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The blunders in politics and thorns to personal life due to pettiness

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“Don’t sweat the petty things; don’t pet the sweaty things” said George Calin, giving us a hint to make life easier.

What are these stupid, petty, narrow minded, bigoted, intolerant things that prick us off and on, more so if we are sensitive and don’t know how to be sensible to not entertain or take notice of? They come from persons who are petty-minded or small-minded. They can very well emerge from our minds and mouths too.

The idea of pettiness invaded my mind bringing in very many unhappy flashbacks as I listened to a video clip which detailed conversations and sections of late night shows of Jimmy Kimmel – American television host, comedian, writer and producer who has continued his late night TV talk show since 2003. He was recalling what actor Robert de Niro had said over time about Donald Trump, all uncomplimentary to Trump. But not nasty, mean or vulgar; albeit damaging and damning. And how did Trump take the comments of both men? Extremely negatively; overreacting, being nasty, exhibiting hate and most definitely petty-mindedness.

How define petty-mindedness; a synonym for which is small-mindedness. “Describes a narrow-mindedness, a lack of tolerance for different opinions or experiences, and a tendency to focus on petty or trivial matters. Also having narrow interests, sympathies or outlook.”

Trump’s petty-mindedness

One recent event that showcased Trump’s stupidity which seems to be a major character trait of his, was the meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky when he was invited to the White House to sign an agreement to allow the US to extract minerals from Ukraine. Zelensky’s attire was commented on adversely by Trump and a journo. He was actually badgered by those crowded in the Oval Office and Vice President Vance was so small minded as to accuse the Ukrainian President of being ungrateful to the US President. Petty-mindedness drove away all diplomatic suavity and political gravitas, lacking in the triumvirate of Trump, Musk and Vance.

Trump’s acts of pettiness are legion and exhibited with no hesitation or inhibition. This, a further pointer to his small mind that is revengeful. A word used on Trump by those who dislike and disapprove of him is ‘stupid.’ The latest petty act of his – personal revenge – is his “Rescinding security clearance and classified information” from ex Prez Joe Biden and his family, Kamala Harris, Hillary Clinton, previous Secretary of State, Antony Blinken and former Deputy Attorney. Lisa Monaco. Their being denied access to state information is going against the usual prerogative of ex VIPs. Trump is exercising here his personal animosity that some of them contested him and the last named for being the prosecutor in many court cases against him. This is gargantuan small mindedness of the supposedly ‘Greatest leader of the world.’

Local political scene

Am I advancing to walk on eggshells? No. We enjoy freedom of expression. There have been examples of newly elected Prime Ministers and Presidents venting their pettiness after winning power. Transfers galore of public servants suspected of being pro the defeated party. This came into being at the end of the 1950s. Soon after Independence, governments seemed to have run smooth and democratically.

On DS’s death, Lord Soulbury appointed Dudley Senanayake as Prime Minister, the accompanying rumour being that DS had decreed thus to the Governor, that his son must succeed him if he were to die suddenly. Loud rumours swirled around highly disgruntled aspirants. Seniors like Sir John Kotelawela were rumoured to be displeased.

Was Dudley’s succession as PM due to his father decreeing to the Governor that were he to die suddenly as PM, his son should be his replacement? This seems to be a petty, small minded act of nepotism and too great a love of dynastic rule. Admittedly very difficult to classify it thus since DS was most definitely a revered leader and obviously a national minded statesman. He was just and placed country before self. He deserves the benefit of the doubt. Maybe knowing the competition that existed among second tier leaders, he felt it safest to propose to the Governor to make his son PM, eligible as he was, who would soon enough hold a general election when the people’s preference would be expressed.

Surveying with the mind’s eye – unprofessional and perhaps naïve – I see that among our leaders, first Prime Ministers and then Presidents, many did act with pettiness. I do not mean prejudice but small-mindedness. But not by a long chalk comparable to how Trump is acting and has acted. His petty vanity and small minded anger pushed him to orchestrate the attack on the Capitol, didn’t it? Self against the safety of the entire nation.

The mildest and least petty minded of our Heads were, in my opinion, W Dahanayake and D B Wijetunge. Some might comment they were the weakest too. The two women showed pettiness, definitely. Prez Premadasa had a chip on his shoulder, sensitive about his beginnings, and thus his petty acts of omission and commission. Also, he was apparently scared of anyone becoming more popular, usurping him. He was not accused of the murder of Richard de Zoysa but what a petty act it was to kill this talented young man because he parodied a statement in an ad about Prez Premadasa. Thus acts of severe small mindedness, and let’s add cruelty, amounting to murder.

JR allowed a minister of his to be so petty and prejudiced that he set the country ablaze in July 1983 and JR, with small mindedness, probably not realizing or imagining at all what the drastic consequences would be, delayed declaring curfew; so much so that people in horror questioned whether he had not at least smelt the smoke arising from buildings set fire to by the Sinhala marauders in Borella.

It is with such relief and joy that I say this government as a whole shows no pettiness. The President and PM are far above this demeaning quality of the mind which prompts acting stupidly and small-mindedly.

Personal

I have a tendency to be personal in my articles in this column. I love actual anecdotes of others and thus the relish with which I read the memoirs of past VIPs retailed in this newspaper.

Young children have a cruel streak in them; most. See how a kid boy would deliberately remove the wings of a butterfly. That was Prabakaran accompanying his father to the Vavunitya kachcheri. I suppose fairy stories have also bee made macabre.

I suffered hell on earth when in Baby Class. Reluctantly following my sister to school which was very close to home, I would burn with the question: will I be with them or ordered out. The leader among us, Ira, would decree as we met in the morning: Nan, you are not with us. Go away. Life almost melted away. The next morning a reversal; Ira would ban Manel, and I was automatically in. And so it went on, until one of the banned let Ira have it, verbally and queen-like.

Standard two was worse. It was not pettyness that prompted Miss S to be what she was, but a sadistic streak that older us came to identify later. My tummy would burn when KG assembly was over and we crocodiled to her class. She shook kids till their teeth rattled and desks were knocked down. Other such torture, all supposed to instill discipline in us. Then she met her Waterloo whether with the Principal in the know or otherwise, we did not know. She turned careful and thus less strident. She got a girl to remove her knickers and tied her mouth with the garment just because the girl chatted a mite with her desk mate. The girl’s father descended on the class the next morning. No more can I tell because I was a senior then and this incident was whispered about. But I must admit I gained from the disciplining received from other teachers in milder manner.

Very much pettiness is within families. Time was when mothers-in-law vented their narrow-mindedness and sorrow at losing a son to another woman. In truth, there were a few mothers who disposed of their daughters in marriage as soon as possible but did not want sons married. To my intended and then ma-in-law, I was non est for quite a while; not seen as present, and poor me, taught by my mother to fall in line and be meek, suffered. Not so now. Brides are no longer meek though they may be scared of how married life could be. It’s mas-in-law who are the more tolerant, giving, loving and genuinely concerned now. All the better, I aver.

It seems to be true that outright wickedness is not disdained as pettiness is. If Trump ups and kills a man, the world will be shocked, but here’s the but – Trump will not be scorned as petty, the f word used so freely on him. Thus the quote I add here from Denis Diderot:

“If there is one realm in which it is essential to be sublime, it is in wickedness. You spit on the petty thief but you can’t deny a kind of respect for the great criminal.”

 



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Rebuilding the country requires consultation

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A positive feature of the government that is emerging is its responsiveness to public opinion. The manner in which it has been responding to the furore over the Grade 6 English Reader, in which a weblink to a gay dating site was inserted, has been constructive. Government leaders have taken pains to explain the mishap and reassure everyone concerned that it was not meant to be there and would be removed. They have been meeting religious prelates, educationists and community leaders. In a context where public trust in institutions has been badly eroded over many years, such responsiveness matters. It signals that the government sees itself as accountable to society, including to parents, teachers, and those concerned about the values transmitted through the school system.

This incident also appears to have strengthened unity within the government. The attempt by some opposition politicians and gender misogynists to pin responsibility for this lapse on Prime Minister Dr Harini Amarasuriya, who is also the Minister of Education, has prompted other senior members of the government to come to her defence. This is contrary to speculation that the powerful JVP component of the government is unhappy with the prime minister. More importantly, it demonstrates an understanding within the government that individual ministers should not be scapegoated for systemic shortcomings. Effective governance depends on collective responsibility and solidarity within the leadership, especially during moments of public controversy.

The continuing important role of the prime minister in the government is evident in her meetings with international dignitaries and also in addressing the general public. Last week she chaired the inaugural meeting of the Presidential Task Force to Rebuild Sri Lanka in the aftermath of Cyclone Ditwah. The composition of the task force once again reflects the responsiveness of the government to public opinion. Unlike previous mechanisms set up by governments, which were either all male or without ethnic minority representation, this one includes both, and also includes civil society representation. Decision-making bodies in which there is diversity are more likely to command public legitimacy.

Task Force

The Presidential Task Force to Rebuild Sri Lanka overlooks eight committees to manage different aspects of the recovery, each headed by a sector minister. These committees will focus on Needs Assessment, Restoration of Public Infrastructure, Housing, Local Economies and Livelihoods, Social Infrastructure, Finance and Funding, Data and Information Systems, and Public Communication. This structure appears comprehensive and well designed. However, experience from post-disaster reconstruction in countries such as Indonesia and Sri Lanka after the 2004 tsunami suggests that institutional design alone does not guarantee success. What matters equally is how far these committees engage with those on the ground and remain open to feedback that may complicate, slow down, or even challenge initial plans.

An option that the task force might wish to consider is to develop a linkage with civil society groups with expertise in the areas that the task force is expected to work. The CSO Collective for Emergency Relief has set up several committees that could be linked to the committees supervised by the task force. Such linkages would not weaken the government’s authority but strengthen it by grounding policy in lived realities. Recent findings emphasise the idea of “co-production”, where state and society jointly shape solutions in which sustainable outcomes often emerge when communities are treated not as passive beneficiaries but as partners in problem-solving.

Cyclone Ditwah destroyed more than physical infrastructure. It also destroyed communities. Some were swallowed by landslides and floods, while many others will need to be moved from their homes as they live in areas vulnerable to future disasters. The trauma of displacement is not merely material but social and psychological. Moving communities to new locations requires careful planning. It is not simply a matter of providing people with houses. They need to be relocated to locations and in a manner that permits communities to live together and to have livelihoods. This will require consultation with those who are displaced. Post-disaster evaluations have acknowledged that relocation schemes imposed without community consent often fail, leading to abandonment of new settlements or the emergence of new forms of marginalisation. Even today, abandoned tsunami housing is to be seen in various places that were affected by the 2004 tsunami.

Malaiyaha Tamils

The large-scale reconstruction that needs to take place in parts of the country most severely affected by Cyclone Ditwah also brings an opportunity to deal with the special problems of the Malaiyaha Tamil population. These are people of recent Indian origin who were unjustly treated at the time of Independence and denied rights of citizenship such as land ownership and the vote. This has been a festering problem and a blot on the conscience of the country. The need to resettle people living in those parts of the hill country which are vulnerable to landslides is an opportunity to do justice by the Malaiyaha Tamil community. Technocratic solutions such as high-rise apartments or English-style townhouses that have or are being contemplated may be cost-effective, but may also be culturally inappropriate and socially disruptive. The task is not simply to build houses but to rebuild communities.

The resettlement of people who have lost their homes and communities requires consultation with them. In the same manner, the education reform programme, of which the textbook controversy is only a small part, too needs to be discussed with concerned stakeholders including school teachers and university faculty. Opening up for discussion does not mean giving up one’s own position or values. Rather, it means recognising that better solutions emerge when different perspectives are heard and negotiated. Consultation takes time and can be frustrating, particularly in contexts of crisis where pressure for quick results is intense. However, solutions developed with stakeholder participation are more resilient and less costly in the long run.

Rebuilding after Cyclone Ditwah, addressing historical injustices faced by the Malaiyaha Tamil community, advancing education reform, changing the electoral system to hold provincial elections without further delay and other challenges facing the government, including national reconciliation, all require dialogue across differences and patience with disagreement. Opening up for discussion is not to give up on one’s own position or values, but to listen, to learn, and to arrive at solutions that have wider acceptance. Consultation needs to be treated as an investment in sustainability and legitimacy and not as an obstacle to rapid decisionmaking. Addressing the problems together, especially engagement with affected parties and those who work with them, offers the best chance of rebuilding not only physical infrastructure but also trust between the government and people in the year ahead.

 

by Jehan Perera

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PSTA: Terrorism without terror continues

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When the government appointed a committee, led by Rienzie Arsekularatne, Senior President’s Counsel, to draft a new law to replace the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA), as promised by the ruling NPP, the writer, in an article published in this journal in July 2025, expressed optimism that, given Arsekularatne’s experience in criminal justice, he would be able to address issues from the perspectives of the State, criminal justice, human rights, suspects, accused, activists, and victims. The draft Protection of the State from Terrorism Act (PSTA), produced by the Committee, has been sharply criticised by individuals and organisations who expected a better outcome that aligns with modern criminal justice and human rights principles.

This article is limited to a discussion of the definition of terrorism. As the writer explained previously, the dangers of an overly broad definition go beyond conviction and increased punishment. Special laws on terrorism allow deviations from standard laws in areas such as preventive detention, arrest, administrative detention, restrictions on judicial decisions regarding bail, lengthy pre-trial detention, the use of confessions, superadded punishments, such as confiscation of property and cancellation of professional licences, banning organisations, and restrictions on publications, among others. The misuse of such laws is not uncommon. Drastic legislation, such as the PTA and emergency regulations, although intended to be used to curb intense violence and deal with emergencies, has been exploited to suppress political opposition.

 

International Standards

The writer’s basic premise is that, for an act to come within the definition of terrorism, it must either involve “terror” or a “state of intense or overwhelming fear” or be committed to achieve an objective of an individual or organisation that uses “terror” or a “state of intense or overwhelming fear” to realise its aims. The UN General Assembly has accepted that the threshold for a possible general offence of terrorism is the provocation of “a state of terror” (Resolution 60/43). The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe has taken a similar view, using the phrase “to create a climate of terror.”

In his 2023 report on the implementation of the UN Global Counter-Terrorism Strategy, the Secretary-General warned that vague and overly broad definitions of terrorism in domestic law, often lacking adequate safeguards, violate the principle of legality under international human rights law. He noted that such laws lead to heavy-handed, ineffective, and counterproductive counter-terrorism practices and are frequently misused to target civil society actors and human rights defenders by labelling them as terrorists to obstruct their work.

The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) has stressed in its Handbook on Criminal Justice Responses to Terrorism that definitions of terrorist acts must use precise and unambiguous language, narrowly define punishable conduct and clearly distinguish it from non-punishable behaviour or offences subject to other penalties. The handbook was developed over several months by a team of international experts, including the writer, and was finalised at a workshop in Vienna.

 

Anti-Terrorism Bill, 2023

A five-member Bench of the Supreme Court that examined the Anti-Terrorism Bill, 2023, agreed with the petitioners that the definition of terrorism in the Bill was too broad and infringed Article 12(1) of the Constitution, and recommended that an exemption (“carve out”) similar to that used in New Zealand under which “the fact that a person engages in any protest, advocacy, or dissent, or engages in any strike, lockout, or other industrial action, is not, by itself, a sufficient basis for inferring that the person” committed the wrongful acts that would otherwise constitute terrorism.

While recognising the Court’s finding that the definition was too broad, the writer argued, in his previous article, that the political, administrative, and law enforcement cultures of the country concerned are crucial factors to consider. Countries such as New Zealand are well ahead of developing nations, where the risk of misuse is higher, and, therefore, definitions should be narrower, with broader and more precise exemptions. How such a “carve out” would play out in practice is uncertain.

In the Supreme Court, it was submitted that for an act to constitute an offence, under a special law on terrorism, there must be terror unleashed in the commission of the act, or it must be carried out in pursuance of the object of an organisation that uses terror to achieve its objectives. In general, only acts that aim at creating “terror” or a “state of intense or overwhelming fear” should come under the definition of terrorism. There can be terrorism-related acts without violence, for example, when a member of an extremist organisation remotely sabotages an electronic, automated or computerised system in pursuance of the organisation’s goal. But when the same act is committed by, say, a whizz-kid without such a connection, that would be illegal and should be punished, but not under a special law on terrorism. In its determination of the Bill, the Court did not address this submission.

 

PSTA Proposal

Proposed section 3(1) of the PSTA reads:

Any person who, intentionally or knowingly, commits any act which causes a consequence specified in subsection (2), for the purpose of-

(a) provoking a state of terror;

(b) intimidating the public or any section of the public;

(c) compelling the Government of Sri Lanka, or any other Government, or an international organisation, to do or to abstain from doing any act; or

(d) propagating war, or violating territorial integrity or infringing the sovereignty of Sri Lanka or any other sovereign country, commits the offence of terrorism.

The consequences listed in sub-section (2) include: death; hurt; hostage-taking; abduction or kidnapping; serious damage to any place of public use, any public property, any public or private transportation system or any infrastructure facility or environment; robbery, extortion or theft of public or private property; serious risk to the health and safety of the public or a section of the public; serious obstruction or damage to, or interference with, any electronic or automated or computerised system or network or cyber environment of domains assigned to, or websites registered with such domains assigned to Sri Lanka; destruction of, or serious damage to, religious or cultural property; serious obstruction or damage to, or interference with any electronic, analogue, digital or other wire-linked or wireless transmission system, including signal transmission and any other frequency-based transmission system; without lawful authority, importing, exporting, manufacturing, collecting, obtaining, supplying, trafficking, possessing or using firearms, offensive weapons, ammunition, explosives, articles or things used in the manufacture of explosives or combustible or corrosive substances and biological, chemical, electric, electronic or nuclear weapons, other nuclear explosive devices, nuclear material, radioactive substances, or radiation-emitting devices.

Under section 3(5), “any person who commits an act which constitutes an offence under the nine international treaties on terrorism, ratified by Sri Lanka, also commits the offence of terrorism.” No one would contest that.

The New Zealand “carve-out” is found in sub-section (4): “The fact that a person engages in any protest, advocacy or dissent or engages in any strike, lockout or other industrial action, is not by itself a sufficient basis for inferring that such person (a) commits or attempts, abets, conspires, or prepares to commit the act with the intention or knowledge specified in subsection (1); or (b) is intending to cause or knowingly causes an outcome specified in subsection (2).”

While the Arsekularatne Committee has proposed, including the New Zealand “carve out”, it has ignored a crucial qualification in section 5(2) of that country’s Terrorism Suppression Act, that for an act to be considered a terrorist act, it must be carried out for one or more purposes that are or include advancing “an ideological, political, or religious cause”, with the intention of either intimidating a population or coercing or forcing a government or an international organisation to do or abstain from doing any act.

When the Committee was appointed, the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka opined that any new offence with respect to “terrorism” should contain a specific and narrow definition of terrorism, such as the following: “Any person who by the use of force or violence unlawfully targets the civilian population or a segment of the civilian population with the intent to spread fear among such population or segment thereof in furtherance of a political, ideological, or religious cause commits the offence of terrorism”.

The writer submits that, rather than bringing in the requirement of “a political, ideological, or religious cause”, it would be prudent to qualify proposed section 3(1) by the requirement that only acts that aim at creating “terror” or a “state of intense or overwhelming fear” or are carried out to achieve a goal of an individual or organisation that employs “terror” or a “state of intense or overwhelming fear” to attain its objectives should come under the definition of terrorism. Such a threshold is recognised internationally; no “carve out” is then needed, and the concerns of the Human Rights Commission would also be addressed.

 

by Dr. Jayampathy Wickramaratne
President’s Counsel

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ROCK meets REGGAE 2026

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JAYASRI: From Vienna, Austria

We generally have in our midst the famous JAYASRI twins, Rohitha and Rohan, who are based in Austria but make it a point to entertain their fans in Sri Lanka on a regular basis.

Well, rock and reggae fans get ready for a major happening on 28th February (Oops, a special day where I’m concerned!) as the much-awaited ROCK meets REGGAE event booms into action at the Nelum Pokuna outdoor theatre.

It was seven years ago, in 2019, that the last ROCK meets REGGAE concert was held in Colombo, and then the Covid scene cropped up.

Chitral Somapala with BLACK MAJESTY

This year’s event will feature our rock star Chitral Somapala with the Australian Rock+Metal band BLACK MAJESTY, and the reggae twins Rohitha and Rohan Jayalath with the original JAYASRI – the full band, with seven members from Vienna, Austria.

According to Rohitha, the JAYASRI outfit is enthusiastically looking forward to entertaining music lovers here with their brand of music.

Their playlist for 28th February will consist of the songs they do at festivals in Europe, as well as originals, and also English and Sinhala hits, and selected covers.

Says Rohitha: “We have put up a great team, here in Sri Lanka, to give this event an international setting and maintain high standards, and this will be a great experience for our Sri Lankan music lovers … not only for Rock and Reggae fans. Yes, there will be some opening acts, and many surprises, as well.”

Rohitha, Chitral and Rohan: Big scene at ROCK meets REGGAE

Rohitha and Rohan also conveyed their love and festive blessings to everyone in Sri Lanka, stating “This Christmas was different as our country faced a catastrophic situation and, indeed, it’s a great time to help and share the real love of Jesus Christ by helping the poor, the needy and the homeless people. Let’s RISE UP as a great nation in 2026.”

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