they have links to the ruling SLPP. The staggering losses they caused to the state coffers have been passed on to the hapless public in the form of tax and tariff increases. The Health Ministry has become a metaphor for corruption, but the government is unflinchingly defending many crooks who are enriching themselves at the expense of the sick.
A Chief Minister in India had to resign prior to his arrest over a land scam, the other day. Hemant Soren, Chief Minister of Jharkhand, was remanded after being produced in court. In 2014, the three-time Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu, J. Jayalalithaa, was sentenced to four years’ simple imprisonment and fined INR 100 crore for offences under the Prevention of Corruption Act.
But here in this country, a person who was sentenced to two years of rigorous imprisonment suspended for five years and fined Rs 25 million by the Colombo High Court (HC) in an extortion case involving a land grab, functions as a Cabinet Minister and Chief Government Whip. He has publicly pledged his support for President Wickremesinghe in the coming presidential race! He has appealed against the HC judgement (2022), but he should have been asked to resign from the aforesaid posts pending the appeal.
The SLPP-UNP government led by President Wickremesinghe has proved that it has no scruples about defending tainted politicians. On Friday, it allowed Minister Keheliya Rambukwella to be arrested over the fraudulent procurement of a consignment of fake immunoglobulin because it did not want to keep on testing the patience of the resentful public lest protests against the kid-glove treatment the police gave him should spin out of control.
He should have been arrested immediately after the lid was blown off the procurement scam, which caused several deaths in government hospitals and enormous losses to the state coffers. One should not be so naïve as to think that the government has thrown Rambukwella under the bus. It is obviously trying every trick in the book to open an escape route for him. With the CID and the state prosecutor on its side, the government might even succeed in its endeavour. Politicians taken into custody are never kept in remand prison; they are allowed to stay in the prison hospital instead. One can only hope that Rambukwella, who had himself admitted to the prison hospital on Saturday itself, will be examined by a team of independent medical specialists.
Last month, Singapore’s Transport Minister S. Iswaran resigned after being charged in a graft case. One of the main reasons why Singapore has become a First World country is its zero tolerance of corruption. The least that the Rajapaksa-Wickremesinghe government can do to assuage public anger is to remove Rambukwella and others with serious allegations against them from the Cabinet forthwith.
It must also ensure that the cricket administration is cleansed of corrupt elements, who are sticking to their positions like limpets with the help of some members of President Wickremesinghe’s kitchen cabinet, and the Rajapaksa family.Independence as well as progress will remain a will-o’-the-wisp for this country unless corruption is eliminated and the rule of law restored as a national priority.
Editorial
Threats, hubris and flippancy
Friday 6th February, 2026
Some Opposition big guns went ballistic yesterday in Parliament, lashing out at the JVP-NPP government for refusing to provide SJB MP Rohana Bandara with security in view of threats to his life. They have been urging the government to ensure the protection of MP Bandara, but in vain. It looks as if the eminences grises of the JVP remote-controlled the national legislature.
The government MPs made some facetious remarks about MP Bandara’s demand for security. Their flippancy is deplorable. Gun violence is on the rise, and hardly a day passes without a fatal shooting in this country. Underworld gangs have amply demonstrated their ability to strike anywhere at will. The police swing into action only after crimes are committed.
The police first made a proper threat assessment and concluded that MP Bandara should be provided with security. The government, which had made light of his complaint, was left with egg on its face. It disregarded the police report and sought to obfuscate the issue. While it was drawing fire in Parliament for the inordinate delay in taking action to protect MP Bandara, the police issued a counter-report, reversing their earlier threat assessment, and, lo and behold, claimed that the threats to the MP emanated from a rival in his own party. Obviously, the government pressured the police to make an about-turn and help give a political twist to the issue. The police have earned notoriety for their absurd claims, which are legion, and trotting out lame excuses in defence of their political masters.
Opposition Leader Sajith Premadasa yesterday chided the government frontbenchers for flippancy and making a false claim that MP Bandara had received threats from someone in his own party. He said a Deputy Inspector General of Police in Anuradhapura and intelligence services had initially recommended that MP Bandara be given adequate security. But the government members continued to crack themselves up. Ruling party politicians behave in this manner when power goes to their heads.
The Opposition MPs are in a dilemma where their security is concerned. When they face threats and ask for protection, the Speaker says the government goes by threat assessments done by the police in deciding whether to provide them with security. The police do as the government says, and issue reports justifying its position that there are no threats to its political rivals. Thus, the Opposition MPs have no one to turn to when their lives are in danger. The government MPs are apparently deriving some perverse pleasure from MP Bandara’s predicament.
Let the government be warned that it is making a big mistake by refusing to provide MP Bandara with security. Sri Lanka is no stranger to political assassinations. The JVP itself has gunned down hundreds of its political rivals. The UNP, the SLFP, etc., too, have a history of political violence, which claimed many lives. Those who do not learn from history are said to be doomed to repeat it. One may recall that an assassin’s bullet that pierced DUNF leader and former Minister Lalith Athulathmudali’s heart in April 1993 became the undoing of a UNP government. That repressive regime disregarded the then Opposition’s demand that the UNP dissidents be provided with security as they were facing threats to their lives from the LTTE as well as pro-UNP goons.
Most of all, a fundamental democratic and legal norm underpinning modern parliamentary systems is that all members of Parliament are equal in rights and privileges and must be treated as such. It is unbecoming of a government to dismiss threats to an Opposition MP’s life, and make flippant remarks, which reflect poorly on it.
Editorial
All’s not well that ends well?
Thursday 5th February, 2026
The argy-bargy is done, and the battle’s lost and won, one might say with apologies to the Bard. A prolonged tug of war between President Anura Kumara Dissanayake and the Constitutional Council (CC) has come to an end. The newly reconstituted CC has unanimously approved President Dissanayake’s nominee for the post of Auditor General (AG). The National Audit Office (NAO), which remained headless for months, now has a new head—Samudrika Jayaratne, who has served as Senior Deputy Auditor General. But the question is whether one can truly say, in this case, all’s well that ends well.
We do not intend to raise suspicions about the integrity of the new AG, but there are some questions that warrant answers. The critics of her appointment have levelled some allegations against her, including transactions tainted by conflict of interest and ‘unprofessional conduct’. They have also claimed that the Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption has launched an investigation into allegations against her. Unsubstantiated as these allegations are, they have the potential to raise doubts in the public mind about the new AG’s integrity and that of the NAO under her. Hence the need for her to respond to them.
Thankfully, President Dissanayake’s efforts to parachute a total outsider loyal to the JVP into the post of AG came a cropper because the immediate predecessors of the three newly appointed civil society members of the CC intrepidly resisted pressure from the Executive. However, the government ought to explain why it overlooked Dharmapala Gammanpila, who served as the Acting AG. The general consensus is that he is the most eligible candidate for the post of AG. Four Mahanayake Theras wrote a joint letter to President Dissanayake, recently, urging him to appoint Gammanpila as AG. The prelates’ request resonated with those who cherish good governance, but President Dissanayake ignored it.
The JVP-led NPP’s election manifesto, A Thriving Nation: A Beautiful Life, attributes the deterioration of the public service to ‘political appointments’ and ‘state workers making political decisions’. Among the steps the NPP has promised to take to straighten up the public service are ‘merit-based appointments and promotions’. But its refusal to appoint Gammanpila as AG has raised many an eyebrow and lent credence to its critics’ claim that it is wary of having an upright official at the helm of the NAO because it does not want various fraudulent deals in the public sector on its watch exposed; some of them are the questionable release of 323 red-flagged freight containers without mandatory Customs inspections from the Colombo Port and the rice and coal scams. The only way the government can show that the merit principle it claims to uphold has not fallen by the wayside and its commitment to good governance is genuine is to give credible reasons for its decision to overlook the most eligible candidate for the post of AG.
The heads of all state institutions must be above suspicion like Caesar’s wife, so to speak, for a fish is said to rot from the head down. One may recall that the Police under Deshabandu Tennakoon, whom the SLPP-UNP government appointed IGP by unashamedly subverting the CC process amidst protests, became subservient to the then rulers. Sadly, the situation has not changed much; the long arm of the law has become a cat’s paw for the JVP-NPP government. While claiming to uphold good governance, the incumbent government has embarked on a campaign to vilify the Attorney General in a bid to pressure him to obey its dictates. Thankfully, he has proved that he is made of sterner stuff, and his staff, the Bar Association of Sri Lanka and others have circled the wagons around him.
Meanwhile, the CC’s unanimous endorsement of the appointment of the AG has diminished the Opposition’s moral right to criticise the actions of the NAO under the new head.
Editorial
The dawn of another Independence Day
Wednesday 4th February, 2026
Another Independence Day has dawned. Elaborate arrangements have been made to celebrate it on a grand scale. The national flag will flutter at full mast majestically to the roll of drums and the blare of trumpets. A colourful parade and a fly-past will be among the day’s many attractions. A ceremony with such pomp and circumstance is an occasion for reflection.
Sri Lanka is celebrating the 78th year of Independence while emerging from its worst-ever economic crisis. There is a long way to go before it achieves full economic recovery. Much is being spoken about the need for economic reforms, and their importance cannot be overstated. But the question is whether they alone will help usher in national progress.
Since 1948, Sri Lanka has seen various political and economic reform movements. Its economy and political system have undergone radical changes during the past several decades. and reforms have yielded mixed results, with progress in some areas and setbacks in others. The current economic crisis and the ongoing recovery efforts have necessitated a national strategy to reform the economy. Experiments with political, constitutional and electoral reforms are far from over.
Successive governments have experimented with economic and political reforms. On the political front, the executive presidential system has survived several half-hearted attempts to abolish it and reintroduce the Westminster system. Politically-motivated amendments have made the Constitution look like a badly edited periodical, according to cynics. The electoral system has become an unholy mess. Provincial Council elections have fallen between two electoral systems, so to speak; at present, they cannot be held under either the Proportional Representation system or the Mixed Proportional system.
Meanwhile, the blame for the sorry state of affairs on all fronts has been laid solely at the feet of politicians. But it should be apportioned to the people, for it is they who elect governments. They vote in such a way that one wonders whether they are capable of making rational decisions and choices despite the country’s high literacy rate. True, politicians deserve the flak they receive for corruption, other malpractices and, above all, the country’s failure to achieve development, but it takes two to tango.
The state service has earned notoriety for inefficiency, incompetence, and delays. Decades of politicisation alone cannot be blamed for this situation. Sri Lankans’ attitude to work leaves much to be desired. The country is yet to develop a strong national work ethic, which is a prerequisite for enhancing national productivity and achieving development. Trade unions perennially make demands but rarely turn the searchlight inwards, much less concentrate on their duties and responsibilities.
The public apparently does not care much about civic duties and responsibilities. Tax compliance is extremely low, and indiscipline is widespread. Roads are characterised by utter chaos, and accidents, mostly caused by reckless driving, claim about seven or eight lives a day. Complaints of sexual harassment of women in buses and trains abound.
The focus of the government, the Opposition, the media, religious leaders and others is currently on educational reforms, which have apparently taken precedence over economic reforms. There are media reports about discussions on constitutional and electoral reforms as well. But there has been no serious discussion on the much-needed social reforms.
Social reforms are organised efforts aimed at not only promoting justice, equality and inclusion across political, economic, cultural and social spheres in a country but also helping bring about attitudinal changes and positive mindsets essential for a nation to adapt to changing times, face challenges, achieve its development goals and progress. It is time serious thought was given to social reforms.
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