Features
Turret Road Kollupitiya Seventy Five Years Ago.
by Hugh Karunanayake
Turret Road Kollupitiya is now known as Anagaraika Dharmapala Mawata in honour of a prominent Buddhist who spearheaded the Buddhist revival movement at the beginning of the twentieth century. The road is in the heart of the Cinnamon Gardens/ Kollupitiya suburbs which are now the most elite residential areas in Colombo.
The City’s elite residential area was originally in Mutwal around the harbour. With the opening of the SouthWest Breakwater, in the Colombo harbour, the primacy of Colombo as a city gradually developed, and the elite residential areas were thereafter in Cinnamon Gardens, Kollupitiya, and Havelock Town. Many professionals, and plantation owners chose to build their mansions in this area.
Chief among them was Jacob de Mel who was known as an astute entrepreneur engaged in the development of broad acres in cococnut, as well as being a prominent owner of graphite mines in the Kurunegala areas. His coconut holdings are estimated to have been nearly 5,000 acres in extent. Jacob de Mel also owned almost the entirety of land on one side of Turret Road commencing from Galle Road on the left hand side proceeding to to Horton Place almost up to Castle Street.
His estate extended to the Hyde Park, Hunupitiya areas as well. The patriarch had a large brood of children comprising nine daughters and five sons and he had enough prime Colombo property in addition to his vast coconut holdings in the Kurunegala District, to give as dowries for his nine daughters as well as providing for his five sons.
His daughters were married to Sir James Peiris, C.E.A. Dias, ARH Canekeratne,Charles Peiris, Henry Peiris, Dr JSR Goonewardene, AFR Goonewardene, W.L. P. de Soysa, and ???? De Soysa. His five sons included Henry de Mel, FB de Mel, and. Frank de Mel, and they all built their homes in Horton Place. Henry de Mel in “Elsemere”, FB de Mel in “Villa de Mel” the patriarch’s own home, and Frank in “Trentino”,also in Horton Place. All the daughters of Jacob de Mel built their residences on Turret Road and adjacent areas such as Hyde Park, and Park Road..
Grand Homes such as “Rippleworth”, “Canela Villa”, “Fincastle”, ” Elscourt Manor” all on Turret Road were built by the daughters and their spouses on land originally part of the Jacob de Mel prime holding.At the turn of the Twentieth Century, Turret Road was a narrow gravel road. Yet, it was one of the principal thoroughfares in the fast growing metropolis of Colombo, linking the Western seaboard with the semi urban hinterland comprising, Borella, Kotte, and Rajagiriya areas. Turret Road was widened as part of the Colombo Municipal Council’s road development scheme in 1922.

The Nine Daughters Of Jacob De Mel At A Family Wedding In 1924
It was in the late 19th Century that the shift from popular residential areas like Mutwal and Hulftsdorf took place. The southward shift was largely to uninhabited areas of Kollupitiya and Cinnamonn Gardens. Wealthy families associated with the political, social, and economic development of Sri Lanka in the 20th Century were resident in homes along Turret Road. Some of the better known homes include Calverly House, the home of the famous lawyer Frederick Dornhorst.
Rippleworth, the home of Sir James Peiris (son in law of Jacob de Mel), legislator and pioneer social reformer, Turret House built by FW Bois, company Director, and later owned by Col TG Jayewardene, Sudassana, the home of Sir Gerard Wijeyekoon, President of the Senate, Canela Villa, owned by CEA Dias ( son in law of Jacob de Mel, and sometime tenanted by Alistair Ferguson, owner of the. Ceylon Observer, newspaper), Fairlight, the home of Felix de Silva, partner of the legal firm De Silva and Mendis, Vijjayantha, the home of EW Jayewardene, father of JR Jayewardene, Elscourt Manor, owned by Henry A Pieris ( son in law of Jacob de Mel) and one time home of the Orient Club, were all homes on Turret Road.
The commercial part of Turret Road was then largely confined to the western end at the intersection with Galle Road, where the first traffic lights in the country were in operation from about 75 years ago. At this junction facing Galle Road was the showrooms of Hemachandra Bros, the long standing firm of jewellers. Adjoining it was New Coop, the prominent store in Colombo, then, for artist’s materials, canvasses, atlases, and prints. Next door was the Bombay Sweet Mart famous for its sherberts and faludas.The Kollupitiya Cooperative Store stood next, followed by the Municipal market. The ” Colpetty Market” as it was then known among Colombo’s diplomatic corps, was then the place in Colombo to buy a good fillet , pork chop, or lingus (spicy sausage) or “bangers” as expats called it!.
On the opposite side, at the corner with Galle Road stood Turret Court a large two storied commercial building owned originally by Justice VM Fernando and later inherited by his son JLM Fernando, one time Chairman of Air Ceylon. Turret Court housed the Colombo Dye Works, run by the Jilla family, Albert Edirisinghe, the optician, Wijaya Stores, the only independent motor spare parts shop outside of Panchikawatte-( the auto alley of Ceylon), and Victory Silk Stores well known for its sarees and Arrow shirts.
Next to Turret Court stood another building also owned by Justice VM Fernando and inherited by his other son, the former Chief Justice HNG Fernando. Gabriel Perera, the legendary gentleman’s barber of the time, operated out of this building. Prime Minister DS Senanayake was a regular patron at Gabriel’s in the days when national leaders went about their daily chores like any other member of the community. Gabriel, like most barbers was very chatty with his clients, and DS was no exception. It has been said that as a result of Gabriel’s seemingly innocent but incisive probing of the PM amidst the snip and snap of his scissors, had led to DS unwittingly baring inside information relating to matters of state. It was no surprise therefore to see hardened journos ( including bald ones) lining up for haircuts on the day that DS was scheduled for his regular “tonsorial tussle.”

Victoria stores, the liquor merchants were in the same building next to Gabriel’s. Also in the same building was Dr Sam Gunawardene’s Dental Surgery. Further west were the premises of John and Co photographers, and then the Shell Service Station. These buildings have been replaced by the Liberty Plaza a large shopping and apartment complex which came up in the late 1970s.Opposite the Shell Service station and beside Duplication Road were some shops which were demolished in the 1950s to make way for the Liberty Cinema built by the Abdul Cader family. At the time it was constructed, there was some controversy around allegations that the new building encroached on public land. This however was investigated and cleared by the Municipal Council. Art enthusiasts especially George Keyt afficianados would be interested to know that when the Liberty Cinema was built, there were two stained glass images created by George Keyt and set on either side of the stage.
The residential sector of Turret Road on its northern side commenced with No: 41, the early home of Dr Noel Bartholomeusz, the well known surgeon of the day. Adjoining his home was Fairlight, the single storied but sprawling home of Felix de Silva, partner of the legal firm De Silva and Mendis. Henry Peiris a son in law of Jacob de Mel owned it earlier. He also owned the homes Elscourt and Fincastle, further west on Turret Road. Fairlight stood on a large block of land, the house standing well behind its spacious front lawn. Shaw Wallace and Hedges leased out premises No 49 for many years, using it as the home for its Managing Director, Garry Shattock and later Prema Fernando.
Twainway, which stood at the conjoining point of Turret Road with Greenpath was the home of Gordon E W Jansz who was Chief Accountant of the Ceylon Government Railway. Beside it stood the home of LN Joseph Chief Clerk of the Senate. His son Moritz lives in Melbourne. A few homes away was Roshanara the home of NK Choksy QC, a leading civil lawyer of the time and father of Kasi Choksy, a former Minister of Finance. A couple of houses away at No 60 lived Christie Ferdinando, a businessman. Next door was Carlton Lodge the home of Carlton Corea. This home was constructed on the grounds of Turret House, which belonged to Carlton Corea’s father-in-law Col TG Jayewardene. The Colonel’s other son-in-law Fairlie Wijemanne also had his home built on the grounds of Turret House.
Carlton Lodge has been for over 40 years the home of the Capri Club. Prior to its tenancy, the Ambassador for Burma in Ceylon, H.E Sao Boon Waat lived there. His wife Shirley was shot and killed in this house allegedly by the Ambassador over a clandestine affair she had. He was recalled to Burma where he was charged with her murder and imprisoned. No charges were laid in Sri Lanka as the ambassador claimed diplomatic immunity and on the grounds that the woman died of a heart attack, a claim that was supported by a Sri Lankan doctor!!
During the Second World War, Turret House was the home of the Upper School of Royal College, Carlton Lodge housed the lower school. The Principal’s office and administration block
was housed in Sudassana, the home of Sir Gerard Wijeykoon which stood opposite to Turret House . The science laboratory was in Firdoshi also on Turret Road beyond Carlton Lodge. School assemblies were held in open air on the spacious grounds of Turret House. The school moved back to its own home in Racecourse Avenue in April 1946.
On the northern side of Turret Road at No 51 lived GL Cooray the son in law of Sir James Peiris. Next door was Savitri the home of CEA Dias, son in law of Jacob de Mel, and a prominent tea and rubber planter. His son Stanley Dias lived there later. Stanley’s son Michael Dias captained the Royal College cricket team in 1960, and now lives a retired leisurely life in Colombo. Savitri was previously known as Canela Villa the home of Alistair Ferguson, a former proprietor of the Ceylon Observer newspaper, and founder of Fergusons Ceylon Directory. The house was a spacious single storied building.
Alvis Place named after Arthur Alvis, a well known resident, led from Turret Road to the Polwatte area where Arthur Alvis lived in his home Newlands on Alvis Place, over a hundred years ago. He was a member for the Kollupitiya Ward in the Municipal Council, and a respected member of the local community.
Next to Alvis Place was Rippleworth, the home built by Sir James Peiris and which was the location for many political and reformist meetings during colonial days. After the death of Sir James in 1930, his son, Leonard, lived in this home till his death in 1954. It was since the venue of a school, but its present use not known. The younger son of Sir James, Herbert, or better known as Devar Surya Sena lived in a separate house adjoining the grounds of Rippleworth on Alwis Place. Next door to Rippleworth was Haslemere the home of DP Cooray. Two doors next was Firdoshi the home of Dr Rustomjee. At the intersection with General’s Lake Road was Sudassana, the home of Sir Gerard Wijeyekoon. On the opposite side facing Sudassana was Shanthi the house then occupied by TSV Tillekeratne, an electrical engineer.
Beyond General’s Lake Road was the Montessori School run by Carmen and Joyce Gunasekera.It was probably the first Montessori school in Ceylon and operated for many years. Aunty Joyce and Aunty Carmen, as they were fondly called by the hundreds of tiny tots that were catered for by these two ladies have been responsible for laying the foundation to many a brilliant career of children of the time. Many have since reached eminence in all walks of life in Sri Lanka.
Further away were the showrooms and workshops of Rowlands Ltd, and British Car Co standing on property leased from Justice ARH Canekeratne, a son in law of Jacob de Mel. Thereafter were the homes of the Macan Markars including Sir Muirburn in which the patriarch Sir Mohamed Macan Markar lived in, having moved from Villa Istanbul on Galle Road, earlier. Sir Mohamed’s grandson Hussain captained the Royal College cricket team in 1965.The son AV Macan Markar lived in the house called Park View, suitably named, as it fronted Victoria Park. On the opposite side of Turret Road between the areas bounded by Flower Road in the west, and Edinburgh Creascent on the East were homes that included that of Dr RB Lenora, later appointed to the Senate. Alongside was Mr Donald Obeysekera’s house Ascot. VA de Mauny son of Count de Mauny of the island of Taprobane, off Weligama, lived in his home Broxmead. Which was next to to the Macan Markars. De Mauny was a director of Rosehaugh and Co, which had its stores adjacent to his home.
On the eastern side, the grounds of Victoria Park fronted Turret Road. On the opposite side was Park Road leading from Turret Road towards Slave Island. Beyond the entrance to Park Road at 185 Turret Road was the home of JLM Fernando. Two doors away was Vaijayantha, home of EW Jayewardene brother of Col TG Jayewardene of Turret House. EW’s son JR was of course the first elected President of Sri Lanka. During World War 2 it was the headquarters of Radio Seac and later rebuilt into a larger building used for the Chinese Embassy for many years.
Further away were two renowned palatial homes Fincastle and Elscourt Manor belonging to Henry Peiris, son in law of Jacob de Mel, and descendent from Jeronis Peiris. Elscourt Manor was home to the Orient Club, before it moved back into its premises on Racecourse Avenue.It was also a recreation centre for service personnel during the Second World War. Its facilities were described thus: ” main lounges and sun lounges,smoke room and bar, billiard room and two shops, one for necessities, and one for gifts.There is also a barber’s shop, a fine valet service, and an information bureau”
The activities in Elscourt Manor by servicemen during the war years probably irked the neighbours to the point that a high brick wall up to roof level was constructed, preventing sight of any activity from either inside or out. Elscourt was demolished in the nineteen fifties, and on part of its grounds, two eminent surgeons of the day, Drs P.R. Anthonisz, and MVP Peiris built their homes. Fincastle was later the office of the Lady Lochore Fund established by Rev CEV Nathanaielsz to assist government and mercantile service employees in financial difficulties.
Almost at the end of Turret Road on the northern side, facing the Town Hall, stood Calverly House, for many years the home of leading lawyer Frederick Dornhorst, QC. On the porch of the house was the inscribed figure 1868, which suggests that the house may have been built in that year. If so, Calverly House may be one of the first buildings on Turret Road. It is today the home of the Buddhist Ladies College, established by Mohandas de Mel.
Perhaps the last building on that side of the road was the pharmaceutical branch of Cargills Ltd, later taken over by the Ceylon Pharmaceutical Company, as its key outlet Osu Sala. The Cinnamon garden Baptist Church, and the manse on the opposite side mark the end of Turret Road. The Ferguson Memorial Hall named after Mr and Mrs Alistair Ferguson, and erected by their sons, son in law, and nephew in around 1910 stands within the grounds of the church property.
It is not known whether Turret Road derived its name from Turret House, or vice versa. It has since lost its residential character, and is a mix of commercial sprawl and residential sub divisions of land which was part of the many stately homes that lined this wonderful thoroughfare. Gone are the spacious gardens and lawns that typified lifestyles of the wealthy in an era characterised by opulent and gracious living.
*( Based on an essay written by the writer for The Ceylankan, the Journal of the Ceylon Society of Australia #17 of February 2002)
Features
Theocratic Iran facing unprecedented challenge
The world is having the evidence of its eyes all over again that ‘economics drives politics’ and this time around the proof is coming from theocratic Iran. Iranians in their tens of thousands are on the country’s streets calling for a regime change right now but it is all too plain that the wellsprings of the unprecedented revolt against the state are economic in nature. It is widespread financial hardship and currency depreciation, for example, that triggered the uprising in the first place.
However, there is no denying that Iran’s current movement for drastic political change has within its fold multiple other forces, besides the economically affected, that are urging a comprehensive transformation as it were of the country’s political system to enable the equitable empowerment of the people. For example, the call has been gaining ground with increasing intensity over the weeks that the country’s number one theocratic ruler, President Ali Khamenei, steps down from power.
That is, the validity and continuation of theocratic rule is coming to be questioned unprecedentedly and with increasing audibility and boldness by the public. Besides, there is apparently fierce opposition to the concentration of political power at the pinnacle of the Iranian power structure.
Popular revolts have been breaking out every now and then of course in Iran over the years, but the current protest is remarkable for its social diversity and the numbers it has been attracting over the past few weeks. It could be described as a popular revolt in the genuine sense of the phrase. Not to be also forgotten is the number of casualties claimed by the unrest, which stands at some 2000.
Of considerable note is the fact that many Iranian youths have been killed in the revolt. It points to the fact that youth disaffection against the state has been on the rise as well and could be at boiling point. From the viewpoint of future democratic development in Iran, this trend needs to be seen as positive.
Politically-conscious youngsters prioritize self-expression among other fundamental human rights and stifling their channels of self-expression, for example, by shutting down Internet communication links, would be tantamount to suppressing youth aspirations with a heavy hand. It should come as no surprise that they are protesting strongly against the state as well.
Another notable phenomenon is the increasing disaffection among sections of Iran’s women. They too are on the streets in defiance of the authorities. A turning point in this regard was the death of Mahsa Amini in 2022, which apparently befell her all because she defied state orders to be dressed in the Hijab. On that occasion as well, the event brought protesters in considerable numbers onto the streets of Tehran and other cities.
Once again, from the viewpoint of democratic development the increasing participation of Iranian women in popular revolts should be considered thought-provoking. It points to a heightening political consciousness among Iranian women which may not be easy to suppress going forward. It could also mean that paternalism and its related practices and social forms may need to re-assessed by the authorities.
It is entirely a matter for the Iranian people to address the above questions, the neglect of which could prove counter-productive for them, but it is all too clear that a relaxing of authoritarian control over the state and society would win favour among a considerable section of the populace.
However, it is far too early to conclude that Iran is at risk of imploding. This should be seen as quite a distance away in consideration of the fact that the Iranian government is continuing to possess its coercive power. Unless the country’s law enforcement authorities turn against the state as well this coercive capability will remain with Iran’s theocratic rulers and the latter will be in a position to quash popular revolts and continue in power. But the ruling authorities could not afford the luxury of presuming that all will be well at home, going into the future.
Meanwhile US President Donald Trump has assured the Iranian people of his assistance but it is not clear as to what form such support would take and when it would be delivered. The most important way in which the Trump administration could help the Iranian people is by helping in the process of empowering them equitably and this could be primarily achieved only by democratizing the Iranian state.
It is difficult to see the US doing this to even a minor measure under President Trump. This is because the latter’s principal preoccupation is to make the ‘US Great Once again’, and little else. To achieve the latter, the US will be doing battle with its international rivals to climb to the pinnacle of the international political system as the unchallengeable principal power in every conceivable respect.
That is, Realpolitik considerations would be the main ‘stuff and substance’ of US foreign policy with a corresponding downplaying of things that matter for a major democratic power, including the promotion of worldwide democratic development and the rendering of humanitarian assistance where it is most needed. The US’ increasing disengagement from UN development agencies alone proves the latter.
Given the above foreign policy proclivities it is highly unlikely that the Iranian people would be assisted in any substantive way by the Trump administration. On the other hand, the possibility of US military strikes on Iranian military targets in the days ahead cannot be ruled out.
The latter interventions would be seen as necessary by the US to keep the Middle Eastern military balance in favour of Israel. Consequently, any US-initiated peace moves in the real sense of the phrase in the Middle East would need to be ruled out in the foreseeable future. In other words, Middle East peace will remain elusive.
Interestingly, the leadership moves the Trump administration is hoping to make in Venezuela, post-Maduro, reflect glaringly on its foreign policy preoccupations. Apparently, Trump will be preferring to ‘work with’ Delcy Rodriguez, acting President of Venezuela, rather than Maria Corina Machado, the principal opponent of Nicolas Maduro, who helped sustain the opposition to Maduro in the lead-up to the latter’s ouster and clearly the democratic candidate for the position of Venezuelan President.
The latter development could be considered a downgrading of the democratic process and a virtual ‘slap in its face’. While the democratic rights of the Venezuelan people will go disregarded by the US, a comparative ‘strong woman’ will receive the Trump administration’s blessings. She will perhaps be groomed by Trump to protect the US’s security and economic interests in South America, while his administration side-steps the promotion of the democratic empowerment of Venezuelans.
Features
Silk City: A blueprint for municipal-led economic transformation in Sri Lanka
Maharagama today stands at a crossroads. With the emergence of new political leadership, growing public expectations, and the convergence of professional goodwill, the Maharagama Municipal Council (MMC) has been presented with a rare opportunity to redefine the city’s future. At the heart of this moment lies the Silk City (Seda Nagaraya) Initiative (SNI)—a bold yet pragmatic development blueprint designed to transform Maharagama into a modern, vibrant, and economically dynamic urban hub.
This is not merely another urban development proposal. Silk City is a strategic springboard—a comprehensive economic and cultural vision that seeks to reposition Maharagama as Sri Lanka’s foremost textile-driven commercial city, while enhancing livability, employment, and urban dignity for its residents. The Silk City concept represents more than a development plan: it is a comprehensive economic blueprint designed to redefine Maharagama as Sri Lanka’s foremost textile-driven commercial and cultural hub.
A Vision Rooted in Reality
What makes the Silk City Initiative stand apart is its grounding in economic realism. Carefully designed around the geographical, commercial, and social realities of Maharagama, the concept builds on the city’s long-established strengths—particularly its dominance as a textile and retail centre—while addressing modern urban challenges.
The timing could not be more critical. With Mayor Saman Samarakoon assuming leadership at a moment of heightened political goodwill and public anticipation, MMC is uniquely positioned to embark on a transformation of unprecedented scale. Leadership, legitimacy, and opportunity have aligned—a combination that cities rarely experience.
A Voluntary Gift of National Value
In an exceptional and commendable development, the Maharagama Municipal Council has received—entirely free of charge—a comprehensive development proposal titled “Silk City – Seda Nagaraya.” Authored by Deshamanya, Deshashkthi J. M. C. Jayasekera, a distinguished Chartered Accountant and Chairman of the JMC Management Institute, the proposal reflects meticulous research, professional depth, and long-term strategic thinking.
It must be added here that this silk city project has received the political blessings of the Parliamentarians who represented the Maharagama electorate. They are none other than Sunil Kumara Gamage, Minister of Sports and Youth Affairs, Sunil Watagala, Deputy Minister of Public Security and Devananda Suraweera, Member of Parliament.
The blueprint outlines ten integrated sectoral projects, including : A modern city vision, Tourism and cultural city development, Clean and green city initiatives, Religious and ethical city concepts, Garden city aesthetics, Public safety and beautification, Textile and creative industries as the economic core
Together, these elements form a five-year transformation agenda, capable of elevating Maharagama into a model municipal economy and a 24-hour urban hub within the Colombo Metropolitan Region
Why Maharagama, Why Now?
Maharagama’s transformation is not an abstract ambition—it is a logical evolution. Strategically located and commercially vibrant, the city already attracts thousands of shoppers daily. With structured investment, branding, and infrastructure support, Maharagama can evolve into a sleepless commercial destination, a cultural and tourism node, and a magnet for both local and international consumers.
Such a transformation aligns seamlessly with modern urban development models promoted by international development agencies—models that prioritise productivity, employment creation, poverty reduction, and improved quality of life.
Rationale for Transformation
Maharagama has long held a strategic advantage as one of Sri Lanka’s textile and retail centers. With proper planning and investment, this identity can be leveraged to convert the city into a branded urban destination, a sleepless commercial hub, a tourism and cultural attraction, and a vibrant economic engine within the Colombo Metropolitan Region. Such transformation is consistent with modern city development models promoted by international funding agencies that seek to raise local productivity, employment, quality of life, alleviation of urban poverty, attraction and retaining a huge customer base both local and international to the city)
Current Opportunity
The convergence of the following factors make this moment and climate especially critical. Among them the new political leadership with strong public support, availability of a professionally developed concept paper, growing public demand for modernisation, interest among public, private, business community and civil society leaders to contribute, possibility of leveraging traditional strengths (textile industry and commercial vibrancy are notable strengths.
The Silk City initiative therefore represents a timely and strategic window for Maharagama to secure national attention, donor interest and investor confidence.
A Window That Must Not Be Missed
Several factors make this moment decisive: Strong new political leadership with public mandate, Availability of a professionally developed concept, Rising citizen demand for modernization, Willingness of professionals, businesses, and civil society to contribute. The city’s established textile and commercial base
Taken together, these conditions create a strategic window to attract national attention, donor interest, and investor confidence.
But windows close.
Hard Truths: Challenges That Must Be Addressed
Ambition alone will not deliver transformation. The Silk City Initiative demands honest recognition of institutional constraints. MMC currently faces: Limited technical and project management capacity, rigid public-sector regulatory frameworks that slow procurement and partnerships, severe financial limitations, with internal revenues insufficient even for routine operations, the absence of a fully formalised, high-caliber Steering Committee.
Moreover, this is a mega urban project, requiring feasibility studies, impact assessments, bankable proposals, international partnerships, and sustained political and community backing.
A Strategic Roadmap for Leadership
For Mayor Saman Samarakoon, this represents a once-in-a-generation leadership moment. Key strategic actions are essential: 1.Immediate establishment of a credible Steering Committee, drawing expertise from government, private sector, academia, and civil society. 2. Creation of a dedicated Project Management Unit (PMU) with professional specialists. 3. Aggressive mobilisation of external funding, including central government support, international donors, bilateral partners, development banks, and corporate CSR initiatives. 4. Strategic political engagement to secure legitimacy and national backing. 5. Quick-win projects to build public confidence and momentum. 6. A structured communications strategy to brand and promote Silk City nationally and internationally. Firm positioning of textiles and creative industries as the heart of Maharagama’s economic identity
If successfully implemented, Silk City will not only redefine Maharagama’s future but also ensure that the names of those who led this transformation are etched permanently in the civic history of the city.
Voluntary Gift of National Value
Maharagama is intrinsically intertwined with the textile industry. Small scale and domestic textile industry play a pivotal role. Textile industry generates a couple of billion of rupees to the Maharagama City per annum. It is the one and only city that has a sleepless night and this textile hub provides ready-made garments to the entire country. Prices are comparatively cheaper. If this textile industry can be vertically and horizontally developed, a substantial income can be generated thus providing employment to vulnerable segments of employees who are mostly women. Paucity of textile technology and capital investment impede the growth of the industry. If Maharagama can collaborate with the Bombay of India textile industry, there would be an unbelievable transition. How Sri Lanka could pursue this goal. A blueprint for the development of the textile industry for the Maharagama City will be dealt with in a separate article due to time space.
It is achievable if the right structures, leadership commitments and partnerships are put in place without delay.
No municipal council in recent memory has been presented with such a pragmatic, forward-thinking and well-timed proposal. Likewise, few Mayors will ever be positioned as you are today — with the ability to initiate a transformation that will redefine the future of Maharagama for generations. It will not be a difficult task for Saman Samarakoon, Mayor of the MMC to accomplish the onerous tasks contained in the projects, with the acumen and experience he gained from his illustrious as a Commander of the SL Navy with the support of the councilors, Municipal staff and the members of the Parliamentarians and the committed team of the Silk-City Project.
Voluntary Gift of National Value
Maharagama is intrinsically intertwined with the textile industry. The textile industries play a pivotal role. This textile hub provides ready-made garments to the entire country. Prices are comparatively cheaper. If this textile industry can be vertically and horizontally developed, a substantial income can be generated thus providing employment to vulnerable segments of employees who are mostly women.
Paucity of textile technology and capital investment impede the growth of the industry. If Maharagama can collaborate with the Bombay of India textile industry, there would be an unbelievable transition. A blueprint for the development of the textile industry for the Maharagama City will be dealt with in a separate article.
J.A.A.S Ranasinghe
Productivity Specialist and Management Consultant
(The writer can becontacted via Email:rathula49@gmail.com)
Features
Reading our unfinished economic story through Bandula Gunawardena’s ‘IMF Prakeerna Visadum’
Book Review
Why Sri Lanka’s Return to the IMF Demands Deeper Reflection
By mid-2022, the term “economic crisis” ceased to be an abstract concept for most Sri Lankans. It was no longer confined to academic papers, policy briefings, or statistical tables. Instead, it became a lived and deeply personal experience. Fuel queues stretched for kilometres under the burning sun. Cooking gas vanished from household shelves. Essential medicines became difficult—sometimes impossible—to find. Food prices rose relentlessly, pushing basic nutrition beyond the reach of many families, while real incomes steadily eroded.
What had long existed as graphs, ratios, and warning signals in economic reports suddenly entered daily life with unforgiving force. The crisis was no longer something discussed on television panels or debated in Parliament; it was something felt at the kitchen table, at the bus stop, and in hospital corridors.
Amid this social and economic turmoil came another announcement—less dramatic in appearance, but far more consequential in its implications. Sri Lanka would once again seek assistance from the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
The announcement immediately divided public opinion. For some, the IMF represented an unavoidable lifeline—a last resort to stabilise a collapsing economy. For others, it symbolised a loss of economic sovereignty and a painful surrender to external control. Emotions ran high. Debates became polarised. Public discourse quickly hardened into slogans, accusations, and ideological posturing.
Yet beneath the noise, anger, and fear lay a more fundamental question—one that demanded calm reflection rather than emotional reaction:
Why did Sri Lanka have to return to the IMF at all?
This question does not lend itself to simple or comforting answers. It cannot be explained by a single policy mistake, a single government, or a single external shock. Instead, it requires an honest examination of decades of economic decision-making, institutional weaknesses, policy inconsistency, and political avoidance. It requires looking beyond the immediate crisis and asking how Sri Lanka repeatedly reached a point where IMF assistance became the only viable option.
Few recent works attempt this difficult task as seriously and thoughtfully as Dr. Bandula Gunawardena’s IMF Prakeerna Visadum. Rather than offering slogans or seeking easy culprits, the book situates Sri Lanka’s IMF engagement within a broader historical and structural narrative. In doing so, it shifts the debate away from blame and toward understanding—a necessary first step if the country is to ensure that this crisis does not become yet another chapter in a familiar and painful cycle.
Returning to the IMF: Accident or Inevitability?
The central argument of IMF Prakeerna Visadum is at once simple and deeply unsettling. It challenges a comforting narrative that has gained popularity in times of crisis and replaces it with a far more demanding truth:
Sri Lanka’s economic crisis was not created by the IMF.
IMF intervention became inevitable because Sri Lanka avoided structural reform for far too long.
This framing fundamentally alters the terms of the national debate. It shifts attention away from external blame and towards internal responsibility. Instead of asking whether the IMF is good or bad, Dr. Gunawardena asks a more difficult and more important question: what kind of economy repeatedly drives itself to a point where IMF assistance becomes unavoidable?
The book refuses the two easy positions that dominate public discussion. It neither defends the IMF uncritically as a benevolent saviour nor demonises it as the architect of Sri Lanka’s suffering. Instead, IMF intervention is placed within a broader historical and structural context—one shaped primarily by domestic policy choices, institutional weaknesses, and political avoidance.
Public discourse often portrays IMF programmes as the starting point of economic hardship. Dr. Gunawardena corrects this misconception by restoring the correct chronology—an essential step for any honest assessment of the crisis.
The IMF did not arrive at the beginning of Sri Lanka’s collapse.
It arrived after the collapse had already begun.
By the time negotiations commenced, Sri Lanka had exhausted its foreign exchange reserves, lost access to international capital markets, officially defaulted on its external debt, and entered a phase of runaway inflation and acute shortages.
Fuel queues, shortages of essential medicines, and scarcities of basic food items were not the product of IMF conditionality. They were the direct outcome of prolonged foreign-exchange depletion combined with years of policy mismanagement. Import restrictions were imposed not because the IMF demanded them, but because the country simply could not pay its bills.
From this perspective, the IMF programme did not introduce austerity into a functioning economy. It formalised an adjustment that had already become unavoidable. The economy was already contracting, consumption was already constrained, and living standards were already falling. The IMF framework sought to impose order, sequencing, and credibility on a collapse that was already under way.
Seen through this lens, the return to the IMF was not a freely chosen policy option, but the end result of years of postponed decisions and missed opportunities.
A Long IMF Relationship, Short National Memory
Sri Lanka’s engagement with the IMF is neither new nor exceptional. For decades, governments of all political persuasions have turned to the Fund whenever balance-of-payments pressures became acute. Each engagement was presented as a temporary rescue—an extraordinary response to an unusual storm.
Yet, as Dr. Gunawardena meticulously documents, the storms were not unusual. What was striking was not the frequency of crises, but the remarkable consistency of their underlying causes.
Fiscal indiscipline persisted even during periods of growth. Government revenue remained structurally weak. Public debt expanded rapidly, often financing recurrent expenditure rather than productive investment. Meanwhile, the external sector failed to generate sufficient foreign exchange to sustain a consumption-led growth model.
IMF programmes brought temporary stability. Inflation eased. Reserves stabilised. Growth resumed. But once external pressure diminished, reform momentum faded. Political priorities shifted. Structural weaknesses quietly re-emerged.
This recurring pattern—crisis, adjustment, partial compliance, and relapse—became a defining feature of Sri Lanka’s economic management. The most recent crisis differed only in scale. This time, there was no room left to postpone adjustment.
Fiscal Fragility: The Core of the Crisis
A central focus of IMF Prakeerna Visadum is Sri Lanka’s chronically weak fiscal structure. Despite relatively strong social indicators and a capable administrative state, government revenue as a share of GDP remained exceptionally low.
Frequent tax changes, politically motivated exemptions, and weak enforcement steadily eroded the tax base. Instead of building a stable revenue system, governments relied increasingly on borrowing—both domestic and external.
Much of this borrowing financed subsidies, transfers, and public sector wages rather than productivity-enhancing investment. Over time, debt servicing crowded out development spending, shrinking fiscal space.
Fiscal reform failed not because it was technically impossible, Dr. Gunawardena argues, but because it was politically inconvenient. The costs were immediate and visible; the benefits long-term and diffuse. The eventual debt default was therefore not a surprise, but a delayed consequence.
The External Sector Trap
Sri Lanka’s narrow export base—apparel, tea, tourism, and remittances—generated foreign exchange but masked deeper weaknesses. Export diversification stagnated. Industrial upgrading lagged. Integration into global value chains remained limited.
Meanwhile, import-intensive consumption expanded. When external shocks arrived—global crises, pandemics, commodity price spikes—the economy had little resilience.
Exchange-rate flexibility alone cannot generate exports. Trade liberalisation without an industrial strategy redistributes pain rather than creates growth.
Monetary Policy and the Cost of Lost Credibility
Prolonged monetary accommodation, often driven by political pressure, fuelled inflation, depleted reserves, and eroded confidence. Once credibility was lost, restoring it required painful adjustment.
Macroeconomic credibility, Dr. Gunawardena reminds us, is a national asset. Once squandered, it is extraordinarily expensive to rebuild.
IMF Conditionality: Stabilisation Without Development?
IMF programmes stabilise economies, but they do not automatically deliver inclusive growth. In Sri Lanka, adjustment raised living costs and reduced real incomes. Social safety nets expanded, but gaps persisted.
This raises a critical question: can stabilisation succeed politically if it fails socially?
Political Economy: The Missing Middle
Reforms collided repeatedly with electoral incentives and patronage networks. IMF programmes exposed contradictions but could not resolve them. Without domestic ownership, reform risks becoming compliance rather than transformation.
Beyond Blame: A Diagnostic Moment
The book’s greatest strength lies in its refusal to engage in blame politics. IMF intervention is treated as a diagnostic signal, not a cause—a warning light illuminating unresolved structural failures.
The real challenge is not exiting an IMF programme, but exiting the cycle that makes IMF programmes inevitable.
A Strong Public Appeal: Why This Book Must Be Read
This is not an anti-IMF book.
It is not a pro-IMF book.
It is a pro-Sri Lanka book.
Published by Sarasaviya Publishers, IMF Prakeerna Visadum equips readers not with anger, but with clarity—offering history, evidence, and honest reflection when the country needs them most.
Conclusion: Will We Learn This Time?
The IMF can stabilise an economy.
It cannot build institutions.
It cannot create competitiveness.
It cannot deliver inclusive development.
Those responsibilities remain domestic.
The question before Sri Lanka is simple but profound:
Will we repeat the cycle, or finally learn the lesson?
The answer does not lie in Washington.
It lies with us.
By Professor Ranjith Bandara
Emeritus Professor, University of Colombo
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