Features
Bala Tampoe’s resistance lives on
By Devana Senanayake
Bala Tampoe may have died in 2014, but his commitment to the social transformation of society and his need to combat the exploitation the proletariat faced, can be felt even ten years later. His contributions are particularly important because the “means of social (re)production” have been upended and reoriented by the pandemic and the economic crisis.
Social reproduction is the labor needed to maintain a labor force and includes intimate labor such as mental and emotional labor. Women’s lives, in the household or in their field, be it formal or informal, have been impacted. But it is in the existence of individuals, collectives and unions—forces of quiet resistance—in this realm that Bala’s spirit lives on in.
Born into an aristocratic Tamil family, Bala’s family had a deep impact on his life choices. His father, a coconut planter and civil servant for the colonial government, used to ride both horses and cars. Bala in a profile recalled his father’s tendency to lash out with his whip at people and bullocks who blocked his path on the road.
His mother, the child of a former Chief Post Master, was a fan of the Indian Nationalist movement and admired leaders such as Gandhi and Nehru. Familial tensions plagued his household and his father used to beat his mother which inspired his desire to defend the oppressed.
Bala studied in Royal College and started his activism early as he joined the Suriya Mal Movement and then the LSSP’s anti-imperialist movement in the early 1940s. Once he received his undergraduate degree from the University of Peradeniya, he lectured students about botany and horticulture, before his dismissal for participation in the Public Workers Strike in 1947.
Nevertheless, Bala’s passion for education did not stop there. Workers, students and children learned about history, philosophy, economics and even feminism, as he touched on texts such as Simone De Beauvoir’s The Second Sex and Kate Millett’s Sexual Politics, in his lectures.
In 1948, Bala became General Secretary of the Ceylon Mercantile Union (CMU) and held his post for 67 years until his death. He participated in the Hartal in 1953—an iconic moment in the country’s history as trade unions and the proletariat opposed the removal of the rice subsidy by the Prime Minister, Dudley Senanayake.
Workers took to the streets, smashed buses, uprooted rail-lines and stopped public transport. Their militancy paralyzed the state apparatus and this resulted in the reduction of the price of rice and the prime minister’s resignation. Bala also led numerous other strikes such as the Lake House strike 1959 and the SLBC strike 1966.
Women’s concerns also received his support, primarily the 600 day strike at Lucky Industries and Polytex strike 1981-1982. Kumudini Samuels, for instance, remembers her participation in the strikes in the 1970s as an employee at Carsons.
Bala also advocated for labor reform such as a bill to limit the unfair termination of employees. He met Dudley Senanayake, proposed state intervention to combat unfair dismissal and laid the foundations for the Termination of Employment Act in 1971. He helped draft a National Workers’ Charter which successive governments have failed to initiate and recommended the ratification of ILO Convention 87 (Freedom of Association and Protection of the Right to Organize) and 98 (Right to Organize and Collective Bargaining Convention).
The CMU moved from a union which represented white collar members of the mercantile sector to those at the factory-floor level. It has promptly been re-named the Ceylon Mercantile Industrial and General Workers Union.
“Today, our union is only one-fifth our original size. We have some 7,000-8,000 members today, but at one point we had 35,000 workers. We could paralyze the Colombo Port,” Bala told Meera Srinivasan in 2013. One such example is the strike in Colombo Port in 1963. At present, the CMU has a membership of only 3,000.
Bala also ran for Parliament in 1960 and 1965 but lost in both instances. He opposed the LSSP, CP and SLFP formation of the United Left Front (ULF) coalition in 1964 and left the party to form the LSSP-R, the ‘R’ standing for revolutionary. He led the LSSP-R, entered it into the Fourth International and renamed it as the Revolutionary Marxist Party (RMP).
Under Upali Cooray, the RMP mobilized women, published a women’s manifesto, and tried to kickstart a women’s liberation movement.
As a lawyer, he defended the young men of the JVP insurrection in 1971. He defended their right to political expression in the Criminal Justice Commission in 1972. The CMU protested the detention of nearly 4,000 comrades, many of them tortured under police custody. They also opposed the State of Emergency which permitted the disposal of dead bodies without the need for a post-mortem examination.
“In 1971 and 1972, comrade Bala’s brilliant knowledge and understanding of Marxism and law brought another dimension to the whole Criminal Justice Commission trial in that a holistic class perspective of the April 1971 insurrection could be presented to the world,” Lionel Bopage said in his article about Bala in 2014.
Women were also unfairly snared in the violence of the counter-insurrection in 1971-72. Former beauty queen in Kataragama, Premavathi Manamperi was arrested, tortured and paraded naked in the Holy City for suspicions of JVP sympathies. She was then shot and buried alive. She had only attended some Marxist classes, but reports later revealed the incident to be an act of revenge by a rejected military officer. Bala mobilized people to protest about her unjust death.
He also advocated a political solution to the National Question as an active member of the Movement for Inter-Racial Justice and Equality (MIRJE), founded by Fr. Paul Caspersz. Of Bala’s romantic partners, unionists and activists fondly recall May Wickramasuriya. May joined the CMU in 1951 and their Executive Committee in 1953.
She played a vital role in the CMU and Employers Federation of Ceylon’s Collective Bargaining Agreement to provide administrators, clerks and executives in British-led companies benefits such as 42 days of leave, a dispute resolution mechanism and retirement at 60. She also helped the CMU secure its premises in Kollupitiya and it is one of the only trade unions in the country to have a property in its name.
May became Assistant-General Secretary of the CMU in 1957 and stayed on until 1998. “May was an institution at CMU. She held the CMU together. She was very supportive of us, women. Bala would listen to May. At that time, none of the trade unions were pro-women. They had no notion of women’s demands and rights in the labor movement and were very male-centric,” Kumudini told me. May experienced a stroke in November 1995 and died three years later in 1998.
After Bala’s demise in 2014, the CMU’s membership and relevance has also disappeared. When I contacted the CMU, they declined to comment and a former member at the last minute refused the publication of his responses. This behavior is indicative of the present state of trade unions, which are primarily male-dominated.
Many of them, led by fossilized men, are embroiled in interpersonal tensions and battles of succession. The tendency to familiarize relationships and political movements means that the consensus and solidarity needed to respond to the moment is lost.
In the meantime, the economic crisis has completely upended the country. Welfare and social services, such as universal healthcare and free education, are underfunded and in-decline. Women and children have been disproportionately hit. The inflation of food has led to severe child malnutrition. Mothers subsist on one meal a day. Girls have dropped out of school as the prices of stationery, uniforms and transport have risen. A number of houses have had their electricity disconnected and are in voluntary blackout. Families in the North, East and Central provinces are in-debt for basic essentials such as food and medicine.
Workers in feminized and invisible roles in the formal and informal sector are burdened by their material realities, exploitation in their realms of labor and inside their households. Women in the plantation sector, apparel sector and domestic labor have set up unions in the past couple of years.
Collectives in the LGBTQIA+ community have distributed mutual aid and resources in times of crisis. Activists continue to bail out LGBTQIA+ folks and sex workers arbitrarily arrested under the Vagrants Ordinance. Women in the Muslim community have protested the institution of marriage under the Muslim Marriage and Divorce Act which impacts poor and rural-based women and children in particular.
These are just a handful of responses to the crisis of “social (re)production” in place.
At present, a dual response which considers formal and informal labor and the intricacies of intimate life, an invisible realm of labor, is the playground for resistance.
While he did not directly champion these causes, the essence of Bala’s spirit can be seen in these quiet but consistent acts of resistance, as the men he inspired are consumed by their personal vices, paper-thin egos and abject mediocrity.
Features
Trump’s Venezuela gamble: Why markets yawned while the world order trembled
The world’s most powerful military swoops into Venezuela, in the dead of night, captures a sitting President, and spirits him away to face drug trafficking charges in New York. The entire operation, complete with at least 40 casualties, was announced by President Trump as ‘extraordinary’ and ‘brilliant.’ You’d think global financial markets would panic. Oil prices would spike. Stock markets would crash. Instead, something strange happened: almost nothing.
Oil prices barely budged, rising less than 2% before settling back. Stock markets actually rallied. The US dollar remained steady. It was as if the world’s financial markets collectively shrugged at what might be the most brazen American military intervention since the 1989 invasion of Panama.
But beneath this calm surface, something far more significant is unfolding, a fundamental reshaping of global power dynamics that could define the next several decades. The story of Trump’s Venezuela intervention isn’t really about Venezuela at all. It’s about oil, money, China, and the slow-motion collapse of the international order we’ve lived under since World War II. (Figure 1)

The Oil Paradox
Venezuela sits on the world’s largest proven oil reserves, more than Saudi Arabia, more than Russia. We’re talking about 303 billion barrels. This should be one of the wealthiest nations on Earth. Instead, it’s an economic catastrophe. Venezuela’s oil production has collapsed from 3.5 million barrels per day in the late 1990s to less than one million today, barely 1% of global supply (Figure 1). Years of corruption, mismanagement, and US sanctions have turned treasure into rubble. The infrastructure is so degraded that even if you handed the country to ExxonMobil tomorrow, it would take a decade and hundreds of billions of dollars to fix.
This explains why oil markets barely reacted. Traders looked at Venezuela’s production numbers and basically said: “What’s there to disrupt?” Meanwhile, the world is drowning in oil. The global market has a surplus of nearly four million barrels per day. American production alone hit record levels above 13.8 million barrels daily. Venezuela’s contribution simply doesn’t move the needle anymore (Figure 1).
But here’s where it gets interesting. Trump isn’t just removing a dictator. He’s explicitly taking control of Venezuela’s oil. In his own words, the country will “turn over” 30 to 50 million barrels, with proceeds controlled by him personally “to ensure it is used to benefit the people of Venezuela and the United States.” American oil companies, he promised, would “spend billions of dollars” to rebuild the infrastructure.
This isn’t subtle. One energy policy expert put it bluntly: “Trump’s focus on Venezuelan oil grants credence to those who argue that US foreign policy has always been about resource extraction.”
The Real Winners: Defence and Energy
While oil markets stayed calm, defence stocks went wild. BAE Systems jumped 4.4%, Germany’s Rheinmetall surged 6.1%. These companies see what others might miss, this isn’t a one-off. If Trump launches military operations to remove leaders he doesn’t like, there will be more.
Energy stocks told a similar story. Chevron, the only U.S. oil major currently authorised to operate in Venezuela, surged 10% in pre-market trading. ExxonMobil, ConocoPhillips, and oil services companies posted solid gains. Investors are betting on lucrative reconstruction contracts. Think Iraq after 2003, but potentially bigger.
The catch? History suggests they might be overly optimistic. Iraq’s oil sector was supposed to bounce right back after Saddam Hussein fell. Twenty years later, it still hasn’t reached its potential. Afghanistan received hundreds of billions in reconstruction spending, most of which disappeared. Venezuela shares the same warning signs: destroyed infrastructure, unclear property rights, volatile security, and deep social divisions.
China’s Venezuela Problem
Here’s where the story gets geopolitically explosive. China has loaned Venezuela over $60 billion, since 2007, making Venezuela China’s biggest debtor in Latin America. How was Venezuela supposed to pay this back? With oil. About 80% of Venezuelan oil exports were going to China, often at discounted rates, to service this debt.
Now Trump controls those oil flows. Venezuelan oil will now go “through legitimate and authorised channels consistent with US law.” Translation: China’s oil supply just got cut off, and good luck getting repaid on those $60 billion in loans.
This isn’t just about one country’s debt. It’s a demonstration of American power that China cannot match. Despite decades of economic investment and diplomatic support, China couldn’t prevent the United States from taking over. For other countries considering Chinese loans and partnerships, the lesson is clear: when push comes to shove, Beijing can’t protect you from Washington.
But there’s a darker flip side. Every time the United States weaponizes the dollar system, using control over oil sales, bank transactions, and trade flows as a weapon, it gives countries like China more reason to build alternatives. China has been developing its own international payment system for years. Each American strong-arm tactic makes that project look smarter to countries that fear they might be next.
The Rules Are for Little People
Perhaps the most significant aspect of this episode isn’t economic, it’s legal and political. The United States launched a military operation, captured a President, and announced it would “run” that country indefinitely. There was no United Nations authorisation. No congressional vote. No meaningful consultation with allies.
The UK’s Prime Minister emphasised “international law” while waiting for details. European leaders expressed discomfort. Latin American countries split along ideological lines, with Colombia’s President comparing Trump to Hitler. But nobody actually did anything. Russia and China condemned the action as illegal but couldn’t, or wouldn’t, help. The UN Security Council didn’t even meet, because everyone knows the US would just veto any resolution.
This is what scholars call the erosion of the “rules-based international order.” For decades after World War II, there was at least a pretense that international law mattered, that sovereignty meant something. Powerful nations bent those rules when convenient, but they tried to maintain appearances.
Trump isn’t even pretending. And that creates a problem: if the United States doesn’t follow international law, why should Russia in Ukraine? Why should China regarding Taiwan? Why should anyone?
What About the Venezuelan People?
Lost in all the analysis are the actual people of Venezuela. They’ve suffered immensely. Inflation is 682%, the highest in the world. Nearly eight million Venezuelans have fled. Those who remain often work multiple jobs just to survive, and their cupboards are still bare. The monthly minimum wage is literally 40 cents.
Many Venezuelans welcomed Maduro’s removal. He was a brutal dictator whose catastrophic policies destroyed the country. But they’re deeply uncertain about what comes next. As one Caracas resident put it: “What we don’t know is whether the change is for better or for worse. We’re in a state of uncertainty.”
Trump’s explicit focus on oil control, his decision to work with Maduro’s own Vice President, rather than democratic opposition leaders, and his promise that American companies will “spend billions”, all of this raises uncomfortable questions. Is this about helping Venezuelans, or helping American oil companies?
The Bigger Picture
Financial markets reacted calmly because the immediate economic impacts are limited. Venezuela’s oil production is already tiny. The country’s bonds were already in default. The direct market effects are manageable. But markets might miss the forest for the trees.
This intervention represents something bigger: a fundamental shift in how powerful nations behave. The post-Cold War era, with its optimistic talk of international cooperation and rules-based order, was definitively over. We’re entering a new age of imperial power politics.
In this new world, military force is back on the table. Economic leverage will be used more aggressively. Alliance relationships will become more transactional. Countries will increasingly have to choose sides between competing power blocs, because the middle ground is disappearing.
The United States might win in the short term, seizing control of Venezuela’s oil, demonstrating military reach, showing China the limits of its influence. But the long-term consequences remain uncertain. Every country watching is drawing conclusions about what it means for them. Some will decide they need to align more closely with Washington to stay safe. Others will conclude they need to build alternatives to American-dominated systems to stay independent.
History will judge whether Trump’s Venezuela gambit was brilliant strategy or reckless overreach. What we can say now is that the comfortable assumptions of the past three decades, that might not be right, that international law matters, that economic interdependence prevents conflict, no longer hold.
Financial markets may have yawned at Venezuela. But they might want to wake up. The world just changed, and the bill for that change hasn’t come due yet. When it does, it won’t be measured in oil barrels or bond prices. It will be measured in the kind of world we all have to live in, and whether it’s more stable and prosperous, or more dangerous and divided.
That’s a question worth losing sleep over.
(The writer, a senior Chartered Accountant and professional banker, is Professor at SLIIT, Malabe. The views and opinions expressed in this article are personal.)
Features
Living among psychopaths
Bob (not his real name) who worked in a large business organisation was full of new ideas. He went out of his way to help his colleagues in difficulties. His work attracted the attention of his superiors and they gave him a free hand to do his work. After some time, Bob started harassing his female colleagues. He used to knock against them in order to kick up a row. Soon he became a nuisance to the entire staff. When the female colleagues made a complaint to the management a disciplinary inquiry was conducted. Bob put up a weak defence saying that he had no intention to cause any harm to the females on the staff. However, he was found guilty of harassing the female colleagues. Accordingly his services were terminated.
Those who conducted the disciplinary inquiry concluded that Bob was a psychopath. According to psychologists, a psychopath is a person who has a serious and permanent mental illness that makes him behave in a violent or criminal way. Psychologists believe that one per cent of the people are psychopaths who have no conscience. You may have come across such people in films and novels. The film The Silence of the Lambs portrayed a serial killer who enjoyed tormenting his innocent victims. Apart from such fictional characters, there are many psychopaths in big and small organisations and in society as well. In a reported case Dr Ahmad Suradji admitted to killing more than 40 innocent women and girls. There is something fascinating and also chilling about such people.
People without a conscience are not a new breed. Even ancient Greek philosophers spoke of ‘men without moral reason.’ Later medical professionals said people without conscience were suffering from moral insanity. However, all serial killers and rapists are not psychopaths. Sometimes a man would kill another person under grave and sudden provocation. If you see your wife sleeping with another man, you will kill one or both of them. A world-renowned psychopathy authority Dr Robert Hare says, “Psychopaths can be found everywhere in society.” He developed a method to define and diagnose psychopathy. Today it is used as the international gold standard for the assessment of psychopathy.
No conscience
According to modern research, even normal people are likely to commit murder or rape in certain circumstances. However, unlike normal people, psychopaths have no conscience when they commit serious crimes. In fact, they tend to enjoy such brutal activities. There is no general consensus whether there are degrees of psychopathy. According to Harvard University Professor Martha Stout, conscience is like a left arm, either you have one or you don’t. Anyway psychopathy may exist in degrees varying from very mild to severe. If you feel remorse after committing a crime, you are not a psychopath. Generally psychopaths are indifferent to, or even enjoy, the torment they cause to others.
In modern society it is very difficult to identify psychopaths because most of them are good workers. They also show signs of empathy and know how to win friends and influence people. The sheen may rub off at any given moment. They know how to get away with what they do. What they are really doing is sizing up their prey. Sometimes a person may become a psychopath when he does not get parental love. Those who live alone are also likely to end up as psychopaths.
Recent studies show that genetics matters in producing a psychopath. Adele Forth, a psychology professor at Carleton University in Canada, says callousness is at least partly inherited. Some psychopaths torture innocent people for the thrill of doing so. Even cruelty to animals is an act indulged in by psychopaths. You have to be aware of the fact that there are people without conscience in society. Sometimes, with patience, you might be able to change their behaviour. But on most occasions they tend to stay that way forever.
Charming people
We still do not know whether science has developed an antidote to psychopathy. Therefore remember that you might meet a psychopath at some point in your life. For now, beware of charming people who seem to be more interesting than others. Sometimes they look charismatic and sexy. Be wary of people who flatter you excessively. The more you get to know a psychopath, the more you will understand their motives. They are capable of telling you white lies about their age, education, profession or wealth. Psychopaths enjoy dramatic lying for its own sake. If your alarm bells ring, keep away from them.
According to the Psychiatric Diagnostic Manual, the behaviour of a psychopath is termed as antisocial personality disorder. Today it is also known as sociopath. No matter the name, its hallmarks are deceit and a reckless disregard for others. A psychopath’s consistent irresponsibility begets no remorse – only indifference to the emotional pain others may suffer. For a psychopath other people are always ‘things’ to be duped, used and discarded.
Psychopathy, the incapacity to feel empathy or compassion of any sort or the least twinge of conscience, is one of the more perplexing of emotional defects. The heart of the psychopath’s coldness seems to lie in their inability to make anything more than the shallowest of emotional connections.
Absence of empathy is found in husbands who beat up their wives or threaten them with violence. Such men are far more likely to be violent outside the marriage as well. They get into bar fights and battling with co-workers. The danger is that psychopaths lack concern about future punishment for what they do. As they themselves do not feel fear, they have no empathy or compassion for the fear and pain of their victims.
karunaratners@gmail.com
By R.S. Karunaratne
Features
Rebuilding the country requires consultation
A positive feature of the government that is emerging is its responsiveness to public opinion. The manner in which it has been responding to the furore over the Grade 6 English Reader, in which a weblink to a gay dating site was inserted, has been constructive. Government leaders have taken pains to explain the mishap and reassure everyone concerned that it was not meant to be there and would be removed. They have been meeting religious prelates, educationists and community leaders. In a context where public trust in institutions has been badly eroded over many years, such responsiveness matters. It signals that the government sees itself as accountable to society, including to parents, teachers, and those concerned about the values transmitted through the school system.
This incident also appears to have strengthened unity within the government. The attempt by some opposition politicians and gender misogynists to pin responsibility for this lapse on Prime Minister Dr Harini Amarasuriya, who is also the Minister of Education, has prompted other senior members of the government to come to her defence. This is contrary to speculation that the powerful JVP component of the government is unhappy with the prime minister. More importantly, it demonstrates an understanding within the government that individual ministers should not be scapegoated for systemic shortcomings. Effective governance depends on collective responsibility and solidarity within the leadership, especially during moments of public controversy.
The continuing important role of the prime minister in the government is evident in her meetings with international dignitaries and also in addressing the general public. Last week she chaired the inaugural meeting of the Presidential Task Force to Rebuild Sri Lanka in the aftermath of Cyclone Ditwah. The composition of the task force once again reflects the responsiveness of the government to public opinion. Unlike previous mechanisms set up by governments, which were either all male or without ethnic minority representation, this one includes both, and also includes civil society representation. Decision-making bodies in which there is diversity are more likely to command public legitimacy.
Task Force
The Presidential Task Force to Rebuild Sri Lanka overlooks eight committees to manage different aspects of the recovery, each headed by a sector minister. These committees will focus on Needs Assessment, Restoration of Public Infrastructure, Housing, Local Economies and Livelihoods, Social Infrastructure, Finance and Funding, Data and Information Systems, and Public Communication. This structure appears comprehensive and well designed. However, experience from post-disaster reconstruction in countries such as Indonesia and Sri Lanka after the 2004 tsunami suggests that institutional design alone does not guarantee success. What matters equally is how far these committees engage with those on the ground and remain open to feedback that may complicate, slow down, or even challenge initial plans.
An option that the task force might wish to consider is to develop a linkage with civil society groups with expertise in the areas that the task force is expected to work. The CSO Collective for Emergency Relief has set up several committees that could be linked to the committees supervised by the task force. Such linkages would not weaken the government’s authority but strengthen it by grounding policy in lived realities. Recent findings emphasise the idea of “co-production”, where state and society jointly shape solutions in which sustainable outcomes often emerge when communities are treated not as passive beneficiaries but as partners in problem-solving.
Cyclone Ditwah destroyed more than physical infrastructure. It also destroyed communities. Some were swallowed by landslides and floods, while many others will need to be moved from their homes as they live in areas vulnerable to future disasters. The trauma of displacement is not merely material but social and psychological. Moving communities to new locations requires careful planning. It is not simply a matter of providing people with houses. They need to be relocated to locations and in a manner that permits communities to live together and to have livelihoods. This will require consultation with those who are displaced. Post-disaster evaluations have acknowledged that relocation schemes imposed without community consent often fail, leading to abandonment of new settlements or the emergence of new forms of marginalisation. Even today, abandoned tsunami housing is to be seen in various places that were affected by the 2004 tsunami.
Malaiyaha Tamils
The large-scale reconstruction that needs to take place in parts of the country most severely affected by Cyclone Ditwah also brings an opportunity to deal with the special problems of the Malaiyaha Tamil population. These are people of recent Indian origin who were unjustly treated at the time of Independence and denied rights of citizenship such as land ownership and the vote. This has been a festering problem and a blot on the conscience of the country. The need to resettle people living in those parts of the hill country which are vulnerable to landslides is an opportunity to do justice by the Malaiyaha Tamil community. Technocratic solutions such as high-rise apartments or English-style townhouses that have or are being contemplated may be cost-effective, but may also be culturally inappropriate and socially disruptive. The task is not simply to build houses but to rebuild communities.
The resettlement of people who have lost their homes and communities requires consultation with them. In the same manner, the education reform programme, of which the textbook controversy is only a small part, too needs to be discussed with concerned stakeholders including school teachers and university faculty. Opening up for discussion does not mean giving up one’s own position or values. Rather, it means recognising that better solutions emerge when different perspectives are heard and negotiated. Consultation takes time and can be frustrating, particularly in contexts of crisis where pressure for quick results is intense. However, solutions developed with stakeholder participation are more resilient and less costly in the long run.
Rebuilding after Cyclone Ditwah, addressing historical injustices faced by the Malaiyaha Tamil community, advancing education reform, changing the electoral system to hold provincial elections without further delay and other challenges facing the government, including national reconciliation, all require dialogue across differences and patience with disagreement. Opening up for discussion is not to give up on one’s own position or values, but to listen, to learn, and to arrive at solutions that have wider acceptance. Consultation needs to be treated as an investment in sustainability and legitimacy and not as an obstacle to rapid decisionmaking. Addressing the problems together, especially engagement with affected parties and those who work with them, offers the best chance of rebuilding not only physical infrastructure but also trust between the government and people in the year ahead.
by Jehan Perera
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