Features
Royal College 49 Group celebrates 75 years
Majority of this group became professionals
byJayantha Gunasekera, PC
Vice President, Royal College Union
In 1949 a group of 96 students were successful in gaining entrance to Royal College, Colombo, having sat an open competitive examination. About 60 of them were from Royal Prep while the rest were from St.Thomas’ College, Mount Lavinia, Trinity College Kandy, St.Joseph’s Colleg and St. Peter’s Colleges, Colombo, etc. They were all around 10 years old. They were examined on general intelligence and general knowledge, Sinhalese or Tamil and Arithmetic. Although Royal Prep bore the same name there was no automatic entry to Royal College unlike several years before and several years after.
Royal was founded in 1835 by the then British government mainly for the education of the sons of the British, under the Principalship of Dr. Barcroft Boake , a product of the Oxford University. Though the school was initially called Colombo Academy it came to be known later as Royal College. On the panels of the college hall are the names of those who distinguished themselves in their lives.
Also in the college hall hang the portraits of C.A.Lorenz, KC- Acting King’s Advocate, Sir Ponnambalam Ramanathan KC –Acting Attorney General and his brother Sir Ponnambalam Arunachalam of the Ceylon Civil Service, Dr. C.A.Hewavitharana and sibling Anagarika Dharmapala. Of the politicians of recent times were Prime Minister Sir John Kotalawela and President J.R. Jayewardene while H.Sri Nissanka a well known Criminal Lawyer and one of the founders of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party also adorn the hall.
Messrs. D.S.Senanayake, Dudley Senanayake and S.W.R.D.Bandaranaike were products of the school known by Royalists as the school by the sea, namely St. Thomas’ Mount Lavinia.
When I entered the Royal College during the War years the building at Reid Avenue was taken over by the British government and converted to a military hospital. We were about five years old and gained entry to what was known as the baby class. The Head Master of Royal Prep was A.F. de Saa Bandaranayake and the baby class teacher was Mrs. Keyt. About 15 of us were selected. Royal Prep was at Skelton Gardens where the Lumbini School is now located.
In 1949 some of us were chosen to gain entry to Royal College. Our Principal was Mr.J.C.A. Corea the first Ceylonese Principal after Bradby. Initially most of these boys did not take studies seriously as a large number were from affluent families being children of professionals but once they got into their respective disciplines there was no turning back. Quite a number of them, some 68%, became lawyers, doctors, and engineers etc. and reached the zenith of their professions. Royal College is indisputably the best school in the island or so Royalists claim. Parents clamor to get their children into Royal but not all of them succeed. Most think of other public schools as second best. Royal and St.Thomas’ are the most prestigious like Eden and Harrow of England.
This batch being written about came to be called the 49 Group. According to statistics compiled by a former Principal it is perhaps the best batch that Royal produced in recent times. It is said that 32 of them became medical doctors most of them consultants, seven entered the legal profession, two becoming President’s Counsel and two others became Judges of the Supreme Court; three entered the Ceylon Civil Service, one became an architect and 18 became engineers. Four headed top business conglomerates.
Whilst in school each one of these 96 boys fought for the last place in class but when they commenced their respective disciplines they shone over the products of other schools.
Of those who took to the legal profession are two President’s Counsel Jayantha Gunasekera (a former elected Secretary of the Bar Association of Sri Lanka) and top Civil Lawyer late Chula de Silva . Two other Lawyers, late S.W.B.Wadugodapitiya and Late Punyadasa Edussuriya became Judges of the Supreme Court whilst late Kumar Ponnambalam, late T.K.Tilakan (District Judge), Late Alavi Mohamed, a Barrister. M.N.B.Peiris died a few years ago. Vipulanandan is still engaged in the law in Australia.
Gamini Seneviratne, Harsha Wickremasinghe and B.S.Wijeweera entered the prestigious Ceylon Civil Service.
Of those 32 who entered the Medical profession several became surgeons: Ranjith De Silva who captained Royal at cricket, Priya Samarasinghe, Geoff Vandendrisen, Gamini Gunatilleke, late S.R.Ratnapala; whilst among the physicians are Henry Rajaratnam, diabetologist well known in his field. There is an Annual Oration in his name. J.B.Pieris was the first to qualify as a neurologist. There is an Annual Oration in his name too. J.B. was also the Director of Post Graduate Institute of Medicine.
Others included late Gamini Jayakuru (venereologist) and late Brendon Gooneratne who distinguished himself in Australia. Brendon was one of my closest friends. He lived in Deanstone Place while I lived in Flower Road and the two of us used to walk to school together. His wife, Professor Yasmin Gooneratne, was a Professor of English in Australia and has several publications to her credit. Brendon died two years ago as a result of a fall. I recently read about Yasmin Gooneratne’s death. She was a wonderful wife to Brendon. She was the daughter of Sammy Dias Bandaranaike brother of Justice Dr.R.F.Dias.
Another wife of a member of the 49 group is Professor Lalitha Mendis who reached the pinnacle of the medical profession. She was the Dean of the Faculty of Medicine and the Director of the Post Graduate Institute of Medicine. She is the wife of our classmate, late Dr. Lalith Mendis.
The other physicians are Dr. Disampathy Subasinghe who practiced as a physician for over 50 years in the U.K., Dr.N.T. de Silva who also practiced in the U.K. for over 50 years, Tissa Cooray (formerly of the WHO), Danilo de Krester, H.S.Karunasekera, Leslie Muthukuda, Late Dan Perimpanayagam, Yasa Rajapakse (UK), V.Dharmapalan (New Zealand) and late R.S.B. Wickremasinghe was the Director of Medical Research Institute.
Of the Engineers that come to my mind are Bandu Yatawara, Late Prof. C.L.V. Jayatilleke who died of COVID 19, he was the Vice Chancellor of Peradeniya, Dr.Susantha Goonetilleke who secured a first class, Channa Amerasinghe former GM. of the Electricity Board, Sri Bavan Sri Skandarajah who staged a fast in Canada in support of LTTE, late H.S.B. Abeysundera, late L.H.Meegama, C. Ramachandran and late Beverly Vandergert.
Perhaps the cleverest of them all was Late. Chelvanayagam Vaseeharan, a maths prodigy who was to be appointed as Professor of Maths.
In this class were several businessmen who headed companies namely Cambridge educated late. Upali Wijewardena of the Upali Group and the owner of the Island Newspapers, late. Lal Jayasundera Chairman of Hayleys , late. Ratna Sivaratnam Chairman Aitken Spence, Godwin Perera Chairman Ceylinco Life whist late. K.Manikavasagar was a director of Glaxo. Arjuna Hulugalle is one of the best read, apart from being the son of H.A.J.Hulugalle Editor of the Daily News. Upatissa Attygalle was also a successful businessman. Nihal Weeratunga. who was Secretary to late President J.R.Jayewardene was also a company director.
V.H.Nanayakkara and P.H.J.S.Ariyapala, both Bachelors of Science, took to teaching and Nanayakkara was on the staff of Royal and also the Hostel Warden till he secured lucrative employment in Seychelles and now lives in Australia.
There was one member of the 49 Group who who became a policeman acquiring notoriety in the force as a ‘tough cop.’ If he had not joined the Police he would surely have been on the other side of the law. That was none other than Rahula Silva. He was charged in several cases of violence. In all these cases he was successfully defended gratis by me, his class mate.
There was late Brigadier Kingsley Jayawardena trained at Sandhurst Military Academy UK. He would certainly have been a General and the Army Commander if he drank less. During the JVP riots of 1988-1989 he protected many of his classmates.
There is also the well known and very talented architect K.L.Gunaratna. Late Laki Senanayake an artist of repute who worked closely with Geoffrey Bawa. A.A.Wijetunga and K.Sivapragasam became Senior Assessors in the Inland Revenue Department.
Late. Bimal Padmaperuma functioned as Chairman of the State Engineering Corporation and late Daham Wimalasena who was the Secretary of the UNP was appointed Chairman of the Ceylon Petroleum Corporation. T.D.S.A. Dissanayake a prolific writer served in the UN and later as our Ambassador in Indonesia.
There were two members of this group to whom life was a ball. They were late Aru Sellamuttu and late Ranjith Kiriella. Nimalasiri Fonseka a bright spark in school practices as a Chartered Accountant and now lives in England.
The late Lionel Almeida and the late Tyrell Mutthiah took to planting and were fine rugby players in school and later. Late W.K.N. de Silva was a Proprietary planter. The late Bobby Perera was one time Director of Qucikshaws. Mahinda Gunasekera domiciled in Canada and does much for our country by countering LTTE propaganda.
Theses classmates have now dwindled and about half are no more. Though depleted we get together at the Royal Thomian cricket match and Bradby Shield rugby encounter. Sometimes we meet more often to welcome classmates coming from abroad. It is at such gatherings that they reminisce about their school days, some wild and some even wilder. Only the pleasantest memories remain and old yarns are told and retold with salt and pepper added. It is amazing that there isn’t a tinge of jealousy and each one is proud of the others’ achievements.
As the college song goes ” they learnt of books and leant of men and learned to play the game”.
((Part of this articles excerpted from an article by late. S.D.Sivapragasam)
Features
A 20-year reflection on housing struggles of Tsunami survivors
Revisiting field research in Ampara
by Prof. Amarasiri de Silva
The 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, also known as the Boxing Day tsunami, triggered by a magnitude 9.1 earthquake off the coast of Sumatra on 26 Dec., 2004, had a catastrophic impact on Sri Lanka. It is estimated to have released energy equivalent to 23,000 Hiroshima-type atomic bombs, wiping out hundreds of communities in minutes. The tsunami struck Sri Lanka’s eastern and southern coasts approximately two hours after the earthquake. The eastern shores, facing the earthquake’s epicenter, bore the brunt of the waves, affecting settlements on the east coast. The tsunami displaced many families and devastated villages and communities in the affected districts of Sri Lanka. Although Boxing Day is associated with exchanging gifts after Christmas and was a time to give to the less fortunate, it brought havoc in Sri Lanka to many communities. It resulted in approximately 31,229 deaths and 4,093 people missing. In terms of the dead and missing numbers, Sri Lanka’s toll was second only to Indonesia (126,804, missing 93,458, displaced 474,619). Twenty-five beach hotels were severely damaged, and another 6 were completely washed away. More than 240 schools were destroyed or sustained severe damage. Several hospitals, telecommunication networks, coastal railway networks, etc., were also damaged. In addition, one and a half million people were displaced from their homes.
Ampara district was a hard-hit district, where more than 10,000 people died. A Galle bound train from Colombo, carrying about 1,700 passengers visiting their ancestral homes and villages, on the Sunday after the Christmas holidays, was struck by the tsunami near Telwatta; most of them were killed.
About 8,000 people were killed in the northeast region, which the LTTE controlled at the time. The Ampara district was a hard-hit district, with more than 10,000 people dying and many more displaced. In sympathy with the victims, the Saudi Arabian government established a grant to construct houses to assist 500 displaced families in Ampara in 2009. The Saudi Envoy in Colombo presented the house keys to President Mahinda Rajapaksa in 2011 for distribution to tsunami victims in the Ampara district. However, due to the protests by local majoritarian ethnic groups, the government intervened, and a court ruling halted the housing distribution to the victims, mandating that houses be allocated according to the country’s population ratio. The project includes residential units and amenities such as a school, a supermarket complex, a hospital, and a mosque, making it unique for Muslim people. Saudi government ambassador Khalid Hamoud Alkahtani engaged in discussions with the Sri Lankan government to sort out the issues and agreed to give the houses to the respective victims.
Immediate Recovery
The immediate relief work was initiated just after the disaster, and the government had financial and moral support from local people and countries worldwide. As most displaced people were children and women, restoring at least basic education facilities for affected children was a high priority. By mid-year, 85 percent of the children in tsunami-affected areas were back in school, which showed that the relief programme in school education was a success.
Relief efforts for households included the provision of finances to meet immediate needs. Compensation of Rs.15,000 (US$150) was offered for victims towards funeral expenses; livelihood support schemes included Payment of Rs.375 (US$3.75) in cash and rations for each member of a family unit per week, a payment of Rs. 2,500 (US$25) towards kitchen utensils per family. These initial measures were largely successful, though there were some problems with a lack of coordination, as witnessed. (See Map 1)
The most considerable financing needs were in the housing sector. The destruction of private assets was substantial (US$700 million), in addition to public infrastructure and other assets. Loss of current output in the fisheries and tourism sectors—which were severely affected—was estimated at US$200 million and US$130 million, respectively.
Strands of Hope: Progress Made for Tsunami-Affected Communities of Sri Lanka
By mid-June 2005, the number of displaced people was down to 516,000 from approximately 800,000 immediately after the tsunami, as people went home—even if the homes in question were destroyed or damaged—and were taken off the books then. At first, an estimated 169,000 people living in schools and tents were mainly transferred to transitional shelters/camps—designed to serve as a stopgap between emergency housing and permanent homes. This transitional shelter was only supplied to affected households in the buffer zone.
By late August 2005, The Task Force for Rebuilding the Nation (TAFREN) estimated that 52,383 transitional shelters, accommodating an estimated 250,000 tsunami-affected people, had been completed since February 2005 at 492 sites. Those transitional housing programme shelters were expected to be completed with 55,000 by the end of September 2005. This goal seems more than achievable. I did not find evidence to show that it has been achieved.
I did my field research in Ampara district with support from UNDP Colombo, the Department for Research Cooperation, and the Swedish International Development Cooperation.
My research shows that the tsunami affected families in Muslim settlements along the East Coast had a severe housing problem for two reasons.
• First, the GoSL has declared that land within 65 meters of the sea is unsafe for living due to possible seismic effects, and people are thus prohibited from engaging in any construction in that beach area. This land strip is the traditional living area of the Muslims, particularly the fisher folk. Families living along the narrow beach strip have not been offered alternative land or adequate compensation to buy land outside the 65-metre zone.
• Second, the LTTE has prohibited Muslims from building houses on land purchased for them by outside agencies on the pretext that it belongs to the Tamils.
The GoSL established several institutions as a response strategy for post-tsunami recovery after the failure of P-TOMS. The Task Force for Rebuilding the Nation (TAFREN), the Task Force for Relief (TAFOR), and the Tsunami Housing Reconstruction Unit (THRU) were the lead agencies created through processes involving private and public sector participation. In November 2005, following the election of President Mahinda Rajapaksa, the Reconstruction and Development Agency (RADA)was set up. This became an authority with executive powers following the parliamentary ratification of the RADA Act in 2006. RADA’s mandate was to accelerate reconstruction and development activities in the affected areas, functionally replacing all the tsunami organizations and a significant part of the former RRR Ministry. According to RADA, the total number of houses built so far (as of May 2006) in Ampara is 629, while the total housing units pledged is 6,169. At the time of the research (March to June 2006), no housing projects were completed in a predominantly Muslim area.
Compensation for damaged houses was not based on a consistent scheme. As a result, some families received large sums, while others did not get any money. In some instances, those who collected compensation were not the affected families. The Auditor General, S.C. Mayadunne, noted that Payment of an excessive amount, even for minor damages, is due to the payments being made without assessing the cost of restoring the houses to normal condition. (For example, Rs. 100,000 had been paid for minor damages of Rs. 10,000) … Payments made without identifying the value of the damaged houses, thus resulting in heavy expenditure by the government (For example, a sum of Rs. 250,000 had been paid for the destruction of a temporary house valued at Rs. 10,000) (Mayadunne, 2005, p. 8). That compensation was not paid according to an acceptable scheme, which led to agitation among the affected people and provided an opportunity for political manipulation. The LTTE and the TRO requested direct aid for reconstruction work in LTTE-controlled areas. The poor response of the GoSL to this demand was interpreted as indifference on its part towards ethnic minorities in Ampara. Meanwhile, the GoSL provided direct support for tsunami-affected communities in southern Sri Lanka, where the majority were Sinhalese, strengthening this allegation.
Land scarcity in tsunami-affected Ampara and disputes over landownership in the area were the main reasons for not completing the housing programmes. The LTTE contended that the land identified for building houses by the GoSL or purchased by civil society organisations for constructing such houses belongs to the Tamils, an ideology based on a myth of their own, a Tamil hereditary Homeland—paarampariyamaana taayakam’ (Peebles, 1990, p. 41). Consequently, housing programmes could not be implemented at that time.
The land question in the Eastern Province has a history that dates back to 1951 when the Gal Oya Colonisation scheme was established. According to the minority version of this history, in a report submitted by Dr. Hasbullah and his colleagues, it shows that the colonists were selected overwhelmingly from among the Sinhalese rather than the Muslims and Tamils, who were a majority in Ampara at that time, and, as a result, the ethnic balance of Ampara District was disrupted. However, conversely, B.H. Farmer reported in 1957 that Tamils, especially Jaffna Tamils, were ‘chary’ and did not have a ‘tradition of migration,’ which was the apparent reason for less Tamil representation among the colonists of Gal Oya. According to Farmer, up to December 31, 1953, between five and 16 percent of the colonists were chosen from the Districts of Batticaloa, Jaffna and Trincomalee, predominantly Tamil. Contradictory evidence (with a political coloring following the recent rise of ethnicity in this discourse) reports by Dr. Hasbullah that 100,000 acres of agricultural land in the East have been ‘illegally transferred from Muslims to the Tamils’ since the 1990s. The Tamils, however, believe that the land in the Eastern Province is part and parcel of the Tamil Homeland. This new political ideology of landownership that emerged at that time in the ethnopolitical context of the Eastern Province has intensified land (re)claiming in Ampara by Muslims and Tamils.
According to Tamil discourse, the increase in the value of land in Ampara over the past two decades has led to rich Muslims purchasing land belonging to poor Tamils, resulting in ethnic homogenization in the coastal areas of the District in favor of the Muslims. ‘Violence against Tamils was also used in some areas to push out the numerically small Tamil service caste communities’ as Hasbullah says. In a situation with an ideological history of land disputes, finding new land for the construction of houses for Muslim communities affected by the tsunami posed a challenge at that time.
In the face of this challenge, Muslims in Ampara sought assistance from Muslim politicians and organisations that willingly came forward to assist them. The efforts made by these politicians and civil society organisations to erect houses for tsunami-affected Muslim families were forcibly curtailed by the LTTE. Consequently, a proposed housing program for Muslims in Kinnayady Kiramam in Kaththankudi was abandoned in 2005. Development of the four acres of land bought by the Memon Sangam in Colombo for tsunami victims of Makbooliya in Marathamunai was prohibited in 2005. Similar occurrences have been reported in Marathamunai Medduvedday. Mrs. Ferial Ashraff, at that time Minister of Housing and Common Amenities, wanted to build houses in Marathamunai, Periyaneelavanai DS division (Addaippallam), the Pandirippu Muslim area, and in Oluvil–Palamunai, but the LTTE proscribed all such initiatives.
The Islamabad housing scheme in Kalmunai Muslim DS division and the construction of houses by Muslim individuals in Karaithivu were banned, and threats were issued by the LTTE and a Tamil military organisation called Ellai Padai (Boundary Forces). Because the GoSL and the intervening agencies could not resolve the housing problem, the affected communities became disillusioned and lost confidence in the GoSL departments, aid agencies, and international NGOs. Much effort and resources were wasted in finding land and designing housing programmes that have not materialised. Some funds pledged by external agencies failed to materialise, causing harm to low-income families. Efforts to provide housing for tsunami-affected people in the Ampara District at that time highlighted their vulnerability to LTTE threats and the power politics of participating agencies. Regarding housing and land issues, the Muslim people of Ampara adopted two approaches to address their challenges. First, in some cases, they reached a compromise with the LTTE, agreeing that upon completion of a housing project, a portion of the houses would be allocated to the Tamil community under LTTE supervision.
For instance, this approach proved successful in the Islamabad housing programme, which was halfway complete as of the time of the research (March–June 2006). Similarly, a housing scheme in Ninthavur followed a comparable compromise with the LTTE. According to Mohamed Mansoor, the then President of the Centre for East Lanka Social Service, 22 of the 100 houses were to be allocated to the Tamil community upon completion. This allocation was deemed reasonable because Muslims owned 80 percent of the land in the area, while Tamils owned 20 percent. At the time of the author’s fieldwork, approximately 30 houses had been completed at this site. I don’t know what happened afterward.
The second approach adopted by the people was to build houses in the areas they had lived in before the tsunami, despite construction being prohibited within 65 meters of the sea. Muslims in Marathamunai knew they would not be allocated any land for housing and sought funds from organisations such as the Eastern Human Economic Development to construct homes on their original plots. The affected individuals have made efforts to urge their leaders to engage with the TRO and the LTTE to reclaim the funds borrowed by Muslim people and organisations to purchase land. The four-acre plot that the Memon Society had acquired for housing development was sold to a Tamil organisation for Rs. 1,000,000 (roughly USD 10,000) and was one such land in question.
The national political forces operating in Ampara have deprived the poor (Muslim) fisher folk of their right to land and build houses in their villages. These communities have resorted to non-violent strategies involving accepting the status quo without questioning it and fighting for their rights. The passivity among the poor affected families is a result of them not having representation in the civil society organisations in the area. These bodies are run by elites who do not wish to contest the GoSL rule of a 65-metre buffer zone or LTTE land claims. The tsunami not only washed away the houses and took the land of the poor communities that lived by the sea, but it also made them even poorer, more marginalised, and more ethnically segregated.
Here, 20 years later, it is time that justice was done to the Muslim families in the Ampara district who were severely hit by the tsunami. It is also a significant and timely commitment made by President Dissanayake to offer 500 houses to the Muslim tsunami victims. Such a promise is overdue and essential, as these marginalised communities have desperately needed a voice and action in their favour for over 20 years. Delivery of such homes to the victims would be an important step in restoring social harmony and the dignity and livelihoods of those affected by the tragic incident.
Features
Worthless corporations, boards and authorities
Prof. O. A. Ileperuma
The Cabinet has recently decided to review the state-owned, non-commercial institutions, many of which are redundant or are of no use. The government manages 86 departments, 25 District Secretariats, 339 Divisional Secretariats, 340 state-owned enterprises and 115 non-commercial state statutory institutions. The national budget allocates Rs. 140 billion to manage these institutions.
We have inherited a large number of redundant Corporations, Boards and Authorities causing a huge drain on our financial resources. These institutions were basically created by previous governments to give jobs to defeated candidates and friends of government politicians. For instance, we have the State Pharmaceutical corporation and the State Pharmaceutical Manufacturing corporation. They can be merged. Then, we have the Coconut Development authority and the Coconut Cultivation Board, which is redundant. Decades ago, coconut cultivation came under the coconut research institute (CRI). An extension section of the CRI can easily undertake the functions of these two institutions. Another example is the still existing Ceylon Cement corporation which earlier ran two cement mills at Puttalam and Kankesanthurai. Now, the Kankasenthurai factory does not exist and the Puttalam factory is under the private sector. Still this Ceylon Cement Corporation exists and the only activity they are doing is to lease the lands for mining which earlier belonged to them. There is a chairman appointed by the minister in charge based on political connections and a general manager and a skeleton staff of about ten workers. This corporation can be easily dissolved and the Ministry Secretary can take up any functions of this corporation.
In the field of sciences, the National Science Foundation was created in 1968 to promote science and technology and to provide funding for researchers. Then a former president created two other institutions, National Science and Technology Commission (NASTEC) and National research Council (NRC). While NASTEC is tasked with science policy and NRC provides research grants; both these tasks were earlier carried out by the National Science Foundation. In the field of education, curriculum revisions, etc., were carried out earlier by the Department of Education, and later the National Institute of Education was created, and for educational policy, the National Education Commission was created. The latter was created to provide a top position for an academic who supported the then government in power.
There is a Water Supply and Drainage Board and also a separate Water Resources Board, and they can easily be amalgamated. There is also the Cashew corporation serving no useful purpose and its duties can be taken over by an institution such as the Department of Minor Crops. There is also the State Development & Construction Corporation and the State Engineering Corporation of Sri Lanka which appear to be doing similar jobs.
We still have Paranthan Chemicals Ltd., which is the successor to the Paranthan Chemicals Corporation involved in manufacturing caustic soda and chlorine. Their factory was destroyed during the war nearly 20 years ago, but it exists and its only function is to import chlorine and sell it to the Water Board for the water purification process. Why can’t the Water Board import chlorine directly?
I am aware that my views on this subject are likely to draw criticism but such redundancies are a severe drain on the Treasury, which faces the difficult task of allocating funds.
Features
Head-turner in Egypt…
Prathibha Liyanaarchchi, Miss Intercontinental Sri Lanka 2024, is back in town after participating in the 52nd edition of Miss Intercontinental held at the Sunrise Remal Resort, Sharm El-Sheik, in Egypt.
There were nearly two weeks of activities, connected with this event, and Prathibha says she enjoyed every minute of it.
“It was wonderful being in the company of over 52 beautiful girls from around the world and we became great friends.
“My roommate was Miss Greece. She was simply awesome and I even taught her a few Sinhala words.
“Most of the contestants were familiar with Ceylon Tea but didn’t quite know much about Sri Lanka.”
However, having won a special award at Miss Intercontinental 2024 – Queen of Tourism – Prathibha says she is seriously thinking of working on a campaign to show the world that Sri Lanka is a paradise island and that tourists would love to experience our scene.
Although our queen was not in the final list, she made it into the Top 22 and was quite a drawcard wherever she went.
“I guess it was my tan complexion and my height 5 ft. 10 inches.”
She even impressed an international audience with her singing voice; the organisers were keen to have a contestant from the Asia Oceania group showcase her talent, as a singer, and Prathibha was selected.
She sang Madonna’s ‘La Isla Bonita’ and was roundly applauded.
Even in the traditional costume section, her Batik Osariya and the traditional seven-piece necklace impressed many.
The grand finale was held on 6th December with Miss Puerto Rico being crowned Miss Intercontinental 2024.
“I would like to say a big thank you to everyone who supported me throughout this journey. I’m honoured to have been named a Top 22 Finalist at Miss Intercontinental 2024 and awarded the Special title of Miss Tourism Queen. It was a challenging yet unforgettable experience competing in Egypt. Preparing, in just three weeks, and performing, was no easy feat, but I’m so proud of what I accomplished.”
For the record, Prathibha, who celebrated her birthday on Christmas Day (25), is a technical designer at MAS holdings, visiting lecturer, model, and a graduate from the University of Moratuwa.
Unlike most beauty queens who return after an international event and hardly think of getting involved in any community work, Prathibha says she plans to continue serving her community by expanding her brand – Hoop The Label – and using it as a platform to create a positive change for the underprivileged community.
“At the same time, I am committed to furthering my education in fashion design and technology, aiming to combine creativity with innovation to contribute to the evolving fashion industry. By blending these passions, I hope to make a lasting impact, both in my community, and in the world of fashion.”
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