Connect with us

Features

Politically-motivated lamentation over 75 years since Independence

Published

on

By C. A. Chandraprema

We now live in a digital world dominated by the social media, where information or disinformation coming through our mobile phones has more to do with forming public opinion than the plainly visible and palpable reality and well-established facts and data. Sri Lanka recently marked the 75th Anniversary of its Independence in the midst of an organised campaign in the social media to propagate the view that all those who ruled Sri Lanka in the past 75 years had ruined the country and that political power should go to the hands of a party that has never held power during this period.

We have all heard various stories about where Sri Lanka was at the time of independence. One story is that at the time of independence the per capita income of Sri Lanka was second in Asia only to that of Japan. Another story is that the first post-independence Prime Minister D. S. Senanayake lent money even to Britain. As a result of such stories being unquestioningly repeated over time, many people especially among the youth, are under the impression that Sri Lanka was heaven on earth at the time of independence and that due to the fault of those who ruled the country in the post-independence period, Sri Lanka had steadily declined to the present position of being officially bankrupt.

The declaration of bankruptcy in 2022 is a matter that will have to be dealt with separately and cannot be gone into here. But is there really any truth in the rose-tinted stories we have been hearing about Sri Lanka at the time of Independence? Long before the Second World War, Japan was a country that had built up its technological, industrial and economic capacity to a level where they could go to war with the Western imperialist powers. Hence any attempt to compare Sri Lanka to Japan in 1948, would be grossly misleading.

The 1948 report of the UN

Economic Commission for Asia and the Far East had described Sri Lanka as a mainly agricultural, industrially underdeveloped economy characterised by low productivity and poverty with a shortfall of resources in comparison to its population. That was the actual reality in the year we gained independence. It is certainly true that in the first years after independence, Sri Lanka was able to complete even large-scale development projects like the Gal Oya scheme without any foreign loans. However, this was not due to any inherent strength of the Sri Lankan economy but due to the good prices that Sri Lankan exports like rubber fetched during the Second World War and the Korean War. Once those wars ended and the windfall profits stopped, Sri Lanka’s resources also dwindled.

Realities at the time of

Independence

The British colonial masters built an economy in Sri Lanka that was useful for the British Empire but not necessarily for the people of Sri Lanka. At the time of independence, the majority of the Sri Lankan population lived in extreme poverty in wattle and daub huts. Electricity, water supply and telephone facilities were available only to a small minority. The countrywide road network was sub-standard and poorly maintained. Today however we don’t see the extreme poverty that prevailed in this country at the time of independence. R. Premadasa built up his entire political image by providing people who lived in wattle and daub huts with permanent brick houses built with tiled roofs.

By today’s standards these were small, crude abodes sneeringly described as petti gewal even by Marxist politicians, but at that time, they contributed to improving the lives of the ordinary people. Today, virtually all houses have electricity. A substantial proportion of the population have water suppliy as well. We now have a carpeted road network second to none in the world. The professional grades even in government service get good salaries. Our internet facilities are on par with that of a developed country.

For many years after Independence, those leaving Sri Lanka to take up permanent residence abroad would have experienced a sharp difference between living in Sri Lanka and living abroad. At that time, Sri Lanka did not have many of the things and facilities that people living abroad took for granted. Even something as basic as television came to Sri Lanka only in 1979. But now anything that is available in developed countries is also available in Sri Lanka. The lifestyle of the majority of the population has seen vast improvements. Even in rural areas there is hardly a house without a TV, a fridge, a washing machine, fans and a fuel driven vehicle of some sort be it a motorcycle, trishaw or a mini-truck. All young people have smart phones.

Many people still see Sri Lanka as a living hell and migrating to foreign countries as an entry into paradise. Even the class that has everything in Sri Lanka wishes to migrate to a foreign country. Several decades ago this sentiment did have some justification. For example, when we were university students, many of our lecturers and professors used public transport. Only those who had private means had cars. But today university lecturers get good salaries and drive luxury vehicles. If a professional in such a category migrates overseas today, he will experience an immediate and sharp drop in his standard of living. Migrating overseas may have made sense until around the turn of the century, but whether it is of any benefit now, is something that each individual will have to decide for himself.

A professional migrating overseas with his family today can only hope to buy a house and a car on mortgage and to pay off those loans over about 25 years and upon retirement to try and survive on the retirement lump sum he gets. The same people could have done the same thing in Sri Lanka as well – only better. If a migrant family to an overseas country is dependent on a fixed income, they will not be able to become wealthy even by Sri Lankan standards.

Today the only people who can go overseas with their families and become rich at least by Sri Lankan standards, are those who are not limited to fixed incomes and who can charge good fees for their services or those who make profits from businesses. The only approach that would make sense today would be to go overseas as expatriate workers to earn some capital which can be invested in Sri Lanka to benefit one’s family.

Stumbling forward

It is an incontrovertible fact that in the past 75 years Sri Lanka has moved forward despite all obstacles and pitfalls. During this period, we have had governments that have contributed to this forward march and governments that have stymied it. It has to be borne in mind that we have come this far while also safeguarding and preserving the democratic system of government. None of the countries in Asia that have achieved a certain level of economic development since World War II have had democratic forms of government during the most important period of their economic advancement. This is true not only of Japan, South Korea and Singapore but also of Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand. It is very difficult for a country to develop with a democratic form of government. This is one reason why India is so far behind China. This why Sri Lanka could never become a Malaysia let alone a Singapore.

A democratic form of government spawns political parties that are willing to do anything or to say anything to get into power. Many things are based on this power motive and not on the basis of what is beneficial to the country. The people of the country are susceptible to manipulation by local villains as well as foreign ones. Then there are trade unions with mafia like power over the sectors they control. There are NGOs implementing foreign agendas in the country. During the entirety of the past 75 years we have observed a tendency to appease the various forces that emerge from among the masses rather than doing what it takes to benefit the economy of the country.

More than all of the above, one of the main obstacles to the forward march of Sri Lanka over the past 75 years was the terrorism that engulfed this country for over half that period. On the one hand there was the Tamil separatist terrorism from 1970 to 2009 which shook the entire world. In 2008 the FBI declared the LTTE to be the deadliest terrorist organization in the world. Then there was the mindlessly brutal Sinhala terrorism of 1971 and 1987-89 motivated by a desire to capture state power through violence. The 2019 Easter Sunday attack in Sri Lanka launched by Muslim terrorists is second only to the 9/11 attacks in terms of the number of fatalities among the terrorist attacks launched against civilian targets worldwide. The terrorist attack of 9 May 2022 which saw the houses and properties of over 70 sitting members of Parliament burnt to the ground in the course of a single night was also a world record. Throughout its 134 year history, the Inter-Parliamentary Union has not heard of an incident like that from any other country in the world.

We are where we are today after all that has happened in this country. The journey that Sri Lanka has traversed over the past 75 years, while taking the consequences of the shortsighted policies of political parties, sabotage by trade unions, conspiracies of foreign funded NGOs, disruption caused in higher education by student unions like the IUSF, the loss of life and property caused by Sinhala, Tamil and Muslim terrorists and ever the present foreign interference, is indeed a remarkable story of resilience. Looked at from that point of view, the real wonder of Asia is not Japan, South Korea or Singapore, but Sri Lanka. The generation that forms its opinions on the basis of what is directed at them by organised groups through the social media will have to learn to look critically at what they see on their mobile phones or risk making decisions that they will bitterly regret sooner rather than later.



Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Features

Welcome bid to revive interest in Southern development issues

Published

on

Southern development issues making a comeback; the RCSS forum in progress

From the global South’s viewpoint the time could not be more appropriate to re-explore the possibility of forging ahead with realizing its long neglected collective development aims. It would seem that over the past three decades or more the developing world itself has allowed its outstanding issues to be thrust onto the backburner, so to speak, of the global development agenda.

Maybe the South’s fascination with the economic growth models advanced by the West and its apex financial institutions enabled the above situation to come to pass. However, time has also made it clear that the people of the South have gained little or nothing from their rulers’ fixation with the ‘development’ paths mapped out for them by Western financial institutions which came to prioritize ‘market-led’ growth.

At this juncture it is crucial that the more informed and enlightened sections among Southern publics come together to figure out where their countries should ‘go from here’ in terms of development, correctly defined. It is gladdening to note that the Regional Centre for Strategic Studies, Colombo (RCSS) has got down to this task.

On November 3rd, the RCSS launched its inaugural ‘RCSS Strategic Dialogue’ under the guidance of its Executive Director, Ambassador (Retd.) Ravinatha Aryasinha, under the theme, ‘Research Priorities for the Global South in Challenging Times’, and the forum was led by none other than by Dr. Carlos Maria Correa, the Executive Director of the Geneva-based South Centre, an institution that has played a pivotal role in Southern development and discourse over the decades.

Among the audience were thought leaders, diplomats, senior public servants, development experts and journalists. In what proved to be a lively, wide-ranging discussion issues at the heart of Southern development were analyzed and a general understanding arrived at which ought to stand the South in general and Sri Lanka in particular in good stead, going forward.

A thought-provoking point made by Dr. Carlos Correa was that the ‘US is helping India and China to come closer, and if India and China work together, the global economy and politics could change dramatically.’ He was referring to the tariff-related trade strife that the US has unleashed on the world and the groundwork that it could lay for the foremost Asian economic powers, India and China, to work consensually towards changing global trade terms in particular in favour of the global South.

The Asian powers mentioned could easily achieve this considering that they could hold their own with the US in economic terms. In other words there exists a possibility of the world economy being shaped in accordance with some of the best interests of the South, provided the foremost economic powers of the South come together and look beyond narrow self- interests towards the collective good of the South. This is a challenge for the future that needs taking up.

China sought to identify itself with the developing world in the past and this could be its opportunity to testify in practical terms to this conviction. In view of the finding that well over 40 percent of global GDP is currently being contributed by the major economies of the South, coupled with the fact that the bulk of international trade occurs among Southern economies, the time seems to be more than right for the South to initiate changes to the international economy that could help in realizing some of its legitimate interests, provided it organizes itself.

The above observation could be considered an important ‘take-away’ from the RCSS forum, which needs to be acted upon by governments, policy makers and think tanks of the developing world. It is time to revisit the seemingly forgotten North-South and South-South Dialogues, revive them and look to exploiting their potential to restructure the world economic system to suit the best interests of all countries, big or small. There are ‘research priorities’ aplenty here for those sections the world over that are desirous of initiating needed qualitative changes to the international economy for the purpose of ushering equity and fair play.

An important research question that arises from the RCSS forum relates to development and what it entails. This columnist considers this question a long- forgotten issue from the North-South Dialogue. It is no longer realized, it seems, that the terms growth and development cannot be used interchangeably. Essentially, while ‘growth’ refers to the total value of goods and services produced by a country yearly, ‘development’ denotes equity in the distribution of such produce among a country’s population. That is, in the absence of an equal distribution of goods and services among the people no ‘development’ could be said to have occurred in a country.

From the above viewpoint very few countries could be said to have ‘developed’ in particularly the South over the decades since ‘political independence’; certainly not Sri Lanka. In terms of this definition of development, it needs to be accepted that a degree of central planning is integral to a country’s economic advancement.

Accordingly, if steady poverty alleviation is used as a yardstick, the global South could be said to be stuck in economic backwardness and in this sense a hemisphere termed the ‘South’ continues to exist. Thanks to the RCSS forum these and related issues were raised and could henceforth be freshly researched and brought to the fore of public discussion.

We have it on the authority of Dr. Carlos Correa that a 7000 strong network of policymakers is at the service of the South Centre, to disseminate their scholarship worldwide if needed. The South would be working in its interests to tie-up with the South Centre and look to ways of advancing its collective interest now that it is in a position to do so, considering the economic clout it carries. It is time the South took cognizance fully of the fact that the global economic power balance has shifted decisively to the East and that it makes full use of this favourable position to advance its best interests.

The New International Economic Order (NIEO) of the sixties and seventies, which won mention at the RCSS forum, needs to be revisited and researched for its merits, but the NIEO was meant to go hand-in-hand with the New International Information Order (NIIO) which was birthed by Southern think tanks and the like around the same time. Basically, the NIIO stood for a global information order that made provision for a balanced and fair coverage of the affairs of the South. Going forward, the merits of the NIIO too would need to be discussed with a view to examining how it could serve the South’s best interests.

Continue Reading

Features

BBC in trouble again!

Published

on

Trump

BBC is in trouble again; this time with the most powerful person in the world. Donald Trump has given an ultimatum to the BBC over a blunder it should have corrected and apologized for, a long time ago, which it did not do for reasons best known, perhaps, only to the hierarchy of the BBC. Many wonder whether it is due to sheer arrogance or, pure and simple stupidity! Trump is threatening to sue the BBC, for a billion dollars in damages, for the defamation of character caused by one of the flagship news programmes of the BBC “Panorama” broadcast a week before the last presidential election.

BBC is the oldest public service broadcaster in the world, having commenced operations in 1922 and was once held in high esteem as the most reliable broadcaster in the world due to its editorial neutrality but most Sri Lankans realized it is not so now, due to the biased reporting during Sri Lanka’s troubled times. By the way, it should not be forgotten that the Sri Lanka Broadcasting Corporation is the second oldest public broadcaster in the world, behind the BBC by only three years, having commenced operations as ‘Colombo Radio’ on 16 December 1925; it subsequently became ‘Radio Ceylon’. It soon became the dominant broadcaster of South Asia, with a Hindi service as well, and I wonder whether there are any plans to celebrate the centenary of that great heritage but that is a different story.

The Panorama documentary titled “Trump: A Second Chance?” was broadcast on 28 October, days before the US presidential election held on 5th November 2024. No one, except the management of the BBC, was aware that this programme had a doctored speech by Trump till the British newspaper The Telegraph published a report, in early November, stating that it had seen a leaked BBC memo from Michael Prescott, a former independent external adviser to its editorial standards committee, sent in May. This memo pointed out that the one-hour Panorama programme had edited parts of a Trump’s speech which may convey the impression that he explicitly encouraged the Capitol Hill riot of January 2021. In fact, this is what most believe in and whether the editors and presenters of Panorama purposely doctored the speech to confirm this narrative remains to be seen.

In his speech, in Washington DC on 6 January 2021, what Trump said was: “We’re going to walk down to the Capitol, and we’re going to cheer on our brave senators and congressmen and women.” However, in Panorama he was shown saying: “We’re going to walk down to the Capitol… and I’ll be there with you. And we fight. We fight like hell.” The two sections of the speech that were edited together were more than 50 minutes apart and the “fight like hell” comment was taken from a section where Trump discussed how “corrupt” US elections were.

There is no doubt that Trump is very lax with words but that does not mean that the media can edit his speeches to convey a totally different meaning to what he states. The moment the memo was received, from its own advisor, the senior management of the BBC should have taken action. The least that could have been done is to issue a correction and tender an apology to Trump in addition to punishing the errant, after an inquiry. One can justifiably wonder whether the BBC did not take any action because of an inherent prejudice against Trump. Even if not so, how the events unfolded makes the BBC appear to be an organization incapable of monitoring and correcting itself.

In fact, a news item on 9 November in the BBC website titled, “Why is Donald Trump threatening to sue the BBC?”, referring to the memo states the following:

“The document said Panorama’s “distortion of the day’s events” would leave viewers asking: “Why should the BBC be trusted, and where will this all end?”. When the issue was raised with managers, the memo continued, they “refused to accept there had been a breach of standards”.

From these statements, it becomes very clear that all that the senior management wanted to do was a cover-up, which is totally inexcusable. After the expose by The Telegraph the BBC had been inundated by public complaints and faced criticism all round resulting in the resignations of the Director General and the Head of News. To make matters worse, the Chairman of the Board of Directors stated that he was planning to tender an apology to President Trump. If he had any common sense or decency, he would have done so immediately.

Worse still was the comment of the head of international news who tried to justify by saying that this sort of editing happens regularly. He fails to realise that his comment will make more and more people losing trust in the BBC.

Some are attempting to paint this as an attempt by those against the licence-fee funding model of the BBC to discredit the BBC but to anyone with any sense at all, it is pretty obvious that this a self-inflicted injury. Some legal experts are advising the BBC to face the legal challenge of Trump, failing to realise that even if Trump loses, the BBC would have to spend millions to defend. This would be the money paid as licence fees by the taxpayer and the increasing resistance to licence fee is bound to increase.

Overall, this episode raises many issues the most important being the role of the free press. British press is hardly fair, as newspapers have political allegiances, but is free to expose irregularities like this. Further, it illustrates that we must be as careful with mainstream media as much as we are with newly emerging media. When a respected organization like the BBC commits such blunders and, worse still. attempts to cover-up, whom can we trust?

by Dr Upul Wijayawardhana

Continue Reading

Features

Miss Universe 2025 More ‘surprises’ before Crowning day!

Published

on

Unexpected events seem to have cropped up at this year’s Miss Universe pageant and there could be more ‘surprises’ before the crowning day – Friday, 21st November, 2025, at the at the Impact Challenger Hall, in Pak Kret, Nonthaburi, Thailand..

First, the controversy involving the pageant’s Thai Director and Miss Mexico, and then the withdrawal of some of the contestants from the 74th Miss Universe pageant.

In fact, this year’s pageant has has kept everyone on edge.

However, I’m told that Sri Lanka’s representative, Lihasha Lindsay White, is generating some attention, and that is ecouraging, indeed.

While success in the pageant is highly competitive and depends on performance during the live events, let’s hope Lihasha is heading in the right direction.

Involved in an unpleasant scene

The 27-year-old Miss Universe Sri Lanka is a businesswoman and mental health advocate, and, according to reports coming my way, has impressed with her poise, intellect, and stage presence.

Her strong advocacy for mental health brings a message of substance and style, which aligns with the Miss Universe Organisation’s current emphasis on impact and purpose beyond just aesthetics.

Lihasha has undergone rigorous training, including catwalk coaching, under internationally acclaimed mentors – Indonesia’s Putra Pasarela for runway coaching; and the Philippines’ Michelle Padayhag for Q&A mastery – which, I’m told, has strengthened her confidence and stage presence.

Pageant predictions are speculative and vary widely among experts. While some say there is a possibility of Lihasha tbreaking into the semi-finals, there is no guarantee of a win.

Ultimately, the outcome will be determined during the competition events, including the preliminary show, national costume segment, and the final night, where Lihasha will compete against representatives from over 100 countries.

Maureen Hingert: 2nd Runner-up in 1955 / Miss Mexico: Stood up for women’s rights

While Sri Lanka has not won the Miss Universe crown before, Maureen Hingert was placed as the 2nd Runner-up in 1955.

Lihasha Lindsay White is a dedicated candidate with a strong personal platform, and her performance in the remaining preliminary events, and at the final show, will determine Sri Lanka’s chances this year.

The competition, no doubt, will be fierce, with contestants bringing diverse backgrounds, preparation methodologies, and cultural perspectives.

Continue Reading

Trending