Opinion
The Port City matter

Our goose seems to be cooked. Marinated in Soya Sauce. The noise about this adventure has been deflected from the main issue. Is the Port City really necessary and the best of available options?
Keeping the dreams, hopes and “Bull” aside for a moment, why was this adventure even considered? This is a huge investment, that may well join the queue behind the “Mahinda Rajapaksa Harbour and Airport”, the “Bird Cage” Hall and most of all, the “Nelum Kulunna – emblems of shabby miscalculations and empty hopes? Do we really need another Port? Now that the Colombo Harbour, its premises and a great part of the coastal shoreline have been fouled up by the sinking “X Press Pearl” container ship, is it suggested that it shows up the virtues of having this second harbour? Assuming of course, that ships scheduled to lay anchor in Colombo, might not just give Sri Lanka a miss and proceed elsewhere!
Being busy with the task of encroaching into the Indian Ocean, what have we done about the treasure trove (said to be some eighteen times our land area) gifted to us on a Golden Platter by the “Law of the Sea” Convention of the United Nations? Do we even know the quantity and value (however crude) of the Deposits beneath the waters? With the semi-conductor needs expected to balloon by the greater demands of electronics, and the current resources diminishing (Australia being the main source), this is a good time for proactive prospecting. Will the neighbouring countries here to help us to measure the extent of damage due to the burnt and sunken ship, also get a preview of the treasure lying in the Ocean bed and deemed to be ours?
What is the justification for the 250 hectares reclaimed – when it is not that we are short of land? Just consider the vast extents of land, within an area lying roughly in the triangle circumscribed by Kalutara, Gampaha and Chilaw, much of it being abandoned paddy lands. Of course, it would be argued that the land required for luxury housing, recreation facilities, gambling centres, etc., that will burgeon in the Port City, cannot possibly be located inland. I also hold the fears of an amateur that massive, multi-storied high-rises, could be risky and unstable on foundations moored in (essentially), rock, rubble and sand. I am sure that such seemingly trivial matters would have been considered within a whole Ministry of “Western area and Metropolis Development “- or some such moniker. We are certain that many a heart in Hong Kong and Dubai would be aflutter with fears that they will soon be knocked off their high perches by the CPCP.
Twenty years ago the tsunami struck and took away something like 40,000 of Sri Lankan lives. If anyone prior to this tragedy foretold anything like it, he would have been considered a certifiable lunatic. Likewise, five years ago, if someone imagined that some of the crashing waves could be as high as 20-25 metres, would it have been believed? What if five years ago, some pessimist predicted that an invasion by a submicroscopic virus, (barely capable of even denting the ego of mighty man,) struck to decimate us in just a few years (almost nothing in geological time), and spread to the remotest corners of the planet? That would have been daft.
We have been consistent in our inconsistency. Remember the noise made before some election, about how we would “kick the Chinese out”, not only from Hambantota, and how we soon went back on bended knees, imploring them to come back and offering them a toffee of some fifteen thousand hectares of land (some of it doubtless inhabited). What a promising start!
Talking of Ports, our projections of improvement of shipping activity in the MR Ruhuna Port, might need to be revised. Remember the song sung to us then, was that the thousands of ships passing within hand-waving distance of our shoreline, would be enticed to lay anchor in our harbour. Is it permissible to ask whether even the cost of the grand “Opening Ceremony” has been recovered? There may be less in-bound cargo, with the “one fell stroke” of banning the import of Agrochemicals, Palm Oil and the possible postponement of the landing of the 226 Super Luxury SUVs, while out-bound cargo will be diminished by cuts in exports of tea, rubber, coconut and housemaids
Dr. Upatissa Pethiyagoda
Opinion
Haphazard demolition in Nugegoda and deathtraps

The proposed expansion of the Kelani Valley railway line has prompted the squatters to demolish the buildings and the above photograph depicts the ad-hoc manner in which a building in the heart of Nugegoda town (No 39 Poorwarama Road) has been haphazardly demolished posing a risk to the general public. Residents say that the live electric wire has not been disconnected and the half-demolished structure is on the verge of collapse, causing inevitable fatal damages.
Over to the Railway Department, Kotte Municipality Ceylon Electricity Board and the Nugegoda Police.
Athula Ranasinghe,
Nugegoda.
Opinion
Aviation and doctors on Strike

On July 19, 1989, United Airlines Flight 232 departed Denver, Colorado for Chicago, Illinois. The forecast weather was fine. Unfortunately, engine no. 2 – the middle engine in the tail of the three-engined McDonnell Douglas DC 10 – suffered an explosive failure of the fan disk, resulting in all three hydraulic system lines to the aircraft’s control surfaces being severed. This rendered the DC-10 uncontrollable except by the highly unorthodox use of differential thrust on the remaining two serviceable engines mounted on the wings.
Consequently, the aircraft was forced to divert to Sioux City, Iowa to attempt an emergency crash landing. But the crew lost control at the last moment and the airplane crashed. Out of a total of 296 passengers and crew, 185 survived.
The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) declared after an investigation that besides the skill of the operating crew, one significant factor in the survival rate was that hospitals in proximity to the airport were experiencing a change of shifts and therefore able to co-opt the outgoing and incoming shift workers to take over the additional workload of attending to crash victims.
One wonders what would have happened if an overflying aircraft diverted to MRIA-Mattala, BIA-Colombo, Colombo International Airport Ratmalana (CIAR) or Palaly Airport, KKS during the doctors’ strike in the 24 hours starting March 12, 2025? Would the authorities have been able to cope? International airlines (over a hundred a day) are paying in dollars to overfly and file Sri Lankan airports as en route alternates (diversion airports).
Doctors in hospitals in the vicinity of the above-named international airports cannot be allowed to go on strike, and their services deemed essential. Even scheduled flights to those airports could be involved in an accident, with injured passengers at risk of not receiving prompt medical attention.
The civil aviation regulator in this country seems to be sitting fat, dumb, and happy, as we say in aviation.
Guwan Seeya
Opinion
HW Cave saw Nanu Oya – Nuwara rail track as “exquisite”

Plans to resurrect the Nanu Oya – Nuwara Eliya rail track are welcome. The magnificent views from the train have been described by H W Cave in his book The Ceylon Government Railway (1910):
‘The pass by which Nuwara Eliya is reached is one of the most exquisite things in Ceylon. In traversing its length, the line makes a further ascent of one thousand feet in six miles. The curves and windings necessary to accomplish this are the most intricate on the whole railway and frequently have a radius of only eighty feet. On the right side of the deep mountain gorge we ascend amongst the tea bushes of the Edinburgh estate, and at length emerge upon a road, which the line shares with the cart traffic for about a mile. In the depths of the defile flows the Nanuoya river, foaming amongst huge boulders of rock that have descended from the sides of the mountains, and bordered by tree ferns, innumerable and brilliant trees of the primeval forest which clothe the face of the heights. In this land of no seasons their stages of growth are denoted by the varying tints of scarlet, gold, crimson, sallow green, and most strikingly of all, a rich claret colour, the chief glory of the Keena tree’.
However, as in colonial times, the railway should be available for both tourists and locals so that splendid vista can be enjoyed by all.
Dr R P Fernando
Epsom,
UK
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