Features
Gaza Conflict: Reply to ‘Another view’
Offering ‘Another view’ (The Island/August 20, 2025) in reply to the first part of the article ‘Gaza conflict: Sarvajana Balaya’s response’ published Wednesday 13th, Stanley Weerasinghe of Pannipitiya has raised seven arguments against my opinion about SB’s Gaza reaction. SW has done so even before seeing the second part of my article, but I don’t see anything wrong with that. Now that the (concluding) second part has been published (August 22), there probably is no need for a reply from me. Still, in appreciation of SW’s concern for truth, which I also share, and even more importantly, for reasons that must be talked about more explicitly before long, in order to prevent the re-emergence of extremist tension in different forms, I decided to gladly try to answer his criticisms.
First, what I meant by saying that the SB delegates did not ‘care or dare’ to make any reference to Israel was that they probably wanted to register their ‘politically correct’ indifference to that country in order to please the local Muslim voters. They must have thought that to do otherwise would antagonise the latter. But not all Muslims are extremists who are blind Jew haters, something I know through personal experience with fellow Sri Lankans of the Muslim community.
My feeling is that most minority leaders (please note, not ordinary citizens who belong to different ethnic minorities) traditionally fail to reciprocate the friendship and flexibility offered by the liberal policy of political correctness usually adopted by nearly all politicians who come from the majority Sinhalese Buddhist community. The urgent need of the hour is to focus on the increasing vulnerability of the Sri Lankan people/nation to the predatory influence of extremist ideologies (whether political or religious), but not to appease opportunistic politicians generally believed to be indirectly benefiting from the actions of extremists.
Second, SW argues that the Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu has been declared a war criminal by the ICC (International Criminal Court). But its ruling (in effect, its authority) seems to be ignored by some countries. Recently, the Hungarian PM Viktor Oban said, just ahead of Benjamin Netanyahu’s scheduled visit to Hungary, that his country had started proceedings to withdraw from the ICC. PM Bart De Wever of Belgium announced that the Israeli PM will not be arrested by his country either. Heads of State of sovereign nations undergoing internal crises should not be treated as common criminals merely on being charged with wrongdoing on suspicion. For all nations economy matters much more than religion.
Three, the widely propagated allegation that Israel is starving Gazans is vehemently disputed by the IDF with plenty of video evidence available on free social media. If there is any starvation there, it is due to some obstruction to the unhindered distribution of food handed over to UNRWA (United Nations Relief and Works Agency) as relief by Israel and other donors including some Arab states to ensure that it reaches the needy population. There is a complaint that Hamas members have penetrated the UNRWA as drivers of the aid trucks and as other workers; they first secure the relief food supplies for Hamas’s own use before giving it to the ordinary Palestinians (who are allegedly being used as human shields, much like Tamil civilians in the north of Sri Lanka before 2009). Some of the food supplies find their way to an impromptu blackmarket, it is claimed by the IDF sources.
Alleged UN collusion with Hamas terrorists is a fact of life it seems. Free media posts cite the IDF as the only army in the world that feeds the enemy that is fighting against it. This is due to its commitment to supplying humanitarian aid to Gaza civilians including basic essentials such as food and medicines. The Sri Lanka army similarly fed the armed terrorists in the North during the separatist civil conflict while supplying relief to stranded Tamil civilians. Bogus whistleblower Azad Maulana, once aide to Pillayan, was also employed by the UNRWA, before he was featured in the fake video produced in 2024 by the infamous Channel 4 of UK about falsely alleged Sri Lanka government collusion in the Easter Sunday attacks of April 2019.
UNHRC chief Volker Turk’s offhand, even dismissive, refusal of an urgent request by some prominent members of the Patriotic National Movement organization including its Secretary Dr Wasantha Bandara, senior lawyer and civil activist Kalyananda Tiranagama, former Eastern Province Governor Anuradha Yahampath, former Cabinet Minister Retired Rear Admiral Sarath Weerasekera, etc., to meet him before he ended his recent official visit to Sri Lanka (23-26 June, 2025) or even to acknowledge a written appeal by them, while at the same time taking care to send an immediate reply to a Jaffna Tamil civilian’s letter (a sinister gesture, no doubt) according to some YouTube channels.
There are other instances of blatant UN discrimination or active prejudice (entirely unexpected in terms of the founding principles of the United Nations) against at least 80% of the Sri Lankan population. In this respect, Israel (with a 75% Jewish and 25% non-Jewish population) and Sri Lanka are in the same boat. The minorities in both countries live in harmony with the respective majorities due mainly to the natural expansiveness and enhanced democratic values of the latter (that is, Jews in Israel, and Buddhists and Hindus in Sri Lanka). Sarvajana Balaya should have taken the opportunity to show Israel that we understand their difficulties.
Four, SW’s implicit charge is that Netanyahu is the main culprit responsible for the persistent human suffering in Gaza. But, so long as Palestinians chant: ‘From the River to the sea – Palestine will be free’, Israel, under Netanyahu or any other future leader, cannot be expected to agree to any arrangement that recognises such a Palestine, because it means total non-recognition of Israel as a sovereign state. It is not Netanyahu who insists on genocide. It is Hamas (harakatul-muqawwamah al- islamiyyah or the Islamic Resistance Movement) that insists on the elimination of Israel.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio was recently (August 23) was questioned by some journalists about the still ongoing humanitarian crisis in Gaza:
‘And what about the civilians that are being killed everyday?’
Rubio said: ‘I blame Hamas. Hamas should stop hiding behind civilians, putting civilians in the way…Hamas has to stop building their military installations underneath hospitals. I think you guys get this. I want them to destroy every element of Hamas they can get their hands on…..These people are vicious animals who did horrifying crimes and I hope you guys post that.
A woman journalist asked: ‘So you don’t care about the 15,000 that died, the babies being killed everyday?’
‘I think that’s terrible and I think that Hamas is 100% to blame. Make sure you post that, please’.
That’s straight from the horse’s mouth. Who gets more authentic information about the ground situation in Gaza than the US Secretary of State?
Though we recognise and fully support a Palestinian state at present, it is still recognised by only 147 (76%) out of the 193 countries of the UN. The territory it encompasses remains disputed. PM Mahmoud Abbas’s Palestine National Authority comprises Judea and Samaria, which are Palestinian enclaves in the Israel-occupied West Bank. The resolution of this confusing situation remains a problem mostly due to Hamas’s refusal to recognise the existence of Israel.
Five, SW’s contention that my ‘fervent hope’ to see Israelis and Palestinians living as peaceful neighbours is not likely to be fulfilled because Netanyahu ‘had shattered such hopes from the inception’. I don’t agree. Surely, no leader in power could agree to the genocide of his/her own people (unlike our purblind, narrowly power craving, politicians who are turning a blind eye to what could be described as a cultural genocide that is being perpetrated against the majority Sinhalese Buddhists in the form of destruction or vandalism of archaeological sites in the North and the East provinces, propagation of the fictitious Hela Budun concept, deliberate distortion of the Dhamma, unethical conversion of innocent poor and not so poor Buddhists and Hindus, etc).
A couple of days ago, Netanyahu said something that he had repeated several times before: ’Our goal is not to occupy Gaza. Our goal is to free Gaza, freed from Hamas terrorists. The war can stop tomorrow if Hamas lays down its arms and releases all the remaining hostages.’ But this stance seems to have now turned sterner due to Hamas’s intransigence. SW should remember that about six months ago US president Trump pledged to rebuild the destroyed Gaza with Israel collaboration, if only terrorism stopped.
Six, I didn’t write that Hamas killed 1200 Israelis, although that number could be right. If the UN Secretary General (Antonio Guterres) said that the massacre (of October 7, 2023) didn’t happen ‘in a vacuum’, he partially justified terrorism, which, I don’t think, is worthy of the head of the UN. A local NGO mercenary, a million times less insignificant than the UN boss, made a similar malicious comment in support of a vicious LTTE atrocity: he said it was to be expected!
Seven, SW’s implicit comparison of Netanyahu with Yitzhak Rabin’s real killer is not acceptable. Netanyahu served in the IDF for six years (1967-73) as a Captain, taking part in active combat in a number of wars including the Yom Kippur War of 1972 and also in the celebrated anti-terror Entebbe, Uganda airport raid or Operation Thunderbolt of 1976. Prime Minister Rabin was assassinated by an extremist Jew, a law student by the name of Yigal Amir, who believed that Rabin endangered the lives of Jews by his Oslo Accords (Oslo I and II, signed respectively in 1993 and 1995).
Stanley Weerasinghe has done me a good turn by pointing out those counter arguments. I am sure he has his own sources to support them. But there is a problem that none of us can avoid in looking for reliable information about anything nowadays, especially about controversial subjects. It is this: Today we mainly depend or rely on electronic media for instant news, most frequently, the YouTube, the American social media platform owned by Google, the multinational tech-giant, which is globally the most widely used search engine. The YouTube has us, its users, in its thrall by influencing our choice of contents to reach, even our inner thoughts, beliefs, prejudices, and opinions through its recommendation algorithms, unless we are critical and discriminating enough in our approach to interacting with the deluge of information that is turned on us. SW and I both share this predicament, but need to sift through the available information to find out what is likely to be the truth according to our own insights.
What has brought us together here is, I think, our great protective love of Sri Lanka, our splendid incomparable Homeland. I hope to share some of my personal reactions to the phases of the ever unfolding Middle Eastern crisis in my youthful years.
by Rohana R. Wasala ✍️
Features
US-Iran war, global exchange rates and Sri Lankan Rupee
When the strait shuts:
In the early hours of February 28, 2026, the world changed. Joint United States and Israeli airstrikes on Iran, meticulously planned, devastatingly executed, killed Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, destroyed large swathes of Iran’s nuclear infrastructure, and triggered the most consequential military confrontation in the Middle East since the Iraq War. What followed was not merely a regional conflict. It was an economic earthquake felt from the trading floors of New York to the fuel queues of Colombo.
We are going to examine how a war fought in the Persian Gulf rewrote exchange rates across the global economy, and why a small island in the Indian Ocean, still recovering from its own financial near-death experience four years ago, found itself once again staring into an economic abyss.
From Maximum Pressure to Maximum Destruction
On February 28, the strikes began. The operation was vast and transformative. Iran’s air defences were systematically destroyed. Its missile production facilities were crippled. And its political leadership was decapitated. In response, Tehran did something it had always threatened but never done: it closed the Strait of Hormuz.
That decision, to block the 21-mile-wide waterway through which approximately 20% of global oil supplies flow, set off a chain of economic consequences that no government, central bank, or multilateral institution had fully stress-tested for.
The Oil Shock and What It Did to Currency Markets
The numbers tell the story with stark clarity. Brent crude, which had been trading at $71.32 per barrel on February 27, jumped 8% to $77.24 in the first two trading days of the conflict. Within a week, following the declaration that the Strait was “closed,” WTI crude surged more than 35%, the biggest weekly gain since the futures contract began in 1983, ending the week at $90.90. Brent climbed 28% to $92.69 in the same period. By early March, Brent had surged past $120 per barrel. The International Energy Agency characterised it as the “largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market.”
This was not merely an oil price story. Oil is the world’s most foundational commodity, priced in US dollars, embedded in the cost of virtually every manufactured good, agricultural product, and service. When oil prices surge by 45%, as they did between February and April 2026, the consequences ripple through exchange rates with a logic that is both mechanical and unforgiving.
For oil-importing emerging market currencies, the mathematics were brutal. When oil prices rise in dollars and a country pays for oil in dollars, there are two simultaneous pressures on the exchange rate. First, the country must acquire more dollars to pay for the same volume of imports, increasing demand for the greenback and putting downward pressure on the domestic currency. Second, higher oil prices widen the current account deficit, removing the trade-balance support that usually anchors currencies. This double blow struck Asian, African, and Latin American currencies with particular force. Gasoline prices rose in 106 countries in the three weeks following the start of the conflict. The European Central Bank postponed planned interest rate cuts, raised its inflation forecast, and cut its growth projections.
Oil exporters told a different story. The Gulf states, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Kuwait, saw windfall revenues at the very moment their physical infrastructure was under threat. Iran’s strikes on Saudi Arabian oil refineries and energy facilities injected volatility into the already fractured GCC calculus: higher oil revenues on one hand, higher security costs and diplomatic complexity on the other.
The Ceasefire and Its Limits
After five weeks of fighting, Pakistan and China delivered a joint peace initiative on March 31, 2026. On April 7–8, the United States and Iran agreed to a two-week ceasefire, with Iran committing to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Markets reacted with violent relief. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq surged 3–4% in futures markets overnight. Oil prices fell nearly 25% from their peak. Equities that had slid 8–12% from pre-conflict highs began recovering.
But the ceasefire was “relief, not resolution.” The Strait of Hormuz remained at just 5% of pre-conflict shipping traffic five weeks after the ceasefire announcement. Supply chains do not unsnarl overnight. On May 7, the United States conducted further airstrikes on military sites in southern Iran and Tehran following Iranian targeting of US warships. A memorandum of understanding, intended to bring the conflict to a formal end within 60 days, was announced by mediators on June 14, with signing set for June 19. As of this writing, the conflict has not been formally resolved and nuclear negotiations are expected to begin under the framework.
Goldman Sachs projected that under an adverse scenario, 10 weeks of disruption and infrastructure damage, Brent could peak at $160 per barrel before settling at $115 in the fourth quarter of 2026. Even the base case of $105–115 per barrel through mid-year represents a sustained energy shock with no parallel in the post-2008 global economy.
Sri Lanka: The Compound Vulnerability
Sri Lanka has a particular relationship with oil price shocks that is unlike almost any other country of its size. It imports 100% of its oil. Its domestic energy infrastructure is built almost entirely around petroleum products. Its foreign exchange reserves, rebuilt painstakingly from near-zero during the 2022 crisis to $6.46 billion by the time the NPP government assumed office, have since grown sluggishly reaching only $6.87 billion by early 2026, a modest gain that offered little buffer against a shock of this magnitude, remain thin relative to the country’s import requirements. And it routes the overwhelming majority of its oil imports through the Strait of Hormuz.
When that strait closed in March, 2026, Sri Lanka’s exposure was immediate, structural, and arithmetically severe. The fuel import bill jumped 74.7% year-on-year to US$630 million in March, 2026, alone. Reserves fell 3.8% to approximately $6.7 billion after the country spent $1.5 billion on fuel imports in the first four months of the year. Sri Lanka’s monthly storage capacity covers only one month of consumption, making it acutely vulnerable to supply disruptions that persist beyond a few weeks.
The exchange rate impact was direct and rapid. The Sri Lankan rupee, which had traded at approximately Rs. 300 to the US dollar at the start of 2026, fell sharply from early March. The currency tumbled 8.7% from its pre-conflict level within weeks. By late May 2026, commercial bank selling rates stood at approximately Rs. 334 per dollar, a 5.4% year-to-date depreciation against the greenback.
Every rupee of depreciation compounds the damage: a dollar-priced barrel of oil that cost Rs. 21,300 at Rs. 300/$ costs Rs. 23,700 at Rs. 334/$, before accounting for the price rise in the barrel itself.
The compounding of the exchange rate depreciation on top of the oil price surge created a fuel price crisis that has no precedent in the post-2022 recovery period. Petrol 92 at CEYPETCO stations, which stood at Rs. 293 per litre 12 weeks before, had risen to Rs. 434 per litre by late May, a 48% increase in the space of three months. The true import and distribution cost of diesel was approximately Rs. 750 per litre, requiring a government subsidy of Rs. 57 billion over a three-month period to keep pump prices at Rs. 407.
The Central Bank’s Painful Choice
The Central Bank of Sri Lanka faced the classic emerging market dilemma that oil shocks create: a currency under pressure from capital outflows and import costs, combined with inflation driven by energy prices, in a context where raising interest rates to defend the currency would choke off the economic recovery that the country had barely begun.
On May 26, 2026, the CBSL made its call. It raised the overnight policy rate by 100 basis points to 8.75%, its first monetary tightening in three years, and the largest single hike since the depths of the financial crisis in March 2023. Seven out of twelve economists polled by Reuters had predicted only a 25-basis-point move. The shock was deliberate: the CBSL was signalling that price stability had been elevated over growth promotion.
The consequences were immediate. The Colombo Stock Exchange fell 0.8% on the day of the announcement. Growth forecasts were cut, from 4.2% to 3.0% by at least one major equity research firm. The Central Bank Governor acknowledged that the 4–5% growth projection for 2026 was now achievable only “at the lower band.” Capital Economics observed that the rate hike “highlights the country’s vulnerability to the crisis in the Middle East, and is unlikely to be the last unless the crisis subsides soon.
More encouragingly, BMI (a Fitch Solutions unit) projected that the rupee could recover to Rs. 320 per dollar by year-end, on the assumption that the Iran war concludes by June and oil prices ease. An IMF board meeting was scheduled to approve a $700 million tranche to Sri Lanka under the ongoing $2.9 billion programme, a lifeline that, if disbursed, would provide critical reserve support.
The Broader Lesson
What the 2026 Iran war has demonstrated, with a clarity that no academic model can replicate, is that geopolitical shocks are not symmetric in their exchange rate effects. The same event that provides a windfall for oil exporters imposes a compound penalty on oil importers, and the penalty is largest for countries whose currencies are weakest, whose reserves are thinnest, whose import dependence is highest, and whose recovery from previous crises is most recent.
Sri Lanka is, in 2026, the canonical case study. It has done almost everything right since 2022: restructured its debt, rebuilt reserves, maintained an IMF programme, restored exchange rate stability, and begun recovering economically. None of that inoculated it against an exogenous shock of this magnitude. The rupee’s 8.7% fall from pre-conflict levels, the $1.5 billion fuel import bill in four months, the 100-basis-point emergency rate hike, these are the costs a small, import-dependent, oil-importing island economy pays when the world’s energy arteries are severed by war.
There is a policy lesson embedded in these numbers. Sri Lanka’s energy vulnerability, its total dependence on imported fossil fuels routed through a single geopolitical chokepoint, is not merely an economic problem. It is a national security problem. The Strait of Hormuz is not a permanent fixture of reliable global trade. The 2026 war has proven, at enormous cost, that it can be closed. Any serious national energy strategy must treat that closure not as a tail risk but as a planning scenario.
The hard work of diversifying energy sources, accelerating renewable capacity, building strategic petroleum reserves, and reducing the share of petroleum in the import bill is not merely desirable. Since February 28, 2026, it has become existential.
(The writer, a senior Chartered Accountant and professional banker, is Professor at SLIIT, Malabe.
Views expressed in this article are personal.)
Features
Forest cover loss threatens rare freshwater fish in Sinharaja streams
When discussions turn to Sri Lanka’s freshwater fish diversity and the urgent need to conserve it, attention is often focused on rivers, streams, reservoirs and water quality.
Yet scientists are increasingly finding that what happens on the land surrounding these waterways can be just as important as what happens in the water itself.
A recent study led by researcher Janamina Bandara of the Wildlife Conservation Society, Galle, together with researchers Sudath Nanayakkara and Sahan Randeniya, highlights how changes in forest cover caused by human activities can significantly influence freshwater fish populations in the hill streams surrounding the Sinharaja rainforest.
Their research sheds light on a relatively understudied aspect of tropical freshwater ecosystems—how alterations to vegetation cover, particularly through commercial cultivation such as tea and cardamom plantations, affect fish communities inhabiting headwater streams.
Hidden Riches of Tropical Streams

Forest plant saplings
Sri Lanka’s freshwater ecosystems are globally recognised for their remarkable biodiversity and high levels of endemism. However, despite their ecological significance, many ecological processes operating within these habitats remain poorly understood.
“Freshwater ecosystems in the tropics harbour extraordinary biodiversity, but many of the ecological relationships within these systems are still not fully documented,” researcher Janamina Bandara told The Island.
The study focused on sub-montane streams in the Sinharaja landscape, examining how varying levels of forest cover influence freshwater fish assemblages.
Researchers investigated whether fish communities differed between streams flowing through relatively undisturbed forests and those surrounded by modified vegetation resulting from agricultural activities.
Spotlight on a Critically Endangered Species

Leaf litter bay / Restoration activities
Particular attention was given to the critically endangered Rakwana loach (Schistura madhavai), a highly restricted endemic fish species first described from the Suriyakanda-Rakwana region.
Commonly referred to as a hill-stream loach, the species inhabits clear, fast-flowing streams and is considered highly sensitive to environmental disturbances.
According to Bandara, while broad community-level analyses did not reveal dramatic differences across all fish populations, species-specific responses painted a very different picture.
“Our findings show that Schistura madhavai exhibits a clear preference for streams flowing through intact forest habitats,” he explained. “The species becomes less common in areas where surrounding vegetation has been altered by human activities.”
Why Forests Matter to Fish
Forests bordering streams play multiple ecological roles. They regulate water temperature by providing shade, contribute organic matter that supports aquatic food webs, stabilise stream banks and help maintain water quality.
When these forests are removed or replaced with plantation crops, the resulting environmental changes can cascade through freshwater ecosystems.
Bandara noted that altered forest cover can influence water chemistry, microclimatic conditions, stream-bed composition and the availability of food resources.
“As riparian vegetation changes, a series of environmental conditions within the stream also change. Sensitive species such as Schistura madhavai appear particularly vulnerable to these shifts and may gradually disappear from modified habitats,” he said.
The research suggests that even subtle changes in habitat structure can have disproportionate impacts on species with narrow ecological requirements.
The Importance of Looking Beyond Numbers

Schistura madhavai
One of the most intriguing findings of the study is that ecosystem degradation may not always be apparent when scientists assess entire fish communities collectively.
In some instances, environmental variables appeared to have little effect on overall fish abundance or diversity. However, when individual species were examined separately, clear patterns emerged.
For example, variations in the amount of detritus—organic matter that accumulates on stream beds and serves as a vital food resource—did not significantly affect the overall fish assemblage. Yet for certain species, including habitat specialists, such changes proved critically important.
“This highlights a key conservation challenge,” Bandara said. “If we only look at total fish numbers or community-wide patterns, we may overlook serious declines occurring among environmentally sensitive species.”
Indicator Species as Ecological Sentinels
The findings underscore the importance of using so-called “indicator species” in environmental monitoring programmes.
Indicator species are organisms whose presence, absence or abundance reflects the health of an ecosystem. Because they respond rapidly to environmental change, they can provide early warnings of ecological degradation.
The Rakwana loach appears to fit this role exceptionally well.
“Species with narrow habitat requirements often act as ecological sentinels,” Bandara observed. “Monitoring them can provide a much clearer picture of ecosystem health than relying solely on broad biodiversity assessments.”
For conservation practitioners, this means that protecting sensitive endemic species may also help safeguard entire freshwater ecosystems.
Restoring Streamside Forests
Perhaps the study’s most important conservation message concerns the restoration of degraded riparian forests—the vegetation growing alongside streams and rivers.
Researchers argue that restoring these streamside habitats should be a priority in freshwater biodiversity conservation efforts.
Healthy riparian vegetation provides shade, reduces erosion, filters pollutants, enhances habitat complexity and supports the intricate ecological interactions upon which aquatic life depends.
“The restoration of degraded riparian forests is likely to be one of the most effective conservation measures for protecting freshwater biodiversity,” Bandara emphasised.
Such efforts could prove particularly valuable in landscapes where agricultural expansion has fragmented natural habitats.

Awareness sessions
A Broader Lesson for Conservation
The study offers a timely reminder that freshwater conservation cannot be achieved by focusing exclusively on water bodies themselves. The surrounding landscape matters immensely.
From the mist-laden streams flowing down the Sinharaja foothills to the countless rivulets nourishing Sri Lanka’s river systems, the fate of freshwater biodiversity is intimately linked to the health of adjacent forests.
As conservationists grapple with accelerating habitat loss and climate-related pressures, the research demonstrates that protecting and restoring forest cover may be just as important as safeguarding the streams themselves.
In the case of the elusive Rakwana loach, the message is clear: save the forest, and you may save the fish.
For Sri Lanka’s unique freshwater biodiversity, that lesson could not be more important.
By Ifham Nizam
Features
Turning Promises into Justice
Sri Lankans have reason to take satisfaction in their country’s latest international achievement. Sri Lanka has climbed 14 places in the 2026 Global Peace Index to rank 67 in the world out of 163 countries that were assessed. At a time when global peacefulness is reported to be at its lowest level since the inception of the Index, and when more countries are experiencing deterioration than improvement, Sri Lanka’s progress stands out. The ranking reflects the country’s recovery from nearly three decades of war, its efforts to strengthen political stability and public security, and its resilience in overcoming the economic and political crises of recent years. The Global Peace Index assesses the strength of institutions, societal safety and security, and the capacity of societies to manage conflict peacefully.
The challenge is to consolidate the gains that have been made and address those unresolved issues that continue to cast a shadow over the country’s future. It is in this context that two recent announcements by the government assume particular significance. Foreign Minister Vijitha Herath has announced that the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA), one of the most controversial laws in the country, will be repealed and replaced within two months. A report prepared by a committee appointed to make recommendations has already been handed over to him. According to the minister, the new legislation, to be known as the State Prevention of Terrorism Act, incorporates recommendations from civil society and is intended to comply with international standards on counter terrorism.
At the same time, Justice and National Integration Minister Harshana Nanayakkara has reaffirmed the government’s commitment to uncovering the truth about missing persons. During a visit to the Chemmani mass grave excavation site in Jaffna, he stated that the excavations should be completed expeditiously so that justice can be done and assured that the necessary resources have been allocated for the task. The excavations are taking place under judicial supervision with the participation of forensic experts, archaeologists, lawyers and representatives of the Office on Missing Persons. These commitments made by the government address two of the most contentious issues that have troubled Sri Lanka for decades. They also suggest that the government believes the country is now in a position to deal with difficult questions from its past rather than postpone them indefinitely.
After Breakthroughs
The timing of the pledge to repeal the PTA is particularly noteworthy. For many years successive governments promised to replace the law but failed to do so. Sri Lanka undertook to repeal it in 2017 as part of its commitments linked to retaining GSP Plus trade concessions by the European Union. Yet despite repeated assurances the law remained in force. The question therefore arises as to why the government now appears determined to act. One possible explanation is that the Easter Sunday investigations have reached a decisive stage. The investigation into the bombings that killed more than 260 people in 2019 appears to have made significant breakthroughs. If these investigations continue along their present course, it is possible that accountability will extend beyond those who directly carried out the attacks to those who may have facilitated, enabled or been part of a wider criminal conspiracy.
There is broad agreement within society that those who masterminded the dastardly Easter bombing must be held accountable and that the victims deserve the truth and justice. However, it is important that the process by which responsibility is determined is seen by the public to be fair, lawful and impartial. If those accused are convicted following a transparent judicial process that respects due process and the rule of law, the outcome is far more likely to gain acceptance across society. This is where the repeal of the PTA becomes important. A transition from a law associated with prolonged detention and exceptional powers to one that is more consistent with human rights standards would strengthen rather than weaken the legitimacy of the investigations. Accountability obtained through a process that is visibly fair will be more durable and less vulnerable to allegations of political motivation or selective justice.
The Chemmani excavations may also provide an example of how such credibility can be built. The process is taking place under judicial supervision and in full public view with the participation of independent experts. Whatever conclusions emerge, and follow up action is decided on, the process itself should command respect because it is transparent and accountable. The same principles can be applied to the Easter Sunday investigations. Public confidence is strengthened when investigations are conducted openly, when legal safeguards are respected and when the rights of both victims and accused persons are protected. The significance of these investigations may extend beyond the tragedy itself. There is likely to be an overlap between those who are eventually found responsible for the Easter Sunday conspiracy and elements of the state apparatus that exercised power during the final stages of the war.
Setting Precedent
For many years Sri Lanka has struggled to address allegations of wartime abuses. The issue has remained politically sensitive because it touches upon the conduct of those who were regarded by many as wartime heroes. Yet if the Easter Sunday investigations establish that senior officials can be investigated and held accountable when evidence warrants it, an important precedent will have been set. Once the deck is cleared through the Easter Sunday investigations and the judicial process that follows, it may become less difficult to address allegations relating to wartime abuses, including those connected to sites such as Chemmani where evidence is now being painstakingly uncovered. This would also strengthen Sri Lanka’s position internationally.
Since the end of the war in 2009, the country has remained under varying degrees of scrutiny by the United Nations Human Rights Council. In October 2025, the Council renewed the mandate of the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights to continue collecting and preserving evidence relating to past violations. The next review of Sri Lanka is due in September this year. The government now has an opportunity to demonstrate that Sri Lanka is capable of addressing difficult issues through its own institutions and according to its own democratic values. The commitments to repeal the PTA and to pursue investigations into missing persons can be seen in that light. Those who were victimized query as to what happened to their loved ones and to the information they know full well they entrusted to the government authorities and to the commissions of inquiry that were appointed. These are opportunities to show that accountability and national ownership can go hand in hand.
Reconciliation requires the difficult task of remembering truthfully. Too often Sri Lanka has sought stability by postponing difficult questions. Yet unresolved grievances do not disappear. They persist across generations and continue to shape political attitudes and communal relationships. Sri Lanka’s rise in the Global Peace Index is an achievement worth celebrating. But the true measure of peace is not only the absence of conflict. It is the presence of justice, trust and confidence in public institutions. The government’s commitments on PTA repeal, the Easter Sunday investigations and the search for truth regarding the disappeared suggest an awareness that old approaches have run their course. The government has an opportunity to break with the patterns of the past. The test now lies in implementation.
by Jehan Perera
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