Editorial
Perpetrators as preachers
Monday 7th June, 2021
A recent meeting between President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and British High Commissioner Sarah Hulton has received much publicity. They reportedly discussed the Geneva resolution against Sri Lanka, among other things. Interestingly, their meeting took place close on the heels of Germany’s apology for the colonial-era genocide in Namibia, and France’s admission of its role in the 1994 ethnic cleansing campaign in Rwanda, where about 800,000 ethnic Tutsis and Hutus perished; France has confessed that it did not heed warnings of the impending carnage.
While discussing the Geneva resolution with the British HC, the Sri Lankan side should have raised the following human rights issues with her and inquired whether the UK would tender an apology for its crimes against this country. In 1817-18, the British resorted to the scorched-earth policy to crush the Wellassa rebellion. Tens of thousands of people were massacred and all fruit-bearing trees felled. Farm animals were wiped out, and over one hundred thousand paddy fields, from which Wellassa has derived its name, reduced to rubble. All males in the area including children were put to the sword by the marauding British troops. What the British perpetrated were genocide and gendercide. Moreover, the UK government, which HC Hulton represents, has allowed a senior LTTE leader, Adele Balasingham, who brainwashed and trained female Tiger cadres responsible for massacring civilians and other crimes, to live in London as a free woman while the British leaders are calling for action against war crimes. Adele’s late husband, Anton Balasingham, who justified LTTE terror and strove to gain international legitimacy for it, was also a British citizen.
The British HC should also have been asked why any UK defence attachés should be stationed here because the British governments do not heed their advice, observations, etc. The Johnson administration has refused to take on board the views of British defence attache, Lt. Col. Anthony Gash, on the final stages of the Vanni war. The same goes for the US defence attaches, for Washington has also rejected as worthless its defence attache, Lt. Col. Lawrence Smith’s observations on Sri Lanka’s war.
While discussing the resolution adopted by the UN human rights arm against Sri Lanka, President Rajapaksa should have taken up with the British HC the UN public health arm’s criticism of the rich countries including the UK for vaccine hoarding. The People’s Vaccine Alliance has also lashed out at the developed nations for stockpiling Covid-19 vaccines at the expense of 70 lower-income countries. The Global North does not have to give away vaccines; if it stops stockpiling them, they will be available in other parts of the world.
The Sri Lankan side should also have discussed with the British HC the international human rights situation, and inquired from her why former British Prime Minister Tony Blair had not been brought to justice yet for his role in killing hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians including half a million children in an illegal war for oil waged on the basis of falsified intelligence dossiers. The British HC should also have been asked when the thousands of Chagossians, who were forcibly evicted by the UK for the construction of the Diego Garcia military base of the US between 1968 and 1973, would be allowed to return to their homeland. This question should also be posed to the US, which pontificates to others on human rights. The UN General Assembly has, in a 116-6 vote, affirmed a 13-1 International Court of Justice verdict that the British rule in the Chagos Archipelago is unlawful. Shouldn’t the UK and the US, before asking others to respect human rights and UNHRC resolutions abide by UN decisions and lead by example?
President Rajapaksa can raise the aforementioned issues with the British HC when they meet next and ask her when the UK will tender an apology for massacres here and make reparation.
It is wrong to say that the UK, Canada, the US, etc., have no right to champion democracy and be critical of human rights violations in places like Sri Lanka because they themselves are perpetrators of grave crimes. They do have a right to defend democracy and human rights. But they must apologise for their own crimes including genocide, gendercide and the plunder of resources in other countries and pay compensation, and thereby demonstrate that they feel remorse for their brutality. That is the least they can do to prevent themselves being seen as a bunch of hypocrites.
Meanwhile, whenever Sri Lankan leaders representing either the government or the Opposition meet foreign leaders or envoys, they invariably ask for financial assistance, thus reducing themselves to the level of mendicants near the Colombo Town Hall, where beggars hare in droves, seeking alms when a car pulls over. If these worthies who are leading ‘whiskey lifestyles’ on the country’s ‘toddy income’, as someone has rightly said, refrain from wasting and stealing public funds, perhaps there will be no need for foreign assistance. They also have huge amounts of leftover campaign funds, which are either invested through various fronts or stashed away in offshore accounts. Instead of panhandling, why can’t these grandees donate a fraction of their ill-gotten wealth so that the country can buy vaccines, PCR machines, ICU beds, etc., and provide economic relief to the poor they shed copious tears for?
Editorial
Zimbabwe, here we come?
Monday 6th July, 2026
President Anura Kumara Dissanayake’s recent attempt in Parliament to defuse the ongoing controversy over his government’s plan to extend the retirement ages of the judges of the Supreme Court (SC) and the Court of Appeal (CA) has been in vain. He spoke at length, offering excuses for his failure to initiate action to fill judicial vacancies, but they did not sound convincing. They have only prompted the Bar Association of Sri Lanka (BASL) and other lawyers’ associations to reiterate their opposition to the prospect of a constitutional amendment being moved to raise the retirement ages of the SC and CA judges.
Addressing a public forum, on Saturday, BASL President Rajeev Amarasuriya reiterated his association’s opposition to the proposed move to change the SC and CA judges’ retirement ages arbitrarily. The BASL’s position has been endorsed by several legal associations, including the Colombo Law Society, the Colombo High Court Lawyers’ Association (CHCLA), LAWASIA, and the Commonwealth Lawyers’ Association (CLA).
CLA President Steven Thiru has gone to the extent of warning that Sri Lanka risks repeating Zimbabwe’s judicial crisis if it goes ahead with its controversial plan to extend the retirement ages of sitting superior court judges arbitrarily. Stating that the CLA did not object to the extension of the mandatory retirement age of judges, given changing demographic realities, Thiru pointed out that the danger lay in the politicised context and particularised application of the proposed move by the sitting executive and the legislature to alter the tenure of a few judges. He stated that Sri Lankan leaders had to heed “the sobering lesson of the Zimbabwean crisis; when a ruling government alters the rules of judicial longevity mid-stream, the damage to the legal fabric is severe. “If Sri Lanka proceeds with an ad hoc, non-transparent extension of Superior Court judges’ tenure without a broad consultative process, it risks plunging its legal system into a similar crisis of legitimacy,” he warned, noting that a structural policy matter must not be perceived as a personalised intervention; to do so would fundamentally invite public cynicism, compromise the appearance of judicial neutrality and shatter the very institutional stability that is to be protected.”
It is hoped that the JVP-NPP government will heed the concerns of lawyers’ associations, abandon its plan at issue and ensure that constitutional reforms follow proper consultation, without undermining judicial independence or public confidence in the judiciary. The JVP/NPP came to power promising a new Constitution and not politically motivated piecemeal constitutional amendments. It said in its election manifesto, inter alia, “A new constitution will be drafted and passed through a referendum with necessary changes, if any, after going through a public discourse” (A Thriving Nation: A Beautiful Life, 2024, p. 109).
As the CHCLA, in a letter to President Dissanayake, has rightly pointed out, “the Judicial Service of Sri Lanka is constituted by officers who ascend through a rigorous hierarchy … This progression is not merely a career ambition; it is a legitimate expectation, recognised and protected by the principles of natural justice and the law governing public service. Officers of the Judicial Service plan their professional and personal lives around the reasonable anticipation of such advancement.” The CHCLA’s views deserve serious consideration.
Meanwhile, Chief Justice Preethi Padman Surasena, addressing a group of newly recruited Magistrates, at Sri Lanka Judges’ Institute, recently, stressed the need for judicial officers to do their best to preserve public confidence in the judiciary. A country could be destroyed by a bad judiciary in the same way it could be devastated by natural disasters, the Chief Justice said, stressing the need to safeguard the integrity, independence and dignity of the judiciary. His message was loud and clear.
However, some factors that erode public confidence in the judiciary are beyond the control of judges. The alleged government move to extend the retirement ages of the judges of the SC and the CA is a case in point. It is widely seen as an instance of political interference with the judiciary. One can only hope that the Sr Lankan legal fraternity and international lawyers’ associations will be able to knock some sense into the JVP-NPP government, and prevent this country from facing the same fate as Zimbabwe, where a serious constitutional crisis erupted in 2021, when its Constitution was arbitrarily amended to change the judges’ retirement ages. That issue raised broader concerns about the separation of powers and judicial independence. The constitutional amendment undermined public confidence in courts and amounted to political interference with the judiciary. Another crisis is the last thing Sri Lanka needs at this juncture.
Editorial
Income status: Reality and challenges
The World Bank’s annual income reclassification, which takes effect every July 1, has placed Sri Lanka, Vietnam, the Philippines, Jordan and the Pacific state of Micronesia in the upper-middle income bracket.
Sri Lanka’s elevation to the upper-middle income status has gladdened many a heart. It is no mean achievement for a country emerging from a crippling economic crisis that led to foreign currency reserves woes, shortages, queues, prolonged power cuts, a steep rise in inflation, and unprecedented political upheavals. However, one should not lose sight of the fact that although the reclassification is a marker of resilience, Sri Lanka only narrowly crossed the threshold, according to economic analysts.
Sri Lanka will now face some challenges. The upper-middle income status generally indicates economic progress and can help improve investor confidence, which Sri Lanka perhaps needs more than anything else to rebuild its forex reserves and be ready to resume foreign debt repayment in earnest. However, a higher income category could reduce Sri Lanka’s access to concessional loans, grants and some forms of international assistance. Commercial borrowing generally carries higher interest rates and shorter repayment periods than concessional development loans.
Trade preference schemes such as the EU’s GSP and GSP+ have stood developing countries, such as Sri Lanka, in good stead. These trade concessions are based on specific eligibility criteria, not income classification alone, but moving into higher income categories can eventually affect eligibility under some preferential trade arrangements, as some economists have pointed out. There’s the rub.
The biggest challenge for Sri Lanka is to ensure that its economy will become more productive, competitive and resilient so that it can lessen its dependence on international assistance, with the help of sustainable growth and investment, as countries like Vietnam have done.
Policymakers should reflect on the state of the economy and ordinary Sri Lankans’ lot, which has not improved despite the country’s income classification upgrade. Such categorisations based on credible data may be technically sound and useful in making economic decisions, but they cannot be considered realistic and reliable yardsticks where the wealth distribution is concerned.
The upper-middle income status usually masks inequality. There are economic tools to gauge income inequality, which affects social stability, poverty levels, and access to education and healthcare, but they too have limitations. It is imperative that the issue of income inequality be addressed as a matter of national priority.
Sri Lanka faced an economic crisis in 2022, despite a previous income classification upgrade, mainly because it did not get its macroeconomic fundamentals right, and acted in a reckless manner. True, the Easter Sunday terror attacks and the Covid-19 epidemic took a heavy toll on the economy, but Sri Lanka would have been able to overcome their impact if its economic imperatives had not been subjugated to the political agenda of the government in power at that time.
If action had been taken to prevent a sharp drop in state revenue by keeping taxes at a realistic level and rationalising pandemic relief while seeking IMF assistance at the first signs of trouble, the economy may have been able to withstand internal and external shocks without going into a tailspin.
Sri Lanka should emulate Vietnam, whose income classification upgrade follows a different track and is a story of growth. Vietnam’s gross national income per capita exceeded the USD 4,636 threshold because of manufacturing export growth. Its GDP expanded at approximately 8 percent in 2025, driven by electronics and consumer goods assembly. Vietnam has reportedly set an ambitious goal of achieving the coveted high-income status by 2045. Sri Lanka, too, should raise the bar for itself and work towards achieving its economic goals.
Editorial
Reward cops, probe Excise officers
Saturday 4th July, 2026
The Police Department has its fair share of rogue elements who have brought the law enforcement authorities into disrepute and make them get bad press. But the police are not short of personnel who even go above and beyond the call of duty to nab lawbreakers and ensure public safety. Sadly, their good work often goes unappreciated.
Unit 2 of the Western Range (North) has done the police proud. On 28 June, its men and officers raided a house in Malabe, where illicit liquor was bottled, and arrested six suspects with as many as 18,000 bottles of illicit liquor.
The bottles of counterfeit arrack complete with security stickers and ready for distribution were virtually indistinguishable from the genuine products, according to investigators. Nobody knows how many bottles of counterfeit arrack had been produced there and how injurious the illicit brew is to health.
Under interrogation, the suspects revealed that the illicit brew had been distributed in the Eastern Province. On Thursday, the police team that conducted the Malabe raid rushed to Batticaloa, where they seized a large number of bottles of illicit liquor transported from Malabe. The police officers who took part in the raid deserve praise.
While the police were busy packing the bottles of illicit brew taken into custody and doing necessary paperwork, a group of Excise officers materialised, and claimed that the police had made a documentation error. Their intervention led to a recount of the bottles of counterfeit liquor in custody, but the allegation turned out to be baseless. Obviously, the Excise Department personnel did not take kindly to the police raid.
One of the police officers told the Excise officers some home truths, one being that the police were doing what the Excise Department should have done. One cannot but agree with him.
The police had to move in as the Excise officers had failed to carry out their duties and functions. The latter should have been able to trace the untested brew transported and sold illegally in liquor outlets in the East. It is possible that the Malabe brew, as it were, was distributed in other parts of the country as well.
Illicit liquor has claimed many lives in this country during the past several years and therefore the brew, seized in Malabe and in some parts of the Eastern Province, must be tested urgently to see if it contains harmful substances. One may recall that in January 2026, six people died in Wennappuwa after consuming arrack purchased from a licensed liquor outlet. Such tragedies occur due to contamination, counterfeit infiltration and supply-chain frauds.
As for the police raids in Malabe and the East, there is reason to believe that so many bottles of illicit liquor could not have been distributed and sold in licensed outlets, unbeknownst to the Excise Department personnel, who are paid with public funds to keep a watchful eye on liquor retailers, among others, and act on any transgressions. That the police had to do their job is an indictment of the Excise officers, especially those under whose nose the illicit brew was sold in the East.
A member of the police team which conducted the raid in the East has asked how the security stickers meant for the legally produced bottles of liquor got into the wrong hands. A thorough investigation should be conducted to ascertain whether Excise officers were involved in the liquor racket and why they confronted the police in the East instead of cooperating.
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