Features
Continuing relevance of Dr. Gamani Corea’s thinking
A major issue facing Southern governments, their policymakers, universities and think tanks is to determine whether world renowned economist of Sri Lankan origin, Dr. Gamani Corea’s (Dr. GC) thinking on particularly Southern development remains relevant today. This is in view of the opinion in some quarters that many of the foremost economic challenges facing the South currently cannot be resolved entirely on the basis of GC’s developmental perspectives.
Thanks to the Bandaranaike Centre for International Studies, Colombo (BCIS), which is celebrating the 50th year of its establishment this year, the above and linked questions were taken up for scholarly analysis recently at a symposium. In fact a number of thought-stimulating commemorative events have been unfolding at the BCIS over this month under the aegis of the BCIS, termed ‘Festival of Ideas’, to mark the latter’s 50 years as a leading institution in Sri Lanka dedicated to the teaching of International Relations. The events were organized and conducted by the BCIS staff under the guidance of its Executive Director Ms. Priyanthi Fernando.
The Dr. GC-centred symposium referred to was held at the BMICH’s ‘Kolomba Kamatha’ theatre on November 22 under the title, ‘Gamani Corea Restrospective’. Among the prominent attendees was the BCIS Chairperson, former President Ms. Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga.
Three speakers featured in the symposium. They were: Dr. Dushni Weerakoon, Executive Director of the Institute of Policy Studies Sri Lanka, former Governor of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka Dr. Indrajit Coomaraswamy and Dhanushka Pathirana, an economic analyst. The session was moderated by Vagisha Gunasekera.
The discussion took place under three broad segments: World Trade, Southern Debt and South-South Cooperation. These were major areas of specialization for Dr. GC and in his day and age in mainly the sixties, stabilizing developing countries’ commodity prices was a principal issue. Accordingly, in the forefront of his thinking was commodity price stabilization and questions flowing from it. Under his leadership UNCTAD worked towards a commodity price stabilization scheme and checking downward slides in commodity prices was a chief concern for Dr. GC.
A principal issue for the panelists, given this backdrop, was whether commodity price stabilization was practicable today. While appreciative of Dr. GC’s work, the ‘majority view’ that emerged from the panel was that such price stabilization was difficult to achieve at present. For example, Dr. Weerakoon, among other things, pointed out that implementation of price stabilization was currently difficult since ‘trade shocks’ are far too numerous. Besides, price decline is more or less the order of the day. Present day issues of this kind cannot be resolved on the basis of solutions arrived at in the sixties. Moreover, a Southern consensus is lacking on these questions.
Dr. Coomaraswamy, besides other matters, pointed out that Southern collective action in the face of issues, such as commodity price instability, was a key focus of Dr. GC. One challenge that the latter faced was the establishment of buffer stocks among the South, as checks against price fluctuations. OPEC cooperation on this front was not forthcoming. However, thinking on the global economy was enhanced greatly under Dr. GC’s leadership of UNCTAD. Another matter of importance was that Sri Lanka did very well in socio-economic indicators during Dr. GC’s time.
Dhanushka Pathirana pointed out that in the sixties and early seventies, state intervention in the local economy was prominent. The state tried to iron out imperfections in the market and Import Substitution Industrialization was resorted to. But now Sri Lanka’s terms of trade are on the decline. Stagnation is marked in the exports and manufacturing sectors. This has been the case over the decades in fact.
However, a leaf could be taken from some South-East Asian economies. In the latter, the state intervenes to spur industrial growth, but this field is constantly open to private sector participation as well. Hence their economic dynamism.
Meeting debt commitments without the South compromising development in the process emerged as a key issue under the Southern debt segment of the symposium. Dr. Coomraswamy was of the view that the South urgently needed a multilateral framework for debt relief. This is an urgent need as far as Sri Lanka is concerned.
Dr. Weerakoon made the point that Sri Lanka needs to have an independent debt management institution. As regards debt relief, the required ‘international financial architecture isn’t there.’ As far as Sri Lanka is concerned, the higher ‘the hair cut’, the longer will be the economic recovery process. Right now, Sri Lanka is obliged to deal with non-Paris Club creditors, such as China and India, and this could have challenges.
With regard to South-South cooperation, the discussion centred on the feasibility of having a New International Economic Order (NIEO), going forward. This was an order advocated by Dr. GC, because he called for Southern collective self-reliance. Dr. Weerakoon pointed to the unwillingness of most Southern states to put aside self-interest and to come together for a common purpose. Coming together on multiple issues is not possible today.
Accordingly, the symposium proved to be most thought-provoking and the Q&A which followed turned out to be lively and a stimulant to further thinking on Southern development questions in particular. However, it is of the utmost importance to probe as to whether Dr. GC’s thinking has ‘had its day’, so to speak.
This columnist, for one, would disagree with the above conclusion. While the solutions offered by Dr. G.C may be proving dated in some respects today, Southern poverty is not only continuing but exponentially growing despite almost the entirety of the world opting for ‘market reforms’ or capitalist-led growth. To put Dr. GC’s thinking in the correct perspective, it needs to be realized that he was essentially seeking durable answers to Southern poverty.
The latter correctly analyzed that it was the ills of the post-World War Two economic order, dominated by the First World and its growth paradigms that had the effect of aggravating Southern poverty and ‘backwardness’.
Accordingly, the answer to the South’s current economic ills continues to reside in a wider system transformation and it is Southern unity and solidarity that offer some hope of material relief accruing to the world’s powerless. That is, South-South Cooperation continues to be relevant.
A challenge of the first magnitude confronting the South is the tendency among most of its members to be blinded by their own interests. More so why we need leaders of Dr. GC’s stature to galvanize the South once again, bring it together and raise its awareness on the need to gather behind the cause of collective, Southern interest. In other words, the crucial need is Southern leaders of vision and foresight. This is a complex and difficult challenge but it needs to be met somehow.
Features
Human welfare and the UN’s continuing relevance
It shouldn’t come as a surprise that there is a growing number of ‘UN Sceptics’ in our midst. One of the prime causes for this trend seems to be the UN’s apparent helplessness in the face of escalating bloodshed and war.
In this connection today’s Gaza, Lebanon and invasion-shattered Ukraine come easily to mind. With regard to the phenomenal amount of civilian blood being spilled in these war zones in particular, the UN has been largely helpless and has proved incapable of being an effective promoter of peace and conflict resolution. The perception of the UN’s impotence should, therefore, only be expected.
But such scepticism has its origins in a superficial reading of current developments in international politics. It fails to take account of all the dimensions of thinking that matter in an assessment of the UN’s apparent failings.
The UN chief and his team have no choice but to act within the confines of the organizational structures they have inherited. They cannot do much to change existing mandates, rules and regulations, for example, provided the envisaged changes receive the sanction of the powers that matter in the prevailing political order. In other words, UN reform must await the consent and facilitation of the foremost powers or the Permanent Members of the UN Security Council.
Modern world history continually demonstrates the almost impossibility of the major powers thinking and acting consensually on law and order matters of the first importance. Just two cases in point are the Gaza and Ukraine. Whereas in both these instances ending human suffering ought, under normal circumstances, be the priority of the foremost powers, they have been motivated more by Realpolitik or power politics calculations rather than by humanity.
One set of ground realities that proves the above premise is the reluctance by the Trump administration to rein-in Israel completely to allow a measure of respite to be relished by the traumatized Gaza civilians who have been subjected to untold suffering over the months. The administration is also proving tolerant of the Netanyahu regime in its current no-holds-barred military onslaughts on Southern Lebanon. In the latter situation too Lebanese civilians are being subjected to hardships of a nightmarish kind.
In the latter instances, the Trump administration’s need to back the Netanyahu regime steadfastly takes precedence over humanitarian considerations. That is, the US’ policy of maintaining the West Asian power balance in its favour emerges as a preeminent requirement.
The latter observation raises the fundamental question of whether the ruling strata of the world’s foremost powers are heirs to civilizational values of any kind. If humanity is not an overriding consideration for these power elites, the continuous bloodletting in contemporary theatres of war should not come as a surprise.
Moreover, one should not be surprised if UN reform happens to be more or less stillborn. After all, the big powers would not want a restructured UN system in which their power would be diluted or badly compromised since having a stranglehold over the present world political order is among their foremost priorities.
Even in the case of the ongoing US-Iran hostilities, Realpolitik is most evident. For both sides to the conflict, it is not humanity that most counts but the consideration that the power they possess should not be compromised. Hence the on-and-off hostilities that have rendered peace negotiations most difficult to sustain.
However, it would be most misleading to contend, based on the above developments, that the UN system is suffering prolonged impotence. The present suffering of Venezuela substantiates this most graphically. In the latter instance, the UN is playing an inestimably vital role in providing succour to the earthquake devastated country.
In fact the UN is proving the live wire in the co-ordination of all rescue and rehabilitation efforts. Minus the guidance and encouraging assistance of the UN, Venezuela would be in far worse shape than it is in at present.
Reports indicate that the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, for instance, is overseeing the operations of over 70 international urban search and rescue teams, including more than 2,300 personnel, who are working alongside the local authorities to trace and provide relief to the quake-affected. Besides, the rescuers come from multiple countries, including Brazil, Canada, Chile, Ecuador, Germany, Spain, the US, France, Syria and Turkiye.
The above is convincing proof of what the UN and its agencies could achieve effectively in humanitarian crises of the most devastating kind. Here is also proof of what could be achieved if the often feuding big powers of the UN Security Council think it wise to sit together in accord and consider as to how their weighty presence in the UN system could be placed at the service of humanity.
The present Permanent Members of the UNSC are mainly representative of the international political and economic order which came into being in the immediate aftermath of World War Two. They by no means represent fully the contemporary world politico-economic order and, therefore, cannot be expected to work equitably towards fulfilling the legitimate needs of present day publics.
Accordingly, while there is no denying that the UN system, as it stands, leaves much to be desired, the world community would do much better to address very earnestly as to how the UN could be reformed and energized to serve humanity better. It is a ‘systemic issue’ and unrelated to any personalities helming the UN at present.
Democratization of the UN needs to be part of the reform process. Countries, such as, India, Indonesia and Brazil, for example, could be considered as knowing much more than the present Permanent Members of the UNSC, the ‘pulse’ of the contemporary world, particularly that of its Southern half. If these major Southern countries are inducted into the UNSC there is bound to be a more balanced representation of the world’s legitimate interests.
Consequently, there could be less international friction and war. Meanwhile, the UN agencies need to be consistently strengthened and sustained to implement their humanitarian programmes without interruption. These projects are the only hope as it were of the less fortunate peoples of the world.
The needs of the world’s hungry and destitute ought to be managed systematically and the UN is best at this at present but the latter is also efficient at bringing all progressive, pro-people organizations along with it in such efforts and this is being proved in Venezuela. Critics of the UN need to take notice of these exemplary collective projects.
Features
Coconut Oil magic …
Yes, coconut oil is in every Sri Lankan kitchen for cooking, frying, etc., and our grandmas have been using it for beauty, long before it became “trendy”.
OK, from me, it’s a simple, no-fuss coconut oil week for you:
For Hair:
Warm 02 tablespoon virgin coconut oil until it’s just lukewarm. Massage into scalp with fingertips, for 05 minutes, then through the lengths. Wrap with a warm towel, or shower cap, for 30 minutes, or overnight if you can. Wash with your usual shampoo.
How often: 01-02 times a week is plenty. Grandma wasn’t wrong.
For Skin:
After a shower, while skin is still slightly damp, rub a tiny bit of oil on rough spots. A little goes a long way — it’s thick!
Tip:
Don’t use it on acne-prone face skin. For some people it can clog pores. Use it more on body, hands, feet.
For Lips:
Dab the tiniest bit of coconut oil on lips before bed. Wakes up softer.
For Under-Eyes or Cuticles:
Use your ring finger to pat a rice-grain amount around dry cuticles or under eyes. Be super gentle. If it stings, or you get bumps, stop.
Pre-Wash Scalp Soother:
If your scalp feels tight/itchy from weather changes, massage a little warm oil, for 15 minutes, before shampooing. Rinse well.
A few important notes for my readers:
Patch test first: Dab a bit of coconut oil on your inner arm and wait 24 hours. Even natural things can irritate.
Quality matters: Go for virgin/cold-pressed coconut oil from the kitchen shelf. No fragrance, no additives.
The smell alone will take you back to grandma’s kitchens, won’t it? Warm, nutty, familiar.
Features
Sri Lankans … big scene in Scotland
It’s not only our entertainers who are in the spotlight, overseas, but Sri Lankans, in general, as well.
The Sri Lankan Sports Club Scotland (SLSC) is a very good example. The club, with Hashan Hettiarachchi, as the President, continues to make a significant impact across Glasgow, and beyond, serving as a vibrant hub for sports, culture, and community engagement, within the Sri Lankan diaspora.
As a registered Scottish charity, SLSC was established with a clear purpose: to provide a formal foundation that supports and unites the Sri Lankan community, while fostering integration, wellbeing, and cultural pride.
Through its growing programmee of activities, the organisation creates opportunities for people of all ages, and backgrounds, to connect, participate, and thrive.
The club’s efforts have been recognised through funding support from the UK’s National Lottery, enabling SLSC to deliver a range of initiatives, focused on sports development, cultural enrichment, and community engagement.
- Sinhala and Tamil New Year
- Traditional wear at Cricket Festival
This support has helped transform ambitious ideas into successful community-driven events that have attracted widespread participation and support.
Over the past year, SLSC has proudly delivered a highly successful Sri Lankan Independence Day celebration, bringing together families and community members to commemorate the nation’s heritage and achievements.
The club also organised a memorable community concert, featuring renowned Sri Lankan artiste Krishantha Erandake, providing an opportunity for people to celebrate their cultural roots, through music and entertainment.
Sport remains at the heart of the organisation’s mission. SLSC has successfully hosted large-scale badminton and cricket tournaments, welcoming participants from across Scotland and beyond.
These events not only promote healthy lifestyles and sporting excellence but also strengthen friendships and community bonds through shared experiences.
Alongside its sporting and cultural programmes, SLSC is committed to preserving Sri Lankan heritage for future generations.
Through traditional dance classes and cultural education programmes, young people are given the opportunity to learn, appreciate, and celebrate the rich traditions of their ancestral homeland.
These initiatives ensure that cultural knowledge and practices continue to flourish within Scotland’s diverse multicultural landscape.
As the organisation continues to grow, SLSC remains dedicated to creating inclusive opportunities that bring communities together, celebrate diversity, and inspire the next generation. With strong community support, dedicated volunteers, and ongoing partnerships, the future looks bright for one of Scotland’s most active and impactful Sri Lankan community organisations.
For SLSC, success is measured not only by the events it delivers, but by the lasting connections it creates and the positive difference it makes within the community every day.
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