Features
Scientists in Politics –Lessons from the Oppenheimer Story
by Prof. Janendra De Costa,
University of Peradeniya
(janendrad@gmail.com)
It was only last week that I belatedly had the opportunity to view Christopher Nolan’s award-winning film ‘Oppenheimer’, the real-life account of the American Theoretical Physicist, J. Robert Oppenheimer, who spearheaded the ‘Manhattan Project’, which successfully built the first atom bomb. The dropping of two of these bombs on the Japanese cites of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, at an enormous human cost, brought World War II to a conclusion with the surrender of Japan to the allies. Germany had already surrendered prior to the use of the atom bomb on Japan.
The story of Oppenheimer, as vividly depicted in the film, is inextricably intertwined with the events that necessitated the need to develop a weapon as non-selectively destructive as the atom bomb and the scientific and technological challenges that needed to be overcome while the clock was ticking as German scientists, under Adolf Hitler, were also engaged in a similar endeavour. While these events were hugely interesting, what intrigued me most as a scientist, though by no means comparable in calibre or achievement to Oppenheimer and the rest of the scientists engaged in the Manhattan Project, was the human dimension of the whole story.
The film showed Oppenheimer as a man with views and opinions on socio-political issues of the day (e.g. Communism and the influence of Soviet Union on global affairs, fascism and the Spanish civil war, antisemitism in Europe, etc.) and a human being with failings like those of other mortals despite his academic brilliance and charisma. Above all, the film highlights the intense inner struggle that he endured, both before and after Hiroshima and Nagasaki, in knowing the destruction that his work would cause and did cause.
The movie also portrays how Oppenheimer tried to push back against the strong political forces, backed up by some of his own fellow scientists, which persecuted and tried to destroy him after the war was over, for the socio-political views that he held and the intensely difficult choices that he made. At a time when some of the Sri Lankan scientists themselves are engaged in promoting the agendas of various candidates in a closely run presidential election, the Oppenheimer story provides important parallels and lessons to the scientific community in Sri Lanka.
Should scientists be apolitical and be neutral on key social issues?
Advancement of knowledge and understanding via scientific research, by its very nature, is apolitical. A scientist investigates a problem with an unbiased and open mind, using the methodology that has been established as valid in previous research. When new methodology is used, it must be specifically tested and validated as scientifically sound and error-free. Once the data are collected, using valid methodology, they are interpreted, based on previously validated principles.
Conclusions are drawn solely based on valid interpretation of observations and results and they are communicated to the outside world, irrespective of their implications. However, when scientists openly endorse and support political parties and their associated ideologies, the ability to engage in unbiased scientific research is compromised. When the former President of Sri Lanka decided to swScientists in Politics – Lessons from the Oppenheimer Storyitch to 100% organic agriculture overnight,
the scientists, who had actively campaigned on behalf of the President, either supported the ill-fated and scientifically improbable project or remained silent. This was a clear example of allegiance to a political party getting in the way of scientific validity and unbiased judgement. When a scientist endorses and supports a political party during an election campaign, he/she is bound to endorse and support the actions and decisions that the party takes once it is in governance.
Even if a scientist opposes the actions of a government that he/she publicly supported and actively campaigned to bring into governance, his/her opposition would not have the same level of credibility in the eyes of the public as that of a scientist who had remained apolitical during an election campaign.
It can be argued that all scientists are citizens so that they are entitled to endorse and support political parties just as citizens of any other walk of life. However, there is only a very fine line between being a private citizen openly endorsing and supporting a political party and being a scientist, where an open mind and unbiased judgement are of paramount importance. It is not enough that scientists are unbiased and open, but they need to be seen to be so.
The need for scientists to be apolitical does not mean that they should remain silent on key social issues. For example, a large majority of scientists all over the world openly endorses and supports the view that climate change is real and that rapidly increasing emissions of greenhouse gases due to human activities is the primary cause of recent climate change. This view on climate change is supported by an overwhelming amount of scientific evidence and, therefore, constitutes a clearcut case for lending support. Supporting issues which are less clearcut, but scientifically valid, requires courage and strength of conviction.
In 1939, Albert Einstein endorsed and co-signed a letter written to President Roosevelt by Physicist Leo Szilard (with inputs from other Physicists, Edward Teller and Eugene Wigner) warning the President about the possibility of Germans developing an atom bomb and urging him to start a nuclear programme for the US as well. Similarly, all over the world, scientists are actively engaged in either supporting or speaking against various social issues impacting humanity, life and environment. Yet, there is a clear distinction between a scientist openly endorsing the view of a political party and actively supporting a social cause.
While the former has the potential to diminish the credibility of a scientist, the latter has the potential to enhance it. Oppenheimer, for example, was interested in Communism as an ideology and participated in gatherings of his fellow scientists who shared the same interest along with those who were members of the American Communist Party. However, he refused to obtain membership of the party, despite both his girlfriend and wife being members, saying that he needed to maintain his independence in thinking.
Pros and cons of scientists getting involved in socio-political activities
Being citizens, scientists find themselves confronted with politics and social issues just as any other citizen. Consciousness about their social responsibility can drive a scientist to embrace a political party or its ideology. Apart from being a conscientious citizen, there have been many instances in the past where scientists have been seen to embrace political parties and ideologies with a view of gaining personal benefits when the party comes in to governance.
This was clearly evident with regard to ‘Viyath Maga’, the gathering of intellectuals, including a considerable number of scientists; it was formed in the run-up to the presidential election in 2019. However, it was equally clear that apart from a selected few, who gained positions in the political establishment and the state sector institutions, the large majority of scientists who openly endorsed and supported the candidate promoted by ‘Viyath Maga’ were merely making up numbers in a political game.
Ironically, a President who came to power on the shoulders of a body of intellectuals and scientists did not even consult them when taking key policy decisions, for which scientific evidence and input from scientists were essential. Being used as pawns in a political game is a real risk that scientists who openly endorse and support politicians and political parties are exposed to.
Past experience everywhere in the world has shown that politicians readily renege on their pre-election promises and manifestos, which were prepared with significant and leading contributions from their supporting intellectuals and scientists, who also campaigned on their behalf. This leaves the credibility of those scientists in tatters, leaving their reputation for conducting research with an open mind and drawing unbiased conclusions from their results tainted, often permanently.
Even a scientist as renowned as Oppenheimer was cast aside by the political establishment once his task of developing and successfully testing the atom bomb was accomplished. In a clear example of how scientists are treated by politicians after they get their work done by them, the US political establishment did not heed the advice of both Einstein and Oppenheimer to negotiate a nuclear arms treaty with the Soviet Union to prevent an arms race between the two superpowers, after the Soviet Union built its own atom bomb.
In fact, after the war, Oppenheimer was hounded by the establishment for his past ties to Communism and his security clearance to engage in nuclear research was revoked so that he could no longer engage in it. Similarly, scientists who endorse and support politicians and political parties run the risk of future persecution, especially if the candidate or party that they support does not come into governance. It is said that even Einstein was not granted security clearance to take part in the Manhattan Project because of his pacifist views prior to the commencement of the Second World war.
The purpose of this article is not to denigrate those scientists and intellectuals who have decided to openly endorse, support and campaign for any particular politician or political party. They have every right to do so as independent and conscientious citizens and professionals, and it is a choice that each individual scientist makes. However, history, both in Sri Lanka and elsewhere, has shown that political activism is a double-edged sword, and politicians are extremely fickle creatures, who would readily dump the scientists who risked their reputations and credibility to bring them into governance.
Therefore, the scientists who go down the path of political activism should do so with the awareness that it might cost them their credibility as independent and unbiased explorers of knowledge. When a scientist goes into political activism, the boundary between the scientist and the politician (or the scientist politician) can quickly become blurred so that he/she may ultimately end up being a politician. In a country such as Sri Lanka where the ratio of scientists to its population is extremely low by global standards, I would hate to see that happening!
(The author is currently based at the University of Florida, Gainesville, USA and is a Fellow of the National Academy of Sciences of Sri Lanka.)
Features
The Venezuela Model:The new ugly and dangerous world order
The US armed forces invading Venezuela, removing its President Nicolás Maduro from power and abducting him and his wife Cilia Flores on 3 January 2026, flying them to New York and producing Maduro in a New York kangaroo court is now stale news, but a fact. What is a far more potent fact is the pan-global impotent response to this aggression except in Latin America, China, Russia and a few others.
Colombian President Gustavo Petro described the attack as an “assault on the sovereignty” of Latin America, thereby portraying the aggression as an assault on the whole of Latin America. Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva referred to the attack as crossing “an unacceptable line” that set an “extremely dangerous precedent.” Again, one can see his concern goes beyond Venezuela. For Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum the attack was in “clear violation” of the UN Charter, which again is a fact. But when it comes to powerful countries, the UN Charter has been increasingly rendered irrelevant over decades, and by extension, the UN itself. For the French Foreign Minister, the operation went against the “principle of non-use of force that underpins international law” and that lasting political solutions cannot be “imposed by the outside.” UN Secretary General António Guterres said he was “deeply alarmed” about the “dangerous precedent” the United States has set where rules of international law were not being respected. Russia, notwithstanding its bloody and costly entanglement in Ukraine, and China have also issued strong statements.
Comparatively however, many other countries, many of whom are long term US allies who have been vocal against the Russian aggression in Ukraine have been far more sedate in their reaction. Compared to his Foreign Minister, French President Emmanuel Macron said the Venezuelan people could “only rejoice” at the ousting of Maduro while the German Chancellor Friedrich Merz believed Maduro had “led his country into ruin” and that the U.S. intervention required “careful consideration.” The British and EU statements have been equally lukewarm. India’s and Sri Lanka’s statements do not even mention the US while Sri Lanka’s main coalition partner the JVP has issued a strongly worded statement.
Taken together, what is lacking in most of these views, barring a negligible few, especially from the so-called powerful countries, is the moral indignation or outrage on a broad scale that used to be the case in similar circumstances earlier. It appears that a new ugly and dangerous world order has finally arrived, footprints of which have been visible for some time.
It is not that the US has not invaded sovereign countries and affected regime change or facilitated such change for political or economic reasons earlier. This has been attempted in Cuba without success since the 1950s but with success in Chile in 1973 under the auspices of Augusto Pinochet that toppled the legitimate government of president Salvador Allende and established a long-lasting dictatorship friendly towards the US; the invasion of Panama and the ouster and capture of President Manuel Noriega in 1989 and the 2003 invasion of Iraq both of which were conducted under the presidency of George Bush.
These are merely a handful of cross border criminal activities against other countries focused on regime change that the US has been involved in since its establishment which also includes the ouster of President of Guyana Cheddi Jagan in 1964, the US invasion of the Dominican Republic in 1965 stop the return of President Juan Bosch to prevent a ‘communist resurgence’; the 1983 US invasion of Grenada after the overthrow and killing of Prime Minister Maurice Bishop purportedly to ensure that the island would not become a ‘Soviet-Cuban’ colony. A more recent adventure was the 2004 removal and kidnapping of the Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, which also had French support.
There is however a difference between all the earlier examples of US aggression and the Venezuelan operation. The earlier operations where the real reasons may have varied from political considerations based on ideological divergence to crude economics, were all couched in the rhetoric of democracy. That is, they were undertaken in the guise of ushering democratic changes in those countries, the region or the world irrespective of the long-term death and destruction which followed in some locations. But in Venezuela under President Donald Trump, it is all about controlling natural resources in that country to satisfy US commercial interests.
The US President is already on record for saying the US will “run” Venezuela until a “safe transition” is concluded and US oil companies will “go in, spend billions of dollars, fix the badly broken infrastructure, the oil infrastructure, and start making money” – ostensibly for the US and those in Venezuela who will tag the US line. Trump is also on record saying that the main aim of the operation was to regain U.S. oil rights, which according to him were “stolen” when Venezuela nationalized the industry. The nationalization was obviously to ensure that the funds from the industry remained in the country even though in later times this did lead to massive internal corruption.
Let’s be realistic. Whatever the noise of the new rhetoric is, this is not about ‘developing’ Venezuela for the benefit of its people based on some unknown streak of altruism but crudely controlling and exploiting its natural assets as was the case with Iraq. As crude as it is, one must appreciate Trump’s unintelligent honesty stemming from his own unmitigated megalomania. Whatever US government officials may say, the bottom line is the entire operation was planned and carried out purely for commercial and monetary gain while the pretext was Maduro being ‘a narco-terrorist.’ There is no question that Maduro was a dictator who was ruining his own country. But there is also no question that it is not the business of the US or any other country to decide what his or Venezuela’s fate is. That remains with the Venezuelan people.
What is dangerous is, the same ‘narco-terrorist’ rhetoric can also be applied to other Latin American countries such as Columbia, Brazil and Mexico which also produce some of the narcotics that come into the US consumer markets. The response should be not to invade these countries to stem the flow, but to deal with the market itself, which is the US. In real terms what Trump has achieved with his invasion of Venezuela for purely commercial gain and greed, followed by the abject silence or lukewarm reaction from most of the world, is to create a dangerous and ugly new normal for military actions across international borders. The veneer of democracy has also been dispensed with.
The danger lies in the fact that this new doctrine or model Trump has devised can similarly be applied to any country whose resources or land a powerful megalomaniac leader covets as long as he has unlimited access to military assets of his country, backed by the dubius remnants of the political and social safety networks, commonsense and ethics that have been conveniently dismantled. This is a description of the present-day United States too. This danger is boosted when the world remains silent. After the success of the Venezuela operation, Trump has already upended his continuing threats to annex Greenland because “we need Greenland from the standpoint of national security.” Greenland too is not about security, but commerce given its vast natural resources.
Hours after Venezuela, Trump threatened the Colombian President Gustavo Petro to “watch his ass.” In the present circumstances, Canadians also would not have forgotten Trump’s threat earlier in 2025 to annex Canada. But what the US President and his current bandwagon replete with arrogance and depleted intelligence would not understand is, beyond the short-term success of the Venezuela operation and its euphoria, the dangerous new normal they have ushered in would also create counter threats towards the US, the region and the world in a scale far greater than what exists today. The world will also become a far less safe place for ordinary American citizens.
More crucially, it will also complicate global relations. It would no longer be possible for the mute world leaders to condemn Russian action in Ukraine or if China were to invade Taiwan. The model has been created by Trump, and these leaders have endorsed it. My reading is that their silence is not merely political timidity, but strategic to their own national and self-interest, to see if the Trump model could be adopted in other situations in future if the fallout can be managed.
The model for the ugly new normal has been created and tested by Trump. Its deciding factors are greed and dismantled ethics. It is now up to other adventurers to fine tune it. We would be mere spectators and unwitting casualties.
Features
Beyond the beauty: Hidden risks at waterfalls
Sri Lanka is blessed with a large number of scenic waterfalls, mainly concentrated in the central highlands. These natural features substantially enhance the country’s attractiveness to tourists. Further, these famous waterfalls equally attract thousands of local visitors throughout the year.
While waterfalls offer aesthetic appeal, a serene environment, and recreational opportunities, they also pose a range of significant hazards. Unfortunately, the visitors are often unable to identify these different types of risks, as site-specific safety information and proper warning signs are largely absent. In most locations, only general warnings are displayed, often limited to the number of past fatalities. This can lead visitors to assume that bathing is the sole hazard, which is not the case. Therefore, understanding the full range of waterfall-related risks and implementing appropriate safety measures is essential for preventing loss of life. This article highlights site-specific hazards to raise public awareness and prevent people from putting their lives at risk due to these hidden dangers.
Flash floods and resultant water surges
Flash floods are a significant hazard in hill-country waterfalls. According to the country’s topography, most of the streams originate from the catchments in the hilly areas upstream of the waterfalls. When these catchments receive intense rainfalls, the subsequent runoff will flow down as flash floods. This will lead to an unexpected rise in the flow of the waterfall, increasing the risk of drowning and even sweeping away people. Therefore, bathing at such locations is extremely dangerous, and those who are even at the river banks have to be vigilant and should stay away from the stream as much as possible. The Bopath Ella, Ravana Ella, and a few waterfalls located in the Belihul Oya area, closer to the A99 road, are classic examples of this scenario.
Water currents
The behaviour of water in the natural pool associated with the waterfall is complex and unpredictable. Although the water surface may appear calm, strong subsurface currents and hydraulic forces exist that even a skilled swimmer cannot overcome. Hence, a person who immerses confidently may get trapped inside and disappear. Water from a high fall accelerates rapidly, forming hydraulic jumps and vortices that can trap swimmers or cause panic. Hence, bathing in these natural pools should be totally avoided unless there is clear evidence that they are safe.
Slipping risks
Slipping is a common hazard around waterfalls. Sudden loss of footing can lead to serious injuries or fatal falls into deep pools or rock surfaces. The area around many waterfalls consists of steep, slippery rocks due to moisture and the growth of algae. Sometimes, people are overconfident and try to climb these rocks for the thrill of it and to get a better view of the area. Further, due to the presence of submerged rocks, water depths vary in the natural pool area, and there is a chance of sliding down along slippery rocks into deep water. Waterfalls such as Diyaluma, Bambarakanda, and Ravana Falls are likely locations for such hazards, and caution around these sites is a must.
Rockfalls
Rockfalls are a significant hazard around waterfalls in steep terrains. Falling rocks can cause serious injuries or fatalities, and smaller stones may also be carried by fast-flowing water. People bathing directly beneath waterfalls, especially smaller ones, are therefore exposed to a high risk of injury. Accordingly, regardless of the height of the waterfall, bathing under the falling water should be avoided.
Hypothermia and cold shock
Hypothermia is a drop in body temperature below 35°C due to cold exposure. This leads to mental confusion, slowed heartbeat, muscle stiffening, and even cardiac arrest may follow. Waterfalls in Nuwara Eliya district often have very low water temperatures. Hence, immersing oneself in these waters is dangerous, particularly for an extended period.
Human negligence
Additional hazards also arise from visitors’ own negligence. Overcrowding at popular waterfalls significantly increases the risk of accidents, including slips and falls from cliffs. Sometimes, visitors like to take adventurous photographs in dangerous positions. Reckless behavior, such as climbing over barriers, ignoring warning signs, or swimming in prohibited zones, amplifies the risk.
Mitigation and safety
measures
Mitigation of waterfall-related hazards requires a combination of public awareness, engineering solutions, and policy enforcement. Clear warning signs that indicate the specific hazards associated with the water fall, rather than general hazard warnings, must be fixed. Educating visitors verbally and distributing bills that include necessary guidelines at ticket counters, where applicable, will be worth considering. Furthermore, certain restrictions should vary depending on the circumstances, especially seasonal variation of water flow, existing weather, etc.
Physical barriers should be installed to prevent access to dangerous areas by fencing. A viewing platform can protect people from many hazards discussed above. For bathing purposes, safer zones can be demarcated with access facilities.
Installing an early warning system for heavily crowded waterfalls like Bopath Ella, which is prone to flash floods, is worth implementing. Through a proper mechanism, a warning system can alert visitors when the upstream area receives rainfall that may lead to flash floods in the stream.
At present, there are hardly any officials to monitor activities around waterfalls. The local authorities that issue tickets and collect revenue have to deploy field officers to these waterfalls sites for monitoring the activities of visitors. This will help reduce not only accidents but also activities that cause environmental pollution and damage. We must ensure that these natural treasures remain a source of wonder rather than danger.
(The writer is a chartered Civil Engineer specialising in water resources engineering)
By Eng. Thushara Dissanayake ✍️
Features
From sacred symbol to silent victim: Sri Lanka’s elephants in crisis
The year 2025 began with grim news. On 1st January, a baby elephant was struck and killed by a train in Habarana, marking the start of a tragic series of elephant–train collisions that continued throughout the year. In addition to these incidents, the nation mourned the deaths of well-known elephants such as Bathiya and Kandalame Hedakaraya, among many others. As the year drew on, further distressing reports emerged, including the case of an injured elephant that was burnt with fire, an act of extreme cruelty that ultimately led to its death. By the end of the year, Sri Lanka recorded the highest number of elephant deaths in Asia.
This sorrowful reality stands in stark contrast to Sri Lanka’s ancient spiritual heritage. Around 250 BCE, at Mihintale, Arahant Mahinda delivered the Cūḷahatthipadopama Sutta (The Shorter Discourse on the Simile of the Elephant’s Footprint) to King Devanampiyatissa, marking the official introduction of Buddhism to the island. The elephant, a symbol deeply woven into this historic moment, was once associated with wisdom, restraint, and reverence.
Yet the recent association between Mihintale and elephants has been anything but noble. At Mihintale an elephant known as Ambabo, already suffering from a serious injury to his front limb due to human–elephant conflict (HEC), endured further cruelty when certain local individuals attempted to chase him away using flaming torches, burning him with fire. Despite the efforts of wildlife veterinary surgeons, Ambabo eventually succumbed to his injuries. The post-mortem report confirmed severe liver and kidney impairment, along with extensive trauma caused by the burns.
Was prevention possible?
The question that now arises is whether this tragedy could have been prevented.
To answer this, we must examine what went wrong.
When Ambabo first sustained an injury to his forelimb, he did receive veterinary treatment. However, after this initial care, no close or continuous monitoring was carried out. This lack of follow-up is extremely dangerous, especially when an injured elephant remains near human settlements. In such situations, some individuals may attempt to chase, harass, or further harm the animal, without regard for its condition.
A similar sequence of events occurred in the case of Bathiya. He was initially wounded by a trap gun—devices generally intended for poaching bush meat rather than targeting elephants. Following veterinary treatment, his condition showed signs of improvement. Tragically, while he was still recovering, he was shot a second time behind the ear. This second wound likely damaged vital nerves, including the vestibular nerve, which plays a critical role in balance, coordination of movement, gaze stabilisation, spatial orientation, navigation, and trunk control. In effect, the second shooting proved far more devastating than the first.
After Bathiya received his initial treatment, he was left without proper protection due to the absence of assigned wildlife rangers. This critical gap in supervision created the opportunity for the second attack. Only during the final stages of his suffering were the 15th Sri Lanka Artillery Regiment, the 9th Battalion of the Sri Lanka National Guard, and the local police deployed—an intervention that should have taken place much earlier.
Likewise, had Ambabo been properly monitored and protected after his injury, it is highly likely that his condition would not have deteriorated to such a tragic extent.
It should also be mentioned that when an injured animal like an elephant is injured, the animal will undergo a condition that is known as ‘capture myopathy’. It is a severe and often fatal condition that affects wild animals, particularly large mammals such as elephants, deer, antelope, and other ungulates. It is a stress-induced disease that occurs when an animal experiences extreme physical exertion, fear, or prolonged struggle during capture, restraint, transport, or pursuit by humans. The condition develops when intense stress causes a surge of stress hormones, leading to rapid muscle breakdown. This process releases large amounts of muscle proteins and toxins into the bloodstream, overwhelming vital organs such as the kidneys, heart, and liver. As a result, the animal may suffer from muscle degeneration, dehydration, metabolic acidosis, and organ failure. Clinical signs of capture myopathy include muscle stiffness, weakness, trembling, incoordination, abnormal posture, collapse, difficulty breathing, dark-coloured urine, and, in severe cases, sudden death. In elephants, the condition can also cause impaired trunk control, loss of balance, and an inability to stand for prolonged periods. Capture myopathy can appear within hours of a stressful event or may develop gradually over several days. So, if the sick animal is harassed like it happened to Ambabo, it does only make things worse. Unfortunately, once advanced symptoms appear, treatment is extremely difficult and survival rates are low, making prevention the most effective strategy.
What needs to be done?
Ambabo’s harassment was not an isolated incident; at times injured elephants have been subjected to similar treatment by local communities. When an injured elephant remains close to human settlements, it is essential that wildlife officers conduct regular and continuous monitoring. In fact, it should be made mandatory to closely observe elephants in critical condition for a period even after treatment has been administered—particularly when they remain in proximity to villages. This approach is comparable to admitting a critically ill patient to a hospital until recovery is assured.
At present, such sustained monitoring is difficult due to the severe shortage of staff in the Department of Wildlife Conservation. Addressing this requires urgent recruitment and capacity-building initiatives, although these solutions cannot be realised overnight. In the interim, it is vital to enlist the support of the country’s security forces. Their involvement is not merely supportive—it is essential for protecting both wildlife and people.
To mitigate HEC, a Presidential Committee comprising wildlife specialists developed a National Action Plan in 2020. The strategies outlined in this plan were selected for their proven effectiveness, adaptability across different regions and timeframes, and cost-efficiency. The process was inclusive, incorporating extensive consultations with the public and relevant authorities. If this Action Plan is fully implemented, it holds strong potential to significantly reduce HEC and prevent tragedies like the suffering endured by Ambabo. In return it will also benefit villagers living in those areas.
In conclusion, I would like to share the wise words of Arahant Mahinda to the king, which, by the way, apply to every human being:
O’ great king, the beasts that roam the forest and birds that fly the skies have the same right to this land as you. The land belongs to the people and to all other living things, and you are not its owner but only its guardian.
by Tharindu Muthukumarana ✍️
tharinduele@gmail.com
(Author of the award-winning book “The Life of Last Proboscideans: Elephants”)
-
News4 days agoInterception of SL fishing craft by Seychelles: Trawler owners demand international investigation
-
News4 days agoBroad support emerges for Faiszer’s sweeping proposals on long- delayed divorce and personal law reforms
-
Opinion1 day agoThe minstrel monk and Rafiki, the old mandrill in The Lion King – II
-
Features1 day agoThe Venezuela Model:The new ugly and dangerous world order
-
News3 days agoPrez seeks Harsha’s help to address CC’s concerns over appointment of AG
-
News5 days agoPrivate airline crew member nabbed with contraband gold
-
Latest News2 days agoWarning for deep depression over South-east Bay of Bengal Sea area
-
News2 days agoIndian Army Chief here


