Connect with us

Features

Anawilundawa’s mangrove revival: Where science, community and Wildlife Department converge

Published

on

Nature enthusiasts engaging with Professor Jayakody, sharing knowledge and passion for conservation

The journey into Anawilundawa begins on water, but the story unfolding there is far deeper than the stillness of a wetland morning.

As the raft moved along the Dutch Canal, the sanctuary slowly revealed itself — the quiet shimmer of water, the tangled silhouettes of mangroves, the calls of birds rising over the reeds, and beyond them the broad ecological tapestry of one of Sri Lanka’s most valuable wetlands.

At first glance, it is a place of beauty and calm. But beneath that serenity lies a story of environmental injury and painstaking recovery — a story in which science, state stewardship and community resilience are coming together to restore a landscape once scarred by shrimp farming.

At the heart of that story is the Accelerated Natural Regeneration of Mangroves (ANRM) Project at the Anawilundawa Ramsar Sanctuary, one of the most significant mangrove restoration initiatives now under way in Sri Lanka. It is a project led by the Department of Wildlife Conservation (DWC), with the Wildlife and Nature Protection Society (WNPS) as its principal science partner, and shaped by the scientific guidance of Professor Sevvandi Jayakody, whose work on blue carbon ecosystems and mangrove restoration has helped make Anawilundawa a model of ecosystem repair rather than symbolic greening.

This is not merely a project about planting mangroves. It is about restoring an entire ecosystem — its hydrology, soils, biodiversity and ecological processes — while also building a stronger relationship between conservation and the communities living at the edge of the wetland.

A Ramsar wetland under pressure

Anawilundawa is one of Sri Lanka’s six Ramsar-designated wetlands and a sanctuary of exceptional ecological importance. It supports a mosaic of freshwater, terrestrial and coastal ecosystems, and is especially renowned for its rich birdlife, drawing local and international visitors alike. But its significance goes well beyond avifauna. The sanctuary also contains vital blue carbon ecosystems such as mangroves and saltmarshes, which store carbon, support fisheries, protect coastlines and provide habitat for a range of flora and fauna.

Yet, like many ecologically rich landscapes in Sri Lanka, Anawilundawa has not been immune to degradation. Shrimp farming left parts of the sanctuary deeply disturbed, with abandoned ponds,

damaged soils and disrupted natural water flows. The result was not simply the loss of trees, but the weakening of an entire ecological system — one in which mangroves, micro-organisms, fish nurseries and wetland functions had all been compromised.

The challenge before the Department of Wildlife Conservation, therefore, was not one of beautification. It was one of ecological rehabilitation on a meaningful scale.

That challenge gave rise to the ANRM project in 2020, with the DWC taking the lead in restoring around 45 hectares of degraded mangrove habitat on abandoned shrimp farms within the sanctuary. From the outset, the Department’s role has been central — not only as the custodian of the protected area, but as the state institution responsible for ensuring that restoration is integrated into long-term conservation management rather than treated as a one-off intervention.

The Department of Wildlife Conservation’s role in restoration

In Sri Lanka, the Department of Wildlife Conservation is most often associated with the protection of elephants, leopards, national parks and protected areas. But Anawilundawa offers a reminder that the Department’s role is also deeply tied to habitat restoration and ecosystem recovery — especially in wetlands and coastal landscapes where degradation can quietly erode biodiversity over time.

At Anawilundawa, the DWC’s leadership is not confined to administration. The Department has provided the institutional backbone for the ANRM initiative, anchoring it within the sanctuary’s management framework and working with scientific partners to ensure that restoration is carried out with ecological rigour.

In a country where environmental projects sometimes remain fragmented between agencies, NGOs and short-term donor interventions, the Department’s stewardship is a critical part of what gives Anawilundawa continuity and legitimacy.

The project’s success also reflects a broader truth: that restoring a Ramsar wetland cannot be left to ad hoc planting drives or episodic enthusiasm. It requires a state institution with a long-term mandate, field presence and responsibility for the site. In that sense, the ANRM initiative has become not only a mangrove restoration project, but also a demonstration of what the Wildlife Department can achieve when conservation management is paired with science-based ecological restoration.

Professor Sevvandi Jayakody and the science behind the revival

If the Department of Wildlife Conservation provides the institutional backbone of the project, Professor Sevvandi Jayakody has emerged as one of its most important scientific voices.

To walk through Anawilundawa with Professor Jayakody’s work in mind is to understand that mangrove restoration is not about planting seedlings and hoping for the best. It is about asking a harder question: What must be repaired in the ecosystem for mangroves to return and survive on their own?

That question lies at the core of the accelerated natural regeneration model being used at Anawilundawa. Rather than relying solely on planting, the project seeks to restore the natural water flows that were disrupted by shrimp farming. By excavating canals and reconnecting the hydrology of abandoned shrimp farm plots, the ANRM initiative is working to recreate the conditions under which mangroves once thrived.

This is what sets the project apart from many restoration efforts. The objective is not merely to increase mangrove cover, but to restore the functioning of the entire ecosystem — its water circulation, soil quality, nutrient dynamics and biodiversity. Once water flow is re-established, microfauna and microflora can begin to recover, soils can regain vitality, and mangroves can re-establish themselves in a more natural and resilient way.

That philosophy — restoring the ecosystem, not just the trees — bears Professor Jayakody’s scientific stamp. It reflects a deeper ecological seriousness that is often missing from restoration discourse.

Mangroves are not ornaments to be planted for ceremonial effect; they are part of a living system that depends on salinity, hydrology, soil health and species compatibility.

Discussing the progress and impact of the ongoing conservation projects and future initiatives

The project also takes care to use native mangrove species suited to the area. Some, such as Rhizophora mucronata, are planted directly in the restoration plots, while others are first raised in nurseries before being transferred to the field.

A visitor centre that tells a larger story

The field visit to Anawilundawa made it clear that the project is not only about work in the mud, but also about building a wider narrative around restoration.

At the visitor centre, presentations offered a structured overview of the ANRM effort and its scientific significance. Professor Sevvandi Jayakody and Waruni Tissera outlined the broader restoration framework, while other researchers and young scientists connected to the project highlighted studies linked to mangroves, wetlands and blue carbon ecosystems.

Among them were Amindhi Pieris, Dhananji Wijerathna and Udara Rajapaksha, whose presentations reflected the way Anawilundawa has become a site of learning as much as restoration.

That intellectual dimension is one of the project’s strongest features. The ANRM site is not being treated merely as a patch of land to be repaired; it is being used as a platform to deepen scientific understanding of wetland health, pollution, biodiversity and carbon storage.

Anawilundawa as a living research hub

The ANRM site has supported a wide range of studies by undergraduates and young scientists, transforming the sanctuary into a living research hub. Among the areas of inquiry are plastic debris contamination, heavy metal contamination, water quality, soil physico-chemical parameters, and total ecosystem carbon stocks in natural, restored and degraded mangrove systems.

These studies are not academic luxuries. They speak directly to the environmental questions Sri Lanka must confront if it is serious about protecting wetlands and coastal ecosystems. How polluted are the waters feeding into mangrove habitats? How do degraded shrimp farms compare with restored plots in terms of soil and carbon dynamics? How can restoration be measured beyond the survival of planted saplings?

The research supported at Anawilundawa also extends into strikingly diverse territory.

It includes work on the antimicrobial and antioxidant properties of mangrove species, herbal tea formulations, eco-friendly dye extracts, microplastic contamination in shrimps, and the isolation of potential probiotic bacteria from lagoon systems.

Professor Jayakody sharing valuable insights on the mangrove ecosystems of Sri Lanka

The breadth of these studies reveals something essential: mangroves are not isolated stands of coastal vegetation. They are ecosystems deeply connected to climate, water quality, fisheries, food systems, pollution and even human health. Anawilundawa, in that sense, is not just restoring habitat; it is generating the knowledge needed to understand why such habitats matter.

In the field, where restoration becomes real

The visitor centre presentations provided the intellectual framework. The field visit provided the proof.

Walking through the restoration plots, watching invasive species removal and observing the practical challenges of wetland recovery, it became evident that the ANRM project is defined by labour as much as by vision. Restoration here is not a slogan. It is a discipline of monitoring water, maintaining nurseries, collecting seeds, observing plots, removing ecological threats and adjusting methods as conditions change.

The birdwatching session that followed served as a reminder of what is ultimately at stake. Anawilundawa’s birdlife is one of the sanctuary’s most visible treasures, but birds also function as ecological signals — indicators of habitat quality and biodiversity health. In a recovering wetland, their presence is part of the story of resilience.

A restoration rooted in community

No account of Anawilundawa would be complete without the community that lives alongside it.

The restoration site borders Muthupanthiya village, and the ANRM project has sought to ensure that local people are not bystanders to conservation, but participants in it.

Schoolchildren from Muthupanthiya and nearby areas take part in awareness programmes and field visits, while the project has also supported local schools. During National Mangrove Day 2025, school libraries in Muthupanthiya and Helambawatawana were expanded, and career guidance sessions on conservation-related professions were held for children.

The project has also supported local livelihoods through seed funding for small businesses linked to non-timber forest products. One beneficiary, Shyamali Ruwankumari, used support for herbal tea production and later expanded into a spice business.

Community members are also employed in various practical roles — helping build nurseries, collect seeds and operate rafts during surveys, field visits and sample collection. During the visit by delegates from the Blue Carbon Initiative and the Indian Ocean Rim Association, it was the community that transported visitors by boat and prepared lunch for the 125 scientists and experts who visited the site.

That traditional lunch, served after a morning in the field, was more than hospitality. It symbolised the deeper ethos of the project: restoration at Anawilundawa is not being performed for outsiders. It is being woven into village life, local livelihoods and local ownership.

Recognition — and a blueprint for the future

The ANRM initiative has already earned recognition beyond Sri Lanka. It was identified as a key factor in Sri Lanka winning a UN Flagship Award for mangrove restoration in 2024, and it has also secured support from the United States Forest Service.

But the real significance of Anawilundawa lies not in awards. It lies in what the project reveals about the future of environmental restoration in Sri Lanka.

It shows that the Department of Wildlife Conservation can play a far more visible role in ecological restoration, not just species protection. It shows that science-led restoration, shaped by experts such as Professor Sevvandi Jayakody, can move beyond ceremonial planting to tackle the deeper ecological wounds of degraded wetlands. It shows that research, community participation and conservation management can be woven into one coherent effort. And it shows that a damaged landscape, if treated with patience and seriousness, can begin to recover.

In an era of climate anxiety, coastal erosion and biodiversity decline, mangroves are no longer peripheral to Sri Lanka’s future. They are part of its natural defence system, its carbon storage capacity, its fisheries support base and its ecological resilience.

As the day at Anawilundawa drew to a close and the wetland slipped back into silence, one thought lingered above all others.

This is not just a story about mangroves returning to abandoned shrimp ponds.

It is a story about what becomes possible when the Wildlife Department’s stewardship, scientific leadership and community participation come together in service of a damaged ecosystem.

by Ifham Nizam ✍️



Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Features

Mayors of Working Class Manchester and Melting Pot New York pose new challenges to Regressive Populism in Britain and America

Published

on

Way back in 1844, Friedrich Engels, a wealthy school dropout from Germany, wrote the first of his many books, “The Condition of the Working Class in England in 1844.” He was 24. The book soon became a classic on nascent urbanism and an intimate account of the making of the industrial working class. The setting and the location for both was Manchester, the burgeoning 19th century Lancashire town, which Engels called “the most important” and “the most sensational” city in England, after London. He went on to describe it as “the principal site of … the Industrial Revolution … the ur-scene, concentrated specimen and paradigm of what such a revolution was portending both for good and bad.”

Now nearly 200 years later and 10 years after Brexit, not to mention the splendid rise and the stately fall of a whole empire in between, a man from Manchester is going to London to see the King and become Britain’s next Prime Minister. Its seventh in a decade and fourth in five years. The national mood seems ready both for good and bad. There is no other choice.

Andrew Murray (Andy) Burnham, the popular Mayor of Greater Manchester will soon replace the beleaguered Sir Keir Starmer whose premiership finally unraveled over the last weekend leading to the Monday morning resignation. Sir Kier left with genuine grace, great pathos and total disbelief in the rapid fall from high promises to hopeless frustration. It was also quite different from the end games of Starmer’s five predecessors, all of them Tories.

James Cameron, who started the procession in 2016 by calling a boneheaded referendum on Brexit, left in a mighty hurry no sooner than his gamble had backfired. His successor Teresa May thought she could reconcile the Brexit blunder and the British reality but failed and left. Boris Johnson came as a clown and left as a clown but only after being the wrecking villain of pre-Brexit Britain. Liz Truss, out of depth and out of sync, lasted little over a month. Rishi Sunak had all the depth he needed to succeed as a fiscally conservative PM, but he had no chance of winning an election after Johnson’s antics as Prime Minister. Inadvertently, as well, Sunak became the convenient immigrant prototype to lead Britain’s grand old party with its white elders fleeing formal politics and its rank and file flocking to the anti-immigrant Reform UK Party.

It is the rise of Reform UK and the thrashing it gave to both Labour and Conservatives in this year’s local elections that hastened the collapse of the Starmer government and Starmer’s exit as Prime Minister. There were other factors too, both personal and political, which contributed to Starmer’s rapid and ultimate failure. His new successor Andy Burnham is a different political persona even though there will likely be not much difference in the policies of the two men. The great British hope now is that Burnham’s personality and Mayoral record in Manchester would help him stem the Reform tide in the country and reverse its current momentum. Time will tell.

Keir Starmer: Rapid Rise and Sudden Fall

In the election that Prime Minister Sunak called in 2024, Starmer led the Labour Party to a seemingly landslide victory, but that was also hugely lopsided. Labour won 411 out of 650 (63%) seats in the House of Commons, but it managed only 34% of the popular vote. “Loveless landslide” was the verdict of the pundits, but the tenuousness of the victory was lost in the euphoria of Labour returning to power after 14 years in opposition wilderness. Prime Minister Starmer and the whole government started on the wrong political foot on every government initiative and even announcements.

The worst of them was to limit Winter Fuel Payment benefit that helped millions of households in England and Wales. The irony of it is that this payment was perhaps the first benefit measure of the Labour government under Tony Blair in 1997. It was the brainchild of then Chancellor Gordon Brown who introduced it as a universal benefit for pensioners. Tory governments after 2010 were critical of the universality of the program but would not cancel or scale back what had become a popular program. Starmer as Prime Minister dared to go where Tories wouldn’t and the backlash was swift and became the start of the government’s slide even before it had found its footing.

Although acknowledged for his skills and strengths in policy, Starmer turned out to be an ineffectual and bumbling politician. Surprisingly so for someone who was an accomplished barrister and a highly successful prosecutor with interest in human rights. As a prominent Member of UK’s Haldane Society of Socialist Lawyers, Starmer had extended his professional tentacles to the Soviet Union before its collapse, to South Africa after apartheid, to Northern Ireland, as well as European and Caribbean countries. All of this has come to nought at 10 Downing Street.

Despite his failure as Prime Minister, Starmer was not new to politics or the Labour Party. Like most Labour politicians, Starmer’s political roots also go back to his parents who were both working class Labour supporters. Starmer himself became a young Labour activist as a teenager and a member of the university Labour Clubs at Leeds and at Oxford. He was even associated with one of the Trotskyite tendencies, the Pabloites, in the Labour Party. His entry into parliamentary politics came late, becoming an MP in in 2015 at the age of 53, a year before Brexit, and became leader of the Labour Party in his first attempt following Labour’s defeat in the 2019 election and the resignation of Jeremy Corbyn.

The trajectory of Andy Burnham, the next Prime Minister, has been a different one within the Labour Party. Born in Manchester, in 1970, and eight years younger to Starmer, Burnham made an early start in parliament. He was young at 30 when he was first elected in the 2001 general election that started Tony Blair’s second term as PM. Burnham made his mark as an MP, held several junior minister positions under Blair, and joined the full cabinet under Gordon Brown. Ideologically, Burnham was to the left of Blair and closer to Gordon Brown, the socialist from Glasgow. After the Labour defeat in 2010, Burnham ran for the party leadership twice, in 2010 and again in 2015, and lost both, first finishing fourth to Ed Miliband and later finishing second to Jeremy Corbyn. In the 2020 leadership race that Starmer won, he was supported by Burnham who by then had become Mayor of Manchester.

Mayor Burnham as Prime Minister

Burnham had left Westminster in 2017 for local politics, contested the Greater Manchester mayoral election, and was elected Mayor garnering 63% of the vote and winning majorities in all ten of the regional boroughs. He has since been re-elected twice as Mayor with the same popular vote. During Covid-19, Burnham provided an alternative local leadership to fighting the pandemic that was quite the contrast to the blunders at the national level under Boris Johnson.

With the unpopularity of the Starmer government, the blowup from the Epstein scandal, and the local elections debacle, there was pressure within the Labour Party for Mayor Burnham to return to Westminster and challenge Starmer for the leadership. After months of bureaucratic party infighting, a by-election path was found for Burnham to become an MP and be eligible as a leadership candidate.

On June 18, Burnham won the by-election as a Labour candidate in Makerfield, a riding in the Greater Manchester Area where a vacancy had been created by the resignation of the incumbent Labour MP. Burnham won impressively with a 54.8% vote, upending Reform UK’s gains in the local elections. He won a plurality of votes from all the main parties – Conservative, Lib-Dem and Green – with all their candidates losing their deposits. He ran on his record of achievements as Mayor – in public housing, public transport, public inquires into child sexual exploitation and facilitating universal access to university education.

Already as an MP and Minister, Burnham had gained national prominence – promoting a National Care Service paralleling the National Health Service, and for making a statement in parliament condemning the cover-up of police abuse and suggesting that the cover up had been “advanced in the committee rooms of this House and in the press rooms of 10 Downing Street.” Those who are supporting Burnham now are obviously hoping that he would be able to reignite the old Labour flame that went dead under Starmer. This was unfortunate because Starmer had already moved the government to the left on many policy fronts, including re-nationalization of sectors that had failed under privatization.

Andy Burnham is not the first City Mayor to become British Prime Minister. There have been two rather unsettling predecessors. First was Neville Chamberlain who was the Mayor of Birmingham during World War I, before he became Prime Minister at the start of World War II. Most recently, Boris Johnson served two terms (2008-2016) as the Mayor of London before becoming Prime Minister. Andy Burnham should know Britain’s Mayoral history well, but he will also know that he is cut from a different political cloth and that he is entering Downing Street in a different era facing different challenges.

One of the areas where Burnham’s predecessor slipped up and never recovered was in dealing with Donald Trump and his mercurial ways. The more hopeful among British commentators have been citing from one of Burnham’s campaign speeches during the Makerfield by election: “This is a final chance to change. This is what people said directly to me on the hundreds of doorsteps that I stood on. We must hear it, we must act upon it and we must get it right. There will be no second chance. But there is a chance now from this result tonight to build a new politics based on unity and hope. Turning away from the path that takes us to a divided, dark politics of the kind we see in the United States.” The battle might be on, to put it mildly.

Mamdani’s New York Magic

Unlike in Britain, there is no national mood as such in the US. Instead, there are many moods across the nation with the pushes and pulls between them shaping the course of politics in this midterm election year. In one of those moods in New York, Mayor Mamdani has pulled off a stunning sweep within the Democratic Party in the primary nomination contests to elect party candidates for New York’s Congressional Districts in the November election. Mamdani endorsed three candidates, all of them members of the Democratic Socialists of America. All three of them have defeated establishment candidates of the Democratic Party and won nominations to contest the November election.

Before the primary vote in New York on Tuesday, none of the mainstream pundits expected Mamdani to pull this off. After Tuesday, none of them have stopped talking about it. President Trump was exercised enough to declare on social media, his only pulpit, that “America the Beautiful will NEVER be a Communist Country!!!”. Giving fake praise to the Mayor, Trump wrote that Mamdani had, “pulled through three solid Communists, and has received loud and universal applause from the Fake News Media. Congratulations Mr. Mayor.”

It is too late for Mr. Trump to learn the differences between democratic socialism in America and communism that is in his nightmare. The Democratic Socialists of America are a broad civil society organization that grew from a membership of 6,000 when Bernie Sanders ran his primary campaign for the 2016 presidential election that Trump ended up winning. And thanks mostly to Trump and his executive actions, the membership has now grown to over 100,000 with activists in every state. The primary reason for their being is opposing Trump’s indefensible policies and initiatives – from immigration to domestic welfare and foreign warfare. New York is the organization’s nerve centre even as it is the vibrant microcosm of the nation’s diversities and contradictions.

One of New York’s Congressional Districts (the Seventh) is the country’s “Commie Corridor”, while the 12th District is America’s wealthiest enclave. Progressive Democrats have won nominations in both as well as in the 10th and the 13th Districts. President Kennedy’s grandson, Jack Schlossberg, went to defeat in the 12th, while the surprising nominee for the 13th District is a firebrand democratic socialist, Darializa Avila Chevalier. Ms. Chevalier is an Afro-Latina from the Dominican Republic who is a community organizer and a sociology Ph.D. student at Columbia.

Ms. Chevalier, known to be “like AOC, but to the Left,” defeated Adriano Espaillat, a 71-year old veteran Latino Congressman also the from Dominican Republic and the first Dominican to be elected to the US Congress. Mr. Espaillat was once an ‘undocumented immigrant’, a category that Trump and his MAGA base now want deported. His defeat sent shockwaves through the American Latino establishment, but to his Latina critics, the Congressman had grown too flabby in office in spite of his own beginnings and early challenges.

The convulsions in New York may or may not make an impact on the course of the campaign for and the results of the midterm elections in November. But they are indicative of new grassroots forces and processes that define the emerging political push backs against racist, right wing and anti-immigrant populism, not only in the US but also in Britain and other western democracies. The current transition in Britain reflects that dynamic.

The essence of the new thrust is that it is shaking up the traditional opposition of American Democrats to right wing populism, which has become too conventional and even elitist. The campaigns of Hillary Clinton and Kamala Harris were culturally elitist and they lost to the most financially elitist presidential candidate in American history. Former President Barak Obama is trying hard to prevent his post-presidential politics from being similarly branded as politics of elitism in retirement.

What sustains this elitism is the myriad of establishment silos claiming to represent every ethnic and immigrant group in America. They operate transactionally at the top in utter isolation from their own grassroots. The genius of Mamdani is in attacking these silos and establishing grassroots solidarity irrespective of religion, ethnicity and immigrant diversity. He has demonstrated that this approach can work in New York’s melting pot, and that it can be politically successful. Trump, the consummate market politician, gets this instinctively. But traditional and elitist Democrats are too timid to embrace the new mode politics in New York City.

by Rajan Philips ✍️

Continue Reading

Features

Colombia’s Revenge Vote

Published

on

Columbia’s new President De la Espriella

During the election period, soon after the killing of the so-called FARC (The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Columbia) dissident commander Iván Idrobo, alias Marlon, a question began circulating across Colombia. Can the Colombian state finally become strong enough that armed groups no longer step into the vacuum where government authority should exist?

The timing could hardly have been more symbolic. While President Gustavo Petro presented the military operation against Marlon as a major victory against illegal armed structures, his own political project was entering its weakest moment. The first left-wing president in Colombia’s modern history, who promised to transform the country through social reform, peace building and a different relationship between the state and marginalized communities, was watching political power shift towards a completely different force.

Colombia narrowly chose Abelardo de la Espriella, a millionaire lawyer and political outsider who built his entire campaign around the image of a political predator. He called himself “El Tigre” and offered voters a message centered on strength, punishment and national revival. In many ways, his victory places Colombia within the same political current that has lifted figures such as Javier Milei in Argentina and Nayib Bukele in El Salvador. It is a movement fuelled by frustration, anger and exhaustion with traditional politics, but also by a growing belief that complex national problems can be defeated through force of personality rather than patient institution-building.

The Colombian election was not simply a victory for the right. It was a rejection of a political establishment that, despite decades of promises from both sides of the ideological divide, failed to solve the fundamental problems shaping ordinary life. The left promised equality and social transformation but struggled to deliver security, economic confidence and effective state control in many regions. The traditional right promised order but failed to eliminate the structural causes that allow criminal economies, corruption and inequality to survive. Between these two failures, political space opened for a figure who promised to destroy the old system entirely.

That is the reality behind Colombia’s political transformation. The country did not suddenly become far-right because millions of Colombians adopted a new ideological identity overnight. Many voters moved because they felt abandoned by governments of different political colours. They saw illegal armed groups expanding their influence, extortion becoming normal in some communities, rural populations trapped between criminal organizations and weak institutions, and politicians endlessly debating while ordinary citizens lived with insecurity.

The victory of De la Espriella is therefore part of a broader Latin American pattern. Across the region, voters have repeatedly punished governments that appear unable to address insecurity, economic stagnation and declining trust in institutions. The political pendulum has swung repeatedly from left to right and from right to left, yet the deeper failures remain unresolved. Elections increasingly resemble political theatre where angry citizens replace the actors while the underlying stage remains unchanged.

Colombia has experienced this cycle before. Álvaro Uribe Vélez rose to power in 2002 by promising security during one of the darkest periods of the country’s armed conflict. His hardline approach weakened the FARC insurgency and restored confidence among many Colombians who believed the state was losing control. His influence continued long after leaving office, creating the powerful Uribista movement. His political allies Juan Manuel Santos and Iván Duque both reached the presidency with his backing.

However, Uribismo eventually faced its own political limits. The movement became associated not only with security achievements but also with allegations surrounding human rights abuses, illegal surveillance, links between sections of the political establishment and paramilitary networks, and the scandal of false positives, in which civilians were killed and falsely presented as guerrilla combatants. The political brand that once represented order became increasingly connected, in the eyes of critics, with unresolved questions about Colombia’s past.

The defeat of Paloma Valencia exposed this decline. She represented the traditional Uribista right, yet many voters who once followed Uribe were no longer automatically loyal. They wanted something more aggressive, more emotional and less connected to the old political establishment. De la Espriella understood this shift. He did not attempt to revive Uribismo. He attempted to replace it.

His campaign succeeded because it understood the modern political battlefield. It was not built around detailed policy documents or traditional party structures. It was built around identity, symbolism and digital warfare. The tiger image, patriotic slogans, military gestures and relentless social media presence created a political brand that appeared energetic, rebellious and anti-establishment. His campaign used influencers, viral content and emotionally charged messaging to dominate online spaces where many younger voters increasingly form political opinions.

His rival Iván Cepeda represented almost the opposite model. A veteran left-wing politician known for human rights advocacy and political seriousness, Cepeda struggled to translate his message into the language of the digital age. His campaign relied heavily on speeches, arguments and traditional political communication. In a political environment where algorithms reward anger, simplicity and spectacle, his approach often appeared slower and less emotionally powerful.

This was one of the central failures of the Colombian left. It underestimated the emotional dimension of politics. It assumed that explaining problems would be enough to win public support. But voters facing insecurity, unemployment and declining trust in institutions were not searching only for analysis. They were searching for someone who appeared capable of taking control.

Petro’s government contributed significantly to this disappointment. His historic victory in 2022 represented a breakthrough after decades of conservative dominance. Millions hoped his administration would finally confront Colombia’s deep inequality, rural abandonment and social exclusion. However, his government struggled to transform ambitious promises into visible results.

His “Total Peace” strategy became the clearest example. The idea recognized an important reality: Colombia’s violence was never caused only by armed men. It was connected to poverty, land inequality, weak institutions and forgotten regions.

The problem was implementation. Several armed groups interpreted negotiations as opportunities to expand territory, recruit fighters and strengthen criminal economies. Organizations involved in drug trafficking, illegal mining and extortion increased their influence in various areas. Communities expecting peace often experienced uncertainty instead. The state appeared to be negotiating while criminal groups continued expanding.

This is where both the Colombian left and right repeatedly fail. The left often correctly identifies the social roots of violence but struggles to impose security and state authority. The right promises security but frequently avoids confronting the deeper inequality, corruption and institutional weakness that allow criminal networks to regenerate. The result is a permanent cycle of crisis management.

At the same time, De la Espriella’s victory reflects the rise of a new international conservative network in Latin America. His political success fits within a broader movement associated with leaders such as Milei and Bukele, as well as wider alliances among right-wing forces that emphasize security, national identity and confrontation with progressive politics. These movements have gained strength by exploiting public frustration with ineffective governments.

The danger is that political anger can become a substitute for governing. The promise of a “miracle homeland” is powerful because it provides emotional satisfaction. It tells citizens that someone finally understands their frustration and will punish those responsible. But governing requires more than punishment. It requires functioning institutions, economic planning, administrative competence and long-term solutions.

De la Espriella has won, but his victory does not represent national unity. It represents a deeply divided country where millions voted against the previous government rather than simply for the new one. His mandate is narrow, his congressional support remains limited and expectations among his supporters are extremely high.

The real test will not be whether De la Espriella can win elections. He has already achieved that. The real test is whether he can succeed where generations of Colombian leaders have failed. The question now is whether he will become a builder of stronger institutions or simply another performer in Colombia’s long-running political theatre.

by Nilantha Ilangamuwa ✍️

Continue Reading

Features

Politics, Taxation and the Need for Consensus

Published

on

The editorial in last Sunday’s Sunday Island, captioned “Fuel Crisis: Beyond Price Debate,” deserves to be applauded because it called on both the government and the opposition to stop playing politics over fuel prices. The editor concluded by stating, “It is hoped that the government and the opposition will stop fighting over fuel prices and address the serious issues that threaten the country’s energy security and economic stability.”

I believe that most Sri Lankans would agree with that sentiment, except perhaps those engaged in politics whose primary objective appears to be the attainment of power, often regardless of the cost to the country.

Unfortunately, opposition parties seldom assess government policies on their merits. This was also true of the NPP when it was in opposition. There is, however, an important difference between exposing political hypocrisy and opposing sound economic policies. Criticism of policy reversals is legitimate, but it should not undermine reforms essential to the country’s economic recovery and long-term stability.

TAX REVENUE-TO-GDP RATIO

The most important indicator of a government’s capacity to finance public services is its tax revenue-to-GDP ratio. In 1990, Sri Lanka’s tax revenue-to-GDP ratio stood at approximately 19%. Over the following three decades, however, successive governments steadily eroded the country’s tax base through tax concessions, exemptions, rate reductions, and weak enforcement. As a result, the ratio declined significantly and averaged between 10% and 12% before collapsing to around 8% following the sweeping tax cuts introduced by the Gotabaya Rajapaksa administration in late 2019.

The economic consequences that followed were devastating. Government revenue fell sharply. The resulting fiscal imbalance contributed significantly to the economic crisis that culminated in sovereign default, shortages of essential goods, inflationary pressures, and widespread social unrest.

The World Bank considers a tax-to-GDP ratio of around 15% to be the minimum required for developing countries such as Sri Lanka to provide basic public services and maintain fiscal sustainability. According to the latest available figures, Sri Lanka has now increased its ratio to approximately 15.5%, thereby reaching that minimum threshold.

While this represents a significant achievement considering the depth of the crisis, it is hardly a cause for celebration. To place matters in perspective, neighbouring India has achieved a tax-to-GDP ratio of approximately 19.6%, despite operating a far larger and more complex economy. Many developed countries record ratios well above 25%.

Sri Lanka’s recovery in tax revenue has been driven largely by substantial increases in taxation. Value Added Tax (VAT), which is an indirect tax, has increased to 18%, while the top personal income tax, a direct tax, now stands at 36%. These measures have imposed a considerable burden on taxpayers, particularly in the aftermath of inflation reaching nearly 70% in September 2022. Although inflation has since fallen substantially, the prices of most goods and services remain significantly higher than they were before the crisis;

Consequently, many income taxpayers feel aggrieved. They are paying more taxes while simultaneously struggling with a higher cost of living. Their frustration is understandable.

THE ONLY CERTAINTIES IN LIFE ARE DEATH AND TAXES

The famous saying that “the only certainties in life are death and taxes” is attributed to Benjamin Franklin in 1789. Yet, for much of Sri Lanka’s post-independence history, large segments of the population have effectively avoided income tax.

Successive governments, driven by short-term political considerations, frequently reduced income tax rates, expanded exemptions, or abolished taxes altogether. Over time, this fostered a culture in which many citizens came to view taxes, such as personal income tax, as unusual or even unfair. Once such attitudes take root in public thinking, they are difficult to reverse.

What has understandably angered many taxpayers, however, is the perception that the burden of personal income tax and corporate income tax has been borne disproportionately by a relatively small segment of the population employed in the formal sector.

For instance, a person employed in the formal economy and earning a monthly salary of Rs. 350,000 would pay Rs. 32,000 in Advance Personal Income Tax (APIT). By contrast, a person earning a similar amount in the informal sector may remain entirely outside the tax net.

THE NEED TO BROADEN THE TAX BASE

Sri Lanka has a serious problem with tax evasion. This challenge is compounded by the fact that the informal economy is estimated to account for nearly 65% of overall economic activity. Therefore, a significant portion of the workforce and businesses operate outside conventional tax structures and regulatory oversight.

While many workers in the informal sector legitimately earn incomes below the personal income tax threshold, it is equally true that numerous business owners generate significant incomes while remaining largely outside the tax net. Many of these businesses fall within the category of small and medium-sized enterprises.

As a consequence, a relatively small group of individuals and corporations shoulder a disproportionately large share of the country’s direct tax burden. Such an arrangement is neither equitable nor sustainable in the long term.

The objective should not necessarily be to increase tax rates further, but rather to ensure that more participants contribute to the system. When a greater number of taxpayers contribute, the burden on existing taxpayers can potentially be reduced over time. Equally important, a broader tax base enhances transparency, improves record-keeping, and encourages businesses to operate within the formal economy.

THE GOVERNMENT’S DECISION TO REVERSE THE VAT THRESHOLD REDUCTION

Against this backdrop, it is disappointing that the government has decided to retreat from an important tax reform by reversing the reduction of the annual VAT registration threshold from Rs. 60 million to Rs. 36 million.

The proposed reduction was a modest but meaningful step towards broadening the tax base and bringing more businesses into the formal economy. Requiring businesses to register for VAT would also have facilitated proper accounting records to be maintained, especially for sales, which in turn would help determine taxable profits for income and corporate tax purposes. However, following public criticism and political pressure, the government reversed course.

At a recent meeting of the Committee on Public Finance (COPF), its Chairman, Dr Harsha de Silva, asked officials from the Ministry of Finance how many additional businesses would be brought into the VAT system through the proposed reduction of the threshold. The officials estimated the number to be approximately 10,000, although they appeared unable to provide a definitive figure.

What was particularly striking during the discussion was that several participants appeared not to fully understand how the VAT system actually functions in Sri Lanka. This is unfortunate because informed public debate requires a sound understanding of the facts.

For example, a substantial proportion of the turnover of even a large supermarket consists of goods that are exempt from VAT. When I served as CFO of a leading supermarket chain, approximately 40% of turnover came from VAT-exempt goods. Although that percentage may have declined over time, it remains significant. In a typical neighbourhood grocery store, the proportion of VAT-exempt sales is likely to be even higher.

Consequently, many smaller retailers would not have been affected by the reduction in the VAT threshold, as their taxable supply would have been well below the threshold. Therefore, the claim made by Dr Harsha De Silva in a post on the X platform that “This Govt was about to fine your local shop Rs. 1 million for not registering for VAT’ is misleading.

The claim that the withdrawal of the proposed reduction in the threshold is a victory for consumers, too, is incorrect. Sri Lankan law requires manufacturers and importers to display a Maximum Retail Price (MRP) on all consumer products. In practice, this means that the retail price of a bottle of Coke is the same regardless of whether it is sold through a VAT-registered supermarket or a smaller retailer.

Ironically, the non-VAT-registered grocery store earns a higher margin than the tax-compliant supermarket. Therefore, the assertion that reducing the VAT threshold would have imposed an additional burden on consumers purchasing goods is incorrect and misleading.

The situation is somewhat different for service providers. Businesses supplying services that became subject to VAT may have sought to pass some or all of the tax burden on to consumers through higher fees. However, that possibility should not obscure the broader objective of expanding the tax base and improving compliance.

There were further criticisms that businesses were given only two weeks’ notice before implementation and would need to invest Rs 200,000 in a POS machine. Yet the government’s intention to reduce the threshold had been announced when presenting the budget about seven months ago. Therefore, it is difficult to understand where the claim of a two-week notice came from. Equally, it is not unreasonable to expect a business generating turnover of Rs. 36 million annually to purchase a POS machine to maintain adequate records of its sales.

A VALUABLE OPPORTUNITY LOST

In my view, a valuable opportunity to widen the tax net has been lost. What should have been a rational discussion on tax policy instead became another example of political point-scoring, misinformation, and a failure to properly explain the operation of the VAT system to the public.

It is therefore difficult to understand why Dr Harsha De Silva has been such a strong critic of reducing the annual VAT threshold to Rs. 36 million, given that during his time as a minister between 2015 and 2019, the threshold stood at only Rs. 12 million.

This type of political gamesmanship serves neither the government nor the opposition. More importantly, it does not serve the country’s interests. Sri Lanka’s economic recovery requires difficult decisions, honest public debate, and a willingness among political leaders to place national interests above short-term political advantage.

That is precisely why the Sunday Island editorial was correct. The country needs less politics and more policy. On issues as fundamental as taxation, energy security, public finances, and fiscal sustainability, consensus is not a sign of weakness. It is a prerequisite for long-term economic stability and national progress.

The challenge before Sri Lanka is not merely to collect more taxes. It is to create a tax system that is fair, credible, broad-based, and capable of supporting the services and infrastructure that citizens expect from the state. Achieving that objective requires competence, transparency, and political courage.

(The views and opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the policy or position of any organization or institution with which the author is affiliated).

By Sanjeewa Jayaweera ✍️

Continue Reading

Trending