Features
The # 1 Sri Lankan Hotel Company in 2023

CONFESSIONS OF A GLOBAL GYPSY
Dr. Chandana (Chandi) Jayawardena DPhil
President – Chandi J. Associates Inc. Consulting, Canada
Founder & Administrator – Global Hospitality Forum
chandij@sympatico.ca
Acknowledgement
I thank Mr. Gemunu Goonewardena, Chairman of the Tourist Hotels Classification Committee from 2018 to 2022, and Non-Executive Director of the Board of Aitken Spence Hotel Holding PLC, for his assistance to me in collecting current data.
Hotels Rooms in Sri Lanka in 2023
All types of accommodation are available in Sri Lanka for tourism, including hotels classified by the Sri Lanka Tourism Development Authority (SLTDA), unclassified accommodation, bungalows etc. The total capacity is now over 48,000 rooms in 3,657 units. This is including the upcoming 2023 opening of the largest hotel in Sri Lanka – the 800-room Cinnamon Life Colombo. With that, the total number of classified hotels (one to five star) rooms in Sri Lanka will soon reach 15,642 in 160 hotels.
In 2023, five hotel companies operated over half of the room stock in Sri Lanka, which are within their 56 (generally, larger) hotels as indicated in the table below. The other half of the rooms are within the balance 104 (generally, smaller) hotels. A small number of rooms in bungalows managed by a few of these companies were not considered for this calculation.
All three top Sri Lankan hotel companies – Cinnamon, Heritance and Jetwing entered the hotel industry around the same period, 50 years ago. With the opening of Life in 2023, in terms of total room capacity, the Cinnamon brand of John Keells Group will surpass Heritance and associated brands (including 500-room RIU partnership) of Aitken Spence Group.
With a successful operation of 10 hotels in three other countries (The Maldives, India and Oman) Aitken Spence Group will continue to compete aggressively in terms of the total number of hotels and rooms operated by a Sri Lankan company. Their main achievements include opening the first five-star resort hotel in Sri Lanka in 1982 – Triton and a decade later opening multi-award-winning, iconic hotel – Kandalama. The company with the largest number of hotels in Sri Lanka – Jetwing operates a chain of 20 hotels with different and interesting themes. The rest of this article focuses on the # 1 Sri Lankan Hotel company — Cinnamon.
Cinnamon Hotel Brand in 2023
Over the last five decades, John Keells Group operated their hotel management company under different names. In 1970s as Walkers Tours Hotels, in 1980s as Hotel Management & Marketing Services Limited, and in 1990s as John Keells Hotels. In the year 2005, they rebranded their hotel chain as Cinnamon. In 2023, Cinnamon is the largest hotel company in Sri Lanka. They also have four hotels in the Maldives.
With the opening of their 16th hotel – Cinnamon Life, the hotel company will have a room stock of 3,288 in Sri Lanka and The Maldives. Both in terms of the quality of the hotels and the quantity of the room stock, Cinnamon is arguably the greatest hotel company in Sri Lanka, today.
Cinnamon Hotel’s most ambitious project – Cinnamon Life Colombo is the first integrated resort in Sri Lanka and the largest private investment in the country. Sri Lankan-British architect, Cecil Balmond designed the resort while Hyundai Engineering & Construction is the main contractor. The construction of the resort began nine years ago. This 47-floor complex, includes 800 five-star hotel rooms, a retail and entertainment complex, large conference venues, a 30-storey office tower and two separate residential towers with 427 luxury apartments. Cinnamon Life Complex promises vibrant, innovative, futuristic and unique elements. It is expected to be an icon that will redefine Colombo’s skyline.
My Connections with Walkers Tours/John Keells from 1973 to 1993
By early 1970s, Walkers Tours & Travels Limited (later rebranded Walkers Tours) became the leading tour operator in Ceylon. It was founded in 1969. Soon, they represented two of the largest European tour operators, from West Germany and Denmark, who were actively promoting tourism in Sri Lanka.
A young lawyer, Sriyantha (Simon) Senaratne was appointed as the Managing Director of Walkers Tours in 1971. When Walkers Tours was acquired by John Keells Group of companies in 1972, he continued in that position for seven more years. As a part of the vision of the Managing Director, Walkers Tours entered the hotel industry in 1973 with a unique project in a remote area — Habarana, and soon became the leader in hotel management in Sri Lanka.
Prior to my departure from Sri Lanka to pursue my global career in early 1994, for the first two decades of this iconic hotel company, I was connected with them in various capacities. My direct and indirect roles with them included serving tourist groups and representatives of Walkers Tours as a waiter, barman, cook, trainee chef, executive chef, food & beverage manager, hotel manager, operations manager of the corporate office of the hotel company, and finally as the general manager of their two largest hotels in the 1980s. In later years, while working for other companies in Sri Lanka such as Le Galadari Meridien and Mount Lavinia Hotel, my teams depended largely on tourist traffic from Walkers Tours.
I am most thankful to Walkers Tours/John Keells Group for giving me valuable opportunities. They allowed me to experience at a young age, various senior operational positions and leadership tasks during the early years of my career in the hotel industry. My direct and indirect connections with this largest group of companies in Sri Lanka over a period of 20 years, can be summarized as:
1973 – Bentota Beach Hotel
First, I was associated with operational people and tour guides attached to Walkers Tours in 1973 while working as a trainee waiter, barman and cook on one of my Ceylon Hotel School (CHS) internships. It was at what was then the best resort hotel in Sri Lanka – Bentota Beach Hotel. Soon after my graduation from CHS in 1974 I was recruited by Bentota Beach as the Trainee Executive Chef. In that role for a year, I associated with more Walkers Tours groups and Resident Managers and Tour Managers.
Bentota Beach was a popular meeting place for many young hoteliers from over a dozen of new hotels in Bentota and Beruwala. In 1975 at a hotelier’s party, I met Jayantha Silva who had been recruited to manage the first hotel to be operated by Walkers Tours – Hotel Swanee.
1975 – Coral Gardens Hotel
After a year, I was transferred with the promotion of Executive Chef (and Assistant Manager) of the sister hotel of Bentota Beach Hotel – Coral Gardens. There, I took my relationships with Walkers tour leaders to a new level. On most days, we catered for an additional 150 to 200 tourists who visited Coral Gardens Hotel only for lunch during their island-wide round trip with Walkers Tours. In consultation with the tour leaders, I planned standard, three-course lunch menus that could be prepared and served quickly, after their glass-bottom boat excursions to see beautiful coral gardens, Hikkaduwa was famous for.
I met an innovative and ambitious, young hotelier — Bobby Adams for the first time in 1975, two weeks prior to his departure from Coral Gardens, when I succeeded him. Bobby who was the Assistant Manager of Coral Gardens Hotel was joining Walkers Tours to open The Village, Habarana – the first hotel to be built by Walkers Tours. Just before Bobby opened The Village in 1976 as its Manager, Bobby called me from Habarana, “Chandi, why don’t you join me as the Executive Chef at The Village?” he asked. However, at that point, I did not accept his offer. A few years later, I worked for Bobby twice. When I married in 1980, he was my best-man. When I was 27, I became his deputy at John Keells. Bobby was the first Director – Operations for hotels at their corporate office.
1977 – One Week Tour with Walkers Tours
In the summer of 1977, Walkers Tours decided to organize a one-week-long coach tour around Sri Lanka for representatives from all hotels in Sri Lanka providing rooms to their clients. As the Assistant Manager and Executive Chef, I represented Coral Gardens Hotel in this tour. It turned out to be a fun-filled, thank you tour. It was a great, public relations initiative by Walkers Tours with their hotel industry partners.
Most members of the top team of Walkers Tours joined this trip. They included Sri Lankan travel trade legends such as Norman Impett and Nevil Arnolda. They were both Directors of Walkers Tours. I also got to be better acquainted with prominent, younger members of Walkers Tours family, such as Bobby Jordan and Jansi Ponniah, who joined the trip. They both were very friendly, efficient, dynamic and well-connected with the hotel industry.
The highlight of the tour was spending a couple of days at their then flagship hotel – The Village, Habarana. By then, Walkers Tours had a number of hotel management agreements, was managing Hotel Swanee, and was taking over the management of Hotel Ceysands. They were in the early stages of planning a hotel in Kandy which was called Kandy Walkinn (which years later opened as Hotel Citadel). My friend Bobby Adams was very happy to see me again. Both of us sat at the ‘Don Martin’s bar at The Village and had a long chat over a couple of drinks. Bobby was very convincing. “Chandi, you must join Walkers Tours, now!” he insisted.
1977 – Hotel Ceysands
The day after the one-week coach tour with Walkers Tours, Captain D. A Wickramasinghe (Captain Wicks, who later became my father-in-law), the new General Manager of Hotel Ceysands called and met with me. He explained that Walkers Tours had taken over the Hotel Ceysands management from the owners — Ceylinco Group. After a pause, Captain Wicks said, “Chandana, we are expecting 100% occupancy from the first of November, 1977 for six months. We need a good professional like you to join us at least by the first of October, to organize the kitchen, restaurant and bars within a month.”
Soon after that, I joined Walkers Tours as the Food & Beverage Manager and Executive Chef of Hotel Ceysands. At that time, I met Walkers Tours Managing Director – Sriyantha (Simon) Senaratna, and the Finance Director – Priya Edirisinghe, who handled the hotel expansion projects.
1979 – Swanee
Hotel Swanee wasn’t a well-planned, developed hotel. However, when Walkers Tours took over the hotel in 1975, they wisely invested in major upgrades for the hotel. They hired respected professionals such as Bevis Bawa, to upgrade and maintain the landscaping.
As the first hotel to be managed by Walkers Tours/John Keells, it was also an important learning journey for the group. In 1979 at the age of 25, I was proud to be promoted to be the Manager of Hotel Swanee. John Keells Group Chairman, Mark Bostock was very fond of me and arranged my first overseas training in his country (England) with Trust House Forte.
1980 – An Offer from a new Rival Company
I was surprised when Somaratne Silva invited me to his house in Colombo to discuss the Manger job offer for me to open Sigiriya Village, which was expected to be the main competitor for The Village Habarana. He was such an interesting man.
He talked about his training in the Netherlands, his work experience in hotels there, his recommending Bobby Adams for The Village and his positive observations about my work at Hotel Ceysands and Hotel Swanee. I nearly accepted that job, but eventually decided to continue with John Keells.
1980 – Ambalangoda Rest House
By 1980, Walkers Tours/John Keells was expanding its hospitality business by acquiring some smaller properties with management contracts. The group opened their second hotel in Beruwala — Hotel Bayroo, on a management contract, in the midst of various obstacles created by the village thugs. In addition to managing Hotel Swanee, I was asked to take over the Ambalangoda Rest House, to reorganize and improve its standards and to manage it.
1981 – Hotel Management & Marketing Services Limited
At the beginning of 1981, I was promoted again and was transferred to the John Keells corporate office in Colombo. I was the second in command of Walkers Tours/John Keells’ hotel company — Hotel Management & Marketing Services Limited (HMMS), as the deputy to Bobby Adams.
1981 – Temple Trees
Mainly owing to a personal relationship Bobby Adams had with then Prime Minister, R. Premadasa, the group commenced managing the Prime Minister’s official residence — Temple Trees. I released one of the departmental managers from Hotel Swanee — Fazal Izzadeen to become the Manager of Temple Trees.
1981 – Ceylinco Hotel
In Colombo, we had negotiated to take over the management of Ceylinco Hotel. “Chandi, I would like you to take over the management of Ceylinco Hotel and re-organize it”, Bobby informed me. He knew that I had a personal friendship with the Ceylinco Group Chairman, Lalith Kotalawala, which was useful in taking over Ceylinco Hotel.
1981 – Representing Walkers Tours as the Group Executive Chef in Hong Kong
In the midst of my busy schedule with HMMS, Bobby Adams entrusted me, on short notice, with a special assignment in Hong Kong. He wanted me to quickly plan and organize a large Sri Lankan and Maldivian food festival at the Hotel Furama InterContinental, Hong Kong. It was an important, two-week tourism promotional festival, in partnership with a number of organizations. They were represented by well-known leaders of the tourist industry, such as M. Y. M. Thahir of Walkers Tours, Pani Seneviratne of Ceylon Tourist Board, and Ahamed Didi of Universal Resorts, The Maldives.
1985 – The Village & The Lodge
Soon after my return from England in 1985, upon completing my graduate studies in International Hotel Management, I re-joined John Keells Group. I was appointed as the General Manager of their largest two hotels – The Village and The Lodge. I reported to Bobby Adams, and also worked closely on rates and financial aspects with Vivendra Lintotawela, who later became the Chairman of John Keells Holdings. On a day when all 260 rooms in both hotels were occupied, my management team in Habarana led providing hospitality and meals to 1,000 people — 520 guests, 120 tourist drivers and 360 employees.
In The Village, Somaratna Silva had cleverly created a rustic resort with an open concept with individual rooms appearing like small houses in a remote village. In The Lodge, two young Architects — Pheroze Choksy and Ismeth Rahim — continued the open concept, but with more sophistication. The end result was simply a masterpiece of architecture in two sister hotels, blending beautifully with nature, and the seamless delivery of world class hospitality.
John Keells/Walkers Tours, had created two iconic resorts, which were simply a delight for any hotelier to operate. I was fortunate to get that opportunity.
1985 – Habarana Farm
In addition to managing the two resorts in Habarana, I managed a large farm with the assistance of a qualified farm manager who reported to me. The farm cultivated vegetables and fruits to supply both resorts and used kitchen food waste to feed around 35 pigs raised on the farm.
1986 – Keels Food Product Distribution Operation
One day the Managing Director of Walkers Tours, Ken Balendra (later, the first Sri Lankan to be appointed as the Chairman of John Keells Holdings) called me and asked, “Chandana, don’t you have unused cold room facilities at The Lodge?” When I confirmed that we did, he assigned me some additional duties. “Look Chandana, we are commencing a new company – Keells Food Products, initially with mainly meat products. Our vision is to eventually make it the largest such company in Sri Lanka. We would like you to set up the food distribution network for Keells Food Products in the North Central Province.” I immediately hired a Food Distribution Coordinator, bought a large refrigerated van and commenced food distribution.
1986-1989 and 1990-1993
During my three years as the Director of Food & Beverage of the 500-room five-star Le Galadari Meridien Hotel in Colombo from 1986 to 1989, I realized the influence Walkers Tours had with most of the hotels in Sri Lanka. My colleague, Chandra Mohotti, the Director of Room Division of the hotel treated anyone from Walkers Tours as royalty, as their group business was valuable.
During my three years as the General Manager of Mount Lavinia Hotel from 1990 to 1993 we depended heavily on group bookings from Walkers Tours. I enjoyed working with them very closely, especially during the tour group contract negotiations held in Berlin, Milan and London during major travel trade events (ITB, BIT and WTM). After work we all socialized until the early hours in the morning. Those were memorable days.
I left Sri Lanka permanently in early 1994 to focus on my global career. Therefore, I had no direct connections with Walkers Tours/John Keells for nearly 30 years. However, during those three decades, when I visited Sri Lanka over 35 times as a tourist, as a guest of a few of their hotels, I continued to be impressed with the visionary developments, ambitious takeovers, innovative expansions and creative re-branding of the hotel business of Walkers Tours/John Keells.
Many board members and professional hoteliers have contributed to this remarkable journey, having many unprecedented successes. In spite of various macro level challenges such as the 26-year civil war from 1983 to 2009, Walkers Tours/John Keells hotels managed to survive and progress.
How Did Everything Start in 1973?
At the end of the day, it is still important to understand the humble beginnings of this hotel company and appreciate the pioneers who commenced that amazing journey… Continuing next week, with a question-and-answer format with the visionary leader who steered Walkers Tours to enter the hotel industry 50 years ago.
Features
The Great and Little Traditions and Sri Lankan Historiography

Power, Culture, and Historical Memory:
History, broadly defined, is the study of the past. It is a crucial component of the production and reproduction of culture. Studying every past event is neither feasible nor useful. Therefore, it is necessary to be selective about what to study from the countless events in the past. Deciding what to study, what to ignore, how to study, and how deeply to go into the past is a conscious choices shaped by various forms of power and authority. If studying the past is a main element of the production and reproduction of culture and History is its product, can a socially and culturally divided society truly have a common/shared History? To what extent does ‘established’ or ‘authentic’ History reflect the experiences of those remained outside the political, economic, social, and cultural power structures? Do marginalized groups have their own histories, distinct from dominant narratives? If so, how do these histories relate to ‘established’ History? Historiography today cannot ignore these questions, as they challenge the very notion of truth in History. Due to methodological shifts driven by post-positivist critiques of previously accepted assumptions, the discipline of history—particularly historiography—has moved into a new epistemological terrain.
The post-structuralism and related philosophical discourses have necessitated a critical reexamination of the established epistemological core of various social science disciplines, including history. This intellectual shift has led to a blurring of traditional disciplinary boundaries among the social sciences and the humanities. Consequently, concepts, theories, and heuristic frames developed in one discipline are increasingly being incorporated into others, fostering a process of cross-fertilization that enriches and transforms scholarly inquiry
In recent decades, the discipline of History has broadened its scope and methodologies through interactions with perspectives from the Social Sciences and Humanities. Among the many analytical tools adopted from other disciplines, the Great Tradition and Little Tradition have had a significant impact on historical methodology. This article examines how these concepts, originally developed in social anthropology, have been integrated into Sri Lankan historiography and assesses their role in deepening our understanding of the past.
The heuristic construct of the Great and Little Traditions first emerged in the context of US Social Anthropology as a tool/framework for identifying and classifying cultures. In his seminal work Peasant society and culture: an anthropological approach to civilization, (1956), Robert Redfield introduced the idea of Great and Little Traditions to explain the dual structure of cultural expression in societies, particularly in peasant communities that exist within larger civilizations. His main arguments can be summarized as follows:
a) An agrarian society cannot exist as a fully autonomous entity; rather, it is just one dimension of the broader culture in which it is embedded. Therefore, studying an agrarian society in isolation from its surrounding cultural context is neither possible nor meaningful.
b) Agrarian society, when views in isolation, is a ‘half society’, representing a partial aspect/ one dimension of the broader civilization in which it exits. In that sense, agrarian civilization is a half civilization. To fully understand agrarian society—and by extension, agrarian civilization—it is essential to examine the other half that contribute to the whole.
c) Agrarian society was shaped by the interplay of two cultural traditions within a single framework: the Great Tradition and the Little Tradition. These traditions together provided the unity that defined the civilization embedded in agrarian society.
d) The social dimensions of these cultural traditions would be the Great Society and the Little Society.
e) The Great Culture encompasses the cultural framework of the Great Society, shaped by those who establish its norms. This group includes the educated elite, clergy, theologians, and literati, whose discourse is often regarded as erudite and whose language is considered classical.
f) The social groups excluded from the “Great Society”—referred to as the “Little Society”—have their own distinct traditions and culture. The “Great Tradition” represents those who appropriate society’s surplus production, and its cultural expressions reflect this dominance. In contrast, the “Little Tradition” belongs to those who generate surplus production. While the “Great Tradition” is inherently tied to power and authority, the “Little Tradition” is not directly connected to them.
g) According to Robert Redfield, the Great and Little Traditions are not contradictory but rather distinct cultural elements within a society. The cultural totality of peasant society encompasses both traditions. As Redfield describes, they are “two currents of thought and action, distinguishable, yet overflowing into and out of each other.” (Redfield, 1956).
At the time Redfield published his book Peasant Society and Culture: an Anthropological Approach to Civilization (1956), the dominant analytical framework for studying non-Western societies was modernization theory. This perspective, which gained prominence in the post-World War II era, was deeply influenced by the US geopolitical concerns. Modernization theory became a guiding paradigm shaping research agendas in anthropology, sociology, political science, and development studies in US institutions of higher learning,
Modernization theory viewed societies as existing along a continuum between “traditional” and “modern” stages, with Western industrialized nations positioned near the modern end. Scholars working within this framework argued that economic growth, technological advancement, urbanization, and the rationalization of social structures drive traditional societies toward modernization. The theory often emphasized Western-style education, democratic institutions, and capitalist economies as essential components of this transition.
While engaging with aspects of modernization theory, Redfield offered a more nuanced perspective on non-Western societies. His concept of the “folk-urban continuum” challenged rigid dichotomies between tradition and modernity, proposing that social change occurs through complex interactions between rural and urban ways of life rather than through the simple replacement of one by the other.
The concepts of the Great and Little Traditions gained prominence in Sri Lankan social science discourse through the works of Gananath Obeyesekere, the renowned sociologist who recently passed away. In his seminal research essay, The Great Tradition and the Little in the Perspective of Sinhalese Buddhism (Journal of Asian Studies, 22, 1963), Gananath Obeyesekere applied and adapted this framework to examine key aspects of Sinhalese Buddhism in Sri Lanka. While Robert Redfield originally developed the concept in the context of agrarian societies, Obeyesekere employed it specifically to analyze Sinhala Buddhist culture, highlighting significant distinctions between the two approaches.
He identifies a phenomenon called ‘Sinhala Buddhism’, which represents a unique fusion of religious and cultural traditions: the Great Tradition (Maha Sampradaya) and the Little Traditions (Chuula Sampradaya). To fully grasp the essence of Sinhala Buddhism, it is essential to understand both of these dimensions and their interplay within society.
The Great Tradition represents the formal, institutionalized aspect of Buddhism, centered on the Three Pitakas and other classical doctrinal texts and commentaries of Theravāda Buddhism. It embodies the orthodoxy of Sinhala Buddhism, emphasizing textual authority, philosophical depth, and ethical conduct. Alongside this exists another dimension of Sinhala Buddhism known as the Little (Chuula) Tradition. This tradition reflects the popular, localized, and ritualistic expressions of Buddhism practiced by laypeople. It encompasses folk beliefs, devotional practices (Bali, Thovil), deity veneration, astrology, and rituals (Hadi and Huunium) aimed at securing worldly benefits. Unlike the doctrinally rigid Great Tradition, the Little Tradition is fluid, adaptive, and shaped by indigenous customs, ancestral practices, and even elements of Hinduism. These Sinhala Buddhist cultural practices are identified as ‘Lay-Buddhism’. Gananath Obeyesekera’s concepts and perspectives on Buddhist culture and society contributed to fostering an active intellectual discourse in society. However, the discussion on the concept of Great and Little Traditions remained largely within the domain of social anthropology.
The scholarly discourse on the concepts of Great and Little Tradition gained new socio-political depth through the work of Newton Gunasinghe, a distinguished Sri Lankan sociologist. He applied these concepts to the study of culture and socio-economic structures in the Kandyan countryside, reframing them in terms of production relations. Through his extensive writings and public lectures, Gunasinghe reinterpreted the Great and Little Tradition framework to explore the interconnections between economy, society, and culture.
Blending conventional social anthropology approach with Marxist analyses of production relations and Gramscian perspectives on culture and politics, he offered a nuanced understanding of these dynamics. In the context of our discussion, his key insights on culture, society, and modes of production can be summarized as follows.
a. The social and economic relations of the central highlands under the Kandyan Kingdom, the immediate pre-colonial social and economic order, were his focus. His analysis did not cover to the hydraulic Civilization of Sri Lanka.
b. He explored the organic and dialectical relationship between culture, forces of production, and modes of production. Drawing on the concepts of Antonio Gramsci and Louis Althusser, he examined how culture, politics, and the economy interact, identifying the relationship between cultural formations and production relations
c. Newton Gunasinghe’s unique approach to the concepts of Great Culture and Little Culture lies in his connection of cultural formations to forces and relations of production. He argues that the relationship between a society’s structures and its superstructures is both dialectical and interpenetrative.
d. He observed that during the Kandyan period, the culture associated with the Little Tradition prevailed, rather than the culture linked to the Great Tradition.
e. The limitations of productive forces led to minimal surplus generation, with a significant portion allocated to defense. The constrained resources sustained only the Little Tradition. Consequently, the predominant cultural mode in the Kandyan Kingdom was, broadly speaking, the Little Tradition.
(To be continued)
by Gamini Keerawella
Features
Celebrating 25 Years of Excellence: The Silver Jubilee of SLIIT – II

Founded in 1999, with its main campus in Malabe and multiple centres across the country—including Metro Campus (Colombo), Matara, Kurunegala, Kandy (Pallekele), and Jaffna (Northern Uni)—SLIIT provides state-of-the-art facilities for students, now celebrating 25 years of excellence in 2025.
Kandy Campus
SLIIT is a degree-awarding higher education institute authorised and approved by the University Grants Commission (UGC) and Ministry of Higher Education under the University Act of the Government of Sri Lanka. SLIIT is also the first Sri Lankan institute accredited by the Institution of Engineering & Technology, UK. Further, SLIIT is also a member of the Association of Commonwealth Universities (ACU) and the International Association of Universities (IAU).
Founded in 1999, with its main campus in Malabe and multiple centres across the country—including Metro Campus (Colombo), Matara, Kurunegala, Kandy (Pallekele), and Jaffna (Northern Uni)—SLIIT provides state-of-the-art facilities for students, now celebrating 25 years of excellence in 2025.
Since its inception, SLIIT has played a pivotal role in shaping the technological and educational landscape of Sri Lanka, producing graduates who have excelled in both local and global arenas. This milestone is a testament to the institution’s unwavering commitment to academic excellence, research, and industry collaboration.
Summary of SLIIT’s
History and Status
Sri Lanka Institute of Information Technology (SLIIT) operates as a company limited by guarantee, meaning it has no shareholders and reinvests all surpluses into academic and institutional development.
* Independence from Government: SLIIT was established in 1999 as an independent entity without government ownership or funding, apart from an initial industry promotion grant from the Board of Investment (BOI).
* Mahapola Trust Fund Involvement & Malabe Campus: In 2000, the Mahapola Trust Fund (MTF) agreed to support SLIIT with funding and land for the Malabe Campus. In 2015, SLIIT fully repaid MTF with interest, ending financial ties.
* True Independence (2017-Present): In 2017, SLIIT was officially delisted from any government ministry, reaffirming its status as a self-sustaining, non-state higher education institution.
Today, SLIIT is recognised for academic excellence, global collaborations, and its role in producing IT professionals in Sri Lanka
.A Journey of Growth and Innovation
SLIIT began as a pioneering institution dedicated to advancing information technology education in Sri Lanka. Over the past two and a half decades, it has expanded its academic offerings, establishing itself as a multidisciplinary university with programmess in engineering, business, architecture, and humanities, in addition to IT. The growth of SLIIT has been marked by continuous improvement in infrastructure, faculty development, and curriculum enhancement, ensuring that students receive world-class education aligned with industry needs.
Looking Ahead: The Next 25 Years
As SLIIT celebrates its Silver Jubilee, the institution looks forward to the future with a renewed commitment to excellence. With advancements in technology, the rise of artificial intelligence, and the increasing demand for skilled professionals, SLIIT aims to further expand its academic offerings, enhance research capabilities, and continue fostering a culture of innovation. The next 25 years promise to be even more transformative, as the university aspires to make greater contributions to national and global progress.
Sports Achievements:
A Legacy of Excellence
SLIIT has not only excelled in academics but has also built a strong reputation in sports. Over the years, the university has actively promoted athletics and competitive sports by organising inter-university and inter-school competitions, fostering a culture of teamwork, discipline, and resilience. SLIIT teams have secured victories in national and inter-university competitions across various sports, including cricket, basketball, badminton, rugby, football, swimming, and athletics. SLIIT’s sports achievements reflect its dedication to holistic student development, encouraging students to excel beyond the classroom.
Kings of the pool!
Once again, our swimmers have brought glory to SLIIT by emerging as champions at the Asia Pacific Institute of Information and Technology Extravaganza Swimming Championship 2024. They won the Men’s, Women’s, and Overall Championships. Congratulations to all swimmers for their dedication and hard work in the pool, bringing honour to SLIIT.
Winning International Competitions
SLIIT students have participated in and excelled in various international competitions, including Robofest, Codefest, and the University of Queensland – Design Solution for Impact Competition, showcasing their skills and talent on a global stage.
Here’s a more detailed look at SLIIT’s involvement in international competitions:
Robofest:
SLIIT’s Faculty of Engineering organises the annual Robofest competition, which aims to empower students with skills in electronics, robotics, critical thinking, and problem-solving, preparing them to compete internationally and bring recognition to Sri Lankan talent.
Codefest:
CODEFEST is a nationwide Software Competition organized by the Faculty of Computing of Sri Lanka Institute of Information Technology (SLIIT) geared towards exhibiting the software application design and developing talents of students island-wide. It is an effort of SLIIT to elevate the entire nation’s ICT knowledge to achieve its aspiration of being the knowledge hub in Asia. CODEFEST was first organised in 2012 and this year it will be held for the 8th consecutive time in parallel with the 20th anniversary celebrations of SLIIT.
University of Queensland – Design Solution for Impact Competition:
SLIIT hosted the first-ever University of Queensland – Design Solution for Impact Competition in Sri Lanka, with 16 school teams from across the country participating.
International Open Day:
SLIIT organises an International Open Day where students can connect with distinguished lecturers and university representatives from prestigious institutions like the University of Queensland, Liverpool John Moores University, and Manchester Metropolitan University.
Brain Busters:
SLIIT Brain Busters is a quiz competition organised by SLIIT. The competition is open to students of National, Private and International Schools Island wide. The programme is broadcast on TV1 television as a series.
Inter-University Dance Competition:
SLIIT Team Diamonds for being selected as finalists and advancing to the Grand Finale of Tantalize 2024, the inter-university dance competition organised by APIIT Sri Lanka. The 14 talented team members from various SLIIT faculties have showcased their skills in Team Diamonds and earned their spot as finalists, competing among over 30 teams from state universities, private universities, and higher education institutes.
Softskills+
For the 11th consecutive year, Softskills+ returns with an exciting lineup of events aimed at honing essential soft skills among students. The program encompasses an interschool quiz contest and a comprehensive workshop focused on developing teamwork, problem-solving abilities, leadership qualities, and fostering creative thinking.
Recently, the Faculty of Business at SLIIT organised its annual Inter-school Quiz Competition and Soft Skills Workshop, marking its fifth successive year. Targeting students in grades 11 to 13 from Commerce streams across State, Private, and International schools, the workshop sought to ignite a passion for soft skills development, emphasising teamwork, problem-solving, creativity, and innovative thinking. Recognising the increasing importance of these soft skills in today’s workforce, the programme aims to fill the gap often left unaddressed in the school curriculum.”
The winners of the soft skill competition with Professor Lakshman Rathnayake: Chairman/Chancellor, Vice Chancellor/MD Professor Lalith Gamage, Professor Nimal Rajapakse: Senior Deputy Vice – Chancellor & Provost, Deputy Vice Chancellor – Research and International Affairs Professor Samantha Thelijjagoda, and Veteran Film Director Somarathna Dissanayake.
VogueFest 2024:
SLIIT Business School organised VogueFest 2024, a platform for emerging fashion designers under 30 to showcase their work and win prizes.
T-shirt Design Competition with Sheffield Hallam University:
SLIIT and Sheffield Hallam University (SHU) UK collaborated on a T-shirt designing competition, with a voting procedure to select the best design.
SLIIT’s Got Talent
: The annual talent show, SLIIT’s Got Talent 2024, was held for the 10th consecutive year at the Nelum Pokuna Mahinda Rajapaksa Theatre on 27th September 2024. SLIIT’s Got Talent had the audience energised with amazing performances, showcasing mind-blowing talent by the orchestra and the talented undergraduates from all faculties.
Other events:
* SLIIT also participates in events like the EDUVision Exhibition organised by the Richmond College Old Boys’ Association.
* They hosted the first-ever University of Queensland – Design Solution for Impact Competition in Sri Lanka.
* SLIIT Business School also organised the Business Proposal Competition.
SLIIT Academy:
SLIIT Academy (Pvt.) Ltd. provides industrial-oriented learning experiences for students.
International Partnerships:
SLIIT has strong international partnerships with universities like Liverpool John Moores University (LJMU), The University of Queensland (UQ), Manchester Metropolitan University (MMU), and Curtin University Australia, providing opportunities for students to study and participate in international events.
(The writer, a senior Chartered Accountant and professional banker, is Professor at SLIIT University, Malabe. He is also the author of the “Doing Social Research and Publishing Results”, a Springer publication (Singapore), and “Samaja Gaveshakaya (in Sinhala).
Features
Inescapable need to deal with the past

The sudden reemergence of two major incidents from the past, that had become peripheral to the concerns of people today, has jolted the national polity and come to its centre stage. These are the interview by former president Ranil Wickremesinghe with the Al Jazeera television station that elicited the Batalanda issue and now the sanctioning of three former military commanders of the Sri Lankan armed forces and an LTTE commander, who switched sides and joined the government. The key lesson that these two incidents give is that allegations of mass crimes, whether they arise nationally or internationally, have to be dealt with at some time or the other. If they are not, they continue to fester beneath the surface until they rise again in a most unexpected way and when they may be more difficult to deal with.
In the case of the Batalanda interrogation site, the sudden reemergence of issues that seemed buried in the past has given rise to conjecture. The Batalanda issue, which goes back 37 years, was never totally off the radar. But after the last of the commission reports of the JVP period had been published over two decades ago, this matter was no longer at the forefront of public consciousness. Most of those in the younger generations who were too young to know what happened at that time, or born afterwards, would scarcely have any idea of what happened at Batalanda. But once the issue of human rights violations surfaced on Al Jazeera television they have come to occupy centre stage. From the day the former president gave his fateful interview there are commentaries on it both in the mainstream media and on social media.
There seems to be a sustained effort to keep the issue alive. The issues of Batalanda provide good fodder to politicians who are campaigning for election at the forthcoming Local Government elections on May 6. It is notable that the publicity on what transpired at Batalanda provides a way in which the outcome of the forthcoming local government elections in the worst affected parts of the country may be swayed. The problem is that the main contesting political parties are liable to be accused of participation in the JVP insurrection or its suppression or both. This may account for the widening of the scope of the allegations to include other sites such as Matale.
POLITICAL IMPERATIVES
The emergence at this time of the human rights violations and war crimes that took place during the LTTE war have their own political reasons, though these are external. The pursuit of truth and accountability must be universal and free from political motivations. Justice cannot be applied selectively. While human rights violations and war crimes call for universal standards that are applicable to all including those being committed at this time in Gaza and Ukraine, political imperatives influence what is surfaced. The sanctioning of the four military commanders by the UK government has been justified by the UK government minister concerned as being the fulfilment of an election pledge that he had made to his constituents. It is notable that the countries at the forefront of justice for Sri Lanka have large Tamil Diasporas that act as vote banks. It usually takes long time to prosecute human rights violations internationally whether it be in South America or East Timor and diasporas have the staying power and resources to keep going on.
In its response to the sanctions placed on the military commanders, the government’s position is that such unilateral decisions by foreign government are not helpful and complicate the task of national reconciliation. It has faced criticism for its restrained response, with some expecting a more forceful rebuttal against the international community. However, the NPP government is not the first to have had to face such problems. The sanctioning of military commanders and even of former presidents has taken place during the periods of previous governments. One of the former commanders who has been sanctioned by the UK government at this time was also sanctioned by the US government in 2020. This was followed by the Canadian government which sanctioned two former presidents in 2023. Neither of the two governments in power at that time took visibly stronger stands.
In addition, resolutions on Sri Lanka have been a regular occurrence and have been passed over the Sri Lankan government’s opposition since 2012. Apart from the very first vote that took place in 2009 when the government promised to take necessary action to deal with the human rights violations of the past, and won that vote, the government has lost every succeeding vote with the margins of defeat becoming bigger and bigger. This process has now culminated in an evidence gathering unit being set up in Geneva to collect evidence of human rights violations in Sri Lanka that is on offer to international governments to use. This is not a safe situation for Sri Lankan leaders to be in as they can be taken before international courts in foreign countries. It is important for Sri Lanka’s sovereignty and dignity as a country that this trend comes to an end.
COMPREHENSIVE SOLUTION
A peaceful future for Sri Lanka requires a multi-dimensional approach that addresses the root causes of conflict while fostering reconciliation, justice, and inclusive development. So far the government’s response to the international pressures is to indicate that it will strengthen the internal mechanisms already in place like the Office on Missing Persons and in addition to set up a truth and reconciliation commission. The difficulty that the government will face is to obtain a national consensus behind this truth and reconciliation commission. Tamil parties and victims’ groups in particular have voiced scepticism about the value of this mechanism. They have seen commissions come and commissions go. Sinhalese nationalist parties are also highly critical of the need for such commissions. As the Nawaz Commission appointed to identify the recommendations of previous commissions observed, “Our island nation has had a surfeit of commissions. Many witnesses who testified before this commission narrated their disappointment of going before previous commissions and achieving nothing in return.”
Former minister Prof G L Peiris has written a detailed critique of the proposed truth and reconciliation law that the previous government prepared but did not present to parliament.
In his critique, Prof Peiris had drawn from the South African truth and reconciliation commission which is the best known and most thoroughly implemented one in the world. He points out that the South African commission had a mandate to cover the entire country and not only some parts of it like the Sri Lankan law proposes. The need for a Sri Lankan truth and reconciliation commission to cover the entire country and not only the north and east is clear in the reemergence of the Batalanda issue. Serious human rights violations have occurred in all parts of the country, and to those from all ethnic and religious communities, and not only in the north and east.
Dealing with the past can only be successful in the context of a “system change” in which there is mutual agreement about the future. The longer this is delayed, the more scepticism will grow among victims and the broader public about the government’s commitment to a solution. The important feature of the South African commission was that it was part of a larger political process aimed to build national consensus through a long and strenuous process of consultations. The ultimate goal of the South African reconciliation process was a comprehensive political settlement that included power-sharing between racial groups and accountability measures that facilitated healing for all sides. If Sri Lanka is to achieve genuine reconciliation, it is necessary to learn from these experiences and take decisive steps to address past injustices in a manner that fosters lasting national unity. A peaceful Sri Lanka is possible if the government, opposition and people commit to truth, justice and inclusivity.
by Jehan Perera
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