Opinion
K.H.J.Wijayadasa- a distinguished Public servant and an admirable friend
by C. Narayanasuwami (Nam)
The history of the Ceylon Civil Service (CCS) is replete with honourable men who had dedicated their life and services to the development and prosperity of our country. Mr. Kandekumara Hapudoragamage Jothiyaratna Wijayadasa (K.H.J. Wijayadasa)–Wije as affectionately known to his colleagues and friends–will remain as one of them. When the history of the CCS is written one day, a lot of hitherto untouched developmental episodes will be unearthed and those would relate to agriculture and rural development, land reform and estate development, urban and industrial development, tea, rubber, coconut and agrarian research and a myriad of stories relating to ports, aviation, irrigation, highways and small -scale industrial growth.
Little is known about how eminent civil servants silently changed the face of the country’s development scenario, admittedly within the overall executive and legislative framework, supervised and coordinated by the elected representatives. The history of public administration demonstrates that the upliftment of the country after independence was a colossal task that devolved on charismatic political leaders and public service personalities, the names of whom are too numerous to mention here. Their commitment and dedication to achieving national goals helped propel development although in recent years a variety of factors have contributed to less than anticipated outcomes.
Mr. Wijayadasa’s career in the public service covered several sectors, including broadcasting, local government, highways and road development but his main contributions were in the areas of agricultural development, land reform and estate development, and environmental policy planning and development. As the Government Agent of Polonnaruwa, Kegalle and Ampara districts he left behind demonstrable successes in development planning and agricultural development.
As Chairman of the Land Reform Commission and Janata Estate Development Board he played a key role though these roles also had their controversial elements due to the nature of activities that they entailed. His contribution to environment policy planning is well documented in various laws and regulations. He had served as secretary to the Prime Minister and secretary to the President of our country for a period of ten years (1984-1994) with dignity, grace and efficiency.
His public service career was marked by a high sense of honesty, integrity, and discipline. He produced several books which displayed his multi-faceted ability and competence. Wijayadasa devoted his retirement to initiating work on restoration of Buddhist shrines, elucidating Buddhist scriptures and writing many spiritual articles on the central tenets of Buddhism.
Wijayadasa’s personality remained complex and comforting. His humour, wit and dedication to details, and candid interactions with diverse cultural groups displayed a sense of intellectual maturity that rose above race, religion and positions of individuals.
The description and analysis of Wijayadasa as a personal and family friend evoke sentimental and emotive reactions that are difficult to quantify or illustrate. Wijayadasa and I entered the University of Peradeniya at the same time and joined the civil service in 1960 together. Although we parted ways in the late 1970s, a result of my decision to pursue a career with the United Nations and the Asian Development Bank in that order, not a single year passed without our getting together in Colombo, Manila, London or New York and exchanging notes on public sector developments.
Many among our friends, including his wife Nimalka and children, were not aware until very much later, that Wije took it upon himself to be present at my wedding in Jaffna. Since then our friendship grew further and was cemented by our working colleagues such as Mahinda Silva, then secretary to the Ministry of Agriculture and Lands, the charismatic Minister of Agriculture and lands, Mr. Hector Kobbekaduwa and several other colleagues in the ministry who worked as a team to deliver challenging programs.
I still remember Mr. Kobbekaduwa in one of his personal letters to me highlighting the respect and admiration he had for Mr. Mahinda Silva, Wijeyadasa and myself for the work done in the ministry during his tenure as Minister. In my view that was a golden period in the growth of agriculture with increased paddy production and expansion and production of subsidiary food crops which reached a peak at a time of scarcities.
This was in addition to the establishment of the then Agrarian Research and Training Institute (now Hector Kobbekaduwa Agrarian Research and Training Institute) which was done in double quick time to meet international and local program priorities. I could witness the elation and happiness in Wije’s face when he congratulated me for the job well done at the opening of the building by the then Prime Minister Mrs. Sirimavo Bandaranaike who congratulated the management for the efficient and expeditious manner in which the Institute was established. That kind of partnership, devotion and commitment to delivery of anticipated outcomes is rare and hard to come by these days.
Wijayadasa was a close friend and an admirable associate with whom sharing of life’s day-to-day problems resulted in greater mutual respect and understanding of each other’s needs and aspirations. From the heydays of the 1970s life became different due to my family commitments and international work obligations. Nevertheless, our friendship never faltered and Wije offered his full support when I launched my book, ‘Managing Development: People, Policies and Institutions’ in Colombo. He not only reviewed the book but also participated as a guest speaker along with others such as Indrajit Coomaraswamy – the Chief Guest was the current president – Mr. Ranil Wickremesinghe.
Wije touched my heart when my wife passed away in 2021. Unsolicited, he wrote a tribute citing my wife’s impeccable characteristics – his presentation published in several papers captured the attention of many who wondered at his intimate knowledge of her attributes.
I have lost an invaluable friend who can never be replaced. I will miss him dearly. To his wonderful and courageous wife who stood by him in good and bad times and dutifully carried out all his wishes, and his children Charmalee, her adorable husband, Gihan, and Uditha who equally loved him to the hilt and did their best to give him the peace and solace he required all his life, I can assure them that he will continue to guide them even in death.
We salute you Wije for your dedication, commitment and standards of honesty and integrity you maintained in your public life. We had disagreements on issues of devolution of power, ethnic disharmony and discriminatory policies that had torn a nation apart but never held our individual opinions to distract or destroy our intimate liking and respect for each other. Their lies our great friendship which even in death binds us together. May your soul attain peace and achieve immortal rest until you are born again, if ever that happens.
Opinion
V. Shanmuganyagam (1940-2026): First Clas Engineer, First Class Teacher
Quiet flows another don. The aging fraternity of Peradeniya Engineering alumni has lost another one of its beloved teachers. V. Shanmuganayagam, an exceptionally affable and popular lecturer for nearly two decades at the Peradeniya Engineering Faculty, passed away on 15 January 2026, in Markham, Toronto, Canada. Shan, as he was universally known, graduated with First Class Honours in Civil Engineering, in 1962, when the Faculty was located in Colombo. He taught at Peradeniya from 1967 to 1984, and later at the Nanyang Technological University in Singapore, before retiring to live in Canada.
In October last year, one of our colleagues, Engineer P. Balasundram, organized a lunch in Toronto to felicitate Shan. It was very well attended and Shan was in good spirits. At 85 he was looking as young as any of us, except for using a wheelchair to facilitate his movement. The gathering was remarkable for the outpouring of warmth and gratitude by nearly 40 or 50 Engineers, who had graduated in the early 1970s and now in their own seventies. One by one every one who was there spoke and thanked Shan for making a difference in their lives as a teacher and a mentor, not only in their professional lives but by extension in their personal lives as well.
As we were leaving the luncheon gathering there were suggestions to have more such events and to have Shan with us for more reminiscing. That was not to be. Within three months, a sudden turn for the worse in his condition proved to be irreversible. He passed away peacefully, far away across the world from the little corner of little Sri Lanka where he was born and raised, and raised in a manner to make a mark in his life and to make a difference in the lives of others who were his family, friends and several hundreds of engineering professionals whom he taught.
V. Shanmuganayagam was born on May 30, 1940, in Point Pedro, to Culanthavel and Sellam Venayagampillai. His family touchingly noted in the obituary that he was raised in humble beginnings, but more consequentially his values were cast in the finest of moulds. He studied at Hartley College, Point Pedro, and was one of the four outstanding Hartleyites to study engineering, get their first class and join the academia. Shan was preceded by Prof. A. Thurairajah, easily Sri Lanka’s most gifted academic engineering mind, and was followed by David Guanaratnam and A.S. Rajendra. All of them did Civil Engineering, and years later Hartley would send a new pair of outstanding students, M. Sritharan and K. Ramathas who would go on to become highly accomplished Electrical Engineers.
Shan graduated in 1962 with First Class Honours and may have been one of a very few if not the only first class that year. Shan worked for a short while at the Ceylon Electricity Board before proceeding to Cambridge for postgraduate studies specializing in Structures. His dissertation on the Ultimate Strength of Encased Beams is listed in the publications of the Cambridge Structures Group. He returned to his job at CEB and then joined the Faculty in 1967. At that time, Shan may have been one of the more senior lecturers in Structures after Milton Amaratunga who too passed away late last year in Southampton, England.
When we were students in the early 1970s, there was an academic debate at the Faculty as to whether a university or specific faculties should give greater priority to teaching or research. Shan was on the side of teaching and he was quite open about it in his classes. He would supplement his lectures with cyclostyled sheets of notes and the students naturally loved it. It was also a time when Shan and many of his colleagues were young bachelors at Peradeniya, and their lives as academic bachelors have been delightfully recounted in a number of online circulations.
The cross-sectional camaraderie at the Faculty in those days is well captured in one of the photographs taken at Shan’s wedding at Point Pedro, in 1974, which too has been doing the rounds and which I have inserted above. Flanking Shan and his bride Kalamathy, from Left to Right are, M. Dhanendran, Nandana Rambukwella, K. Jeyapalan, Wickrama Bahu Karunaratne, A.S. Rajendra, Lal Tennekoon, Tusit Weerasooria, and R. Srikantha. Sadly, Rambukwella, Karunaratne (Bahu), Tennekoon and now Shan himself, are no longer with us.
Like other faculty members, Shan kept contact with his former students turned practising engineers and they would reach out to him to solicit his expertise in their projects. In the early 1980s, when I was working as Resident Project Manager with my Peradeniya contemporaries, JM Samoon and K. Balasundram, at the Hanthana Housing Scheme undertaken by the National Development Housing Authority (NHDA), Shan was one of the project consultants helping us with concrete technology involving mix design and in situ strength testing using the testing facilities at the Faculty.
The Hanthana Team Looking back, the Hanthana housing scheme construction was the engineering externalization of the architectural imaginings of Tanya Iousova and Suren Wickremesinghe, for building houses on hill slopes without flattening the hills. The project involved the construction of hundreds of housing units with supporting infrastructure comprising roads and drainage, water supply and sanitary, and electricity distribution using underground cables. Tanya & Suren Wickremasinghe were the Architects with an Italian construction company as contractors.
To their credit, Tanya and Suren assembled quite a team of Consulting Engineers that was a cross-section of E’Fac alumni, viz., Siripala Kodikkara and Siripala Jayasinghe (Contract Administration); Prof. Thurairajah (Foundations & Soil Mechanics); S.A. Karunaratne (Structures); V. Shanmuganyagam (Concrete Technology); Neville Kottagama and DLO Mendis (Roads & Drainage); K. Suntharalingam (Water Supply & Sanitary); and Chris Ratnayake (Electrical).
As esoteric gossip goes, DLO Mendis had an informal periodization of engineering graduates, identifying them as either Before-Thurai or After-Thurai, centered on 1957 – the year Prof. Thurairajah graduated with supreme distinction and went on to do groundbreaking theoretical research in Soil Mechanics at Cambridge. Of the Hanthana consultant team, Neville Kottagama and DLO Mendis were before Thurai by six years, Shan was five years after, and all the others came later. Sadly though, only Tanya and Chris are with us today from the 1980s group named above.
After Hanthana came 1983 when all hell broke loose and hundreds of professionals and their families were forced to leave Sri Lanka. Shan left Peradeniya and joined Nanyang Technological University in Singapore, encouraged by his Cambridge contemporaries from Singapore. He taught at Nanyang for twelve years (1984-1996) before moving to Canada with his wife and three sons who were by then ready for university education.
All three children have done exceptionally well in their studies and professional careers. The oldest, Dhanansayan, is a Medical Doctor and a Professor at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, in Madison, United States. That was where India’s Jayaprakash Narayan and Sri Lanka’s Philip Gunawardena had their university education a hundred years ago.
The younger two sons took to Engineering. The second son, Kalaichelvan, is Program Manager at Creation Technologies, an award-winning global electronics manufacturing service provider. And the youngest, Dhaksayan, is the Chief Information Officer (CIO) at the Toronto Transit Commission (TTC), which is North America’s third-largest urban transit system.
All three have done their parents proud and Shan would have been gratified to see them achieve exemplary success in their chosen fields. A first class Engineer and a first class teacher, Shan was also a great father and a loving grandfather. As we remember Professor Shanmuganyagam, we extend our thoughts and sympathies to his beloved wife Kalamathy, his sons and their young families
by Rajan Philips
Opinion
Cannavarella: Estate once owned by OEG with a heritage since 1880
Established in 1880, Cannavarella Estate stands among the most historically significant plantations in Sri Lanka, carrying a legacy that intertwines agricultural heritage, colonial transitions and modern development. Its story begins with the cultivation of cinchona, a medicinal bark used to produce quinine, which is a vital treatment for malaria at the time, introduced when coffee estates across the island were failing.
Under the ownership of Messrs Macfarlane, Cannavarella rapidly gained a reputation for producing cinchona at ideal elevations between 4,000 and 5,000 feet above sea level. At that time, the estate spanned around 750 acres and played a pivotal role in the island’s shift from coffee to alternative plantation crops during the late 19th century.
A transformative chapter began when Christopher B. Smith purchased the property and unified several surrounding estates- Moussagolla, Cannavarella, East Gowerakelle, and Naminacooly- into what became known as the Cannavarella Group. This amalgamation created a vast holding of approximately 1,800 acres. By 1915, nearly 1,512 acres of this extent were cultivated in tea, marking the estate’s full transition from cinchona to the crop that would define its identity for generations.
The Group was managed by the Eastern Produce and Estates Company from 1915 until 1964, after which stewardship passed successively to Walker & Sons Company Ltd, and then to George Steuart Company Ltd by 1969.
A defining moment in the estate’s history arrived in 1971 when Sir Oliver Goonetilleke, former Governor General of Ceylon, acquired the estate. Under his ownership, it came under the London-based company Ceyover Ltd., a name derived from “Cey” for Ceylon and “Over” for Oliver.
The estate remained under private ownership until the nationalization wave of 1975, during which Cannavarella was brought under the Janatha Estates Development Board (JEDB). For nearly two decades it was managed under government purview until the plantation sector was re-privatised in 1992.
Thereafter, Cannavarella Estate moved under the management of Namunukula Plantations Limited, first through BC Plantation Services, then under John Keells Holdings’ Keells Plantation Management Services and eventually under the ownership of Richard Pieris & Company PLC, where it continues today as part of the Arpico Plantations portfolio.
Blending heritage, landscape and community
Situated along the northeastern slopes of the scenic Kabralla-Moussagolla range and bordering the Namunukula mountain range, Cannavarella Estate spans a total extent of 800 hectares. Its six divisions rise across elevations from 910 to 1,320 metres above sea level, creating a landscape ideal for cultivating premium high-grown tea. Of the total land area, 351 hectares are dedicated to mature tea, while 54 hectares consist of VP tea, representing 16 % of the estate.
Among its most remarkable features are fields containing seedling tea bushes more than a century old, living symbols of Sri Lanka’s plantation legacy that continue to thrive across the slopes. The estate is also home to the origin of the Menik River, which begins its journey in the Moussagolla Division, adding an ecological richness to Cannavarella’s natural environment.
Cannavarella’s history of leadership reflects broader transformations within the plantation industry. The last English superintendent, Mr. Charles Edwards, oversaw the estate during the final phase of British management. In 1972, he was succeeded by Franklin Jacob, who became the first Sri Lankan superintendent of the Cannavarella Group, marking a shift toward local leadership and expertise in plantation management.
Development within Cannavarella Estate has never been confined to agriculture alone. Over the past decade, the estate has strengthened its emphasis on community care, diversification and improving living conditions for its workers. In 2022, coffee planting was initiated in Fields 7 and 8 of the NKU Division, covering 2.5 hectares as part of a broader effort to introduce alternative revenue streams while complementing tea cultivation.
The estate’s commitment to early childhood development is reflected in the initiation of a morning meal programme across all Child Development Centres from 2025, ensuring that children receive nutritious meals each day. A newly constructed Child Development Centre in the EGK Division, completed in 2020, now offers modern facilities including a play area, study room and kitchen, symbolizing the estate’s dedication to nurturing the next generation. In 2015, a housing scheme consisting of 23 new homes was completed and handed over to workers in the CVE Division, significantly improving quality of life and providing families with safer, more stable living environments.
A future built on stability and renewal
Cannavarella Estate is preparing to undertake one of its most important social development initiatives. A major housing programme has been proposed to relocate 69 families currently residing in landslide-prone areas of the Moussagolla Division. Supported by the Indian Housing Programme, this effort aims to provide secure, sustainable housing in safer terrain, ensuring long-term stability for vulnerable families and reducing disaster risk in the region.
Across its history, Cannavarella Estate has remained a landscape shaped both by the land and the people who call it home. Cannavarella continues to honour its roots while building a modern legacy that uplifts both the estate and its people. (Planters Association news release)
Opinion
From the Lecture Hall to the Global Market: How Sri Lankan students are mastering the “Gig Economy”
Have you ever wondered how a university student, between heavy textbooks and late-night study sessions, manages to earn a professional income in US dollars? It sounds like a dream, but for thousands of Sri Lankans, it’s becoming a daily reality through online freelancing.
A recent study published in the Ianna Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies has pulled back the curtain on this digital revolution. By interviewing 21 successful student freelancers across Sri Lanka, researchers have mapped out exactly what it takes to turn a laptop and an internet connection into a thriving career.
The Rise of the “Earn-as-you-learn” Era
In Sri Lanka, the number of online freelancers has exploded from about 20,000 in 2016 to over 150,000 today. While our traditional education system often focuses on preparing students for 9-to-5 office jobs , these students are diving into the “Gig Economy” a digital marketplace where they sell specific skills, like graphic design or programming, to clients all over the world.
The Secret Sauce for Success
So, what makes some students succeed while others struggle? The research found that it isn’t just about being good at coding or design. Success comes down to six “Core Pillars”:
· A Growth Mindset: The digital world moves fast. Successful students don’t just learn one skill; they are constantly updating themselves to ensure they don’t become “outdated”
· The Balancing Act:
How do they handle exams and clients? They don’t use a magic wand; they use strict time management. Many work late into the night (from 6 p.m. to midnight) to accommodate international time zones.
· The Power of “Hello”:
Since most clients are in the USA or UK, strong English and clear communication are vital. It’s about more than just talking; it’s about negotiating prices and building trust.
· Proactive Problem Solving:
Successful freelancers don’t wait for things to go wrong. They update their clients regularly and fix issues before they become headaches.
Why This Matters for Sri Lanka
Right now, our universities don’t always teach “how to be a freelancer”. This study suggests that if we integrate freelancing modules and mentorship into our degree programs, we could significantly reduce graduate unemployment. It’s a way for students to gain financial independence and bring much-needed foreign currency into our economy while still in school.
You Can Do It Too
If you’re a student (or the parent of one), the message is clear: the global market is open for business. You don’t need to wait for graduation to start your career. With a bit of flexibility, a willingness to keep learning, and a proactive attitude, you can transition from a learner to an earner.
The Research Team Behind the Study
This groundbreaking research was conducted by a dedicated team from the Department of Business Management at the SLIIT Business School (Sri Lanka Institute of Information Technology). The authors of the study include:
· Lihini Niranjana Dasanayaka
· Thuvindu Bimsara Madanayake
· Kalana Gimantha Jayasekara
· Thilina Dinidu Illepperuma
· Ruwanthika Chandrasiri
· Gayan Bandara
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