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Editorial

Welcome to the political circus

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The currently ongoing project of the Rajapaksas, banished from office only a few moths ago but now crawling out of the woodwork, is a clear demonstration that anything is possible in this land like no other. We give all credit to President Ranil Wickremesinghe for dragging his feet on making more cabinet appointments despite the pressure to do so. RW is too well aware of public opinion on that score to rush into anything like that especially at this time when all kinds of straws, like bringing Namal baba back into the cabinet, have already been thrown in the wind.

Chief Opposition Whip Lakshman Kiriella told parliament on Thursday that Mahinda Rajapaksa is now on a comeback trail. He reminded former speaker and elder brother Chamal Rajapaksa of his earlier public comment, during the height of the Aragalaya, that his malli had misjudged the time at which he should have relinquished power. Kiriella added that such advice should be retendered. Many will agree that the game MR is playing now is not intended to win anything for himself but in the interest of the dynastic succession of his son, Namal Rajapaksa. However that be, the way the papadam crumbles will be played out down the road in the months to come.

Most would be astonished at Rajapaksa resilience and Rajapaksa brass. Who could have imagined in their wildest imagination that Gotabaya Rajapaksa, no doubt seeking US residence having renounced citizenship to run for president, would be back home as quickly as he did to the comforts bestowed on ex-presidents by Sri Lanka’s impoverished taxpayers? True there is no Mahinda sulanga today such as that created by the likes of Wimal Weerawansa, Udaya Gammanpila and many others when crowds streamed to Carlton House at Tangalle where a stunningly defeated ex-president held court. Many of those who fanned that wind (or gale, if we may say so) have now broken ranks, but that is another story. Maithripala Sirisena and Ranil Wickremesinghe must take the blame for the failure to nail the crooks when they were out of office. Sri Lanka’s massive tragedy was the premature death of Ven Madulwawe Sobitha, the moral force that led to a common opposition candidate defeating Mahinda Rajapaksa.

The Rajapaksa brass alluded to in the previous paragraph refers to the organizers of the rallies backing their return. The first of these was organized in Kalutara by Rohitha Abeygunawardene, also known as Rattaran. His own explanation for that nickname is that was what his mother lovingly called him as a baby and infant. But there are other allegations about the origin of the name. Be that as it may, Mahinda Rajapaksa glowingly spoke of the rally’s organizer at the event and YouTube watchers are privy to everything that was said there. The next event followed at Nawalapitiya and it was organized by the redoubtable Mahindananda Aluthgamage who was Minister of Agriculture when the fertilizer ban was imposed. He has lately attempted to distance himself from that disastrous policy decision claiming that the subject was under the purview of a state minister under the agriculture ministry. He’s also on record saying he advised President Gotabaya to go slow on implementating that policy.

That will be laughed out of court by thousands of farmers who burned hundreds of effigies of the former minister who was (and is) a doughty defender of the Rajapaksas. The next rally, we are told, will be at Kurunegala and guess who the organizer is going to be? Right, first guess, none other that Johnston Fernando, one of the most visible proponents of the Rajapaksa creed and its policies. How much ice these events are cutting with the general public who will vote at the next election is anybody’s guess. Mahinda Rajapaksa went on record recently that “we are not afraid of elections.” But the perception of the many the due local government polls will not take place in March as scheduled. No doubt the public warmly welcomed President Ranil Wickremesinghe’s recent announcement that he intends halving the present number of local councilors standing at 8,000 to 4,000 prior to the next election. He also mentioned giving the executive powers of a pradeshiya sabha to a chairman-based committee rather than a single chairman saying draft laws for this will be prepared before the next local elections.

The voters who are sick of elected leeches fattening themselves off the public purse will cheer these measures. But Wickremesinghe and his government must not delude themselves that the public is not well aware that the proposed changes will take time to enter the statute. That would mean no local elections in March 2023. Given the country situation today, with Sri Lanka in the grips of its worst ever economic crisis with many of its people struggling to survive, we desperately need a government with a mandate to rule. We don’t have that now. Wickremesinghe has been installed in office by his discredited predecessor, elected by the parliamentary majority of the Rajapaksas’ SLPP and not the Sri Lankan people.

He wields executive power courtesy of the SLPP of which he’s a prisoner at least until he can constitutionally dissolve parliament in February 2023. Right now the ruling cabal needs an election, any election, like a hole in the head. Whether the oppositions dictum of no postponement of elections on which a declaration was signed last week can hold water given the current political structure is therefore very much in doubt.



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Editorial

No-shows, ‘witch-hunt’ and waste of energy

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Teachers’ trade unions are protesting against what they describe as a political witch-hunt against some of their members who did not attend a meeting chaired by Prime Minister and Minister of Education Dr. Harini Amarasuriya in Tangalle on Sunday, 15 March, 2026. Many seats in the Tangalle Municipal Council auditorium, where the meeting was held, were left empty by no-shows. The trade unions have taken exception to a letter sent by the Tangalle Zonal Education Office to the school principals in the area, asking them to explain why their staff members did not attend the aforesaid meeting. Their consternation is understandable. When the show cause letter, dated 24 March 2026, became public and got bad press, some trade unionists speculated that the government politicians might try to dissociate themselves from it. There is reason to believe that the letter at issue would not have been issued if the absence of teachers had not become a matter of concern to the government, and therefore it is unlikely that the Zonal Education Director who called for explanation from the school principals has done so unbeknownst to her superiors in the Education Ministry.

Teachers or other state workers should be free to decide whether to attend meetings, etc., held outside their regular working hours, especially during weekends, and they must not be penalised for skipping such events. In a way, the above-mentioned show cause letter can be considered a kind of comeuppance for the state-sector teachers who, together with their trade union leaders, went out of their way to bring the JVP/NPP to power. So did other state employees and their trade unions, as evident from the postal vote results in 2024. Now, it is mandatory for them to attend even unofficial meetings chaired by the ruling party politicians!

Why should government politicians travel all the way from Colombo to faraway places to chair meetings while the country is facing a crippling energy crisis, which has prompted the ruling party politicians to urge the public to reduce fuel consumption. Shouldn’t they practise what they preach?

VIP motorcades consist of dozens of vehicles, some which operate undercover, blending into traffic at present as the current leaders came to power, promising to disband VIP security divisions and do away with huge security contingents. Whenever they travel, one can see lead cars, pilot vehicles, decoy cars and many other vehicles carrying counter-assault teams. They ought to travel less and help save state funds and precious fuel these days. They must follow the energy-saving guidelines issued by the Commissioner General of Essential Services to the state sector. Almost all the meetings attended by the government leaders can be held online. State officials also have to travel long distances in official vehicles to attend the events ‘graced’ by politicians in power. Nothing usually comes of such meetings, which only help politicians wax eloquent and say very little in many words.

In Pakistan, fuel allocation for the state sector has been halved as an energy crisis management measure; 60% of the state-owned vehicles have been taken off the roads, and, most of all, fuel quotas for ministers have been abolished. Sri Lanka must adopt such austerity measures, and ensure that the politicians share in the hardships faced by the public. After all, the present-day leaders came to power, promising to use public transport. This is the best time for them to make good on their election promises, and travel with the ordinary people in crowded buses and trains. They claim to be very popular, and a research organisation would have the public believe that the approval rating of the incumbent government has increased to a whopping 65%. So, there is no reason why the ruling party politicians should hesitate to travel with hapless commuters.

About two months ago, President Anura Kumara Dissanayake went out for a constitutional with only a single security officer, in Jaffna, and the government released a video of his famous walk to gain political mileage. If the former war zone is safe for the Head of State and Commander-in-Chief to move about without heavy security, why can’t other government politicians travel in buses and trains or cycle to work? Above all, they insist in Parliament and elsewhere that the law-abiding citizens do not have to worry about frequent shooting incidents, which they describe as turf wars among drug dealers. They need not worry about their safety at all, for they say they have no underworld links. Shouldn’t they set an example to the public at least during the current fuel crisis by cancelling meetings and using public transport?

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Editorial

More surprises in the Gulf War

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Saturday 28th March, 2026

US President Donald Trump has postponed his much-advertised plan to attack Iran’s national grid and critical energy infrastructure for 10 more days as part of his efforts to find an off-ramp with Tehran. He has asked Tehran to declare a ceasefire and come for talks on his own terms or face a series of attacks of unprecedented ferocity. One of his main conditions for negotiations has left the world puzzled; he wants Iran to abandon its nuclear programme, while insisting that he has obliterated Iran’s nuclear potential by destroying all its nuclear facilities and neutralising the threat of the nuclearisation of the Islamic state. If so, he has already achieved his goal, and there is absolutely no need for him to have negotiations with Iran on its nuclear programme, keep on pouring US taxpayers’ money into an endless war, deploy US ground troops to the region and, most of all, continue to cause more economic hardships to the rest of the world.

Trump is apparently without a specific goal or an exit strategy in the ongoing war. He is now trying to have the world believe that he has won the war, and is claiming that Tehran has allowed some oil tankers flying the Pakistan flag to sail through the Strait of Hormuz to appease him! Turning down Trump’s offer to talk, Iran has derisively said the US has been negotiating with itself. Tehran is leveraging everything possible to crank up economic pressure on the US and Israel. It has already made the world economy scream in a bid to turn international opinion against Washington and Tel Aviv. According to unverified reports, it has also threatened to go so far as to target the submarine internet cables in the Red Sea and disrupt global connectivity unless the US and Israel stop attacks. Iran has made no official statement about this issue, but it is capable of severing the undersea fibre-optic cables in case of other Gulf nations continuing to back the US in the ongoing conflict and/or its power and energy facilities coming under attack again. These undersea cables are used for global financial transactions worth trillions of dollars, international communication and data flows, cloud devices, etc., according to media reports. The White House must be under tremendous pressure from the US tech giants and other multinationals to ensure the safety of the submarine cables in the Red Sea.

Meanwhile, the latest developments on the Middle East front may have reminded Trump of former US President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s words of wisdom. An ex-Supreme Commander of the Allied Expeditionary Force in Europe during World War II, Eisenhower famously said, “Every war is going to astonish you in the way it occurred and in the way it is carried out.” While Trump is trying to have the Strait of Hormuz reopened for international navigation, the threat of another vital chokepoint in the Gulf region being closed has emerged.

The Houthis of Yemen have threatened to close the Bab el-Mandeb Strait, which connects the Red Sea to vital international shipping lanes. The geographical location of this chokepoint has made it vulnerable to Houthi attacks. The Houthis say they are ready to join the war any time. Trump and Netanyahu have already bitten off more they can chew in the Persian Gulf, and how they are going to face the emerging threat is anybody’s guess. The Houthis have a history of disrupting shipping routes.

Airstrikes alone will not help the US, Israel and its allies keep the Hormuz Strait and Bab el-Mandeb Strait open for international navigation. It will be a huge gamble for the US to send its warships and ground troops to gain control of them, for they will be within the Iranian and Houthi missile range.

There seems to be no end to threats and challenges the US and Israel are facing in their war on Iran, and they have plunged the entire world into chaos in the name of their leaders’ dreams. Unacceptable as what Iran is doing by way of retaliation may be, that is the way the cookie crumbles in military conflicts, especially in asymmetrical warfare. The US carried out atomic bomb attacks on Japan purportedly to end a war. Israel has already bombed Gaza back to the Stone Age, but continues to carry out airstrikes in that part of Palestine.

It is up to the US and Israel to make a serious effort to put the genie back into the bottle in the Persian Gulf. Other nations are suffering for no fault of theirs, and eminent economists fear that the world is heading for a global recession.

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Editorial

Farmers’ woes signal food shortages

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Friday 27th March, 2026

Vegetable prices have plummeted at the special economic centres, which serve as collection hubs in predominantly agricultural areas, such as Dambulla, because most trucks cannot operate for want of diesel. Farmers are unable to dispose of their produce due to transport problems. Usually, it is in February, March and early April that farmers save some money for the traditional New Year. However, vegetable prices have increased elsewhere due to high transport costs and supply disruptions caused by a diesel scarcity, but farmers gain nothing from these price hikes, which benefit only traders. The prices of imported food items are also soaring due to increasing shipping costs caused by the Middle East war. Importers who have built stocks in view of the Avurudu season will laugh all the way to the bank.

Unsold vegetable stocks are discarded as there are no storage facilities. It is a crime to let food items go to waste. Successive governments have ignored the need to help farmers store their produce properly and reduce post-harvest waste. In April 2025, President Anura Kumara Dissanayake and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi opened the Dambulla Agricultural Storage Complex with a capacity of 5,000 metric tons. It is reportedly equipped with temperature and humidity control mechanisms to reduce post-harvest losses by approximately 40%, stabilise fluctuations in agricultural product prices, ensure the supply of high-quality food to consumers and enhance agricultural sustainability. This storage facility, which would have been a boon to farmers in the area, is still not operational, some Opposition politicians who visited it have told the media.

The transport problems faced by the farming community are not due to high fuel prices alone. Transporters and farmers cannot obtain diesel because the government is supplying huge amounts of diesel to the oil-fired power plants, which are working overtime to make up for a shortfall in coal-fired electricity generation due to the procurement of substandard coal for the Norochcholai power plant. Paddy farmers have been left without diesel for harvesting and therefore the cost of harvesting has increased, and this increase is bound to reflect in the prices of rice.

Former Director of Agriculture K. B. Herath told the media yesterday that the prices of parboiled rice and samba may increase to Rs. 300 and Rs. 400, respectively in June/July due to a sharp drop in the paddy yield, and the situation would take a turn for the worse owing to a fertiliser shortage.

The government has been compelled to restrict the distribution of fertiliser for paddy cultivation. Commissioner General of the Department of Agrarian Development said yesterday fertiliser would be issued only through the Agrarian Service Centres to prevent hoarding. Such measures become unavoidable during crises. However, the irony of the proposed method of restricting fertiliser distribution may not have been lost on the discerning public. The JVP, which leads the incumbent government, has become reliant on the Agrarian Service Centres, 240 of which it destroyed in the late 1980s. If only it had realised the value of these institutions at that time and spared them!

Meanwhile, the closure of the Hormuz Strait has adversely impacted the global fertiliser supply. The Persian Gulf is also a major hub of global fertiliser production and exports. Iran, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and Oman are among the world’s leading exporters of nitrogen fertilisers, including urea and ammonia, accounting for roughly 30–35 percent of global urea exports and around 20–30 percent of ammonia exports, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the UN. Overall, up to 30 percent of global fertiliser exports are channelled through the Strait of Hormuz, the closure of which has severely affected international fertiliser supply chains. Production cuts and shipping constraints have stalled an estimated 3–4 million tonnes of fertiliser trade per month, and global fertiliser prices could average 15–20 percent higher during the first half of 2026 if the crisis continues, FAO says. This is a frightening proposition, as we said in a previous editorial comment. There is no gainsaying that Sri Lanka has to manage the available fertiliser stocks carefully in view of the global supply disruptions, but a drop in the fertiliser application will surely cause a countrywide yield decline.

If the current fertiliser scarcity persists, the farming community will have to combine the application of available chemical fertiliser with organic amendments, which the incumbent government leaders berated the previous administration for promoting.

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