Editorial
Promoting tourism
Friday 25th February, 2022
The government, which is struggling to find forex even for fuel imports, has decided to spend as much as USD 56 million on a huge advertising campaign to promote tourism, according to a report we published yesterday. It defies comprehension why so much of money should be spent on advertising; we thought Sri Lanka was already known the world over as a tourist destination. There are many things that the government ought to do before embarking on an expensive advertising campaign. It is said that nothing kills a bad product faster than good advertising.
Experts have written reams about Sri Lanka’s tourism industry, its strengths and weaknesses and the so-called way forward; this comment is only a layman’s view based on what we have heard and seen as journalists over the years.
First of all, Sri Lanka should make itself tourist-friendly. It lacks basic facilities for foreign tourists. A few years ago, we editorially commented on the plight of a group of foreign tourists at Sigiriya. Washrooms there were closed for repairs and, worse, the cleaning staff had the chutzpah to ask the tourists ‘to go to the jungle’. Nobody takes the trouble of travelling all the way from a faraway land to this country to ease himself or herself in the jungle. The authorities concerned trotted out some lame excuses, but Sri Lanka’s image as a tourist destination suffered irreparable damage. When such issues crop up, tourism authorities must take prompt remedial action.
The exploitation of foreign tourists continues unabated. Tourism to many hoteliers, guides and others has apparently come to mean a licence of sorts to exploit foreigners. When the BIA was reopened for tourists, some cronies of the government made a killing at the expense of foreign visitors with the help of PCR testing and quarantine. The media had to fight quite a battle to stop the racket. The state itself exploits foreign tourists by charging exorbitant amounts by way of entrance fees at cultural sites, where nothing special is on offer for them. Tickets at these places must be reasonably priced so that foreign tourists will not feel that they are exploited.
The safety of foreign tourists is of paramount importance. No one in his or her proper senses will visit a place where his or her safety is at stake. Unfortunate incidents are reported, from time to time, of foreign tourists being harmed. In this electronically driven world, ensuring tourists’ safety cannot be a difficult task, especially in a small country. There are many racketeers preying on unsuspecting tourists, who should be given ready access to the law enforcement authorities; their complaints must be investigated and culprits brought to justice expeditiously.
In this day and age, there is hardly any need for spending colossal amounts of forex on advertising; everyone has access to the Internet and writes about his or her travel experience. The best way to promote Sri Lanka is to ensure that foreign tourists feel safe and happy here and leave with contented smiles. One positive social media review by a foreign traveller is worth more than a million-dollar advertisement. This is what Sri Lanka should strive to achieve.
This country is not short of good men and women engaged in tourism, and how they looked after their stranded foreign guests like their own family members during lockdowns is now known to the entire world. It is this kind of publicity Sri Lanka needs most, and it cannot be generated with the help of expensive advertising campaigns.
Meanwhile, the need for those engaged in tourism to be considerate towards local tourists cannot be overemphasised. Most hoteliers and restaurateurs are not well disposed towards Sri Lankans. Local visitors must not be treated like pariahs. Hoteliers and others are likely to lose their heads again when foreign tourist arrivals increase; they must be kept reminded that it is Sri Lankans who have kept their businesses afloat during the past two years or so.
Editorial
Punishment in hellholes
Friday 10th July, 2026
The latest bout of prison violence has brought the appalling conditions of Sri Lanka’s prisons to light once again. Whenever riots erupt in prisons and lives are lost, issues such as prison congestion, squalor, etc., attract the attention of legislators and other policymakers, but hardly any remedial action is taken, and no wonder the status quo remains. Governments only pay lip service to prison reforms, which have become mere political slogans.
Over the past few days, many members of Parliament have been shedding copious tears for the victims of the Negombo prison violence, which claimed about 28 lives, including those of seven officers, but sadly nothing comes of their so-called discussions and debates. Cynics say Sri Lanka has a NATO (No-Action-Talk-Only) parliament, where its members talk the talk, but seldom walk the walk. They ought to sink their political differences and find ways and means of improving the conditions of prisons, which are widely considered hellholes. Haphazard prison reforms won’t do.
Meanwhile, as for remand prisons, there is a crucial issue that needs to be addressed urgently. Even a brief stay in a Sri Lankan remand prison is tantamount to punishment in itself before conviction, as is public knowledge. Suspects are so vulnerable in prisons that they even run the risk of being beaten to death, as we saw the other day in Negombo. Successive governments have abused the PTA (Prevention of Terrorism Act), the Offences against Public Property Act, etc., to have suspects arrested and remanded for prolonged periods.
Many people languish in remand prisons due to politically motivated arrests and selective enforcement that the police have earned notoriety for. The police ought to conduct thorough investigations and gather credible evidence before moving to arrest suspects who are not hardcore criminals posing a danger to society. It defies comprehension why so many suspects are arrested and kept in remand prisons for months on end even when there is no reason to suspect that they will flee the country, interfere with witnesses, suppress evidence, commit further serious offences, or pose a significant danger to the public.
Pretrial arrests, remand or detention should be the exception and not the rule, especially in a country like Sri Lanka, which cannot even ensure the safety of convicts and remand prisoners. The police make arrests swiftly and thereafter drag their feet on investigations while objecting to bail for suspects. Most suspects who are arrested and remanded in this manner are political opponents of the governments in power. There have been numerous such cases during the past several decades. Ruling party politicians use arrests to vilify their opponents and gain political mileage. They abuse their parliamentary privileges to defame suspects in custody and hold social media kangaroo trials with impunity. They apparently presume suspects guilty until proven innocent. When they do so, the police cannot be expected to conduct impartial investigations; the police dare not do anything that might cause the ruling party politicians to lose face. It is no surprise that the police have been accused of fabricating evidence against suspects who have incurred the wrath of ruling party politicians.
Holding a person on remand indefinitely until the conclusion of investigations is not consistent with due process and international best practices. The rule of law demands that the police or other investigators establish reasonable grounds to suspect an offence, collect and preserve evidence, interview witnesses, question suspects and assess the facts objectively before depriving anyone of personal liberty. They must not act according to their whims and fancies or at the behest of their political masters.
Premature arrests risk wrongful detention, reputational damage, hardships and expensive legal challenges for suspects. They could also compromise public confidence in law enforcement and lead to perceptions that investigations are influenced by political pressure or public sentiment rather than facts. When the rule of law is undermined, the justice system becomes weak.
Editorial
Waste of time and money
Thursday 9th July, 2026
The latest episode of prison violence has come to an end, after claiming 28 lives and leaving more than 100 others injured. But political battles are still raging over it. The government and the Opposition continue to clash; they traded allegations and insults in Parliament on Tuesday and Wednesday. The Opposition is all out to lay the blame for the prison violence squarely on the government. It is demanding the resignation of Minister of Justice and National Integration Harshana Nanayakkara.
The government has struck back, asking whether any Yahapalana politician resigned over the Easter Sunday terror attacks in 2019. Many of the SJB politicians were in that failed administration. That argument is however self-defeating in that the JVP was a partner of the dysfunctional Yahapalana government in all but name and defended it to the hilt in Parliament.
Moreover, there were devastating terror attacks on military and civilian targets during the Eelam war. A considerable number of military installations, including the Mullaitivu camp and the Elephant Pass base were overrun by the LTTE, which killed hundreds of military personnel, but no politician resigned. There have also been several major incidents of prison violence. As we pointed out yesterday, in 1983, 53 Tamil prisoners were massacred inside the Welikada Prison in two separate attacks. In 2012, about 27 inmates were killed during a riot in the same prison, following a search operation conducted by the STF for weapons, drugs and mobile phones. In 2020, violent clashes in the Mahara Prison left 11 inmates dead. But ministers in charge of prisons did not resign. So, it may be argued that neither the SJB nor the UNP nor the SLPP has any moral right to call for anyone’s resignation over the Negombo Prison riots.
Opposition politicians and their propagandists may go on shouting until they are blue in the face, but their efforts to see the back of Minister Nanayakkara will be in vain. Sri Lankan governments are notorious for shielding politicians and officials loyal to them, no matter what. The incumbent dispensation is no different. One may recall that it went to the extent of bringing two senior CID officers out of retirement, elevating them to high posts in the public security sector and entrusting them with the task of probing the Easter Sunday carnage, which they themselves failed to prevent despite repeated warnings, while they were at the helm of the CID in 2019. So, it is only wishful thinking that the government will ever ask Minister Nanayakkara to resign over the Negombo Prison killings.
Interestingly, an NPP MP’s attempt to distract Parliament and the public from the Negombo Prison violence by bashing the former rulers, boomeranged on the government. Deputy Minister Mahinda Jayasinghe displayed a picture in the House, claiming that it showed Namal Rajapaksa with notorious criminal Julampitiye Amare at a public event. His claim prompted Opposition MP Chamra Sampath Dassanayake to remind the government that it was the JVP that had enabled Mahinda Rajapaksa, accused of shielding the likes of Julampitiye Amare, to win the 2005 presidential election and paved the way for the rise of the Rajapaksa family in national politics.
Worryingly, more often than not, parliamentary debates descend into slanging matches. They cost the public an arm and a leg. A parliamentary sitting costs taxpayers about Rs. 32.2 million, according to research conducted by some civil society organisations. It behoves the government and the Opposition to stop wasting public funds, and use parliament time productively to discuss issues of national importance seriously, manage state funds frugally and make progressive laws.
As for prison violence, the focus of parliamentary debates must be on structural problems in Sri Lanka’s prison system, including overcrowding, delays in court proceedings, gang rivalries, drug peddling, inadequate facilities, corruption and difficulties in maintaining security in large custodial institutions, the causes of the latest prison riots, and what needs to be done to improve prison conditions and prevent violent clashes and human rights violations in prisons. Parliament, maintained at public expense, is not the place for verbal slugfests, which can be staged elsewhere, if at all.
Editorial
Prison riots and political battles
Wednesday 8th July, 2026
Prison riots in Negombo have claimed 27 lives including those of seven officers and left more than 100 others injured. It is believed that a clash between a group of drug peddlers among inmates and those who opposed their illegal operations led to the deadly mayhem. A committee has been appointed to probe the violence.
The drug Mafia has flexed its muscles again. The government has embarked on an ambitious campaign to rid the country of narcotics, and rightly so. The ongoing nationwide drug bust deserves the fullest public cooperation. However, if the latest outbreak of prison violence is anything to go by, a special programme needs to be launched to root out the scourge of narcotics in prisons, where some corrupt officers are in league with drug dealers.
The mastermind behind the Negombo Prison riots has been identified. He is an associate of a powerful drug dealer, according to media reports. The netherworld of narcotics and crime has emerged so powerful that it can plunge the country’s prison system into utter chaos at will. Worse, in 2023, an underworld gang planned a commando-style operation to free a drug dealer, called Nadun Chinthaka alias Harak Kata, detained at the CID headquarters. The STF managed to scuttle their plan. We reported that the gang had enrolled some serving military personnel and a sniper for the attack to spring its leader free. Another drug leader had High Court Judge Sarath Ambepitiya and his MSD bodyguard Inspector Upali Ranasinghe gunned down in late 2004. An underworld gang attacked a prison bus in Kalutara, killing five of its rivals and two prison guards, in 2017. Successive governments have only made half-hearted attempts to neutralise powerful crime syndicates run by drug dealers.
It is puzzling why the prison authorities did not transfer all troublemakers responsible for Sunday’s clash in Negombo to other prisons, after bringing the situation under control. On Monday morning, they gave the all-clear. It was the calm before the storm; violence erupted again soon afterwards. There was a total intelligence failure. If the rioters had been sent to other prisons on Sunday itself, Monday’s violence could have been averted.
Sadly, incidents of prison violence lead to political clashes between the government and the Opposition. There have been several deadly riots in prisons during the past several decades. In 1983, about 50 Tamil prisoners were massacred inside the Welikada Prison in two separate attacks. In the same prison, 27 inmates were killed in 2012 during a riot that followed a search operation conducted by the STF for weapons, drugs and mobile phones. In 2020, violent clashes in the Mahara Prison left 11 inmates dead. All those incidents triggered political battles, with Opposition politicians flaying their ruling party counterparts for failure to ensure the safety of prisoners. If they had put their heads together and taken action to eliminate the root causes of prison unrest and violence, instead of fighting political battles, perhaps the Negombo prison riots would not have occurred.
There have been some half-hearted attempts at prison reforms under successive governments. But the structural problems in Sri Lanka’s prison system remain unresolved. They include overcrowding, delays in court proceedings, gang rivalries, drug peddling, inadequate facilities, corruption and difficulties in maintaining security in large custodial institutions. The Negombo prison is reported to have been experiencing a shortage of officers. These issues have to be resolved urgently as part of a multi-pronged strategy to make prisons safe. Rhetoric won’t do.
Following the Mahara prison violence in 2020, President Anura Kaumara Dissanayake, who was an Opposition firebrand at that time, went ballistic in Parliament, condemning the then SLPP government for its failure to protect prisoners. A video of his fiery speech is doing the rounds in the digital realm. It has become grist for the Opposition’s mill.
Opposition politicians are now doing what the JVP did in the past; they are tearing into the JVP-NPP government over the Negombo prison violence. But prisons will not be any less vulnerable to violence even if the holders of power change; those who are berating the current administration may find themselves in the dock one day if they form a government.
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