Features
Twenty fourth death anniversary of the late A.C.S. Hameed
by A.C.A.M.Nuhuman
My late brother Abdul Cader Shahul Hameed’s 24th death anniversary falls today. He was elected to Parliament in both March and July 1960 from the Akurana electorate. From 1965 until his death on Sept. 3, 1999, he represented the Harispattuwa electorate.
In 1977, when the UNP returned to power, he was elevated to the cabinet becoming the first foreign minister of this country. This requires some explanation. Since independence the Ministry of Defense and External Affairs was held by the Head of the Government. In 1977, then Prime Minister J.R. Jayewardene created the Ministry of Foreign Affairs as a separate ministry and appointed Hameed as the country’s first foreign minister.
It is noted that JRJ rarely intervened on foreign policy matters, seeking to act through his Foreign Minister A.C.S.Hameed. That was because President Jayewardene had implicit faith in Hameed to do what was right in furthering the interests of the country. He trusted my brother.
Foreign policy
With Sri Lanka holding the chairmanship of the Non – Aligned Movement (NAM) during 1976-1979 period, Hameed was constantly called upon to deal with some of the thorniest international issues of the 1970s.
These included which of the two Cambodian factions had a rightful claim to their country’s seat at the UN. The General Assembly session, while this matter was thrashed out, was held up for over four hours as Hameed negotiated behind closed doors trying to resolve the dispute with the backing from the UN’s legal advisors.
Then there was the question of whether Egypt, which had signed the Camp David Accord with Israel in 1978 be expelled from the NAM. There was also sharp division in the NAM over the disputed territory in the Western Sahara of the Maghreb region of North Africa; and the split in the NAM over the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan (1979-1989). Hameed had a significant role in resolving these issues.
During his time, in many ways a Sri Lanka could fight above her weight by making a viable contribution to global foreign affairs and this resulted in many benefits for the country. The Jayewardene policy of opening the long shackled economy attracted substantial support from many countries from which Sri Lanka had little assistance before.
Law of the Sea
One of Hameed’s greatest contributions to this country was his active role in projecting Sri Lanka’s national interests at the third UN Conference on the Law of the Sea. He was closely associated in formulating Sri Lanka’s case for special treatment in the delimitation of its continental shelf, given the special geological features present in the southern part of the Bay of Bengal. He coordinated with the Sri Lanka delegation to the conference and engaged in intensive consultation with key delegations during his visits to New York and Geneva.
These efforts resulted in a Statement of Understanding being incorporated in the Law of the Sea Convention, which accommodates Sri Lanka’s concerns. This has brought about extensive economic benefits to the country through the exploitation of resources in the extended areas of maritime jurisdiction. Hameed also actively encouraged the formation of the Indian Ocean Marine Affairs Cooperation (IOMAC) to serve as a consultative body of India Ocean States, in promoting their interests in the use of marine resources of the Indian Ocean.
Foreign employment
The full benefit of the Middle East job boom from 1973 was not available to Sri Lanka in the early years due to restriction in issuing passports and the existence of an exit permit system discouraging foreign employers from recruiting from Sri Lanka. The Central Bank annual report for 1977 states only 10,000 workers from here had gone for employment in the Middle East at the time. One of Hameed’s first ministerial directives was to remove all restrictions on issuing of passports and also opening embassies in Middle Eastern countries.
In 1977 our only embassy in the Arab world was in Egypt. Today millions of Sri Lankans are employed in the Middle East and it was Hameed who laid the foundation for this opportunity to grow.
Once when my brother was at his Kandy office, about 20 Buddhist monks sought his assistance to obtain a small piece of Mahaweli land to build a platform on the river for conducting their ordination ceremonies over flowing water as required by the rules of their sect. The previous temporary platform on which these ceremonies were conducted had been washed away due to heavy rain upriver. The late minister offered to build a permanent structure, and constructed one of the three Seemamalakas in the country.
As Foreign Minister he visited Finland, the first VIP visitor from Sri Lanka to that country. That visit resulted in the construction by Finland of a pipe-borne water supply scheme in his backward constituency.
Assistance to the Muslim community
My brother was principally a pluralist at heart and had an abiding belief that we were Sri Lankans first and foremost. The fact that he successfully represented Harispattuwa, an 80 percent Sinhalese constituency in the Kandy District, and developed it into a well-served electorate is testament to that that belief in pluralism.
But my brother also did great things for the Muslim community to which he belonged. In 1955, he was elected president of the Central Ceylon Muslim Assembly and it was through this organization that the Kandy Muslim Teacher Training College was inaugurated. At that time, there was a big shortage of trained Muslim teachers, and the organization went a long way towards alleviating this need for qualified teachers.
Another significant achievement was the amendment of the Finance Act No 11 of 1963. Due to this Act, Muslims were deprived of their rights to buy or sell land without proving their citizenship. As a consequence, thousands of deeds were gathering dust in land registries Islandwide without being registered. Although this problem was not faced by Muslims from the Kandy District as they had ge (like Podiappuhamylage) names in their birth certificates, it was a problem acutely felt by Muslims in other parts of the country. My brother recognized this grave issue and raised the problem with President Jayewardene and the Cabinet. Later this Act was amended, thereby enabling Sri Lankan Muslims to buy and sell land without proof of their citizenship like any other citizen in this country.
Let me finish by saying that my brother was known both for his intellect and wit in equal measure. My good friend Thalif Deen a long time UN correspondent in New York recollects an incident that is the stuff of UN legend. Hameed was to deliver an address at the United Nations General Assembly on behalf of President Jayawardena and Deen recalls how an Eelam activist/lawyer from London, Krishna Vaikunthavasan, gatecrashed into the UN head quarters, took his stance at the General Assembly speaker’s rostrum where Hameed was due to speak and began a diatribe against the Colombo government.
He was soon silenced and taken away. Hameed followed him to the podium beginning with a riveting punchline, “I want to thank the previous speaker for keeping his speech short,” as the Assembly, known to tolerate long winded and boring speeches, burst into peals of laughter.
I conclude with a prayer for my good friend and brother. “O! Allah, make his grave a garden of bliss and also make the grave not a place of hell fire.”
Allahummaj al Kabrahu Rawlathan min Riyalul Jinan Wala Thaj al Kabrahul Huffrathan min Hufrin Niran, -Ammen.May Allah Almighty bestow the highest felicity to this departed soul in Jennathul Firdous.
Features
Fractious West facing a more solidified Eastern opposition
Going forward, it is hoped that a reported ceasefire agreement between the US and Iran would provide a basis for a degree of stability in the Middle East and pave the way for substantive peace talks between the powers concerned. The world is compelled to fall back on hope because there is never knowing when President Donald Trump would change his mind and plans on matters of the first importance. So erratic has he been.
Yet, confusion abounds on who has agreed to what. The US President is on record that a number of conditions put forward by him to Iran to deescalate tensions have been accepted by the latter, whereas Iran is yet to state unambiguously that this is so. For instance, the US side claims that Iran has come clear on the point that it would not work towards acquiring a nuclear weapons capability, but there is no official confirmation by Iran that this is so. The same goes for the rest of the conditions.
Accordingly, the peace process between the US and Iran, if such a thing solidly exists, could be said to be mired in uncertainty. Nevertheless, the wider publics of the world are bound to welcome the prospects of some sort of ceasing of hostilities because it would have the effect of improving their economic and material well being which is today under a cloud.
However, questions of the first magnitude would continue to bedevil international politics and provide the breeding ground for continued tensions between East and West. Iran-US hostilities helped highlight some of these divisive issues and a deescalation of these tensions would not inevitably translate into even a temporary resolution of these questions. The world community would have no choice but to take them up and work towards comprehending them better and managing them more effectively.
For example, there are thorny questions arising from the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT). Essentially, this treaty bans the processing and use of nuclear weapons by states but some of the foremost powers are not signatories to it.
Moreover, the NPT does not provide for the destroying of nuclear arsenals by those signatory states which are already in possession of these WMDs. Consequently, there would be a glaring power imbalance between the latter nuclear-armed states and others which possess only conventional weapons.
Such a situation has grave implications for Iran’s security, for instance. The latter could argue, in view of the NPT restrictions, that the US poses a security threat to it but that it is debarred by the Treaty from developing a nuclear arms capability of its own to enable it to match the nuclear capability of the US. Moreover, its regional rival Israel is believed to possess a nuclear weapons capability.
Accordingly, a case could be made that the NPT is inherently unfair. The US would need to help resolve this vexatious matter going forward. But if it remains, US-Iran tensions would not prove easy to resolve. The same goes for Iran-Israeli tensions. Consequently, the Middle East would remain the proverbial ‘powder keg’.
Besides the above issues, the world has ample evidence that it could no longer speak in terms of a united NATO or West. Apparently, there could be no guarantee that US-NATO relations would remain untroubled in future, even if the current Iran-US standoff is peacefully resolved. US-NATO ties almost reached breaking point in the current crisis when the US President called on its NATO partners, particularly Britain, to help keep open the Hormuz Straits for easy navigation by commercial vessels, militarily, on seeing that such help was not forthcoming. Such questions are bound to remain sore points in intra-Western ties.
In other words, it would be imperative for the US’ NATO partners to help pull the US’ ‘chestnuts out of the fire’ going ahead. The question is, would NATO be willing to thus toe the US line even at the cost of its best interests.
For the West, these fractious issues are coming to the fore at a most unpropitious moment. The reality that could faze the West at present is the strong opposition shown to its efforts to bolster its power and influence by China and Russia. Right through the present crisis, the latter have stood by Iran, materially and morally. For instance, the most recent Security Council resolution spearheaded by the US which was strongly critical of Iran, was vetoed by China and Russia.
Accordingly, we have in the latter developments some marked polarities in international politics that could stand in the way of the West advancing its interests unchallenged. They point to progressively intensifying East-West tensions in international relations in the absence of consensuality.
It is only to be expected that given the substance of international politics that the West would be opposed by the East, read China and Russia, in any of the former’s efforts to advance its self interests unilaterally in ways that could be seen as illegitimate, but what is sorely needed at present is consensuality among the foremost powers if the world is to be ‘a less dangerous place to live in.’ Minus a focus on the latter, it would be a ‘no-win’ situation for all concerned.
It would be central to world stability for International Law to be upheld by all states and international actors. Military intervention by major powers in the internal affairs of other countries remains a principal cause of international mayhem. Both East and West are obliged to abide scrupulously with this principle.
From the latter viewpoint, not only did the West err in recent times, but the East did so as well. Iran, for instance, acted in gross violation of International Law when it attacked neighbouring Gulf states which are seen as US allies. Neither Iran nor the US-Israel combine have helped in advancing international law and order by thus taking the law into their own hands.
Unfortunately, the UN has been a passive spectator to these disruptive developments. It needs to play a more robust role in promoting world peace and in furthering consensual understanding among the principal powers in particular. The need is also urgent to advance UN reform and render the UN a vital instrument in furthering world peace. The East and West need to think alike and quickly on this urgent undertaking.
Features
Science-driven health policies key to tackling emerging challenges — UNFPA
Marking World Health Day on April 7, health experts have called for a stronger commitment to science-based decision-making to address increasingly complex and evolving health challenges in Sri Lanka and beyond.
Dr. Dayanath Ranatunga, Assistant Representative of the United Nations Population Fund, stressed that health is no longer confined to hospitals or traditional medical systems, but is shaped by a broad spectrum of social, environmental, and technological factors.
“This year’s theme, ‘Together for Health. Stand with Science,’ reminds us that science is not only for laboratories or policymakers. It is a way of thinking and a tool that shapes everyday decisions,” he said.
Dr. Ranatunga noted that modern health challenges are increasingly interconnected, ranging from infectious diseases such as COVID-19 to climate-related risks, demographic shifts, and emerging forms of online violence.
He warned that maternal and newborn health continues to demand urgent attention despite progress. Globally, an estimated 260,000 women died from pregnancy and childbirth-related causes in 2023 alone—many of them preventable through timely, science-based interventions.
“In countries like Sri Lanka, where fertility rates are declining and survival rates improving, every pregnancy carries greater significance—not just for families, but for the future of communities and economies,” he said.
The UNFPA official also highlighted the growing threat of Technology Facilitated Gender-Based Violence (TFGBV), including cyber harassment and online abuse, noting that these forms of violence can have deep psychological consequences despite lacking visible physical harm.
He emphasised the need for multidisciplinary, science-informed approaches that integrate mental health, digital safety, and survivor-centered care.
Turning to demographic trends, Dr. Ranatunga pointed out that increasing life expectancy is bringing new challenges, particularly the rise of non-communicable diseases such as diabetes, cardiovascular illnesses, and cancers.
In Sri Lanka, nearly 13.9% of mothers develop diabetes during pregnancy, a trend attributed to obesity and unhealthy lifestyles, underscoring the urgent need for preventive healthcare strategies.
“Are we investing enough in prevention?” he asked, noting that early intervention and healthier lifestyles could significantly reduce long-term healthcare costs, especially in a country with a free public healthcare system.
He underscored the importance of data-driven policymaking, stating that scientific research and analytics enable governments to identify gaps, anticipate future needs, and allocate resources more effectively.
The UNFPA, he said, is already leveraging tools such as Geographic Information Systems (GIS) to improve access to maternal healthcare, including mapping travel times for pregnant women to reach health facilities.
Digital innovation is also transforming healthcare delivery, from telemedicine to real-time data systems, improving efficiency and ensuring continuity of care even during emergencies.
In Sri Lanka, partnerships between the government and development agencies are helping to modernise training institutions, including facilities in Batticaloa, equipping healthcare workers with both clinical and digital skills.
However, Dr. Ranatunga cautioned that technology alone is not a solution.
“It must be guided by evidence and grounded in equity,” he said, pointing out that women’s health remains significantly underfunded, with only about 7% of global healthcare research focusing on conditions specific to women.
He also drew attention to the growing health impacts of climate change, including extreme weather, food insecurity, and displacement, describing it as an emerging public health crisis.
“Health does not begin in hospitals. It is shaped by the environments we live in, the choices we make, and the systems we build,” he said.
Calling for renewed commitment, Dr. Ranatunga urged stakeholders to invest in prevention, embrace innovation, and ensure that science remains central to policy and practice.
“Science is not just about knowledge—it is about ensuring that everyone has the opportunity to live healthy, dignified lives, and that no one is left behind,” he added.
By Ifham Nizam
Features
Sharing the festive joy with ‘Awurudu Kaale’
Melantha Perera is well known as a very versatile musician.
He was involved with the band Mirage, as their keyboardist/vocalist, and was also seen in action with other outfits, as well, before embarking on a trip to Australia, as a solo artiste.
I now hear that he has plans to operate as a trio.
However, what has got many talking about Melantha, these days, is his awesome work with the visually impaired Bright Light Band.
They have worked out a special song for the Sinhala and Tamil New Year, aptly titled ‘Awurudu Kaale.’
Says Melantha: “This song has been created to celebrate the spirit of the Sinhala and Tamil New Year and to share the joy of the Awurudu season with all Sri Lankans”.
Yes, of course, Melantha composed the song, with the lyrics written collaboratively by Melantha, Badra, and the parents of the talented performers, whose creative input brought the song to life during moments of inspiration.

Melantha Perera: Awesome work with Bright Light Band
This meaningful collaboration reflects the strong community behind the Bright Light Band.
According to Melantha, accompaning the song is a vibrant video production that also features the involvement of the parents, highlighting unity, joy, and togetherness.
Beyond showcasing their musical talents, the visually impaired members of Bright Light Band deliver a powerful message, through this project, that their abilities extend beyond singing, as they also express themselves through movement and dance.
Melantha expressed his satisfaction with the outcome of the project and looks forward to sharing it with audiences across the country during this festive season.
He went on to say that Bright Light Band extends its sincere gratitude to Bcert Australia for their generous Mian sponsorship, the CEO of the company, Samath Fernando, for his continuous support in making such initiatives possible, and Rukshan Perera for his personal support and encouragement in bringing this project to completion.
The band also acknowledges Udara Fernando for his invaluable contribution, generously providing studio space and accommodating extended recording sessions to suit the children’s availability.
Appreciation is warmly extended to the parents, whose unwavering commitment from ensuring attendance at rehearsals to supporting the video production has been instrumental in the success of this project.
Through ‘Awurudu Kaale’, Bright Light Band hopes to spread festive cheer and inspire audiences, proving that passion and talent know no boundaries.
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