Features
Rape at the Ambepussa Rest House

Extracted from the memoirs of Rtd. Senior DIG Edward Gunawardena
Ambepussa rest house on the Colombo – Kandy Road in the Warakapola Police area is one of the oldest rest houses in the country. Pippet’s History of the Ceylon Police refers to coffee planters on horseback riding on the Kandy road often taking a break there.
Even in the sixties, when I was the ASP in charge of the Kegalle District, this resthouse catered mainly to the elite. But, occasionally, affluent locals also patronized it. Most importantly it enjoyed a good reputation.
Not many months after I left the Gampaha District and took charge of Kegalle District I had a telephone call one day from Inspector Percy Wijesuriya, the OIC of the Kirindiwela police station in the Gampaha police district. Percy was an outstanding police officer who related an interesting story to me.
A rich overseer of the Public Works Department (PWD) living with his family in the Kirindiwela police area had taken a young servant girl employed by him to look after his children to the Ambepussa rest house and raped her. This girl had been dropped off next morning near her home with instructions not to reveal anything to her parents.
The overseer had subsequently visited this humble home and promised to pay the father of the girl Rs. 5,000/= if he did not complain to the police.
But this poor villager on the way to water his betel plot had met a constable on patrol and mentioned what had happened to his daughter. The constable had cycled back immediately to the police station and informed the OIC.
Percy Wijesuriya, the conscientious officer he was, had driven to the girls home with the constable. Lilian, this girl of 14, had with tears in the eyes related the full story in the presence of her mother. Percy had then taken the girl and the mother to the police station, having left a message requesting the father too to come there. It was after recording her statement that he had decided to call me as the offense had been committed in the Kegalle police district.
On receiving the call I instructed Percy to produce the girl before DMO of the Wathupitiwala hospital and get her examined. I also told him to send an officer to the Ambepussa Rest House and secure the bed linen of the room that had been occupied by the suspect and the victim. This smart OIC told me that he had already done so.
About an hour later he telephoned me again to say that when the girl was being taken to the DMO’s office the suspect was seen coming out of it!
This particular DMO even when I was ASP Gampaha had a reputation as a bribe taker. As the medical evidence is the most vital in a rape case I realized that he could either make or break this case. Something told me that this corrupt medical man will prove to be a stumbling block. As the victim had already been examined by this doctor I had sleepless nights thinking what my next move should be.
In the middle of the night I told the reserve sergeant to send a message to Sub-Inspector Cumaranatunga to meet me at 6 am at my residence. At the same time I told my man Friday, Chandradasa, to prepare breakfast for at least two others.
Bindu Cumaranatunga the disciplined young officer, reported to me five minutes before 6 am. We sat at the dining-table and I briefed him about the case and the action that had already been taken by Percy Wijesuriya and told him that he should take charge of the investigation.
I also told him that a sergeant of the Kirindiwela police will be bringing the victim and her parents to my office at 9.30 am. SI Cumaranatunga then asked me about the room at the rest house and the other evidence. I told him that the room had already been secured with the bed linen taken to custody but statements had to be recorded.
As I was concerned about the medical evidence, I telephoned Dr. George Weerasiri, the DMO of Kegalle and explained my anxieties to him. I was relieved when he requested me to produce the victim before him as the offense had been committed in the Kegalle Police District. Cumaranatunga had breakfast with me and left to Ambepussa with two constables of the Crimes Division to take charge of the bed linen etc. and also record the statements of the witness.
He returned to Kegalle before the victim was brought to my office. He told me that the Rest house keeper and his staff were co-operative and there would be no difficulty in tying up the rest house end of the case.
Cumaranatunga and I then discussed what had to be done. I clearly told him that the victim being a minor she should at all times be accompanied by her mother or better father and mother both. I also told him that she had to be examined by Dr. Weerasiri and also the JMO Colombo, Dr. W.D.L. Fernando, to both of whom I had spoken. He was happy when I told him that producing the girl before these doctors would be his initial task in the investigation.
No sooner the victim, together with her parents, was brought to my office shortly after 9.30 am, by Sergeant Pietersz of Kirindiwela I ensured they were given a snack and tea. My instructions to Cumaranatunga were to take her before Dr. Weerasiri and meet me with the report. It did not take much time for Dr. Weerasiri to tell me on the telephone that that it was a clear case of rape. He said the report would be sent to me through SI Cumaranatunga.
By the time Cumaranatunga arrived with the report, I had prepared a letter to my friend the JMO Colombo, Dr. W.D.L. Fernando requesting him to examine the girl and report as the DMO Kegalle and the DMO Wathupitiwala had made contradicting reports. When I read this letter out to Cumaranatunga he was surprised.
“But Sir, we have not got a report from the Wathupitiwala doctor”, was his instant response. I quietly explained to him that I expected a negative report from him I also told him not to proceed to the JMO’s office if this doctor’s report also indicates rape. True to my expectations this corrupt doctor had stated that there were no signs of rape.
Cumaranatunga had thereafter taken the victim to Dr. Fernando the JMO together with the two conflicting opinions. When I was having lunch at about 1.30 p.m., Dr. Fernando telephoned me to say that the victim had been raped and there was no question about it. I thanked him and requested him to hand the telephone to Cumaranatunga. I told Cumaranatunga to bring all these reports to me safely; and also make detailed notes of all he had done.
I made it a point to tell him to make the girl and her parents comfortable and also arrange their lunch before recording their statements in the afternoon. This responsible Sub-Inspector had also made arrangements for the police matron to be with the victim until the investigations were completed in Kegalle.
The whole investigation was completed without any major problems. The evidence of the victim and her parents, evidence gathered at the Ambepussa rest house and the Government Analysts report on the bed linen was favourable (there was no DNA profiling then). The circumstantial evidence combined to make a cast iron case.
The problem that arose about the crucial medical evidence was also overcome primarily because of the good personal relationships I maintained with the DMO Kegalle and the JMO Colombo.
It took about two more years for this case to reach its fitting climax in the Kandy Assizes.
Features
South’s ‘structural deficiencies’ and the onset of crippled growth

The perceptive commentator seeking to make some sense of social and economic developments within most Southern countries today has no choice but to revisit, as it were, that classic on post-colonial societies, ‘The Wretched of the Earth’ by Frantz Fanon. Decades after the South’s initial decolonization experience this work by the Algerian political scientist of repute remains profoundly relevant.
The fact that the Algeria of today is seeking accountability from its former colonizer, France, for the injustices visited on it during the decades of colonial rule enhances the value and continuing topicality of Frantz’s thinking and findings. The fact that the majority of the people of most decolonized states are continuing to be disempowered and deprived of development should doubly underline the significance of ‘The Wretched of the Earth’ as a landmark in the discourse on Southern questions. The world would be erring badly if it dismisses this evergreen on decolonization and its pains as in any way outdated.
Developments in contemporary China help to throw into relief some of the internal ‘structural deficiencies’ that have come to characterize most Southern societies in current times. However, these and many more ‘structural faults’ came to the attention of the likes of Fanon decades back.
It is with considerable reservations on their truthfulness that a commentator would need to read reports from the US’ Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) on developments in China, but one cannot approach with the same skepticism revelations on China by well-known media institutions such as Bloomberg News.
While an ODNI report quoted in this newspaper on March 25th, 2025, elaborated on the vast wealth believed to have been amassed by China’s contemporary rulers and their families over the years, Bloomberg News in a more studied manner said in 2012, among other things, on the same subject that, ‘Xi’s extended family had amassed assets totaling approximately $376 million, encompassing investments in sectors like rare earth minerals and real estate. However, no direct links were established between these assets and Xi or his immediate family.’
Such processes that are said to have taken hold in China in post- Mao times in particular are more or less true of most former colonies of the South. A clear case in point is Sri Lanka. More than 75 years into ‘independence’ the latter is yet to bring to book those sections of its ruling class that have grown enormously rich on ill-gotten gains. It seems that, as matters stand, these sections would never be held accountable for their unbounded financial avarice.
The mentioned processes of exploitation of a country’s wealth, explain in considerable measure, the continuing underdevelopment of the South. However, Fanon foresaw all these ills and more about the South long ago. In ‘The Wretched of the Earth’ he speaks insightfully about the ruling classes of the decolonized world, who, having got into the boots of the departing colonizers, left no stone unturned to appropriate the wealth of their countries by devious means and thereby grow into the stratum described as ‘the stinking rich.’
This is another dimension to the process referred to as ‘the development of underdevelopment.’ The process could also be described as ‘How the Other Half Dies’. The latter is the title of another evergreen piece of research of the seventies on the South’s development debacles by reputed researcher Susan George.
Now that the Non-aligned Movement is receiving some attention locally it would be apt to revisit as it were these development debacles that are continuing to bedevil the South. Among other things, NAM emerged as a voice of the world’s poor. In fact in the seventies it was referred to as ‘The trade union of the poor.’ Accordingly, it had a strong developmental focus.
Besides the traditional aims of NAM, such as the need for the South to keep an ‘equidistance’ between the superpowers in the conduct of its affairs, the ruling strata of developing countries were also expected to deliver to their peoples equitable development. This was a foremost dimension in the liberation of the South. That is, economic growth needed to be accompanied by re-distributive justice. In the absence of these key conditions no development could be said to have occurred.
Basing ourselves on these yardsticks of development, it could be said that Southern rulers have failed their peoples right through these decades of decolonization. Those countries which have claimed to be socialistic or centrally planned should come in for the harshest criticism. Accordingly, a central aim of NAM has gone largely unachieved.
It does not follow from the foregoing that NAM has failed completely. It is just that those who have been charged with achieving NAM’s central aims have allowed the Movement to go into decline. All evidence points to the fact that they have allowed themselves to be carried away by the elusive charms of the market economy, which three decades ago, came to be favoured over central planning as an essential of development by the South’s ruling strata.
However, now with the returning to power in the US of Donald Trump and the political Right, the affairs of the South could, in a sense, be described as having come full circle. The downgrading of USAID, for instance, and the consequent scaling down of numerous forms of assistance to the South could be expected to aggravate the development ills of the hemisphere. For instance, the latter would need to brace for stepped-up unemployment, poverty and social discontent.
The South could be said to have arrived at a juncture where it would need to seek ways of collectively advancing its best interests once again with little or no dependence on external assistance. Now is the time for Southern organizations such as NAM to come to the forefront of the affairs of the South. Sheer necessity should compel the hemisphere to think and act collectively.
Accordingly, the possibility of South-South cooperation should be explored anew and the relevant institutional and policy framework needs to be created to take on the relevant challenges.
It is not the case that these challenges ceased to exist over the past few decades. Rather it is a case of these obligations being ignored by the South’s ruling strata in the belief that externally imposed solutions to the South’s development questions would prove successful. Besides, these classes were governed by self- interest.
It is pressure by the people that would enable their rulers to see the error of their ways. An obligation is cast on social democratic forces or the Centre-Left to come to center stage and take on this challenge of raising the political awareness of the people.
Features
Pilot error?

On the morning of 21 March, 2025, a Chinese-built K-8 jet trainer aircraft of the Sri Lanka Air Force (SLAF) crashed at Wariyapola. Fortunately, the two pilots ejected from the aircraft and parachuted down to safety.
A team of seven has been appointed to investigate the accident. Their task is to find the ‘cause behind the cause’, or the root cause. Ejecting from an aircraft usually has physical and psychological repercussions. The crew involved in the crash are the best witnesses, and they must be well rested and ready for the accident inquiry. It is vital that a non-punitive atmosphere must prevail. If the pilots believe that they are under threat of punishment, they will try to withhold vital information and not reveal the truth behind what happened, prompting their decision to abandon the stricken aircraft. In the interest of fairness, the crew must have a professional colleague to represent them at the Inquiry.
2000 years ago, the Roman philosopher Cicero said that “To err is human.” Alexander Pope said, “To err is human. To forgive, divine.” Yet in a Royal Air Force (RAF) hangar in the UK Force (RAF) hangs a sign declaring: “To err is human. To forgive is not RAF policy” These are the two extremes.
Over the years, behavioural scientists have observed that errors and intelligence are two sides of the same coin. In other words, an intelligent human being is liable to make errors. They went on to label these acts of omission and commission as ‘Slips, Lapses, Mistakes and Violations’.
To illustrate the point in a motoring context, if one was restricted to driving at a speed limit of 100 kph along an expressway and the speed crept up to 120 kph, then it is a ‘Slip’ on one’s part. If you forgot to fasten the seatbelt, it is a ‘Lapse’. While driving along a two-lane road, if a driver thinks in his/her judgement that the way is clear and tries to overtake slower traffic on the road, using the opposite lane, then encounters unanticipated opposite traffic and is forced to get back to the correct lane, that is a ‘Mistake’. Finally, if a double line is crossed while overtaking, while aware that the law is being broken, that is labelled as a ‘Violation’. In theory, all of the above could be applied to flying as well.
In the mid-Seventies, Elwyn Edwards and Frank Hawkins proposed that good interaction between Software (paperwork), Hardware (the aircraft and other machines), Liveware (human element) and the (working) environment are the essentials in safe flight operations. Labelled the ‘SHELL’ concept, it was adopted by the International Civil Aviation Organisation. (ICAO). (See Diagram 01)
In diagram 01, two ‘L’s depict the ‘Liveware’, inside and outside an aircraft flightdeck. The ‘L’ at the centre is the pilot in command (PIC), who should know his/her strengths and weaknesses, know the same of his/her crew, aircraft, and their mission, and, above all, be continuously evaluating the risks.
Finally, Prof. James Reason proposed the Swiss Cheese Theory of Accident Causation. (See Diagram 02)
From this diagram we see that built in defences in a system are like slices of Swiss cheese. There are pre-existing holes at random which, unfortunately, may align and allow the crew at the ‘sharp end’ to carry out a procedure unchecked.
Although it is easy and self-satisfying to blame a crew, or an individual, at an official accident investigation, what should be asked, instead, is why or how the system failed them? Furthermore, a ‘just culture’ must prevail.
The PIC and crew are the last line of defence in air safety and accident prevention. (See Diagram 3)
A daily newspaper reported that it is now left to be seen whether the crash on 21 March was due to mechanical failure or pilot error. Why is it that when a judge makes a wrong judgement it is termed ‘Miscarriage of Justice’ or when a Surgeon loses a patient on the operating table it is ‘Surgical Misadventure’, but when a pilot makes an honest error, it is called ‘Pilot Error’? I believe it should be termed ‘Human Condition’.
Even before the accident investigation had started, on 23 March, 2025, Minister of Civil Aviation, Bimal Ratnayake, went on record saying that the Ministry of Defence had told him the accident was due to an ‘athweradda’ (error). This kind of premature declaration is a definite ‘no-no’ and breach of protocol. The Minister should not be pre-empting the accident enquiry’s findings and commenting on a subject not under his purview. Everyone concerned should wait for the accident report from the SLAF expert panel before commenting.
God bless the PIC and crew!
– Ad Astrian
Features
Thai scene … in Colombo!

Yes, it’s happening tomorrow, Friday (28th), and Saturday (29th,) and what makes this scene extra special is that you don’t need to rush and pack your travelling bags and fork out a tidy sum for your airfare to Thailand.
The Thai Street Food Festival, taking place at Siam Nivasa, 43, Dr. CWW Kannangara Mawatha, Colombo 7, will not only give you a taste of Thai delicacies but also Thai culture, Thai music, and Thai dancing.
This event is being organised by the Thai Community, in Sri Lanka, in collaboration with the Royal Thai Embassy in Colombo.
The Thai Community has been very active and they make every effort to promote Amazing Thailand, to Sri Lankans, in every possible way they can.
Regarding the happening, taking place tomorrow, and on Saturday, they say they are thrilled to give Sri Lankans the vibrant Thai Street Food Festival.

Explaining how Thai souvenirs are turned out
I’m told that his event is part of a series of activities, put together by the Royal Thai Embassy, to commemorate 70 years of diplomatic relations between Thailand and Sri Lanka.
At the Thai Street Food Festival, starting at 5.00 pm., you could immerse yourself in lively Thai culture, savour delicious Thai dishes, prepared by Colombo’s top-notch restaurants, enjoy live music, captivate dance performances, and explore Thai Community members offering a feast of food and beverages … all connected with Amazing Thailand.

Some of the EXCO members of the Thai Community, in Sri Lanka,
with the Ambassador for Thailand
I’m sure most of my readers would have been to Thailand (I’ve been there 24 times) and experienced what Amazing Thailand has to offer visitors … cultural richness, culinary delights and unique experiences.
Well, if you haven’t been to Thailand, as yet, this is the opportunity for you to experience a little bit of Thailand … right here in Colombo; and for those who have experienced the real Thailand, the Thai Street Food Festival will bring back those happy times … all over again!
Remember, ENTRANCE IS FREE.
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