Features
Quotes with comments as 2021 fades away and 2022 takes over
Today is the last day of the year. An obvious clichéd statement but must be stated as 2021 dies in a couple of hours and 2022 dawns.
Cassandra, reclining on her couch with no cooking to do – no gas and no desire to get blasted by a new cylinder – looks back at the 365 days gone by and the 366 to come with mixed feelings. Hunger and anger tear her guts and heart. Looking back her major emotion is rock bottom disillusionment, because most of the woes we people of Sri Lanka sank under were man made: Economic downturn; reduced crops and heartburn to farmers; bombs in the kitchen and consequent deaths and injury to the innocent. The persons who principally caused these by action or advice are detested and those who by their silence or votes abetted the crimes, cursed. That is the tragedy of this wonderful country – once bountiful now fast depleted. Cass will not name names – too long for this column – but they hatefully pass before her third eye, most fat bellied with self satisfaction on faces and fingers coiled around ill-gotten gains. It was patently obvious that to many, getting a buck or two on the sly was worth lives of innocents lost; starvation and national bankruptcy. New Sri Lankan rupees flow out of CB machines exacerbating the dire inability of us Ordinaries to contend with the soaring cost of living.
And the deniers of truth; the tall tale tellers, the crazy advisers – legion in number – sycophant themselves to the Mighty Powers. The wavy haired elder, the ‘Ala gone’ one and even a police officer covered up, by inanities, the gas company directors’ blatant lying, blaming gas cylinder connections and home cookers, while they manipulated for quick profit the composition of the gases in cylinders. Mr Waves, speaking on reduced harvests, asks us to grow vambatu and what else. Where? Cass spits on all of them, never mind her neck being guillotined.
Other writers, more objective and competent, will comment on events of the year that’s ending in a couple of hours and divinatory prophets (plenty available) will forecast the year to come. So, Cass decided to cull some quotes and comment on them paradigming them to suit the Sri Lankan context. So here goes.
Quotes
I wish our farmers, particularly, will take the Buddha’s advice and turn away from lamenting and burning effigies and will become wise and demand what they need. Or else they may quietly fade away and their paddy and vegetable lands given to greedy land seekers approved by the Soubhagya Government. The Buddha noted that “The Brahmins had no cattle, no gold, no wealth. They had study as their wealth and grain.”
Our farmers may have passed higher grades in school than many an MP, and constituted the backbone of the country; respected by us for their dignity, integrity and hard work. Now with the foundation of their farming success taken away by presidential decree, they shed tears; their families go hungry and they give up cultivation, even their lives. And those who advised doing away with chemical fertiliser, insecticides and weedicides bask behind presidential protection.
The original Cassandra was of the 5th to 4th centuries BC, when Greek civilization flourished with nonpareil philosophers. The present-day Cassandra quotes them.
“What you leave behind is not what is engraved in stone monuments but what is woven into the lives of others.” Pericles. This invites another quotation – from the Percy Bysshe Shelley.
Two vast and trunkless legs of stone/Stand in the desert….
And on the pedestal, these words appear:
My name is Ozymandias, King of Kings;
Look on my Works, ye Mighty, and despair!
Nothing beside remains.
Oh yes, we have plenty of modern vast white elephants which impoverished the entire country and we bear the brunt even now, of China cooperated sites to blazen forth a name – not Ozy but Mahinda. Derision substitutes admiration and sycophancy. A persistent question that bothers Cass is why the Chinese, who are our friends and benefactors and all that, are not asking that seaweed company not to demand its pound of flesh from Siri Lanka that has no dollars. Also did the Chinese ambassador visit Jaffna with an acquisitive eye in the name of helping poor Siri Lanka?
So true what Pericles said. Once leaders go – either deposed or to the grave – they leave behind what people think of them. History will record them and future generations judge them, notwithstanding their names atop buildings and on roads. The least said the better of such in our country as of now and the very recent past.
This Christmas season, positioned for all to see the gaping gap between haves and have-nots in this country, is no longer serendipitous. While the fat folk from the House by the Diyawanna winged their way across oceans or to Little England here in SL, some even chartering planes like a family group to receive blessings from South Indian gods, the poorer could hardly scrape one full meal a day, due to expense and gas bomb threat.
A good thought for both groups was said by Democritus in BC years.
“Happiness resides not in possession, and not in gold. Happiness dwells in the soul.”
Even babes in arms know how much wealth has been accumulated by many in power through foul means. They seem happy and live luxuriously. But retribution will surely come to them. At least they live under the cloud of fear of discovery of their crimes. They better keep this saying in mind:
“Depression is a cruel punishment. There is no fever, no rashes, no blood tests to send people scurrying in concern, just the slow erosion of self.”
Many an Ordinary bemoans the fact that utter corruption seems to make those who resort to it happy, living the good life. They groan – no karma, no punishment. Who knows whether they will pay even in future lives? But philosopher Cass says – Not to worry. Their thoughts alone must already be torturing them. Hence the younger corrupt seeks more and more of the good life and the older scurries to this kovil and that seer. Depression of mind compounded with fear is a terribly terrible punishment and occurs as day follows night.
Those who tear their hair about injustice can take solace from Heraclitus’ pronouncement: “Everything flows and nothing abides; everything gives way and nothing stays fixed.” The Buddha said it simpler: Anicca vata sankhara – Impermanent, alas, are all formations.”
Rumours or mere murmurings float around about change being inevitable, but change in how things are as of now. We see marches and hear protests and predictions that change will come soon. We Ordinaries want change but abiding by law and order, in the proper way and if its change of government, through elections. Socrates’ wisdom comes in here. He pronounced:
“The secret of change is to focus all your energy not on fighting the old, but on building new.”
That’s good advice for the rising JVP and the ranting SJB. Do it the proper way and change, nay eliminate for goodness sake, the cloak of corruption that shrouds this island of ours. Uproot and fling aside corruption. To do that, catch the corrupt, extract all their ill-gotten gains and add to the country kitty and then punish the rogues severely.
Even the government in power can take Socrates’ advice. They can change themselves. The President who carried the majority people’s hopes for a better country, can start the change by drastically reducing and changing the Cabinet. A golden opportunity was given him to right so many wrongs and get the country on a path of recovery minus all the Cabinet garbage and crooked bureaucratic high ups. But please no more sackings due to adverse comments by those who know.
And finally, a warning to such as Cass who criticise, with the best of intentions but can and will be misunderstood as flies in the ointment who deserve elimination. Personal proof: She, in another guise, was a columnist in a newspaper, not of Upali’s. She received an email with names of the richest politicos in SL. That was during the Yahapalana Government. She included some names in her column with the distinct comment that she could not believe Aiyo S to be rich. But his guards – probably his presidential secretariat – pounced on this. The man himself would have read Sinhala newspapers. Result: The Ed wrote to the columnist that her weekly column was being discontinued on orders of ‘higher authority’. Worse can happen like getting the brain needled by insertion of a sharpened rod through the ear. Sure, horribly painful death sans gunshot or scuffle. Consequently, Cass takes to heart the following: ‘There is such a thing as tempting the gods. Talking too much, too soon and with too much self –satisfaction has always seemed to me a sure way to court disaster. The forces of retribution are always listening. They never sleep.’ – Meg Greenfield.
On that cautionary note which is taken as a New Year resolution by Cass, she wishes all her readers a much better 2022, starting with hope and continuing with contentment and ending with this land of ours much improved, cleaner and more concerned about the less well to do.
Features
Trump’s tariffs, AKD’s gazette and Sri Lanka’s diplomatic slumber
“We are rather respectable in Colombo. We go to bed fairly early, and we remain there till morning. “
According to Sri Lanka’s diplomatic folklore, the late S.W. R. D. Bandaranaike uttered these words while explaining the reasons for Sri Lanka’s abstention on the UN resolution condemning the Soviet invasion of Hungary. Apparently, SWRD’s foreign ministry officials were asleep at home when the diplomatic cable seeking instructions was received from New York. In those days, there were no cell phones, Internet, or even fax or telex machines. The diplomatic cables were sent through post offices. Decoding them was a slow and time-consuming process. Thus, the government could not provide appropriate instructions to our mission in New York in time, and the Sri Lankan delegation abstained on that sensitive UN vote.
Sri Lanka’s Absence from Section 301 Consultations
But then, how does one explain Sri Lanka’s absence from the crucial bilateral consultation held in Washington by the Office of the United States Trade Representative (USTR) during March-April on “Forced Labour” under the Section 301 of the US Trade Act of 1974? Didn’t our foreign and trade ministries send appropriate instructions to Washington in time? Even if the instructions from the foreign ministry were transmitted to our embassy in Washington by pigeon carriers, there was enough time for Sri Lanka to participate in those meetings.
In March, the USTR initiated these 301 investigations on 60 trading partners, and invited all of them for confidential consultations. Out of the 60, 46 participated in these consultations. Sri Lanka was not one of them. Other countries that didn’t participate in these consultations included China, Russia, and Venezuela! In addition to that, the Section 301 Committee conducted a public hearing with interested parties on April 28 and 29. Washington-based diplomats, representatives from few trade ministries as well as representatives from many foreign trade associations and chambers participated in these hearings. Sri Lanka was once again conspicuously absent.
As a result, when the USTR published the proposed forced labour tariffs on June 2nd, Sri Lanka ended up with a 12.5% duty. Pakistani and Indonesian diplomats participated in these consultations and took appropriate follow-up measures, and managed to enter the 10% duty category. As even a threat of a modest tariff hike could disrupt supply chains and reduce competitiveness, particularly in an industry such as garments, I discussed this issue on 15 June and underscored the importance of Sri Lanka’s participation at the next hearing, which was scheduled to be held from July 7th .
Awakening from Diplomatic Slumber and AKD’s Gazette
Fortunately, Sri Lanka finally awoke from weeks of diplomatic slumber, and Ambassador Mahinda Samarasinghe participated in the public hearing on 9 July, and promised, “…. · We have agreed to the text in our negotiations with the USTR on forced labour, …. The gazette as we speak is being printed and I’m getting the gazette tomorrow morning, and the gazette will be shared with USTR as I get it“.
As promised, President Anura Kumara Dissanayake issued a gazette on 10 July banning the imports of goods produced by forced labour. These new regulations are very similar to what Pakistan and Indonesia enacted in April, after their consultations with USTR in March. Why couldn’t we do it in April? Why did we wait till the very last minute?
Challenges ahead
“War is too important to be left to generals alone,” is a famous saying attributed to former French Premier Georges Clemenceau. Similarly, monitoring our main markets is too important to be left to diplomats alone. The United States is the largest single-country market for Sri Lanka. Therefore, Sri Lankan trade chambers and associations should become more proactive in these markets and participate in these events. For example, the chairman of the Pakistani apparel exporters association participated in the April hearings. Similarly, representatives from the Indian Agricultural and Processed Food Products Export Development Authority, the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry, the Confederation of Indian Industry, and Reliance Industries also participated in July hearings. At an event where each speaker is given only five minutes (strictly enforced), having a number of speakers from a country is an advantage. The presence of industry representatives in these kinds of events also help them understand the market dynamics and the future challenges. This is important, particularly because there will be many more challenges with Trump’s tariffs.
With the gazette issued on 10 July, Sri Lanka has imposed a prohibition on the importation of goods produced with forced labour. Now, the challenge will be to effectively enforce the prohibition. And what are the goods produced with forced labour? The USTR list only focuses on aluminum, cotton, electronics, lithium-ion batteries, rice, and tobacco. However, according to the U.S. Department of Labour, the list is much longer. Hence, this list may change continuously during the next two years and tariffs may fluctuate once again.
So, this is definitely not the time to slumber.
(The writer, a retired public servant, can be reached at senadhiragomi@gmail.com)
by Gomi Senadhira ✍️
Features
Tales of Mystery and Suspense 10 Casino for Sale
After the overwhelming grotesquerie of J K Rowling’s latest Cormoran Strike novel (written, I should have noted, as the others were, under the pseudonym Robert Galbraith), I thought I should return to the world of fun, and also a much shorter description since this thriller moves quickly without the layers of detail that Rowling engages in.
I then move to the second comic thriller by Caryl Brahms and S J Simon. This, their second story to feature Vladimir Stroganoff and Adam Quill, was Casino for Sale, as lunatic a romp as the first, though without the emphasis on the ballet that characterized A Bullet in the Ballet.
This one begins with the impresario Stroganoff buying a casino cheap from Baron Sam de Rabinovich, only to find that it was a rundown place, not the grand casino of La Bazouche, a resort on the Frenc+h Riviera, as he had initially thought. The grand one belonged to Lord Buttonhooke, and Stroganoff could not compete, until he thought of bringing the Ballet Stroganoff to the casino – which of course leads to Buttonhooke deciding to have ballet performances in his Casino too.
Stroganoff invites Quill to visit him, which Quill decides to do since he has left Scotland Yard, having come into a legacy. No one believes this, and he has to face questions as to what he did to have been sacked, with sympathy for having been found out.
The day he arrives in La Bazouche there is a murder, of a vitriolic critic called Citrolo, in Stroganoff’s office. He had been going to write a damning review of the opening night of the ballet and Stroganoff, when he realizes Citrolo cannot be swayed, drugs him and dictates the review himself to the papers. He leaves Citrolo sleeping and finds him shot the next morning, whereupon he decides to muddy the waters and leave a suicide note and lots of other murder weapons. So much overkill, as it were, of course ensures that he is arrested.
But the excitable French detective who makes the arrest follows up his suggestion that Buttonhooke was also involved, and so the two casino owners find themselves in cells next door to each other, with the detective Gustave quite happy to provide creature comforts for a fee.
Quill decides he must investigate, and finds Gustave most cooperative, since he has a laid back attitude to work. So it is Quill that finds a notebook which makes it clear Citrolo is an accomplished blackmailer, and that there are lots of possible murderers, including Stroganoff’s croupier, who was crooked, Rabinovich, who was now working for Buttonhooke, a confidence trickster called Kurt Kukumber, whose prospectus for a dud gold mine was found in the office and Prince Alexis Artishok who was engaged in a deal to buy diamonds from the ballerina Dyra Dyrakova.
Stroganoff had been trying to get Dyrakova to dance for him, but having done so previously she had refused. But then to Stroganoff’s chagrin she agreed to dance for Buttonhooke. The clearly crooked Artishok had told Buttonhooke’s mistress Sadie Souse, who was not very bright, that Dyrakova possessed diamonds she was willing to sell cheap, and Sadie was determined to have them.
Quill meanwhile finds out that there was a secret passage to Stroganoff’s office, the obvious solution to what had begun as a locked room mystery, and that this was known by almost everyone apart from Stroganoff himself. And then Rabinovich is murdered, just after Gustave had released his two original suspects, leading him to blame Quill for having insisted on that and thus allowing them to kill again.
Soon afterwards Dyrakova arrives, and the town is full of posters announcing that she will appear in the casinos, elaborate posters for either one, since Stroganoff is determined that she will dance for him, and if she does not come willingly, he has devised a scheme to make her do so unwillingly. So, though Buttonhooke has her taken off to his yacht immediately she arrives at the station, Quill along with Arenskaya gets her into a launch and to Stroganoff’s casino, where she performs to tumultuous applause, not knowing for whom she is dancing.
When Quill asked her about the diamonds, she said she had sold them long ago, and that gave Quill the solution to the mystery. Rabinovich had known about this, and Artishok had killed him to prevent Sadie learning it from him, he had killed Citrolo who had recognized him for an accomplished card sharper, not a Russian prince at all. But before he is arrested, he gets away in a boat, and the police launch that pursues him is on the point of catching him up when it runs out of petrol.
Again, lots of excitement, and entertaining references – Gustave grows marrows – and if not quite as brilliant as its predecessor, Casino was certainly a delightful read.
Features
The challenge of being positive about SAARC
It was a few years back that a former President of Sri Lanka took it on himself to pronounce SAARC ‘dead’. Since then there have been other sections of Sri Lankan opinion that have joined the critics of SAARC and taken the solemn stance that SAARC has indeed died what may be called a natural death.
Their fatalism is understandable. SAARC has failed to meet at heads of government or state level for the past several years to take the SAARC process notably forward. Regional cooperation has more or less been only an appealing idea. No substantive concrete projects have taken off to make the idea a hard reality. ‘Inner paralysis’ seems to be SAARC’s lot. Hence the fatalism in these circles.
However, being one of the worst cash-strapped regions of the world and a teemingly populated one with people virtually left to their devices, what choices do the ‘SAARC Eight’ have other than to try their best to band together and continue with their cooperation efforts, however small they may be?
There is no escaping the mounting debt trap for many of these countries and bankrupt Sri Lanka is a glaring example, but ‘throwing in the towel’ and abandoning themselves entirely to the diktats of the strongest economies and their agencies will prove a ‘living death’ for many countries in the SAARC fold.
The gains may be meagre but giving-up on SAARC cooperation in full would prove self-defeating for the organization and South Asia. Right now, the collective intention ought to be to salvage what the region could from the tenuous cooperative efforts. Moreover, such initiatives could go some distance to generate a degree of goodwill among the Eight and help in sustaining a dialogue process.
Given this backdrop it proved ‘a stich in time’ for the Regional Centre for Strategic Studies (RCSS), Colombo, to recently host the SAARC Secretary General Ambassador Md. Golam Sarwar to a round table discussion on the unifying potential of SAARC and its future possibilities, besides other related issue areas.
Held on June 24th and moderated by RCSS Executive Director and former ambassador Ravinatha Aryasinha, the forum brought together a vibrant, wide ranging audience comprising academicians, diplomats, senior public servants, civil society activists and many others. Following the presentation by Ambassador Golam Sarwar titled, ‘Reigniting SAARC: Achievements, Challenges and the Way Ahead’, a lively Q&A followed.
The above forum could be described as an act of lighting the proverbial ‘candle’ rather than ‘cursing the darkness.’ It surely is a ‘darkness’ that could be seen as daunting considering that the region’s pivotal powers, India and Pakistan, are failing to act in a spirit of accord but are engaged in bitter finger-pointing on a number of questions of vital importance to SAARC.
On the other hand, what is the rest of the region doing to bring the above sides together? It is disappointing that to date the rest of SAARC has failed to launch a major diplomatic drive to bring peace between the feuding regional heavyweights. It needs to act without delay and establish its earnestness and this effort would need to prove SAARC’s staying power in the unfolding months and even years.
In assessing SAARC’s seeming failure local opinion in particular has failed to factor in what could be described as weak leadership. Since Sheikh Mujibur Rahman of Bangladesh, the founding father of SAARC, the region has failed to produce a visionary leader who could advance the SAARC cause with charisma and drive.
Among other reasons, weak leadership accounts considerably for the faltering and stuttering status, as it were, of SAARC. Badly needed are leaders who could go the extra mile, think less of narrow national interests and work diligently towards the collective well being of the region but SAARC’s millions of ordinary people have been made to wait in vain for leaders of such stature. Instead, they have been burdened with politicians who seem to be relishing the apparently moribund state of SAARC.
Looking back, it could be said that it was the dynamic leadership factor that led to the launching of the Non-Aligned Movement and for its sustenance for a few decades. True, it could be seen in some quarters that NAM is no more, but as in the case of SAARC, the former too has been unfortunate to be burdened over the years with politicians who lack the vision and drive to unflaggingly advance the fortunes of the South. NAM and SAARC lack the dynamism and vision of leaders of the stature of Jawaharlal Nehru, for example, to give them the required guidance and intellectual depth.
The reasons are complex for there not being among us currently political leaders with the vision and the steadfast commitment to advance the legitimate interests of the South. However, it could be stated with conviction that the majority of Southern leaders have too easily caved in to the demands of the global North and its financial agencies.
These leaders have failed to see, for instance, that the largely market economy oriented Northern governments would not view with favour a centrist economic model that attaches priority to the interests of the dis-empowered publics of the South. This realization ought to have dawned on the current government in Sri Lanka, for instance, some while ago but it has no choice but to abide by IMF dictates since economic survival at present is unthinkable without the latter’s succour.
Accordingly for SAARC this should be the time for some soul-searching. Priority needs to be attached to ending the feuding between India and Pakistan since at present the material fortunes of the region hinge largely on these regional giants giving peaceful relations among them a try. This is no easy challenge to meet but some daring, visionary diplomacy needs to take hold among the rest of SAARC.
There is some sense in SAARC bringing the peoples of the region together through programs that address their best collective interests. A meeting of minds among SAARC nations could enable SAARC and its agencies to build a region-wide people’s movement for progressive political and economic change that could in turn lead to the region’s political leaders sensitizing themselves more to the neglected needs of their publics.
However, the time is ‘now’ for the initiation of these progressive changes and the voice of SAARC well wishers would need to drown out those of their critics.
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