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Midweek Review

Controversial post-Aragalaya defence partnerships

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Russian troops at Mattala airport

The US almost succeeded in signing SOFA (Status of Forces Agreement) during the Yahapalana administration, as well as finalising the MCC (Millennium Challenge Corporation) meant to promote economic growth, open markets, and increased living standards in selected countries. SOFA was to allow deployment of US personnel in Sri Lanka. The then President Maithripala Sirisena thwarted SOFA while Premier Ranil Wickremesinghe’s representative Tilak Marapana was having discussions on the matter at the highest level in Washington.

Close on the heels of the first-ever joint tactical counter-terrorist exercise ‘Wolverine Path 2025,’ involving Russian and Sri Lankan troops, at the Army Training School, in Maduru Oya (25 Oct to 4 Nov 2025), Sri Lanka further expanded its partnership with the US.

The signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU), formalising the defence partnership between the Montana National Guard, the US Coast Guard District 13, and the Sri Lanka Armed Forces, in terms of the Department of War’s State Partnership Programme (SPP), took place at the Defence Ministry here, on 14th Nov.

Julie Chung, who is serving as the US Ambassador in SL, since 25 February, 2022, Adjutant General of the Montana National Guard, Brigadier General Trenton Gibson, and the Secretary of Defence, Air Vice Marshal (retd.) Sampath Thuyacontha, signed the MoU.

The US, in a statement issued through the Public Diplomacy section of their Embassy, in Colombo, declared that the MoU marked a historic milestone in US-Sri Lanka defence relations, underscoring both nations’ shared commitment to regional stability, maritime security, and professional military collaboration in the Indo-Pacific to advance their common goal of peace through partnership.

Before we discuss the US-Sri Lanka relations, under the Trump-AKD administrations, let me focus on the Russia-Sri Lanka initiative. This should be deliberated, taking into consideration the US-led EU, UK reaction to the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war and the inevitable consequences. Direct accusations had been made against the US over the removal of Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan in April 2022 through the passage of a no-confidence motion, overthrowing of Sri Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, in July 2022, and Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s ouster in August 2024. Allegations have also been made regarding the toppling of Nepali Prime Minister K.P. Sharma Oli in September this year. In the cases of Pakistan and Nepal, direct references have been made apropos them earning the wrath of the US for not condemning the launch of thevRussian offensive in Feb 2022. But hardly any Westerner talks about the Maidan coup, staged by the US that toppled the then elected sitting Ukrainian President, which brought about the ensuing events.

The contingent of troops from the Russian Federation arrived in an Ilyushin Il-76, a multi-purpose, fixed-wing, four-engine turbofan strategic airlifter that landed at the Mattala Rajapaksa International Airport (MRIA), on the night of 24 Oct, and was welcomed by the Director General of Infantry, K.J.N.M.P.K. Nawarathna, GoC of 12 Division Maj. Gen. W.M.N.K.D. Bandara, and the Exercise Director, Maj. Gen. S.A.U.A. Solangaarachchi. There hadn’t been previous Russian military flights to Mattala in the Southern Province.

The Russian Embasy, in Colombo, said that the exercise was finalized in August this year.

Two days before the conclusion of ‘Wolverine Path 2025,’ the Russian Ambassador in Colombo, Levan Dzhagaryan, visited the Army Training School at Maduru Oya, his first to such a Lankan military facility. The Ambassador’s visit underscored Russia’s interest in further developing bilateral relations. Against the backdrop of the US seeking to isolate Russia, Moscow is determined to ensure such US efforts are countered at every possible level. Time-tested Russia-India relations seems to be the target of stepped-up US actions, meant to weaken New Delhi’s resolve to maintain the same. Russian President Putin’s visit to New Delhi emphasises the Moscow strategy as the US upped the ante.

Russian news agency TASS reported the exercise in a 5 Nov, 2025, online report, headlined ‘Russia, Sri Lanka hold first joint military exercise.’

Post-ACSA developments

The signing of the latest US-Sri Lanka defence agreement prompted a person, very much familiar with the developments taking place, to query whether the new MoU between the NPP government, which is led by the JVP that had been once a pretender of anti-Americanism and outwardly opposed Sri Lanka having anything to do with US imperialism, but would now allow the US to have access to Sri Lanka ports and airports?

It would be pertinent to mention that the JVP gave up the anti-American project, around 2009/2010, when it joined forces with the UNP to back retired war- winning General Sarath Fonseka’s candidature at the 2010 presidential election. That happened during Somawansa Amarasinghe’s leadership.

Had the JVP retained its much-hyped Marxist ideology, it couldn’t, under any circumstances, join that post-war political project that also involved the US. WikiLeaks shed light on the US involvement in the abortive bid to help Fonseka win the presidency.

The Illankai Thamil Arasu Kadchi (ITAK)-led Tamil National Alliance (TNA) that had to declare the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) as the sole representative of the Tamil speaking people, in 2001, wouldn’t have thrown its weight behind the UNP-JVP project if not for the US pressure on their late leader R. Sampanthan. Although the JVP quit the UNP-led coalition, in 2019, to pave the way for JVP leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake to contest the presidential election under the NPP symbol, the US obviously remained a key factor in their overall thinking.

The latest US-Sri Lanka MoU on defence cannot be discussed in isolation. It wouldn’t be fair to find fault with the NPP without examining the gradual transformation of US-Sri Lanka relations in the defence field, beginning with the much-talked-about Acquisition and Cross-Servicing Agreement (ACSA), signed in March 2007. President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s government didn’t even bother to consult its coalition partners before the then Defence Secretary, Gotabaya Rajapaksa, signed the ACSA, on Sri Lanka’s behalf. The then US Ambassador, Robert O. Blake, signed on behalf of the US.

Those who had been critical of Sri Lanka entering into the ACSA never bothered to examine how Ambassador Blake intervened on behalf of Sri Lanka to pave the way for specific intelligence transfer during 2007 and 2008 to enable the Navy to destroy four LTTE floating warehouses, carrying weapons for the Tigers, on the high seas. Although ACSA was not meant to facilitate such assistance, the US decision may have been significantly influenced by Colombo entering into the ACSA for a period of 10 years.

In 2017, the Sirisena-Wickremesinghe Yahapalana government extended the agreement. The JVP, that backed Sirisena’s candidature at the 2015 presidential election and backed the Wickremesinghe-led government, though it refrained from taking any portfolios, but, interestingly, didn’t oppose the ACSA renewal. The ACSA is in operation today. The US has unrestricted access to all Sri Lankan ports, including the China-operated Hambantota port and airports.

It would be pertinent to mention that the 2007 ACSA consisted of just eight pages. But the 2017 ACSA comprised 83 pages. In spite of the controversy, the Yahapalana government never released it.

Thanks to the growing US-India political-military-economic-social relations, since 2014, US military activity here is no longer an issue. During the period the Soviet Union challenged the US supremacy, India, as a close ally of that grouping, strongly opposed the US role here. That attitude didn’t change even after the collapse of the Soviet Union as India remained suspicious of US strategies. In fact, the ACSA could have been finalised during Ranil Wickremesinghe’s premiership, in 2002, if not for New Delhi’s objections.

But Wickremesinghe, when he had the opportunity, gave the go ahead for the renewal of the ACSA, while President Sirisena tried to distance himself from that agreement.

NPP goes a step further

The JVP-led NPP government appears to have no qualms in going along with strategies – initiated years, if not decades ago, by interested parties. These strategies should be discussed taking into account the US-India partnership, India’s own approach to Sri Lanka and Sri Lanka’s relations with Quad countries, namely the US, Australia, Japan and India. The developing hostilities between the combined West, with the backing of India and China, are evident, though the ridiculous US stand pertained to India’s relations with Russia. The resumption of direct flights between India and China, after five years, couldn’t have happened at a better time as the West makes a determined bid to weaken major economies. Last year they reached a landmark agreement on border patrols.

Japan recently accommodated Sri Lanka in its Official Security Assistance (OSA) programme that can be described as an expansion of the Comprehensive Partnership, entered into in 2015. The two countries finalised an OSA agreement during President Anura Kumara Dissanayake’s visit to Tokyo, in late September this year, to pave the way for Japanese assistance to the Navy. Japan had never provided any armaments or equipment to Sri Lankan armed forces during the war, though Colombo Dockyard Limited (CDL), managed by Japan’s Onomichi Dockyard, sold Fast Attack Craft (FACs) to the Navy.

Now the Japanese had exited the CDL to enable India’s premier state-owned shipyard, Mazagon Dock Shipbuilders Limited (MDL), to pay USD 52.96 mn for 51% stake of the company. Mazagon is an enterprise affiliated with the Indian Defence Ministry.

The JVP simply ignored their erstwhile comrades Wimal Weerawansa and Frontline Socialist Party (Peratugami Pakshaya) protests over the Indian take-over of the CDL and the defence MoU signed in April this year, along with six other secret MoUs during Indian leader Narendra Modi’s visit here.

The signing of the latest US-Sri Lanka agreement indicates that the US strategy is on track. The NPP has proved, in no uncertain terms, its readiness to face challenges and proceed under extreme criticism, in and outside Parliament. The way the NPP government proceeded with US and Indian initiatives indicated that the government is sure of its approach. The NPP’s continued commitment to the International Monetary Fund (IMF)-led post-Aragalaya recovery programme somewhat wrong-footed the thoroughly disorganised Opposition.

The main Opposition Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) has ended up endorsing the NPP’s approach, vis-a-vis India, by declaring its commitment and support for special relations with India. But the SJB remained silent on the NPP’s delaying a formal decision on President Ranil Wickremesinghe’s moratorium on Chinese research vessels visiting Sri Lanka during 2024. In spite of the NPP promise to make its position known on the issue, the government remains silent even at the end of 2025.

Ambassador Chung, who arrived here several weeks before the launch of Aragalaya on 31 March, 2022, throughout the violent protest campaign, unwaveringly threw her weight behind it. That campaign was brought to a successful conclusion on 09 July, 2022, when President Gotabaya Rajapaksa was forced to flee from the President’s House, by violent mobs, and clandestinely boarded SLNS Gajabahu, formerly USCGC Sherman, Hamilton-class high endurance cutter, to reach Trincomalee safely. The US interventions in Sri Lanka have to be examined against the backdrop of their strong-minded efforts to dislodge the Rajapaksas, against the backdrop of growing China-Sri Lanka relations.

On behalf of the US, Ambassador Chung worked behind the scenes, in mid-2022, to convince the then Speaker, Mahnda Yapa Abeywardena, to fill Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s vacancy. Had she succeeded, Ranil Wickremesinghe couldn’t have received the Parliament’s blessings to complete the remainder of Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s five-year term. Chung vigorously opposed Wickremesinghe’s decision to evict Aragalaya activists from the Old Parliament, and the Galle Face protest site.

The military thwarted the JVP bid to capture Parliament as Wickremesinghe stood his ground. Wickremesinghe should receive public appreciation for taking a stand against the bid to cause anarchy and Mahinda Yapa Abeywardena for declining the despicable US push for filling Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s vacancy, contrary to constitutional provisions.

The JVP, however, regardless of consequences, proceeded with what had been envisaged by Wickremesinghe. The UNP leader lacked the courage to enter into a MoU on defence with India. President Dissanayake did. No one would have thought any government would consider selling the controlling stake of CDL to India. President Dissanayake did.

Ironically this is the same party that led violent protests against India in the past, especially after the signing of the Indo-Lanka Accord of July 1987, even burning hundreds of Indian made state owned buses, already paid for by Sri Lankan tax payers, among other acts of brutal violence that killed so many innocent people.

Remember how the JVP led, and inspired protests, compelled President Gotabaya Rajapaksa to cancel the tripartite agreement involving India, Japan and Sri Lanka to develop the Eastern Container Terminal (ETC) during the 2020-2021 period. India and Japan teamed up with Sri Lanka’s leading conglomerate John Keells to develop the adjacent West Container Terminal (WCT) that commenced commercial operations in April 2025.

The FSP, over the last weekend, flayed the JVP over entering into another defence-related agreement with the US. Wasantha Mudalige, on behalf of the FSP, lambasted the government over entering into defence-related agreements with the US, India and Japan. Alleging that the government cooperated with those countries in line with their overall geo-political strategies.

An unprecedented Chinese reaction to Japanese comment on possible military intervention in support of Taiwan has underscored an extremely dangerous developing situation.

The finalisation of the US-India Defence Framework Agreement on 31 Oct, 2025, at a time the US has imposed, indisputably, one of the highest tariffs on any country, and new the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between India and Israel, signed four days later, to enhance defence, industrial, and technological cooperation, prove New Delhi’s firm commitment to overall US strategy. The US has gradually transformed its relations with India, since 1995, and recent developments indicate that there is no turning back. Sri Lanka, too, faces a similar situation.

SAFN taps Daya, Boggs

The South Asia Foresight Network (SAFN), a leading South Asian think tank, operating under the Millennium Project, recently appointed ex-US Department of State employee, Daya Gamage, who served at the American diplomatic mission, in Colombo, from 1970 to 1994, and Dr. Robert Boggs, with nearly four decades of field experience, as a political analyst across South Asia – from Kathmandu, Islamabad, and Delhi to Colombo – as Senior Fellows (Honorary).

Would the two ex-State Department employees make a difference by helping to improve fair coverage, thereby influencing the decision makers?

Gamage authored the widely discussed book Tamil Tigers’ Debt to America: US Foreign Policy Adventurism and Sri Lanka’s Dilemma, a critical study of the intersections between US foreign policy and Sri Lanka’s internal conflict dynamics. The 2016 book is a must read for those interested in knowing the truth.

SAFN has acknowledged that it felt the need to bring in Sri Lankan experts in the absence of sufficient knowledge and expertise to handle Sri Lanka issues, especially related to the West.

South Asia Foresight Network (SAFN) at the Millennium Project, in Washington DC, in which Asanga Abeygunasekera, son of the late controversial politician Ossie Abeygunasekera, killed in a Tiger suicide attack on a UNP election rally, along with its late leader, Gamini Dissanayake, and scores of others, is the Executive Director, is on record as having said Gamage and Boggs could be most useful to bridge this vast lacuna as they have the expertise and understanding to provide some enlightenment to issues not adequately addressed at present by the SAFN and Millennium Project.

 

By Shamindra Ferdinando



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Midweek Review

Year ends with the NPP govt. on the back foot

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President Dissanayake addresses Parliament as PM Dr. Harini Amarasuriya looks on. Dissanayake is the leader of both the JVP and NPP

The failure on the part of the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP)-led National People’s Power (NPP) government to fulfil a plethora of promises given in the run up to the last presidential election, in September, 2024, and a series of incidents, including cases of corruption, and embarrassing failure to act on a specific weather alert, ahead of Cyclone Ditwah, had undermined the administration beyond measure.

Ditwah dealt a knockout blow to the arrogant and cocky NPP. If the ruling party consented to the Opposition proposal for a Parliamentary Select Committee (PSC) to probe the events leading to the November 27 cyclone, the disclosure would be catastrophic, even for the all-powerful Executive President Anura Kumara Dissanayake, as responsible government bodies, like the Disaster Management Centre that horribly failed in its duty, and the Met Department that alerted about the developing storm, but the government did not heed its timely warnings, directly come under his purview.

The NPP is on the back foot and struggling to cope up with the rapidly developing situation. In spite of having both executive presidency and an overwhelming 2/3 majority in Parliament, the government seems to be weak and in total disarray.

The regular appearance of President Dissanayake in Parliament, who usually respond deftly to criticism, thereby defending his parliamentary group, obviously failed to make an impression. Overall, the top NPP leadership appeared to have caused irreparable damage to the NPP and taken the shine out of two glorious electoral victories at the last presidential and parliamentary polls held in September and November 2024 respectively.

The NPP has deteriorated, both in and out of Parliament. The performance of the 159-member NPP parliamentary group, led by Prime Minister Dr. Harini Amarasuriya, doesn’t reflect the actual situation on the ground or the developing political environment.

Having repeatedly boasted of its commitment to bring about good governance and accountability, the current dispensation proved in style that it is definitely not different from the previous lots or even worse. (The recent arrest of a policeman who claimed of being assaulted by a gang, led by an NPP MP, emphasised that so-called system change is nothing but a farce) In the run-up to the November, 2024, parliamentary polls, President Dissanayake, who is the leader of both the JVP and NPP, declared that the House should be filled with only NPPers as other political parties were corrupt. Dissanayake cited the Parliament defeating the no-confidence motions filed against Ravi Karunanayake (2016/over Treasury Bond scams) and Keheliya Rambukwella (2023/against health sector corruption) to promote his argument. However, recently the ongoing controversy over patient deaths, allegedly blamed on the administration of Ondansetron injections, exposed the government.

Mounting concerns over drug safety and regulatory oversight triggered strong calls from medical professionals, and trade unions, for the resignation of senior officials at the National Medicines Regulatory Authority (NMRA) and the State Pharmaceutical Corporation (SPC).

Medical and civil rights groups declared that the incident exposed deep systemic failures in Sri Lanka’s drug regulatory framework, with critics warning that the collapse of quality assurance mechanisms is placing patients’ lives at grave risk.

The Medical and Civil Rights Professional Association of Doctors (MCRPA), and allied trade unions, accused health authorities of gross negligence and demanded the immediate resignation of senior NMRA and SPC officials.

MCRPA President Dr. Chamal Sanjeewa is on record as having said that the Health Ministry, NMRA and SPC had collectively failed to ensure patient safety, citing, what he described as, a failed drug regulatory system.

The controversy has taken an unexpected turn with some alleging that the NPP government, on behalf of Sri Lanka and India, in April this year, entered into an agreement whereby the former agreed to lower quality/standards of medicine imports.

Trouble begins with Ranwala’s resignation

The NPP suffered a humiliating setback when its National List MP Asoka Ranwala had to resign from the post of Speaker on 13 December, 2024, following intense controversy over his educational qualification. The petroleum sector trade union leader served as the Speaker for a period of three weeks and his resignation shook the party. Ranwala, first time entrant to Parliament was one of the 18 NPP National List appointees out of a total of 29. The Parliament consists of 196 elected and 29 appointed members. Since the introduction of the National List, in 1989, there had never been an occasion where one party secured 18 slots.

The JVP/NPP made an initial bid to defend Ranwala but quickly gave it up and got him to resign amidst media furor. Ranwala dominated the social media as political rivals exploited the controversy over his claimed doctorate from the Waseda University of Japan, which he has failed to prove to this day. But, the JVP/NPP had to suffer a second time as a result of Ranwala’s antics when he caused injuries to three persons, including a child, on 11 December, in the Sapugaskanda police area.

The NPP made a pathetic, UNP and SLFP style effort to save the parliamentarian by blaming the Sapugaskanda police for not promptly subjecting him for a drunk driving test. The declaration made by the Government Analyst Department that the parliamentarian hadn’t been drunk at the time of the accident, several days after the accident, does not make any difference. Having experienced the wrongdoing of successive previous governments, the public, regardless of what various interested parties propagated on social media, realise that the government is making a disgraceful bid to cover-up.

No less a person than President Dissanayake is on record as having said that their members do not consume liquor. Let us wait for the outcome of the internal investigation into the lapses on the part of the Sapugaskanda police with regard to the accident that happened near Denimulla Junction, in Sapugaskanda.

JVP/NPP bigwigs obviously hadn’t learnt from the Weligama W 15 hotel attack in December, 2023, that ruined President Ranil Wickremeinghe’s administration. That incident exposed the direct nexus between the government and the police in carrying out Mafia-style operations. Although the two incidents cannot be compared as the circumstances differ, there is a similarity. Initially, police headquarters represented the interests of the wrongdoers, while President Wickremesinghe bent over backwards to retain the man who dispatched the CCD (Colombo Crime Division) team to Weligama, as the IGP. The UNP leader went to the extent of speaking to Chief Justice Jayantha Jayasuriya, PC, and Speaker Mahinda Yapa Abeywardena to push his agenda. There is no dispute the then Public Security Minister Tiran Alles wanted Deshabandu Tennakoon as IGP, regardless of a spate of accusations against him, in addition to him being faulted by the Supreme Court in a high-profile fundamental rights application.

The JVP/NPP must have realised that though the Opposition remained disorganised and ineffective, thanks to the media, particularly social media, a case of transgression, if not addressed swiftly and properly, can develop into a crisis. Action taken by the government to protect Ranwala is a case in point. Government leaders must have heaved a sigh of relief as Ranwala is no longer the Speaker when he drove a jeep recklessly and collided with a motorcycle and a car.

Major cases, key developments

Instead of addressing public concerns, the government sought to suppress the truth by manipulating and exploiting developments

* The release of 323 containers from the Colombo Port, in January 2025, is a case in point. The issue at hand is whether the powers that be took advantage of the port congestion to clear ‘red-flagged’ containers.

Although the Customs repeatedly declared that they did nothing wrong and such releases were resorted even during Ranil Wickremesinghe’s presidency (July 2022 to September 2024), the public won’t buy that. Container issue remains a mystery. That controversy eroded public confidence in the NPP that vowed 100 percent transparency in all its dealings. But the way the current dispensation handled the Port congestion proved that transparency must be the last thing in the minds of the JVPers/NPPers holding office.

* The JVP/NPP’s much touted all-out anti-corruption stand suffered a debilitating blow over their failure to finalise the appointment of a new Auditor General. In spite of the Opposition, the civil society, and the media, vigorously taking up this issue, the government continued to hold up the appointment by irresponsibly pushing for an appointment acceptable to President Dissanayake. The JVP/NPP is certainly pursuing a strategy contrary to what it preached while in the Opposition and found fault with successive governments for trying to manipulate the AG. It would be pertinent to mention that President Dissanayake should accept the responsibility for the inordinate delay in proposing a suitable person to that position. The government failed to get the approval of the Constitutional Council more than once to install a favourite of theirs in it, thanks to the forthright position taken by its civil society representatives.

The government should be ashamed of its disgraceful effort to bring the Office of the Auditor General under its thumb:

* The JVP/NPP government’s hotly disputed decision to procure 1,775 brand-new double cab pickup trucks, at a staggering cost exceeding Rs. 12,500 mn, under controversial circumstances, exposed the duplicity of that party that painted all other political parties black. Would the government rethink the double cab deal, especially in the wake of economic ruination caused by Cyclone Ditwah? The top leadership seems to be determined to proceed with their original plans, regardless of immeasurable losses caused by Cyclone Ditwah. Post-cyclone efforts still remain at a nascent stage with the government putting on a brave face. The top leadership has turned a blind eye to the overwhelming challenge in getting the country back on track especially against the backdrop of its agreement with the IMF.

Post-Cyclone Ditwah recovery process is going to be slow and extremely painful. Unfortunately, both the government and the Opposition are hell-bent on exploiting the miserable conditions experienced by its hapless victims. The government is yet to acknowledge that it could have faced the crisis much better if it acted on the warning issued by Met Department Chief Athula Karunanayake on 12 November, two weeks before the cyclone struck.

Foreign policy dilemma

Sri Lanka moved further closer to India and the US this year as President Dissanayake entered into several new agreements with them. In spite of criticism, seven Memorandums of Understanding (MoUs), including one on defence, remains confidential. What are they hiding?

Within weeks after signing of the seven MoUs, India bought the controlling interests in the Colombo Dockyard Limited for USD 52 mn.

Although some Opposition members, representing the SJB, raised the issue, their leader Sajith Premadasa, during a subsequent visit to New Delhi, indicated he wouldn’t, under any circumstances, raise such a contentious issue.

Premadasa went a step further. The SJB leader assured his unwavering commitment to the full implementation of the 13th Amendment to the Constitution that was forced on Sri Lanka during President JRJ’s administration, under the highly questionable Indo-Lanka Accord of July, 1987, after the infamous parippu drop by Indian military aircraft over Jaffna, their version of the old gunboat diplomacy practiced by the West.

Both India and the US consolidated their position here further in the post-Aragalaya period. Those who felt that the JVP would be in a collision course with them must have been quite surprised by the turn of events and the way post-Aragalaya Sri Lanka leaned towards the US-India combine with not a hum from our carboard revolutionaries now installed in power. They certainly know which side of the bread is buttered. Sri Lanka’s economic deterioration, and the 2023 agreement with the IMF, had tied up the country with the US-led bloc.

In spite of India still procuring large quantities of Russian crude oil and its refusal to condemn Russia over the conflict in Ukraine, New Delhi has obviously reached consensus with the US on a long-term partnership to meet the formidable Chinese challenge. Both countries feel each other’s support is incalculably vital and indispensable.

Sri Lanka, India, and Japan, in May 2019, signed a Memorandum of Cooperation (MoC) to jointly develop the East Container Terminal (ECT) at the Colombo Port. That was during the tail end of the Yahapalana administration. The Gotabaya Rajapaksa administration wanted to take that project forward. But trade unions, spearheaded by the JVP/NPP combine, thwarted a tripartite agreement on the basis that they opposed privatisation of the Colombo Port at any level.

But, the Colombo West International Terminal (CWIT) project, that was launched in November, 2022, during Ranil Wickremesinghe’s presidency, became fully operational in April this year. The JVP revolutionary tiger has completely changed its stripes regarding foreign investments and privatisation. If the JVP remained committed to its previous strategies, India taking over CDL or CWIT would have been unrealistic.

The failure on the part of the government to reveal its stand on visits by foreign research vessels to ports here underscored the intensity of US and Indian pressure. Hope our readers remember how US and India compelled the then President Wickremesinghe to announce a one-year moratorium on such visits. In line with that decision Sri Lanka declared research vessels wouldn’t be allowed here during 2024. The NPP that succeeded Wickremesinghe’s administration in September, 2024, is yet to take a decision on foreign research vessels. What a pity?

The NPP ends the year on the back foot, struggling to cope up with daunting challenges, both domestic and external. The recent revelation of direct Indian intervention in the 2022 regime change project here along with the US underscored the gravity of the situation and developing challenges. Post-cyclone period will facilitate further Indian and US interventions for obvious reasons.

****

Perhaps one of the most debated events in 2025 was the opening of ‘City of Dreams Sri Lanka’ that included, what the investors called, a world-class casino. In spite of mega Bollywood star Shah Rukh Khan’s unexpected decision to pull out of the grand opening on 02 August, the investors went ahead with the restricted event. The Chief Guest was President Anura Kumara Dissanayake, who is also the Finance Minister, in addition to being the Defence Minister. Among the other notable invitees were Dissanayake’s predecessor Ranil Wickremesinghe, whose administration gave critical support to the high-profile project, worth over USD 1.2 bn. John Keells Holdings PLC (JKH) and Melco Resorts & Entertainment (Melco) invested in the project that also consist of the luxurious Nüwa hotel and a premium shopping mall. Who would have thought President Dissanayake’s participation, even remotely, possible, against the backdrop of his strong past public opposition to gambling of any kind?

Don’t forget ‘City of Dreams’ received a license to operate for a period of 20 years. Definitely an unprecedented situation. Although that license had been issued by the Wickremesinghe administration, the NPP, or any other political party represented in Parliament, didn’t speak publicly about that matter. Interesting, isn’t it, coming from people, still referred by influential sections of the Western media, as avowed Marxists?

 

By Shamindra Ferdinando

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Midweek Review

The Aesthetics and the Visual Politics of an Artisanal Community

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Through the Eyes of the Patua:

Organised by the Colombo Institute for Human Sciences in collaboration with Millennium Art Contemporary, an interesting and unique exhibition got underway in the latter’s gallery in Millennium City, Oruwala on 21 December 2025. The exhibition is titled, ‘Through the Eyes of the Patua: Ramayana Paintings of an Artisanal Community’ and was organized in parallel with the conference that was held on 20 December 2025 under the theme, ‘Move Your Shadow: Rediscovering Ravana, Forms of Resistance and Alternative Universes in the Tellings of the Ramayana.’ The scrolls on display at the gallery are part of the over 100 scrolls in the collection of Colombo Institute’s ‘Roma Chatterji Patua Scroll Collection.’ Prof Chatterji, who taught Sociology at University of Delhi and at present teaches at Shiv Nadar University donated the scrolls to the Colombo Institute in 2024.

The paintings on display are what might be called narrative scrolls that are often over ten feet long. Each scroll narrates a story, with separate panels pictorially depicting one component of a story. The Patuas or the Chitrakars, as they are also known, are traditionally bards. A bard will sing the story that is depicted by each scroll which is simultaneously unfurled. For Sri Lankan viewers for whom the paintings and their contexts of production and use would be unusual and unfamiliar, the best way to understand them is to consider them as a comic strip. In the case of the ongoing exhibition, since the bards or the live songs are not a part of it, the word and voice elements are missing. However, the curators have endeavoured to address this gap by displaying a series of video presentations of the songs, how they are performed and the history of the Patuas as part of the exhibition itself.

The unfamiliarity of the art on display and their histories, necessitates broader explanation. The Patua hail from Medinipur District of West Bengal in India. Essentially, this community of artisans are traditional painters and singers who compose stories based on sacred texts such as the Ramayana or Mahabharata as well as secular events that can vary from the bombing of the Twin Towers in New York in 2001 to the Indian Ocean Tsunami of 2004. Even though painted storytelling is done by a number of traditional artisan groups in India, the Patua is the only community where performers and artists belong to the same group. Hence, Professor Chatterji, in her curatorial note for the exhibition calls them “the original multi-media performers in Bengal.”

‘The story of the Patuas’ also is an account of what happens to such artisanal communities in contemporary times in South Asia more broadly even though this specific story is from India. There was a time before the 21st century when such communities were living and working across a large part of eastern India – each group with a claim to their recognizably unique style of painting. However, at the present time, this community and their vocation is limited to areas such as Medinipur, Birbhum, Purulia in West Bengal and Dumka in Jharkhand.

A pertinent question is how the scroll painters from Medinipur have survived the vagaries of time when others have not. Professor Chatterji provides an important clue when she notes that these painters, “unlike their counterparts elsewhere, are also extremely responsive to political events.” As such, “apart from a rich repertoire of stories based on myth and folklore, including the Ramayana and other epics, they have, over many years, also composed on themes that range from events of local or national significance such as boat accidents and communal violence to global events such as the tsunami and the attack on the World Trade Centre.”

There is another interesting aspect that becomes evident when one looks into the socio-cultural background of this community. As Professor Chatterji writes, “one significant feature that gives a distinct flavour to their stories is the fact that a majority of Chitrakars consider themselves to be Muslims but perform stories based largely on Hindu myths.” In this sense, their story complicates the tension-ridden dichotomies between ethno-cultural and religious groups typical of relations between groups in India as well as more broadly in South Asia, including in Sri Lanka. Prof Chatterji suggests this positionality allows the Patua to have “a truly secular voice so vital in the world that we live in today.”

As a result, she notes, contemporary Patuas “have propagated the message of communal harmony in their compositions in the context of the recent riots in India and the Gulf War. Their commentaries couched in the language of myth are profoundly symbolic and draw on a rich oral tradition of storytelling.” What is even more important is their “engagement with contemporary issues also inflects their aesthetics” because many of these painters also “experiment with novel painterly values inspired by recent interaction with new media such as comic books and with folk art forms from other parts of the country.”

From this varied repertoire of the Patuas’ painterly tradition, this exhibition focusses on scrolls portraying different aspects of the Ramayana. In North Indian and the more dominant renditions of the Ramayana, the focus is on Rama while in many alternate renditions this shifts to Ravana as typified by versions popular among the Sinhalas and Tamils in Sri Lanka as well as in some areas in several Indian states. Compared to this, the Patua renditions in the exhibition mostly illustrate the abduction of Sita with a pronounced focus on Sita and not on Ravana, the conventional antagonist or on Rama, the conventional protagonist. As a result, these two traditional male colossuses are distant. Moreover, with the focus on Sita, these folk renditions also bring to the fore other figures directly associated with her such as her sons Luv and Kush in the act of capturing Rama’s victory horse as well as Lakshmana.

Interestingly, almost as a counter narrative, which also serves as a comparison to these Ramayana scrolls, the exhibition also presents three scrolls known as ‘bin-Laden Patas’ depicting different renditions on the attack on New York’s Twin Towers.

While the painted scrolls in this collection have been exhibited thrice in India, this is the first time they are being exhibited in Sri Lanka, and it is quite likely such paintings from any community beyond Sri Lanka’s shores were not available for viewing in the country before this. Organised with no diplomatic or political affiliation and purely as a Sri Lankan cultural effort with broader South Asian interest, it is definitely worth a visit. The exhibition will run until 10 January 2026.

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Midweek Review

Spoils of Power

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Power comes like a demonic spell,

To restless humans constantly in chains,

And unless kept under a tight leash,

It drives them from one ill deed to another,

And among the legacies they thus deride,

Are those timeless truths lucidly proclaimed,

By prophets, sages and scribes down the ages,

Hailing from Bethlehem, Athens, Isipathana,

And other such places of hallowed renown,

Thus plunging themselves into darker despair.

By Lynn Ockersz

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