News
JVP leader blames Lanka’s plight on racism of political leaders

JVP-led NPP leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake said on Saturday that post-Independent Sri Lanka was led astray by politicians playing the ethnic card to muster votes.
Addressing the NPP Women’s Convention in Matara, Dissanayake said: “We have no other option but to rise as a single nation. We never had a national movement comprising all communities thinking as a single nation. Prior to its Independence India had a very strong national movement.
It is that national identity built by the likes of Nehru, Gandhi, Chandra Bose and Patel overarching communal differences that has helped India to attain its development goals in engaging in space exploration.
“Japan, which was flattened during World War II, could rise to become an economic super power because its people thought of it as a single nation. The US made use of nationalism in its struggle against the British and has become a world superpower. In Sri Lanka, there has been no such movement. When we speak of nationalism we still have to talk of our forefathers in the times of 1818 and 1848 rebellions. We have had no national heroes since then. We have no Nehrus, Gandhis and Patels. When India produced such national leaders, we had Stevens, Junius Richards, Ridgeways and Solomon Diases.
“We never had an independence struggle to awaken the Sri Lankan nation. Instead our leaders thought only of self-interest and they opted to the strategy of setting ethnic communities against one another. That was the political culture they nurtured because it helped them stay in power for short periods. They never wanted to create a national identity – a pan Sri Lankan identity overarching communal and religious differences. This is where we got it wrong and it is the mistake that we should rectify because without that thinking as a single nation, we would never be able to march forward from the present crisis to develop this nation.”
NPP MP Dr. Harini Amarasuriya, NPP National Executive member Sunil Handunnetti, NPP National Executive member and Women for Rights Chairperson Saroja Savithri Paulraj, Socialist Youth Union and Matara District leader Malsha Amasha also addressed the rally.
News
MoU on Defence a significant new addition to Ranil-Modi consensus

Defence Secy says a decision was taken at 2023 Defence Dialogue
Contrary to claims that the MoU/agreements finalised during Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s state visit here were in accordance with an understanding between former President Ranil Wickremesinghe and PM Modi in July 21, 2023, the MoU on Defence Cooperation is a new addition.
A joint statement issued on July 21, 2023, soon after the conclusion of Wickremesinghe’s visit, didn’t refer to an MoU on defence cooperation.
Premier Modi disclosed the decision to enter into an MoU on 16 Dec., 2024 at a joint press conference addressed by him and President Anura Kumara Dissanayake.
A media statement issued by the Indian High Commission in Colombo quoted the Indian PM as having said that President Dissanayake and he had agreed that the two countries’ security interests were interconnected. “We have decided to quickly finalise the Security Cooperation Agreement.”
President Dissanayake, in his address, didn’t refer to the proposed MoU on defence cooperation. The Presidential Media Division quoted President Dissanayake as having said that they exchanged views on cooperation in the fields of defence and security, power and energy, training and capacity building, education, agriculture and social security.
However, retired Air Vice Marshal Sampath Thuyakonttha, who signed the MoU on Defence Cooperation, in his capacity as the Defence Secretary, said that they had agreed to strengthen defence relations through an MoU during Defence Dialogue in 2023.
Responding to concerns expressed in some quarters about the MoU at issue, Thuyakonttha, a veteran Mi 24 helicopter gunship pilot, emphasised that the agreement on the MoU had been reached in keeping with the instructions issued by the Secretary to the President in January this year.
In addition to the MoU on Defence Cooperation, the two sides finalised six other MoUs/agreements. They dealt with Implementation of HDVC interconnection for import/export of power, cooperation in the field of sharing successful digital solutions implemented at population scale for digital transformation, multi-sectoral grant assistance for Eastern Province, cooperation in the field of health, medicine, etc.
India, Sri Lanka and UAE have agreed to develop Trincomalee as an energy hub.
Milinda Moragoda, who served as Sri Lanka’s High Commissioner in New Delhi during the August 2021-Oct 2023 period and played a critical role in negotiations, stressed the pivotal importance of going ahead with the MoU/agreements.
In response to The Island queries regarding the latest developments, Moragoda said that the progress made on the economic integration and connectivity side was extremely encouraging. Especially, the concrete steps taken to establish connectivity in power, petroleum and the development of Trincomalee as an energy hub, he said.
“The fact that trilateral cooperation between India, Sri Lanka and selected third countries will become part of our future development strategy, with the formal entry of the UAE as a partner in the Trincomalee energy hub initiative is a very important step forward.”
Moragoda said: “The establishment of a framework to share successful digital solutions between India and Sri Lanka is also another positive development.
“It is critical that both parties now focus on the speedy implementation of all the agreements that have been reached.
“Future consideration should be given to developing road and rail connectivity as well.
“We should all understand and absorb that the physical connectivity that would be established in power, petroleum and other sectors will link us directly to India, the Middle East and Europe making us potentially a key global hub at a pivotal point in world history.
“The understandings that have been reached with India could become critical for Sri Lanka’s immediate economic survival and development as we cope with the monumental disruptions taking place in the international economic environment and geopolitical sphere at the moment.
“Sri Lanka is in an extremely vulnerable position and will have to very quickly work out a survival strategy through which we can diversify our foreign income and investment sources while arriving at an understanding with the US in the short term.
“As we enter an era where geoeconomics will become more important than plain economics, the agreements reached during the visit of Prime Minister Modi could help lay an initial foundation for Sri Lanka’s future developmental direction.”
By Shamindra Ferdinando
News
Harsha says govt. grabbed credit for what he initiated

Dambulla cold storage facility:
SJB Colombo District MP Dr Harsha de Silva has said he is happy that the government is continuing with his projects after changing their names.
Speaking to the media after Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi had inaugurated a 5,000-metric-ton cold storage facility in Dambulla, Dr de Silva said the construction of that facility had been initiated in 2019 with a grant from India, during his tenure as Minister of Economic Reforms. The name of the project, Prabhaswara, had been changed, he claimed.
Dr de Silva said he had not been informed of the opening of the storage facility.
He said a plaque had been installed with names of the Indian prime minister and President Anura Kumara Dissanayake inscribed on it in violation of the NPP’s pledge that the names of its leaders would not be displayed in that manner.
Dr de Silva that he was genuinely happy about the opening of the country’s first agricultural storage complex capable of controlling temperature and humidity.
“Due to the collapse of the Yahapalana government, we were unable to complete the project. Later, those who came to power had no desire to finish the work. I believe that this government will ensure that farmers will benefit from the business plan we developed.
by Dhammika Salwathura
News
Patali, Sarath concerned over Defence MoU

Former ministers Patali Champika Ranawaka and retired Rear Admiral Sarath Weerasekera, over the weekend, said that Sri Lanka shouldn’t under any circumstances enter into a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on Defence Cooperation with any country.
Responding to media queries following a public meeting held at Naula, Matale, in support of LG candidates, Ranawaka said that the MoU could place Sri Lanka at an extremely vulnerable position as the world and regional powers battled for supremacy in the Indian Ocean.
Ranawaka pointed out that the JVP had destroyed many lives during its second insurgency in the name of what it described as Indian expansionist policies.
Weerasekera said
Sri Lanka had suffered for three decades due to a terror project launched by India.
Addressing the media in Colombo, the former Public Security Minister demanded that the NPP government reveal the contents in the MoU on Defence Cooperation.
Both Ranawaka and Weerasekera recalled that the JVP, while in the opposition, had fiercely opposed joint projects with India.
Weerasekera said that having gained political power, the JVP had overnight changed its position. (SF)
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