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Editorial

When cowards shiver

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Friday 20th January, 2023

A memorable line uttered by the eponymous protagonist in Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar—’Cowards die many times before their deaths’—comes to mind when one sees the grandees of the SLPP-UNP government shivering, unable to face the local government (LG) elections. It may be said, with apologies to the Bard, that cowards lose many times before their defeats.

When Prime Minister Dinesh Gunawardena recently tabled a ministerial report on a Bill that seeks to amend the Local Government Elections Act and increase youth representation, the Opposition let out a howl of protest, claiming that the government was trying to use that Bill to postpone the LG polls. Calling that move only a feint, we warned that a killer hook would follow. It seems to have come sooner than expected in the form of the Regulation of Election Expenditure Bill, riddled with flaws and deficiencies, which we will discuss in a separate comment.

Minister of Justice Dr. Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe told Parliament yesterday that the proposed law would not apply to the upcoming LG polls, but the Opposition is convinced otherwise. Both Opposition Leader Sajith Premadasa and NPP chief Anura Kumara Dissanayake are of the view that the Bill will cause the LG polls to be delayed if it becomes law. Dissanayake has said that after securing the passage of the Bill, the government will have someone seek a judicial intervention to make the EC abide by the new law, and the formulation of new regulations, etc., will take time and delay the LG polls. The Opposition therefore asked the government to introduce an amendment to the Bill to the effect that it would not be applicable to the LG election scheduled to be held soon. Its call went unheeded.

The government, which is all out to delay the LG polls, might succeed in its endeavour, but it will not be able to avoid crushing electoral defeats. The UNP-led Yahapalana government managed to postpone the Provincial Council elections, in 2017, but suffered humiliating defeats at subsequent elections.

State Minister Sanath Nishantha has been trounced at a co-operative society election in the Puttalam District, according to media reports! A Rajapaksa loyalist, Nishantha is a staunch supporter of President Ranil Wickremesinghe as well. One may wonder what possessed him to contest a co-operative society election, but his ignominious defeat could not have come at a worse time for the government, which pretends to be confident of winning the LG polls while doing everything in its power to postpone them. It has given the government a foretaste of what is to come. Now that a state minister has lost a co-operative society election, what is lying in store for the SLPP and UNP candidates in the LG election fray is not difficult to imagine.

It is a pity that Prime Minister Dinesh Gunawardena has been accused of being party to a conspiracy to postpone the LG polls. He endeared himself to the masses by standing up to repressive regimes and safeguarding the people’s franchise. He gained national prominence in 1983 by winning one of the 18 by-elections that the then President J. R. Jayewardene had to hold in the constituencies where the UNP lost the heavily-rigged referendum, which extended the life of the eighth parliament in the most despicable manner. Gunawardene won the Maharagama seat, and three other Opposition heavyweights, Anil Moonesinghe, Richard Pathirana and Amarasiri Dodangoda won Matugama, Akmeemana and Baddegama, respectively, despite savage violence unleashed by the JRJ regime, which also resorted to widespread rigging. Forty years on, Gunawardene has joined forces with Jayewardene’s nephew, Wickremesinghe, and is drawing heavy flak for trying to postpone elections. Richard Pathirana’s son, Ramesh, is a minister in the current regime, which is all out to deprive the people of their franchise. Justice Minister Rajapakshe made a name for himself as the Chairman of the COPE (Committee on Public Enterprises), in the late noughties, by exposing the fraudulent divestiture of Sri Lanka Insurance and Lanka Marine Services, and thereby paving the way for the nullification by the apex court of those shady deals. He too will sully his reputation if the new law to be made is used to postpone the LG polls despite his assurances to the House that it will not affect the upcoming mini elections.

Pity the land that is in need of leaders who have the backbones to face elections, one may say with apologies to Brecht.



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Editorial

CIABOC DG in JO’s crosshairs

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Saturday 30th May, 2026

The Joint Opposition (JO) has submitted a petition to the Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption (CIABOC), calling for the suspension of CIABOC Director General Ranga Dissanayake and a high-level probe into his allegedly arbitrary and biased conduct. It has claimed that Dissanayake is misusing his position to further the interests of the ruling NPP led by the JVP, and the integrity of the CIABOC investigations has been undermined by his political bias and arbitrary actions.

There are arguments for and against the Opposition’s campaign against the CIABOC DG. Dissanayake himself has denied the allegations against him as baseless, and it is being argued in some quarters that he is in the Opposition’s crosshairs because of the ongoing investigations into corrupt deals under the previous governments. The JO has cited in support of its petition against Dissanayake an affidavit the late SriLankan CEO Kapila Chandrasena submitted to court through his lawyers, claiming that Dissanayake intimidated him.

Allegations against Dissanayake have not been substantiated, but they have adversely impacted the image of the CIABOC. Hence the need for a thorough investigation into the charges contained in the JO’s petition, which is now in the public domain.

There are various allegations against many state officials in key positions. Some officials of the Attorney General’s Department, the police top brass and some secretaries to ministries have also been accused of misusing their authority to advance the government’s political agenda. Some public officials’ partiality and servility to the government in power severely erode public trust in the institutions they represent and make a mockery of the constitutional safeguards in place to ensure their independence. Constitutional provisions alone cannot depoliticise public institutions; state officials in key positions must assert their independence from politicians and be above reproach.

The JVP was instrumental in having the 17th Amendment to the Constitution introduced in 2001, paving the way for the establishment of the Independent Commissions to safeguard the independence of key state institutions vis-a-vis political interference. In 2015, it campaigned really hard to have the 18th Amendment replaced with the 19th Amendment to restore the 17th Amendment in all but name. In 2022, it joined forces with other Opposition parties and civil society groups to do away with the 20th Amendment and bring in the 21st Amendment, which revived the constitutional mechanisms the 19th Amendment had put in place to free the state service from the clutches of politicians.

But today the JVP-led NPP government stands accused of manipulating the Constitutional Council to elevate its loyalists among public officials to key positions in the state service and pressuring officials to toe its line. The Sri Lanka Association of Divisional Secretaries and Assistant Divisional Secretaries has protested against a controversial government decision to provide “Clean Sri Lanka” coordinators, who are said to be JVP cadres, with offices inside Divisional Secretariats. It has written to President Anura Kumara Dissanayake opposing the government move and warning that such deployment of “Clean Sri Lanka” operatives will only undermine the independence of the public service. The JVP/NPP is accused of trying to establish a parallel administration as part of a strategy to perpetuate its hold on power.

It is imperative that the CIABOC conduct a thorough probe into the JO’s allegations against DG Dissanayake, in a transparent manner. That is the only way it can clear its name, if at all. If the allegations at issue go uninvestigated, they will undermine the integrity of the CIABOC, and provide a fresh impetus to the Opposition’s campaign.

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Editorial

Strange bedfellows, ‘comrades’, and polls

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Friday 29th May, 2026

How long the Provincial Councils (PCs) will remain unelected is anybody’s guess. All of them are currently under the provincial Governors appointed by the President. There have been five Presidents and four governments since the conclusion of the last PC elections held on a staggered basis between 2012 and 2014. The JVP-NPP government is under increasing pressure to hold the much-delayed PC polls. The NPP’s National Policy Framework, A Thriving Nation: A Beautiful Life, promises to hold the PC elections within one year of forming a government. But the government is now wary of holding elections because its performance at last year’s local LG polls fell below its expectations just seven months after its spectacular win at the 2024 general election.

The Opposition has sought to capitalise on what is described as the government’s fear of elections. It is cranking up pressure on the JVP/NPP to stop trotting out lame excuses and hold the PC elections.

JVP General Secretary Tilvin Silva caused quite a stir the other day by declaring that funds allocated by Budget 2026 for the PC elections had been spent on disaster relief and therefore PC elections could not be held this year. The Opposition and Election monitors lashed out at the government for its efforts to postpone the PC polls on some flimsy pretext. The NPP politicians have since claimed there are funds for elections but stopped short of specifying when the PC polls will be held.

Now, the Election Commission says it is ready to conduct the PC polls soon if Parliament passes a law, enabling it to do so under the PR system instead of the Mixed Proportional system. The Treasury says it is ready to release funds. The Opposition says it is ready to face an election, but the JVP/NPP is not ready. It is unbecoming of a government that flaunts its two-thirds majority in Parliament to postpone elections.

Ironically, the Opposition political parties that castigate the JVP-NPP government for delaying the PC polls helped the UNP-led Yahapalana government amend the Provincial Council Elections Act in a deplorable manner and postpone the PC polls indefinitely. The JVP fully backed the Yahapalana administration, which avoided an election in 2017 for fear of suffering a midterm electoral defeat.

At a Joint Opposition media briefing on Wednesday, the UNP proposed that all Opposition parties close ranks and form a common electoral front to defeat the government in the next PC polls. That strategy has worked in the cooperative society elections, where the Opposition turned the tables on the government in many areas. Those contests serve as electoral weather vanes, indicating the direction of political winds. Opposition parties have gained control of many cooperative societies by preventing a split in the anti-government vote. That is no mean achievement for the Opposition.

However, the dynamics of contests and voting patterns do not remain constant at different elections, and therefore the question is how advisable it is to extrapolate a trend from the cooperative society elections and political alignments related to them.

The difficulty of bringing Opposition parties under one banner became evident on Wednesday itself. The SJB and the SLPP were not represented at the Opposition media briefing, according to press reports. It may be too early to say whether they, too, will join the grand Opposition alliance in the offing, but bringing a diverse group of politicians together to contest elections is a Herculean task.

Electoral alliances, formed by strange bedfellows with competing ambitions and espousing different ideologies are fissiparous and fragile. They tend to collapse even after being elected to power, plunging political institutions into chaos. History is full of such instances. The fate that befell the so-called National Unity government, or the Yahapalana administration, as it was popularly known, is a case in point. Three years into office, the uneasy alliance between the UNP and the SLFP collapsed, rendering that government dysfunctional to the extent of endangering national security. It is hoped that the government will muster the courage to hold the PC polls before long and that no councils will end up hung.

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Editorial

Futility of rhetoric and need for unity

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Thursday 28th May, 2026

The JVP-NPP government would have the public believe that the economy is resilient enough to absorb external shocks, and the rupee is stabilising. True, the rupee has staged a countertrend rally recently, but the situation is far from rosy. Anything is possible in this topsy-turvy world, with US President Donald Trump acting whimsically. Much more therefore needs to be done to strengthen the rupee. This requires a truly national effort. Sadly, the government and the Opposition are at daggers drawn, and do not see eye to eye even on crucial economic issues.

Opposition politicians parade their supposed knowledge of economic affairs in Parliament, which is full of backseat drivers who claim to know the way but cannot drive. They keep on telling the public what they think is wrong with the economy. There is absolutely no need for them to do so, for the country’s economic problems and their root causes are all too well known. What the public wants to know is how the Opposition proposes to solve them.

Interestingly, the SLPP, which mismanaged the economy and bankrupted the country, is also critical of the incumbent government’s economic performance. Its leaders are lecturing the government on how to run the economy. What it is doing is like a bankrupt businessman conducting lectures on business management.

While out of power, the JVP/NPP also lectured previous governments on how to manage the economy. Its leaders would even brag that raising funds to settle the country’s external debt was child’s play, but now they are struggling to increase the forex inflow and navigate a host of other economic issues. Some of them even claimed they would be able to build the country’s foreign currency reserves by asking their supporters residing overseas to send in dollars. Between saying and doing, many a pair of shoes is said to be worn out.

The JVP was prominent among the political parties that resisted President Ranil Wickremesinghe’s modus operandi to put the economy back on an even keel during the previous government. It also berated the IMF and pledged to renegotiate the ongoing bailout programme if voted into power. It opposed tax and tariff increases and demanded that relief be granted to the public even at the expense of the economic recovery measures. It insulted Wickremesinghe, claiming that he was too old to rule the country and derisively called him Seeya (grandpa). Today, in a strange twist of fate, the JVP-led NPP government has chosen to pursue Wickremesinghe’s economic policies (‘Seeyanomics’?). It is jacking up taxes and tariffs and curtailing state expenditure in a desperate bid to boost revenue.

President Wickremesinghe got his act together on the economic front, and made tough decisions, regardless of their political consequences, and straightened up the economy, but he could not win the last presidential election because he succumbed to the arrogance of power and blundered on the political front, shielding as he did crooks of all sorts. Other political leaders, especially President Anura Kumara Dissanayake should learn from Wickremesinghe’s experience.

The Opposition’s right to criticise the government and its policies, economic or otherwise, cannot be questioned. It must act as a countervailing force against the party in power, but it should stop playing politics with the economy and allow the government to do what needs to be done to shore up the country’s foreign currency reserves and strengthen the rupee.

A strategy to mitigate the adverse impact of external pressures on the country’s foreign currency reserves consists in curtailing the foreign exchange outflow. The need for import restrictions, etc., cannot be overstated. Governments usually fight shy of adopting such drastic yet essential measures, fearing political consequences and protests by their political rivals. Procrastination worsens crises. This is why a consensual approach is needed to resolve existential issues facing the nation.

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