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Midweek Review

The strange case of Katuwapitiya suicide bomber’s wife Pulasthini

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Pulasthini Rajendra aka Sarah Jesmine

Can Pulasthini Rajendra aka Sarah Jesmine, wife of Katuwapitiya suicide bomber Atchchi Muhammadu Hastun, reveal something Abdul Cader Fatima Hadiya, wife of Zahran Hashim, couldn’t? This is the question that baffles lawmaker Mujibur Rahuman. Did Pulasthini know somethings not known to any other person alive? Rahuman asked, pointing out another mystery – the case of Jameel, who had been tasked to carry out a suicide blast at the Taj Samudra but opted to go back to a hotel in Dehiwela where he met an intelligence services officer before he triggered the blast. SJB MP Patali Champika Ranawaka made reference to intelligence officer’s alleged links with Jameel in Parliament. SJB MP Eran Wickremaratne, too, made a statement in Parliament on similar lines. However, Manusha Nanayakkara and Harin Fernando, who had led the campaign to find the truth about the Easter Sunday carnage, dropped the matter after receiving ministerial portfolios from Gotabaya Rajapaksa, at the behest of the then Premier Ranil Wickremesinghe.

By Shamindra Ferdinando

Samagi Jana Balavegaya (SJB) lawmaker Mujibur Rahuman declared in Parliament on Nov. 10, 2022 that Pulasthini Rajendra aka Sarah Jesmine, wife of Thowheed Jamaat suicide bomber Atchchi Muhammadu Hastun, who carried out the 2019 Easter Sunday blast, at St. Sebastian’s Church, at Katuwapitiya, Katana, “is alive”.

Alleging Jesmine had taken refuge in India, the Colombo district MP, who represented the UNP at the time of the Easter Sunday carnage, said that the government was struggling to prove she died during a series of blasts at Saindamaruthu, Kalmunai, on the night of April.

Speaking on the Poisons, Opium and Dangerous Drugs Amendment Act, MP Rahuman briefly addressed four contentious issues, including the claim Jesmine received refuge in India. So was she a RAW agent in Zahran camp as some speculated.

Addressing largely an empty House, lawmaker Rahuman questioned (1) the inordinate delay in amending the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) in spite of promises given by Ranil Wickremesinghe, in his capacity as the Prime Minister (2015-2019), and ousted President Gotabaya Rajapaksa (2019-2022), (2) the failure on the part of the Attorney General to disclose the cases withdrawn during Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s administration (3) disappearance of Jesmine and finally (4) dual citizens in Parliament.

Claiming that Jesmine, too, survived the Saindamaruthu blasts, MP Rahuman quoted terror mastermind Zahran Hashim’s wife, Abdul Cader Fatima Hadiya, as having told the Presidential Commission of Inquiry (P CoI) into the Easter Sunday blasts, that she heard Jesmine’s voice, after the blasts.

Zahran Hashim detonated himself at Shangri-la, on the morning of April 19, 2019. Those killed at Saindamaruthu, a week later, included Zahran Hashim’s father Mohamed Hashim and his brothers Zainee and Rilwan. Rilwan is believed to have been one of those who detonated bombs. Fatima and her child survived the Saindamaruthu blasts and remain in government custody.

MP Rahuman said that three DNZ tests, conducted on the human remains found there, had proved Jesmine hadn’t been among the dead at Saindamaruthu. Of the three tests, two were conducted during the Parliamentary Select Committee (PSC) probe into the Easter Sunday blasts and the P CoI, the MP said, pointing out the third was conducted in the wake of the then Public Security Minister Rear Admiral Sarath Weerasekera’s declaration in Parliament that the government believed Jesmine didn’t survive the Saindamaruthu blasts.

The lawmaker questioned the failure on the part of the government to establish the truth as Abubakkar, the Traffic OIC of Kalawanchikudy police who allegedly helped Jesmine to flee the country, is in the custody of the Criminal Investigation Department (CID). The outspoken MP alleged that successive governments hadn’t sought Indian assistance to apprehend Jesmine, the only person who could shed light on the Easter Sunday conspiracy.

In a way this is strange logic on the part of Rahuman to assume that Jesmine would know more about the Easter Sunday conspiracy than Zahran’s wife Fatima, who, too, survived the blasts ,with her child. Mind you Zahran was the mastermind and definitely not Jesmine’s husband Atchchi Muhammadu Hastun, who also perished when he detonated a suicide bomb at the packed Katuwapitiya Church, on Easter Sunday. Besides Jesmine, who was originally a Tamil Hindu, and had converted to Islam, only after she fell under the spell of Hastun, in 2015. So she couldn’t have been privy to the terrorist cell’s deep conspiracies, being more of an outsider.

MP Rahuman told The Island that the country couldn’t move forward without addressing the Easter Sunday mystery. The police owed an explanation as regards the arrest of Abubakkar and the status of the investigations into the police officer’s complicity in Jesmine’s escape.

Pulasthini marries Hastun

Abdul Cader Fatima Hadiya

Rajaratnam Kavitha, the mother of Jesmine (former Pulasthini before she married Hastun) is on record as having told the P CoI that her daughter had been with Fatima from February 2019 to April 26, 2019, the day the remnants of the Zahran’s group triggered the Saindamaruthu blasts.

The P CoI was told how Pulasthini had been converted to Islam, in 2015, by the General Secretary of the Sri Lanka Thowheed Jamaat (SLTJ) Abdul Razik. Pulaththini, born in 1996, had obtained 8As and 1B at the GCE O/L examination. Having chosen to study biology, Pulasthini attended private tuition classes at Kalmunai. Kavitha had been employed in Abu Dhabi at that time.

Pulasthini has disappeared in late July, 2015 and, according to Kavitha’s testimony before the P CoI, her mother (Pulasthini’s grandmother) had informed her (Kavitha) over the phone on 29 July, 2015, of the disappearance of Pulasthini. Kavitha had instructed her mother to lodge a complaint with the Kaluwanchikudy Police. Meanwhile, Razik had called Kavitha’s brother to inform that Pulasthini was with them.

It would be pertinent to mention that these developments take place at the onset of the Yahapalana administration.

Negligence on the part of police

Kavitha had been so worried she had returned from Abu Dhabi and visited Razik’s office, at Maligawatte, where she met Pulasthini dressed like a Muslim woman. There had been three men, including Razik and a woman. Having talked to Pulasthini, Kavitha had lodged a complaint with the Maligawatta police. While Kavitha had been at the Maligawatta police, Pulasthini, accompanied by Razik, visited the police station where the police advised her to take the girl home for 15 days if she remained faithful to Hinduism. But in case Pulasthini decided to follow Islam, she should be allowed to join Razik, the police stressed, while warning she would be arrested if she didn’t act accordingly.

When P CoI queried whether she was aware that a mother had the right to a child, regardless of religion, and if so, did she explain that to the Maligawatte police, Kavitha said that she was aware of that and when that point was raised, law enforcement men had told her that Pulasthini was over 18 years old and that she could do as she wished.

Kavitha also said that the police officers had got her to sign a three-page document. She added that she could not understand the contents as it had been in Sinhala.

“Razik’s aim was to convert Hindus to Islam. When I first went to the Maligawatte Police station I told them that, but the Police did not pay any attention to it and only listened to Razik,” Kavitha added.

However, Kavitha had managed to bring Pulasthini back to her home at Kalawanchikudy where she had removed the Abaya and practiced Hindu rituals. But, 15 days later, Razik had demanded that Pulasthini be returned to them. Then again, Pulasthini had disappeared on Sept. 24, 2015, after accompanying Kavitha to the Batticaloa hospital. Kavitha lodged a complaint with the Batticaloa police.

The following day, Razik had informed Kavitha that Pulasthini had got married to Hastun. Kavitha, accompanied by her brother, and one of her aunts and son, had visited Razik in Maligawatte though he couldn’t prove the said marriage took place. Maligawatta police declared they could not intervene as both Hastun and Pulasthini were over 18 years of age. During that visit to Maligawatte, Kavitha had got to know her only daughter Pulasthini had been named Sarah Jasmine after the marriage.

Obviously, there had been differences between Hastun and Jesmine and the latter left her husband and sought refuge in Abu Dhabi in early January 2016. Jesmine had arrived in Abu Dhabi on January 06, 2016, and was there for about four months. During that short spell she had been employed as a cashier there.

After having convinced Kavitha that she wanted to resume her studies and wouldn’t return to Hastun, Jesmine had returned to Kalawanchikudy in mid-2016. However, Hastun had lodged a complaint with Kattankudy police. Though Jesmin lived in Kalawanchikudy, Hastun had been so influential he got the police to hand her over to him. This couldn’t have been achieved without the intervention of a particular Muslim Federation.

Kavitha told P CoI Zahran’s wife Fatima had taken Pulasthini to a house at Narammala and the last call to her was taken on February 19, 2019 around 12.30 pm.

Kavitha explained how she made abortive attempts to lodge complaints with the Kalawanchikudy and Kattankudy police, after having lodged a complaint with the Narammala police (April 06, 2019) of her daughter’s disappearance. Subsequently, Kavitha lodged a complaint with the Human Rights Commission’s Regional Office in Batticaloa.

Kavitha asserted that her daughter’s jewellery hadn’t been among the items shown to her by the police, recovered from the scene of the Saindamaruthu blasts.

A tearful Kavitha urged law enforcement authorities to find her daughter. And had she done something wrong to punish her. “But if she is alive, give me a chance to see her at least once”, Kavitha told P CoI.

Over two years after the Easter Sunday attacks, the then Director General, Legal Affairs at the Presidential Secretariat, Attorney-at-Law Harigupta Rohanadeera insisted the government wasn’t aware of what really happened to Pulasthini though aware of her presence at Saindamaruthu at the time the military surrounded their hideout, about a week after the April 21, 2019 blasts. Rohanadeera was on Hiru ‘Salakuna’. The panel of journalists pressed the then President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s aide over Pulasthini securing refuge in India, having fled the country in a boat.

HRCSL inquiry

Mujibur Rahuman

The Island inquired into the Pulasthini’a matter, in August 2020. The writer took up this issue with the then HRCSL Chairperson Dr. Deepika Udagama and was assured that Kavitha never mentioned about Zahran’s Hashim’s involvement in her daughter’s disappearance when she visited the HRCSL regional office, in Batticaloa.

Dr. Udagama said there hadn’t been any reference to Zahran when Kavitha visited the Regional Office, on April 17, 2019, four days before the Easter attacks.

Dr. Udagama was responding to The Island query whether the Regional Office informed Colombo of receiving a complaint as regards the missing young woman. The Island raised the issue with Dr. Udagama in the wake of Kavitha‘s testimony, before the Presidential Commission of Inquiry (P CoI), in late July 2020.

Kavitha said that she visited the HRCSL Regional Office, in Batticaloa, after the Kaluwanchikudy and Kattankudy Police stations declined to accept her complaints. Kavitha said: I informed an officer there that I found out my daughter was with Zahran. At that moment he said he knew Zahran and that there was nothing to be scared of since Zahran was a normal person.”

Kavitha also quoted a Batticaloa-based HRCSL official as having said there was no need to lodge a complaint and that he would look into the matter.

Q (The Island): Did HRCSL receive a complaint in this regard or any information regarding Kavitha’s visit to HRCSL Regional Office?

A (Dr. Deepika Udagama): We obtained a detailed report on the matter from our Batticaloa Regional Office. It also includes the log entry relating to the visit of Ms. Kavitha to the Regional Office on 17 April, 2020. According to our records, one Ms. Kavitha of Mankadu, Cettipalayam, had visited our Batticaloa Regional Office on 17 April, 2019, accompanied by a male. Her complaint was that her daughter P. Pulasthini (age 24) had gone away with a young man from the Muslim community and had married him, in 2015, and that her whereabouts were not known. She had appealed to the HRCSL to assist in finding her. As the matter was of a private nature, our officer had informed Ms. Kavitha that it did not fall within the HRCSL’s statutory mandate. Ms. Kavitha had been advised to seek the assistance of the police to find her daughter. At that point the mother had not been informed of any attempts to complain to the police or of any inaction on the part of the police. If that were the case the complaint would have been registered.

In her complaint Ms. Kavitha had stated that one Razik, from a Muslim organisation, was having influence over her daughter’s family life. There had been no mention of a Zahran. In fact, as a gesture of assistance, our officer had called a telephone number, provided by Ms. Kavitha, which was said to be that of Razik.

He had denied knowledge of Pulasthini’s whereabouts and had mentioned that the parents had complained to the Maligawatta police station about the matter and that the police, including CID, had questioned him in that regard. As there was nothing out of the ordinary about the complaint, the HRCSL Colombo had not been informed. That is the regular procedure.

Q: Did P CoI ask HRCSL personnel to appear before it? And if not, will you be inquiring into this (in the wake of PCoI revelation.)

A: No, we have not been summoned by the P CoI. The records from our Batticaloa office, in our opinion, do not give rise to any issue that requires further investigation.

Q: Did HRCSL inquire into the Easter Sunday tragedy or receive complaints as regards the government’s failure to thwart the carnage?

A: Even in the absence of a complaint, the HRCSL could investigate this matter on its own initiative (per S.14 of HRCSL Act, No 21 of 1996). However, we are aware that the same issue is being canvassed before the Supreme Court via FR petition by at least one aggrieved party. When a matter is being canvassed before the Supreme Court in a FR application, the Commission does not conduct a parallel inquiry. The decision of the SC is binding on all parties.

Safer dead

Four years after 2019 Easter Sunday carnage, the fate of Pulasthini remains a mystery. The first volume of the P CoI final report (Vol. 1, page 223) referred to this matter as follows: “The Commission of Inquiry received evidence of two witnesses who testified that Sarah was seen alive after the Easter Sunday attacks and had fled to India. In her testimony, Zahran’s wife Abdul Cader Fatima Hadiya said that after the blasts at Saindamaruthu, on April 26, 2019, she lost consciousness. After she regained consciousness, she could hear the voice of a woman which sounded like that of Sarah. The DNA analysis, with the mother of Sarah, did not establish that Sarah had died in the blasts. In view of this testimony, the COI recommends that investigations into Sarah be continued.”

Several lawmakers, including S.M.S. Marrikar (SJB), Manusha Namayakkara (SJB) and Rauf Hakeem (SLMC), also elected on the SJB ticket, commented on Sarah’s matter.

The former Attorney General Dappula de Livera, in an interview with News First journalist Zulfick Farzan, on May 17, 2021, commented on the issue at hand. Livera said that her death at the Saindamaruthu gun battle, followed by explosions, is yet to be confirmed. “We understand that she fled to India, but that too is not confirmed. Actually, her whereabouts remain unknown.”

The National Catholic Committee for Justice to the Easter Sunday Attack Victims, on July 12, 2021, raised a gamut of issues pertaining to NTJ suicide attacks with the then President Gotabaya Rajapaksa. Sarah’s disappearance was high on the Catholic group’s agenda. Gotabaya Rajapaksa did nothing to address the concerns of the Catholic Church. The Wickremesinghe-Rajapaksa government, too, seems yet to address the issues. The SJB MP Rahuman’s criticism in Parliament, on November 10, 2022, is evidence that the Easter Sunday mystery hadn’t been solved.



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Midweek Review

Fonseka clears Rajapaksas of committing war crimes he himself once accused them of

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With Sri Lanka’s 17th annual war victory over separatist Tamil terrorism just months away, warwinning Army Chief, Field Marshal Sarath Fonseka (Dec. 06, 2005, to July 15, 2009) has significantly changed his war narrative pertaining to the final phase of the offensive that was brought to an end on May 18, 2009.

The armed forces declared the conclusion of ground operations on that day after the entire northern region was brought back under their control. LTTE leader Velupillai Prabhakaran, hiding within the secured area, was killed on the following day. His body was recovered from the banks of the Nanthikadal lagoon.

With the war a foregone conclusion, with nothing to save the increasingly hedged in Tigers taking refuge among hapless Tamil civilians, Fonseka left for Beijing on May 11, and returned to Colombo, around midnight, on May 17, 2009. The LTTE, in its last desperate bid to facilitate Prabhakatan’s escape, breached one flank of the 53 Division, around 2.30 am, on May 18. But they failed to bring the assault to a successful conclusion and by noon the following day those fanatical followers of Tiger Supremo, who had been trapped within the territory, under military control, died in confrontations.

During Fonseka’s absence, the celebrated 58 Division (formerly Task Force 1), commanded by the then Maj. Gen. Shavendra Silva, advanced 31/2 to 4 kms and was appropriately positioned with Maj. Gen. Kamal Gunaratne’s 53 Division. The LTTE never had an opportunity to save its leader by breaching several lines held by frontline troops on the Vanni east front. There couldn’t have been any other option than surrendering to the Army.

The Sinha Regiment veteran, who had repeatedly accused the Rajapaksas of war crimes, and betraying the war effort by providing USD 2 mn, ahead of the 2005 presidential election, to the LTTE, in return for ordering the polls boycott that enabled Mahinda Rajapaksa’s victory, last week made noteworthy changes to his much disputed narrative.

GR’s call to Shavendra What did the former Army Commander say?

* The Rajapaksas wanted to sabotage the war effort, beginning January 2008.

* In January 2008, Mahinda Rajapaksa, Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa and Navy Commander VA Wasantha Karannagoda, proposed to the National Security Council that the Army should advance from Vavuniya to Mullithivu, on a straight line, to rapidly bring the war to a successful conclusion. They asserted that Fonseka’s strategy (fighting the enemy on multiple fronts) caused a lot of casualties.

* They tried to discourage the then Lt. Gen. Fonseka

* Fonseka produced purported video evidence to prove decisive intervention made by Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa on the afternoon of May 17. The ex-Army Chief’s assertion was based on a telephone call received by Maj. Gen. Shavendra Silva from Gotabaya Rajapaksa. That conversation had been captured on video by Swarnavahini’s Shanaka de Silva who now resides in the US. He had been one of the few persons, from the media, authorised by the Army Headquarters and the Defence Ministry to be with the Army leadership on the battlefield. Fonseka claimed that the videographer fled the country to escape death in the hands of the Rajapaksas. It was somewhat reminiscent of Maithripala Sirisena’s claim that if Rajapaksas win the 2015 Presidential election against him he would be killed by them.

* Shanaka captured Shavendra Silva disclosing three conditions laid down by the LTTE to surrender namely (a) Their casualties should be evacuated to Colombo by road (b) They were ready to exchange six captured Army personnel with those in military custody and (c) and the rest were ready to surrender.

* Then Fonseka received a call from Gotabaya Rajapaksa, on a CDMA phone. The Defence Secretary issued specific instructions to the effect that if the LTTE was to surrender that should be to the military and definitely not to the ICRC or any other third party. Gotabaya Rajapaksa, one-time Commanding Officer of the 1st battalion of the Gajaba Regiment, ordered that irrespective of any new developments and talks with the international community, offensive action shouldn’t be halted. That declaration directly contradicted Fonseka’s claim that the Rajapaksas conspired to throw a lifeline to the LTTE.

Fonseka declared that the Rajapaksa brothers, in consultation with the ICRC, and Amnesty International, offered an opportunity for the LTTE leadership to surrender, whereas his order was to annihilate the LTTE. The overall plan was to eliminate all, Fonseka declared, alleging that the Rajapaksa initiated talks with the LTTE and other parties to save those who had been trapped by ground forces in a 400 m x 400 m area by the night of May 16, among a Tamil civilian human shield held by force.

If the LTTE had agreed to surrender to the Army, Mahinda Rajapaksa would have saved their lives. If that happened Velupillai Prabhakaran would have ended up as the Chief Minister of the Northern Province, he said. Fonseka shocked everyone when he declared that he never accused the 58 Division of executing prisoners of war (white flag killings) but the issue was created by those media people embedded with the military leadership. Fonseka declared that accusations regarding white flag killings never happened. That story, according to Fonseka, had been developed on the basis of the Rajapaksas’ failed bid to save the lives of the LTTE leaders.

Before we discuss the issues at hand, and various assertions, claims and allegations made by Fonseka, it would be pertinent to remind readers of wartime US Defence Advisor in Colombo Lt. Col. Lawrence Smith’s June 2011 denial of white flag killings. The US State Department promptly declared that the officer hadn’t spoken at the inaugural Colombo seminar on behalf of the US. Smith’s declaration, made two years after the end of the war, and within months after the release of the Darusman report, dealt a massive blow to false war crimes allegations.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, in 2010, appointed a three-member Panel of Experts, more like a kangaroo court, consisting of Marzuki Darusman, Yasmin Sooka, and Steven Ratner, to investigate war crimes accusations.

Now Fonseka has confirmed what Smith revealed at the defence seminar in response to a query posed by Maj. General (retd.) Ashok Metha of the IPKF to Shavendra Silva, who had been No 02 in our UN mission, in New York, at that time.

White flag allegations

‘White flag’ allegations cannot be discussed in isolation. Fonseka made that claim as the common presidential candidate backed by the UNP-JVP-TNA combine. The shocking declaration was made in an interview with The Sunday Leader Editor Frederica Jansz published on Dec. 13, 2009 under ‘Gota ordered them to be shot – General Sarath Fonseka.’

The ‘white flag’ story had been sensationally figured in a leaked confidential US Embassy cable, during Patricia Butenis tenure as the US Ambassador here. Butenis had authored that cable at 1.50 pm on Dec. 13, 2009, the day after the now defunct The Sunday Leader exclusive. Butenis had lunch with Fonseka in the company of the then UNP Deputy Leader Karu Jayasuriya, according to the cable. But for the writer the most interesting part had been Butenis declaration that Fonseka’s advisors, namely the late Mangala Samaraweera, Anura Kumara Dissanayake (incumbent President) and Vijitha Herath (current Foreign Minister) wanted him to retract part of the story attributed to him.

Frederica Jansz fiercely stood by her explosive story. She reiterated the accuracy of the story, published on Dec. 13, 2009, during the ‘white flag’ hearing when the writer spoke to her. There is absolutely no reason to suspect Frederica Jansz misinterpreted Fonseka’s response to her queries.

Subsequently, Fonseka repeated the ‘white flag’ allegation at a public rally held in support of his candidature. Many an eyebrow was raised at The Sunday Leader’s almost blind support for Fonseka, against the backdrop of persistent allegations directed at the Army over Lasantha Wickrematunga’s killing. Wickrematunga, an Attorney-at-Law by profession and one-time Private Secretary to Opposition Leader Sirimavo Bandaranaike, was killed on the Attidiya Road, Ratmalana in early January 2009.

The Darusman report, too, dealt withthe ‘white flag’ killings and were central to unsubstantiated Western accusations directed at the Sri Lankan military. Regardless of the political environment in which the ‘white flag’ accusations were made, the issue received global attention for obvious reasons. The accuser had been the war-winning Army Commander who defeated the LTTE at its own game. But, Fonseka insisted, during his meeting with Butenis, as well as the recent public statement that the Rajapaksas had worked behind his back with some members of the international community.

Fresh inquiry needed

Fonseka’s latest declaration that the Rajapaksas wanted to save the LTTE leadership came close on the heels of Deputy British Prime Minister David Lammy’s whistle-stop visit here. The UK, as the leader of the Core Group on Sri Lanka at the Geneva-based United Nations Human Rights Council, spearheads the campaign targeting Sri Lanka.

Lammy was on his way to New Delhi for the AI Impact Summit. The Labour campaigner pushed for action against Sri Lanka during the last UK general election. In fact, taking punitive action against the Sri Lankan military had been a key campaign slogan meant to attract Tamil voters of Sri Lankan origin. His campaign contributed to the declaration of sanctions in March 2025 against Admiral of the Fleet Wasantha Karannagoda, General (retd) Shavendra Silva, General (retd) Jagath Jayasuriya and ex-LTTE commander Karuna, who rebelled against Prabhakaran. Defending Shavendra Silva, Fonseka, about a week after the imposition of the UK sanctions, declared that the British action was unfair.

But Fonseka’s declaration last week had cleared the Rajapaksas of war crimes. Instead, they had been portrayed as traitors. That declaration may undermine the continuous post-war propaganda campaign meant to demonise the Rajapaksas and top ground commanders.

Canada, then a part of the Western clique that blindly towed the US line, declared Sri Lanka perpetrated genocide and also sanctioned ex-Presidents Mahinda Rajapaksa and Gotabaya Rajapaksa. Other countries resorted to action, though such measures weren’t formally announced. General (retd) Jagath Dias and Maj. Gen (retd) Chagie Gallage were two of those targeted.

Against the backdrop of Fonseka’s latest claims, in respect of accountability issues, the urgent need to review action taken against Sri Lanka cannot be delayed. Although the US denied visa when Fonseka was to accompany President Maithripala Sirisena to the UN, in Sept. 2016, he hadn’t been formally accused of war crimes by the western powers, obviously because he served their interests.

On the basis of unsubstantiated allegations that hadn’t been subjected to judicial proceedings, Geneva initiated actions. The US, Canada and UK acted on those accusations. The US sanctioned General Shavendra Silva in Feb. 2020 and Admiral Karannagoda in April 2023.

What compelled Fonseka to change his narrative, 18 years after his Army ended the war? Did Fonseka base his latest version solely on Shanaka de Silva video? Fonseka is on record as claiming that he got that video, via a third party, thereby Shanaka de Silva had nothing to do with his actions.

DNA and formation of DP

Having realised that he couldn’t, under any circumstances, reach a consensus with the UNP to pursue a political career with that party, Fonseka teamed up with the JVP, one of the parties in the coalition that backed his presidential bid in 2010. Fonseka’s current efforts to reach an understanding with the JVP/NPP (President Anura Kumara Dissanayake is the leader of both registered political parties) should be examined against the backdrop of their 2010 alliance.

Under Fonseka’s leadership, the JVP, and a couple of other parties/groups, contested, under the symbol of the Democratic National Alliance (DNA) that had been formed on 22 Nov. 2009. but the grouping pathetically failed to live up to their own expectations. The results of the parliamentary polls, conducted in April 2010, had been devastating and utterly demoralising. Fonseka, who polled about 40% of the national vote at the January 2010 presidential election, ended up with just over 5% of the vote, and the DNA only managed to secure seven seats, including two on the National List. The DNA group consisted of Fonseka, ex-national cricket captain Arjuna Ranatunga, businessman Tiran Alles and four JVPers. Anura Kumara Dissanayake was among the four.

Having been arrested on February 8, 2010, soon after the presidential election, Fonseka was in prison. He was court-martialed for committing “military offences”. He was convicted of corrupt military supply deals and sentenced to three years in prison. Fonseka vacated his seat on 7 Oct .2010. Following a failed legal battle to protect his MP status, Fonseka was replaced by DNA member Jayantha Ketagoda on 8 March 2011. But President Mahinda Rajapaksa released Fonseka in May 2012 following heavy US pressure. The US went to the extent of issuing a warning to the then SLFP General Secretary Maithripala Sirisena that unless President Rajapaksa freed Fonseka he would have to face the consequences (The then Health Minister Sirisena disclosed the US intervention when the writer met him at the Jealth Ministry, as advised by President Rajapaksa)

By then, Fonseka and the JVP had drifted apart and both parties were irrelevant. Somawansa Amarasinghe had been the leader at the time the party decided to join the UNP-led alliance that included the TNA, and the SLMC. The controversial 2010 project had the backing of the US as disclosed by leaked secret diplomatic cables during Patricia Butenis tenure as the US Ambassador here.

In spite of arranging the JVP-led coalition to bring an end to the Rajapaksa rule, Butenis, in a cable dated 15 January 2010, explained the crisis situation here. Butenis said: “There are no examples we know of a regime undertaking wholesale investigations of its own troops or senior officials for war crimes while that regime or government remained in power. In Sri Lanka this is further complicated by the fact that responsibility for many of the alleged crimes rests with the country’s senior civilian and military leadership, including President Rajapaksa and his brothers and opposition candidate General Fonseka.”

Then Fonseka scored a major victory when Election Commissioner Mahinda Deshapriya on 1 April, 2013, recognised his Democratic Party (DNA was registered as DP) with ‘burning flame’ as its symbol. There hadn’t been a previous instance of any service commander registering a political party. While Fonseka received the leadership, ex-Army officer Senaka de Silva, husband of Diana Gamage ((later SJB MP who lost her National List seat over citizenship issue) functioned as the Deputy Leader.

Having covered Fonseka’s political journey, beginning with the day he handed over command to Lt. Gen. Jagath Jayasuriya, in July, 2009, at the old Army Headquarters that was later demolished to pave the way for the Shangri-La hotel complex, the writer covered the hastily arranged media briefing at the Solis reception hall, Pitakotte, on 2 April, 2023. Claiming that his DP was the only alternative to what he called corrupt Mahinda Rajapaksa’s government and bankrupt Ranil Wickremesinghe-led Opposition, a jubilant Fonseka declared himself as the only alternative (‘I am the only alternative,’ with strapline ‘SF alleges Opposition is as bad as govt’. The Island, April 3, 2013).

Fonseka had been overconfident to such an extent, he appealed to members of the government parliamentary group, as well as the Opposition (UNP), to switch allegiance to him. As usual Fonseka was cocky and never realised that 40% of the national vote he received, at the presidential election, belonged to the UNP, TNA and the JVP. Fonseka also disregarded the fact that he no longer had the JVP’s support. He was on his own. The DP never bothered to examine the devastating impact his 2010 relationship with the TNA had on the party. The 2015 general election results devastated Fonseka and underscored that there was absolutely no opportunity for a new party. The result also proved that his role in Sri Lanka’s triumph over the LTTE hadn’t been a decisive factor.

RW comes to SF’s rescue

Fonseka’s DP suffered a humiliating defeat at the August 2015 parliamentary polls. The outcome had been so bad that the DP was left without at least a National List slot. Fonseka was back to square one. If not for UNP leader and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, Fonseka could have been left in the cold. Wickremesinghe accommodated Fonseka on their National List, in place of SLFPer M.K.D.S. Gunawardene, who played a critical role in an influential section of the party and the electorate shifting support to Maithripala Sirisena. Gunawardena passed away on 19 January, 2016. Wickremesinghe and Fonseka signed an agreement at Temple Trees on 3 February, 2016. Fonseka received appointment as National List MP on 9 February, 2016, and served as Minister of Regional Development and, thereafter, as Minister of Wildlife and Sustainable Development, till Oct. 2018. Fonseka lost his Ministry when President Sirisena treacherously sacked Wickremesinghe’s government to pave the way for a new partnership with the Rajapaksas. The Supreme Court discarded that arrangement and brought back the Yahapalana administration but Sirisena, who appointed Fonseka to the lifetime rank of Field Marshal, in recognition of his contribution to the defeat of terrorism, refused to accommodate him in Wickremesinghe’s Cabinet. The President also left out Wasantha Karannagoda and Roshan Goonetilleke. Sirisena appointed them Admiral of the Fleet and Marshal of Air Force, respectively, on 19, Sept. 2019, in the wake of him failing to secure the required backing to contest the Nov. 2019 presidential election.

Wickremesinghe’s UNP repeatedly appealed on behalf of Fonseka in vain to Sirisena. At the 2020 general election, Fonseka switched his allegiance to Sajith Premadasa and contested under the SJB’s ‘telephone’ symbol and was elected from the Gampaha district. Later, following a damaging row with Sajith Premadasa, he quit the SJB as its Chairman and, at the last presidential election, joined the fray as an independent candidate. Having secured just 22,407 votes, Fonseka was placed in distant 9th position. Obviously, Fonseka never received any benefits from support extended to the 2022 Aragalaya and his defeat at the last presidential election seems to have placed him in an extremely difficult position, politically.

Let’s end this piece by reminding that Fonseka gave up the party leadership in early 2024 ahead of the presidential election. Senaka de Silva succeeded Fonseka as DP leader, whereas Dr. Asosha Fernando received appointment as its Chairman. The DP has aligned itself with the NPP. The rest is history.

By Shamindra Ferdinando

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Midweek Review

Strengths and weaknesses of BRICS+: Implications for Global South

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The 16th BRICS Summit, from 22 to 24 October 2024 in Kazan, was attended by 24 heads of state, including the five countries that officially became part of the group on 1 January: Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Iran, Egypt and Ethiopia. Argentina finally withdrew from the forum after Javier Milei’s government took office in 2023.

In the end, it changed its strategy and instead of granting full membership made them associated countries adding a large group of 13 countries: two from Latin America (Bolivia and Cuba), three from Africa (Algeria, Nigeria, Uganda) and eight from Asia (Belarus, Indonesia, Kazakhstan, Malaysia, Thailand, Turkey, Uzbekistan and Vietnam). This confirms the expansionary intent of the BRICS, initiated last year and driven above all by China, which seeks to turn the group into a relevant multilateral forum, with focus on political than economic interaction, designed to serve its interests in the geopolitical dispute with the United States. This dispute however is not the making of China but has arisen mainly due to the callous bungling of  Donald Trump in his second term in office.

China has emerged as the power that could influence the membership within the larger group more than its rival in the region, India.  Obviously, the latter  is concerned about these developments but seems powerless to stop the trend as more countries realize the need for the development of capacity to resist Western dominance. India in this regard seems to be reluctant possibly due to its defence obligations to the US with Trump  declaring war against countries that try to forge partnerships aiming to de-dollarize the global economic system.

The real weakness in BRICS therefore, is the seemingly intractable rivalry between China and India and the impact of this relationship on the other members who are keen to see the organisation grow its capacity to meet its stated goals. China is committed to developing an alternative to the Western dominated world order, particularly the weaponization of the dollar by the US. India does not want to be seen as anti-west and as a result  India is often viewed as a reluctant or cautious member of BRICS. This problem seems to be perpetuated due to the ongoing border tensions with China. India therefore has a  desire to maintain a level playing field within the group, rather than allowing it to be dominated by Beijing.

Though India seems to be  committed to a multipolar world, it prefers focusing on economic cooperation over geopolitical alignment. India thinks the expansion of BRICS initiated by China may dilute its influence within the bloc to the advantage of China. India fears the bloc is shifting toward an anti-Western tilt driven by China and Russia, complicating its own strong ties with the West. India is wary of the new members who are also beneficiaries of China’s Belt and Road Initiative. While China aims to use BRICS for anti-Western geopolitical agendas, India favors focusing on South-South financial cooperation and reforming international institutions. Yet India seems to be not in favour of creating a new currency to replace the dollar which could obviously strengthen the South-South financial transactions bypassing the dollar.

Moreover, India has explicitly opposed the expansion of the bloc to include certain nations, such as Pakistan, indicating a desire to control the group’s agenda, especially during its presidency.

In this equation an important factor is the role that Russia could play. The opinion expressed by the Russian foreign minister in this regard may be significant. Referring to the new admissions the Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has said: “The weight, prominence and importance of the candidates and their international standing were the primary factors for us [BRICS members]. It is our shared view that we must recruit like-minded countries into our ranks that believe in a multipolar world order and the need for more democracy and justice in international relations. We need those who champion a bigger role for the Global South in global governance. The six countries whose accession was announced today fully meet these criteria.”

The admission of three major oil producing countries, Saudi Arabia, Iran and UAE is bound to have a significant impact on the future global economic system and consequently may have positive implications for the Global South. These countries would have the ability to decisively help in creating a new international trading system to replace the 5 centuries old system that the West created to transfer wealth from the South to the North. This is so because the petro-dollar is the pillar of the western banking system and is at the very core of the de-dollarizing process that the BRICS is aiming at. This cannot be done without taking on board Saudi Arabia, a staunch ally of the west. BRICS’ expansion, therefore, is its transformation into the most representative community in the world, whose members interact with each other bypassing Western pressure.  Saudi Arabia and Iran are actively mending fences, driven by a 2023 China-brokered deal to restore diplomatic ties, reopen embassies, and de-escalate regional tensions. While this detente has brought high-level meetings and a decrease in direct hostility rapprochement is not complete yet and there is hope which also has implications, positive for the South and may not be so for the North.

Though the US may not like what is going on, Europe, which may not endorse all that the former does if one is to go by the speech delivered by the Canadian PM in Brazil recently, may not be displeased about the rapid growth of BRICS. The Guardian UK highlighted expert opinion that BRICS expansion is rather “a symbol of broad support from the global South for the recalibration of the world order.” A top official at the Konrad Adenauer Foundation, Caroline Kanter has told the daily, “It is  obvious that we [Western countries] are no longer able to set our own conditions and standards. Proposals will be expected from us so that in the future we will be perceived as an attractive partner.” At the same time, the bottom line is that BRICS expansion is perceived in the West as a political victory for Russia and China which augurs well for the future of BRICS and the Global South.

Poor countries, relentlessly  battered by the neo-liberal global economy, will greatly benefit if  BRICS succeeds in forging a new world order and usher in an era of self-sufficiency and economic independence. There is no hope for them in the present system designed to exploit their natural resources and keep them in a perpetual state of dependency and increasing poverty. BRICS is bound to be further strengthened if more countries from the South join it. Poor countries must come together and with the help of  BRICS work towards this goal.

by N. A. de S. Amaratunga

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Midweek Review

Eventide Comes to Campus

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In the gentle red and gold of the setting sun,

The respected campus in Colombo’s heart,

Is a picture of joyful rest and relief,

Of games taking over from grueling studies,

Of undergrads heading home in joyful ease,

But in those bags they finally unpack at night,

Are big books waiting to be patiently read,

Notes needing completing and re-writing,

And dreamily worked out success plans,

Long awaiting a gutsy first push to take off.

By Lynn Ockersz

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