Features
Horse Racing in Sri Lanka
by Vijaya Chandrasoma
In October of 1987, the government agreed to a visit by a team from the New Zealand Export Import Corporation, to explore the possibilities of the resumption and development of horse racing and breeding in Sri Lanka. Horse racing was a popular sport in Sri Lanka during the 1950s, with a beautiful race course in the heart of Colombo. The Sport of Kings had all but disappeared from the Sri Lankan scene with the banning of the importation of racehorses and laws against gambling imposed by the nationalist purists of the then SLFP government. Laws that were observed in the breach in all other forms of gambling as long as these political hypocrites were duly and handsomely compensated.
Our neighbors, India has a well-established racing and breeding industry, with stallions imported from all over the world. Sri Lanka, on the other hand, did not breed horses, and horse racing was conducted using only imported horses. With the foreign exchange crisis of the late 1950s, the import of racehorses was prohibited, and horse racing in Colombo died a natural death. A very poor standard of pony racing continued during the “April Season” in Nuwara Eliya, when the elite in Colombo escaped the extreme heat to vacation for a couple of weeks in the year-long Spring climate of the hill country. The Nuwara Eliya racecourse provided a backdrop to the exhibition of dresses worn by Colombo’s ageing socialites, failing miserably in their efforts to emulate the fashions of Royal Ascot.
The tour of the New Zealand team was referred to the Ministry of Lands and Land Development, which included Mahaweli Authority. Minister Dissanayake chose me to liaise with the New Zealand team. Not a difficult choice, because I had an almost encyclopedic knowledge of British horse racing and race courses, knowledge gained at the cost of dissipation of family wealth which continues to the present day.
The New Zealanders visited Nuwara Eliya, which boasted a racecourse in a beautiful environment in the heart of the town, but sadly lacking in the basic amenities essential to the operation of a successful race course. Facilities like ample barns for trainers to house their strings of horses, breeding sheds, training tracks and a modern totalizator. Whether it had the potential for transformation into even an average racecourse acceptable to international horse racing aficionados was debatable.
However, the Mahaweli Authority had identified a piece of land near Katana, on the west coast of Colombo about five miles north of the international airport. The land was ideally suited for the construction of a first class, New Zealand/American style of a flat, dirt track with a circuit of about one mile. These types of flat dirt racecourses are the norm in the world today, and they have adjacent flat grass courses to be used a few races per week. These courses are sadly lacking in the beauty of the classic racecourses in England and France, like Epsom and Ascot in England and Longchamps and Chantilly in France. These beautiful exclusively grass courses are contoured to the undulations of the land, with tracks of manicured grass. The huge disadvantage to these grass topped courses is that a race meeting cannot last for more than five days, tops, as the grass gets cut up by the constant battering of the hooves of the horses six, sometimes eight races a day. So each grass track runs about six meetings per year at intervals used to repair the damaged grass. Dirt tracks, on the other hand, can be used for months on end, and have become increasingly popular over the years. Katana was planned to be such a dirt track, with an adjacent grass track to be used sparingly, with elaborate stands and totalizators to be built for the spectators.
New Zealand, though of the same physical size as the United Kingdom, has a population of about five million, compared to the U.K.’s population of over 60 million. However, the number of race tracks in each country is about the same, New Zealand with over 50 racecourses to the U.K.’s 60.
New Zealand has a glut of racehorses, stallions, broodmares they are desperate to export to developing nations. They also have a sophisticated totalizator software industry which they can also trade as a sine qua non for the development of a racing industry in Sri Lanka.
What they did not know was that their project was dead in the water from the outset. There was no way the Sri Lankan government would get involved in the development of a horse racing industry in the middle of an ethnic war. Minister Dissanayake perhaps thought that it was a project that could be looked into after the end of the ethnic hostilities. No one could predict that it would take 20+ years of terror and violence to reach the final conclusion of the war.
However, in spite of the continuing ethnic violence, the New Zealanders left Sri Lanka with high hopes. A few weeks after their visit, we received an invitation from the Export Import Corporation of New Zealand for a representative of the Authority to visit New Zealand, to study the resources they possessed to develop the industry in Sri Lanka. In their letter of invitation, they had mentioned me by name as the person they thought most likely to be of mutual benefit from such a tour, as they had been impressed by my knowledge of the subject. While I discussed with the Minister the futility of the tour as there was absolutely no chance of the project reaching fruition in the immediate future, I was hopeful for his ultimate approval of the invitation, as it would not cost the Sri Lankan government a penny. All expenses were to be hosted by the New Zealand government.
So my dream of the ultimate working holiday came true. I traveled via Singapore to Wellington, where I was accommodated in the corner suite at a Hyatt in downtown Wellington.
Our job was to thrash out a proposal for the introduction of a horse racing and breeding industry in Sri Lanka. I was really impressed with the work habits of my New Zealand counterparts. A car picked me up from my hotel at 7.45 a.m. and we were on the job in the Conference Room of the Corporation, working on the terms of the proposal to be submitted to government of Sri Lanka. We worked solid till about 1.00 p.m., repaired for a boozy lunch. My New Zealand counterparts returned to the office to check on any urgent developments and faxes, and then called it a day. Now that’s a workday that will appeal to everyone,
New Zealand also proposed to import into Sri Lanka brood mares and stallions to start off a breeding program, based initially in Nuwara Eliya, ultimately moving to Katana, when that facility was ready for operations. They provided blueprints for the racecourse, stands and the ancillary facilities necessary for a first class horseracing and Totalizator operation. Finances were not discussed in detail. These would follow after the Cabinet of Sri Lanka’s government approved the project on principle.
The New Zealanders were excellent hosts, and on the evenings they did not have plans for me to visit some of the tracks in the environs of Wellington, notably the world class Trentham racecourse, they wined and dined me in great style in their homes.
We also took a plane to Auckland, where we spent two days touring the racecourses in Auckland and training facilities available in that city. My hosts had decided to travel back to Wellington by road, a 400-mile drive, stopping en route at Rotorua, where we visited a horse trainer’s facility, including the breeding shed. I was privileged to watch a stallion mating with a broodmare in the shed. Sadly, the whole operation lasted under a minute, and the mare gave a kick of frustration to the stomach of the stallion as he was dismounting her. Slam, bang, thank you, ma’am. Some things never change, no matter the species.
After two of the most enjoyable weeks I had spent in my life, I was ready to return, armed with the formal proposal to be submitted to our government. I had decided to change the routing of my return journey to take in stopovers at Melbourne and Bangkok. I had friends in Melbourne, and really enjoyed myself in their company for a few days in that beautiful city.
I had second thoughts about Bangkok, though. The only extramarital sex I have ever had was listening, ears pricked, to the sexual adventures of friends who had spent time in Bangkok. My ex-wife was also aware of the reputed lewd attractions of the city which had special appeal to dirty old men. If I had spent a couple of days in Bangkok, the suspicion of bad behavior would never fade, even had my actions been pristine. So I made one of the few intelligent decisions of my life, canceled the detour to Bangkok, and returned to Colombo on the direct Melbourne to Colombo Qantas flight. I was even able to buy my ex-wife a nice gift with the money I had planned to spend “sightseeing” in Bangkok.
Features
Misinterpreting President Dissanayake on National Reconciliation
President Anura Kumara Dissanayake has been investing his political capital in going to the public to explain some of the most politically sensitive and controversial issues. At a time when easier political choices are available, the president is choosing the harder path of confronting ethnic suspicion and communal fears. There are three issues in particular on which the president’s words have generated strong reactions. These are first with regard to Buddhist pilgrims going to the north of the country with nationalist motivations. Second is the controversy relating to the expansion of the Tissa Raja Maha Viharaya, a recently constructed Buddhist temple in Kankesanturai which has become a flashpoint between local Tamil residents and Sinhala nationalist groups. Third is the decision not to give the war victory a central place in the Independence Day celebrations.
Even in the opposition, when his party held only three seats in parliament, Anura Kumara Dissanayake took his role as a public educator seriously. He used to deliver lengthy, well researched and easily digestible speeches in parliament. He continues this practice as president. It can be seen that his statements are primarily meant to elevate the thinking of the people and not to win votes the easy way. The easy way to win votes whether in Sri Lanka or elsewhere in the world is to rouse nationalist and racist sentiments and ride that wave. Sri Lanka’s post independence political history shows that narrow ethnic mobilisation has often produced short term electoral gains but long term national damage.
Sections of the opposition and segments of the general public have been critical of the president for taking these positions. They have claimed that the president is taking these positions in order to obtain more Tamil votes or to appease minority communities. The same may be said in reverse of those others who take contrary positions that they seek the Sinhala votes. These political actors who thrive on nationalist mobilisation have attempted to portray the president’s statements as an abandonment of the majority community. The president’s actions need to be understood within the larger framework of national reconciliation and long term national stability.
Reconciler’s Duty
When the president referred to Buddhist pilgrims from the south going to the north, he was not speaking about pilgrims visiting long established Buddhist heritage sites such as Nagadeepa or Kandarodai. His remarks were directed at a specific and highly contentious development, the recently built Buddhist temple in Kankesanturai and those built elsewhere in the recent past in the north and east. The temple in Kankesanturai did not emerge from the religious needs of a local Buddhist community as there is none in that area. It has been constructed on land that was formerly owned and used by Tamil civilians and which came under military occupation as a high security zone. What has made the issue of the temple particularly controversial is that it was established with the support of the security forces.
The controversy has deepened because the temple authorities have sought to expand the site from approximately one acre to nearly fourteen acres on the basis that there was a historic Buddhist temple in that area up to the colonial period. However, the Tamil residents of the area fear that expansion would further displace surrounding residents and consolidate a permanent Buddhist religious presence in the present period in an area where the local population is overwhelmingly Hindu. For many Tamils in Kankesanturai, the issue is not Buddhism as a religion but the use of religion as a vehicle for territorial assertion and demographic changes in a region that bore the brunt of the war. Likewise, there are other parts of the north and east where other temples or places of worship have been established by the military personnel in their camps during their war-time occupation and questions arise regarding the future when these camps are finally closed.
There are those who have actively organised large scale pilgrimages from the south to make the Tissa temple another important religious site. These pilgrimages are framed publicly as acts of devotion but are widely perceived locally as demonstrations of dominance. Each such visit heightens tension, provokes protest by Tamil residents, and risks confrontation. For communities that experienced mass displacement, military occupation and land loss, the symbolism of a state backed religious structure on contested land with the backing of the security forces is impossible to separate from memories of war and destruction. A president committed to reconciliation cannot remain silent in the face of such provocations, however uncomfortable it may be to challenge sections of the majority community.
High-minded leadership
The controversy regarding the president’s Independence Day speech has also generated strong debate. In that speech the president did not refer to the military victory over the LTTE and also did not use the term “war heroes” to describe soldiers. For many Sinhala nationalist groups, the absence of these references was seen as an attempt to diminish the sacrifices of the armed forces. The reality is that Independence Day means very different things to different communities. In the north and east the same day is marked by protest events and mourning and as a “Black Day”, symbolising the consolidation of a state they continue to experience as excluding them and not empathizing with the full extent of their losses.
By way of contrast, the president’s objective was to ensure that Independence Day could be observed as a day that belonged to all communities in the country. It is not correct to assume that the president takes these positions in order to appease minorities or secure electoral advantage. The president is only one year into his term and does not need to take politically risky positions for short term electoral gains. Indeed, the positions he has taken involve confronting powerful nationalist political forces that can mobilise significant opposition. He risks losing majority support for his statements. This itself indicates that the motivation is not electoral calculation.
President Dissanayake has recognized that Sri Lanka’s long term political stability and economic recovery depend on building trust among communities that once peacefully coexisted and then lived through decades of war. Political leadership is ultimately tested by the willingness to say what is necessary rather than what is politically expedient. The president’s recent interventions demonstrate rare national leadership and constitute an attempt to shift public discourse away from ethnic triumphalism and toward a more inclusive conception of nationhood. Reconciliation cannot take root if national ceremonies reinforce the perception of victory for one community and defeat for another especially in an internal conflict.
BY Jehan Perera
Features
Recovery of LTTE weapons
I have read a newspaper report that the Special Task Force of Sri Lanka Police, with help of Military Intelligence, recovered three buried yet well-preserved 84mm Carl Gustaf recoilless rocket launchers used by the LTTE, in the Kudumbimalai area, Batticaloa.
These deadly weapons were used by the LTTE SEA TIGER WING to attack the Sri Lanka Navy ships and craft in 1990s. The first incident was in February 1997, off Iranativu island, in the Gulf of Mannar.
Admiral Cecil Tissera took over as Commander of the Navy on 27 January, 1997, from Admiral Mohan Samarasekara.
The fight against the LTTE was intensified from 1996 and the SLN was using her Vanguard of the Navy, Fast Attack Craft Squadron, to destroy the LTTE’s littoral fighting capabilities. Frequent confrontations against the LTTE Sea Tiger boats were reported off Mullaitivu, Point Pedro and Velvetiturai areas, where SLN units became victorious in most of these sea battles, except in a few incidents where the SLN lost Fast Attack Craft.

Carl Gustaf recoilless rocket launchers
The intelligence reports confirmed that the LTTE Sea Tigers was using new recoilless rocket launchers against aluminium-hull FACs, and they were deadly at close quarter sea battles, but the exact type of this weapon was not disclosed.
The following incident, which occurred in February 1997, helped confirm the weapon was Carl Gustaf 84 mm Recoilless gun!
DATE: 09TH FEBRUARY, 1997, morning 0600 hrs.
LOCATION: OFF IRANATHIVE.
FACs: P 460 ISRAEL BUILT, COMMANDED BY CDR MANOJ JAYESOORIYA
P 452 CDL BUILT, COMMANDED BY LCDR PM WICKRAMASINGHE (ON TEMPORARY COMMAND. PROPER OIC LCDR N HEENATIGALA)
OPERATED FROM KKS.
CONFRONTED WITH LTTE ATTACK CRAFT POWERED WITH FOUR 250 HP OUT BOARD MOTORS.
TARGET WAS DESTROYED AND ONE LTTE MEMBER WAS CAPTURED.
LEADING MARINE ENGINEERING MECHANIC OF THE FAC CAME UP TO THE BRIDGE CARRYING A PROJECTILE WHICH WAS FIRED BY THE LTTE BOAT, DURING CONFRONTATION, WHICH PENETRATED THROUGH THE FAC’s HULL, AND ENTERED THE OICs CABIN (BETWEEN THE TWO BUNKS) AND HIT THE AUXILIARY ENGINE ROOM DOOR AND HAD FALLEN DOWN WITHOUT EXPLODING. THE ENGINE ROOM DOOR WAS HEAVILY DAMAGED LOOSING THE WATER TIGHT INTEGRITY OF THE FAC.
THE PROJECTILE WAS LATER HANDED OVER TO THE NAVAL WEAPONS EXPERTS WHEN THE FACs RETURNED TO KKS. INVESTIGATIONS REVEALED THE WEAPON USED BY THE ENEMY WAS 84 mm CARL GUSTAF SHOULDER-FIRED RECOILLESS GUN AND THIS PROJECTILE WAS AN ILLUMINATER BOMB OF ONE MILLION CANDLE POWER. BUT THE ATTACKERS HAS FAILED TO REMOVE THE SAFETY PIN, THEREFORE THE BOMB WAS NOT ACTIVATED.

Sea Tigers
Carl Gustaf 84 mm recoilless gun was named after Carl Gustaf Stads Gevärsfaktori, which, initially, produced it. Sweden later developed the 84mm shoulder-fired recoilless gun by the Royal Swedish Army Materiel Administration during the second half of 1940s as a crew served man- portable infantry support gun for close range multi-role anti-armour, anti-personnel, battle field illumination, smoke screening and marking fire.
It is confirmed in Wikipedia that Carl Gustaf Recoilless shoulder-fired guns were used by the only non-state actor in the world – the LTTE – during the final Eelam War.
It is extremely important to check the batch numbers of the recently recovered three launchers to find out where they were produced and other details like how they ended up in Batticaloa, Sri Lanka?
By Admiral Ravindra C. Wijegunaratne
WV, RWP and Bar, RSP, VSV, USP, NI (M) (Pakistan), ndc, psn, Bsc (Hons) (War Studies) (Karachi) MPhil (Madras)
Former Navy Commander and Former Chief of Defence Staff
Former Chairman, Trincomalee Petroleum Terminals Ltd
Former Managing Director Ceylon Petroleum Corporation
Former High Commissioner to Pakistan
Features
Yellow Beatz … a style similar to K-pop!
Yes, get ready to vibe with Yellow Beatz, Sri Lanka’s awesome girl group, keen to take Sri Lankan music to the world with a style similar to K-pop!
With high-energy beats and infectious hooks, these talented ladies are here to shake up the music scene.
Think bold moves, catchy hooks, and, of course, spicy versions of old Sinhala hits, and Yellow Beatz is the package you won’t want to miss!
According to a spokesman for the group, Yellow Beatz became a reality during the Covid period … when everyone was stuck at home, in lockdown.
“First we interviewed girls, online, and selected a team that blended well, as four voices, and then started rehearsals. One of the cover songs we recorded, during those early rehearsals, unexpectedly went viral on Facebook. From that moment onward, we continued doing cover songs, and we received a huge response. Through that, we were able to bring back some beautiful Sri Lankan musical creations that were being forgotten, and introduce them to the new generation.”
The team members, I am told, have strong musical skills and with proper training their goal is to become a vocal group recognised around the world.
Believe me, their goal, they say, is not only to take Sri Lanka’s name forward, in the music scene, but to bring home a Grammy Award, as well.
“We truly believe we can achieve this with the love and support of everyone in Sri Lanka.”
The year 2026 is very special for Yellow Beatz as they have received an exceptional opportunity to represent Sri Lanka at the World Championships of Performing Arts in the USA.
Under the guidance of Chris Raththara, the Director for Sri Lanka, and with the blessings of all Sri Lankans, the girls have a great hope that they can win this milestone.
“We believe this will be a moment of great value for us as Yellow Beatz, and also for all Sri Lankans, and it will be an important inspiration for the future of our country.”
Along with all the preparation for the event in the USA, they went on to say they also need to manage their performances, original song recordings, and everything related.

The year 2026 is very special for Yellow Beatz
“We have strong confidence in ourselves and in our sincere intentions, because we are a team that studies music deeply, researches within the field, and works to take the uniqueness of Sri Lankan identity to the world.”
At present, they gather at the Voices Lab Academy, twice a week, for new creations and concert rehearsals.
This project was created by Buddhika Dayarathne who is currently working as a Pop Vocal lecturer at SLTC Campus. Voice Lab Academy is also his own private music academy and Yellow Beatz was formed through that platform.
Buddhika is keen to take Sri Lankan music to the world with a style similar to K-Pop and Yellow Beatz began as a result of that vision. With that same aim, we all work together as one team.
“Although it was a little challenging for the four of us girls to work together at first, we have united for our goal and continue to work very flexibly and with dedication. Our parents and families also give their continuous blessings and support for this project,” Rameesha, Dinushi, Newansa and Risuri said.
Last year, Yellow Beatz released their first original song, ‘Ihirila’ , and with everything happening this year, they are also preparing for their first album.
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