Midweek Review
SC gave country timely reprieve from visa scam:
Authorities still unable to restore disrupted passport supply
Text and pic By Shamindra Ferdinando
The National People’s Power (NPP) government hasn’t been able to normalize the issuance of new passports and renewal of existing passports yet, while tens of thousands of desperately poor Lankans are trying to go abroad to earn a living, to keep their home fires burning, on top of well over a million of their fellow countrymen/women who are already doing so, without being a burden to anyone. The situation at the passport office is unlikely to be restored anytime soon.
The latest Foreign Employment Bureau data shows that a total of 312,836 Sri Lankans left the country for overseas jobs last year. Among them 185,162 were male workers, while 127,674 were female, who mainly work as housemaids.
In spite of the change of rulers. following the presidential election, the whole process remains thoroughly disorganized for want of uninterrupted supply of new passports.
For those seeking to obtain a new passport, at a cost of Rs. 10,000, will have to wait patiently for months. It costs twice that amount to obtain a PP through the Immigration and Emigration Department’s one day service. For those who are desperately poor, even Rs 10,000 is obviously astronomically high. The Department is unable to indicate when its normal service can be fully restored.
Foreign Minister Vijitha Herath recently acknowledged that the government is yet to choose a new supplier of passports. On the part of the troubled Immigration and Emigration Department, there is absolutely no hesitation in acknowledging the continuing crisis created by the previous regime, led by Wickremesinghe.
The previous dispensation failed to meet the growing requirement for passports, while at the same time it rushed headlong to finalise a controversial agreement for the issuance of online visas with the involvement of foreign entities at tremendous cost. That agreement came into operation on 07 May, 2024.
In terms of the hotly disputed agreement, inked between the Immigration and Emigration Department and a foreign consortium – GBS Technology Services & IVS Global-FZCO and its technical partner VF Worldwide Holdings Ltd., the latter received exclusive rights to process online visa applications.
Who facilitated the deal between the Dubai-headquartered consortium and the government of Sri Lanka? In June 2023, the Public Security Ministry received, what some called, unsolicited proposal though the writer believes that move had been in line with a conspiracy to terminate the existing agreement with state-owned enterprise Mobitel and the Immigration and Emigration Department. That proposal, titled ‘Comprehensive Proposal on E-Visa, Consular Services, Visa Services, Biometric Services and Tourism Promotion,’ was meant to pave the way for the new agreement. The Wickremesinghe-Rajapaksa government was in a hurry to conclude the agreement.
But the original proposal had been made in March 2022 before a violent protest campaign that targeted the ouster of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa got underway on 31 March, 2022, with their first demonstration outside his private residence at Mirihana. The same proposal was made to the Foreign Ministry, in October 2022, a couple of months after President Gotabaya Rajapaksa was forced out of office by violent protesters, who even stormed the official residence of the President, where he had taken up residence after he had to flee from his private home in March. The Dubai-based company then took up its proposal with the Public Security Ministry, in June 2023, and, following Cabinet authorization, the two parties finalized the agreement on 31 December, 2023.
The utterly corrupt decision that had been made without competitive bidding meant to ensure the best for the country, resulted in a shocking increase in visa fees – from the previously affordable $ 1 fee charged by Mobitel to a staggering $ 25 per visa. The issue exploded in the run-up to the presidential election. In fact, it was a major issue on the election platform. No less a person than NPP presidential candidate Anura Kumara Disanayake (AKD) dealt with the issue quite often as the Opposition fiercely attacked the Wickremesinghe administration over what was widely called ‘online visa scam.’
The absence of long queues doesn’t mean the situation is better. Unless the government takes remedial measures promptly, the situation is going to deteriorate, regardless of half-baked solutions provided by the government.
Under the leadership of Dr. Harsha de Silva, the Committee on Public Finance (CoPF) inquired into the matter. No holds barred investigation revealed that the previous visa service provider Mobitel had submitted several proposals to upgrade the system, all at a much lower cost – just $ 1 per visa, though the government selected the foreign consortium.
The question remained as to why the government ignored Mobitel’s offer and ended up paying so much more for a less secure system?
Widespread accusations pertained to the online visa scam and disruption of the new passport supply line, too, contributed to the unprecedented NPP victories at the presidential and parliamentary elections. The voting public realized the gravity of the situation as the Supreme Court stepped in and quashed the sordid deal in August 2024, just weeks before the presidential election.
The SC suspended the controversial visa scheme. The court ordered the immediate restoration of the low cost and efficient previous system run by Mobitel. The online visa scam dealt a crushing blow to Wickremesinghe’s presidential election bid.
A cumbersome process
The writer was among those present on the second floor of the Department of Immigration and Emigration at Suhurupaya, Sri Subhuthipura Road, Battaramulla on the morning of 08 January, 2025, when an official declared that those who wanted to obtain new passports sooner may comeback exactly in one month after handing over their applications, to make representations to a special committee tasked with expediting the process. That message was repeated on several occasions.
In the absence of a steady supply of new passports, the powers that be adopted a system meant to delay the entire process, much to the disappointment of the public. Regardless of the change of the government, the disgraceful system continues. Let me explain how hapless people are being harassed by an utterly corrupt and inefficient bureaucracy.
Having submitted photographs online to the Immigration and Emigration Department on 20 November, 2024 (the day before the parliamentary election), the writer was able to secure an appointment on 08 January, 2025, just to hand over the applications – 50 days from the day the writer submitted photographs via a studio as instructed by the Department.
After the handing over of an application, one has to wait for a month to make representations to the Department. But, there is no guarantee that the Immigration and Emigration committee can be convinced. Those who can afford may obtain a new passport through the ‘one-day service’ but at a very much higher cost. Those who boast of friendly and cost-effective government services owed the public an explanation as to why people are deprived of an opportunity to obtain a passport within a reasonable period of time.
It would be pertinent to mention that it could take as many as 80 days to meet the Immigration and Emigration committee from the day one submitted photographs online.
Advice offered by Immigration and Emigration official on the second floor underscored that there is no time-frame for issuance of passports for those depending on the normal service. The process can take a couple of months and the situation may take a turn for the worse if the government fails to reach agreement on a suitable supplier of passports.
The crisis in the Immigration and Emigration Department exposed the previous Cabinet-of-Ministers, headed by President Ranil Wickremesinghe. The decision-making process in respect of the issuance of online visa and shortage of new passports failed on the part of the Cabinet to ensure transparency in such a vital matter.
The Controller General of Immigration and Emigration, Harsha Illukpitiya, had to pay a huge price for playing ball with the then government. The SC, on 25 September, 2024, remanded Illukpitiya, on contempt of court charges for failing to implement the interim order and other orders in respect of the implementation of the electronic visa process. The SC three-judge bench, consisting of Justices Preethi Padman Surasena, Kumuduni Wickremasinghe, and Achala Wengappuli fixed the matter for inquiry on 22 January, 2025 (next Wednesday).
The SC dismissed Illukpitiya’s defence that his failure in this regard hadn’t been deliberate and the delay was due to technical issues. The whole issue should be examined taking into consideration the then President Ranil Wickremnesinghe’s efforts to put off the presidential election the way he made the Local Government polls disappear and the contemptible bid to retain Deshabandu Tennakoon’s services as the Inspector General of Police. The President’s move on the IGP was contrary to the SC decision pertaining to the controversial cop. But, Wickremesinghe until the very last moment sought to consolidate his hold through questionable means.
The UNP leader, for some unexplainable reason, went along with Public Security Minister Tiran Alles in the much discussed online visa matter and the IGP’s issue. The government should have realized the crisis it was heading for when the SC, on 02 August, 2024, issued an interim order suspending the contract given to a private consortium.
The SC issued this order after considering Fundamental Rights (FR) petitions filed by the then MPs M.A. Sumanthiran (ITAK), Rauff Hakeem (SJB), Patali Champika Ranawaka (SJB) and a few others. There were altogether eight petitioners.
During proceedings, on 25 September, 2024, President’s Counsel Sumanthiran asked the SC to remand Illukpitiya pending the conclusion of the cases. In a way, the SC brought the government down to its knees.
On a SC directive, the NPP government appointed the Additional Secretary of Public Security Ministry, B.M.D. Nilusha Balasuriya, as the Acting Controller General of Immigration and Emigration.
SC shows the way
Sumanthiran failed to get elected at the last general election, while United Republican Front leader Patali Champika Ranawaka skipped the election over differences with the SJB leadership. Hakeem got re-elected again on the SJB ticket. The SJB MPs joining ITAK heavyweight proved that political parties could work together to fight corruption at the highest level. Among the respondents were the then Minister of Public Security Tiran Alles, the Controller General of Immigration Illukpitiya, the Sri Lanka Tourism Development Authority, GBS Technology Services & IVS Global- FZCO, VFS VF Worldwide Holdings LTD, the Cabinet of Ministers and the Attorney General.
The successful action must encourage other lawmakers to move relevant courts if the government resorted to corrupt practices. Illukpitiya’s fate is nothing but an unprecedented warning to all those carrying out illegal orders, that they may face catastrophic consequences.
Following the SC order, Sumanthiran, Ranawaka and Hakeem addressed the media. Ranawaka declared: “We filed a case against the e-visa fraud. The Supreme Court, after examining the complaint, ordered the return to the old ETA (Electronic Travel Authorization) system until the case was resolved. However, the Controller General Illukpitiya failed to implement the order due to the influence of the former Minister and President, who acted in defiance of the law.
Ranawaka alleged that the former Public Security Minister’s overwhelming ego is the primary cause for this. “The ruling also serves as a lesson for public sector officials about blindly following politicians’ demands.”
The SC order demonstrated that the Cabinet of Ministers can be challenged, successfully. Let me remind you of the disclosure that former Cabinet colleagues of disgraced Health Minister Keheliya Rambukwella told police they approved his Cabinet proposal that paved the way for the procurement of substandard human immunoglobulin vials amid a shortage of medicines in the country because they trusted him.
Over a dozen ex-Ministers claimed that they wouldn’t have backed Rambukwella’s Cabinet proposal if they knew the Health Minister was making false claims. The police questioned them pertaining to the SC order in respect of that particular investigation.
The crux of the matter is whether members of the Cabinet, who backed the online visa fraud, can be subjected to CID investigations.
Alles is on record as having said that the Parliament unanimously approved the changes to the visa processes, including the introduction of several new visa categories, while the involvement of the foreign consortium in managing online and on-arrival visas was referred to the Cabinet of Ministers on two occasions and got its sanction.
Citizens’ actions
The massive fraud perpetrated by the government may have gone unnoticed if not for video clips of an irate passenger, later identified as Sandaru Kumarasinghe, lambasting the government for handing over the responsibilities to a foreign consortium.
At the behest of the government, the Katunayaka police recorded Kumarasinghe’s statement who fiercely criticized the foreign consortium for denying an online visa to his wife, a foreign citizen.
The Opposition capitalized on the angry public sentiment caused by Kuamarsinghe who questioned the Wickremesinghe-Rajapaksa government’s right to outsource such vital responsibilities to a foreign consortium at the expense of local competitors. The incident at the BIA in late April or early May, 2024, drew public attention.
Kumarasinghe’s declaration of Indian involvement in the operation, and subsequent statements, compelled the Indian High Commission in Colombo to issue the following statement: “We have seen reports and comments, including in social media, regarding Indian companies taking over visa issuance at Bandaranaike International Airport (BIA), Colombo. The companies referred to in these reports are not India-based or Indian and are headquartered elsewhere. Any reference to India in this context is unwarranted.”
The report of the Committee on Public Finance on the visa matter can be the basis of NPP government investigation. The circumstances under which Mobitel that had been providing services, since 2012, was discarded in spite of submitting proposals for system improvements in July and November 2020 (revised proposal) and in August 2023. The Immigration and Emigration Department unceremoniously rejected Mobitel’s strong stand that it had the required technological capacity. The powers that be had been determined to abolish their agreement with Mobitel despite it being a responsible state entity, at any cost. Who benefited from the deal with the Dubai-based company?
In the absence of proper mechanism to evaluate and supervise such major proposals, influential persons manipulated the process at will. There can’t be a better example than the Dubai-based company conveniently leaving out USD 200 mn investment earlier promised to make available for necessary technical equipment, software, and knowledge for system integration with the Immigration and Emigration Department.
Perhaps the Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery and Corruption (CIABOC), too, should look into this matter. The CoPF investigation revealed how the government can be manipulated with catastrophic consequences.
Midweek Review
Focus on Minister Paulraj’s UK statement
Women and Child Affairs Minister Saroja Savithri Paulraj recently proudly declared that the national election wins, secured by the National People’s Power (NPP) last year, transformed the country for the better by elevating all citizens, irrespective of race or religion, as equals before the law enforcers?.
The first Tamil Member of Parliament, elected from the Matara District ever, Paulraj said that the Tamil community greatly feared whether justice would be done if members of the community visited police stations. They were also frightened that the armed forces would treat them differently, the first-time MP, who is also a member of the NPP’s National Executive Committee said, adding that the Tamil community had been also apprehensive whether they would be accepted as citizens of Sri Lanka. However, the NPP’s triumph changed the ground situation.
At the onset of this statement, lawmaker Paulraj said that she must repeat the same in Tamil. The declaration was made at a public gathering in the UK. Among those who had been on stage at that moment were Justice and National Integration Minister Harshana Nanayakkara and Health and Mass Media Minister and Chief Government Whip Dr. Nalinda Jayatissa.
During the second JVP insurgency (1987-1990), anti-subversive operations targeted the Sinhalese. The writer, on many occasions, observed the police and military manning checkpoints leaving out Tamils, Muslims and Sinhala Catholics when buses entering the City were checked. That was the general practice all over the country.
A section of the social media criticised Minister Paulraj over her UK statement. Minister Paulraj had been on a parliamentary delegation, led by Speaker Dr. Jagath Wickramaratne, that undertook a visit to the UK from 26 to 29 October, 2025. The Parliament, in a statement issued after the conclusion of the UK funded visit, declared that the visit was aimed at strengthening inter-parliamentary collaboration, advancing democratic governance, and promoting institutional transparency and accountability.
Paulraj is the President of the UK–Sri Lanka Parliamentary Friendship Association, in addition to being the Chairperson of the Women Parliamentarians’ Caucus.
The delegation included Hansa Abeyratne, Assistant Secretary General of Parliament. Minister Paulraj also called for a focused discussion on advancing gender equality and women’s empowerment through parliamentary action with Harriet Harman, UK Prime Minister’s Special Envoy for Women and Girls.
British High Commissioner to Sri Lanka Andrew Patrick accompanied the delegation. It would be pertinent to ask whether the British HC here asked the Parliament to restrict the delegation to members of the ruling NPP. The JVP-led NPP won a staggering 159 seats, out of 225, at the last parliamentary election.
SJB frontline MP Mujibur Rahman, has questioned the decision to restrict the UK visit to NPP lawmakers. The former UNPer said that if the UK had extended private invitations to a select group of NPPers, Parliament should explain as to why Assistant Secretary General of Parliament Hansa Abeyratne joined the delegation.
Let me examine Minister Paulraj’s recent controversial comments made in the UK, taking into consideration the gradual transformation of the armed forces and police to meet separatist Tamil terrorist threat. Over the years, that threat changed into an unprecedented conventional military challenge. The British conveniently turned a blind eye to LTTE operations, directed from British soil, over several decades, as Sri Lanka struggled to resist the group on the Northern and Eastern battlefields. The UK allowed terrorism to flourish, even after the group assassinated two world leaders Rajiv Gandhi of India, in May 1991, and Sri Lankan President Ranasinghe Premadasa, in May 1993. Both of them played ball with the LTTE at different times and finally paid with their lives.
Minister Paulraj is absolutely right. Tamil people dreaded the police and armed forces as the LTTE consisted of Tamils, men, women and children. The armed forces and police had no option but to take maximum precautions and consider all possibilities as the LTTE infiltrated political parties at all levels and brazenly exploited security loopholes to advance their macabre cause.
The Matara district, represented by Minister Paulraj, experienced LTTE terror on 10 March, 2009, when a suicide bomber blew himself up at a religious parade near Godapitiya Jumma mosque, in Akuressa, killing 14 and injuring 35 – all civilians.
Members of the NPP delegation, invited by the UK, couldn’t have been unaware that the man who ‘supervised’ the terror campaign, Anton Balasingham, enjoyed privileged status as a British citizen. The former British HC employee, at its Colombo mission, was married to Adele (she now lives comfortably in the UK), who encouraged the conscription of child ‘soldiers’, including girls, operated there with the full knowledge of successive British governments.
Child soldiers
The Tamil community feared all groups that were sponsored by the LTTE. Velupillai Prabhakaran’s LTTE is definitely not an exception. The group used children as cannon fodder in high intensity battles and even during the Puthumathalan evacuations, Prabhakaran made a desperate bid to forcibly conscript child soldiers. That was during January-May 2009 as ground forces fought their way into a rapidly shrinking area held by the deeply demoralised Tiger units, surrounded by a human shield made up of their own hapless people, many of whom were held against their will.
If the NPP government bothered to peruse the reports made available by the Norway-led Scandinavian truce monitoring mission during February 2002 – January 2008, Minister Paulraj, in her capacity as Women and Child Affairs Minister, could easily understand the gravity of the then situation. The LTTE conscripted children and also deployed women, regardless of consequences. The number of child soldiers and women cadres’ deaths may horrify the Matara district NPP leader.
The LTTE used women suicide cadres as a strategic weapon. As Chairperson of the Women Parliamentarians’ Caucus, Minister Paulraj should undertake a comprehensive examination of the use of women in combat and suicide missions. That murderous enterprise continued until a soldier put a bullet through Velupillai Prabhakaran’s head on the banks of the Nanthikadal lagoon.
At the time the military brought the war to an end in May 2009, the NPP hadn’t been established. Having thrown its weight behind the war effort, at the onset of the Eelam War IV, in 2006, the JVP withdrew its support and finally ended up in a coalition, led by the UNP, that backed retired General Sarath Fonseka’s candidature at the 2010 presidential election. The coalition included the now defunct Tamil National Alliance (TNA) that formally recognised the LTTE/Velupillai Prabhakaran as the sole representatives of the Tamil speaking people. That recognition, granted in 2001, at gun point, remained until the fighting machine disintegrated during a two-year and 10-month long all-out campaign by the security forces to defeat LTTE terrorism.
Lawmaker Paulraj should seriously examine the circumstances of the Tamil community living in all parts of the country, including the Northern and Eastern regions, overwhelmingly voting for Fonseka whose Army eradicated the LTE conventional fighting capacity. The Tamils, particularly those living in former war zones, were the main beneficiaries of the LTTE’s annihilation. Had the LTTE through some jugglery, managed to work out a ceasefire, in May 2009, and save its top leadership, the child conscription may not have ended.
Sri Lanka’s triumph over terrorism ended child conscription. That achievement may not receive the approval of duplicitous and insensitive politicians and political parties but the ordinary Tamil people appreciate that.
During Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga’s presidency, her government made a strong attempt to halt forcible conscriptions. That effort involved both the UN and the ICRC but the LTTE never kept its promise to discontinue forcible conscription. Regardless of signing an agreement with the international community, the LTTE abducted children, sometimes while they were on their way to school or returning from school.
The LTTE actions never bothered the British, though some Colombo-based diplomats took a different stance. David Tatham, who served as the British HC here during the period 1996 – 1999, perhaps recognised the disruptive role played by the Tamil Diaspora in Sri Lanka. Tatham didn’t mince his words in Jaffna when he declared his opposition to the Tamil Diaspora funding the war here. Tatham made his statement three years after the armed forces brought back the Jaffna peninsula under the government rule.
During a visit to Jaffna, in August 1998, Tatham urged the Tamil community to stop funding the on-going war. Tatham knew the destruction caused by such unlimited funding. The British diplomat took a courageous stand to publicly appeal for an end to Tamil Diaspora funding. The appeal was made at a time the British allowed a free hand to the LTTE on their territory. The Tamil Diaspora received direct orders from the North. They worked at the behest of the LTTE. That ended in May 2009.
The LTTE-Tamil Diaspora adopted a simple strategy. They assured major political parties in Europe of support at parliamentary elections and the arrangement worked perfectly. The LTTE-Tamil Diaspora influenced British parliamentarians to make unsubstantiated allegations. The accusations, directed by various politicians, culminated with the Canadian Parliament formally declaring that Sri Lanka perpetrated genocide against Tamils.
LTTE sets up own ‘police’ unit
The LTTE established a police unit in 1992 and also operated a court system. Unfortunately, interested parties have conveniently forgotten how the LTTE controlled the civilian population living in areas under its control. Before Velupillai Prabhakaran developed the ‘law enforcement’ arm and rapidly expanded it, in the wake of the 2002 Ceasefire Agreement, the LTTE and other Tamil groups the targeted police.
Paulraj, as the Minister in Charge of Women and Child Affairs, should know how the LTTE strategies brought fear among the Tamil community. Let me remind the Minister of two senseless political killings carried out by the LTTE. The LTTE assassinated Rajani Thiranagama (née Rajasingham), in Jaffna, on 21 September, 1989. This happened during the deployment of the Indian Army in terms of an agreement that had been forced on Sri Lanka. The LTTE ordered her death for being critical of the atrocities perpetrated by them.
At the time of the high profile assassination, Thiranagama served as the head of the Department of Anatomy of the Medical Faculty of the Jaffna University and an active member and one of the founders of the University Teachers for Human Rights, Jaffna. The LTTE assassinated Jaffna Mayor Mrs. Sarojini Yogeswaran on 17 May, 1998, at her Jaffna residence.
Those who continuously find fault with the military, and the police, never condemn the LTTE, or other Tamil groups, for mindless violence unleashed on the Tamil community. Perhaps, a census should be conducted to identify the individual killings carried out by successive governments and Tamil groups.
Sarojini Yogeswaran’s husband former MP, Vettivelu, had been among those politicians killed by the LTTE. Vettivelu and former Opposition Leader and the foremost Tamil leader Appapillai Amirthalingam were killed during the Premadasa-Prabhakaran honeymoon (May 1989 to June 1990). LTTE hitmen killed them on 13 July, 1989, in Colombo. If Amirthalingam had allowed his Sinhala police bodyguards to check all visitors who entered the premises, this heinous crime could have been averted. Unfortunately, Amirthalingam prevented the police from interfering with the secretly arranged meeting because he didn’t want to offend the LTTE. But one Sinhala policeman shot dead all three gunmen. Had they managed to flee, the killings could have been conveniently blamed on the government.
Those who complain of security checks must be reminded of senseless killings. The Fort Railway Station, bombing on 03 February, 2008, killed 12 civilians and injured more than 100. Among the dead were eight schoolchildren of D. S. Senanayake College baseball team and their coach/teacher-in-charge.
JD before LLRC
Have we ever heard of apologists for Tigers demanding justice for those who had been killed by the LTTE? Never. The civil society never takes up killings carried out by the LTTE. Can there be a rational explanation for the assassination of Dr. Neelan Tiruchelvam, PC, on 29 July, 1999.
At the time of his assassination, the legal scholar served as a National List member of Parliament and was the Director of the International Centre for Ethnic Studies.
Who empowered the LTTE? The LTTE thrived on support extended by foreign governments. The British allowed a free hand to the LTTE operation, though the group was banned there, only in 2001, under the Terrorism Act 2000, and subsequent regulations making it a criminal offence to be a member of, or support, the group in the UK. But the group was allowed to continue and law enforcement authorities turned a blind eye to the display of LTTE flags. The displaying of LTTE flags, perhaps, is the least of the illegal acts perpetrated by the group.
One of Sri Lanka’s celebrated career diplomats, the late Jayantha Dhanapala, explained the issue of accountability when he addressed the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC), headed by one-time Attorney General, the late C. R. de Silva, on 25 August, 2010. The writer was present there on that occasion.
Dhanapala, in his submissions, said: “Now I think it is important for us to expand that concept to bring in the culpability of those members of the international community who have subscribed to the situation that has caused injury to the civilians of a nation. I talk about the way in which terrorist groups are given sanctuary; harboured; and supplied with arms and training by some countries with regard to their neighbours or with regard to other countries. We know that in our case this has happened, and I don’t want to name countries, but even countries which have allowed their financial procedures and systems to be abused in such a way that money can flow from their countries in order to buy arms and ammunition that cause deaths, maiming and destruction of property in Sri Lanka are to blame and there is therefore a responsibility to protect our civilians and the civilians of other nations from that kind of behaviour on the part of members of the international community. And I think this is something that will echo within many countries in the Non-Aligned Movement, where Sri Lanka has a much respected position and where I hope we will be able to raise this issue.”
Dhanapala also stressed on the accountability on the part of Western governments, which conveniently turned a blind eye to massive fundraising operations in their countries, in support of the LTTE operations. It is no secret that the LTTE would never have been able to emerge as a conventional fighting force without having the wherewithal abroad, mainly in the Western countries, to procure arms, ammunition and equipment. But, the government never acted on Dhanapala’s advice.
The UK, in March this year, imposed sanctions on former Chief of Staff of the Sri Lankan Armed Forces, Shavendra Silva, former Commander of the Navy Wasantha Karannagoda and former Commander of the Army Jagath Jayasuriya, as well as Vinayagamoorthy Muralitharan, known as Karuna Amman formerly of the LTTE. Sri Lanka never had the courage to point out how the UK allowed the LTTE to build conventional military capacity.
By Shamindra Ferdinando
Midweek Review
‘Harini Amarasuriya Social & Ethnographic Research Lab’ much ado about nothing?
As I listened to the Prime Minister, Dr. Harini Amarasuriya at University of Colombo on 28 October 2025, she noted that research symposiums, conferences, and academic publications across the country’s universities have expanded in recent years, and this visibility had contributed to improved global university rankings. Nevertheless, and more importantly she cautioned that rankings should not be the sole benchmark of academic excellence. She rightly observed that research was a central mission of universities, not only for generating new knowledge but also for enriching the learning experience and nurturing future scholars. After a long time, I was able to agree with a political leader, and much of what I said later that morning in the same event resonated with her basic assumptions.
However, as I listened to her thought-provoking address and the need to reflect and analyse which should necessarily be part of university training, the recently established eponymous research ‘lab’ in her name at Hindu College, University of Delhi, came to mind.
Taking a cue from the Prime Minister and the need to be reflective in what we write, it would be disingenuous on my part if I do not discuss what the ‘Harini Amarasuriya Social & Ethnographic Research Lab’ means in terms of real politics as well as common sense. After all, she is not just an anthropologist and a former academic but also and more crucially, Sri Lanka’s Prime Minister. The overwhelming majority of Sri Lankans, including me, voted to send her and the government she represents to parliament with considerable electoral backing. As a voter and a scholar, but importantly as a citizen, the public use of a Sri Lankan leader’s name internationally is a matter of interest as it has broad connotations and implications beyond individuals.
In this context, having had a similar training as the Prime Minster and being familiar with Hindu College and other affiliated colleges of Delhi University, the foremost question to my mind is why a lab is needed for serious social research or more specifically ethnographic research. Incidentally this is the kind of research that is mostly associated with the published work of the Prime Minister in her former academic incarnation. By definition, the ‘lab’ for these broad disciplines is society itself.

Granted, on the one hand, some very specific streams in social research can of course have labs focused on fields such as psychology, linguistics, visual research and so on. On the other hand, one can always have a specialised lab like the Urban Research Lab run by the Indraprastha Institute of Information Technology Delhi which organises seminars, panel discussions, film screenings and book talks in its efforts at knowledge production. In more recent times, the word lab is used to denote a hub of related academic activities – often interdisciplinary – including organising specialised lectures, workshops, etc., which once used to be done by academic departments.
However, nothing available in the public domain from Hindu College or the Prime Minister’s Office elucidates what the exact focus or expertise of this ‘lab’ purports to be. Moreover, being very familiar with the sociology (and social anthropology) teaching programme at Hindu College, why an undergraduate college of this kind needs a lab of unspecified expertise towards social research is beyond comprehension. More than a thoughtful addition to the college’s necessary academic infrastructure, this unfortunately looks like a hastily concocted afterthought.
At the moment, the lab remains an inconsequential room with a steel plaque bearing our Prime Minister’s name. I wonder if her office or our High Commission in Delhi made inquiries from Hindu College or India’s Ministry of External Affairs, what exact purpose this room would serve and how it will cater to knowledge generation. For example, will it promote research in areas such as child protection and welfare, human rights and social justice, youth dynamics and social development and gender dynamics and women’s rights which are also interests the Prime Minister has had in her academic career? Or will it promote research on Sri Lanka more generally? Or will it be a generic all-weather centre or lab that organises seemingly academic events of no particular consequence in universities? No one seems to know. It is also not clear if the Prime Minister’s Office or the Sri Lanka High Commission in Delhi asked such questions in preparing for the Prime Minister’s visit.
In the same vein, did her office and the High Commission ask who the Head of this lab is and what kind of governance structure it has, including the nature of Sri Lankan representation? To elucidate with a similar example, the Indian High Commission in Colombo wields unmitigated influence in the functioning of the Centre for Contemporary Indian Studies at University of Colombo, which, granted, is funded by the Indian taxpayer. But the lab in Hindu College, is named after our Prime Minister in “recognition of her achievements” as a press release from her office states. Therefore, our government should have some serious say in what it stands for and what it should do in the name of research in the same way the Indian government does with regard to the Centre for Contemporary Indian Studies.
Given the Prime Minister’s early education in India and particularly at Hindu College, albeit at a very different time, the sentimentality with which she views her alma mater and the country is understandable. However, sentimentality should not be a consideration when it comes to matters of the state in which the name of our country, our sense of politics and our collective common sense are also implicated. Even if the Prime Minister’s Office or the Sri Lankan government did not ask the necessary questions due to their pronounced lack of experience and inability to seek advice from the right quarters in matters of international relations and regional politics as already proven multiple times, our High Commission in Delhi which is no longer led by a political appointee should have asked all the right questions and advised the government on the suitability of this initiative.
The eponymous lab is not an awe-inspiring phenomenon, but by virtue of carrying the Sri Lankan Prime Minister’s name, its significance should be mirrored in remaining relevant. Anyone with an iota of national pride would not want a room bearing our Prime Minister’s name to fall by the wayside, as many other ill-thought-out political projects in India and Sri Lanka have become or could become. After all, University of Delhi, to which Hindu College is affiliated, recently cancelled a scheduled lecture which was part of the long standing ‘Friday Colloquium’ series at the Department of Sociology at Delhi School of Economics right next door to Hindu College and in the same breath asked its affiliate colleges to promote a summit on “cow welfare.” This emanates from the sanctity associated with that animal in Hinduism.
Against this established backdrop, would the ‘Harini Amarasuriya Social & Ethnographic Research Lab’ be required to sponsor similar events in the future? Would it become yet another organization facilitating the steady decline in academic freedom sweeping across Indian universities? Would it become a place where bizarre and ill-advised lectures and workshops might be organized and substandard publications released? If so, all this will go against the Prime Minister’s own track record as a former academic has spent considerable time battling such nefarious practices. Have mechanisms to manage and control such unenviable outcomes been put in place at the intervention of the Prime Minister’s Office or the Sri Lanka High Commission in Delhi?
I am asking these questions with another unfortunate and somewhat comparable example in mind. In 1993, the then Sri Lankan President R. Premadasa established a ‘reawakened village’ based on his locally tested ‘udagama’ concept in Mastipur, Bodhgaya. Its work began in 1989 and went on for four years. It was described by the Times of India of June 15, 1998, as “a Rs 75-lakh housing project and a spanking residential complex.” As the newspaper reports further, “on April 13, 1993, Premadasa flew into Bodhgaya from Colombo to hand over the keys of the 100 new houses to poor Dalit families. ‘Buddhagayagama’ was inscribed at the entrance to the colony in Sinhalese, Hindi and English.” And yet by 1999 and certainly today, the Buddhagayagama is a site of extreme poverty and utter deprivation despite the fact that it was much better thought out, better funded and better led diplomatic and political intervention compared to the ‘Harini Amarasuriya Social & Ethnographic Research Lab’ with the direct involvement of the Sri Lankan President’s Office, the High Commission in Delhi, among other institutions, both in Sri Lanka and India. Crucially, it failed as there was no mechanism in place to maintain the complex and improve the livelihood of the villagers.
Compared to this Sri Lankan failure in India, what exactly is in place in Hindu College to ensure that the in that college does not become yet another dormant entity bearing our Prime Minister’s name or become an institution championing academic ‘unfreedom’ with zero Sri Lankan diplomatic intervention?
I remain open to being educated and would gladly accept being proven wrong.
Midweek Review
School in the Jungle
In a faraway village in the jungle,
Where people labour in humble silence,
Eight students have passed the Ordinary Level,
And this is not at all a minor achievement,
For a little school with just one teacher,
Who had to teach alone all nine subjects,
But let not the lesson be lost in the policy haze,
That it’s better to leave one school open,
Rather than give-up the hapless young,
To the wiles of multiplying drug barons.
By Lynn Ockersz
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