Midweek Review
War crimes: Türk’s visit again underscores SL’s wholly inadequate response
Various international bodies with vested interests cooperate with the Western agenda. There cannot be a better example than the United Nations nuclear watchdog International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) declaration that Iran was not adhering to nuclear nonproliferation obligations the day before Israel launched massive air and missile attacks on that country. The UNHRC is no exception. However, that sordid operation involving the IAEA resulted in Iran obliterating the myth that Israeli defences couldn’t be penetrated. At the time the US forced Israel and Iran to cease attacks on each other, Iran has proved to the world that Israel could be overwhelmed. Sri Lanka seems to be not interested in countering false narrative thereby keeping the path open for the UN to continue its deceitful project here.
Sri Lanka military and an invading army conducted two separate mock media briefings at the Defence Services and Staff College (DSSC), Batalanda, recently. They dealt with a fictitious but developing situation, following a major confrontation in the general area of Dambulla.
The briefings were held at the end of an exercise, called ‘Shadow Dance,’ conducted at the DSSC, where a group of journalists, representing the print and electronic media, participated.
Having explained the circumstances leading to the latest fighting, the two warring armies fielded the questions posed. The invading army addressed/handled the media much better than the Sri Lankan military, represented by the 55 Division. The 63 Division represented the invading army that occupied the entire Northern Province, for a decade, and was threatening the rest of the country.
In a way, the 55 Division reflected the pathetic failure on the part of successive governments and the Army to counter unsubstantiated war crimes allegations levelled, since the successful conclusion of the war against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) 17 years ago.
The writer was among those invited to participate in the mock media briefing. The Sri Lankan military was aptly called the defenders of the nation while the occupying army was called videsh forces. The Sri Lankan military performance reminded us of the shoddy way successive governments faced the Geneva challenge. Even 17 years after President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s government achieved the unthinkable – the LTTE’s battlefield defeat – the country is still under intense Geneva pressure.
UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk’s recently concluded visit (June 23-26) proved beyond any doubt the Geneva strategy is on track. The Austrian lawyer’s pronouncements demonstrated that Geneva is absolutely confident of its strategy and the war-winning country lacked a cohesive approach to counter Geneva lies and expose their so far unchallenged narrative.
The National People’s Power (NPP) government seems wholly inadequate to counter the Geneva strategy. The Austrian simply repeated what Geneva and those who had been disgracefully exploiting post-war developments here, for domestic political reasons, were saying over the years.
The reportage of the four-day visit and various comments made by interested parties highlighted Sri Lanka’s failure to address accountability issues. That is the ugly truth. Having eradicated terrorism that was exported to Sri Lanka from India in the ’80s, the country seems simply incapable of comprehending and countering the PRIMARY lie propagated by the UN that the Sri Lanka military killed 40,000 during the final phase of the offensive in 2009.
We should at the same time not forget the fact that most organisations like the UN, set up in the aftermath of World War 11, were created by the victors, i.e. former evil colonial rulers who had previously plundered their subjects to no end. So, naturally, most of the new world bodies, created by them, are stacked against the third world. They are literally often manned by their handpicked ‘yes’ men and women in key positions. It is no coincidence that most top positions even, in the UN office in Colombo, are held by Westerners.
Can we actually expect any fair play from bodies like the United Nations? At a time when UNHCR’s tail should be on fire with an active genocide taking place for at least two years in Palestine, its Chief Volker Türk, however, with an entourage, more or less flogged a dead horse in Sri Lanka for publicity and in an apparent attempt to revive the world’s most ruthless terrorist organisation that had a conventional fighting capability that Sri Lanka defeated in the battlefield against all odds. In other words, the UN landed us with a proverbial Tartar last week. Some estimates put Palestinian civilians already killed in the Israeli genocide, in Gaza, at as much as 400,000 on Türk’s watch! Bravo! Folks don’t be surprised if this tartar (our apologies to real tartars, who continue to be maligned by colonial thinking) gets the Nobel Peace Prize ahead of convicted criminal Donald Trump.
Instead of staging annual circuses by such UN bureaucrats to hoodwink the world, wasting millions of dollars, why not just try the Sri Lankan Army in a kangaroo court for the preposterous charge levelled against it in the UN Darusman report of killing 40,000 Tamil civilians in the last stage of the war, which figure had already been contradicted by statistics maintained by other responsible bodies, and individuals, including the UN’s local office.
Sri Lanka never properly challenged the primary UN accusation as no one, who wielded political power, since 2009, bothered to do so. Instead, all Presidents played politics with the issue, while Maithripala Sirisena (2015-2019) treacherously betrayed the armed forces by teaming up with Yahapalana Premier Ranil Wickremesinghe to co-sponsor an accountability resolution, in August 2015, against their own country. That resolution was titled “Promoting reconciliation, accountability and human rights in Sri Lanka.”
Volker Türk’s visit reminded us that Sri Lanka remained entrapped in that resolution, in spite of the SLPP’s sham move in 2020. The SLPP right royally deceived the country by declaring that Sri Lanka quit the Geneva resolution. The bombastic declaration was made in Geneva by the then Foreign Minister Dinesh Gunawardena during the February-March 2020 sessions. That hoax was perpetrated on the country.
Geneva warning
At the end of Volker Türk’s visit, the Austrian reiterated their long standing demand for an internationally-backed accountability mechanism, the repeal of the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA), an end to surveillance on human rights defenders, and the release of military-occupied land.
The Geneva official also called for the repeal of the recently enacted Online Safety Act. The Austrian’s call for an end to surveillance on human rights defenders is nothing but a joke. The accusation is nothing new and often repeated both here and abroad. Sri Lanka should have asked Geneva a long time ago to identify those civilians who had been under surveillance in the Northern and Eastern Provinces and in Colombo. Unfortunately, successive governments never made an honest bid to counter high profile operations directed at Sri Lanka. Sri Lanka should have asked the Austrian whether at least one of those who had been categorised as human rights defenders sought their intervention to halt forcible conscription of children or prevent the LTTE from using innocent Tamil civilians as human shields.
Volker Türk’s own organisation never bothered to ask the LTTE to stop child recruitment or do away with human shields.
The often repeated demand to repeal the PTA, that had been introduced in 1979 and made permanent in 1982, in response to terrorism perpetrated in Sri Lanka by India over the years, became a key point in the overall strategy against Sri Lanka. Perhaps, Sri Lanka should study the Austrian anti-terrorism law that raised concerns among the interested parties. But Austria, faced with terror threats, has adopted powerful anti-terrorist law and seemed to be confident in its security strategy. The Geneva Human Rights Chief cannot be unaware that comprehensive Austrian anti-terrorism law covers almost all possible threats. Surveillance is in line with the Austrian security strategy.
Türk also played politics with the Chemmani mass grave in Jaffna though there is no confirmation of the identities of the victims or who the perpetrators were. There is absolutely no doubt that there had been some excesses on the part of the military and law enforcement authorities when fighting the most ruthless terrorist outfit in the world. Whoever is responsible for those atrocities should be held accountable, regardless of their rank. The accountability on the part of political authorities, too, cannot be ignored and, therefore, Sri Lanka should accept moral responsibility for excesses, whatever the circumstances in which they were perpetrated.
But we cannot forget how some high profile accusations, directed at Sri Lanka, backfired on the Geneva Human Rights organisation. Türk’s predecessor Michelle Bachelet (2018-2022), without hesitation, accused Sri Lanka of killing and secretly burying Tamils. The former Chilean President declared the existence of Mannar mass graves after some Colombo-based Western diplomatic missions, particularly the British and the Germans, played their part in the propaganda project.
The following is the relevant section, bearing No 23, from Bachelet’s report: “On May 29, 2018, human skeletal remains were discovered at a construction site in Mannar (Northern Province). Excavations conducted in support of the Office on Missing Persons, revealed a mass grave from which more than 300 skeletons were discovered. It was the second mass grave found in Mannar following the discovery of a site in 2014. Given that other mass graves might be expected to be found in the future, systematic access to grave sites by the Office as an observer is crucial for it to fully discharge its mandate, particularly with regard to the investigation and identification of remains, it is imperative that the proposed reforms on the law relating to inquests, and relevant protocols to operationalize the law be adopted. The capacity of the forensic sector must also be strengthened, including in areas of forensic anthropology, forensic archeology and genetics, and its coordination with the Office of Missing Persons must be ensured.”
The Bachelet report dealt with the situation here from October 2015 to January 2019.
Bachelet ended up with egg on her face when a US carbon dating report into six human skeleton samples taken from Sri Lanka’s largest mass grave revealed they belong to the 15th century. The radiocarbon dating report by Florida-based Beta Analytic Radiocarbon Dating Laboratory, which found that the remains belong to between 1499 and 1719 AD, was submitted to the Mannar Magistrate court and made public. Geneva didn’t talk about Mannar mass graves again. Now Bachelet’s successor Türk seems obsessed with Chemmani.
Case for int’l backed accountability mechanism
Whatever those critical of repeated calls for an internationally-backed accountability mechanism to probe Sri Lanka, the writer is of the strong belief that such a setup is necessary. The origins of terrorism here cannot be investigated unless all stakeholders agree for an internationally-backed accountability mechanism. Would Geneva explain its stand on India’s accountability for launching its terrorism project here that had to be destroyed militarily at a great cost to the Sri Lanka armed forces and innocent civilians?
Accountability issues here cannot be investigated, leaving India out, as the environment for Nanthikadal was created by India … and India alone. Western powers simply looked the other way.
A monument built by Sri Lanka for the Indian Army personnel killed in Sri Lanka is a grim reminder of New Delhi’s intervention here purely based on domestic reasons. No less a person than the late Indian National Security Advisor J.N. Dixit, who had been New Delhi’s top envoy during the deployment of the Indian Army here, in his memoirs ‘Makers of India’s Foreign Policy: Raja Ram Mohun Roy to Yashwant Sinha’, launched, in 2004, admitted the destabilisation project undertaken under Indira Gandhi’s leadership. Dixit faulted the then Premier Indira Gandhi for their intervention in Sri Lanka.
Those who had been demanding justice and accountability on the part of Sri Lanka are silent on massacres carried out by the Indian Army. The Jaffna hospital massacre, in October 1987, and the Valvettithurai carnage, in August 1989 ,were two examples.
Against the backdrop of Dixit’s admission, the declaration made by the late veteran diplomat, Jayantha Dhanapala, at the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission, is of pivotal importance.
One of Sri Lanka’s celebrated career diplomats even headed the revamped UN nuclear disarmament department as Under-Secretary General, Dhanapala discussed the issue of accountability when he addressed the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC), headed by one-time Attorney General, the late C. R. de Silva, on 25 August, 2010.
Dhanapala, in his submissions, said: “Now I think it is important for us to expand that concept to bring in the culpability of those members of the international community who have subscribed to the situation that has caused injury to the civilians of a nation. I talk about the way in which terrorist groups are given sanctuary; harboured; and supplied with arms and training by some countries with regard to their neighbours or with regard to other countries. We know that in our case this has happened, and I don’t want to name countries, but even countries which have allowed their financial procedures and systems to be abused in such a way that money can flow from their countries in order to buy arms and ammunition that cause deaths, maiming and destruction of property in Sri Lanka are to blame and there is, therefore, a responsibility to protect our civilians and the civilians of other nations from that kind of behaviour on the part of members of the international community. And I think this is something that will echo within many countries in the Non-Aligned Movement, where Sri Lanka has a much respected position and where I hope we will be able to raise this issue.”
Dhanapala also stressed on the accountability on the part of Western governments, which conveniently turned a blind eye to massive fundraising operations in their countries, in support of the LTTE operations. It is no secret that the LTTE would never have been able to emerge as a conventional fighting force without having the wherewithal abroad, mainly in the Western countries, to procure arms, ammunition and equipment. But, the government never acted on Dhanapala’s advice.
Geneva conveniently follows Western strategies. Sri Lanka is a victim of that approach. Therefore, US withdrawal from the UNHRC, in June 2018, is questionable. The US withdrew from the UN Human Rights Council, with then-US Ambassador to the UN, Nikki Haley, calling the council a “cesspool of political bias”. The US decision followed accusations that the Council was biased against Israel and failed to adequately address human rights abuses. Perhaps, the US has conveniently forgotten how Israel dealt with the Goldstone war crimes report on Gaza. Interestingly, that discarded report coincided with the UN report on Sri Lanka’s successful war against the Tamil separatist movement.
Western agenda on track
Retired security forces officers Rear Admiral D.P.K. Dassanayake and Maj. General G.V. Ravipriya, on behalf of those who had been accused of war crimes, sought an opportunity to meet the official from Geneva. They also sought the intervention of the Foreign Ministry to explore the possibility of meeting the Austrian. Their efforts were in vain.
Some found fault with Volker Türk’s visit to Chemmani mass graves where he controversially blamed the government for killing and burying them. The man from Geneva sprinkled flowers on the Chemmani graves. Sri Lanka should have invited him to pay floral tribute at the graves of many Tamils killed by the LTTE during the conflict. Perhaps, he could also have visited the burial site of the LTTE’s number two Gopalswamy Mahendraraja, alias Mahattaya, and his loyalists, executed by the LTTE on the suspicion of working for India’s Research and Analysis Wing (RAW).
Actually those who had been shedding crocodile tears and demanding justice for war victims are only speaking on behalf of the LTTE dead, whoever was allegedly killed by the government. Therefore, the assassination of TULF greats Appapillai Amirthalingam and Vettivelu Yogeswaran (both in July 1989 in Colombo) or Sarojini Yogeswaran (May 1998 in Jaffna) or Dr. Neelan Thiruchelvam. The list is too long to mention.
Volker Türk is not the first foreign dignitary to play ball with the anti-Sri Lanka grouping. He won’t be the last either. In November 2013, Canadian delegation to CHOGM, the Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Deepak Obhrai, laid a wreath at Elephant Pass in memory of those who were killed during the armed conflict. Obhrai did so while returning from Jaffna where he met the then Chief Minister of the Northern Province, C.V. Wigneswaran at the premises of the Tamil Jaffna-based newspaper, Uthayan.
In August 2016 Wigneswaran confidently declared that the Army killed over 100 LTTEers in custody after the end of the conflict by injecting them with a poisonous drug. That blatant lie received massive media coverage and the pathetic Yahapalana rulers failed to vigorously take up the issue with the retired Supreme Court justice.
Wigneswaran went to the extent of claiming that the US Air Force would examine the rehabilitated LTTE cadres to establish the truth. He got away with that barefaced lie.
Sri Lanka’s continuous and mysterious failure to build its Geneva defence, on the following facts, is baffling: (1) US denial of battlefield executions/war crimes by 58 Division on the Vanni east front. This was in June 2011, in Colombo, at the first defence seminar following the eradication of the LTTE (2) Disclosure of confidential British diplomatic cables that disputed the UN claim of 40,000 civil deaths. This was in October 2017 at the House of Lords (3) UN Colombo estimated that there were 7,000-8,000 deaths (both combatants and civilians) during the period August 2008-May 13, 2009. That report, prepared with the direct involvement of the ICRC and hospitals in war one, too, contradicted the claim of over 40,000 killed. In January 2010, less than a year after the Army put a bullet through Prabhakaran’s head on the banks of the Nanthikadal lagoon, the people living in the Northern and Eastern provinces declared that they really appreciated the eradication of the LTTE. Then Lt. Gen. Sarath Fonseka, wartime commander of the Army, handsomely won all the Northern and Eastern electoral districts at the presidential election. Where were the so-called human rights defenders when the Tamil electorate endorsed Fonseka, whose ruthless execution of the war by taking the fight to the enemy, often using tactics the Tigers earlier thrived in, ensured the LTTE’s eradication? But that wouldn’t have been a reality without the significant contributions made by the Navy and the Air Force.
By Shamindra Ferdinando
Midweek Review
How massive Akuregoda defence complex was built with proceeds from sale of Galle Face land to Shangri-La
The Navy ceremonially occupied its new Headquarters (Block No. 3) at the Defence Headquarters Complex (DHQC) at Akuregoda, Battaramulla, on 09 December, 2025. On the invitation of the Commander of the Navy, Vice Admiral Kanchana Banagoda, the Deputy Minister of Defence, Major General Aruna Jayasekara (Retd) attended the event as the Chief Guest.
Among those present were Admiral of the Fleet Wasantha Karannagoda, the Defence Secretary, Air Vice Marshal Sampath Thuyacontha (Retd), Commander of the Army, Lieutenant General Lasantha Rodrigo, Commander of the Air Force, Air Marshal Bandu Edirisinghe, Inspector General of Police, Attorney-at-Law Priyantha Weerasooriya and former Navy Commanders.
With the relocation of the Navy at DHQC, the much-valued project to shift the Ministry of Defence (MoD) and Headquarters of the war-winning armed forces has been brought to a successful conclusion. The Army was the first to move in (November 2019), the MoD (May 2021), the Air Force (January 2024) and finally the Navy (in December 2025).
It would be pertinent to mention that the shifting of MoD to DHQC coincided with the 12th anniversary of bringing back the entire Northern and Eastern Provinces under the government, on 18 May, 2009. LTTE leader Velupillai Prabhakaran was killed on the following day.
The project that was launched in March 2011, two years after the eradication of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), suffered a severe setback, following the change of government in 2015. The utterly irresponsible and treacherous Yahapalana government halted the project. That administration transferred funds, allocated for it, to the Treasury, in the wake of massive Treasury bond scams perpetrated in February and March 2015, within weeks after the presidential election.
Maithripala Sirisena, in his capacity as the President, as well as the Minister of Defence, declared open the new Army Headquarters, at DHQC, a week before the 2019 presidential election. Built at a cost of Rs 53.3 bn, DHQC is widely believed to be the largest single construction project in the country. At the time of the relocation of the Army, the then Lt. Gen. Shavendra Silva, the former Commanding Officer of the celebrated Task Force I/58 Division, served as the Commander.
Who made the DHQC a reality? Although most government departments, ministries and armed forces headquarters, were located in Colombo, under the Colombo Master Plan of 1979, all were required to be moved to Sri Jayewardenepura, Kotte. However successive administrations couldn’t go ahead with the massive task primarily due to the conflict. DHQC would never have been a reality if not for wartime Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa who determinedly pursued the high-profile project.
The absence of any reference to the origins of the project, as well as the significant role played by Gotabaya Rajapaksa at the just relocated Navy headquarters, prompted the writer to examine the developments related to the DHQC. The shifting of MoD, along with the Armed Forces Headquarters, was a monumental decision taken by Mahinda Rajapaksas’s government. But, all along it had been Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s determination to achieve that monumental task that displeased some within the administration, but the then Defence Secretary, a former frontline combat officer of the battle proved Gajaba Regiment, was not the type to back down or alter his strategy.
GR’s maiden official visit to DHQC
Gotabaya Rajapaksa, who made DHQC a reality, visited the sprawling building in his capacity as the President, Defence Minister and the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces on the morning of 03 August, 2021. It was Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s maiden official visit to the Army Headquarters, located within the then partially completed DHQC, eight months before the eruption of the externally backed ‘Aragalaya.’ The US-Indian joint project has been exposed and post-Aragalaya developments cannot be examined without taking into consideration the role played by political parties, the Bar Association of Sri Lanka, media, as well as the weak response of the political leadership and the armed forces. Let me stress that a comprehensive probe should cover the period beginning with the Swiss project to humiliate President Gotabaya Rajapaka in November, 2019, by staging a fake abduction, and the storming of the President’s House in July 2022. How could Sri Lanka forget the despicable Swiss allegation of sexual harassment of a female local employee by government personnel, a claim proved to be a blatant lie meant to cause embarrassment to the newly elected administration..
Let me get back to the DHQC project. The war-winning Mahinda Rajapaksa government laid the foundation for the building project on 11 May, 2011, two years after Sri Lanka’s triumph over the separatist Tamil terrorist movement. The high-profile project, on a 77-acre land, at Akuregoda, Pelawatta, was meant to bring the Army, Navy, and the Air Force headquarters, and the Defence Ministry, to one location.
President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s visit to Akuregoda would have definitely taken place much earlier, under a very different environment, if not for the eruption of the Covid-19 pandemic, just a few months after his victory at the November 2019 election. The worst post-World War II crisis that had caused devastating losses to national economies, the world over, and delivered a staggering blow to Sri Lanka, heavily dependent on tourism, garment exports and remittances by its expatriate workers.
On his arrival at the new Army headquarters, President Gotabaya Rajapaksa was welcomed by General Shavendra Silva, who also served as the Chief of Defence Staff. Thanks to the President’s predecessor, Maithripala Sirisena, the then Maj. Gen Shavendra Silva was promoted to the rank of Lt. Gen and appointed the Commander of the Army on 18 August, 2019, just three months before the presidential poll. The appointment was made in spite of strong opposition from the UNP leadership and US criticism.
President Gotabaya Rajapaksa hadn’t minced his words when he publicly acknowledged the catastrophe caused by the plunging of the national income and the daunting challenge in debt repayment, amounting to as much as USD 4 bn annually.
The decision to shift the tri-forces headquarters and the Defence Ministry (The Defence Ministry situated within the Army Headquarters premises) caused a media furor with the then Opposition UNP alleging a massive rip-off. Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa reiterated his commitment to the project. If not for the change of government in 2015, the DHQC would have been completed during Mahinda Rajapaksa’s third term if he was allowed to contest for a third term successfully. Had that happened, Gotabaya Rajapaksa wouldn’t have emerged as the then Opposition presidential candidate at the 2019 poll. The disastrous Yahapalana administration and the overall deterioration of all political parties, represented in Parliament, and the 19th A that barred Mahinda Rajapaksa from contesting the presidential election, beyond his two terms, created an environment conducive for Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s emergence as the newly registered SLPP’s candidate.
Shangri-La move
During the 2019 presidential election campaign, SLPP candidate Gotabaya Rajapaksa strongly defended his decision to vacate the Army Headquarters, during Mahinda Rajapaksa presidency, to pave the way for the Shangri-La Hotel in Colombo. Shangri-La was among the hotels targeted by the Easter Sunday bombers – the only location targeted by two of them, including mastermind Zahran Hashim.
President Gotabaya Rajapaksa is on record as having said that vacation of the site had been in accordance with first executive President J.R. Jayewardene’s decision to move key government buildings away from Colombo to the new Capital of the country at Sri Jaywardenepura. Gotabaya Rajapaksa said so in response to the writer’s queries years ago.
Gotabaya Rajapaksa said that a despicable attempt was being made to blame him for the Army Headquarters land transaction. “I have been accused of selling the Army Headquarters land to the Chinese.”
Rajapaksa explained that Taj Samudra, too, had been built on a section of the former Army Headquarters land, previously used to accommodate officers’ quarters and the Army rugger grounds. Although President Jayewardene had wanted the Army Headquarters shifted, successive governments couldn’t do that due to the war and lack of funds, he said.
President Maithripala Sirisena and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe declared open Shangri-La Colombo on 16 November, 2017. The Hong Kong-based Shangri-La Asia invited Gotabaya Rajapaksa for dinner, the following day, after the opening of its Colombo hotel. Shangri-La Chairperson, Kuok Hui Kwong, the daughter of Robert Kuok Khoon Ean, was there to welcome Gotabaya Rajapaksa, who had cleared the way for the post-war mega tourism investment project. Among those who had been invited were former President Mahinda Rajapaksa, former External Affairs Minister Prof. G.L. Peiris, former Presidential Secretary Lalith Weeratunga, and President’s Counsel Gamini Marapana, PC.
The Cabinet granted approval for the high-profile Shangri-La project in October 2010 and the ground-breaking ceremony was held in late February 2012.
Rajapaksa said that the Shangri-La proprietor, a Chinese, ran a big operation, based in Hong Kong, Malaysia and Singapore. Another parcel of land was given to the mega ITC hotel project, also during the previous Rajapaksa administration. ITC Ratnadipa, a super-luxury hotel by India’s ITC Hotels, officially opened in Colombo on April 25, 2024
Following the change of government in January 2015, the remaining section of the Army headquarters land, too, was handed over to Shangri-La.
Gotabaya Rajapaksa emphasised that the relocation of the headquarters of the Army, Navy, and Air Force, as well as the Defence Ministry, had been part of JRJ’s overall plan. The change of government, in January 2015, had caused a serious delay in completing the project and it was proceeding at a snail’s pace, Rajapaksa said. Even Parliament was shifted to Kotte in accordance with JRJ’s overall plan, Gotabaya Rajapaksa said, explaining his move to relocate all security forces’ headquarters and Defence Ministry into one complex at Akuregoda.
Acknowledging that the Army Headquarters had been there at Galle Face for six decades, Rajapaksa asserted that the Colombo headquarters wasn’t tactically positioned.
Rajapaksa blamed the inordinate delay in the completion of the Akuregoda complex on the Treasury taking hold of specific funds allocated for the project.
Over 5,000 military workforce

Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s maiden visit to DHQC on 3 August, 2021. General
Shavendra Silva is beside him
Major General Udaya Nanayakkara had been the first Director, Project Management Unit, with overall command of approximately 5,000 tri-forces personnel assigned to carry it out. The Shangri-La transaction provided the wherewithal to implement the DHQC project though the change of government caused a major setback. Nanayakkara, who had served as the Military Spokesman, during Eelam War IV, oversaw the military deployment, whereas private contractors handled specialised work such as piling, AC, fire protection and fire detection et al. The then MLO (Military Liaison Officer) at the Defence Ministry, Maj. Gen Palitha Fernando, had laid the foundation for the project and the work was going on smoothly when the Yahapalana administration withheld funds. Political intervention delayed the project and by September 2015, Nanayakkara was replaced by Maj Gen Mahinda Ambanpola, of the Engineer Service.
In spite of President Sirisena holding the Defence portfolio, he couldn’t prevent the top UNP leadership from interfering in the DHQC project. However, the Shangri-La project had the backing of A.J.M. Muzammil, the then UNP Mayor and one of the close confidants of UNP leader Ranil Wickremesinghe. Muzammil was among those present at the ground breaking ceremony for Shangri-La held on 24th February, 2012 ,with the participation of Minister Basil Rajapaksa.
Having identified the invaluable land, where the Army Headquarters and Defence Ministry were situated, for its project, Shangri-La made its move. Those who had been aware of Shangri-La’s plans were hesitant and certainly not confident of their success. They felt fearful of Defence Secretary Rajapaksa’s reaction.
But, following swift negotiations, they finalised the agreement on 28 December, 2010. Lt. Gen. Jagath Jayasuriya was the then Commander of the Army, with his predecessor General Fonseka in government custody after having been arrested within two weeks after the conclusion of the 2010 26 January Presidential poll.
Addressing the annual Viyathmaga Convention at Golden Rose Hotel, Boralesgamuwa, on 04 March, 2017, Gotabaya Rajapaksa, perhaps for the first time publicly discussed his role in the Shangri-La project. Declaring that Sri Lanka suffered for want of, what he called, a workable formula to achieve post-war development objectives, the war veteran stressed the pivotal importance of swift and bold decision-making.
Gotabaya Rajapaksa explained how the government had acted swiftly, and decisively, to attract foreign investments though some such efforts were not successful. There couldn’t be a better example than the government finalising an agreement with Shangri-La Hotels, he declared.
Declaring that the bureaucratic red tape shouldn’t in any way be allowed to undermine investments, Rajapaksa recalled the Chairman/CEO of Shangri-La Hotels and Resorts, Robert Kuok Khoon Ean, wanting the Army Headquarters land for his Colombo project. In fact, the hotels chain, at the time, had proposed to build hotels in Colombo, Hambantota and Batticaloa, and was one of the key investors wanting to exploit Sri Lanka’s success in defeating terrorism.
“Khoon-Ean’s request for the Army Headquarters land caused a serious problem for me. It was a serious challenge. How could I shift the headquarters of the war-winning Army? The Army had been there for six decades. It had been the nerve centre of the war effort for 30 years,” said Rajapaksa, who once commanded the First Battalion of the Gajaba Regiment (1GR)
Rajapaksa went on to explain how he exploited a decision taken by the first executive president J.R. Jayewardene to shift the Army Headquarters to Battaramulla, many years back. “Within two weeks, in consultation with the Secretary to the Finance Ministry, Dr. P.B. Jayasundera, and the Board of Investment, measures were taken to finalise the transaction. The project was launched to shift the Army, Navy and Air Force headquarters to Akuregoda, Pelawatte, in accordance with JRJ’s plan.”
The Hong Kong-based group announced the purchase of 10 acres of state land, in January 2011. Shangri-La Asia Limited announced plans to invest over USD 400 mn on the 30-storeyed star class hotel with 661 rooms.
The hotel is the second property in Sri Lanka for the leading Asian hospitality group, joining Shangri-La’s Hambantota Resort & Spa, which opened in June 2016.
Rajapaksa said that the top Shangri-La executive had referred to the finalisation of their Colombo agreement to highlight the friendly way the then administration handled the investment. Shangri-La had no qualms about recommending Sri Lanka as a place for investment, Rajapaksa said.
The writer explained the move to shift the Army Headquarters and the Defence Ministry from Colombo in a lead story headlined ‘Shangri-La to push MoD, Army Hq. out of Colombo city: Army Hospital expected to be converted into a museum’ (The Island, 04 January, 2011).
Yahapalana chaos
In the wake of the January 2015 change of government, the new leadership caused chaos with the suspension of the China-funded Port City Project, a little distance away from the Shangri-La venture. Many an eyebrow was raised when the then Finance Minister Ravi Karunanayake declared, in March, 2015, that funds wouldn’t be made available to the DHQC project until the exact cost estimation of the project could be clarified.
Media quoted Karunanayake as having said “Presently, this project seems like a bottomless pit and we need to know the depth of what we are getting into. From the current state of finances, allocated for this project, it seems as if they are building a complex that’s even bigger than the Pentagon!”
The insinuating declaration was made despite them having committed the blatant first Treasury bond scam in February 2015 that shook the Sirisena-Wickremesinghe administration to its core.
In June 2016, Cabinet spokesperson, Dr. Rajitha Senaratne, announced the suspension of the Akuregoda project. Citing financial irregularities and mismanagement of funds, Dr. Senaratne alleged that all Cabinet papers on the project had been prepared according to the whims and fancies of Gotabaya Rajapaksa.
The then Minister Karunanayake spearheaded the campaign against the DHQC project alleging, in the third week of January, 2015, that Rs 13.2 billion, in an account maintained at the Taprobane branch of the Bank of Ceylon had been transferred to the Consolidated Fund of the Treasury. The matter was being investigated as the account belonged to the Ministry of Defence, he added. The Finance Minister stressed that the MoD had no right to maintain such an account in violation of regulations and, therefore, the opening of the account was being investigated. The Minister alleged that several illegal transactions, including one involving Samurdhi, had come to light. He estimated the Samurdhi transaction (now under investigation) at Rs. 4 billion.
Having undermined Shangri-La and the DHQC projects, the UNP facilitated the expansion of the hotel project by releasing additional three and half acres on a 99-year lease. During the Yahapalana administration, Dayasiri Jayasekera disclosed at a post-Cabinet press briefing how the government leased three and a half acres of land at a rate of Rs. 13.1 mn per perch whereas the previous administration agreed to Rs 6.5 mn per perch. According to Jayasekera the previous government had leased 10 acres at a rate of Rs 9.5 mn (with taxes) per perch.
The bottom line is that DHQC was built with Shangri-La funds and the initiative was Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s whose role as rock solid wartime Secretary of Defence to keep security forces supplied with whatever their requirements could never be compared with any other official during the conflict.
By Shamindra Ferdinando
Midweek Review
The Hour of the Invisible
Picking-up the pieces in the bashed Isle,
Is going to take quite a long while,
And all hands need to be united as one,
To give it even a semblance of its former self,
But the more calloused and hardy the hands,
The more suitable are they for the task,
And the hour is upon us you could say,
When those vast legions of invisible folk,
Those wasting away in humble silent toil,
Could stand up and be saluted by all,
As being the most needed persons of the land
By Lynn Ockersz
Features
Handunnetti and Colonial Shackles of English in Sri Lanka
“My tongue in English chains.
I return, after a generation, to you.
I am at the end
of my Dravidic tether
hunger for you unassuaged
I falter, stumble.”
– Indian poet R. Parthasarathy
When Minister Sunil Handunnetti addressed the World Economic Forum’s ‘Is Asia’s Century at Risk?’ discussion as part of the Annual Meeting of the New Champions 2025 in June 2025, I listened carefully both to him and the questions that were posed to him by the moderator. The subsequent trolling and extremely negative reactions to his use of English were so distasteful that I opted not to comment on it at the time. The noise that followed also meant that a meaningful conversation based on that event on the utility of learning a powerful global language and how our politics on the global stage might be carried out more successfully in that language was lost on our people and pundits, barring a few commentaries.
Now Handunnetti has reopened the conversation, this time in Sri Lanka’s parliament in November 2025, on the utility of mastering English particularly for young entrepreneurs. In his intervention, he also makes a plea not to mock his struggle at learning English given that he comes from a background which lacked the privilege to master the language in his youth. His clear intervention makes much sense.
The same ilk that ridiculed him when he spoke at WEF is laughing at him yet again on his pronunciation, incomplete sentences, claiming that he is bringing shame to the country and so on and so forth. As usual, such loud, politically motivated and retrograde critics miss the larger picture. Many of these people are also among those who cannot hold a conversation in any of the globally accepted versions of English. Moreover, their conceit about the so-called ‘correct’ use of English seems to suggest the existence of an ideal English type when it comes to pronunciation and basic articulation. I thought of writing this commentary now in a situation when the minister himself is asking for help ‘in finding a solution’ in his parliamentary speech even though his government is not known to be amenable to critical reflection from anyone who is not a party member.
The remarks at the WEF and in Sri Lanka’s parliament are very different at a fundamental level, although both are worthy of consideration – within the realm of rationality, not in the depths of vulgar emotion and political mudslinging.
The problem with Handunnetti’s remarks at WEF was not his accent or pronunciation. After all, whatever he said could be clearly understood if listened to carefully. In that sense, his use of English fulfilled one of the most fundamental roles of language – that of communication. Its lack of finesse, as a result of the speaker being someone who does not use the language professionally or personally on a regular basis, is only natural and cannot be held against him. This said, there are many issues that his remarks flagged that were mostly drowned out by the noise of his critics.
Given that Handunnetti’s communication was clear, it also showed much that was not meant to be exposed. He simply did not respond to the questions that were posed to him. More bluntly, a Sinhala speaker can describe the intervention as yanne koheda, malle pol , which literally means, when asked ‘Where are you going?’, the answer is ‘There are coconuts in the bag’.
He spoke from a prepared text which his staff must have put together for him. However, it was far off the mark from the questions that were being directly posed to him. The issue here is that his staff appears to have not had any coordination with the forum organisers to ascertain and decide on the nature of questions that would be posed to the Minister for which answers could have been provided based on both global conditions, local situations and government policy. After all, this is a senior minister of an independent country and he has the right to know and control, when possible, what he is dealing with in an international forum.
This manner of working is fairly routine in such international fora. On the one hand, it is extremely unfortunate that his staff did not do the required homework and obviously the minister himself did not follow up, demonstrating negligence, a want for common sense, preparedness and experience among all concerned. On the other hand, the government needs to have a policy on who it sends to such events. For instance, should a minister attend a certain event, or should the government be represented by an official or consultant who can speak not only fluently, but also with authority on the subject matter. That is, such speakers need to be very familiar with the global issues concerned and not mere political rhetoric aimed at local audiences.
Other than Handunnetti, I have seen, heard and also heard of how poorly our politicians, political appointees and even officials perform at international meetings (some of which are closed door) bringing ridicule and disastrous consequences to the country. None of them are, however, held responsible.
Such reflective considerations are simple yet essential and pragmatic policy matters on how the government should work in these conditions. If this had been undertaken, the WEF event might have been better handled with better global press for the government. Nevertheless, this was not only a matter of English. For one thing, Handunnetti and his staff could have requested for the availability of simultaneous translation from Sinhala to English for which pre-knowledge of questions would have been useful. This is all too common too. At the UN General Assembly in September, President Dissanayake spoke in Sinhala and made a decent presentation.
The pertinent question is this; had Handunetti had the option of talking in Sinhala, would the interaction have been any better? That is extremely doubtful, barring the fluency of language use. This is because Handunnetti, like most other politicians past and present, are good at rhetoric but not convincing where substance is concerned, particularly when it comes to global issues. It is for this reason that such leaders need competent staff and consultants, and not mere party loyalists and yes men, which is an unfortunate situation that has engulfed the whole government.
What about the speech in parliament? Again, as in the WEF event, his presentation was crystal clear and, in this instance, contextually sensible. But he did not have to make that speech in English at all when decent simultaneous translation services were available. In so far as content was concerned, he made a sound argument considering local conditions which he knows well. The minister’s argument is about the need to ensure that young entrepreneurs be taught English so that they can deal with the world and bring investments into the country, among other things. This should actually be the norm, not only for young entrepreneurs, but for all who are interested in widening their employment and investment opportunities beyond this country and in accessing knowledge for which Sinhala and Tamil alone do not suffice.
As far as I am concerned, Handunetti’s argument is important because in parliament, it can be construed as a policy prerogative. Significantly, he asked the Minister of Education to make this possible in the educational reforms that the government is contemplating.
He went further, appealing to his detractors not to mock his struggle in learning English, and instead to become part of the solution. However, in my opinion, there is no need for the Minister to carry this chip on his shoulder. Why should the minister concern himself with being mocked for poor use of English? But there is a gap that his plea should have also addressed. What prevented him from mastering English in his youth goes far deeper than the lack of a privileged upbringing.
The fact of the matter is, the facilities that were available in schools and universities to learn English were not taken seriously and were often looked down upon as kaduwa by the political spectrum he represents and nationalist elements for whom the utilitarian value of English was not self-evident. I say this with responsibility because this was a considerable part of the reality in my time as an undergraduate and also throughout the time I taught in Sri Lanka.
Much earlier in my youth, swayed by the rhetoric of Sinhala language nationalism, my own mastery of English was also delayed even though my background is vastly different from the minister. I too was mocked, when two important schools in Kandy – Trinity College and St. Anthony’s College – refused to accept me to Grade 1 as my English was wanting. This was nearly 20 years after independence. I, however, opted to move on from the blatant discrimination, and mastered the language, although I probably had better opportunities and saw the world through a vastly different lens than the minister. If the minister’s commitment was also based on these social and political realities and the role people like him had played in negating our English language training particularly in universities, his plea would have sounded far more genuine.
If both these remarks and the contexts in which they were made say something about the way we can use English in our country, it is this: On one hand, the government needs to make sure it has a pragmatic policy in place when it sends representatives to international events which takes into account both a person’s language skills and his breadth of knowledge of the subject matter. On the other hand, it needs to find a way to ensure that English is taught to everyone successfully from kindergarten to university as a tool for inclusion, knowledge and communication and not a weapon of exclusion as is often the case.
This can only bear fruit if the failures, lapses and strengths of the country’s English language teaching efforts are taken into cognizance. Lamentably, division and discrimination are still the main emotional considerations on which English is being popularly used as the trolls of the minister’s English usage have shown. It is indeed regrettable that their small-mindedness prevents them from realizing that the Brits have long lost their long undisputed ownership over the English language along with the Empire itself. It is no longer in the hands of the colonial masters. So why allow it to be wielded by a privileged few mired in misplaced notions of elitism?
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