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Tilake Abeysinghe passes away

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Internationally reputed painter and sculptor Tilake Abeysinghe passed away in Toronto, Canada, last week. Abeysinghe was a graduate of the Accademia di Belle Arti di Brera in Milan, where he studied painting under Domenico Cantatore and came under the influence of the world-renowned sculptor Mario Marini.

After graduation from the academy, he held exhibitions at art centres in Italy and Switzerland and established his own Atelier in Milan in 1980. In a professional career, spanning over 70 years, he held over 75 one-man exhibitions and represented Sri Lanka in several International Exhibitions. His work was exhibited in Colombo, Toronto, Sao Paulo, Montreal, New Delhi, Dhaka, Fukuoka, Karachi, Paris, Beijing, Copenhagen, Hamburg and London.

His major works include a 25-foot-high sculpture at the Italian Embassy, in Colombo, an 85-foot mural spanning the entire breadth of the Standard Chartered Bank building, in Colombo, a large mural in bas-relief at the American Express Bank, in Colombo, a 10-foot-tall bronze statue of Capt. C.P.J. Seneratne, at Girandurukotte,  a bust of Sri Jawaharlal Nehru at the Indian High Commission, in Colombo, and several large paintings, portraits and a 12-foot sculptured monument for the Central Bank of Sri Lanka, in Colombo.

Abeysinghe was awarded several accolades during his long career. Among them are the first prize for designing the Buddhajayanthi Stamp (1955), the Gold award for the most outstanding personality for aesthetic art by Lions International (1984), the Gold award at the Japan-Sri Lanka Exhibition in 1993, the Kalapathi award of Sri Lanka Society of Arts (1993), Vishva Prasadini and Ruhunuputhra Awards (1993). In 1984 he was invested with the singular title of “Cavaliere of the Order of Merit ” (knighthood) by the Italian Government for his services to art and sculpture.Tilake donated millions of Rupees to Sri Lanka to battle COVID-19. This includes ventilators, oxygen regulators, oxygen, blood gas analysis cartridges, ICU equipment, endotracheal tubes, and urgent ICU medicine. Proceeds of Tilake’s final exhibition in Toronto went to support malnourished families including pregnant mothers, lactating mothers and children less than five years old.

The font of Tilake’s Art is found in the lush green fields and forest glades of the Village of Karatota in the deep South where he was born. The salient features of his art are simplicity and economy. Simplicity in form and economy of means used to bring a canvas to life are derived from the unwritten philosophy of the Sri Lankan Villager, rooted as it is in the Teaching of the Buddha. Tilake’s myriad canvases are a celebration of life itself, an “Ode to Joy” in a Sri Lankan manner.

His paintings are permeated with beings of ethereal beauty, more often than not in the feminine incarnation. These canvases, which shout for the sheer joy of living, have oftentimes been created despite dire personal tragedy, like Schubert’s music. However, there is no trace of anguish in them. Tilake’s paintings are also highly original, they bear no stamp of allegiance to any other artist. Tilake’s paintings are simple and direct and they do need no titles either. Tilake paints from an inner compulsion to create and calls his paintings his “other children”. His legacy will remain for generations to come.



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Judicial vacancies: President keeps country guessing

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President

The NPP government has not taken a final decision regarding filling of the vacancies in the judiciary.

A group of Opposition MPs, led by SJB leader Sajith Premadasa, on 12 June, requested Speaker Dr. Jagath Wickremeratne to take up the issue of judicial vacancies with President Dissanayake. Opposition sources said that there were four vacancies, each in the Court of Appeal and the Supreme Court, and the inordinate delay had adversely affected the judiciary.

Government sources indicated that there was no change in the status quo as regards filling of vacancies. Referring to the government proposal to extend the retirement age of judges, authoritative sources said that no final decision had been taken yet.

SJB lawmaker Dayasiri Jayasekera told The Island that they would raise the issue in Parliament this week.

He said that the deliberate delay in making appointments to superior courts and the move to extend the retirement age couldn’t be taken separately.

The MP noted that the Bar Association of Sri Lanka, the Lawyers’ Collective, the Colombo High Court Lawyers’ Association, Colombo Magistrate’s Court Lawyers’ Association and the Bar Association of Badulla had opposed the government move.

There hadn’t been any public statements in support of the government move, MP Jayasekera said, urging the government to end uncertainty in the judiciary.

by Shamindra Ferdinando

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Sajith calls on Opposition parties to rally around SJB

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Sajith

SJB leader Sajith Premadasa has invited the UNP and other political parties to join his party. Premadasa, who is also the leader of the Opposition, has emphasised that the UNP and the SJB could reach a consensus on policies but his party wouldn’t, under any circumstances, accept whatever formula to share positions. Premadasa said so, speaking to the media over the weekend, after meeting the Mahanayaka Thera of the Malwatta Chapter of the Siyam Nikaya Most Venerable Thibbatuwawe Sri Siddhartha Sumangala Thera.

A statement issued by the Opposition Leader’s Office quoted MP Premadasa as having extended an invitation to all political parties to give up extremist policies and join the SJB.

The SJB leader alleged that the NPP government feared facing elections and that was the reason for the inordinate delay in holding Provincial Council polls. PC polls were last held in 2012, 2013 and 2014, on a staggered basis. Premadasa said that if PC polls were held his party would definitely win the majority of PCs.Premadasa also urged the government to reduce electricity tariffs and fuel prices.

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Ex-EC Chief slams govt. over PC polls delay

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Deshapriya

Former Chairman of the Election Commission, Mahinda Deshapriya, on Saturday, strongly criticised the continued postponement of local government elections, declaring that every day without elections constitutes a violation of both the Constitution and democratic principles.

Speaking during an interview with journalist Bhanuka Rajapaksa, on Hiru TV, on Saturday, Deshapriya described the current administration of local government institutions by unelected officials as fundamentally undemocratic and contrary to the spirit of representative governance.

Deshapriya said local authorities, across the country, are presently being managed by secretaries and bureaucrats rather than elected representatives, depriving citizens of their democratic right to be governed by individuals, chosen through the electoral process.

“If the Constitution recognises and provides for local government institutions, then it is the responsibility of the State to ensure that elections are held and that these bodies are administered by representatives, elected by the people,” he said.

Deshapriya rejected attempts to justify the prolonged delay, arguing that responsibility for the situation rests with the government.

He noted that while various political parties have publicly stated their readiness to face elections, the ruling administration possesses the authority to resolve any issues relating to the electoral system.

The former Election Commission chief pointed out that the government enjoyed a two-thirds majority in Parliament, enabling it to enact any legislative amendments required to facilitate the conduct of elections. Instead, he said, successive committees and review processes had been used to postpone a final decision.

He also referred to efforts by opposition legislators who have moved motions seeking to address concerns relating to the electoral framework and expedite the holding of local government polls.

Deshapriya warned that any attempt to appoint a fresh delimitation committee could further delay the electoral process, making it unlikely that local government elections would be held within the current year.

He also dismissed claims that financial constraints have prevented the conduct of elections. Expressing surprise at such assertions, he questioned how funding shortages could be cited as a reason for postponement while expenditure continues in other sectors.

According to Deshapriya, the existence of laws establishing local government institutions imposes an obligation on the State to ensure that those institutions are populated through democratic means.

“The legal framework exists. If elected representatives are not appointed through elections and institutions continue to function under unelected administrators, that is a failure of the State,” he said.

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