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Editorial

Duminda, Ranil and Basil

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Three important happenings last week further bedeviled the country’s already vapid governance and political mess. First there was UNP leader Ranil Wickremesinghe’s return to Parliament nearly a year after the last election to take its single National List seat after months of foot-dragging, waffling and, indeed, prevarication. Then there was dual citizen Basil Rajapaksa’s return home (or second home?) after an absence of over a month in the USA on “personal business.” Finally there was President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s stunning Poson pardon of ex-MP Duminda Silva serving a life-term in prison following conviction for the murder of also ex-MP Bharatha Lakshman Premachandra.

There is no escaping the reality that the country is in one helluva mess. After an initial success several months ago in controlling the spread of the Covid pandemic, the vaccination process is not where it should be. Political interference in organizing preferential treatment for friends, relations and supporters created both rage and unhappiness widely displayed on television screens. A large number of vulnerable persons who received a first shot of AstraZenecca vaccine have been left high and dry not knowing when the second jab would be possible. A glimmer of light appeared at the end of the tunnel last week with reports of a delivery of a new stock from the Serum Institute of India in the short term. But there was no word about how it would be distributed.

As of now, President Gotabaya Rajapaksa appears to be ironclad in not wavering on his decision on banning inorganic fertilizer imports. This despite an avalanche of scientific opinion widely publicized. At least one major television channel is campaigning vigorously against the decision with daily bulletins of angry farmer protests countrywide. Claims that there are sufficient fertilizer stocks for the next season have been roundly debunked by protesters. If true, the government is hopeless impotent to root out hoarded stocks of profiteering hoarders. A segment of the electorate that strongly supported the president and the SLPP at recent elections have clearly been alienated. All this on top of the pandemic challenges, periodic lock downs and resultant bedlam, rightly or wrongly fathered on the government, is not helping the rulers who are at a zenith of unpopularity less than a year after their election by a popular mandate.

We have in a previous comment in this space speculated on the possibility of Mr. Ranil Wickremesinghe awaiting a nekatha to return to Parliament and resume a presence in the legislature that continued for 43 years until interrupted by his and his party’s stunning defeat last year. The single National List seat the UNP could salvage for itself after being reduced to zero was left unclaimed for about a year. First Wickremesinghe said he will not take the seat. Perhaps he remembered his party’s declaration that it will not admit defeated candidates to the legislature through the back door. Then other names were thrown up as possibilities for the vacancy. Eventually the people were told that Wickremesinghe was under pressure to accept the vacancy and was the unanimous choice of the UNP’s working committee.

Now Ranil is back in the House occupying an opposition frontbench seat; and, clad in his immaculate western suit, has made his first speech in Sinhala, generally not the language of his choice when he has to perform at his best. Before he took his oath last week, the four times prime minister and longtime opposition leader exposed himself to a no-holds-barred television interview where, even the ranks of Tuscany must admit, he acquitted himself reasonably well facing a volley of googlies bowled at him. Spurning rhetoric and wild swings at real and perceived enemies, he kept his cool and emerged unscathed if not victorious. But suspicions remain that he is open to playing footsie with the Prime Minister Rajapaksa, something he has been accused of doing before. With his long experience as prime minister and opposition leader and a very long stint as leader of the UNP, it is suggested that he can give good advice to the government.

Whether the president and the government are open to such advice is an open question. In his first intervention in Parliament following his swearing, Wickremesinghe while not adopting a belligerent tone, faulted the government for its lack of a plan in the current crisis situation, militarization of civil services including the response to the Covid pandemic, rapidly depleting foreign reserves and granting tax relief to “big people” while imposing hunger on “small people.” He sought a parliamentary debate to discuss the transfer of parliamentary power to the military, urging cabinet leadership in meeting the daunting challenges confronting the country.

There is widespread speculation as this is being written that Basil Rajapaksa will return to Parliament via the creation of a National List vacancy and assume an important ministry dealing with economic affairs. The finance ministry, currently held by the prime minister, has also been mentioned in this connection. Whether this will or will not happen remains to be seen. Nevertheless it must be said that most people believed the 20th Amendment provision enabling dual citizen to enter Parliament was intended for Basil. No hasty appointment, however, was made. He did not run at the last election due to the 19th Amendment prohibition and his unwillingness to renounce his American citizenship unlike brother Gotabaya. His admirers, admitting that the people are shouldering unbearable burdens, openly promise that Basil will wave a magic wand. Will a fuel price reduction be the first of these concessions?



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Editorial

Executive brinkmanship

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Pressure is mounting on President Anura Kumara Dissanayake to ensure that an Auditor General is appointed without further delay. But he has remained unmoved. He is determined to wear down the Constitutional Council (CC) and appoint one of his party loyalists as Auditor General. The CC has rejected his nominees—and rightly so; they are not eligible. Former Executive Presidents went all out to railroad the CC into rubber-stamping their decisions. They had no qualms about doing so while claiming to uphold the independence of the public service. President Dissanayake has failed to be different. His refusal to compromise amounts to brinkmanship; he is waiting until the CC blinks.

The NPP’s election manifesto, A Thriving Nation: A Beautiful Life, attributes the deterioration of the public service to ‘political appointments’ and state workers making political decisions. Among the steps the NPP has promised to take to straighten up the public service are ‘merit-based appointments and promotions’. This principle has fallen by the wayside where the question of appointing the Auditor General is concerned.

The government should take cognisance of the possible negative effects of the prolonged delay in appointing the Auditor General during a period of disaster response and international relief and rebuilding support.

The Bar Association of Sri Lanka has called upon President Dissanayake to appoint a person with proven competence, integrity, and independence, who commands wide acceptance as Auditor General forthwith. It has stressed the need to appoint a nonpartisan professional as the Auditor General to safeguard the integrity of the National Audit Office and inspire the confidence of both citizens and international partners in the financial governance of the State.

Transparency International Sri Lanka, the Civil Society Organizations (CSOs) and the other good governance activists, too, have faulted President Dissanayake and his government for the inordinate delay in appointing the Auditor General. They are of the view that a strong, independent Auditor General enables Parliament and the public to scrutinise government expenditure, identify irregularities, prevent misuse of funds, and ensure that those entrusted with public resources are held to account. The delay in appointing the Auditor General has weakened the effectiveness, authority, and the independence of the entire public audit system and created space for inefficiency, mismanagement, and corruption, they have noted. The situation will take a turn for the worse if the government succeeds in having one of its cronies appointed Auditor General.

The government is apparently playing a waiting game in the hope that the reconstitution of the CC due next year will provide a window of opportunity for it to appoint one of its loyalists as Auditor General.

Why the government is so desperate to place a malleable person at the helm of the National Audit Office is not hard to understand. If it succeeds in its endeavour, the next Auditor General will be beholden to the JVP/NPP. When an ineligible person is elevated to a high post, he or she naturally becomes subservient to the appointing authority. Such officials go out of their way to safeguard the interests of their political masters in case of irregularities involving state funds and other accountability issues.

A protracted delay in appointing the Auditor General or the appointment of a government supporter to that post will increase the risk of mismanagement of state funds and corruption, lead to the erosion of public trust and confidence in the National Audit Office, undermine legislative oversight and impair fiscal discipline. Most of all, the government’s failure to appoint a competent, independent person of integrity as Auditor General will diminish donor confidence especially at a time when the country is seeking disaster relief funds from the international community. There is no way the government can justify its refusal to appoint the current Acting Auditor General as the head of the supreme audit institution. He is obviously the most eligible candidate.

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Editorial

Selective transparency

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Saturday 27th December, 2025

The NPP government has released a cordial diplomatic letter from Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to President Anura Kumara Dissanayake, and gained a great deal of publicity for it as part of a propaganda campaign to boost Dissanayake’s image. Such moves are not uncommon in politics, especially in the developing world, where the heads of powerful states are deified and their visits, invitations and letters are flaunted as achievements of the leaders of smaller nations. However, the release of PM Modi’s letter to President Dissanayake is counterproductive, for it makes one wonder why the government has not made public the MoUs it has signed with India?

PM Modi’s Sri Lanka visit in April 2025 saw the signing of seven MoUs (or pacts as claimed in some quarters) between New Delhi and Colombo. Prominent among them are the MoUs/pacts on the implementation of HVDC (High-Voltage Direct Current) Interconnection for import/export of power, cooperation among the governments of India, Sri Lanka, and the United Arab Emirates on developing Trincomalee as an energy hub, and defence cooperation between India and Sri Lanka.

The NPP government has violated one of the fundamental tenets of good governance––transparency; there has been no transparency about the aforesaid MoUs or pacts, especially the one on defence cooperation. They cannot be disclosed without India’s consent, the government has said. This is a very lame excuse. The JVP/NPP seems to have a very low opinion of the intelligence of the public, who made its meteoric rise to power.

When the JVP/NPP was in opposition, it would flay the previous governments for signing vital MoUs and pacts without transparency. But it has kept even Parliament in the dark about the MoUs/pacts in question.

Ironically, the JVP, which resorted to mindless violence in a bid to scuttle the signing of the Indo-Lanka Accord in 1987, has sought to justify the inking of an MoU/pact on defence cooperation between Sri Lanka and India and keeping it under wraps, about three and a half decades later. The signing of that particular defence MoU/pact marked the JVP’s biggest-ever Machiavellian U-turn. How would the JVP have reacted if a previous government had entered into MoUs with India and kept them secret? It opposed the proposed Economic and Technology Cooperation Agreement (ETCA) between Sri Lanka and India tooth and nail, didn’t it?

Whenever one sees the aforesaid letter doing the rounds in the digital space, one remembers the MoUs/pacts shrouded in secrecy, which have exposed the pusillanimity of the NPP government, whose leaders cannot so much as disclose their contents without India’s consent.

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Editorial

Desperate political sandbagging

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Friday 26th December, 2025

There is nothing more predictable than surprise in politics. After securing a two-thirds majority in Parliament last year and emerging victorious in most local councils, this year, the JVP-led NPP may have thought that it was plain sailing. But the government now has many unforeseen, seemingly intractable issues to contend with almost on all fronts. The disaster-stricken economy is expected to slow down, with relief and rebuilding costs escalating, and the deadline for the resumption of debt repayment approaching. Vehicle imports are bound to decrease, causing a sharp drop in the government’s tax revenue. The rupee is depreciating fast. As if these were not enough, the government is experiencing serious problems on the political front.

The defeat of the NPP’s budget in the Colombo Municipal Council (CMC), which the JVP/NPP seized control of through extensive horse trading, could not have come at a worse time for the government. The same fate has befallen many other NPP-controlled local councils. Most of all, the NPP has suffered a string of defeats in the cooperative society elections countrywide during the last several months.

Desperate times are said to call for desperate measures. Cyclone Ditwah and the attendant extreme weather events that badly damaged roads, tank bunds and river banks prompted repair teams to resort to sandbag revetment. But there have been many instances where sandbag facings collapsed, unable to withstand the intensity of floods and slope failures. The government politicians who boasted of having carried out swift restoration work have been left red-faced; they have failed to assess the severity of the problems they are trying to solve.

The NPP government has resorted to a method similar to sandbag revetment in a desperate bid to consolidate its control over some local councils which cannot secure the passage of their budgets for want of majorities. Its members have gone to the extent of setting the clock forward in such institutions, meeting in advance of the regular start time and declaring their budgets passed before the arrival of the Opposition councillors. What the NPP did in the Horana Urban Council the other day is a case in point, the Opposition says.

The NPP is accused of having inflated the number of votes for its Galle MC budget amidst a howl of protests from the Opposition and declared victory. The Opposition councillors prevented the council secretary from leaving the auditorium, put the budget to a fresh vote and defeated it. The Opposition has threatened legal action against the Mayors/Chairpersons and the state officials for violating the law. The government is likely to employ a similar method to have the CMC budget passed when it is put to a vote again next week. The JVP has no sense of shame, just like all other political parties that have been in power.

All self-righteous politicians, given to moral grandstanding, lay bare their true faces when their interests are threatened, and they face the prospect of losing their hold on power. The JVP/NPP is now without any right to be critical of its rivals who did not scruple to undermine democratic principles and traditions to retain power.

Gaining control of hung local councils is one thing, but running them to the satisfaction of their members and the public is quite another. The non-majority councils that the Opposition parties have gained control of could face the same fate as the CMC. This situation has come about because the country is without patriotic leaders. Ideally, the political parties that obtained pluralities in the hung councils should have been allowed to control those institutions, and they should have adopted a conciliatory approach and sought their political rivals’ cooperation to serve the public.

The shameful manner in which the NPP acted during the Galle MC budget vote is not unprecedented. One may recall that in January 2024, the SLPP-UNP government did something similar to secure the passage of its despicable Online Safety Bill. The then Speaker Mahinda Yapa Abeywardena stooped so low as to make use of a brawl in the House and declare the Bill passed. Interestingly, the SLPP and the UNP are among those who are raking the NPP over the coals for undermining democratic principles and traditions. So much for the self-proclaimed messiahs and their critics.

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