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IS THIS THE FINISH OF THE SRI LANKAN ELEPHANT?

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by Rohan Wijesinha

It is mooted on social media that the hierarchy of the Department of Wildlife Conservation (DWC) has determined that to rid themselves of the headache of Human-Elephant Conflict (HEC), they will drive all wild elephants into the confines of National Parks and imprison them there, with no consideration of it exceeding the carrying capacity of the parks. At present, this seems just rumour and conjecture but the recent actions of the DWC certainly give credence to the suggestion.

If there is truth to the rumour, then the total population of the wild elephant has to be reduced from the present number to less than 2,000 for the National Parks to be able to sustain captive herds and, even then, for a very short time. As per the official census of 2011, there were approximately 6,000 wild elephants in Sri Lanka. A politician recently suggested the figure of 7,000 (and the just completed census will inevitably support this), though it is uncertain as to what scientific knowledge this claim was based on. In which case, approximately 5,000 elephants need to be obliterated.

There are two obvious ways of accomplishing this:

· Kill 5,000 wild elephants.

· Drive them into National Parks and contain them there; to starve to death.

Both methodologies will result in the planned massacre of thousands of elephants – one quick and messy, and the second through the protracted starvation and suffering of these creatures. Is this consistent with the supposed religious ideology and culture of this Nation?

As per official figures, since 2010 to date, approximately 4,250 elephants have perished. If the 2011 census is close to correct, then the remaining number should be less than 2,000. Yet, claims are being made for over three times that number. It takes 22 months for an elephant calf to be born. The female will then not come into estrous for another two to three years until her calf is weaned. Despite all of this, if the number has grown by this much, then nothing short of a biological miracle has taken place; unless the 2011 census was woefully incorrect. If that is so, then the recent census undertaken using the same methodology is hardly likely to be accurate as well.

Returning to a Failed System

The DWC has previously stated that driving elephants does not work. This is for a variety of reasons, the foremost being that HEC is mainly caused by male elephants. However, when there is a ‘drive’, all elephants in the area are driven away; mainly females and their calves. Many of the males, by now used to thunder flashes and noise, remain hidden. Even when driven away, they often return in search of their home ranges; deafened by elephant bombs and even blinded by rubber bullets, they are now much more aggressive and resentful of people.

The females and calves remain where they have been driven to; traumatized and often injured, many perish, often from starvation. This tragically happened when elephants were driven into the Lunugamvehera National Park during the Walawe Left Bank Development Project. In addition to elephants perishing as a result of this drive, a survey undertaken by the Center for Conservation and Research (CCR) found that three months after the drive, 71% of the farmers said that HEC intensity was the same or worse than before the drive. The drive was detrimental to elephant conservation and neither did it help the farmers. This begs the question, why does DWC conduct elephant drives?

A National Park can host a finite number of elephants. This number varies according to the amount of fodder available for them in it. If this number is exceeded, then these highly intelligent animals will attempt to leave the confines of the Park, or die. This is why even now, elephants range from one area to another, to permit the foliage in the previous place to replenish itself. In the Uda Walawe National Park, researchers have found that the elephant population has decreased by 50% in the last 10 years. This is due to bad habitat management resulting in the loss of grasslands. The rest have either died or moved to other areas. Inevitably, HEC has increased. In the Yala National Park, thanks to fencing the elephants in, over 50% of the calves die within two years due to malnutrition. There are indications that calves are dying in the Lunugamvehera NP too due to poor habitat quality. This is a portent of things to come if these drives continue.

What elephants and informed science are aware of, the National custodians of these magnificent animals choose to ignore. The DWC, with political patronage, is in the process of driving approximately 150 elephants from the Sharvatipura area, near Anuradhapura, to the Wilpattu National Park; a sanctuary for wildlife but NOT for a large number of elephants. Grass is the major food source of elephants and lacking large open grasslands, it rarely attracts any herds of any size into its interior. Its beautiful forests lack the varieties preferred by elephants, and their height and stature, make whatever there inaccessible to them. In addition, in their desperate attempts to find something to eat, elephants could change the habitat of the Park with serious consequences to all of the other of its wondrous inhabitants. Imagine those beautiful forests turning into scrubland. It could happen.

Sacrificial Lambs

At present, these 150 sacrifices to knee-jerk political requirement are stranded in the Oya Maduwa NLDB Farm awaiting what else the DWC has in store for them. For, predictably, the drive is not quite going to plan. Ill thought out schemes rarely do e.g. who would drive elephants during the cultivation season through cultivation to where they are to go? Why doesn’t the DWC tell the politicians what they need to know rather than what they would like to hear?

Some 44% of the land mass of Sri Lanka is shared by humans and elephants. This is not new. In previous times it was much more. Those ancient communities knew how to live with elephants and other wild animals as their neighbours. Since Independence, with the increase in development, communities from other areas were relocated to these places and were largely unaware of how to deal with their wild neighbours. Soon coexistence turned to conflict with, inevitably, the stronger being the overall victor.

Yet today, nothing has been learned; or is it that much has been learned but not corrected? In fact, history will be harsh on this country’s statutory guardians of its wilderness and wildlife.

Saving human lives and livelihoods

Human lives are lost in this conflict too, over 1,000 in the last 10 years. In 2020, a Presidential Committee was set up to formulate a National Actions Plan for HEC Mitigation. This committee comprised of all the relevant stake holders from the National to the Local Government levels, elephants researchers and scientists, conservation NGOs and informed lay people. The Plan’s primary focus was to keep people safe. This was to be achieved by erecting community based village and agricultural fencing, protecting people and their cultivation. This National Action Plan (NAP) commenced implementation in 2023 but with minimal budgetary allocations provided. Once again, a solution only partially tried and then forgotten, for the policymakers seek quick solution for a problem that has been decades in the making.

Cultivation and community fencing has been tried and tested, by the Centre for Conservation and Research (CCR) in over 70 villages in the North Central, North Western, Southern and North Eastern Provinces, with 100% success. There are around 300 paddy field fences erected by the Department of Agrarian Development in 2024 through the implementation of the NAP. That plus, some work done by the DWC of more diligent fence monitoring etc., appears to have helped because the elephant and human deaths in 2024 are less than 2023.

If the NAP had been implemented in full, much of what is taking place now could have been averted. As such, it was hoped that the new Government which was elected on a mandate of change, with a promise of letting science and informed knowledge lead the way, would implement in full this Plan of learned compilation. Instead, they seem to have stuck by those policies of old with only thought of the present, while damning the country and its future.

Saving a National Asset

Look at any website advertising the wonders of this little island and there will invariably be a picture of elephants and other wildlife displayed on it. It is the natural wonders of this country that draws visitors to it, with over 30% of them visiting National parks and other protected areas. They bring in millions of dollars of revenue to Sri Lanka. Without wildlife, who would come? It must be remembered that elephants are a keystone species vital for the well-being of a Park. Without them, the other wildlife, and the habitat, would rapidly deteriorate.

Future generations, the World, will never forgive us if we drive this unique subspecies of the Asian Elephant into extinction. If HEC is to be reduced, and it must, then the following should be undertaken:

· Set up a Presidential Task Force or Committee to facilitate, oversee and monitor the full implementation of the National Action Plan.

· Stop illegal encroachment into National Parks and other protected areas.

· Implement a system of planned development which takes into account the wildlife and other natural wonders of an area.

· Set up mechanisms for local communities to directly benefit from having wildlife as neighbours e.g. community based wildlife/bird watching outside of protected areas, selling of arts and crafts to tourists, village cookery lessons, etc.

· STOP ELEPHANT DRIVES.

It is hoped that sense will prevail.



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Rethinking post-disaster urban planning: Lessons from Peradeniya

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University of Peradeniya

A recent discussion by former Environment Minister, Eng. Patali Champika Ranawaka on the Derana 360 programme has reignited an important national conversation on how Sri Lanka plans, builds and rebuilds in the face of recurring disasters.

His observations, delivered with characteristic clarity and logic, went beyond the immediate causes of recent calamities and focused sharply on long-term solutions—particularly the urgent need for smarter land use and vertical housing development.

Ranawaka’s proposal to introduce multistoried housing schemes in the Gannoruwa area, as a way of reducing pressure on environmentally sensitive and disaster-prone zones, resonated strongly with urban planners and environmentalists alike.

It also echoed ideas that have been quietly discussed within academic and conservation circles for years but rarely translated into policy.

One such voice is that of Professor Siril Wijesundara, Research Professor at the National Institute of Fundamental Studies (NIFS) and former Director General of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Peradeniya, who believes that disasters are often “less acts of nature and more outcomes of poor planning.”

Professor Siril Wijesundara

“What we repeatedly see in Sri Lanka is not merely natural disasters, but planning failures,” Professor Wijesundara told The Island.

“Floods, landslides and environmental degradation are intensified because we continue to build horizontally, encroaching on wetlands, forest margins and river reservations, instead of thinking vertically and strategically.”

The former Director General notes that the University of Peradeniya itself offers a compelling case study of both the problem and the solution. The main campus, already densely built and ecologically sensitive, continues to absorb new faculties, hostels and administrative buildings, placing immense pressure on green spaces and drainage systems.

“The Peradeniya campus was designed with landscape harmony in mind,” he said. “But over time, ad-hoc construction has compromised that vision. If development continues in the same manner, the campus will lose not only its aesthetic value but also its ecological resilience.”

Professor Wijesundara supports the idea of reorganising the Rajawatte area—located away from the congested core of the university—as a future development zone. Rather than expanding inward and fragmenting remaining open spaces, he argues that Rajawatte can be planned as a well-designed extension, integrating academic, residential and service infrastructure in a controlled manner.

Crucially, he stresses that such reorganisation must go hand in hand with social responsibility, particularly towards minor staff currently living in the Rajawatte area.

“These workers are the backbone of the university. Any development plan must ensure their dignity and wellbeing,” he said. “Providing them with modern, safe and affordable multistoried housing—especially near the railway line close to the old USO premises—would be both humane and practical.”

According to Professor Wijesundara, housing complexes built near existing transport corridors would reduce daily commuting stress, minimise traffic within the campus, and free up valuable land for planned academic use.

More importantly, vertical housing would significantly reduce the university’s physical footprint.

Drawing parallels with Ranawaka’s Gannoruwa proposal, he emphasised that vertical development is no longer optional for Sri Lanka.

“We are a small island with a growing population and shrinking safe land,” he warned.

“If we continue to spread out instead of building up, disasters will become more frequent and more deadly. Vertical housing, when done properly, is environmentally sound, economically efficient and socially just.”

Peradeniya University flooded

The veteran botanist also highlighted the often-ignored link between disaster vulnerability and the destruction of green buffers.

“Every time we clear a lowland, a wetland or a forest patch for construction, we remove nature’s shock absorbers,” he said.

“The Royal Botanic Gardens has survived floods for over a century precisely because surrounding landscapes once absorbed excess water. Urban planning must learn from such ecological wisdom.”

Professor Wijesundara believes that universities, as centres of knowledge, should lead by example.

“If an institution like Peradeniya cannot demonstrate sustainable planning, how can we expect cities to do so?” he asked. “This is an opportunity to show that development and conservation are not enemies, but partners.”

As climate-induced disasters intensify across the country, voices like his—and proposals such as those articulated by Patali Champika Ranawaka—underscore a simple but urgent truth: Sri Lanka’s future safety depends not only on disaster response, but on how and where we build today.

The challenge now lies with policymakers and planners to move beyond television studio discussions and academic warnings, and translate these ideas into concrete, people-centred action.

By Ifham Nizam ✍️

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Superstition – Major barrier to learning and social advancement

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At the initial stage of my six-year involvement in uplifting society through skill-based initiatives, particularly by promoting handicraft work and teaching students to think creatively and independently, my efforts were partially jeopardized by deep-rooted superstition and resistance to rational learning.

Superstitions exerted a deeply adverse impact by encouraging unquestioned belief, fear, and blind conformity instead of reasoning and evidence-based understanding. In society, superstition often sustains harmful practices, social discrimination, exploitation by self-styled godmen, and resistance to scientific or social reforms, thereby weakening rational decision-making and slowing progress. When such beliefs penetrate the educational environment, students gradually lose the habit of asking “why” and “how,” accepting explanations based on fate, omens, or divine intervention rather than observation and logic.

Initially, learners became hesitant to challenge me despite my wrong interpretation of any law, less capable of evaluating information critically, and more vulnerable to misinformation and pseudoscience. As a result, genuine efforts towards social upliftment were obstructed, and the transformative power of education, which could empower individuals economically and intellectually, was weakened by fear-driven beliefs that stood in direct opposition to progress and rational thought. In many communities, illnesses are still attributed to evil spirits or curses rather than treated as medical conditions. I have witnessed educated people postponing important decisions, marriages, journeys, even hospital admissions, because an astrologer predicted an “inauspicious” time, showing how fear governs rational minds.

While teaching students science and mathematics, I have clearly observed how superstition acts as a hidden barrier to learning, critical thinking, and intellectual confidence. Many students come to the classroom already conditioned to believe that success or failure depends on luck, planetary positions, or divine favour rather than effort, practice, and understanding, which directly contradicts the scientific spirit. I have seen students hesitate to perform experiments or solve numerical problems on certain “inauspicious” days.

In mathematics, some students label themselves as “weak by birth”, which creates fear and anxiety even before attempting a problem, turning a subject of logic into a source of emotional stress. In science classes, explanations based on natural laws sometimes clash with supernatural beliefs, and students struggle to accept evidence because it challenges what they were taught at home or in society. This conflict confuses young minds and prevents them from fully trusting experimentation, data, and proof.

Worse still, superstition nurtures dependency; students wait for miracles instead of practising problem-solving, revision, and conceptual clarity. Over time, this mindset damages curiosity, reduces confidence, and limits innovation, making science and mathematics appear difficult, frightening, or irrelevant. Many science teachers themselves do not sufficiently emphasise the need to question or ignore such irrational beliefs and often remain limited to textbook facts and exam-oriented learning, leaving little space to challenge superstition directly. When teachers avoid discussing superstition, they unintentionally reinforce the idea that scientific reasoning and superstitious beliefs can coexist.

To overcome superstition and effectively impose critical thinking among students, I have inculcated the process to create a classroom culture where questioning was encouraged and fear of being “wrong” was removed. Students were taught how to think, not what to think, by consistently using the scientific method—observation, hypothesis, experimentation, evidence, and conclusion—in both science and mathematics lessons. I have deliberately challenged superstitious beliefs through simple demonstrations and hands-on experiments that allow students to see cause-and-effect relationships for themselves, helping them replace belief with proof.

Many so-called “tantrik shows” that appear supernatural can be clearly explained and exposed through basic scientific principles, making them powerful tools to fight superstition among students. For example, acts where a tantrik places a hand or tongue briefly in fire without injury rely on short contact time, moisture on the skin, or low heat transfer from alcohol-based flames rather than divine power.

“Miracles” like ash or oil repeatedly appearing from hands or idols involve concealment or simple physical and chemical tricks. When these tricks are demonstrated openly in classrooms or science programmes and followed by clear scientific explanations, students quickly realise how easily perception can be deceived and why evidence, experimentation, and critical questioning are far more reliable than blind belief.

Linking concepts to daily life, such as explaining probability to counter ideas of luck, or biology to explain illness instead of supernatural causes, makes rational explanations relatable and convincing.

Another unique example that I faced in my life is presented here. About 10 years ago, when I entered my new house but did not organise traditional rituals that many consider essential for peace and prosperity as my relatives believed that without them prosperity would be blocked.  Later on, I could not utilise the entire space of my newly purchased house for earning money, largely because I chose not to perform certain rituals.

While this decision may have limited my financial gains to some extent, I do not consider it a failure in the true sense. I feel deeply satisfied that my son and daughter have received proper education and are now well settled in their employment, which, to me, is a far greater achievement than any ritual-driven expectation of wealth. My belief has always been that a house should not merely be a source of income or superstition-bound anxiety, but a space with social purpose.

Instead of rituals, I strongly feel that the unused portion of my house should be devoted to running tutorials for poor and underprivileged students, where knowledge, critical thinking, and self-reliance can be nurtured. This conviction gives me inner peace and reinforces my faith that education and service to society are more meaningful measures of success than material profit alone.

Though I have succeeded to some extent, this success has not been complete due to the persistent influence of superstition.

by Dr Debapriya Mukherjee
Former Senior Scientist
Central Pollution Control Board, India ✍️

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Race hate and the need to re-visit the ‘Clash of Civilizations’

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Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese: ‘No to race hate’

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has done very well to speak-up against and outlaw race hate in the immediate aftermath of the recent cold-blooded gunning down of several civilians on Australia’s Bondi Beach. The perpetrators of the violence are believed to be ardent practitioners of religious and race hate and it is commendable that the Australian authorities have lost no time in clearly and unambiguously stating their opposition to the dastardly crimes in question.

The Australian Prime Minister is on record as stating in this connection: ‘ New laws will target those who spread hate, division and radicalization. The Home Affairs Minister will also be given new powers to cancel or refuse visas for those who spread hate and a new taskforce will be set up to ensure the education system prevents, tackles and properly responds to antisemitism.’

It is this promptness and single-mindedness to defeat race hate and other forms of identity-based animosities that are expected of democratic governments in particular world wide. For example, is Sri Lanka’s NPP government willing to follow the Australian example? To put the record straight, no past governments of Sri Lanka initiated concrete measures to stamp out the evil of race hate as well but the present Sri Lankan government which has pledged to end ethnic animosities needs to think and act vastly differently. Democratic and progressive opinion in Sri Lanka is waiting expectantly for the NPP government’ s positive response; ideally based on the Australian precedent to end race hate.

Meanwhile, it is apt to remember that inasmuch as those forces of terrorism that target white communities world wide need to be put down their counterpart forces among extremist whites need to be defeated as well. There could be no double standards on this divisive question of quashing race and religious hate, among democratic governments.

The question is invariably bound up with the matter of expeditiously and swiftly advancing democratic development in divided societies. To the extent to which a body politic is genuinely democratized, to the same degree would identity based animosities be effectively managed and even resolved once and for all. To the extent to which a society is deprived of democratic governance, correctly understood, to the same extent would it experience unmanageable identity-bred violence.

This has been Sri Lanka’s situation and generally it could be stated that it is to the degree to which Sri Lankan citizens are genuinely constitutionally empowered that the issue of race hate in their midst would prove manageable. Accordingly, democratic development is the pressing need.

While the dramatic blood-letting on Bondi Beach ought to have driven home to observers and commentators of world politics that the international community is yet to make any concrete progress in the direction of laying the basis for an end to identity-based extremism, the event should also impress on all concerned quarters that continued failure to address the matters at hand could prove fatal. The fact of the matter is that identity-based extremism is very much alive and well and that it could strike devastatingly at a time and place of its choosing.

It is yet premature for the commentator to agree with US political scientist Samuel P. Huntingdon that a ‘Clash of Civilizations’ is upon the world but events such as the Bondi Beach terror and the continuing abduction of scores of school girls by IS-related outfits, for instance, in Northern Africa are concrete evidence of the continuing pervasive presence of identity-based extremism in the global South.

As a matter of great interest it needs mentioning that the crumbling of the Cold War in the West in the early nineties of the last century and the explosive emergence of identity-based violence world wide around that time essentially impelled Huntingdon to propound the hypothesis that the world was seeing the emergence of a ‘Clash of Civilizations’. Basically, the latter phrase implied that the Cold War was replaced by a West versus militant religious fundamentalism division or polarity world wide. Instead of the USSR and its satellites, the West, led by the US, had to now do battle with religion and race-based militant extremism, particularly ‘Islamic fundamentalist violence’ .

Things, of course, came to a head in this regard when the 9/11 calamity centred in New York occurred. The event seemed to be startling proof that the world was indeed faced with a ‘Clash of Civilizations’ that was not easily resolvable. It was a case of ‘Islamic militant fundamentalism’ facing the great bulwark, so to speak, of ‘ Western Civilization’ epitomized by the US and leaving it almost helpless.

However, it was too early to write off the US’ capability to respond, although it did not do so by the best means. Instead, it replied with military interventions, for example, in Iraq and Afghanistan, which moves have only earned for the religious fundamentalists more and more recruits.

Yet, it is too early to speak in terms of a ‘Clash of Civilizations’. Such a phenomenon could be spoken of if only the entirety of the Islamic world took up arms against the West. Clearly, this is not so because the majority of the adherents of Islam are peaceably inclined and want to coexist harmoniously with the rest of the world.

However, it is not too late for the US to stop religious fundamentalism in its tracks. It, for instance, could implement concrete measures to end the blood-letting in the Middle East. Of the first importance is to end the suffering of the Palestinians by keeping a tight leash on the Israeli Right and by making good its boast of rebuilding the Gaza swiftly.

Besides, the US needs to make it a priority aim to foster democratic development worldwide in collaboration with the rest of the West. Military expenditure and the arms race should be considered of secondary importance and the process of distributing development assistance in the South brought to the forefront of its global development agenda, if there is one.

If the fire-breathing religious demagogue’s influence is to be blunted worldwide, then, it is development, understood to mean equitable growth, that needs to be fostered and consolidated by the democratic world. In other words, the priority ought to be the empowerment of individuals and communities. Nothing short of the latter measures would help in ushering a more peaceful world.

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