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Oblates re-enter field of education in Anuradhapura
By Fr. Emmanuel Fernando OMI
May 15, 2024, is an unforgettable day in the history of the Oblates in Sri Lanka since it was on that day the foundation stones were blessed and laid for the construction of the new Mazenod College at Sravasti Pura, Anuradhapura. The day began at 10.30 a.m with the prayer recited by Fr. Emmanuel Fernando OMI, invoking God to bless the Foundation stones for the construction of the new College.
On that occasion Fr. Shane de Rosairo, OMI, the Vice-Rector of Mazenod College, in his welcome speech said: “I am delighted to see that we are joined by a wide array of esteemed guests and well-wishers in our audience this morning, who truly add joy and colour to the ambience of this glorious occasion. It is indeed a Red-letter day for Mazenod College family of Anuradhapura as this this day will go down in history of Sri Lanka as a quantum leap in the journey that Mazenod College has been treading so far since its humble inauguration at Rajabima Oblate Centre, Anuradhapura, on January 7 in 2019.” He pointed out that Mazenod College at Anuradhapura , the brain-child of the Oblate Congress held in September 2018, is an actualization of the timely need for holistic education felt by the Oblates in Sri Lanka, making a comeback to the field of education in Sri Lanka.
Batagolle Pangnarathna Thero, Teacher of Presidents; College and of Jayanthi Temple, speaking at the function of the Blessing and Laying the Foundation Stone of the new Mazenod College at Anuradhapura said he very much appreciated the spirit and the attitude of Fr. Dileepa Jayamaha OMI in the way he assists the Buddhist children studying at Mazenod College, by his insistence on attending Daham Pasala in the temples.
Bishop Norbert Andradi OMI, in his speech, mentioned that the Catholic Church continues to impart education to children of all Religions through their Schools and that the Holy Family Sisters and the Oblates had been pioneers in this field already in Anuradhapura many years ago through their schools namely Holy Family Convent (which is now Swarnapali Balika Vidyalaya) and through St. Joseph’s College. Bishop Norbert mentioned that the Catholic schools insist also on discipline and good behaviour in the students.
Bishop Norbert Andradi recited the prayers and blessed the foundation stones for the construction of the buildings of Mazenod College and they were laid by Fr. Roshan Silva, the Provincial Superior, Bishop Norbert Andradi, the Bishop of Anuradhapura, Batagolle Pangnarathna Thero, Frs. James Jayasinghe, the Vice-Provincial of the Oblates of Colombo, Anton Grecian OMI, the Provincial Treasurer. Among the others who laid foundation stones were: Frs. Shane de Rozayro OMI, Emmanuel Fernando OMI, Alec Roy Fernando, the Vicar General of the diocese of Anuradhapura, Sr. Irene Fernando, Sr. Mala Fernando HF, Major T.R.C.S Thennakoon, 212 Infantry Bridge, Mr Rasike Melroy Vasana (our contractor, Chief Engineer RDA), Major General Nishantha Manage, Mr. Shiroman Joison, Deputy Principal, Gateway College, Negombo,Mr. Punchirala Rathnayake, the President of farmers Association.
Fr. Dileepa Jayamaha OMI, the Rector of Mazenod College in his ‘Thanksgiving speech’, said classes began on 07 January, 2019 with 33 children and three teachers in the Rajabima Oblate Centre, at Jayanthi Mawatha, Anuradhapura. Fr. Dileepa noted that the Oblates had been committed to the education of children in Sri Lanka since 1847. For example, the Oblates began St. Patrick’s College, Jaffna, St. Henry’s College at Ilavalai, in the Northern Province, St. Joseph’s College at Anuradhapura, St. Joseph’s College at Trincomalee and also De Mazenod College,Kandana and St. Joseph’s College, St. Peter’s College , and Aquinas University in Colombo. Mindful of the Oblate contribution to education of children in the past, the Oblates at a Congress in 2018 decided to recommence their commitment to education of children.
Having recommenced education at Mazenod College, our Oblate Superiors with foresight bought a spacious plot of land to promote holistic education. Unfortunately, the Oblates had to face some difficulties about that plot of land. In sorting out the difficulties with the various Departments, Buddha Sasana and Christian Affairs Ministry, several Government Departments and the Farmers’ Society of Sravasti Pura, Anuradhapura had been of great assistance to obtain the needed authorization from the Agrarian Department in November 2023. Fr. Dileepa said that he was very grateful to all the members in the above-mentioned Government Ministries, the Departments and to the members of the Farmers’ Society. He was very grateful also to Bishop Norbert Andradi OMI for his kind assistance.
Fr. Dileepa Jayamaha OMI was very grateful also to the Venerable Buddhist monks, our neighbours and the parents of our students for the trust they have placed in us. Rooted in such a loving trust, we promise to be faithful.
At present, there are 378 students (boys and girls), of whom 297 Buddhists, 44 Catholics, 21 Christians, 14 Muslims and two Hindus. Having children at Mazenod College, Anuradhapura, representing all our Religions in Sri Lanka, He said, “We commit ourselves to journey together, in a spirit of affection and solidarity in our apostolate of holistic education, embodying sports and other useful skills. To achieve the above-mentioned objectives, everyone’s cooperation is needed.”
Concluding his speech, Fr. Dileepa thanked the Venerable monks who were present, R and V Construction Company Mr and Mrs Rasike Melroy and their trustworthy workers, Duminda Pathirana and co-workers, the priests, the Religious Sisters, the Rev. Brothers, the teachers, the parents and the students.
Very Rev. Fr. Roshan Silva OMI, the Provincial Superior of the Oblates of Colombo Province addressing the audience praised the untiring commitment of Fr. Dileepa Jayamaha OMI to the apostate of education of the children through Mazenod College since its inception in 2019. He praised the collaborative spirit of Fr.
Shane de Rosayro OMI. He mentioned that it was during administration of the former Oblate Provincial Council that Fr. Irwin Morais OMI, the Provincial and Fr. Christy Silva OMI, the Oblate treasurer, that this project was initiated and that he, as Oblate Provincial together with his Councillors, is committed to the realization of this project.The beautiful dances and the songs of the students on stage captured the attention of the audience which responded with a big ovation.
News
Fort Magistrate issues arrest warrant for MP Archchuna
The Fort Magistrate yesterday (23) issued a warrant for the arrest of Jaffna District MP Ramanathan Archchuna as he failed to appear in court during the hearing of a case against him for alleged obstruction of police duties.
This happened when the Fort Magistrate took up a case regarding an incident involving the MP and Fort police during a public demonstration in September this year.
Police said that at the time the MP was arrested on allegations of obstructing a police officer in the execution of their duties.
News
New anti-terror law opposed by social media collective
Collective for Social Media Declaration (CSMD) has strongly opposed the proposed Protection of the State from Terrorism Act, No. of 2026 (PSTA).
The following is the text of the statement issued by Sampath Samarakoon on behalf of CSMD: “The Protection of the State from Terrorism Act, No. of 2026 (PSTA) presents itself as an improvement on the existing Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA). This framing obscures the reality that its core architecture, including administrative detention, military powers, proscription regimes, and broad speech offences, replicates the essential features that made the PTA objectionable for over four decades.
The Bill replicates the fundamental architecture that made the PTA objectionable. Rather than using the ordinary criminal law regime for terrorism offences alongside emergency powers when genuinely required, the PSTA creates parallel criminal jurisdictions with reduced safeguards and expanded executive authority. Its scheme maintains extraordinary arrest and detention powers, grants the Attorney General potentially coercive mechanisms to compel admissions without trial, and empowers the President, senior police officers, and the Defence Secretary to issue proscription orders, restriction orders, curfews, and prohibited place declarations with limited judicial oversight. As the title suggests, the Bill’s fundamental purpose is to protect the state rather than to protect civilians from violence, a framing that offers little resistance to treating public dissent, political disruption, and threats to political power as terrorism in themselves. Though the Bill includes carve-outs for protest and industrial action, these sit in tension with other provisions and may prove ineffective in practice.
Section 78 defines “confidential information” so broadly that it could capture online content, and social media posts documenting military checkpoints, photographs of army deployments during civilian protests, or tweets noting the presence of intelligence personnel at public events. Tamil civil society organisations, and activists documenting enduring militarisation in their communities face particular exposure. Section 15 criminalises failure to report information about terrorism offences with penalties of up to seven years imprisonment, placing journalists, lawyers, doctors, and religious figures in impossible positions where professional ethics conflict with criminal liability. This provision effectively conscripts recipients of information as state informants, creating a chilling effect on communication without requiring any technical interception.
Journalists, civil society activists, and ordinary social media users face particular exposure under this Bill. The predictable consequence is self-censorship driven by fear rather than any genuine security benefit. The Bill’s extended detention provisions, which permit up to two years of combined remand and detention without charge, provide a repressive mechanism for silencing dissent. Meanwhile, the surveillance and decryption powers granted under sections 53 and 55 threaten to eliminate private digital communication entirely, depriving citizens of secure channels for democratic dialogue and exposing them to monitoring that bears no reasonable relationship to legitimate counter-terrorism objectives.
We want to particularly stress the Bill’s impact on privileged, and encrypted communications, that go far beyond the PTA. Section 55 grants magistrates authority to order the unlocking of encrypted communications, yet assumes technical capability that simply does not exist with genuine end-to-end encryption (E2EE) systems. The extension of police powers to military personnel under section 19 creates a 24-hour window before handover to civilian authorities during which device contents could be accessed without procedural safeguards. Given documented patterns of abuse during military detention, including custodial torture, particularly affecting Tamil communities, the risk of coerced access to encrypted communications is not theoretical.
National security cannot serve as a blank cheque to erode democratic values. We urge the government to withdraw this Bill, engage in meaningful consultation with civil society, and affected communities, and develop fit-for-purpose legislation that meets international human rights standards while addressing legitimate national, and human security concerns.”
News
Court orders destruction of illegal float valve stock
Mahara Magistrate’s court has ordered the destruction of a stock of illegal float valve stock, apprehended in Kadawatha, after finding that the products were sold without mandatory labeling and certification, the Consumer Affairs Authority said.
The court ordered that the seized valves, valued at approximately Rs. 500,000, be destroyed after determining they violated labelling regulations under consumer protection laws.
The Consumer Affairs Authority had taken legal action against two business establishments, in the Eldeniya area of Kadawatha, for selling float operated valves without displaying the Sri Lanka Standards Institution (SLS) registration number, a requirement for such products.
In one case, a hardware store pleaded guilty to selling and displaying float valves without the required SLS registration number. The court imposed a fine of Rs. 20,000 for the offence.
In a separate case, a company was accused of misleading consumers by using the official logo of the Industrial Technology Institute without authorisation. The court released the accused company on personal bail of Rs. 100,000 and fixed the case for further hearing.
As part of its ruling, the court ordered the destruction of the seized valve stock, citing violations of labelling regulations and consumer protection standards.
The Consumer Affairs Authority warned consumers to avoid purchasing plumbing fittings and other hardware items that do not carry proper labels or certification details, noting that substandard products can lead to water leaks, higher water bills and the wastage of treated drinking water.
Authorities said the wastage of purified water, which is produced at significant cost, poses a broader economic and environmental concern for the country.
The CAA said it will continue enforcement action against businesses that sell uncertified or misleading products and urged traders to comply with national standards and consumer protection laws.
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