Features
Wall Street’s new TACO trade – Trump Always Chickens Out
Monday, May 26 was Memorial Day in the United States. In a strange, unhinged, rant on Truth Social, Trump wished all, “Including the scum who ruined our country over the past four years” a Happy Memorial Day. A vitriolic message threatening to wreak retribution on all his political enemies.
Memorial Day is not a festive “Happy” holiday. It is a day to honor the ultimate sacrifice made by those in defense of their country. A day of reverence that demands humility and respect for the nation’s fallen heroes.
Former President Biden’s recent diagnosis of Stage 4 metastatic prostate cancer has raised questions about when he was first aware that his prostate cancer had metastasized, thereby becoming increasingly more aggressive.
The vast majority of patients suffering from a disease not uncommon for men in their 70s, had they adhered to annual check-ups and screening protocols, would have been identified with such an aggressive cancer at a much earlier stage. Which raises the question whether those surrounding the former president had kept that information away from the public.
Biden had showed no cognitive or physical decline during the first two years of his presidency, when he delivered an outstanding legislative performance. A performance that gave the Democrats a convincing win in the 2022 mid-terms. Sadly, this success prompted Biden to break his pre-election promise of being a one-term, transitional president, and to seek a second presidential term. A most ill-thought of and selfish decision, considering, even had he won re-election, he would have been 86-years old at the end of his second term.
Signs of cognitive decline and physical disability had become obvious during the final two years of his presidency. It is entirely possible that Biden’s prostate cancer had metastasized during this time, and his allies, out of a misplaced sense of loyalty, had indeed covered up the illness. A fatal mistake, one that may well have cost the nation its democracy.
The final evidence of Biden’s complete cognitive collapse was shown during the presidential debate of June 27, 2024, when he displayed visible exhaustion, stammering through unintelligible arguments, staring blankly, mouth agape, as Trump lobbed one verbal attack after another. Trump smirked. That was the moment he knew he had won a second shot at the presidency.
Biden’s subsequent withdrawal left the new candidate, Vice-President Kamala Harris with insufficient time to mount a successful challenge. The presidency was gifted to Trump, who readily won both the popular and Electoral College votes in November.
This great mistake by the Democrats of handing over the presidency and both Houses of Congress to a Party led by a convicted felon with authoritarian ambitions has changed the geopolitical structure of the world today. Trump is openly hostile to the nation’s long-standing allies, its neighbors and the nations of NATO. He appears to be throwing the ideological lot of the United States with the strongmen and dictators of the world.
Trump’s economic and tariff policies have, in four short months, transformed the strongest economy in the world he inherited from the Biden administration, to one of economic and societal chaos, rampant corruption and contempt for the rule of law and the constitution.
Coined by Robert Armstrong of the Financial Times, Wall Steet has introduced a new TACO trade. The acronym, which stands for trades resulting in Trump Always Chickening Out, illustrates how markets fall on Trump’s vow to impose high tariffs on imports, and then jump back when he announces “pauses” on those very tariffs. He imposed tariffs on Liberation Day, April 2, 2025, which he declared “the day of American economic independence”. When the stock market crashed the following day, he realized he had made a colossal mistake, and announced indefinite “pauses” of these tariffs, causing further economic uncertainty and instability.
Last week, Trump announced the imposition of a 50% tariff on imports from the Union, causing a sharp drop in the markets. A few days later, saying he had a “good call” with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, he was “giving the EU until July 9 to reach a deal with the US”. And he took credit for the immediate rise in the markets caused entirely by his Chickening Out – and God only knows what will happen on July 9. More TACO trades, without a doubt.
The economic uncertainty caused by Trump’s manic tariff policies may have ended, at least on a temporary basis. Last Wednesday, the Manhattan-based Court of International Trade blocked Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs from going into effect, ruling that the president had overstepped his authority by imposing tariffs. The Court ruled that “the US constitution gives the US Congress exclusive powers to regulate commerce with other countries, that are not trumped by the president’s emergency powers to safeguard the economy”.
The panel of three Judges who made up the Court was appointed by Presidents Reagan, Obama and – you guessed it – Trump!
However, to further muddy the waters, the US Appeals Court for the Federal Circuit “paused” the ruling of the Court of International Trade that blocked Trump’s tariffs, which now allows Trump’s tariffs to stay in effect, while the ruling is on appeal. The White House has immediately appealed the ruling, asking the Supreme Court to intervene.
Trump’s feud with Harvard University is reaching fever pitch. He demands the university bans the admission of international students, interferes in its academic curricula, claiming that it teaches its students the real history of the nation, like Critical Race Theory, instead of the modern, white-washed Christian version, spreads communist propaganda, and many other “woke” theories that go against the new American (Republican Version) Gospel: The 2025 Project.
Harvard’s President, Alan Garber, received thunderous applause when he opened his Commencement Day address on May 29, with the words, “Members of the Class of 2025, from down the street, across the country and around the world…. Around the world, just as it should be”. Gerber called for universities to stand firm against the Trump administration which has waged war against Ivy League schools in recent months.
Harvard University, one of the most prestigious seats of learning and research in the world, has been around since 1636, long before the birth of the United States. It will be in existence long after its future distinguished historians condemn the blasphemous, white supremacist Project 2025 and the dumbest, most corrupt president in US history.
Trump’s basic argument against Harvard, that the university provides an education for the benefit of foreign students, depriving homegrown students of a first-class education, is false. In fact, the opposite is true.
American universities like Harvard, Yale and the other Ivy Leagues lure the brightest of foreign students, usually from the third world, offering them grants and loans, enabling them to study for undergraduate degrees, at no initial cost. After they complete their degree, they are anchored to the United States for at least eight years, the period it takes them to repay their student loans. By which time, they have obtained US citizenship, secured high-level jobs, bought homes, found partners – America has become their home. And their world-class talents, enriched by the best education money can’t buy, remain for the benefit of the USA.
According to a new study of the non-profit, non-partisan organization dedicated to public policy research on trade, immigration and other issues of national importance, the National Foundation for American Policy, “The achievements of immigrants in the form of Nobel Prizes, thriving businesses and contributions in other fields are a testament to the American Dream. Being open to immigration allows America to reap the benefits of scientific and technological innovation”.
So who are the victims of the brain-drain? Trump’s recent public speeches, consisting of the most incomprehensible word salads, provide absolute proof of his continuing cognitive decline. Space permits me to cite just a few extracts of his “oration” at the press conference at Doha, Qatar, during his recent four-day swing of the Middle-Eastern nations of Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar. Drivel which brings to mind the words of the treacherous Antonio, who said, in Shakespeare’s The Tempest, “Whereof what’s past is prologue”, and is certainly worthy of verbatim quotation. If only to ponder the question:
Will the United States, as a nation, ever again be able to carve the sublime past of the soaring oratory of an Obama, out of the ridiculous prologue of the crazed utterings of a psychopath?
Hand to heart, these are a few faithful extracts of this press conference:
“When you look at what’s happening with Russia and Ukraine the drone is killing tremendous numbers of people. You hide behind a tree and the drone comes down and circles you with fire.
You don’t have a chance and the tree comes down also by the way.
“Do you know that Sean Duffy, the head of the Transportation Department, who’s working right now on the airports and getting a system because Biden didn’t do a thing for four years and Pete Buttigieg was the head and he goes bicycling to work.
“He takes a bicycle to work, can you believe it? What a — And they say he’s going to run for president, I don’t see it. Who knows, right? But I don’t see it.
“But, when I look at what they’ve done, it’s so horrible what they’ve done and the work they did do, wasted billions of dollars. They tried to hook up air systems to….Copper. They tried to hook up copper to glass and the glass doesn’t work with the copper and….
“They had 30,000 contractors different contractors doing 30,000 different jobs, and when they put it all together, they spent billions of dollars. It didn’t even come close to working and we’re going to be giving out a brand-new system.
“Sean Duffy, the head of Transportation. He’s a great Sean though, I have to tell you but Sean Duffy was the world champion for five years climbing trees and down, up and down, world champion! So that’s what you call a serious a lumberjack…. But he’s doing a fantastic job at Transportation.
“But this has been a very historic trip”.
Words spoken at a press conference in the presence of leaders of Qatar and other Arab nations, and the international press, describing the success of his four-day swing of the Arab nations of Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates. But all was not in vain. Trump snagged the illegal “gift” of a 13-year-old, hand-me-down $400 million flying palace from the Emir of Qatar.
Former President Biden was forced out of contention of a second term because of public evidence of cognitive deficiency of a word salad during the presidential debate. Extracts from the drivel shown in Trump’s rants above provide conclusive evidence of the cognitive collapse of a man who belongs in a psychiatric facility for felons, not in the White House.
Trump has made no progress whatsoever, economic or societal, in the first four months of his second presidential term. Contrary to the campaign promises he made, the wars in Ukraine and Gaza are still raging (his buddies, Putin and Netanyahu have been playing him like a fiddle, as Ukraine and Gaza keep burning). Prices of groceries and inflation continue to increase. His on/off tariff deals keep causing economic and stock market chaos. He continues dealing with his illegal cryptocurrency under the aegis of the presidency. His personal real estate deals with, and lavish, unconstitutional personal gifts from, Middle-Eastern despots, have enriched himself and his family beyond their wildest dreams. The White House Gift Shop has introduced a section, specializing in Presidential Pardons for Cash, with employee discounts. And his administration thumbs its collective nose at due process, the judiciary, the rule of law and the constitution.
Only 44 months to go. What else could possibly go wrong?
by Kumar de Silva ✍️
Features
So, who is going to tell the rest of the world?
Series: The greatest digital rethink, Part V of V – Series conclusion
Five instalments. Five levels of education. One recurring pattern: the countries that ran the experiment are retreating, the countries that watched them are still paying the entry price. This final column asks the question the international education community has been carefully avoiding: does anyone actually learn from anyone else, or do we just take turns making the same expensive mistakes?
What five parts told us
Let us briefly take stock. In Part I of this series, we traced the arc of three decades of digital enthusiasm in education, from the early computer labs of the 1990s through the tablet explosion of the 2010s, to the pandemic acceleration and the emerging backlash that defines the present moment. In Part II, we watched Sweden take tablets away from preschoolers who should never have been given them in the first place, and Finland legislate to return the pencil to its rightful place in the primary classroom. In Part III, we confronted the paradox at the heart of secondary school de-digitalisation: governments triumphantly banning the phone in the student’s pocket while quietly expanding the data systems that monitor their every digital interaction. In Part IV, we sat in the university exam hall, a room that had been pronounced redundant 20 years ago, and watched it fill up again with students writing with pens, because the large language models (LLM) like Chat GPT, had made every other form of assessment untrustworthy.
The inconvenient asymmetry
There is a concept in international education research, ‘asymmetric correction’, that describes this phenomenon with academic precision. It means, in plain language, that the systems with enough money, data and institutional capacity to discover that an experiment has gone wrong can afford to correct it. The systems without those resources cannot, and often do not even know the correction is needed until the damage is visible in their own classrooms and their own assessment results.
This is not merely an abstract inequity. It has a specific mechanism. The countries now de-digitalising, Finland, Sweden, Australia, France, the UK, have had 20 or 30 years of experience with school digitalisation. They have run multiple cycles of national assessments. They have PISA data going back decades. They have teacher unions vocal enough to flag classroom deterioration before it becomes a crisis. They have the research infrastructure to connect a policy change to an outcome measure and draw a conclusion. When their scores drop, they investigate. When the investigation points at screens, they act.
The evidence that was always there
One of the more unsettling conclusions of this series is that much of the evidence driving the current de-digitalisation wave was available considerably earlier than the policies it has inspired. The finding that handwritten notes produce better conceptual understanding than typed ones was published in 2014. The OECD’s analysis showing that more computers do not produce better learning outcomes appeared in 2015. UNESCO’s concerns about platform power and datafication in education have been articulated consistently for years. The distraction research, documenting that students with open laptops in lecture halls perform worse, and drag their neighbours down with them, has been accumulating for well over a decade.
None of this stopped the rollout. The tablets arrived in the Swedish preschools. The 1:1 device programmes expanded. The learning management systems embedded themselves. The AI proctoring tools were procured and deployed. Evidence that gave pause was routinely absorbed into a narrative about implementation, the problem was not the technology, it was how it was being used; give us better training, better platforms, better connectivity, and the results will follow. The results, in many cases, did not follow. But by the time that was clear, the infrastructure was in place, the contracts were running, and the political cost of admitting the bet had been wrong was prohibitive.
What changed was not the evidence, it was the political permission to act on it. PISA 2022 delivered declines dramatic enough to be impossible to attribute to anything other than something systemic. UNESCO issued what amounted to an institutional mea culpa. And a sufficient number of teachers, in a sufficient number of countries, were by then willing to say publicly what they had been saying in staffrooms for years: that the screens were not helping, and in many cases were actively in the way.
What a responsible global policy would look like
This series is not a manifesto against technology in education. It has never argued that. Screens are indispensable tools, for accessing information, for enabling collaboration across distance, for serving students whose accessibility needs require digital solutions, for supporting the administrative and logistical complexity of modern educational institutions. The argument is not against technology. It is against the thoughtless, evidence-free, vendor-driven acceleration of technology in contexts where it undermines the very foundations it is supposed to strengthen.
A responsible global education policy would, at minimum, do several things that the current system conspicuously fails to do. It would require that the evidence base for large-scale digital procurement be genuinely independent of the vendors supplying the technology. It would insist that the learning from early-adopter systems, including the learning about what went wrong, be actively communicated to late-adopter systems before, not after, they make the same investments. It would treat the question of appropriate technology use at different ages and in different pedagogical contexts as a matter of ongoing empirical inquiry, not a settled ideological commitment to ‘more is better.’ And it would hold to account the international organisations and development banks that have promoted digital solutions to educational problems without adequate attention to long-term cognitive and social outcomes.
None of this is technically difficult. The knowledge exists. The research is available. The lesson is sitting there in the PISA data, in the Swedish preschool curriculum reversal, in the UK university exam halls filling up with students holding pens. The question is purely one of political will, and of whether the global education community considers it acceptable to keep selling a model it is quietly dismantling at home.
Who decides what technology is for?
Beneath all the policy detail in this series lies a question that is fundamentally political rather than technical: who gets to decide what role technology plays in education, and in whose interest do those decisions get made? The answer, across the period this series has covered, has too often been: vendors, with governments following at a respectful distance and parents and teachers arriving to the conversation after the contract is signed.
De-digitalisation, for all its imperfections, its occasional moral panic, its selective use of evidence and its tendency to become a political signalling exercise, represents something important: a reassertion that educational technology is a means, not an end, and that the people who should determine how much of it to use are educators, researchers and communities, not quarterly earnings reports. The fact that Finland chose to legislate, that Sweden chose to buy books instead of tablets, that Queensland schools now require phones to be away for the day, often collected, or switched off, from the moment students arrive and found their playgrounds transformed, these are acts of pedagogical agency. They are an insistence that schools are for children, not for platforms.
A final word
There is nothing wrong with technology in education. There is something very wrong with the assumption that more technology is always better, and something worse with the global system that allows wealthy nations to learn that lesson expensively, correct it quietly, and then export the uncorrected version to everyone else.
The pencil did not disappear because it failed. It was sidelined because screens arrived with better marketing. It is coming back, in Finnish classrooms, in Swedish preschools, in Australian playgrounds, in university exam halls, not out of nostalgia, but because 30 years of evidence have converged on an uncomfortable truth: some things, it turns out, require your full attention, your physical hand, and the irreplaceable cognitive effort of a human being working without a shortcut.
That is not a retreat. That is a reckoning. And the only question left worth asking is whether the rest of the world will get to benefit from it before they have to discover it for themselves.
SERIES COMPLETE
Part I: From Ed-Tech Enthusiasm to De-Digitalisation | Part II: Phones, Pens & Early Literacy | Part III: Attention, Algorithms & Adolescents | Part IV: Universities, AI & the Handwritten Exam | Part V: Who Is Going to Tell the Rest of the World?
Features
New kid on the block – AI drug prescriber from the US
Artificial intelligence (AI) in healthcare has come to stay and is a well-recognised development over the last decade or so. AI has now progressed on to even the ability to execute quite a few tasks and manoeuvres that were once the sole duties of doctors. Certain AI programmes are now designed to make tricky diagnoses, offer mental counselling, detect drug interactions, read and diagnose images, forecast results, and review scientific articles, to name a few amongst other capabilities. As the aptitudes of AI increase, the roles of doctors are likely to change. In the future, there is a real possibility that physicians would increasingly be placed in supervisory roles in semiautonomous systems, while retaining responsibility but with reduced independence.
Philosopher Walter Benjamin, in the 1930s, wrote that photography and cinema would have a telling effect on paintings and painters. It was argued that the introduction of visual images would render painting and painters quite obsolete. Many belittled the artistic value of photographs, just as today, many ask whether AI can truly understand illness or empathise with discomfort. The opponents of photography theorised that original works of art, such as paintings, had a so-called aura and that there was something special about an original artwork compared to a reproduction as a photo image, and that the painting echoed its singular history and unique trajectory through time, space, and social meaning.
Today’s doctors have something comparable. Their professional authority was grounded in their unique training, the practical wisdom that they had accrued, their face-to-face presence with patients, and their nuanced clinical judgment. Like an original painting, medical expertise appeared singular and inseparable from the clinician who exercised it rather than from the tools or institutions that supported the physician’s practice.
Now enters the latest AI initiative in healthcare. As documented in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) on the 13th of April 2026, it is the very first AI DRUG PRESCRIBER. It originated in the state of Utah of the United States of America, which is the 45th state admitted to the Union on the 4th of January 1896, and is well-known for its unique geography, including the Great Salt Lake and its “Mighty 5” national parks: Zion, Bryce Canyon, Arches, Capitol Reef, and Canyonlands.
In January 2026, the State of Utah publicised a first-of-its-kind partnership with an AI company to develop an AI-based programme to prescribe medications without physician involvement. The AI prescriber package sold by the company Doctronic is claimed to conduct a “comprehensive medical assessment” that “mirrors the clinical decision-making process a licensed physician would follow“. Originally, it was intended to focus on prescription renewals, and the software is designed to prescribe almost 200 drugs, including corticosteroids, statins, antidepressants, hormones, and anticoagulant agents. It has the potential to develop into an autonomous system that could even provide original prescriptions without the involvement of doctors.
There are perceived advantages to AI prescribing in a world facing shortages of primary care physicians, as well as certain specialists. The public health goal is to make sure that patients have access to safe, effective drugs and continue receiving them for as long as it is appropriate. There are documented scientific studies in Western countries on non-adherence, failure to take the drugs of a first prescription, and failure to get refill prescriptions. True enough, AI could reduce pervasive medication errors, enhance process efficiency, and free physicians to focus on complex diagnostic tasks or human-to-human interactions.
Yet for all that, technology-driven revolutions can also cause damage, create waste, and even destabilise the medical connection. They could reduce the patient-clinician encounters and substantially reduce the prospects for physicians to spot other problems and for patients to raise anxieties and ask questions. Doctors have to go through a rigorous process of training and demonstration of clinical fitness to be allowed to practice medicine. AI prescribers face no equivalent safety process. AI companies generally do not openly reveal the precise operational details of the software’s abilities to make medical decisions. In the Utah deal, generalisations were offered, including that the AI prescriber is “trained on established medical protocols,” and that its algorithm continues to progress through “feedback loops.” However, they are far from the absolute detailed guarantees that training of a physician offers.
In the American System of Governance, most states have long maintained foundational laws for dispensing medicines, positioning licensed physicians and pharmacists as essential caretakers and even as gatekeepers. Federal Law requires that any drug that “is not safe for use except under the supervision of a practitioner licensed by law” must be dispensed only “upon a written prescription of a practitioner licensed by law“. AI prescribers are not licensed “practitioners” of medicine, and here, Utah has waived state requirements. It has waived State Laws for businesses with novel ideas deemed potentially beneficial to consumers.
Under the main FDA statute, an AI prescriber comes under an “instrument, apparatus, implement, or machine clearly intended for use in the cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease,” which makes it an FDA-regulated medical device. The 21st Century Cures Act of 2016 created exemptions for software involving administrative support, general wellness, or electronic record storage. For clinical software, the FDA has generally exercised enforcement discretion only for tools that aid physician decisions. By design, AI prescribers remove the physician, meaning that FDA oversight is required.
However, in the Utah deal, the company has apparently not attempted to approach the FDA about the technology, thereby working on the presumption that the FDA does not regulate the practice of medicine. True enough, Federal Law and the FDA itself express that the FDA does not regulate the practice of medicine. However, Federal Law also emphasises that medical devices and drugs must be legally sold and used within a legitimate patient-clinician relationship. Federal Law does not permit the replacement of physicians with unlicensed computers.
The scientific aspects of the conundrum imply that the current political administration appears to be disregarding some of the federal oversight. Since its 2025 inauguration, the executive branch of the current administration has rescinded previous AI governance orders, encouraged the removal of policies that might impair innovation, and issued an executive order aimed at reducing federal funds for states that strictly regulate AI. The USA Commissioner of Food and Drugs has clearly emphasised the need for AI innovation. Given this antiregulatory environment for AI, the prospect of federal intervention against initiatives like AI prescribers appears to be quite slim.
As federal and state regulators retreat, private parties have stepped in. The Joint Commission (TJC), a private, non-profit organisation that functions as the primary accrediting body for healthcare organisations, recently released non-binding guidance urging healthcare organisations to establish internal AI governance structures and rigorously measure outcomes. The success of AI prescribers will ultimately depend on the acceptance of health systems, which should demand robust evidence of safety and effectiveness, optimally in the form of clinical trials.
Tort law, a branch of civil law that deals with public wrongs such as situations where one person’s behaviour causes some form of harm or loss to another, remains a potential avenue for addressing patient harm because Utah’s agreement leaves such remedies intact. However, injured patients face significant hurdles. Courts will have to determine whether AI could be held to the same standard of care as a human physician. A product liability lawsuit would typically require a plaintiff to show that there was a reasonable alternative design, a challenge for AI black-box technologies. Furthermore, companies might argue that patients “assumed the risk” of using the AI prescriber. However, that is not a complete defence.
AI prescribing would be safest under concurrent state and federal oversight. Yet Utah has granted a state waiver, and FDA compliance has not been demonstrated. Other companies may take the lesson that they can bypass federal safety standards, and they may race into the market to ensure they are not left behind.
Some examples beg for caution. The FDA fell behind in regulating flavoured e-cigarettes, which are now ubiquitous and have contributed to a youth e-cigarette epidemic, which has even reached Sri Lanka. The sheer scale of the unauthorised market and the subsequent legal tactics used by tobacco companies turned premarket requirements into a mere technicality. If AI prescribing becomes the industry standard before safety and liability frameworks are established, the power problem may render future regulation infeasible.
Although AI offers the promise of increased efficiency and expanded access, the evasion of legal obligations by early movers raises profound concerns. The company that is marketing the AI Prescriber is operating in a unique legal “grey zone” that has sparked intense debate among regulators and medical associations.
Incorporating AI into modern health care must be evidence-based and responsible. Physicians and health systems should insist that AI technologies should not be allowed to bypass long-standing and proven legal guardrails governing medical products. That needs to be the axiom that should apply not only to the Western nations but to the whole wide world.
by 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.
An Independent Freelance Correspondent.
Features
From the Handbook for Bad Political Appointments
The Geathiswaran Chapter:
Dr. Ganesanathan Geathiswaran, Sri Lanka’s Deputy High Commissioner in Chennai is in hot water, dragging in with him the Foreign Ministry as well as the Sri Lanka government into a worthless controversy. It stands as a classic example of a misplaced political appointment to a sensitive public position paid for by hapless Sri Lankan taxpayers. And that too by a government that came to power promising not to politicise appointments.
Why would a meeting between a Sri Lankan diplomat and a group of fishermen in South India in the last week of March 2026 be controversial? After all, illegal fishing in Sri Lankan waters by South Indian fishermen from the Tamil Nadu area, which negatively impacts the livelihoods of mostly Tamil-speaking Sri Lankan fishing communities, is a perennial problem that neither Sri Lankan nor Indian governments have been able to resolve. This is also a consistent political issue in Tamil Nadu politics. In this context, a Sri Lankan diplomat meeting local fishermen might well be within his job description. But the issue is how and where such a meeting should take place. The bottom line is that it should not be a public event.
Speaking to The Hindu on 5April 2026, Geathiswaran insisted his presence in the meeting was a “routine visit” and that the event was not organised by any political party. He also said, “I’m not here to do politics” and “I have nothing to do with politics.” He further insisted, “I did not take part in any political campaign. It was in an open area along the seashore. The meeting was not on a stage and in a public area.” These utterances show both Geathiswaran’s naivety, woeful lack of experience and understanding of the nature of politics in the region where he is our country’s chief diplomat.
Be that as it may, let us look at the optics and substance of the said event. According to information circulating in the media in both Sri Lanka and India, the Deputy High Commissioner attended a meeting with local fishermen in Puducherry. It was not a closed-door meeting. It appears, the Sri Lankan diplomat was invited to the event or it was coordinated by Jose Charles Martin, the leader of the newly formed political party, Latchiya Jananayaga Katchi (LJK). Though launched only in 2025, the LJK has been making inroads into Tamil Nadu politics mostly funded by the business interests and funds of Martin’s father, the well-known lottery tycoon, Santiago Martin. LJK joined the BJP-led NDA in the ongoing Puducherry Assembly Elections of 2026. Moreover, as indicated in the photographs in circulation, one can easily see the presence of several BJP politicians including V. P. Ramalingam, BJP’s Puducherry president and a candidate in the Raj Bhavan constituency.
Members of Martin’s family are craftily aligned with different Tamil Nadu political formations. Jose Charles Martin himself is contesting the Puducherry electoral area as a BJP ally, while his mother is contesting from the AIADMK, and his brother-in-law is contesting as a candidate of the Tamilaga Vettri Kazhagam (TVK) party.
Therefore, Geathiswaran’s assertion that the event was not organised by a political party is blatantly false. Further, the event does not become non-political just because of the absence of a stage just as much as a stage does not provide political attributes merely because of its higher elevation. It is unacceptable that a diplomat hand-picked by the Sri Lankan President for the important station of Chennai, thereby depriving the appointment of a senior career diplomat with years of work experience and awareness of political nuance and optics, can be allowed to be this naïve.
It is in this context that Pawan Khera, a senior leader of the Indian National Congress, complained in an X post on 4 April tagging the Indian External Affairs Minister noting that Geathiswaran’s participation in the meeting was “a gross violation of the 1961 Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations”, according to which “diplomats ‘have a duty not to interfere in the internal affairs of that State.’” He also noted in his post that the diplomat was invited by the leader of the LJK and also referred to the presence of senior BJP politicians. Leaving aside the overemphasis of the Vienna Convention, which in this instance makes no sense, the issue at hand is the complete lack of common sense on the part of the Sri Lankan diplomat that allowed this controversy to arise in the first place. Despite his insistence on not engaging in politics, which in the case is likely true, this was very clearly a political event, politically conceived, perceived and packaged, organised by a political party, and conducted in the presence of allied politicians who were contesting in a local election. As a foreign diplomatic representative, Geathiswaran should have the cerebral wherewithal to make the distinction or at least seek guidance from his superiors at the Foreign Ministry in Colombo.
Diplomats need not shy away from controversy if it makes sense and benefits the nation. But the incident under reference is purely nonsensical from any perspective. This brings me back to Geathiswaran’s appointment as Sri Lanka’s Deputy High Commissioner in Chennai, itself. What unique experiences did he bring to the post? Of course, he is Tamil-speaking. So are hundreds of thousands of other citizens in the country including potentially competent, well-trained, intelligent and experienced career diplomats. I am not saying that political appointments are necessarily unfavourable, though not ideal unless they bring to the service expertise that the Foreign Service does not have. But what quality and qualification does Geathiswaran possess for the position that is lacking in a career foreign service officer?
Does he bring in access to the different segments of Tamil Nadu political landscape that no one else has? If so, should this controversy not have arisen in the first place, owing to the good connections to the entire political spectrum? In short, he brings absolutely nothing to his office and the country he represents. He also does not have any diplomatic or any other public or private sector experience that would have injected sense and nuance into the present posting. His only qualification is the close political connection to the NPP through family.
This fiasco brings to mind some ideas I presented in 2024 in the government’s own newspaper, the Observer two weeks before the NPP government was established and about one month after President Dissanayake assumed office. Since those conditions still remain valid and the present incident raises the same alarm I raised then, I think it is worth reflecting on them yet again:
“During the last three decades, particularly during the Rajapaksa administration, Sri Lanka’s Foreign Service saw a significant nosedive … In real terms what this means is, the Foreign Service has been encroached by individuals purely based on their political and nepotistic connections, with little or no regard for requisite qualifications, expertise or experience. This is observed not only at ambassadorial level, but also right down to the junior levels in our overseas missions … The main reason for the sorry state of the Sri Lanka Foreign Service is that it has been problematically and parochially politicised over a long period of time, without any pushback … Political appointments are a serious problem. Due to the appointment of completely unqualified individuals on political patronage, there are very few intelligent and well-trained personnel in our embassies in the major cities of the world who are able to proactively work in the country’s interest, when problems arise at the global level. Furthermore, it is also not apparent if there are officials in the Ministry who can advise their unenlightened political superiors without fear and stand their ground on principle. This situation has come about as a matter of simple personal survival and bread-and-butter purposes, owing to which both the larger interest of the Service and self-respect of officers have been clearly compromised.”
Is this not what the Chennai incident also indicates? Geathiswaran being a wrongful appointment is one matter. But it also appears that he did not even have the common sense to seek advice before the meeting in Puducherry or such advice was simply not forthcoming or heeded, as political appointees are generally considered a know-it-all bunch who have the ears of the political hierarchy, and therefore above the norms and regulations that apply to mere career officials.
For many of us the advent of the NPP to power signified the dismantling of the culture of political patronage in which diplomatic postings were rewards for loyalty and friendships. It took less time for the present government than others to go against its own repeatedly stated pre-election positions and to stuff the Foreign Service with incompetent individuals. The present fiasco authored by one of these appointees exemplifies the consequences of this continuing malpractice.
Let me leave readers and government apologists with the words of Tom Nichols, former professor at the U.S. Naval War College about Trumpian ambassadorial appointments, as this applies to our country too: “[With some of his ambassador choices], Trump has elevated diplomatic incompetence to an art.”
Sri Lanka just might outdo the mighty US President on this score.
-
News6 days agoCEB orders temporary shutdown of large rooftop solar systems
-
Features6 days agoFrom Royal College Platoon to National Cadet Corps: 145 years of discipline, leadership, and modern challenges
-
Latest News5 days agoPNS TAIMUR & ASLAT arrive in Colombo
-
News7 days agoAnura Solomons passes away
-
Features6 days agoCIA’s hidden weapon in Iran
-
Latest News5 days agoPrasidh, Buttler set up comfortable win for Gujarat Titans
-
News2 days agoPNS TAIMUR & ASLAT set sail from Colombo
-
Business7 days agoSL’s economic outlook for 2026 being shaped by M-E conflict
