Opinion
Let Lanka be a global beacon of light
This is a response to Lynn Ockersz’ ‘”Pakistan strikes enlightened note on interfaith harmony – The Island, World Scan feature on 23 December 2021.
It is noteworthy that Pakistani Ministers Qadri and Mazari have called for inter-religious harmony and tolerance, in the face of the barbaric act of the lynching of our brother, Priyantha Kumara. Even Prime Minister Imran Khan’s immediate reaction was that of condemnation, calling it a ‘national disgrace’ and assuring the world that the culprits will be rounded up and severely dealt with, according to the law of the land. At the same time, one should not ignore the discordant view of the Minister of Defence, whose utterances had somewhat of a flavour of approval, saying it’s not unusual for youngsters to get emotional with religion, and go berserk.
Be that as it may, the writer makes an appeal to Pakistan, to take a lead role in the South Asian region, in bringing into being ways of uniting the peoples of the region, on the basis of shared values. Why cannot we start that from home and show the region and the wide world, how inter-religious harmony and tolerance can and should be achieved?
Sri Lanka is a multinational, multi-racial, multi-lingual, multi-religious and multi-cultural country. At grass root level, most often there is demonstrable harmony. At state level this is ensured, at least on paper, by the fact that the most sacred days of all communities and religions are duly honoured and declared as public holidays. Perhaps we are the only country in the world, with such dispensation. But most unfortunately, this is not being used in the best possible way, to foster amity.
In our Calendar, there are 25 Public Holidays, apart from all Saturdays and Sundays. Of the 25, 23 are connected with a particular religious or racial event, the exceptions being Independence Day and May Day. It must be remembered that these 25 days are ‘commemorative’ days and not ‘holidays’, unlike Saturdays and Sundays. The vast majority of us tend to treat these days too as ‘holidays’ and do nothing connected with the event being commemorated, thereby negating its very intention.
My simple suggestion is to utilise this existing template meaningfully, to actively promote and ensure lasting harmony, tolerance and integration.
In this regard, our National holidays could be re-framed. The Independence Day and May Day, along with another eight days, which are considered to be of the highest importance to the respective ethnic or religious group; namely Thai Pongal, Sinhala and Tamil New Year (two days), Vesak (two days), Poson, Ramazan and Christmas – making up a group of 10 days that need to be considered separately. During these 10 days, there are large scale religious observances, social events and/or family reunions. This group of 10 could constitute our ‘National Holidays’.
The remaining 15 commemorative events consisting of 10 Poya days, Hadji, Prophet Mohammed’s birthday, Maha Sivarathri, Deepavali and Good Friday could be declared working days, with the exception that the first two hours, i.e. 8 to 10 be spent in some activity devoted to the significance of that particular day’s event.
Accordingly, on a Poya Day there could be a bana/meditation/dhamma discussion; on Deepavali and Maha Sivarathri Day, a Hindu religious/cultural programme; on Hadji and Prophet Mohammed’s birthday, a programme on some aspect of Islam and the life of the Holy Prophet, and on Good Friday, a Prayer Service, talk and discussion on the life of Jesus Christ. This will ensure that everyone will at least spend some time meaningfully, in observance of the particular event being commemorated. It will also promote understanding of the different religions and cultures, and integration and harmony amongst the different religious and ethnic groups, as they would be involved together in making arrangements and participating in each other’s function, and thereafter getting back to work (or class-room), after partaking in fellowship.
One should not forget that a number of Buddhists observe ‘ata-sil’ on most Poya days. As ‘ata-sil’ observance need not necessarily be on the Poya day, arrangements could be made to hold such observances on the Sunday following or preceding the Poya. In fact, many schools arrange their ‘ata-sil’ observances on the school day preceding the Poya.
Since we have been used to enjoying ‘long week-ends’, consideration could be given to declaring a Monday and/or Friday in each quarter of the year simply as an additional holiday, to encourage people to take longer breaks and engage in an activity of their choice, which is a healthy concept. This would make a total of 14/18 ‘National Holidays’.
Thus it will be seen that this proposed scheme, will curtail the number of holidays and increase the number of working days/hours, thereby helping the country’s smooth administration and economy; with a little ‘give and take’ it is likely to promote better understanding and appreciation of each other’s cultures, build bridges, facilitate cross faith interactions, and regain inter-community trust, which is essential for ensuring harmony and oneness – particularly important in the coming days of a rejuvenated effort to achieve harmony and nation re-building.
Perusal of our recent history reveals times we have gone into a slumber – have done ‘too little, too late’ with disastrous consequences. The end of the armed insurrection in 2009 was a missed opportunity – failed to adequately address the root cause of communal strife. The clock keeps ticking; swift action is needed. Let this not be yet another lost opportunity. Sri Lanka could well be the beacon of light to the entire South Asia region, as well as a global example of a harmoniously integrated society, progressing by leaps and bounds. Then we could very well say that our brother Pradeep Kumara, did not die in vain!
Dr. L.A.W. SIRISENA
Opinion
Losing Oxygen
The ability of expressing our fundamental right to breathe clean air is over. The Global Commons of air is rapidly being impacted, in addition to an increase in the concentration of Carbon Dioxide and a decrease in Oxygen concentration. The concentration of toxic gasses and airborne particulate matter in the atmosphere is increasing. While a global compact on the quality of air as a fundamental right, is urgent consideration of its impact on health must also become a matter of concern. he most essential thing for our existence is the ability to breathe. The air that we take for granted is like an invisible river of gasses considered a part of the ‘Global Commons’ or those resources that extend beyond political boundaries. The Commons of air is composed of a mix of gasses, the dominant being Nitrogen at about 78%, followed by Oxygen at 21%. Carbon Dioxide that is contributing to climate change accounts for only 0.04% and demonstrates how small changes in the concentration of gasses in the atmosphere can bring about massive changes to those that live in it.
The Oxygen component of the air we breathe was made by those earliest plants, the Bryophytes, which colonized land from 470 Ma onwards. This land colonization increased atmospheric oxygen to present levels by 400 Ma. The fire-mediated feedbacks that followed have stabilised high oxygen levels ever since, shaping subsequent evolution of life. Oxygen is the most crucial element on earth for the aerobic organisms that depend on it to release energy from carbon-based macromolecules. The current stocks have been maintained over millions of years by plants, terrestrial and oceanic. To sustain a gaseous concentration at around 21% of the air we breathe. This level is required to maintain a healthy body and mind. A lowering of this concentration has consequences. At 19% physiologically adverse effects begin. Impaired thinking and attention, reduced coordination, decreased ability for strenuous work is experienced, at 15% Poor judgment, faulty coordination, abnormal fatigue upon exertion, emotional upset Levels below this lead not only to very poor judgement and coordination but also impaired respiration, lung and heart damage. The question often arises: ‘If the atmospheric Oxygen concentration is 21% how can it vary so widely in different areas ? The answer is that ‘when you add other gasses, smoke and aerosols into the atmosphere, the concentration of atmospheric gasses will decrease in concentration. In some cities like New Delhi or Mexico have Oxygen concentrations measured at about 18% or lower.
There has been a clear decline in the volume of oxygen in Earth’s atmosphere over the past 20 years. Although the magnitude of this decrease appears small compared to the amount of oxygen in the atmosphere, it is difficult to predict how this process may evolve, due to the brevity of the collected records. A recently proposed model predicts a non-linear decay, which would result in an increasingly rapid fall-off in atmospheric oxygen concentration, with potentially devastating consequences for human health.
The free Oxygen in the atmosphere is 1.2×1015 tonnes (12,000,000,000,000,000 t), but it is unstable in our planet’s atmosphere and must be constantly replenished by photosynthesis in green plants. Without plants, our atmosphere would contain almost no O2. An important thing that needs international address is the fact that the system that replenishes the Oxygen of our atmosphere is under threat. We remove the vegetation that produces the Oxygen at a prodigious rate. According to Global Forest Watch we fell about 15 billion trees each year. With one tree one tree producing about 120Kg of Oxygen per year, the loss of Oxygen production through deforestation is massive. The impact on the oceans is becoming just as serious.
As human activities have caused irreversible decline of atmospheric O2 and there is no sign of abatement, It is time to take actions to promote O2 production and pay for industrial use and consumption of O2. Vehicular traffic in cities with poor air flow design transforms molecular oxygen O2 into Ozone O3. Ozone is good when it is high up in our atmosphere. It protects us from sunburn. Ozone is bad when it is near the ground where we can breathe it in. You can’t see ozone in the air but bad ozone levels is sometimes called smog. It is formed when chemicals coming out of cars and factories are cooked by the hot sun. Breathing in ground-level ozone can make you cough. It can also make it harder for you to breathe. Ozone might even make it hurt to take a breath of air. When you breathe in ozone, it makes the lining of your airways red and swollen, like your skin would get with a sunburn.
All this becomes even more pressing with the discovery of the “human oxidation field” a beneficial chemical microenvironment formed around the body’s surface that helps protect it from volatile organic compounds (VOCs). This field is generated by the reaction of ozone with oils and fats on our skin, especially the unsaturated triterpene squalene, which constitutes about 10 percent of the skin lipids that protect our skin and keep it supple. The reaction releases a host of gas phase chemicals containing double bonds that react further in the air with ozone to generate substantial levels of OH radicals. As the Ozone levels as in cities rise, the individual ‘human oxidation field’ looses its ability to maintain skin health.
In looking at the question of why there was such a rapid loss in the quality of air, the first study to systematically analyse the global O2 budget and its changes over the past 100 years, found that anthropogenic fossil fuel combustion is the largest contributor to the current O2 deficit, which consumed 2.0 Gt/a in 1900 and has increased to 38.2 Gt/a by 2015.
The inability to defend our fundamental right to breath seems to stem from the ability of any industry to discount the consequences of burning fossil fuels as a ‘negative externality’. Climate Change is one consequence, but the impact that lowered Oxygen concentrations will have on emerging urban populations seem disturbing. There is only one way to arrest the fall in atmospheric Oxygen, increase the rate of photosynthesis. There must be a protection of the existing stocks of photosynthetic biomass and programs that encourage increasing the standing stock of Oxygen to be able to sustain our fundamental right to breathe clean air.
by Dr. Ranil Senanayake
Opinion
Appreciation: Upali Tissa Pieris Seneviratne
My brother, close on two years senior to me, was into sports – cricket, football, and athletics were his favourites. We were at De Mazenod College for our primary schooling, moved apart thereafter – he to Ananda College which had hosted all our male relatives from our father and his brothers, our mother’s brothers and all our male cousins on either side, while I was sent to Royal. He moved, thereafter, to the Royal Post-Primary which turned into Thurstan College.
There he distinguished himself at cricket and, together with his captain, Brindley Perera, provided the runs. He also had the distinction of being the first at Thurstan to pass the SSC examination. At that point he returned to De Mazenod where he won, what was called, the Senior Proficiency Prize, captained the cricket eleven, and was the senior athletics champion.
That last was witnessed by the district head of the Police and led to his being rapidly drawn into the Police force.
Following initial training at Katukurunda the new recruits were posted to distant Police Stations as Sub-Inspectors. He had spells in the Hiniduma area and in Galenbindunuweva, off Anuradhapura.
It was while he served at Anuradhapura itself that he met with an accident that almost took his life. He came out of that with a limp.
That did not prove to be a substantial handicap and he served with distinction in Kosgoda and other stations on the south western coast before he was moved to the CID. There he played a major role in solving what came to be known as ‘the Kalattawa Case’, which led to the arrest and due punishment of a wealthy producer of illicit booze – a man who had ‘pocketed’ a good many public servants who were entrusted with the enforcement of the law.
In the early 1970s, he was entrusted with investigations related to the activities of a group of agents of Lankan and foreign right-wing politics, which called itself ‘the JVP’. Among those he had arrested was a colleague of mine, Susil Siriwardena, who later managed to secure a show of incarceration in a Ward at the General Hospital (where the only luxury he enjoyed was access to some books). In due course, many years later, President Premadasa, besides other responsibilities imposed on him, related to his initiatives in Village Reawakening (Gam Udawa), put Susil in charge of the Janasaviya programme.
It is a pity that my brother and fellow officers have not placed on record their experience of that ‘April Insurgency’.
My brother served with distinction in both the CID and the CDB. When Lalith Athulathmudali was in charge of Internal Security, in the late 1970s, my brother was seconded for service in that Ministry as Director of Training. The Secretary was Denis Hapugalle, who was an Army man – and their approach to ‘training’ differed. After a year or two, Upali reverted to the Police and took early retirement to set up a Security service that served several Mercantile establishments for over 30 years.
He contributed much to the development of the Police retired senior officers organisation, which he served for many years as its Secretary and its President.
He was the most generous of men and gifted with a sense of humour that he would have inherited from our father. May he reach the bliss of Nirvana!
D G P (Gamini) Seneviratne
Opinion
Archaic rules affecting bank customers
At present, there is a rule in (state-owned) commercial banks that prevents individuals from opening accounts if they reside in an area different from the address stated on their National Identity Card (NIC). The justification offered is that this helps prevent money laundering and the handling of illicit funds.
However, one must question the logic of this rule. How exactly does it stop such individuals? A person with ill intentions could just as easily open an account in the area mentioned on their NIC. Moreover, even if there are, say, one lakh fraudsters in the country, this rule effectively imposes restrictions on twenty lakh genuine citizens — penalising the many for the misdeeds of a few. How fair is that, and how does it encourage people to save and participate in the formal banking system?
The government constantly speaks about digitalisation and technological advancement, yet continues to tolerate outdated and impractical regulations like this.
Consider another case: a customer of a state bank urgently needed to encash a fixed deposit opened at a distant branch. When he approached the branch near his current residence, he was told to visit the original branch, as that branch must physically receive the original FD certificate upon encashment. One wonders what is the use of highly paid branch managers, fax machines, emails, and even WhatsApp, if two branches cannot coordinate to resolve such a simple issue?
Unfortunately, the customer has to travel 200 km to reach the original branch.
If the government truly wishes to build a modern, technologically advanced financial system, it must first eliminate such archaic rules and adopt smarter, technology-driven safeguards against fraudsters — without punishing honest citizens in the process.
A Ratnayake
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