Features
Attempt to catch some thieves
(Continued from last week)
Formal talks began at 10 a.m. on the 21st. Before their commencement there was an exchange of gifts. These normally are not particularly valuable. They are tokens. By and large from our side, it was a silver moonstone tray. We didn’t have any major problems with the Chinese and the talks proceeded smoothly and with a degree of informality and good humour. By 11.15 a.m. we had finished. The fact that the Head of the Chinese delegation understood and spoke some English also helped to expedite matters. At 6.30 p.m. a banquet was given in honour of the Deputy Minister by the Chinese Vice Minister. As was customary, this was an elaborate affair. We lost count of the number of courses.
The practice at these banquets is that you don’t eat too much of any single course. Instead, you taste a wide variety and range of food. Interestingly, the Chinese serve rice last. When the rice arrives, one knows that the main courses are now over and fruit and desert are to follow. The courses are accompanied with wines and the potent Moutai, a colourless alcoholic drink with I believe a rye base which even a non-drinker must take a sip of to follow social convention. These banquets are leisurely and relaxing with the relation of a great deal of anecdotes and general good humour.
Over the next few days, our Chinese hosts had laid out an interesting programme of visits. These included Museums; Factories; Palaces and the Mao Mausoleum, where the late Chairman’s body was preserved in a glass casket, in the manner of Lenin in Russia. On some evenings we were taken to cultural shows, a more dramatic one being a dance-drama on the separation of China and Taiwan. One night the Vice-Minister took us out for dinner to a newly opened Peking duck restaurant with a seating capacity of over 5000 people!
In such a populous country as China, restaurants are filled with numbers that don’t gather in stadiums of other countries. The duck itself was delicious with pieces served piping hot which you then dip into an excellent sauce mix, roll in a pancake with spring onion and eat. But behind all this elegant dining there is an element of cruelty. The ducks that are served are force-fed ‘or 60 days and killed. Perhaps death is more merciful than being continuously force-fed.
On the 24th of November, towards the end of our stay in Beijing, we were taken to the Western Hills to visit a Pagoda believed to contain a Tooth Relic of the Buddha. This was of great interest to us, since we are also in possession of a Tooth Relic of the Buddha in Sri Lanka. The Buddhists in the delegation offered flowers and worshipped at the temple.
On our last day in Beijing, the 26th morning, the Deputy Minister and the delegation called on Vice Prime Minister Yao-Ji-Ling. The conversation was characteristically relaxed and very friendly. At 4 p.m. the Deputy Minister and delegation called on the Minister of Trade.
This was followed by the formal signing of the Rubber-Rice Protocol for 1980. Afterwards, champagne was served. There was the usual battery of Press and TV cameras. The calls on the Vice Prime Minister, the Minister of Trade and the signing ceremony were prominently displayed in the late evening T.V. news. In the night, was the return banquet by our Deputy Minister at the International Club. It was another convivial occasion.
Metaphysics
The next day the 27th we flew to Guilin. This was part of the arrangement whereby, according to tradition, delegations from each other’s countries were taken to see some interesting places in their respective countries before their departure. Therefore, the same practice was obtained when the Chinese visited Sri Lanka. The distinction of Guilin was that spread out everywhere were quite fantastic rock and hill formations like huge ant hills. You saw them almost everywhere.
They appeared to be geologically unique. During the afternoon we were taken to the “Reed Pipe Cave,” where there was a fascinating array of limestone formations in the shapes of mushrooms; castles; old men; lions and many others. At 6.30 p.m. a dinner was hosted for us by the Chairman of the Municipal Revolutionary Committee Guilin. We sat at a number of round tables. One of the members of our delegation unwisely accepted the challenge of a veteran revolutionary
y to drink Moutai in competition with him. By the time we finished dinner and got back to our hotel, he had reached the stage of mild indiscretion and great jollity. Those experienced in such matters have recorded that those having alcoholic drinks and continuing to drink, progressively reach four stages of inebriation characterized as jocose; bellicose, lachrymose and finally comatose. Our friend was simultaneously in the first and third stage, mercifully having bypassed the second. He was not happy about being confined to his room and began to come out to the corridor, imagining that he had a good voice and therefore could sing. This became a bit of a serious problem.
So, all of us except for the Deputy Minister, who had already retired for the night went into his room and tried to persuade him to change and get to bed. But he appeared to be particularly nervous about getting into bed. We asked him why. He said that there was someone in his bed. We patted the bed and tried to demonstrate that there was nobody there. He said yes, there was no one now but when he got into bed, then there was someone there! He had reached that kind of metaphysical condition! Someone had to finally wait with him for a long time in his room until lie had at last fallen asleep. The following morning, he was quite surprised at the heights of philosophy he had scaled the previous night.
On the 28th, we were taken on a boat trip down the Lijiang River, with lunch served on board. We cruised through rugged and beautiful scenery with mountain formations of fantastic shapes. After we got back, in the evening we saw a Chinese classical film. It was elaborate and slow. Next day, the 29th, we took a flight back to Canton. During the afternoon, we visited the Port of Whampoa on the Pearl River. This was an important Port for us since most of our rice shipments came from here.
We spent quite a while visiting the facilities and talking to officials. A dinner was hosted by the Foreign Trade Bureau of Canton. The next two days, the 30th of November and the I” of December, we were taken to a large People’s Commune with a population of over 70,000. Agriculture and the light industry were the main activities. After lunch, we set out for the Fashan District in another county, a journey of over three hours, crossing two ferries over branches of the Pearl River.
Even these branches were large and very wide. At our destination, we visited factories and an Agricultural University for workers set up by former Prime Minister Zhou-En-Lai. The large sugar factory there was very interesting, because of the ancillary facilities for the production of yeast; industrial alcohol and paper board from bagasse. It was an impressive integrated facility. We concluded our stay with a visit to a silk factory.
Impressions of China
The visit was a great education to all of us. We talked to so many people and saw so many things. It deepened knowledge and experience. We had the rare privilege of seeing so much of China during a period when it was still very much a closed country and at a time when many scholars and interpreters particularly from the West could only speculate on what was happening there. We learned much from our discussions with Vice Prime Ministers, Ministers, Vice-Ministers, Senior Officials; Mayors; Heads of Revolutionary Committees and Communes and many others. We saw a country intensively cultivated, with crops growing even on many railway embankments.
A great deal of effort and skill had gone into water management, with water impounded everywhere, and an irrigation system small and large Criss-crossing the country. We saw all types of grains; vegetables and fruits cultivated extensively and combined with animal husbandry. There seemed to be a major thrust on the planting of trees. This was really something to see and learn from. Trees were planted everywhere, even in the middle of cities. Many roads both big and small had double rows of trees planted on both sides.
All in all, we saw a society busy at work and demonstrating great energy. Modern sophistication was lacking. But a thaw and an opening to the world were clearly visible. Apart from a greater freedom in the dress code, one saw the beginning of a free market in surplus vegetables, fruits, grains and livestock, not to forget the huge killed rats laid out for sale. Private plots of land for cultivation were being cautiously permitted. Street artists were drawing, painting and selling their pictures to the modest number of tourists beginning to come in. It was evident that China was slowly lifting the bamboo curtains and that the economic system was seeing the beginning of a gradual shift towards profits and incentives. We got back to Sri Lanka to the customary busy schedule.
An Attempt to Catch some Thieves
There are naturally many problems involved in the unloading, transport and storage of large quantities of food. One such problem related to street urchins who had made an art of slashing bags stacked in open lorries, with blades or knives and collecting into tins the rice, flour or sugar seeping out. These acts took place in the busy Fort and Pettah areas when lorries had to travel slowly or be completely halted due to traffic jams.
We managed to get the presence of some extra policemen in the more vulnerable areas. Sometimes problems arose due to corruption in the police itself. On one occasion, I received information that a whole lorry load of flour had been slipped out of the Port without documentation. My informant gave me details and said that the flour had been unloaded into a godown in the Pettah, but that we should act fast because very soon the stock would be dispersed. He also told me that the officer in charge of the Pettah police station had been bribed and that investigations should not be handed over to that station. In many instances, when theft or pilferage took place it was not easy to catch the culprits.
Here, there appeared to be some prospect of apprehension. I thought that the matter was important enough for the Minister himself to call the Inspector General of Police, Mr. Rudra Rajasingham, particularly because it seemed important to keep the local police station out of the investigations. Mr. Herat telephoned the IGP. I was seated opposite. To a question, I heard the Minister replying “The OIC Pettah.” The next moment he was laughing uproariously.
After the conversation, I asked the Minister as what was so funny. Still laughing, the Minister said that the IGP had asked “The OIC of what station?” and when he replied “Pettah,” he had immediately said “Oh, that rogue!” Sad to say, law and disorder seemed to have combined too well in this case. The culprits were not caught.
There were a number of ingenious ways of committing theft. In fact, this is a subject on which a separate chapter could be written. But I will mention only one example. It came to light that a number of rather large stones were beginning to accumulate near some of the food stores. Investigations revealed that some drivers and cleaners sold some bags on the way from the Port and put under their seats heavy stones which would approximate to the weight of the missing bags.
Therefore, when the lorry went over the weighbridge at the stores, the weight was almost right. Thereafter, the stones were quietly taken out, because the empty lorry was weighed once again on its way out. Preventing this sort of thing, and even discovering frauds after they were committed were a serious preoccupation of many. On one occasion, in order to discover an alleged massive fraud at one of our bigger store complexes, we had to arrange for CID officers to see the Food Commissioner at his residence, since their coming to office would have leaked out.
Ultimately, we introduced police personnel disguised as labourers to the Co-operative labour gangs working in the stores. This detailed strategy was successful and some important people were caught. But by that time, they had made enough money to retain the leading and the most expensive criminal lawyers to defend them in Court.
(Excerpted from In the Pursuit of Governance, autobiography of MDD Pieris) ✍️
Features
Why Sri Lanka Still Has No Doppler Radar – and Who Should Be Held Accountable
Eighteen Years of Delay:
Cyclone Ditwah has come and gone, leaving a trail of extensive damage to the country’s infrastructure, including buildings, roads, bridges, and 70% of the railway network. Thousands of hectares of farming land have been destroyed. Last but not least, nearly 1,000 people have lost their lives, and more than two million people have been displaced. The visuals uploaded to social media platforms graphically convey the widespread destruction Cyclone Ditwah has caused in our country.
The purpose of my article is to highlight, for the benefit of readers and the general public, how a project to establish a Doppler Weather Radar system, conceived in 2007, remains incomplete after 18 years. Despite multiple governments, shifting national priorities, and repeated natural disasters, the project remains incomplete.
Over the years, the National Audit Office, the Committee on Public Accounts (COPA), and several print and electronic media outlets have highlighted this failure. The last was an excellent five-minute broadcast by Maharaja Television Network on their News First broadcast in October 2024 under a series “What Happened to Sri Lanka”
The Agreement Between the Government of Sri Lanka and the World Meteorological Organisation in 2007.
The first formal attempt to establish a Doppler Radar system dates back to a Trust Fund agreement signed on 24 May 2007 between the Government of Sri Lanka (GoSL) and the World Meteorological Organisation (WMO). This agreement intended to modernize Sri Lanka’s meteorological infrastructure and bring the country on par with global early-warning standards.
The World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) is a specialized agency of the United Nations established on March 23, 1950. There are 193 member countries of the WMO, including Sri Lanka. Its primary role is to promote the establishment of a worldwide meteorological observation system and to serve as the authoritative voice on the state and behaviour of the Earth’s atmosphere, its interaction with the oceans, and the resulting climate and water resources.
According to the 2018 Performance Audit Report compiled by the National Audit Office, the GoSL entered into a trust fund agreement with the WMO to install a Doppler Radar System. The report states that USD 2,884,274 was deposited into the WMO bank account in Geneva, from which the Department of Metrology received USD 95,108 and an additional USD 113,046 in deposit interest. There is no mention as to who actually provided the funds. Based on available information, WMO does not fund projects of this magnitude.
The WMO was responsible for procuring the radar equipment, which it awarded on 18th June 2009 to an American company for USD 1,681,017. According to the audit report, a copy of the purchase contract was not available.
Monitoring the agreement’s implementation was assigned to the Ministry of Disaster Management, a signatory to the trust fund agreement. The audit report details the members of the steering committee appointed by designation to oversee the project. It consisted of personnel from the Ministry of Disaster Management, the Departments of Metrology, National Budget, External Resources and the Disaster Management Centre.
The Audit Report highlights failures in the core responsibilities that can be summarized as follows:
· Procurement irregularities—including flawed tender processes and inadequate technical evaluations.
· Poor site selection
—proposed radar sites did not meet elevation or clearance requirements.
· Civil works delays
—towers were incomplete or structurally unsuitable.
· Equipment left unused
—in some cases for years, exposing sensitive components to deterioration.
· Lack of inter-agency coordination
—between the Meteorology Department, Disaster Management Centre, and line ministries.
Some of the mistakes highlighted are incomprehensible. There is a mention that no soil test was carried out before the commencement of the construction of the tower. This led to construction halting after poor soil conditions were identified, requiring a shift of 10 to 15 meters from the original site. This resulted in further delays and cost overruns.
The equipment supplier had identified that construction work undertaken by a local contractor was not of acceptable quality for housing sensitive electronic equipment. No action had been taken to rectify these deficiencies. The audit report states, “It was observed that the delay in constructing the tower and the lack of proper quality were one of the main reasons for the failure of the project”.
In October 2012, when the supplier commenced installation, the work was soon abandoned after the vehicle carrying the heavy crane required to lift the radar equipment crashed down the mountain. The next attempt was made in October 2013, one year later. Although the equipment was installed, the system could not be operationalised because electronic connectivity was not provided (as stated in the audit report).
In 2015, following a UNOPS (United Nations Office for Project Services) inspection, it was determined that the equipment needed to be returned to the supplier because some sensitive electronic devices had been damaged due to long-term disuse, and a further 1.5 years had elapsed by 2017, when the equipment was finally returned to the supplier. In March 2018, the estimated repair cost was USD 1,095,935, which was deemed excessive, and the project was abandoned.
COPA proceedings
The Committee on Public Accounts (COPA) discussed the radar project on August 10, 2023, and several press reports state that the GOSL incurred a loss of Rs. 78 million due to the project’s failure. This, I believe, is the cost of constructing the Tower. It is mentioned that Rs. 402 million had been spent on the radar system, of which Rs. 323 million was drawn from the trust fund established with WMO. It was also highlighted that approximately Rs. 8 million worth of equipment had been stolen and that the Police and the Bribery and Corruption Commission were investigating the matter.
JICA support and project stagnation
Despite the project’s failure with WMO, the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) entered into an agreement with GOSL on June 30, 2017 to install two Doppler Radar Systems in Puttalam and Pottuvil. JICA has pledged 2.5 billion Japanese yen (LKR 3.4 billion at the time) as a grant. It was envisaged that the project would be completed in 2021.
Once again, the perennial delays that afflict the GOSL and bureaucracy have resulted in the groundbreaking ceremony being held only in December 2024. The delay is attributed to the COVID-19 pandemic and Sri Lanka’s economic crisis.
The seven-year delay between the signing of the agreement and project commencement has led to significant cost increases, forcing JICA to limit the project to installing only one Doppler Radar system in Puttalam.
Impact of the missing radar during Ditwah
As I am not a meteorologist and do not wish to make a judgment on this, I have decided to include the statement issued by JICA after the groundbreaking ceremony on December 24, 2024.
“In partnership with the Department of Meteorology (DoM), JICA is spearheading the establishment of the Doppler Weather Radar Network in the Puttalam district, which can realize accurate weather observation and weather prediction based on the collected data by the radar. This initiative is a significant step in strengthening Sri Lanka’s improving its climate resilience including not only reducing risks of floods, landslides, and drought but also agriculture and fishery“.
Based on online research, a Doppler Weather Radar system is designed to observe weather systems in real time. While the technical details are complex, the system essentially provides localized, uptotheminute information on rainfall patterns, storm movements, and approaching severe weather. Countries worldwide rely on such systems to issue timely alerts for monsoons, tropical depressions, and cyclones. It is reported that India has invested in 30 Doppler radar systems, which have helped minimize the loss of life.
Without radar, Sri Lanka must rely primarily on satellite imagery and foreign meteorological centres, which cannot capture the finescale, rapidly changing weather patterns that often cause localized disasters here.
The general consensus is that, while no single system can prevent natural disasters, an operational Doppler Radar almost certainly would have strengthened Sri Lanka’s preparedness and reduced the extent of damage and loss.
Conclusion
Sri Lanka’s inability to commission a Doppler Radar system, despite nearly two decades of attempts, represents one of the most significant governance failures in the country’s disastermanagement history.
Audit findings, parliamentary oversight proceedings, and donor records all confirm the same troubling truth: Sri Lanka has spent public money, signed international agreements, received foreign assistance, and still has no operational radar. This raises a critical question: should those responsible for this prolonged failure be held legally accountable?
Now may not be the time to determine the extent to which the current government and bureaucrats failed the people. I believe an independent commission comprising foreign experts in disaster management from India and Japan should be appointed, maybe in six months, to identify failures in managing Cyclone Ditwah.
However, those who governed the country from 2007 to 2024 should be held accountable for their failures, and legal action should be pursued against the politicians and bureaucrats responsible for disaster management for their failure to implement the 2007 project with the WMO successfully.
Sri Lanka cannot afford another 18 years of delay. The time for action, transparency, and responsibility has arrived.
(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
Features
Ramifications of Trump Corollary
President Trump is expected to close the deal on the Ukraine crisis, as he may wish to concentrate his full strength on two issues: ongoing operations in Venezuela and the bolstering of Japan’s military capabilities as tensions between China and Japan over Taiwan rise. Trump can easily concede Ukraine to Putin and refocus on the Asia–Pacific and Latin America. This week, he once again spilled the beans in an interview with Politico, one of the most significant conversations ever conducted with him. When asked which country currently holds the stronger negotiating position, Trump bluntly asserted that there could be no question: it is Russia. “It’s a much bigger country. It’s a war that should’ve never happened,” he said, followed by his usual rhetoric.
Meanwhile, US allies that fail to adequately fund defence and shirk contributions to collective security will face repercussions, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth declared at the 2025 Reagan National Defense Forum in Simi Valley, California. Hegseth singled out nations such as South Korea, Israel, Poland, and Germany as “model allies” for increasing their commitments, contrasting them with those perceived as “free riders”. The message was unmistakably Trumpian: partnerships are conditional, favourable only to countries that “help themselves” before asking anything of Washington.
It is in this context that it becomes essential to examine the Trump administration’s National Security Strategy, issued last week, in order to consider how it differs from previous strategies and where it may intersect with current US military practice.
Trump’s 2025 National Security Strategy is not merely another iteration of the familiar doctrine of American primacy; it is a radical reorientation of how the United States understands itself, its sphere of influence, and its role in the world. The document begins uncompromisingly: “The purpose of foreign policy is the protection of core national interests; that is the sole focus of this strategy.” It is the bluntest opening in any American NSS since the document became a formal requirement in 1987. Whereas previous strategies—from Obama to Biden—wrapped security in the language of democracy promotion and multilateralism, Trump’s dispenses entirely with the pretence of universality. What matters are American interests, defined narrowly, almost corporately, as though the United States were a shareholder entity rather than a global hegemon.
It is here that the ghost of Senator William Fulbright quietly enters, warning in 1966 that “The arrogance of power… the belief that we are uniquely qualified to bring order to the world, is a dangerous illusion.” Fulbright’s admonition was directed at the hubris of Vietnam-era expansionism, yet it resonates with uncanny force in relation to Trump’s revived hemispheric ambitions. For despite Trump’s anti-globalist posture, his strategy asserts a unique American role in determining events across two oceans and within an entire hemisphere. The arrogance may simply be wearing a new mask.
Nowhere is this revisionist spirit more vivid than in the so-called “Trump Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine”, perhaps the most controversial American hemispheric declaration since Theodore Roosevelt’s time. The 2025 NSS states without hesitation that “The United States will reassert and enforce the Monroe Doctrine to restore American preeminence in the Western Hemisphere.” Yet unlike Roosevelt, who justified intervention as a form of pre-emptive stabilisation, Trump wraps his corollary in the language of sovereignty and anti-globalism. The hemispheric message is not simply that outside powers must stay out; it is that the United States will decide what constitutes legitimate governance in the region and deny “non-Hemispheric competitors the ability to position forces or other threatening capabilities… in our Hemisphere”.
This wording alone has far-reaching implications for Venezuela, where US forces recently seized a sanctioned supertanker as part of an escalating confrontation with the Maduro government. Maduro, emboldened by support from Russia, Iran, and China’s so-called shadow fleet, frames Trump’s enforcement actions as piracy. But for Trump, this is precisely the point: a demonstration of restored hemispheric authority. In that sense, the 2025 NSS may be the first strategic document in decades to explicitly set the stage for sustained coercive operations in Latin America. The NSS promises “a readjustment of our global military presence to address urgent threats in our Hemisphere.” “Urgent threats” is vague, but in practical military planning, vagueness functions as a permission slip. It is not difficult to see how a state accused of “narco-terrorism” or “crimes against humanity” could be fitted into the category.
The return to hemispheric dominance is paired with a targeted shift in alliance politics. Trump makes it clear that the United States is finished subsidising alliances that do not directly strengthen American security. The NSS lays out the philosophy succinctly: “The days of the United States propping up the entire world order like Atlas are over.” This is a direct repudiation of the language found in Obama’s 2015 NSS, which emphasised that American leadership was indispensable to global stability. Trump rejects that premise outright. Leadership, in his framing, is merely leverage. Allies who fail to meet burden expectations will lose access, influence, and potentially even protection. Nowhere is this more evident than in the push for extraordinary defence spending among NATO allies: “President Trump has set a new global standard with the Hague Commitment… pledging NATO countries to spend 5 percent of GDP on defence.”
In turn, US disengagement from Europe becomes easier to justify. While Trump speaks of “negotiating an expeditious cessation of hostilities in Ukraine”, it requires little sophistication to decode this as a form of managed abandonment—an informal concession that Russia’s negotiating position is stronger, as Trump told Politico. Ukraine may well become a bargaining chip in the trade-off between strategic theatres: Europe shrinks, Asia and Latin America expand. The NSS’s emphasis on Japan, Taiwan, and China is markedly sharper than in 2017.
China looms over the 2025 NSS like an obsession, mentioned over twenty times, not merely as a competitor but as a driving force shaping American policy. Every discussion of technology, alliances, or regional security is filtered through Beijing’s shadow, as if US strategy exists solely to counter China. The strategy’s relentless focus risks turning global priorities into a theatre of paranoia, where the United States reacts constantly, defined less by its own interests than by fear of what China might do next.
It is equally striking that, just nine days after Cyclone Ditwah, the US Indo-Pacific Command deployed two C130 aircraft—capable of landing at only three locations in Sri Lanka, well away from the hardest-hit areas—and orchestrated a highly choreographed media performance, enlisting local outlets and social media influencers seemingly more concerned with flaunting American boots on the ground than delivering “urgent” humanitarian aid. History shows this is not unprecedented: US forces have repeatedly arrived under the banner of humanitarian assistance—Operation Restore Hope in Somalia (1992) later escalated into full security and combat operations; interventions in Haiti during the 1990s extended into long-term peacekeeping and training missions; and Operation United Assistance in Liberia (2014) built a lasting US operational presence beyond the Ebola response.
Trump’s NSS, meanwhile, states that deterring conflict in East Asia is a “priority”, and that the United States seeks to ensure that “US technology and US standards—particularly in AI, biotech, and quantum computing—drive the world forward.” Combined with heightened expectations of Japan, which is rapidly rearming, Trump’s strategic map shows a clear preference: if Europe cannot or will not defend itself, Asia might.
What makes the 2025 NSS uniquely combustible, however, is the combination of ideological framing and operational signalling. Trump explicitly links non-interventionism, long a theme of his political base, to the Founders’ moral worldview. He writes that “Rigid adherence to non-interventionism is not possible… yet this predisposition should set a high bar for what constitutes a justified intervention.”
The Trump NSS is both a blueprint and a warning. It signals a United States abandoning the liberal internationalist project and embracing a transactional, hemispherically focussed, sovereignty-first model. It rewrites the Monroe Doctrine for an age of great-power contest, but in doing so resurrects the very logics of intervention that past presidents have regretted. And in the background, as Trump weighs the cost of Ukraine against the allure of a decisive posture in Asia and the Western Hemisphere, the world is left to wonder whether this new corollary is merely rhetorical theatre or the prelude to a new era of American coercive power. The ambiguity is deliberate, but the direction of travel is unmistakable.
[Correction: In my column last week, I incorrectly stated that India–Russia trade in FY 2024 25 was USD 18 billion; the correct figure is USD 68.7 billion, with a trade deficit of about USD 59 billion. Similarly, India recorded a goods trade surplus of around USD 41.18 billion with the US, not a deficit of USD 42 billion, with exports of USD 86.51 billion and imports of USD 45.33 billion. Total remittances to India in FY 2024 25 were roughly USD 135.46 billion, including USD 25–30 billion from the US. Apologies for the error.]
by Nilantha Ilangamuwa
Features
MEEZAN HADJIAR
selfmade businessman who became one of the richest men in the Central Province
I am happy that a book about the life and contribution of Sathkorale Muhamdiramlagedara Segu Abdul Cader Hajiar Mohamed Mohideen better known as Meezan Hadjiar or Meezan Mudalali of Matale [1911—1964] written by Mohammed Fuaji -a former Principal of Zahira College Matale, has now been published by a group of his admirers and relatives. It is a timely addition to the history of Matale district and the Kandyan region which is yet to be described fully as forming a part of the modern history of our country. Coincidentally this book also marks the centenary of Meezan Hadjiars beginning of employment in Matale town which began in 1925.
Matale which was an outlier in the Kandyan Kingdom came into prominence with the growth of plantations for coffee and, after the collapse of the coffee plantations due to the ‘coffee blight’ , for other tree crops . Coffee was followed by the introduction of tea by the early British investors who faced bankruptcy and ruin if they could not quickly find a substitute beverage for coffee.They turned to tea.
The rapid opening of tea plantations in the hill country demanded a large and hardworking labour force which could not be found domestically. This led to the indenturing of Tamil labour from South India on a large scale. These helpless workers were virtually kidnapped from their native villages in India through the Kangani system and they were compelled to migrate to our hill country by the British administration .
The route of these indentured workers to the higher elevations of the hill country lay through Matale and the new plantation industry developed in that region thereby dragging it into a new commercial culture and a cash economy. New opportunities were opened up for internal migration particularly for the more adventurous members of the Muslim community who had played a significant role in the Kandyan kingdom particularly as traders,transporters,medical specialists and military advisors.
Diaries of British officials like John D’oyly also show that the Kandyan Muslims were interlocutors between the Kandyan King and British officials of the Low Country as they had to move about across boundaries as traders of scarce commodities like salt, medicines and consumer articles for the Kandyans and arecanuts, gems and spices for the British. Even today there are physical traces of the ‘’Battal’’or caravans of oxen which were used by the Muslims to transport the above mentioned commodities to and from the Kandyan villages to the Low country. Another important facet was that Kandyan Muslims were located in villages close to the entrances to the hill country attesting to their mobility unlike the Kandyan villagers.
Thus Akurana, Galagedera, Kadugannawa, Hataraliyadde and Mawanella which lay in the pathways to enter the inner territory of the Kings domain were populated by ‘Kandyan Muslims’ who had the ear of the King and his high officials. The’’ Ge’’ names and the honorifics given by the King were a testament to their integration with the Sinhala polity. Meezan Hadjiars’’ Ge ‘‘name of Sathkorale Mohandiramlage denotes the mobility of the family from Sathkorale, an outlier division in the Kandyan Kingdom, and Mohandiramlage attests to the higher status in the social hierarchy which probably indicated that his forebears were honoured servants of the king.
Meezan Hadjiar [SM Mohideen] was born and bred in Kurugoda which is a small village in Akurana in Kandy district. He belonged to the family of Abdul Cader who was a patriarch and a well known religious scholar. Cader’s children began their education in the village school but at the age of 12 young Mohideen left his native village to apprentice under a relative who had a business establishment in the heart of Matale town which was growing fast due to the economic boom. It must be stated here that this form of ‘learning the ropes’ as an apprentice’was a common path to business undertaken by many of the later Sri Lankan tycoons of the pre-independence era.
But he did not remain in that position for long .When his mentor failed in his business of trading in cocoa, cardamoms, cloves and arecanuts and wanted to close up his shop young Mohideen took over and eventually made a great success of it. His enterprise succeeded because he was able to earn the trust of both his buyers and sellers. He befriended Sinhalese and Tamil producers and the business he improved beyond measure took on the name of Meezan Estates Ltd [The scales] and Mohideen soon became famous as Meezan Mudalali – perhaps the most successful businessman of his time in Matale. He expanded his business interests to urban real estate as well as tea and rubber estates. Soon he owned over 3,000 acres of tea estates making him one of the richest men in the Central Province.
With his growing influence Meezan spent generously on charitable activities including funding a water scheme for his native village of Kurugoda also serving adjoining villages like Pangollamada located in Akurana. He also gave generously to Buddhist causes in Matale together with other emerging low country businessmen like Gunasena and John Mudalali.
Matale was well known as a town in which all communities lived in harmony and tended to help each other. As a generous public figure he became strong supporter of the UNP and a personal friend of its leaders like Dudley Senanayake and Sir John Kotelawela. UNP candidates for public office-both in the Municipality and Parliament were selected in consultation with Meezan who also bankrolled them during election time. He himself became a Municipal councillor. The Aluvihares of several generations had close links with him. it was Meezan who mentored ACS Hameed – a fellow villager from Kurugoda – and took him to the highest echelons of Sri Lankan politics as Minister of Foreign Affairs. He was a supporter and financier of the UNP through thick and thin.
Though his premature death at the age 53 in 1965 saved him from the worst political witch hunts under SWRD Bandaranaike who was his personal friend it was after 1970 and the Coalition regime that Meezan’s large family were deprived of their livelihood by the taking over of all their estates. Fortunately many of his children were well educated and could hold on till relief was given by President Premadasa despite the objections of their father’s erstwhile protégé ACS Hameed who surprisingly let them down badly.
It is only fitting that we, even a hundred years later, now commemorate a great self made Sri Lankan business magnate and generous contributor to all religious and social causes of his time. His name became synonymous with enterprise in Matale – a district in which I was privileged to serve as Government Agent in the late sixties.He was a model entrepreneur and his large family have also made outstanding contributions to this country which also attest to the late Meezan Hadjiars foresight and vision of a united and prosperous Srilanka.
by SARATH AMUNUGAMA.
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