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Miracles and other strange stories

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Welcoming the vene ra ble Galaboda Gnanissara Thero — the “Pod ihamudu ruwo ” of Gangaramaya — Bound by a shared vision

(Excerpted from the Merrill. J. Fernando autobiography)

I believe in miracles. I believe that there is a divine hand in all the affairs of men. I believe that many of the good things that have happened to me to have been answers to prayer, whilst narrow escapes from disaster, on several occasions, the merciful hand of God.

In September 1976, whilst I was driving in Colombo, at the corner of Muttiah Park, about 200 metres from the Gangaramaya Temple, my car was hit by a truck. I have little or no memory about the accident itself, but I found myself seated on the pavement on the side of the road in a state of shock, not quite knowing what was going on. My car was a total wreck. Sometime later I was told that I had been pulled out of the car by passers-by. The only visible injury was a small gash on my back. However, later on at the hospital, it was discovered that a few of my ribs had also been broken.

Whilst I was awaiting treatment at the Accident Ward of the General Hospital, I saw Dr. Cabraal, the neurosurgeon, passing by. I told him about the accident and that I had no recollection of what had taken place. He told me that the erasure of that unpleasant memory was nature’s way of protecting me. In the meantime a young doctor, possibly an intern, who walked into the ward sutured the wound in my back, but to this day the site of the wound produces unpleasant sensations. My guess is that the wound was closed up without it being properly disinfected.

Whist all this was going on Dr. P. R. Anthonis, the well-known surgeon, arrived at the ward and said: “Merrill, you cannot stay here, I am taking you to Ratnam Hospital.” After admitting me to Ratnam’s, he called in Dr. Rienzie Pieris, the Orthopaedic Surgeon, who was then in government service. Rienzie took me in hand and after that first meeting we became lifelong friends. My sons who were holidaying at Merton bungalow at the time of the accident returned to Colombo and wanted to stay with me in hospital, but I insisted that they go back to school.

Divine deliverance

K. Selvanathan, the father of Mano and Hari, visited me in hospital and told me that he had seen the twisted heap of metal that had been my car and that it was a miracle that I had escaped with my life. He said: “Merrill, when you get out of hospital, you must work for God, to thank him for having saved your life.” I have never forgotten those words.

In July 1983, civil riots broke out all over Colombo. I was in office at that time with Leone Van Lier, from South Africa. Gangs of armed men were stopping cars, smashing up windscreens, and, if the occupants were Tamil, pulling them out and beating them. Petrol was being removed from cars by force and used to burn vehicles and buildings. It was a terrifying and lawless time.

Against the pleas of my staff, I decided to leave the office with Leone. I told them that I would pray and trust in God. Leone, a seasoned South African, was surprisingly calm as he had become familiar with civil strife in his country! I drove out of my office and found the road full of rioting gangs but about 100 metres away I spotted two naval officers on motorcycles. I quickly got my car behind their machines and traveled with that escort up to the next set of traffic lights, leaving the rioters behind. As we got to safety, both Leone and I realized that our naval escort had disappeared. Thinking about it later, and the unbelievably opportune appearance of the naval officers, I concluded that it was the intervention of the Lord on my behalf.

There was a somewhat similar episode some years later, when I was rushed to Durdans with an undiagnosed but serious medical condition. Over a couple of weeks in hospital I was administered a wide range of medications and subjected to numerous procedures, but my condition did not improve, whilst the various tests carried out on me failed to identity the problem. One evening, Pastor Dishan Wickremaratne, having found out that I was in hospital, arrived with his father, Pastor Colton and, together, prayed with me for over an hour. The next day I had recovered completely and was able to return home just two days later.

Immediately thereafter I left for Singapore and, at the New University Hospital, underwent a series of tests and subsequently had consultations with several doctors. However, there was no sign of illness, nor an indication of a medical condition which could have caused that bout of ill-health. Thinking about this chain of events some months later, I came to the realization that my recovery from an inexplicable illness was due to the power of prayer.

Netherlands – near disaster

I was on a business trip across Europe, during which I had to spend some time in the Netherlands. One morning, I traveled to Rotterdam by train to meet a customer and while walking from the station to the customer’s office, I stopped at a department store to buy refills for my pen. I had placed my leather briefcase on a counter with a mirror, on it and while removing the case, I accidentally knocked down the mirror, which shattered to pieces. Having apologized profusely to the shop staff for my clumsiness, I moved on.

When I finished my business with the customer, he suggested that we leave for a pre-arranged lunch, but I declined and caught an early train back. Traveling through The Hague, the speeding train suddenly derailed and several compartments, including the one I was in, toppled. A young couple sitting next to me suffered minor fractures whilst I smashed my knee on a hard surface. Ambulances arrived quickly and the medical staff started dispatching the injured to hospital, requesting all passengers to stay at the location till all had been attended to.

I could not afford to waste time as I had traveled thousands of miles to attend to important business issues. Avoiding the paramedics, I managed to scramble out of my compartment, which had fallen into a ditch, and limped across to the nearest highway where I flagged down a passing truck. The driver very kindly dropped me off at my hotel in Amsterdam.

My knee by then was badly swollen and painful, but I collected my bags and rode to the airport immediately to catch a flight to Munich, to meet another customer. After the meeting my customer took me to a doctor, who attended to my knee and, thereafter, I drove to Berlin for the next customer meeting.

The above events followed each other in very rapid succession and during that period my main focus was honouring my customer appointments, despite the accident and the injury. After my meeting in Berlin, I relaxed for a couple of days – on doctor’s orders, actually –and that rest gave me the opportunity for quiet reflection on that rapid chain of events.

A momentous meeting for me — greeting His Holiness, Pope Francis

My conclusion was that the whole episode could have ended very badly for me, but that I escaped, by God’s grace, relatively unscathed and was still able to conclude my business. Perhaps the broken mirror was an omen and a warning of what was to follow! However, at each stage, I was provided with a timely solution which, in my view, could only have been heaven sent.

A special relationship

Whilst I was in hospital recovering from my car accident in ‘ 76, the well-known Venerable Galaboda Gnanissara Thero, the “Podihamuduruwo” of the Gangaramaya Temple, visited me. He returned to me my neck chain, my ring, and my rosary, which I carry with me all the time. He had recovered them from the scene of the accident. With that first meeting, we developed a very special friendship.

Whenever I visited him at the temple, thereafter, he used to come out to the car and lead me into the premises, holding me by the hand. I always hastened to open the car door myself lest he opened it for me, as I did not think that was appropriate. He would take me into the greeting room and insist that I sit down and make myself comfortable. He would not allow me to take off my shoes although it is customary to do so when one is in the presence of a Buddhist priest or in a temple. He would also lead me around the temple, still with my shoes on. Much to my embarrassment, he introduces me to all we meet as the Christian who helps all religions!

Every year we conduct a ‘pirith’ ceremony at our Peliyagoda premises for the Buddhist members of our staff. Irrespective of all his other commitments, this ceremony is always presided over by Podihamuduruwo. He waits for a couple of hours after the ceremony commences and then leaves with me, as I am unable to maintain the traditional seated, cross-legged posture on the ground for very long.

I have tremendous respect for Podihamuduruwo, a dynamic leader and a person of vision. I have seen for myself the contribution he has made to uplifting underprivileged youth, with his vocational training centre in basic engineering and other technical skills.

In fact, many of the technicians in my plant at Peliyagoda were first trained at the Gangaramaya centre. I have assisted him in some of his ventures, such as the construction of housing for low-income families and also at the training centre. I never failed to contribute to the annual Gangaramaya Perahera and, once, at his request, participated in the construction of resting houses for pilgrims at the Kataragama Temple.

The Venerable Thero and I come from two completely different backgrounds; I from a middle class society on the western coast, rooted firmly in the Catholic faith, and he from a village farming community in the deep south, the power base of rural Sinhala Buddhists. But we discovered a commonality of ideas and ideals and a resonance in our personal philosophies, especially that of a shared sense of community responsibility. He too, like me, is a man with a highly-developed entrepreneurial spirit. Despite the mutual exclusivity in the respective positions we occupy in society, I an industrialist and he a leading Buddhist cleric, deep down, fundamentally, we are kindred spirits.

I was deeply distressed when Podihamuduruwo fell seriously ill. He was flown to Singapore for treatment and I visited him in hospital with Pastor Samson and, together, we prayed to Lord Jesus for his recovery. I fervently hope that this good and amazing man will be able to recover and return to the wonderful work he has been doing for the community. Our society sorely needs more people like him.



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When Batting Was Poetry: Remembering David Gower

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For many Sri Lankans growing up in the late nineteen fifties and early sixties, our cricketing heroes were Englishmen. I am not entirely sure why that was. Perhaps it was a colonial hangover, or perhaps it reflected the way cricket was taught locally, with an emphasis on technical correctness, a high left elbow, and the bat close to the pad. English cricket, with its traditions and orthodoxy, became the benchmark.

I, on the other hand, could not see beyond Sir Garfield Sobers and the West Indian team. Sir Garfield remains my all-time hero, although only by a whisker ahead of Muttiah Muralitharan. For me, Caribbean flair and attacking cricket were infinitely superior to the Englishmen’s conservatism and defensive approach.

That said, England has produced many outstanding cricketers, with David Gower and Ian Botham being my favourites. Players such as Colin Cowdrey, Tom Graveney, Mike Denness, Tony Lewis, Mike Brealey, Alan Knott, Derek Underwood, Tony Greig, and David Gower were great ambassadors for England, particularly when touring the South Asian subcontinent, which posed certain challenges for touring sides until about three decades ago. Their calm and dignified conduct when touring is a contrast to the behaviour of the current lot.

I am no longer an avid cricket viewer, largely because my blood pressure tends to rise when I watch our Sri Lankan players. Therefore, I was pleasantly surprised recently when I was flipping through the TV channels to hear David Gower’s familiar voice commentating. It brought back fond memories of watching him bat during my time in the UK. I used to look forward to the summer for two reasons. To feel the sun on my back and watch David Gower bat!

A debut that announced a star

One of my most vivid cricketing memories is watching, in 1978, a young English batsman pull the very first ball he faced in Test cricket to the boundary. Most debutants play cautiously, trying to avoid the dreaded zero, but Gower nonchalantly swivelled and pulled a short ball from Pakistan’s Liaquat Ali for four. It was immediately apparent that a special talent had arrived.

To place that moment in perspective, Marvan Atapattu—an excellent Sri Lankan batsman—took three Tests and four innings to score his first run, yet later compiled 16 Test centuries.

Gower went on to score 56 in his first innings and captivated spectators with his full repertoire of strokes, particularly his exquisite cover drive. It is often said that a left-hander’s cover drive is one of the most pleasurable sights in cricket, and watching Sobers, Gower, or Brian Lara execute the cover drive made the entrance ticket worthwhile.

A young talent in a time of change

Gower made his Test debut at just 21, rare for an English player of that era. World cricket was in turmoil due to the Kerry Packer revolution, and England had lost senior players such as Tony Greig, Alan Knott, and Derek Underwood. Selectors were searching for young talent, and Gower’s inclusion injected fresh impetus.

Gower scored his first Test century in only his fourth match, just a month after his debut, against New Zealand, and a few months later scored his maiden Ashes century at Perth.

He finished with 18 Test centuries from 117 matches. His finest test innings, in my view, was the magnificent 154 not out at Kingston in 1981 against Holding, Marshall, Croft, and Garner. Batting for nearly eight hours and facing 403 balls, he set aside flair for determination to save the Test.

He and Ian Botham also benefited from playing their initial years under Mike Brealey, an average batsman but an outstanding leader. Rodney Hogg, the Australian fast bowler, famously said Brealey had a ‘degree in people’, and both young stars flourished under his guidance.

Captaincy and criticism and overall record

Few English batsmen delighted and frustrated spectators and analysts as much as Gower. The languid cover drive, so elegant and so pleasurable to the spectators, also resulted in a fair number of dismissals that, at times, gave the impression of carelessness to both spectators and journalists.

Despite his approach, which at times appeared casual, he was appointed as captain of the English team in 1983 and served for three years before being removed in 1986. He was again appointed captain in 1989 for the Ashes series. He led England in 1985 to a famous Ashes series win as well as a series win in India in1984-85.

In the eyes of some, the captaincy might not have been the best suited to his style of play. However, he scored 732 runs whilst captaining the team during the 1985 Ashes series, proving that he was able handle the pressure.

Under Gower, England lost two consecutive series to the great West Indian teams 5-0, which led to the coining of the phrase “Blackwashed”! He was somewhat unlucky that he captained the English team when the West Indies were at the peak, possessing a fearsome array of fast bowlers.

David Gower scored 3,269 test runs against Australia in 42 test matches. He scored nine centuries and 12 fifties, averaging nearly 45 runs per inning. His record against Australia as an English batsman is only second to Sir Jack Hobbs. Scoring runs against Australia has been a yardstick in determining how good a batsman is. Therefore, his record against Australia can easily rebut the critics who said that he was too casual. He scored 8,231 runs in 117 test matches and 3,170 runs in 114 One Day Internationals.

A gentleman of the game free of controversies

Unlike the other great English cricketer at the time, Ian Botham, David was not involved in any controversies during his illustrious career. The only incident that generated negative press was a low-level flight he undertook in a vintage Tiger Moth biplane in Queensland during the 1990-91 Ashes tour of Australia. The team management and the English press, as usual, made a mountain out of a molehill. David retired from international cricket in 1992.

In 1984, during the tour of India, due to the uncertain security situation after the assassination of the then Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, the English team travelled to Sri Lanka for a couple of matches. I was fortunate enough to get David to sign his book “With Time to Spare”. This was soon after he returned to the pavilion after being dismissed. There was no refusal or rudeness when I requested his signature.

He was polite and obliged despite still being in pads. Although I did not know David Gower, his willingness that day to oblige a spectator exemplified the man’s true character. A gentleman who played the game as it should be, and a great ambassador of England and world cricket. He was inducted into the ICC Cricket Hall of Fame in 2009 and appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in 1992 for his services to sport.

By Sanjeewa Jayaweera

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Sri Lanka Through Loving Eyes:A Call to Fix What Truly Matters

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Love of country, pride, and the responsibility to be honest

I am a Sri Lankan who has lived in Australia for the past 38 years. Australia has been very good to my family and me, yet Sri Lanka has never stopped being home. That connection endures, which is why we return every second year—sometimes even annually—not out of nostalgia, but out of love and pride in our country.

My recent visit reaffirmed much of what makes Sri Lanka exceptional: its people, culture, landscapes, and hospitality remain truly world-class. Yet loving one’s country also demands honesty, particularly when shortcomings risk undermining our future as a serious global tourism destination.

When Sacred and Iconic Sites Fall Short

One of the most confronting experiences occurred during our visit to Sri Pada (Adam’s Peak). This sacred site, revered across multiple faiths, attracts pilgrims and tourists from around the world. Sadly, the severe lack of basic amenities—especially clean, accessible toilets—was deeply disappointing. At moments of real need, facilities were either unavailable or unhygienic.

This is not a luxury issue. It is a matter of dignity.

For a site of such immense religious and cultural significance, the absence of adequate sanitation is unacceptable. If Sri Lanka is to meet its ambitious tourism targets, essential infrastructure, such as public toilets, must be prioritized immediately at Sri Pada and at all major tourist and pilgrimage sites.

Infrastructure strain is also evident in Ella, particularly around the iconic Nine Arches Bridge. While the attraction itself is breathtaking, access to the site is poorly suited to the sheer volume of visitors. We were required to walk up a steep, uneven slope to reach the railway lines—manageable for some, but certainly not ideal or safe for elderly visitors, families, or those with mobility challenges. With tourist numbers continuing to surge, access paths, safety measures, and crowd management urgently needs to be upgraded.

Missed opportunities and first impressions

Our visit to Yala National Park, particularly Block 5, was another missed opportunity. While the natural environment remains extraordinary, the overall experience did not meet expectations. Notably, our guide—experienced and deeply knowledgeable—offered several practical suggestions for improving visitor experience and conservation outcomes. Unfortunately, he also noted that such feedback often “falls on deaf ears.” Ignoring insights from those on the ground is a loss Sri Lanka can ill afford.

First impressions also matter, and this is where Bandaranaike International Airport still falls short. While recent renovations have improved the physical space, customs and immigration processes lack coherence during peak hours. Poorly formed queues, inconsistent enforcement, and inefficient passenger flow create unnecessary delays and frustration—often the very first experience visitors have of Sri Lanka.

Excellence exists—and the fundamentals must follow

That said, there is much to celebrate.

Our stays at several hotels, especially The Kingsbury, were outstanding. The service, hospitality, and quality of food were exceptional—on par with the best anywhere in the world. These experiences demonstrate that Sri Lanka already possesses the talent and capability to deliver excellence when systems and leadership align.

This contrast is precisely why the existing gaps are so frustrating: they are solvable.

Sri Lankans living overseas will always defend our country against unfair criticism and negative global narratives. But defending Sri Lanka does not mean remaining silent when basic standards are not met. True patriotism lies in constructive honesty.

If Sri Lanka is serious about welcoming the world, it must urgently address fundamentals: sanitation at sacred sites, safe access to major attractions, well-managed national parks, and efficient airport processes. These are not optional extras—they are the foundation of sustainable tourism.

This is not written in criticism, but in love. Sri Lanka deserves better, and so do the millions of visitors who come each year, eager to experience the beauty, spirituality, and warmth that our country offers so effortlessly.

The writer can be reached at Jerome.adparagraphams@gmail.com

By Jerome Adams

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Seething Global Discontents and Sri Lanka’s Tea Cup Storms

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Seething Global Discontents and Sri Lanka’s Tea Cup Storms

Global temperatures in January have been polar opposite – plus 50 Celsius down under in Australia, and minus 45 Celsius up here in North America (I live in Canada). Between extremes of many kinds, not just thermal, the world order stands ruptured. That was the succinct message in what was perhaps the most widely circulated and listened to speeches of this century, delivered by Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney at Davos, in January. But all is not lost. Who seems to be getting lost in the mayhem of his own making is Donald Trump himself, the President of the United States and the world’s disruptor in chief.

After a year of issuing executive orders of all kinds, President Trump is being forced to retreat in Minneapolis, Minnesota, by the public reaction to the knee-jerk shooting and killing of two protesters in three weeks by federal immigration control and border patrol agents. The latter have been sent by the Administration to implement Trump’s orders for the arbitrary apprehension of anyone looking like an immigrant to be followed by equally arbitrary deportation.

The Proper Way

Many Americans are not opposed to deporting illegal and criminal immigrants, but all Americans like their government to do things the proper way. It is not the proper way in the US to send federal border and immigration agents to swarm urban neighbourhood streets and arrest neighbours among neighbours, children among other school children, and the employed among other employees – merely because they look different, they speak with an accent, or they are not carrying their papers on their person.

Americans generally swear by the Second Amendment and its questionably interpretive right allowing them to carry guns. But they have no tolerance when they see government forces turn their guns on fellow citizens. Trump and his administration cronies went too far and now the chickens are coming home to roost. Barely a month has passed in 2026, but Trump’s second term has already run into multiple storms.

There’s more to come between now and midterm elections in November. In the highly entrenched American system of checks and balances it is virtually impossible to throw a government out of office – lock, stock and barrel. Trump will complete his term, but more likely as a lame duck than an ordering executive. At the same time, the wounds that he has created will linger long even after he is gone.

Equally on the external front, it may not be possible to immediately reverse the disruptions caused by Trump after his term is over, but other countries and leaders are beginning to get tired of him and are looking for alternatives bypassing Trump, and by the same token bypassing the US. His attempt to do a Venezuela over Greenland has been spectacularly pushed back by a belatedly awakening Europe and America’s other western allies such as Australia, Canada and New Zealand. The wags have been quick to remind us that he is mostly a TACO (Trump always chickens out) Trump.

Grandiose Scheme or Failure

His grandiose scheme to establish a global Board of Peace with himself as lifetime Chair is all but becoming a starter. No country or leader of significant consequence has accepted the invitation. The motley collection of acceptors includes five East European countries, three Central Asian countries, eight Middle Eastern countries, two from South America, and four from Asia – Cambodia, Vietnam, Indonesia and Pakistan. The latter’s rush to join the club will foreclose any chance of India joining the Board. Countries are allowed a term of three years, but if you cough up $1 billion, could be member for life. Trump has declared himself to be lifetime chair of the Board, but he is not likely to contribute a dime. He might claim expenses, though. The Board of Peace was meant to be set up for the restoration of Gaza, but Trump has turned it into a retirement project for himself.

There is also the ridiculous absurdity of Trump continuing as chair even after his term ends and there is a different president in Washington. How will that arrangement work? If the next president turns out to be a Democrat, Trump may deny the US a seat on the board, cash or no cash. That may prove to be good for the UN and its long overdue restructuring. Although Trump’s Board has raised alarms about the threat it poses to the UN, the UN may end up being the inadvertent beneficiary of Trump’s mercurial madness.

The world is also beginning to push back on Trump’s tariffs. Rather, Trump’s tariffs are spurring other countries to forge new trade alliances and strike new trade deals. On Tuesday, India and EU struck the ‘mother of all’ trade deals between them, leaving America the poorer for it. Almost the next day , British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and Chinese leader Xi Jinping announced in Beijing that they had struck a string of deals on travel, trade and investments. “Not a Big Bang Free Trade Deal” yet, but that seems to be the goal. The Canadian Prime Minister has been globe-trotting to strike trade deals and create investment opportunities. He struck a good reciprocal deal with China, is looking to India, and has turned to South Korea and a consortium from Germany and Norway to submit bids for a massive submarine supply contract supplemented by investments in manufacturing and mineral industries. The informal first-right-of-refusal privilege that US had in Canada for defense contracts is now gone, thanks to Trump.

The disruptions that Trump has created in the world order may not be permanent or wholly irreversible, as Prime Minister Carney warned at Davos. But even the short term effects of Trump’s disruptions will be significant to all of US trading partners, especially smaller countries like Sri Lanka. Regardless of what they think of Trump, leaders of governments have a responsibility to protect their citizens from the negative effects of Trump’s tariffs. That will be in addition to everything else that governments have to do even if they do not have Trump’s disruptions to deal with.

Bland or Boisterous

Against the backdrop of Trump-induced global convulsions, politics in Sri Lanka is in a very stable mode. This is not to diminish the difficulties and challenges that the vast majority of Sri Lankans are facing – in meeting their daily needs, educating their children, finding employment for the youth, accessing timely health care and securing affordable care for the elderly. The challenges are especially severe for those devastated by cyclone Ditwah.

Politically, however, the government is not being tested by the opposition. And the once boisterous JVP/NPP has suddenly become ‘bland’ in government. “Bland works,” is a Canadian political quote coined by Bill Davis a nationally prominent premier of the Province of Ontario. Davis was responding to reporters looking for dramatic politics instead of boring blandness. He was Premier of Ontario for 14 years (1971-1985) and won four consecutive elections before retiring.

No one knows for how long the NPP government will be in power in Sri Lanka or how many more elections it is going to win, but there is no question that the government is singularly focused on winning the next parliamentary election, or both the presidential and parliamentary elections – depending on what happens to the system of directly electing the executive president.

The government is trying to grow comfortable in being on cruise control to see through the next parliamentary election. Its critics on the other hand, are picking on anything that happens on any day to blame or lampoon the government. The government for all its tight control of its members and messaging is not being able to put out quickly the fires that have been erupting. There are the now recurrent matters of the two AGs (non-appointment of the Auditor General and alleged attacks on the Attorney General) and the two ERs (Educational Reform and Electricity Reform), the timing of the PC elections, and the status of constitutional changes to end the system of directly electing the president.

There are also criticisms of high profile resignations due to government interference and questionable interdictions. Two recent resignations have drawn public attention and criticism, viz., the resignation of former Air Chief Marshal Harsha Abeywickrama from his position as the Chairman of Airport & Aviation Services, and the earlier resignation of Attorney-at-Law Ramani Jayasundara from her position as Chair of the National Women’s Commission. Both have been attributed to political interferences. In addition, the interdiction of the Deputy Secretary General of Parliament has also raised eyebrows and criticisms. The interdiction in parliament could not have come at a worse time for the government – just before the passing away of Nihal Seniviratne, who had served Sri Lanka’s parliament for 33 years and the last 13 of them as its distinguished Secretary General.

In a more political sense, echoes of the old JVP boisterousness periodically emanate in the statements of the JVP veteran and current Cabinet Minister K.D. Lal Kantha. Newspaper columnists love to pounce on his provocative pronouncements and make all manner of prognostications. Mr. Lal Kantha’s latest reported musing was that: “It is true our government is in power, but we still don’t have state power. We will bring about a revolution soon and seize state power as well.”

This was after he had reportedly taken exception to filmmaker Asoka Handagama’s one liner: “governing isn’t as easy as it looks when you are in the opposition,” and allegedly threatened to answer such jibes no matter who stood in the way and what they were wearing “black robes, national suits or the saffron.” Ironically, it was the ‘saffron part’ that allegedly led to the resignation of Harsha Abeywickrama from the Airport & Aviation Services. And President AKD himself has come under fire for his Thaipongal Day statement in Jaffna about Sinhala Buddhist pilgrims travelling all the way from the south to observe sil at the Tiisa Vihare in Thayiddy, Jaffna.

The Vihare has been the subject of controversy as it was allegedly built under military auspices on the property of local people who evacuated during the war. Being a master of the spoken word, the President could have pleaded with the pilgrims to show some sensitivity and empathy to the displaced Tamil people rather than blaming them (pilgrims) of ‘hatred.’ The real villains are those who sequestered property and constructed the building, and the government should direct its ire on them and not the pilgrims.

In the scheme of global things, Sri Lanka’s political skirmishes are still teacup storms. Yet it is never nice to spill your tea in public. Public embarrassments can be politically hurtful. As for Minister Lal Kantha’s distinction between governmental mandate and state power – this is a false dichotomy in a fundamentally practical sense. He may or may not be aware of it, but this distinction quite pre-occupied the ideologues of the 1970-75 United Front government. Their answer of appointing Permanent Secretaries from outside the civil service was hardly an answer, and in some instances the cure turned out to be worse than the disease.

As well, what used to be a leftist pre-occupation is now a right wing insistence especially in America with Trump’s identification of the so called ‘deep state’ as the enemy of the people. I don’t think the NPP government wants to go there. Rather, it should show creative originality in making the state, whether deep or shallow, to be of service to the people. There is a general recognition that the government has been doing just that in providing redress to the people impacted by the cyclone. A sign of that recognition is the number of people contributing to the disaster relief fund and in substantial amounts. The government should not betray this trust but build on it for the benefit of all. And better do it blandly than boisterously.

by Rajan Philips

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