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Midweek Review

Deafening silence of vociferous diplomatic community

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German Ambassador Jorn Rohde accompanied by both local and foreign journalists at the Mannar mass graves site

 

By Shamindra Ferdinando

Sri Lanka is ‘blessed’ with a very vocal section of the diplomatic community. Those who represent this grouping work overtime on domestic issues. During the conflict, they did their best to throw a lifeline to the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) when it was literally gasping for its last breath. They stepped up their efforts in the post-war period.

Sri Lanka lacked a workable strategy to deal with growing external interventions. This grouping worked through some political parties, a section of the civil society groups, and the media. They intervened in a spate of issues, ranging from the disappearance of NGO activist Kathiravel Thayapararajah, in Sept 2009, to safety and security of one-time Director of the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) Shani Abeysekera.

The grouping backed any issue that facilitated its overall strategy to tarnish the country for defeating the world’s most ruthless terrorist outfit by their own reckoning. The grouping never forgave the Rajapaksas for bringing the war against the LTTE to a successful conclusion, in May 2009. The UN has been deeply involved in the high profile politically-motivated operation. There cannot be a better example than UN Resident Coordinator Hanaa Singer’s intervention in the simmering issue of cremation of Muslim victims of the raging Covid-19 epidemic.

Singer, in a letter dated Nov 12, 2020, addressed to Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa, pressed the government to end the cremation of all Covid-19 victims. The controversial letter, also copied to Foreign Minister Dinesh Gunawardena, Justice Minister Ali Sabry, PC, and Health Minister Pavithradevi Wanniarachchi, challenged the disposal through cremation the bodies of those who died of the Covid-19 infection. Singer backed UN intervention on the basis of a plethora of requests from the Muslim community, as well as others.

Singer faulted Sri Lanka for what she called a discriminatory policy adopted as regards disposal of bodies.

A section of the media received the Colombo-based UN head’s letter hours after it was delivered to Offices of the Prime Minister and Foreign, Justice and Health ministers. Who released Singer’s letter? Did the UN Resident Coordinator’s Office make the letter available to the media? Or did the PM’s Office, or did the ministers, Gunawardena, Sabry or Wanniarachchi release it? Who benefitted from the public getting to know the UN intervention in purely a domestic matter? The story received significant international media coverage. Interested parties felt the issue could be quite useful at the March 2021 sessions at the Geneva-based United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) sessions to further hammer the country.

The UN Resident Coordinator’s push to end mandatory cremation here received the backing of three members of the Sri Lanka Core Group at Geneva. The Sri Lanka Core Group comprises the UK, Canada, Germany, North Macedonia, Malawi and Montenegro. Can one imagine a justifiable reason for North Macedonia, Malawi and Montenegro to be part of the Sri Lanka Core Group except to serve as lackeys of the West? The UK, Canada and Germany backed the moves to end mandatory cremation. They exploited the issue to the hilt. Those who cannot stomach Sri Lanka’s triumph over terrorism always sought to isolate the country’s wartime leadership. But, they didn’t have an issue with the war-winning Army Chief General Sarath Fonseka as he had succumbed to political maneuvering that paved the way for the Sinha Regiment veteran to challenge President Mahinda Rajapaksa at the January 2010 presidential election, the first major national poll, after the near three-decade old war ended. Fonseka lost by a staggering 1.8mn votes.

So, it’s no wonder that one of the first things that the Iraqi rebellion did after the Western-led invasion of that country was to blow up the whole UN compound in Baghdad for the sordid role the world body played in building up a bogus case against Iraq of there being weapons of mass destruction in that country, on which the US-led invasion there took place.

 

Core Group worried over Easter

Sunday suspect

 At the behest of diplomatic missions in Colombo, the UK, at the ongoing 47th Geneva sessions, on June 22, 2021, on behalf of Sri Lanka Core Group raised the following issues. The grouping (1)stressed former CID Director Shani Abeysekera’s safety and security (2) plight of human rights lawyer Hejaaz Hizbullah (3)continuing restrictions on memorialization (4) declared support for the Bar Association of Sri Lanka as regards the need for an independent and impartial investigation into recent deaths in police custody.

Let me, first of all, appreciate the Sri Lanka Core Group taking a tough stand on deaths in police custody. The government should be embarrassed over continuing deaths in police custody. The Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka and the Bar Association of Sri Lanka issued strong statements demanding an end to extra judicial killings. The police should be held accountable for such killings and Parliament cannot absolve itself of the responsibility for police ‘executions’. The SLPP government owes an explanation why tangible measures haven’t been taken to end police killings.

The Sri Lanka Core Group statement conveniently refrained from mentioning that Attorney-at-Law Hejaaz Hizbullah had been held under the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) in connection with the 2019 Easter Sunday attacks which claimed the lives of 270 men, women and children and caused injuries to 500 other totally innocent folks. Among the dead and the wounded were several dozens of foreigners. The Sri Lanka Core Group also refrained from making any reference to the LTTE when it raised objections to continuing restrictions on memorialization.

The Core Group leader, the UK, and Canada, are home to substantial numbers of Sri Lankan terrorists. One-time British High Commission employee LTTE theoretician Anton Balasingham received British citizenship and lived there, in style, until his death in Dec 2006. Adele Balasingham, who once encouraged young girls to join the LTTE terrorists and publicly tied cyanide capsules round the necks of those girls, lives in the UK while the British HC preaches post-war national reconciliation to us.

The much-touted Canadian stand on the accountability issue in Sri Lanka is nothing but a joke now. The discovery of 600 or more remains of children at the Marieval Indian Residential School, which operated from 1899 to 1997, in the province of Saskatchewan, and last month’s, discovery of some 215 remains, at a similar school in British Columbia, exposed what fake do-gooders they are in a land they plundered from its natives. China raised the issue at the ongoing Geneva sessions. The media exposed the murder of indigenous children in the wake of Canada recognizing genocide in Sri Lanka. Actually, Geneva should call for a comprehensive investigation into Canadian murder of hundreds of native children they had forcefully taken from their families, under a much publicised project to ‘civilise natives’, while Canada is still trying to hoodwink the world with concerns over alleged continuing  human rights abuses in some selected countries, like China and Sri Lanka.

Canadian PM has made a foolish bid to divert attention by requesting Pope Francis to come to Canada to apologise for church-run boarding schools where hundreds of unmarked graves have been found.

It would be pertinent to mention what Jiang Duan, Minister of the Chinese mission to the United Nations in Geneva said about Canada violating human rights of its indigenous people. Duan urged the UNHRC to keep following the human rights issues in the North American country. That statement had been made by China on behalf of a group of countries. The writer is glad that Sri Lanka had been among that group. Canada, home to thousands of ex-Sri Lankan terrorists and their families, continue to harass Sri Lanka at every opportunity, for political reasons. The recent passage of Bill 104 in Canada that recognized genocide in Sri Lanka, exposed Canadian strategy meant to appease Tamil Canadians of Sri Lankan origin with an eye on their huge vote bank.

 Quoting reports, the top Chinese diplomat said over 150,000 indigenous children had been forcibly taken away from their parents and sent to boarding schools during 19th and 20th centuries.

“They were subjected to malnutrition, and many fell victims to abuse and rape. At least 4,000 children died of disease, neglect, accidents or abuse while at schools,” Jiang said, calling for a thorough and impartial investigation into all cases where crimes were committed against the indigenous people, especially children, so as to bring those responsible to justice, and offer full remedy to victims.

“We are also deeply concerned over the illegal killings of civilians by Canadian overseas military servicemen and systemic racial discrimination, xenophobia, Islamophobia within Canada,” Duan noted, adding that Canada has also repeatedly exploited human rights issue as a tool to promote its political agenda.

 

Oxford AstraZeneca vaccine in short supply

As the writer earlier stressed, a section of the Colombo-based diplomatic community, in a way functions as a partisan and unashamed political grouping. An influential section of the civil society and the media cooperate with the grouping resulting in various issues being taken up. They aggressively addressed Sri Lanka’s policy of cremating bodies of all Covid-19 victims. Those who had accepted and appreciated external interventions on behalf of the Muslim community must have been quite surprised over their silence against the backdrop of nearly 580,000 people so far deprived of AstraZeneca/Covishield booster shot.

Sri Lanka shouldn’t have expected their intervention if they followed diplomatic norms in other matters. But, having fought for the Muslims’ right to bury their Covid-19 dead and expressed concerns over an Easter Sunday terror suspect and defended attempts to politicize war dead, the UN and its partners shouldn’t have remained silent over Sri Lanka being deprived of Oxford AstraZeneca required for the second dose.

Shouldn’t UN Resident Coordinator Singer have at least taken up the matter with New York as nearly 600,000 Sri Lankans faced an increased threat from the deadly Delta variant? Those missions eternally concerned for the wellbeing of Sri Lanka did nothing to facilitate sufficient stock of Oxford AstraZeneca vaccines.

Swiss project

 Civil society groups, too, remained silent in spite of reports of Western powers hoarding vaccines while smaller economies struggled to cope up with the situation. Those who expressed concern over the safety and security of interdicted SSP Abeysekera as well as the wellbeing of Hejaaz Hizbullah, remained quiet about nearly 600,000 deprived of AstraZeneca second dose.

People haven’t forgotten how a high profile Swiss operation meant to embarrass President Gotabaya Rajapaksa went awry in Nov-Dec 2019 in the immediate aftermath of the last presidential election. The Swiss Embassy, in Colombo, went to the extent of trying to evacuate its local employee Garnier Banister Francis, formerly Siriyalatha Perera, and her family, after a swift police investigation exposed the Swiss plot. They had been so hard pressed to prevent the exposure of the blatant lie, a ridiculous attempt was made to drive Francis holed up in the diplomatic mission straight to the Bandaranaike International Airport (BIA) and evacuate her and family in an air ambulance that was kept on standby there. President Gotabaya Rajapaksa personally intervened to thwart the Swiss plot. If they succeeded, the so-called case of Swiss Embassy employee abducted and molested by government agents would have been mentioned in the Sri Lanka Core Group statement issued on June 22 as a gospel truth.

The Swiss intervened with Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa close on the heels of Francis claiming her being abducted near the Embassy. Interested parties staged the embassy drama in the immediate aftermath of Inspector Nishantha Silva of the CID and his family securing political asylum in Switzerland. The fugitive CID officer, too, would have received space in the Core Group’s statement if the Swiss operation succeeded. 

Sarah Newey, GLOBAL HEALTH SECURITY CORRESPONDENT, in a May 12, 2021 report in The Telegraph, titled ‘UK could share 20 pc of doses worldwide and still vaccinate all adults in July, analysis suggests’ discussed the issue at hand against the backdrop of the release of a report by Unicef and Airfinity. A section of the international media dealt with the crisis caused by wealthy ‘hoarding’ vaccine supplies.

Newey reported that the UK could donate 20 percent of its available coronavirus vaccines and remain on track to vaccinate all adults by the end of July, analysis suggested, amidst rising frustrations that wealthy countries hoarded jabs.

 Based on the then supply forecasts, a decision to share a fifth of doses with poorer nations from June would push back Britain’s vaccination timeline by just 10 days, according to analysis by Unicef and the life sciences research facility Airfinity.

 The widespread calls to UK Health Secretary Matt Hancock to resign over the last weekend in the wake of The Sun publishing pictures of Hancock and a colleague, non- executive, director, Department of Health Gina Coladangelo kissing, possibly indicated that he had been too busy to think of sharing a surplus of vaccines.

The Health Secretary was finally forced to quit following The Sun revelation of Hancock and Gina Coladangelo, both married with three children, kissing inside the Department of Health on 6 May.

 

A bungling administration

 The SLPP government, too, should accept responsibility for the crisis caused by its shortfall of AstraZeneca second jab. The Government Medical Officers Association (GMOA), while demanding an orderly inoculation project, took advantage of its position to ensure a second jab for family members, friends and associates. The secret inoculation project carried out by GMOA members at Galle revealed the mismanagement of the whole operation. The police, too, inoculated outsiders, including journalists who sought the intervention of high ranking Cabinet ministers. The government could have avoided the crisis over AstraZeneca second jab if half of the 1,264,000 jabs received from Serum Institute were used as the first jab. Instead, those at the helm of the vaccination drive inoculated as many as 925,242 persons (first jab during late January-early April 2021). The bungling SLPP government never explained why well over half of available AstraZeneca jabs had been used in the first round and the unpardonable nearly one and half month delay in using Sinopharm.  In spite of China delivering 600,000 jabs on March 30, the government didn’t use them. State Minister Dr. Nalaka Godahewa is on record as having said that the delay in using Sinopharm caused many deaths and aggravated the situation. Actually, the Samagi Jana Balavegaya (SJB) should have moved a no-faith motion against the government over Dr. Godahewa’s admission. But SJB too played politics at every turn. With some of its members earlier proclaiming that Lankans would be used as guinea pigs to test Chinese vaccines. Unfortunately, the pathetic main Opposition didn’t even bother to respond to the State Minister’s shocking admission.

 Recently, the British Parliament was told how the British High Commission in Colombo based its wartime assessment on Sri Lanka on a range of sources, including media and civil society. Let me reproduce a question raised by Lord Naseby and response provided by Lord Goldsmith to underscore the way the BHC, Colombo, gathered information. Lord Naseby on April 21, 2021 asked Her Majesty’s government what sources were used to ascertain the situation in Sri Lanka during the civil war in that country between January 1 and May 18, 2009.

Lord Goldsmith responded on April 29, 2021. The following is the response verbatim: “The UK government’s assessment of the situation in Sri Lanka during the civil war was informed by a broad range of internal and open source reporting, including from our High Commission in Colombo, international organizations, civil society and media.”

It would be interesting to know whether any Colombo based international organizations, civil society and media informed the BHC, Colombo of the AstraZeneca crisis at least after Sri Lanka detected the deadly Delta variant. Even if BHC had alerted the disgraced Health Secretary Hancock, he was probably too busy with Gina Coladangelo even to consider Sri Lanka’s requirement.

How can we forget the way Western embassies played politics with the recovery of skeletal remains from what was called the largest mass grave in Mannar? They blindly blamed the Sri Lankan military. Acting on assertions made by Colombo-based diplomatic missions, the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet at the March 2019 sessions faulted the Sri Lankan military over the Mannar mass graves. Geneva was in such a hurry it didn’t even wait for a report from a carbon dating laboratory in the US that subsequently revealed skeletal remains dated back to around 500 years during the European colonial era (1499 to 1719 period.)

The samples were sent to the laboratory after concerns were raised to ascertain if the skeletal remains were of those who were killed during the war between government troops and Tigers which ended in May 2009.

Following the US lab report, Western embassies, one-time LTTE mouthpiece the Tamil National Alliance, the civil society and the media quietly dropped the Mannar issue. Thanks to a US lab report, Mannar mass graves no longer figure in statements issued by the UK-led Sri Lanka Core Group.



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Midweek Review

NPP drowning in sea of scams

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Outgoing Treasury Chief Mahinda Siriwardena congratulates his successor Harshana Suriyapperuma in late June 2025 at the Finance Ministry

The Opposition is pressing for a one-day debate on USD 2.5 mn Treasury theft, which is more like a daylight robbery that had been kept under wraps by Treasury mandarins till ‘Free Lawyers’ made it public. However, the government is strongly opposed to the Opposition proposal. The Opposition is seeking consensus among

different parties to intensify the campaign against the government, struggling to cope up with a spate of controversies. Against the backdrop of the devastating debate on the coal scam, the NPP seems reluctant to face another over the theft of Treasury funds.

By Shamindra Ferdinando

USD 2.5 mn brazen heist at the Treasury several months ago and the bigwigs there obviously dragging their feet over the matter till it was brought to light recently, thanks to the Free Lawyers movement, which has dampened the NPP’s enthusiasm for May Day. The Treasury fiasco humiliated the cocky NPP leadership against the backdrop of damning report issued by the National Audit Office (NAO) that found fault with the government for awarding the coal tender for 2025/2026 period to Trident Champhar Limited of India in violation of tender procedures. The NAO emphasised that the Indian company shouldn’t have even been considered for the tender.

Even after the exposure of the scandalous handling of the coal tender, the NPP, in spite of some rumblings within the party, remained confident of overcoming the growing accusations regarding governance issues. But, the sudden revelation of the loss suffered by the Treasury, and pathetic efforts made by the NPP to suppress the truth, has caused irreparable harm to the ruling party. The arrogant NPP will have to use May Day to defend the government. Instead of preaching to the masses ad nauseum the corruption allegations against previous administrations, the NPP would have to explain such massive failures/corruption, particularly the loss of USD 2.5 mn.

There hadn’t been a previous instance of such an incident at the Treasury. The NPP will have to answer questions posed by ‘Free Lawyers,’ a civil society group that first raised the Treasury issue. On behalf of ‘Free Lawyers,’ its President Maithri Gunaratne, PC, former Governor of several provinces Rajith Keerthi Tennakoon, and Attorney-at-Law Shiral Lakthikala, targeted the government over the unprecedented Treasury heist. The Opposition, too, censured the NPP, with SJB leader Sajith Premadasa, MP, Chairman of Public Finance Committee (CoPF) Dr. Harsha de Silva, MP, and United Republican Front (URF) taking the lead.

The NPP’s excuses, based on claimed raids carried out by hacker/hackers targeting the Treasury, are untenable. The NPP’s position cannot be defended or supported against growing criticism. The coal scam and Treasury fiasco dominated social media, with the Opposition, as well as ordinary citizens, having a field day at the expense of the NPP, a political party that accused its opponents of waste, corruption, irregularities and mismanagement. Its successful propaganda campaigns, at the presidential and parliamentary polls, in September and November, 2024, respectively, were centered on fighting corruption.

Their anti-corruption platform appealed to the people for obvious reasons. Against the backdrop of bankruptcy, declared in May, 2022, after failing to meet debt commitments, the electorate rallied around the NPP that thrived on waste, corruption, irregularities and mismanagement, perpetrated by previous governments. Having bagged the executive presidency in September, 2024, the NPP assured the electorate that the Parliament would be cleansed of evils at the general election. President Anura Kumara Dissanayake declared that the people have been vested with the responsibility of cleansing the Parliament. Dissanayake went a step further when he addressed a public gathering at the 18th mile post on the Negombo-Colombo road. The NPP leader, who also leads the JVP, asserted that there was no need for an Opposition in Parliament and the House should be filled with NPPers.

Dissanayake based his assertion essentially on two failed No-Confidence Motions (NCMs) moved against Ravi Karunanayake and Keheliya Rambukwella in 2016 and 2023, respectively. The NPP/JVP leader found fault with Yahapalanaya and the Wickremesinghe-Rajapaksa government for protecting the two wrongdoers, hence the call to cleanse Parliament.

The results of the parliamentary election proved that the electorate responded very favourably to Dissanayake’s call. Of the 225-seat Parliament, the NPP secured 159 seats, including 18 National List slots. Having accused previous governments of shielding wrongdoers, Dissanayake easily directed the NPP’s steamroller parliamentary group to defeat the NCM moved against Energy Minister Punyakumara Dissanayake (National List) on 10 April, just a few days after the NAO report exposed the coal scam.

First ex-MP as Treasury Secy.

If its own hands are clean, there is no doubt that the NPP now deeply regrets the appointment of ex-NPP National List MP Harshana Suriyapperuma as the Secretary to the Treasury and the Finance Ministry. That appointment was made in June 2025 to fill the vacancy created by the retirement of Mahinda Siriwardana who, along with Governor of the Central Bank Dr. Nandalal Weerasinghe, played a significant role in the country’s post-Aragalaya recovery programme.

Suriyapperuma, who had served as Deputy Minister of Finance and Planning for just seven months, before being appointed the Treasury Secretary/Finance Ministry Secretary, is under heavy fire for suppressing the truth. No less a person than CoPF Chairman Dr. de Silva publicly accused Suriyapperuma of trying to undermine his committee. The SJB has demanded Suriyapperuma’s immediate resignation. Dr. Anil Jayantha succeeded as Deputy Minister of Finance and Planning.

Those who inquired into the crisis-hit Treasury are of the belief that 53-year-old Suriyapperuma lacked the much required experience to fill the shoes of Mahinda Siriwardana. Perhaps, the breach at the Treasury could have been averted if an outsider was not brought in place of Siriwardena. The recent reportage of the incident revealed that Suriyapperuma had been aware of the breach and sought to avoid appearing before the CoPF. The NPP could have responded to the developing situation differently if an ex-MP hadn’t been entrusted with the task of steering the Treasury/Finance Ministry. To make matters worse, President Dissanayake holds the Finance portfolio.

Although the government declared that the theft of USD 2.5 mn had been reported to the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) after initial detection made in January this year, controversy surrounds the failure on the part of law enforcement authorities to bring it to the notice of the courts. Maithri Gunaratne, appearing in Hiru last Saturday (25), questioned why the police failed to inform the relevant Magistrate if the government lodged a complaint in that regard.

Australia has confirmed irregularities in payments owed to their government. Regardless of NPP efforts to blame it on hacker/hackers, the truth is clear. Payments have been made to an account that hadn’t been in the original agreement between the governments of Sri Lanka and Australia. That is the undeniable truth that the NPP cannot suppress by propaganda.

The NPP should be ashamed that such a fraud had been perpetrated on a country still struggling to cope up with the economic destruction caused by the UNP- and the SLFP-led governments with the help of “mission impossible” type roles played by outside interests, especially during Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s tenure using the JVP/Aragalaya.

The world knows how the UNP perpetrated the Treasury bond scams with the direct involvement of the then Governor of the Central Bank Arjuna Mahendran, in February 2015 and March 2016. Regardless of that intolerable scam, the UNP made a desperate attempt to retain the services of the Singaporean as the Governor of the Central Bank. Party leader and the then Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe demanded the re-appointment of Mahendran. That despicable move had to be dropped due to massive Opposition protests and growing public discontent over the Treasury bond scams.

The first Treasury bond scam carried out on 27 February, 2015 caused a direct loss of approximately Rs. 2 billion. On the instructions of Mahendran, the Treasury suddenly and arbitrarily changed the process of issuing Treasury Bonds. According to media reports at that time, higher interest payments, over the next 30 years, caused a further loss of around Rs. 145 billion.

Then Mahendran struck again. Caused further direct losses of more than Rs. 4 billion to the government through the fraudulent increase in interest rates as a result of the Treasury Bond issues on 27th March, 2016 ,and 29th March, 2016, in order to provide an undue advantage to connected primary dealers by indulging in further pre-meditated bond scams.

NPP on back foot

The ruling party put on a brave face with lawmakers and various others trying to play down the incident at the Treasury. Some pathetically tried to compare various accusations directed at the Rajapaksas with the incident at the Treasury which they conveniently blamed on hacker/hackers.

The NPP is facing an explosive mixture of issues. Both the coal and Treasury scams have brought immense pressure on the national economy and caused automatic deterioration. The resignation of Punyakumara aka Kumara Jayakody over the coal scam indicated that defeating the NCM moved against him was a strategic political blunder. Had the NPP asked the tainted first time Minister to step down and appoint a Presidential Commission to go into the coal scam, the NPP could have averted a major disaster. However, the Energy Minister and the Energy Secretary Udayanga Hemapala had to resign before the Parliament took up the NCM. Had the top NPP leadership bothered to peruse the executive summary of the NAO presented to Parliament on 7 April, the Party wouldn’t have tried to defend the minister.

Having championed a corruption-free political party system and then won both the presidential and parliamentary polls on that platform, the NPP executed the shocking move to move 323 containers out of the Colombo Port, in January 2025, without even any cursory checks. Those who perpetrated that operation used continuing port congestion as an excuse to clear red-flagged containers without mandatory physical checking. The NPP recently thwarted a bid by Opposition lawmakers, representing a parliamentary committee inquiring into the illegal release of containers, to summon President Dissanayake.

That committee, headed by Justice Minister Attorney-at-Law Harshana Nanayakkara, owed an explanation as to why President Dissanayake, in his capacity as the Finance Minister, shouldn’t appear before a House committee. President Dissanayake very often addresses Parliament on crucial issues. As the Minister in charge of Finance, the President should offer an explanation regarding the high profile container issue that tarnished the NPP’s image.

Three major issues in hand, namely the release of 323 containers, coal scam and theft at the Treasury, regardless of what various apologists say on mainstream and social media, have caused irrevocable damage to the party, let alone escapades involving the likes of Speaker Jagath Wickramaratne, Minister Lal Kantha, etc. The impact on the NPP can be ascertained only at an election. With the public increasingly aware of the growing accusations against it, the ruling party will do whatever possible to put off long delayed Provincial Council elections. Facing the electorate against deepening discontent among the public seems to be a frightening situation. It would be interesting to observe how a House committee, headed by Foreign Minister Vijitha Herath, appointed to explore ways and means to conduct Provincial Council polls, address the issue at hand.

When compared with the three major issues, the resignation of Asoka Ranwala, as the Speaker, in December, 2024, over his failure to produce the much-touted educational qualifications, seems unnecessary. Of course, Ranwala’s case attracted tremendous public attention at that time as the public really believed the NPP wouldn’t deceive them. Ranwala’s lie shocked the public. NPP theoretician Prof. Ranjith Nirmal Dewasiri had no qualms in publicly attacking Ranwala in the wake of the NPP defending the Speaker. But, subsequent NPP actions revealed massive manipulations that shamed the first post-Aragalaya government.

Having accused Ranil Wickremesinghe of squandering as much as Rs 16 mn to join his wife Prof. Maithree in the UK in September, 2023, the NPP has ended up facing far more serious accusations. The incident at the Treasury should be sufficient for the Opposition to move NCM against the government. Of course, the NPP got the numbers in Parliament to easily defeat the NCM but the consequences would be devastating. Those who still talk of recovering the missing USD 2.5 mn must be living in a dreamland. The UNP is labelled with Treasury bond scams (2015 and 2016) and the SLPP faulted with tax cuts (2019) and sugar tax scam (2020). The NPP will have to live with the coal scam and Treasury theft. The NPP will no longer be able to parade on political platforms as paragons of virtue. It would be pertinent to mention that the Presidential Commission appointed to probe the procurement of coal, since 2009, would be able to produce a report to meet the NPP’s expectations. All indications point to that and 2026 is going to be far more challenging, both in and outside Parliament, than the previous year.

NDB fraud

Examined together, the massive fraud at the National Development Bank (NDB), perpetrated during the 2024-2026 period, and the Treasury incident, they underscore the vulnerability of the entire banking system. The 13.2 bn NDB fraud and theft of USD 2.5 mn from the Treasury exposed the regulator, the Central Bank of Sri Lanka, in respect of the NDB. The situation at the NDB cannot be examined without taking into consideration that Ernst & Young is the external auditors of the NDB and its Managing Partner Duminda Hulangamuwa functions as Senior Economic Adviser to President Dissanayake. People haven’t forgotten that Hulangamuwa had been mentioned as the possible successor of Mahinda Siriwardena before the NPP brought in Suriyapperuma. The Central Bank and Securities Exchange Commission (SEC) come under the purview of the Finance Ministry now embroiled in the expanding Treasury fiasco.

The Board of Directors at the NDB consists of Sriyan Cooray (Chairman), Kelum Edirisinghe (Director / Chief Executive Officer (Executive), Bernard Sinniah (Director /Non-Independent), Sujeewa Mudalige (Director /Independent), Kushan D’Alwis (Director/Independent), Kasturi Chellaraja (Director/Independent), Shweta Pandey (Director /Independent), Hasitha Premaratne (Director/Independent), Sanjaya Mohottala (Director (Non-Independent) and Shanil Fernando Director (Independent).

The issue at hand is how such a fraud went unnoticed for a considerable period of time and whether the top management simply ignored warning signs and the failure on the part of the regulator to intervene. Those who have read Mahinda Siriwardana’s ‘Sri Lanka’s Economic Revival: Reflections on the Journey from Crisis to Recovery’ would know the circumstances leading to the 2022 economic collapse. Soft spoken Siriwardana meticulously discussed how the then Central Bank leadership as well as the so-called economic leadership of the Pohottuwa party deliberately deceived President Gotabaya Rajapaksa. Siriwardena’s narrative is explosive. The book, launched before his retirement, with the participation of President Dissanayake, underscored the responsibility on the part of the political leadership and those running the banking system. Obviously Siriwardena’s work had no impact on the current dispensation as well as the top banking management.

The Opposition sees an apparent opportunity to heap pressure on the NPP as it contemplates counter measures. Their challenge is how to take remedial measures without jeopardizing the government. The IMF declaration that it is closely watching the theft of USD 2.5 mn from the Treasury must have added pressure on the government, ripped apart by the situation at the Treasury. Let us hope the government and the Opposition reach consensus on ways and means to improve financial discipline. Overall, the Parliament cannot absolve itself of the responsibility for enactment of laws and ensuring financial discipline and the fact that Sri Lanka needs to start repayment of debt in 2028.

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Midweek Review

Is language social or psychological phenomenon?

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This essay was presented at The Philosophy Group of the University of London about 20 years ago. The thought provoking essay published in The Island on 22 April by Usvwatte-aratchi- Some languages confine you; some languages free you prompted me to try to get this essay published if possible. It may help the readers to further their ideas about the importance of usage of language.

Personally, I have firsthand experience in this subject. I was exposed to two different cultures and two languages. In my formative years I was brought up in a certain culture and spoke the language pertaining to that culture/language (Sinhalese -Sri Lanka). I spent all my studying and working life (55 years) using a different language in a different culture (English -England). I must mention that this was not recently. It was the early 1960’s. I can claim that I have enough knowledge and experience to justify this essay topic. In this essay I shall be investigating some of the social aspects of language with the aid of some opinions put forward by some philosophers. Then I shall be making an attempt to see what psychology has to offer before I draw my own conclusions. I am treating social aspects as part and parcel of the culture. In my view these are inseparable entities, unless one chooses to forget his or her cultural upbringing to suit a particular society.

Adoption of different culture

Socially, learning a different language and adopting a different culture is quite possible. In this case what dominates is one’s attitude or the circumstances. Attitude is psychological. I am convinced that circumstances may lead to a change of attitudes. Having said that, we must not forget that there are individuals who have not taken the trouble to learn the language of the culture in which they live. This has created a lot of socio-psychological problems in the community in which they live. It is obvious that the problem is one of communication. The main tool of communication is language. Philosophers and psychologists have spent many years investigating how language helps us to communicate and also how it may lead us to misunderstand our own fellow human beings. Understanding others (family members, members of the community in which we live, and the strangers we meet) is one of the most important aspects of living.

An awareness of the problem of language goes back to the early Greek philosophers. Parmenides gave us the first example of an argument from language to the world, saying that if we speak of a thing it must exist, since we speak of a thing at various times, it must continue to exist in a particular form. It is recently that language itself has come to be studied in a systematic way. The two landmarks in this respect were the development of Linguistics and the philosophy of language in the 20th century. The great philosopher Bertrand Russell (1872-1970) has admitted that until he became a middle-aged man, he did not think about language per se, but regarded it as ‘transparent’. I am sure this is true with most of us although we are not of Russell’s caliber when it comes to philosophy. And one may not have to wait until one reaches one’s middle age.

Linguistics and philosophy of language

It will help us if we understand the difference between Linguistics and philosophy of Language. What linguists discover may be applied to philosophy, sociology, psychology, anthropology or physiology. But as a discipline of study, it remains independent of them. The philosophy of language is different. One of the modern philosophers John Searle (1932-2025) thought, by contrast to linguistics, philosophy tries to solve philosophical problems by analyzing the ordinary use, meaning and relations of words in a particular language. Searle goes on to say that language is crucial to understand human experience. In my opinion this is a very valid comment. At a very practical level we spend a lot of time sharing our experiences. Verbal communication is vital in this area. According to Canadian philosopher Ian Hacking(1936-2023) the influence of language on philosophy has been profound and almost unrecognized. He indicates, if we are not to be misled by this influence, it is necessary to become conscious of it, and to ask ourselves deliberately how far it is legitimate.

It is appropriate to bring in Ludwig Wittgenstein(1889-1951) at this point. He brought in the subject predicate theory of language. For example, if we say “John is king”. Where John is the subject and king is the predicate. Here existence requires substance. For Aristotle, forms do not exist independently of things—every form is the form of something. A “substantial” form is a kind that is attributed to a thing, without which that thing would be of a different kind or would cease to exist altogether. Wittgenstein supports Saint Augustine’s view that words are names of objects and that combinations of words have the sole function of describing reality. For example, if we point at a certain object, say a table and try to say to a child “this is a table”, the child will be confused as to what we are pointing at. Is it the colour, the tabletop or one or more of its legs This is called the ostensive definition method of teaching. Ostensive definitions lead to a variety of interpretations. The child may understand a particular case of this definition but there is no guarantee that she will be able to make a transition from one case to others like it.

Plato’s theory

J G Herder (1744-1803) pointed out the object to which we make reference may be defined by numerous different terms. How then can we justify direct, one to one correspondence-either of so many to one, or of one to so many? How are we going to deal with situations where a term describes something non-existent or only possible? Plato’s “Forms” theory cannot be applied here as anything that we can speak of already exists as a Form. Critics of this theory ask the question: “how can the world be crowded with so many imaginary objects?” We use words to describe and define. Is there any room for slang language? This comes in handy in our day to day social communication. Ostensive definition raises the questions that require a constant selection of what counts as relevant. In Aldous Huxley’s novel Chrome Yellow, the character Old Rowley is confused as to: Does ‘pig’ refer to the quality of having a curly tail? Or standing in rows to eat? Or being pink skinned and fat? Or wearing no clothes? When we use the word “piggishness” is it something inherent to pigs, or simply, a matter of how we choose to describe them?

How can we relate the above ideas and theories of language to our daily living? Daily living is a psychosocial activity.

Perceptions

The nature of language reflects the nature of our perceptions, and these are far from straight forward. Franz Brentano (1838-1917) developed his theory of intentionality: that every mental phenomenon has a relation of direction to its object, i.e. perceptions, desires, imagination etc. are related to what is perceived, desired or imagined. I presume this can be applied to any language irrespective of the culture (our social conditioning). Say for instance the images of art and the writings are given the ability to represent objects by imposing the intentionality on the object. Thus, when we assert that we see or believe something, we impose, by convention and intention, (that is true if and only if it is the case) on the statement, and these conditions are not contained intrinsically in the sounds that make it up, but in our perception of belief about the fact. I begin to wonder how this can be applied to non-physical and unseen situations. Sometimes our feelings and attitudes are unknown to the observer. A person may shout because he is angry but you cannot see the anger, only its physical expression. We will not be able to see the prior event that has led to the anger and the utterance. This shows that there is a limit to how much is revealed simply by observing a word and its context; there is often more than that can be said.

How can we account for unexpected linguistic behaviour? This has both social and psychological implications.

For a long time behavioural theorists believed that every development of the human being was controlled by environmental and social factors. This is similar to an ostensive explanation of meaning. It implied that everything was learnt through training and association. But Noam Chomsky (b.1928) was not happy with this idea. He thought language is a complex phenomenon and which is not taught bit by bit or systematically to infants. It is successfully acquired by (almost) everybody. From my own experience it is true to say that the difficulty in learning a second language is a very different process from that experienced with the first language. Chomsky argued that the first language is not in fact learned, but rather acquired through exposure to a particular language. According to him all languages share the same basic structure, and he called this “deep structure”, which may be expressed as surface structures through a process called ‘transformation’. Chomsky’s theory helps us to assume a universal system of grammar, which may generate an infinite number of particular sentences within a language. This explains how we may create sentences within a language we have never encountered before from a limited set of grammatical rules and this appears to be a rational scientific approach.

Social or psychological phenomenon

The argument/discussion whether language is a social or a psychological phenomenon requires much more investigation than this essay warrants. I have briefly brought in various philosophers’ work, which are invaluable to this topic in terms of philosophy of language. In conclusion I am tempted to state my own experiences as a bi-lingual person. When it comes to my first language, which is Sinhalese I don’t think I learned it. I heard my parents speaking it and I picked up a few words and I constructed my own sentences and gradually became proficient by accumulating more words. Of course, the proper grammatical use of even my own language was taught in school and not by my parents. Learning my second language i.e. English took a different form. I was taught to speak, read, and write English at school and I had to work harder at this than my first language, because my English was confined to the classroom situation only, i. e. I learnt English in a non- English environment. First language came naturally and the second one I had to learn to fit into the social and the education structure that prevailed at that time. Compulsion can motivate us to learn!I had no choice but to adopt myself culturally and linguistically as a university student in England and then as a university teacher in England. Apart from the native English students, I have taught students from different countries. European, African and Asian. I had the opportunity to intermingle with them and learned various different cultural and linguistic aspects. After almost a half a century in England, I am back to my own culture (language, customs, food etc) where I was born and started my life. I am still proficient in my own language Sinhalese. No conscious effort needed.

After all the foregoing arguments and philosophy that I have put forward, my own conclusion is Chomsky’s theories are more plausible to me than other theories on this issue. It is difficult to be exact and say whether language is a social or psychological phenomenon. From the above arguments, we can see that culture and language of a given society are tightly bound. This leads us to psychological adjustments in order to fit into a society. Who can deny that even the philosophers mentioned above have not been subjected to their own cultural environment?

by Prof. Sampath
Anson Fernando
Formerly University of
The Arts London

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Midweek Review

Birthing a Nation

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Thanks to community centres,

Taking root and flowering Down-Under,

Sri Lankans have finally given shape,

To a truly National New Year,

Where communities meet and greet,

Partake of the same bubbly pot of rice,

Spread cheer under the same banner,

And end the ‘Us’ and the ‘Other’ fixation.

By Lynn Ockersz

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