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Origins and Achievements of Colombo Law Faculty

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75th anniversary celebrations Sept. 22, 2023

by Dr. Dinesha Samararatne

I feel like an apology is in order as my opening line. A reflection on the 75 years of the Faculty of Law was to be shared by Justice Saleem Marsoof PC, who, unfortunately is not available to join us this evening. I stand here before you as a substitute challenged by the lack of the long and personal view of this institution and its graduates. Unlike Justice Marsoof, my association with it is relatively short. I am not aiming to be comprehensive, but I most certainly am aiming to offer you some thoughts to prompt your own reflections as we mark this significant milestone of an institution that is close to our hearts and one that has been central to the life of this nation.

The physical origin of the Faculty of Law, the College House, is the same as the origins of the University of Ceylon. It also happens to be a location from which at least aspects of the constitution of independent Ceylon were drafted. It is apt that the birth of the Faculty of Law is entangled with the political independence of this country. The Department of Law was established in July 1947 within the Faculty of Arts of the newly minted University of Ceylon.

The Department shifted to Peradeniya only in 1959. In 1965, it was relocated to Colombo and by 1967 it was upgraded as the first, and to date, only, Faculty of Law in Sri Lanka. By 1978, the Faculty of Law became a part of the newly established University of Colombo.

Early Days

It is a well-known fact that the first Vice Chancellor of the University of Ceylon, Sir Ivor Jennings was a key figure instrumental not only in the establishment of the then Department of Law alongside of Ceylon’s first University but that he also played a key role in drafting the independence constitution of Ceylon as well as of several other new states. Together with Sir Ivor Jennings who taught Constitutional Law Justice Francis Soertsz QC, Professor T Nadaraja and Justice (Dr) H W Tambiah QC were the illustrious founding academics of this new Department.

The first batch of graduates of the Department in 1950, were destined to be leading legal personalities of Sri Lanka. They were Mr RKW Goonesekere (who later served as a Principal of Sri Lanka Law College and a Chancellor of the University of Peradeniya), Mr Shiva Pasupati (who went on to serve as an Attorney General), Mr Ana Seneviratne (who was later the Inspector General of Police) and Mr Hema Rupasinghe (who went on to serve as a prominent Advocate).

The second batch of students were admitted directly to the Department of law and went on to serve in similarly significant public roles: namely Mr. Felix R. Dias Bandaranaike who took to politics and held office as a prominent Minister, Miss. Lakshmi Jayasundera (who later married Mr. Felix R. Dias Bandaranaike and who passed away recently), Mr. H.L. de Silva PC, a learned and erudite counsel, and Mr. Lakshman Kadirgamar PC, who worked as Director of WIPO before taking to politics and holding office as a Minister of Foreign Affairs. The Department of Law was the training ground for leaders of a new nation and arguably, remains so, to this date.

Graduating with a First Class

The first ever Bachelor of Laws (LL.B.) First Class honours pass was conferred on Mr. K. Shinya, of the third batch that graduated from the University of Ceylon, in 1952 who went on to become a prominent Advocate. The second First Class honours went to Mr. H.M.Z. Farouque, in 1960 and he went on to serve as the Registrar-General of Sri Lanka.

Men and women who graduated with First Class Honours from the Department of Law and subsequently the Faculty of Law reflect the exceptional quality of legal education and formation that this institution has had to offer. This honour roll includes Emeritus Prof. Savitri Goonesekere who as the first woman Vice Chancellor of the University of Colombo made a singular contribution nationally and internationally in law and policy making. I have had the honour of being a student of the last class she taught, before retirement from the faculty, in 2004 where Prof Goonesekere taught us the Law of Delict.

First class honours degrees were also awarded to Prof. L.J.M Cooray, Prof. Wickrema Weerasooria and Prof M Sornarajah, all of whom excelled in academia and distinguished themselves internationally, Justice Mark Fernando PC, one of the most illustrious justices of the Sri Lankan Supreme Court and Emeritus Professor GL Pieris, former Vice Chancellor of the University of Colombo and a former Minister of Constitutional Affairs.

More recently First-Class Honours degrees were awarded to Mr. Thusantha Wijemanne, a banker turned diplomat who also worked as a Director-General of the SAARC Arbitration Council, to Ms. Shermila Anthony who currently serves on the academic staff at the Faculty and to Dr Nishara Mendis who until recently also served on the academic staff.

Since 2010, more students graduated with First Class honours and include Ms Chathurika Akurgoda, Mr Supun Jaywardena, Dr Sachintha Dias, Ms Pramoda Vithange, Mr Minaal Wickremesinghe and just this year, Ms Shabnam Hilal and Mr Ishan Arachchi. Of the many significant achievements of these more recent graduates with First Class Honours, it is worth mentioning that Dr Sachintha Dias completed his D Phil at Oxford University and Mr Supun Jaywardena is the first ever law graduate with visual impairment in Sri Lanka to have achieved significant academic success and has recently returned to Sri Lanka after successfully reading for his Master’s degree at the University of Melbourne, Australia.

Illustrious Alumni

Over the course of its 75 year long history, graduates of this institution have achieved the highest levels of recognition not only in law but also in other spheres such as public service and politics. It is not possible to do justice to their service in this short speech and tonight, I can only name but a few of them. Graduates of international renown in academia include Prof CF Amerasinghe, Emeritus Professor Suri Ratnapala, Dr Neelan Tiruchelvam, Emeritus Professor Sharya Scharenguivel, Dr Nirmala Chandrahasan, Professor Deepika Udagama, Dr Mario Gomez, Mr Rohan Edrisinha, Dr Sharika Marasinghe and Prof Sumudu Atapattu.

Notable scholarly and professional contributions have been made by many of our graduates including Mr DC Amerasinghe, Mr Sriyan de Silva, Dr Sunil F Cooray, Ms Priyanee Wijesekere, Dr Rohan Perera PC, Dr Palitha Kohona, Dr Jayantha de Almeida PC and Ms Kishali Pinto Jaywardene. Esteemed members of the judiciary who graduated from the Faculty include Justice ARB Amerasinghe, Justice Mark Fernando PC, former Chief Justice Asoka de Silva, Justice Gamini Amaratunga, Justice Suresh Chandra, Justice Saleem Marsoof PC, Justice Eric Basnayake, first woman Justice of the Supreme Court of Sri Lanka and Sri Lanka’s first woman Chief Justice, Justice Dr Shirani Bandaranayake, Justice Chitrasiri, Justice Prasanna Jayawardene PC and currently, Justice Mahinda Samayawardhana.

One cannot but help but pause here to note the remarkable contribution made to Sri Lanka’s jurisprudence particularly in the 1990s by Justice ARB Amerasinghe, Justice Mark Fernando, Mr RKW Goonesekere and Mr HL de Silva. The jurisprudence thus developed was replicated to some extent more recently by Justice Prasanna Jayawardene. Today, the Faculty counts for the first time a head of state among its own, President Ranil Wickremesinghe.

There is no doubt that this institution has produced women and men who have served humanity well, whether in Sri Lanka or beyond. In my own work it has been wonderful to hear glowing reports about alumni of this institution often at leading institutions of the world such as Harvard University, Oxford University and at the United Nations. Annually, our graduates secure admission to the best law schools in the world, often securing prestigious scholarships.

It is customary and meaningful, when marking significant anniversaries of an institution, to name and celebrate the achievements and contributions of notable products of the institution. While we do that, in keeping with the emancipatory vision for university education in Sri Lanka, it is important to acknowledge the many other graduates who have also served well, in ensuring that legal systems function fairly and efficiently.

They may not be well known illustrious personalities but graduates of this institution who served professionally, ethically and generously to whoever who sought their services. In my view, it is in the ability of producing those types of graduates that the true test of the effectiveness or greatness of this institution is to be found.

On that score, let us acknowledge that this institution has served this land well. Could it have done better? I most certainly think so but it is fair to say that the emancipatory vision of universal education has been made available in our lecture halls for many, without any discrimination, over the years. It is fitting that this celebration tonight will contribute to that emancipatory dimension of this institution by providing support for undergraduates in financial need.

The faculty admits students from all parts of the country and from all walks of life. We have all experienced that min-cosmos of the Sri Lankan university where the generationally privileged student rubs shoulders with the generationally marginalised with strong prospects for transformation of the lives of both students through that encounter. For this emancipatory project to continue at this time of crisis, helping hands are essential. Our hope is that each of you will extend your generous support to our institution at this time and pay forward the support this land and its people extended to you, when you were pursuing your legal education as an undergraduate.

Student Life

Many of us hold and sweet and perhaps bitter-sweet memories of our formative days at University. This evening as we reconnect, our conversations will go back to the joys and horrors of our undergraduate days. Justice Marsoof, recollects his student life as an undergraduate in the second batch of students admitted to the newly established Faculty in 1968 in an essay published in Pursuing a Vision of Justice edited by Senaka Weeraratne, published in 2022. He notes that the faculty as a small place but, and I quote ‘hallowed portal of learning.’

Justice Marsoof notes that at the time of his admission to the Faculty of Law, they had two lecture halls with a small staff room adjoining the Science Faculty building on the main campus. The Law Faculty Library was then located across Reid Avenue. Today, the Faculty itself is on that same side of Reid Avenue and comprises two buildings. These two buildings house approximately 1,000 students and 40 academic staff.

Much has changed since the 1960s. The Bachelor of Laws degree which was originally offered as a three-year degree programme is now offered as a four-year programme thereby offering students extended opportunity for knowledge gathering, development of critical thinking and their overall formation. The latest revision of the curriculum is aimed at offering undergraduates more breadth in terms of course offerings and will be taught only in English.

From a Department of Law with a first batch of four students, over the course of 75 years, under the Deanships of Prof Nadarajah, Prof GL Peiris, Dr Anton Cooray, Prof Sharya Scharenguivel, Justice Dr Shirani Bandaranayake, Prof N Selvakkumaran, Prof VT Thamilmaran, Prof Indira Nanayakkara and presently Prof Sampath Punchihewa, this institution has evolved and grown in significant ways. In addition to the Bachelor of Laws degree for 350 students in a batch, the Faculty now also offers extension courses as well as postgraduate courses.

Co-curricular activities such as mooting offers students the opportunity to develop discipline specific as well as generic skills which they require for their professional development. It is a matter of pride for the Faculty that our students have often excelled in international mooting competitions even though the human and financial resources available to them are minimal.

Looking back to look forward

Marking a significant milestone of any institution, is a time for celebration, but I do think that our task would be incomplete, and even partial, if we do not pause to reflect critically on our institutional history in order to seek guidance for thinking meaningfully about our future.

The Faculty of Law was founded on, what I think, was an enduring vision that included at least three dimensions. The first was that of universal access to university education. The second is a commitment to developing critical thinking and excellence in legal education and the third is that of education as means for human flourishing and for developing democratic citizenship. Tonight as we celebrate the 75 years of this institution, it would be fitting for us to consider how well the Faculty and its graduates have realised this enduring vision.

On many occasions our graduates have fulfilled their professional and ethical responsibilities by defending constitutionalism, by ensuring respect for human rights and by working for the causes of the vulnerable and the voiceless. However, in 2023, when Sri Lanka seems to be standing again at cross-roads and is in crisis, we have an opportunity to ask ourselves about our responsibility for the state of the law, constitutionalism and respect for human dignity in Sri Lanka today.

I often try to imagine what the 1940s was like for the Ceylonese. A new state was being formed in the wake of two world wars and the collapse of an Empire on which the sun was never expected to set. Surely it must have been a tumultuous time. In 2023, as we mark 75 years of the Faculty of Law, we are once again in a tumultuous time. Visionary leaders of the 1940s laid a foundation for an institution in which they imagined a better collective future for us, despite the turbulence and uncertainty of their time. We, in 2023, face severe challenges in continuing quality universal education and higher education, in preserving the rule of law and in ensuring respect for human dignity.

Our challenge today, is twofold: to preserve the founding vision of this institution and to adapt it to deal with the new challenges that we face. I think it is fitting that the 75th anniversary of this institution is synchronised with the 75th anniversary of the Sri Lankan state. It is a powerful reminder of the responsibility and promise of this institution and of yours and mine, as its alumni. How we fulfil that responsibility and realise its promise in the next 75 years, is up to us and history, as always, will be our judge.



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Maduro abduction marks dangerous aggravation of ‘world disorder’

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Venezuelan President Maduro being taken to a court in New York

The abduction of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro by US special forces on January 3rd and his coercive conveying to the US to stand trial over a number of allegations leveled against him by the Trump administration marks a dangerous degeneration of prevailing ‘world disorder’. While some cardinal principles in International Law have been blatantly violated by the US in the course of the operation the fallout for the world from the exceptionally sensational VVIP abduction could be grave.

Although controversial US military interventions the world over are not ‘news’ any longer, the abduction and hustling away of a head of government, seen as an enemy of the US, to stand trial on the latter soil amounts to a heavy-handed and arrogant rejection of the foundational principles of international law and order. It would seem, for instance, that the concept of national sovereignty is no longer applicable to the way in which the world’s foremost powers relate to the rest of the international community. Might is indeed right for the likes of the US and the Trump administration in particular is adamant in driving this point home to the world.

Chief spokesmen for the Trump administration have been at pains to point out that the abduction is not at variance with national security related provisions of the US Constitution. These provisions apparently bestow on the US President wide powers to protect US security and stability through courses of action that are seen as essential to further these ends but the fact is that International Law has been brazenly violated in the process in the Venezuelan case.

To be sure, this is not the first occasion on which a head of government has been abducted by US special forces in post-World War Two times and made to stand trial in the US, since such a development occurred in Panama in 1989, but the consequences for the world could be doubly grave as a result of such actions, considering the mounting ‘disorder’ confronting the world community.

Those sections opposed to the Maduro abduction in the US would do well to from now on seek ways of reconciling national security-related provisions in the US Constitution with the country’s wider international commitment to uphold international peace and law and order. No ambiguities could be permitted on this score.

While the arbitrary military action undertaken by the US to further its narrow interests at whatever cost calls for criticism, it would be only fair to point out that the US is not the only big power which has thus dangerously eroded the authority of International Law in recent times. Russia, for example, did just that when it violated the sovereignty of Ukraine by invading it two or more years ago on some nebulous, unconvincing grounds. Consequently, the Ukraine crisis too poses a grave threat to international peace.

It is relevant to mention in this connection that authoritarian rulers who hope to rule their countries in perpetuity as it were, usually end up, sooner rather than later, being a blight on their people. This is on account of the fact that they prove a major obstacle to the implementation of the democratic process which alone holds out the promise of the progressive empowerment of the people, whereas authoritarian rulers prefer to rule with an iron fist with a fixation about self-empowerment.

Nevertheless, regime-change, wherever it may occur, is a matter for the public concerned. In a functional democracy, it is the people, and the people only, who ‘make or break’ governments. From this viewpoint, Russia and Venezuela are most lacking. But externally induced, militarily mediated change is a gross abnormality in the world of democracy, which deserves decrying.

By way of damage control, the US could take the initiative to ensure that the democratic process, read as the full empowerment of ordinary people, takes hold in Venezuela. In this manner the US could help in stemming some of the destructive fallout from its abduction operation. Any attempts by the US to take possession of the national wealth of Venezuela at this juncture are bound to earn for it the condemnation of democratic opinion the world over.

Likewise, the US needs to exert all its influence to ensure that the rights of ordinary Ukrainians are protected. It will need to ensure this while exploring ways of stopping further incursions into Ukrainian territory by Russia’s invading forces. It will need to do this in collaboration with the EU which is putting its best foot forward to end the Ukraine blood-letting.

Meanwhile, the repercussions that the Maduro abduction could have on the global South would need to be watched with some concern by the international community. Here too the EU could prove a positive influence since it is doubtful whether the UN would be enabled by the big powers to carry out the responsibilities that devolve on it with the required effectiveness.

What needs to be specifically watched is the ‘copycat effect’ that could manifest among those less democratically inclined Southern rulers who would be inspired by the Trump administration to take the law into their hands, so to speak, and act with callous disregard for the sovereign rights of their smaller and more vulnerable neighbours.

Democratic opinion the world over would need to think of systems of checks and balances that could contain such power abuse by Southern autocratic rulers in particular. The UN and democracy-supportive organizations, such as the EU, could prove suitable partners in these efforts.

All in all it is international lawlessness that needs managing effectively from now on. If President Trump carries out his threat to over-run other countries as well in the manner in which he ran rough-shod over Venezuela, there is unlikely to remain even a semblance of international order, considering that anarchy would be receiving a strong fillip from the US, ‘The World’s Mightiest Democracy’.

What is also of note is that identity politics in particularly the South would be unprecedentedly energized. The narrative that ‘the Great Satan’ is running amok would win considerable validity among the theocracies of the Middle East and set the stage for a resurgence of religious fanaticism and invigorated armed resistance to the US. The Trump administration needs to stop in its tracks and weigh the pros and cons of its current foreign policy initiatives.

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Pure Christmas magic and joy at British School

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Students of The British High School in Colombo in action at the fashion show

The British School in Colombo (BSC) hosted its Annual Christmas Carnival 2025, ‘Gingerbread Wonderland’, which was a huge success, with the students themseles in the spotlight, managing stalls and volunteering.

The event, organised by the Parent-Teacher Association (PTA), featured a variety of activities, including: Games and rides for all ages, Food stalls offering delicious treats, Drinks and refreshments, Trade booths showcasing local products, and Live music and entertainment.

The carnival was held at the school premises, providing a fun and festive atmosphere for students, parents, and the community to enjoy.

The halls of the BSC were filled with pure Christmas magic and joy with the students and the staff putting on a tremendous display.

Among the highlights was the dazzling fashion show with the students doing the needful, and they were very impressive.

The students themselves were eagerly looking forward to displaying their modelling technique and, I’m told, they enjoyed the moment they had to step on the ramp.

The event supported communities affected by the recent floods, with surplus proceeds going to flood-relief efforts.

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Glowing younger looking skin

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Hi! This week I’m giving you some beauty tips so that you could look forward to enjoying 2026 with a glowing younger looking skin.

Face wash for natural beauty

* Avocado:

Take the pulp, make a paste of it and apply on your face. Leave it on for five minutes and then wash it with normal water.

* Cucumber:

Just rub some cucumber slices on your face for 02-03 minutes to cleanse the oil naturally. Wash off with plain water.

* Buttermilk:

Apply all over your face and leave it to dry, then wash it with normal water (works for mixed to oily skin).

Face scrub for natural beauty

Take 01-02 strawberries, 02 pieces of kiwis or 02 cubes of watermelons. Mash any single fruit and apply on your face. Then massage or scrub it slowly for at least 3-5 minutes in circular motions. Then wash it thoroughly with normal or cold water. You can make use of different fruits during different seasons, and see what suits you best! Follow with a natural face mask.

Face Masks

* Papaya and Honey:

Take two pieces of papaya (peeled) and mash them to make a paste. Apply evenly on your face and leave it for 30 minutes and then wash it with cold water.

Papaya is just not a fruit but one of the best natural remedies for good health and glowing younger looking skin. It also helps in reducing pimples and scars. You can also add honey (optional) to the mixture which helps massage and makes your skin glow.

* Banana:

Put a few slices of banana, 01 teaspoon of honey (optional), in a bowl, and mash them nicely. Apply on your face, and massage it gently all over the face for at least 05 minutes. Then wash it off with normal water. For an instant glow on your face, this facemask is a great idea to try!

* Carrot:

Make a paste using 01 carrot (steamed) by mixing it with milk or honey and apply on your face and neck evenly. Let it dry for 15-20 minutes and then wash it with cold water. Carrots work really well for your skin as they have many vitamins and minerals, which give instant shine and younger-looking skin.

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