Features
The Serendipity of the Long Distance Cyclist
“All have dreams. But it is important that you live those dreams”
That is Dr Mohan Pillai’s philosophy and advice. He recently gave way again to his dream by cycling with two other enthusiasts from Bangalore on push bikes across South India beginning on September 1st from Cochin, in Kerala going across India to Nagapattinam in the eastern coast where they boarded the ferry to Sri Lanka. Mohan who lives in Australia joined his friends in Cochin arriving by air via Colombo with his checked-in baggage containing his 20 year-old bicycle. The ferry landed in Kankasanturai and they then cycled via Vavuniya, Mihintale, Kurunegala to Colombo, arriving on September 17th.
Starting at around 5 am each day, they set off at a steady pace for two hours when they stopped at a wayside boutique for breakfast. Then back on their bikes until lunch which they routinely partook from a simple restaurant. Each night they slept in a small hotel and then proceeded to the next stop 50 to 60 km away depending on the terrain.
Beginning in Cochin, this was their daily programme until they reached Colombo except for the day on the ferry. An unfortunate diversion was when one of his companions was bitten by a stray dog and the team was busy getting medical attention for him in the form of an anti-rabies vaccine in the Kurunegala hospital followed by a similar shot when they reached Colombo. They were very impressed by the service provided by the two public hospitals.
Dr Pillai’s bicycling trip was to celebrate his 80th birthday which was a few days ago. But he is no stranger to the island having been brought up in Colombo for most of his early life. An old boy of Royal College and a MBBS from the Colombo Medical College, he migrated to Australia in 1978 and ran a flourishing practice as a General Practitioner there in Melbourne until a few years ago.
He took a leading role in sports both at Royal College representing the College in hockey and the University captaining both the University hockey team and its rowing team and being elected President of the (University) Amalgamated Club which oversees University sports.
It was in his very young boyhood that the love of cycling began. This evolved into a dream for further adventure on two wheels when he entered his teenage years. Throughout his college and University days and even thereafter he was interested in cycling and motor cycling using first a gearless bicycle, a BSA Bantam and later a Yamaha 125cc which were the kind of affordable two wheelers in Sri Lanka at that time.
After graduating, he interned at Kurunegala and worked at Kuliyapitiya, Ingiriya and on secondment as University Medical Officer. He married Madhuri from Kerala, India and they decided to emigrate in 1978 worried about the race riots of 1977 which later became a feature of Sri Lanka for the next few years. He obtained his first two medical appointments in Darwin in Australia’s Northern Territories. He moved to Mebourne in 1990 to better facilitate the education of his children, Mini and Mayu, by buying a practice from a retiring Sri Lankan doctor, continuing as a General Practitioner (GP) in Melbourne for 35 years.
His love for cycling and motor cycling remained and so did his love for Sri Lanka and India. While he owned a 24 gear bicycle and a 1200 cc BMW motorcycle in Melbourne, Australia, he found his routes not as picturesque as what Sri Lanka and India could offer, Cities in Australia are connected very often by miles and miles of nothingness. Asia is more interesting as the surroundings, culture and food vary from country to country and sometimes even rapidly when going from place to place.
Mohan was fascinated by the 500cc Royal Enfield Bullet manufactured in India and bought one in 2015 to celebrate his 70th birthday and kept it with his nephew in Bangalore planning to use it on tours. They formed a group of eight like-minded enthusiasts from Southern India and they organized tours on their motor cycles. The tours were first in the southern states of India but then broadened to culminate in a visit to Ladakh in the North in 2017.
At age 72, the oldest in the group, Mohan rode his motorcycle from Dehi to Ladakh, a distance of around 950 km to reach the mountainous town of Khardungla which was at a height similar to that of the Everest base camp – 18,000 ft above mean sea level. Having ridden on numerous trips covering areas from Ladakh in the north to Rameswaram in the South and from Mumbai in the West to Chennai in the East, the group became more adventurous in their thinking, In 2018, they made their first overseas trip from Darjeeling to the neighbouring country of Bhutan.
In 2023, a group of ten immensely enjoyed criss-crossing the island of Lombok in Indonesia on hired motor cycles. In 2022, they organized a tour of Sri Lanka using powerful motor cycles hired this time from Colombo. The only difficulty they faced was riding to Nuwara Eliya in heavy rain but the trip was otherwise most enjoyable.
For his 80th birthday, Mohan initially planned to ride on the historic Route 66 in the US. Route 66, established in 1926 but is no longer maintained as a a highway stretches from Chicago to California takes two to three weeks to cover and has captivated the attention of many US travellers. However after Trump became President, many of his Indian friends did not wish to risk possible visa problems or even deportation to San Salvadore by going to the US and Mohan had to abandon the idea of Route 66.
Mohan then got the great idea of bicycling across an extensive Indo-Sri Lankan route. The route was going to exceed 850 km and only two of his group Arun Menon and M S Chadrasekhar agreed to join him. Mohan pulled out his bicycle from years of storage and some people were wondering whether he was still all there in making such an attempt at 80 but everybody was worried of the possible consequences to health. His wife and daughter while thinking that the whole plan was absolutely crazy did nothing to stop him and later encouraged him.
He has learnt many things from his travels on two wheels. There are unexpected problems in cycling as roads that appear flat but have a small incline can cause discomfort and delay. While one could ignore light rain and wind, the hot sun has to be avoided so that cycling should start very early in the morning. One of the drawbacks he found was that if a bicycle needed attention, repair shops were few and far between. Fortunately the only work they needed was three flat tyres which needed fixing.
In his travels both on a motor cycle and a bicycle, he found people everywhere full of goodwill, friendly and ever ready to help. In spite of people warning them about thieving drug addicts, they neither lost any of their possessions nor encountered any such behaviour. Two wheel tours allow one to experience and understand the lives, problems, food habits and culture of the ordinary people of the area. This is only if one stayed in small hotels, ate the local food and drank the local drink. Tourism based on travel from one five-star hotel to another does not provide a window on the local scene but rather an exposure to what the country believes tourists want to see, want to eat and want to experience giving them a distorted five-star tourist view of the locality.
He feels a long bicycle trip is a test of commitment and requires dedication and concentration by the rider. A good rider should be able to avoid accidents on the road.
While his cycling trip this time was to celebrate his 80th birthday, he was emphatic that this would not be his last trip in Asia on two wheels. However he believes his days on a push cycle tour are over, having gifted his bike to his niece in Sri Lanka.
Features
From stabilisation to transformation without delay
At a symposium on reconciliation organised by the National Peace Council last week, more than 250 religious clergy, civic activists and political representatives from different communities gathered to discuss the country’s future. Speaking at the event, Minister Bimal Rathnayake explained the government’s approach to national reconciliation. He said the government viewed the country’s recovery in terms of a three stage process. The first stage was stabilisation, the second was development and the third was transformation. Reconciliation, he implied, would come in that final stage. The participation of Opposition Leader Sajith Premadasa at the same symposium, and the constructive nature of his comments, strengthens that hope.
When the present NPP government took office in 2024, the country was emerging from one of the gravest crises in its post Independence history. The economic collapse of 2022 had led to shortages of fuel, food, medicines and electricity. Inflation soared, foreign reserves disappeared and long queues became part of daily life. The political upheaval that followed culminated in the resignation of former President Gotabaya Rajapaksa after mass public protests under the banner of the Aragalaya movement. The country was then governed by a leadership that spoke the language of reform and reconciliation but was widely perceived as lacking a direct popular mandate.
Sri Lanka’s past experience suggests that stabilisation and transformation cannot be treated as entirely separate stages. Postponing reconciliation until some future moment risks repeating the failures of the past. If transformation is endlessly delayed until a supposedly perfect moment arrives, there will always be new crises and new reasons for postponement. Minister Rathnayake’s contention that the government’s immediate priority has necessarily been stabilisation flows from the government’s awareness of the precarious situation the country is. Over the past two years, the government has succeeded to a significant extent in restoring economic and political stability. Inflation has reduced, shortages have ended and public institutions have regained a degree of functionality.
Guaranteed Changes
On the other hand, the country’s development continues to face challenges due to adverse global conditions, including disruptions caused by conflict in the Middle East and extreme weather events that have affected tourism, trade and the cost of living. The danger is that reconciliation may be indefinitely postponed in the name of stabilisation. This danger can be reduced if the government works proactively with the opposition and civil society to commence practical measures of transformation now rather than later. The participation of Opposition Leader Sajith Premadasa at the symposium, and the constructive nature of his comments, has strengthened the sense that bipartisan engagement on reconciliation may now be possible.
The urgency of transformation came through strongly in the presentations made by representatives of the Sri Lanka Tamil and Malaiyaha Tamil communities. ITAK parliamentarian S.Shritharan spoke of the frustration caused by unresolved post war issues in the north and east. He referred to disputes regarding land occupied during the war years, including controversies linked to Buddhist temples and state sponsored settlement activity in areas claimed by local communities. He also pointed to the continuing large scale presence of the security forces in the north and east nearly two decades after the end of the war. These grievances have remained central to Tamil political discourse since the end of the armed conflict in 2009. Families displaced by war continue to seek the return of ancestral lands. Civil society organisations in the north have repeatedly called for greater civilian control over local administration and a reduction in military involvement in civilian life.
Academic research and practical work on the ground have shown that reconciliation cannot be separated from questions of dignity, equality and justice. Former minister Mano Ganesan, leader of the Democratic People’s Front, focused on the longstanding problems faced by the Malaiyaha Tamil community. He spoke passionately about continuing housing shortages, landlessness and economic marginalisation, issues that have persisted since Independence. He also highlighted the devastating impact of recent extreme weather events on estate communities that remain socially and economically vulnerable. The condition of the Malaiyaha Tamil community remains one of the enduring social justice issues in Sri Lanka.
After Independence in 1948, a large proportion of them were denied citizenship and voting rights through legislation that rendered them stateless. Though citizenship rights were eventually restored, the social and economic consequences of exclusion continue to be felt generations later.
Many families still lack secure housing and land ownership despite their immense contribution to the country’s plantation economy. Minister Rathnayake’s responses to both these concerns were politically significant. He argued that recent political developments, including the declining influence of narrow ethnic politics across communities, indicated a major shift in public attitudes. According to him, the political ground has changed in ways that make it increasingly difficult for politicians who rely primarily on ethnic division and communal insecurity to retain public support.
Inter-Connected
There is evidence to support the assessment about the changing political grounding which sees future prospects in the resolution of long standing problems. . The economic collapse of 2022 affected all communities alike and generated a new politics centred on governance, anti corruption, accountability and economic justice. The Aragalaya protests brought together Sinhalese, Tamils and Muslims in a common demand for political change. Although ethnic grievances have not disappeared, the crisis created space for a broader understanding that the country’s future depends on cooperation rather than division. Opposition Leader Premadasa’s comments at the symposium reflected this changing political climate. He emphasised that national reconciliation could not be separated from economic justice and the need to address disparities between regions and social classes.v He also mentioned the need for civil society organisations to take this message to the community. This wider understanding of reconciliation is important because ethnic inequality and economic inequality have often reinforced each other in Sri Lanka’s history.
Academic studies have identified the denial of citizenship rights after Independence as a historic injustice that set back the Malaiyaha community for decades. The challenge now is to ensure that transformation becomes part of the stabilisation and development process itself. Practical first steps are both possible and necessary. The release of civilian lands still under state control, greater devolution of administrative authority, reduction of military involvement in civilian affairs, language equality in public administration and accelerated housing and land ownership programmes in the plantation sector are all measures that can begin immediately without waiting for a final stage of transformation.
The government’s recent commitment that provincial council elections will finally be held this year is therefore significant. These elections have been repeatedly postponed by successive governments. Holding them would not solve the ethnic conflict by itself. But it would signal a willingness to restore democratic institutions and share power in a meaningful way.
Sri Lanka has repeatedly postponed difficult reforms in the hope that a more convenient political moment would eventually arrive. But opportunities are invariably created and fought for instead of being provided as a gift by a benevolent government.
The present moment, shaped by the economic crisis and public demand for accountable government, offers a rare opportunity to move simultaneously towards stability, development and reconciliation. Provincial council elections can be the first meaningful step. But they must not be the last.
by Jehan Perera
Features
Researchers to shape new environmental policy framework
In a significant move aimed at steering Sri Lanka’s environmental governance towards a more science-based and evidence-driven path, the Ministry of Environment has initiated a new collaborative mechanism to integrate leading researchers into national policy formulation and conservation planning.
The initiative was discussed at a high-level meeting chaired by Dr. Dammika Patabendi at the Ministry of Environment on Tuesday, where top environmental scientists, wildlife experts and researchers were invited to contribute towards what officials described as a “strategic transition” in the country’s environmental management framework.
The discussions focused on strengthening the scientific basis of environmental conservation programmes and national policy decisions while creating a more research-friendly environment for academics and field scientists engaged in biodiversity and ecological studies.
Particular attention was paid to long-standing concerns raised by researchers regarding procedural and operational difficulties encountered when conducting studies in collaboration with the Department of Wildlife Conservation and the Forest Department.
Minister Patabendi stressed the need for environmental policies to be guided by credible scientific data rather than ad hoc administrative decisions, ministry sources said.
Among the key proposals discussed was the establishment of a streamlined mechanism that would reduce bureaucratic obstacles faced by researchers in obtaining approvals, accessing field sites and sharing scientific findings with state institutions.
The Minister highlighted the importance of building stronger partnerships between policymakers and the scientific community at a time when Sri Lanka is grappling with escalating environmental challenges including deforestation, biodiversity loss, human-elephant conflict, climate-related disasters and ecosystem degradation.
Environmentalists attending the meeting had also highlighted the urgent necessity of incorporating empirical research into national decision-making processes to ensure long-term ecological sustainability and better resource management.
The meeting brought together several of Sri Lanka’s leading environmental researchers and academics including Rohan Pethiyagoda, Saminda Fernando, Sewwandi Jayakody, Samantha Gunasekara, Dinidu Devapura, Himesh Jayasinghe, Manoj Prasanna, Mendis Wickramasinghe and Suranjan Karunarathna.
Director General of Wildlife Conservation Ranjan Marasinghe also participated in the deliberations.
Officials said the proposed framework is expected to pave the way for a more transparent, data-oriented and scientifically credible environmental governance structure capable of addressing emerging conservation challenges more effectively.
The government expects the new mechanism to support the implementation of practical and scientifically robust programmes aimed at safeguarding Sri Lanka’s ecological future while enhancing cooperation between state agencies and the country’s growing community of environmental researchers.
By Ifham Nizam
Features
Back home … for a special occasion
Niluk Uswaththa, of Seven Notes fame, based in Dubai, surprised many when he and his wife Apeksha, turned up in Colombo, last week … unannounced.
Yes, they had a purpose in their surprise visit … to wish Apeksha’s mum for her birthday, which was on Monday, 18th May, and what a surprise it turned out to be!
In an exclusive chit-chat with The Island, Niluk said that the scene in Dubai is improving and Seven Notes do have work coming their way.
Since the members of Seven Notes are all employed (doing day jobs), they operate only on Saturdays and Sundays.

Niluk: Didn’t come prepared to perform, but obliged
friends in Galle
In fact, to get to Colombo for the birthday surprise (on Monday, 18th May), the band had to skip their 17th May, Sunday gig.
“Although it’s a short vacation, my wife and I are enjoying the setup here,” said Niluk, adding that they spent two days in Galle and that their next destination is Anuradhapura.”
Niluk didn’t come prepared to perform, but he obliged the crowd present, at a friend’s birthday celebrations, in Galle, singing and playing guitar.
They are scheduled to leave for their home, in Dubai, in the first week of June.
Seven Notes is an outfit made up of Sri Lankans and the band has been around for almost nine years.
Niluk came into their scene nearly seven years ago.
“When I went to Dubai, I had offers coming my way but it was Seven Notes that impressed me because of their acoustic style.”
The Dubai’s entertainment scene is showing clear signs of bouncing back and even levelling up in the next few months.

Niluk and Apeksha: Enjoying their short vacation
After a slowdown earlier this year due to regional tensions, shows and festivals are back on the calendar, and organisers say late 2026 could be the busiest concert season in years.
Time Out Dubai says “the 2026 concert calendar is filling up nicely” and “the city is ready to party once again” after some reschedules.
Dubai Summer Surprises in July brings retail activations, comedy nights, and indoor art exhibitions.
Organisers point to a backlog of postponed events that are being rescheduled for late 2026 and early 2027.
Yes, Dubai is calm on the surface but on alert. Life is mostly normal in the city, but there’s a “balancing act” as people watch for escalation.
-
Features7 days agoOctopus, Leech, and Snake: How Sri Lanka’s banks feast while the nation starves
-
Sports7 days agoSri Lanka women’s volleyball team ready for Central Asian challenge
-
Opinion6 days agoMurder of Ehelepola family, Bogambara Wewa and Sightings of Wangediya
-
Business5 days agoHistoric launch of CCWE Fashion Week & International Summit 2026
-
News6 days agoSteps underway to safeguard Sri Lanka’s maritime heritage
-
News2 days agoPolice probe underway to ascertain links between criminals deported from UAE and local politicians
-
Features3 days agoThe NPP’s pivot to the past
-
Editorial6 days agoA play without its protagonist
