Opinion
The great escape

On 7 April 1942, four political prisoners escaped from Bogambara Prison
Ask modern Sri Lankans what 5 April signifies for them, and most will answer “the JVP uprising in 1971.” Not surprising, since the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna celebrates this event each year.
However, 5 April has greater significance for Sri Lankans than this. In 1956, the general election began on this day, resulting in the overthrow of the UNP regime of 1947, which had continued the colonialist policies of the British Empire. The new government began to put in place a new political, social and economic order, one more suited to a nation throwing off its colonial past.
Which takes us back to 1942. Sri Lanka remained a part of the British Empire, the mightiest ever seen hitherto. The country’s wealth flowed into the coffers of England, while its citizens remained immiserated, third-class citizens in their own country. But a change approached, from the East. On 8 December 1941, the Japanese invaded British Malaya. On 15 February, the myth of British invincibility lay broken as Singapore fell. My late father told me that the British in Sri Lanka went around “like whipped dogs”.
On 5 April, carrier-borne aeroplanes of the Imperial Japanese Navy attacked Colombo, causing severe damage to British military installations. The effects of the attack were electric. The British panicked, expecting further air raids (which happened) and an invasion (which did not). The British Eastern Fleet pulled back to East Africa. The population of Colombo decamped overnight. Chaos reigned. Two days later, on the night of 7 April, four socialist political prisoners escaped from Bogambara Prison.
The story of their escape really begins in 1927, when Philip Gunawardena, a young student in the USA, joined the League against Imperialism. In 1929-31 he served on the executive council of the League, which had as its avowed aim the liberation of the colonies, which included Sri Lanka. He gathered around him a body of Sri Lankan students overseas, who shared his perspective. This political stance saw its first domestic expression at the Youth Congress in 1931, at which a resolution called for “downright unadulterated independence”.
As the students overseas returned, they joined their co-thinkers in the Youth League movement. In 1933 they established the Suriya-Mal Movement, led by an Englishwoman, Doreen Young. The following year they went to work among the victims of the Malaria epidemic, which affected a million people. They made a name for themselves by distributing quinine for malaria and Marmite for malnutrition.
In 1935 they went on to form the Lanka Sama Samaja Party, a socialist organisation with the primary aim of independence from the British Raj. The following year Philip Gunawardena and N.M. Perera gained election to the State Council, where they raised vital issues, such as the use of Sinhala and Tamil, and free education.
LSSP agitation among workers, particularly among plantation workers, rang alarm bells in the offices of the occupation power. This rose to a crescendo when Mark Bracegirdle, an Anglo-Australian planter, joined the party. Governor Stubbs’ failed attempt to deport him caused a furore which, in effect, kick-started the independence movement.
With the collapse of France in the Second World War, the British began clamping down on dissent, especially as LSSP-led strikes broke out all over Nuwara Eliya and Uva. In mid-June 1940 the government arrested Philip Gunawardena, N. M. Perera, Colvin R. de Silva, and Edmund Samarakkody.
The Police failed to capture Leslie Goonewardena: experience gained (principally by Philip’s brother Robert Gunawardena) in hiding Bracegirdle helped the LSSP to work under the noses of the authorities. Although the Party press was sealed, the party organ, the Samasamajaya continued to appear, along with leaflets in Tamil and English. The party even organised a secret conference, which adopted a new programme and constitution.
Meanwhile, the detained Party leaders at Bogambara did not waste their time. N.M. used his time to work on The Case for Free Education (a basal document in the struggle for an equitable education system), while Philip worked on the concept agricultural reform (which formed the kernel of the Paddy Lands Act, which he introduced to Parliament in 1958).
They won over Solomon, one of their jailors, and with his help they managed to leave the prison on several occasions. Now, the party planned to get them out for good. Solomon got an imprint of the key on a bar of soap and Philip’s wife Kusuma, who visited the prisoners, took it out with her. She gave it to Robert, who cut the key.
Robert had the task of guiding them once they escaped. According to Regi Siriwardena, the escape on 7 April 1942 was fairly straightforward, with Solomon simply opening their cells and leading them out. Robert escorted them to several cars which were parked outside, and they made off as fast as possible. The Party hid them in several safe houses.
Regi Siriwardena reported that Doric de Souza had set him up in one of these, two weeks before the prison break, to provide cover. Colvin and Solomon arrived on the night of 8 April. Regi served as a courier between Colvin and Philip. He also had a hand in the editorial of the Samasamajaya, and Solomon later would edit the Party’s Tamil organ, the Samadharmam.
The escape infuriated the colonial authorities, who suppressed the LSSP completely. British imperial prestige, already at an all-time low following the fall of Singapore and the Japanese raid on Sri Lanka, fell even further. A month later, on 8 May, Sri Lankan troops belonging to the Ceylon Garrison Artillery stationed in the Cocos Island mutinied. The mutiny was suppressed, but its leader, Gratien Fernando (whom the LSSP’s anti-imperialist agitation had affected) went to his execution unrepentant. Thereafter, anti-colonial agitation referred to the Cocos Islands Mutiny as resistance to British colonial rule grew.
About three months after the prison break, many of the leaders escaped to India, where they took part in the Indian struggle for independence. Their contribution to India’s independence was disproportionate to their numbers. Most of the leaders were arrested before the end of the war, and were deported to Sri Lanka.
Some stayed on: S.C.C. Anthonypillai (who married Philip’s sister Caroline) led a major trade union in Tamil Nadu. Hector Abhayavardana went on to become general secretary of the Socialist Party of India, returning to Sri Lanka and the LSSP in 1959. N.M.’s wife Selina Perera remained an activist in Kolkata. Over a half-century later, the Indian Government honoured three of the surviving LSSP cadres who had taken part in the struggle – Vivienne Goonewardena, Bernard Soysa and Hector Abhayavardana.
The LSSP continued its underground agitation in Sri Lanka. It participated in the fight for free education and successfully raised anti-imperialist feeling in the country. In 1943 the Ceylon National Congress voted in support of Independence. Eventually the State Council passed the “Free Lanka Bill”.
The proscription on the Party ended after the war, and in 1946 the Party led a strike wave. This enabled D.S. Senanayake, Oliver Ernest Goonetilleka and other “moderates” to raise the bogie of communism and persuade the British to grant Sri Lanka dominion status.
The escape of the detenus from Bogamabara on 7 April 1942 thus had a profound effect on the British Raj in both India and Sri Lanka. However, this important event is rarely, if ever commemorated.
Vinod Moonesinghe
Opinion
Friendship with all, but India is No.1

The government did everything in its power to welcome Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi during the three days in April 4-6 he was in Sri Lanka. The country is known for its hospitality and the government exceeded expectations in its hospitality. There were children to greet the prime minister at the airport along with six cabinet ministers. There was a large banner that described the Indian prime minister in glowing terms. President Anura Kumara Dissanayake also conferred the Sri Lanka Mitra Vibhushana Award, the country’s highest award, to Prime Minister Modi in appreciation of friendship and cooperation. The role that the Indian government under him played in saving Sri Lanka from economic disaster three years ago would merit him nothing less. The gesture was not merely humanitarian; it was also an astute expression of regional leadership rooted in a philosophy of “neighbourhood first,” a cornerstone of Prime Minister Modi’s foreign policy.
India has a key role to play as a stabilising actor in South Asia, especially when regional neighbours falter under economic or political pressure. It has yet to reach its full potential in this regard as seen in its relations with Pakistan and Bangladesh. But with regard to Sri Lanka, India has truly excelled. Prime Minister Modi’s visit to Sri Lanka at this time carried symbolic weight beyond the economic and political. President Dissanayake, in his welcome speech, noted that Prime Minister Modi was the first foreign leader to visit after the new government came to power. By being the first to visit he conferred international importance to the newly elected Sri Lankan leaders. This early gesture conveyed India’s tacit endorsement of President Dissanayake’s government, an endorsement that can be especially valuable for a leader without a traditional elite background. The president also remarked on their shared political origins as both originally came into politics as outsiders to the traditional ruling establishments, creating a bridge between them that hinted at a broader ideological compatibility.
President Dissanayake showed his human touch when he first showed the Mitra Vibushana medal to Prime Minister Modi in its box, then took it out and placed it around the neck of the Indian leader. When the two leaders clasped their hands together and raised them, they sent a message of camaraderie and solidarity, an elder statesman with a long track record with a younger one who has just started on his journey of national leadership. Interestingly, April 5 the date on which the award was conferred was also the 54th anniversary of the commencement of the JVP Insurrection of 1971 (and again in 1987), in which anti-India ideology was a main feature. In making this award, President Dissanayake made the point that he was a truly Sri Lankan leader who had transcended his political roots and going beyond the national to the international.
FINDING TRUST
Six of the seven agreements signed during the visit focused on economic cooperation. These ranged from renewable energy initiatives and digital governance platforms to infrastructure investments in the plantation sector. Particularly noteworthy were agreements on the construction of homes for the descendants of Indian-origin Tamils and the installation of solar units at 5000 religious sites. Both these projects blend development assistance with a careful sensitivity to identity politics. These initiatives align with India’s strategic use of development diplomacy. Unlike China’s approach to aid and infrastructure which has been frequently critiqued for creating debt dependencies India’s model emphasises partnership, cultural affinity, and long-term capacity building.
The seventh agreement has to do with defence and national security issues which has been a longstanding area of concern for both countries. None of the agreements, including the seventh, have been discussed outside of the government-to-government level, though texts of the other six agreements were released during Prime Minister Modi’s visit. Several of the issues concerning economic agreements have been in the public domain eliciting concerns such as the possibility of personal information on Sri Lankan citizens being accessible to India through the digitisation project. However, little is known of the defence agreement. To the extent it meets the needs of the two countries it will serve to build trust between them which is the foundation on which dialogue for mutually beneficial change can take place.
In the past there has been a trust deficit between the two countries. Sri Lankans would be mindful of the perilous security situation the country faced during the time of the war with the LTTE and other Tamil militant organisations, when parts of the country were taken over and governed by the LTTE and the country’s territorial integrity was at stake. This was also a time when Indian military aircraft were deployed in Sri Lankan airspace without the Sri Lankan government’s consent in June 1987, which the Indian government justified as a humanitarian measure, and there were concerns about possible Indian military intervention on a larger scale. This was followed by the signing of the Indo-Lanka Peace Accord the next month in July 1987 which led to the induction of the Indian army as a peacekeeping force into Sri Lanka with government consent.
UNRESTRICTED FRIENDS
The history of Indian intervention in Sri Lanka’s ethnic conflict has given an impetus to Sri Lanka to look to other big powers to act as a counterbalance to India. In more recent years India has expressed its concern at naval vessels from China coming into Sri Lankan waters on the grounds of doing research which could be used against India. Sri Lanka’s engagement with China has strained ties with India, particularly when Chinese infrastructure investments, such as the Hambantota Port, appears to have the potential to serve dual civilian-military purposes. Given China’s growing global reach and its ambition to project influence through the Belt and Road Initiative, Sri Lanka’s geography makes it a critical hub in the Indian Ocean. Hopefully, with the signing of the defence agreement between India and Sri Lanka, these fears and suspicions of the past will be alleviated and soon come to an end.
The position that the government headed by President Dissanayake has taken is to be friends with all. The principle of “friendship with all, enmity with none” is not new, but the stakes are higher today, as global competition between major powers intensifies. India, by virtue of geography and history, will always be Sri Lanka’s first and most important partner. It was India, and not China, not the West, that provided an emergency economic lifeline when Sri Lanka’s foreign reserves evaporated in 2022. That support, amounting to over $4 billion in credit lines and direct aid, was delivered quickly and with minimal conditionality. It also demonstrated how regional proximity can enable faster, more context-aware responses than those offered by multilateral institutions.
The world has become a harsher and more openly self-interested one for countries, even ones that were thought to have indissoluble bonds. Sri Lanka’s biggest export markets are in the United States and European Union and it has received large amounts of economic assistance from Japan and China, though unfortunately some of the loans from China were used inappropriately by former Sri Lankan governments to create white elephant infrastructure projects. Burdened now with enormous debt repayments that bankrupted it in 2022, Sri Lanka continues to need economic resources and markets from around the world. President Dissanayake’s government will understand that closeness to India need not mean an exclusive relationship with it alone. In a multipolar world, friendship (and doing business) with all is both a virtue and a necessity. But among friends, there must always be a first —and for reasons of history, culture, religion, geography and strategic logic, that will be India.
by Jehan Perera
Opinion
Power corrupts …

Only America could re-elect an extremist like Trump.
There are planned protests across the US today against President Donald Trump and his adviser billionaire Elon Musk.
More than 1,200 “Hands Off!” demonstrations have been planned by more than 150 groups – including civil rights organisations, labour unions, veterans, fair-election activists and LGBT+ advocates.
This includes a planned protest at the National Mall in Washington as well as locations in all 50 states.
They are in opposition to Trump’s actions: slashing the federal government, his handling of the economy and other issues.
Musk has played a key role in Trump’s second administration, leading efforts to downsize the federal government as head of the newly created Department of Government Efficiency.
Organisers hope these demonstrations will be the largest since Trump came to office.
Speaking of Musk, let’s see how Trump’s second term has impacted America’s richest men …?
Countries across the globe are planning their response, or lack thereof, to Donald Trump’s tariffs.
China responded to Trump’s 34% tariff with its own levy of the same percentage on US imports.
According to state news agency Xinhua, China has accused the US of using tariffs “as a weapon” to suppress Beijing’s economy.
The country’s foreign ministry added that the US should “stop undermining the legitimate development rights of the Chinese people”.
It also warned there were no winners from and no way out for protectionism.
China also claimed that the US tariffs violated World Trade Organization rules – rules it itself has broken a number of times.
Professor Wang Wen, trade expert at the Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies, spoke from Beijing to Kamali Melbourne. He outlined why he believed the tariffs would eventually benefit China, and why Beijing would “never yield” to the US president.
“The basic strategy of China’s tariff policy against Trump is to count on reciprocal rules and defend China’s national interest and dignity. China will never yield to Trump on the issue of tariff war,” he said.
However, Xi Jinping is no democratic leader either, given to expansionism by hook or crook.
China’s booming economy has opened up many opportunities to achieve its sinister objectives – massive investments which weaker economies fall into and become easy prey.
Sri Lanka is no exception. Caught in the middle are the smaller nations who are confused and worried how best to stay alive.
Sunil Dharmabandhu
Wales, UK
Opinion
Praise to ex-President Ranil Wickremesinghe!

In the despicable absence of an urgent practical response on the part of the JVP-Anura Kumara Dissanayake-led NPP government to the devastating 28th March earthquake in Myanmar, ex-president Ranil Wickremesinghe has made a very timely and sensible proposal regarding how to assist our disaster stricken fellow humans in that country. ex-president Wickremesinghe! Thank you very much for saving, at least to some extent, Sri Lanka’s still unsullied reputation as a sovereign state populated by a most humane and hospitable people. You have again demonstrated your remarkable ability to emerge as an able state level troubleshooter at critical moments, this time though, just by being a mentor. It is a pity that you don’t think of adopting a more universally acceptable, less anglophile version of principled politics that will endear you to the general electorate and induce the true patriots of the country to elect you to the hot seat, where you will have the chance to show your true colours!
The ordinary people of Myanmar (formerly called Burma) are remarkably humble, polite and kind-hearted just like our fellow ordinary Sri Lankans. There’s a natural cultural affinity between us two peoples because we have been sharing the same Theravada Buddhist religious culture for many centuries, especially from the 4th century CE, when Buddhism started making gradual inroads into the Irrawaddy Valley through trade with India. Whereas Buddhism almost completely disappeared from India, it flourished in Sri Lanka and Burma. Nearly 88% of the 55 million present Myanmar population profess Buddhism, which compares to 72% of the 22 million population in Sri Lanka. Wickremesinghe has been mindful enough to take a glance at the historicity of close Myanmar-Sri Lanka relations. And he didn’t mince his words while giving some details.
At the beginning of his statement in this connection (which I listened to in a video today, April 1, 2025), Ranil Wickremesinghe said that our government has expressed its sorrow (but little else, as could be understood in the context). Countries near and far from Myanmar including even partly affected Thailand, and India, China, and distant Australia have already provided emergency assistance. Referring to the special connection we have with Myanmar as a fellow Theravada Buddhist country, he said that both the Amarapura and Ramanna nikayas brought the vital higher ordination ritual from there. We must help Myanmar especially because of this historic relationship.
When an earthquake struck Nepal, the birthplace of the Buddha, in 2015, we sent an army team to assist. On that occasion, Sri Lanka was the second country to provide relief, India being the first, with China becoming the third country to come to Nepal’s help. Today, India, Thailand, Malaysia, China and Australia have dispatched aid by now. Last year Sri Lanka gave 1 million US Dollars for Gazan refugees. We need to take a (meaningful) step now.
Wickremesinghe proposed that the army medical corps be sent to Myanmar immediately to set up a temporary hospital there. The necessary drugs and other materials may be collected from Buddhist and non-Buddhist donors in Colombo and other areas.
Emphasising the ancient friendly relationship between Sri Lanka and Myanmar, Wickremesinghe mentioned that King Alaung Sithu I (of the Pagan Dynasty, 1090-1167 CE) sent help to (Prince Keerthi who later became) King Vijayabahu the Great (1055-1110 CE) to defeat and drive away from the island the occupying Cholas after a 17 year long military campaign. The grateful Lankan monarch Vijayabahu, during his reign, offered the Thihoshin Pagoda (name meaning ‘Lord of Lanka’ pagoda, according to Wikipedia) and a golden Buddha image to the Myanmar king. (This pagoda is situated in Pakokku in the Magway region, which is one of the six regions affected by the recent earthquake. I am unable to say whether it remains undamaged. Though the monument was initiated during Vijayabahu’s lifetime, the construction was completed during the reign of King Alaung Sithu I {Wikipedia}).
Wickremesinghe, in his statement, added that it was after this that a strong connection between Sri Lanka and Myanmar started. In some Buddhist temples in Myanmar there are paintings by ancient Lankan painters, illustrating Jataka stories (Stories relating to different births of Buddha). Among these, Wickremesinghe mentioned, there is a painting depicting the duel between (the occupying Chola king of Anuradhapura) Elara and (his young native challenger from Ruhuna prince) Dutugemunu. (Although Wickremesinghe did not talk about it, a fact well known is that there is a copy of our Mahavamsa in Myanmar. In reporting the ex-president’s speech, I have added my own information and information from other sources. I have put this within parentheses)
Let’s hope President Anura Kumara Dissanayake is wise enough to derive some benefit from his predecessor’s mentoring in the name of our beloved Motherland.
Rohana R. Wasala
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