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University of Moratuwa celebrates its Golden Jubilee

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I was lent a copy of the Golden Jubilee publication of the University of Moratuwa (UoM) by a friend with the injunction I write about the coffee table book and the University which by far, as he said, is the best in Sri Lanka. “All graduates passing out are employed and employable.” That is saying much!

50th Anniversary Publication

The coffee table publication is excellent: gold bordered and lettered stating 1972-2022 50th ANNIVERSARY University of Moratuwa with the name in the three languages. Below this is the legend ‘Golden Jubillee’ in beautiful slanting script. Within, every feature matches the excellence of the book’s binding and cover. The contents, covering two pages, is uniquely filled in with pictures and titles and pagination in large digits. Next runs three pages of Acknowledging the contributors of the past, listing Chancellors from Sir Arthur C. Clarke to Dr Ray Wijewardena to Dr Roland Silva to Prof KKYW Perera. Next listed are 13 Vice Chancellors followed by Deputy VCs, Deans of Faculties, Registrars, Librarians (3) and Bursars. Each section is also two paged with a broad band of dark golden orange. Section One is: Introduction: The years preceding University status; Section two: The early years and the journey of the University of Moratuwa; three: The pillars of the past; stories of past Vice Chancellors; four: Impact: Stories of Research, Innovation and Service; five: The University of Moratuwa: what we are today.

The entire book carries hand drawn painted pictures – some full paged, interspersed with photographs of persons, sites, buildings and events – some very old, which pictorially traces the history of the UoM.

Three highlighted sections

The entire publication deserves detailed description but that is impossible in a newspaper column, hence I decided to draw the attention of the reader to, and quote from four sections. I add again that going through the entire book would be very informative and will gladden the spirit which is at present downcast. Facing an almost surreal painting of the grounds of the UoM, is the title University of Moratuwa and underneath Wisdom is all Wealth.

I quote from the introductory pages and the last page of summing up; one VC’s ‘story’ and the section on U

oM’s research and innovations.

The message from the present VC – Prof N D Gunawardena runs to two pages. He writes: “The University, which traces its beginning to 1972 as a small institution in Katubedda is now at the forefront of tertiary education providing Engineering, Information Technology, Architecture, Business and Medical Education for over 10,000 students in both undergraduate and post graduate levels.” His final paragraph reads thus: “Sri Lanka has much to offer to the world. In an era of brain drain and fleeting dreams, I am confident that our university can make a difference. We possess the knowledge and skills within our shores to make this island a world hub in Design, Technology, Business and Sciences. All we need is resilience, fortitude and funds to make it happen. I am determined to ensure that on this momentous occasion, we lack nothing.”

One VC’s message

My second comment is from Section Four on Vice Chancellors. I select one VC because I knew him from way back when. On the timeline that runs through this section from 1972 to 2017, 1989 is raised above in large bold digits. The legend carried on the page with a portrait of Prof G T F De Silva, seventh VC from 1989 to 1996, and a photograph of him as a young academic listening to Dr Arthur C Clarke is: “The very first academic to join the then Ceylon College of Technology (CCT) which is today the prestigious University of Moratuwa … Professor Dr Silva faced the worst years of the insurgency when the University suffered much turmoil and closures… He has contributed immensely to the progress of the university.”

During the second JVP insurrection in the 1980s, the vacancy of VC was not filled, hence senior members arranged for seven members of staff to take over VC responsibility for one week each. This temporary arrangement was eliminated by Prof De Silva consenting to be VC at this dangerous juncture in the dire country situation. His philosophy was Bahu jana sithaya, bahu jana sukaya – the wellbeing of the people. He stipulated one condition: that he continue teaching while being VC.

Some of his many ventures to improve the university were to establish a well-stocked library; improve hostel facilities, initiate more student societies and set up a bursary scheme for deserving students. “The Professor was also a visionary in that he took risks with the betterment of the University in mind.” He was a nature lover; an ancient nuga tree that had fallen was made to rise again. He wished and worked towards making UoM akin to the Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs) which Jawaharlal Nehru instituted “Thus it was the Professor’s view that the university needed to produce practical engineers who would be of service to the common man’s requirements … He underlined that people must have access to solar and wind energy, low cost housing etc built by the University.” He authored a book in Sinhala – Memories of a Vice Chancellor of a University that moved from Darkness to Light. A ship that traversed the ocean of Technology.

Moving to the personal, I said earlier I knew GTF long ago as a just passed put undergrad. He came to a Maha Vidyalaya down South to substitute for a teacher on maternity leave. He blazed new trails in science teaching to scholarship holders in Grade 8 by conducting classes in the lab, which the teacher on leave had avoided due to fear of demonstrating preparation of gases et al to eager beaver students. GTF even organized a science exhibition with the kids. I met him off and on after that and found him to be just the same simple soul of almost 60 years previous, concerned about people and with dynamism and enthusiasm undimmed.

Mr S Rubasingam was one of three librarians serving from the inception of the UoM 1971- 1998. He was conscientiousness personified. How do I say this? I attended the SL Library Association course in Librarianship and Info Science and Mr Rubasingam was a lecturer in all three years of the course. He was a tireless lecturer and expected his students, varying in age, intelligence and commitment, mostly female, to be the same. I spent a lot of my time waiting with trepidation to see this almost chain smoker insert the chalk he had in hand between his lips or draw on the blackboard with his lighted cigarette! He helped develop the UoM library so it is an integral and useful part of the university.

The person who lent me the book to comment wanted me to pay special attention to Section Four Impact: Stories of Research, Innovation and Services which carry sub headings among which I highlight two: Innovation and Success Stories, and Service and Recognition. I quote from the introductory page: “The UoM graduates are held in high esteem today in their professional fields as well as by foreign universities, … won coveted awards, competing with the best of the best.. made a monumental and lasting impact on the country and its people.”

Innovations are listed, liaising with prestigious foreign universities, the ADB and others. Students under Faculty guidance invented the first electric car, a Hovercraft, hydraulic ramp pump, solar photovoltaic cells, electrical biogas cooking facility and of course the traffic light system installed all over the island. Machines to be powered solely by carbon neutral sources were installed in the MAS Intimates Thurulie clothing factory; claiming to be the world’s first such factory.

Clever persons from the UoM even restored the stained glass window of St Paul’s Church in Kandy after a terrorist bomb caused severe damage. The Fashion and Textile Design Dept is moving streets ahead in innovation. An unmanned aerial vehicle and robot technologies are also within the UoM’s research and technology section “The lasting impact the university has made on the nation is unparalleled and everlasting. The future is already here. … teams of academics who venture into uncharted waters, into a world presenting new problems to solve every day”

History

The UoM grew from the Government Technical College, Maradana, established in 1893 which, in 1906 changed to Ceylon Technical College. The Ceylon College of Technology established in Katubedda in 1966 offering a Diploma in Technology changed its status to the Katubedda Campus of the University of Ceylon in 1972. The Dept of Architecture was transferred from Colombo to this campus with its first president Dr L H Sumanadasa. In 1978 it acquired the status of an independent university under the name of University of Moratuwa, Sri Lanka. To the existing Faculties was added that of medicine.

The UoM strives to produce ‘world class graduates’ in technology fields; which it does. Its vision is “To be the Most Globally Recognized Knowledge Enterprise in South Asia” Both these ideals have been met; proof being that while other institutions in Sri Lanka, educational included, have not maintained standards or had even deteriorated, the UoM has progressed and made an international name for itself. Its ‘remarkable journey of providing world class education’ reached 50 years in 2022 – a landmark to be celebrated and a university with an excellent record to be congratulated and praised.



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Features

Easter truth can be the beginning

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Bimal Rathnayake

There has long been speculation that the Easter bombing of April 2019 had a relationship to Sri Lankan politics. The near simultaneous bombings of three Christian churches and three luxury hotels, with a death toll of 270 and over 500 injured, by Muslim suicide bombers made no sense in Sri Lanka where there has been no history of conflict between the two religions. But a political motivation was suspected on the basis of who would be the beneficiary of an otherwise senseless crime. The bombing immediately discredited the government in power at that time, saw the nomination of the opposition presidential candidate soon after, and paved the way for the crushing defeat of the government at the national elections that followed in a few months.

In Parliament last week, Leader of the House Bimal Ratnayake revealed a political strategy to create the conditions for the change of government that took place. His remarks corresponded to suspicions that the attack was not just a failure of intelligence, but the result of deliberate manipulation by those in the political sphere. What is new is that these suspicions are now being stated clearly and officially at the highest level of government. Minister Ratnayake said, “They started this in 2013 by creating and maintaining Sinhala and Muslim extremist groups through intelligence agencies. The culmination of this was similar to the Cambridge Analytica incident.”

The Cambridge Analytica scandal involved the unauthorised harvesting of personal data from millions of Facebook users to build psychological profiles and micro-target voters for political purposes. The data harvested by Cambridge Analytica was used primarily to influence the 2016 U.S. presidential election in favour of Donald Trump and the 2016 Brexit referendum in the UK. The company also allegedly worked on elections in Kenya, Nigeria, India, Trinidad and Tobago, and several other countries, using psychographic profiling and targeted digital ads to manipulate voter behaviour.

Cardinal’s Consistency

If the allegations about the Easter attacks prove true, they would constitute one of the most unprincipled examples of violence being used for political purposes in Sri Lanka’s post-war period. To use fear, death, and destruction to pave the way for a political return is totally unacceptable and without conscience. What makes the current moment different from earlier efforts to deal with such unacceptable actions is that there now appears to be political will. There is a sense that the present government is committed to follow through with investigations, even if the implications reach to the highest levels of power.

It is significant that the government has taken the controversial step of reappointing retired officers Shani Abeysekera and Ravi Seneviratne, both of whom were known to be top class police investigators who were removed from the investigation process by previous governments, to once again lead the investigations. They are both controversial in that they briefly joined the government side’s political stage during the last presidential election campaign. Minister Ratnayake justified their reappointment on the grounds that Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith made the request. It is in this context that the current government’s willingness to act gains it credibility with the Catholic community, which bore the brunt of the attacks.

The role of the Catholic Church and Malcolm Cardinal Ranjith in consistently pushing for accountability in the Easter Sunday case is commendable. From the outset, the Cardinal was a vocal advocate for justice for the victims of the bombing. His calls for transparency, a credible investigation, and the identification of those truly responsible have been persistent and unwavering. Over the years, previous government leaders made promises to find the culprits and masterminds in response to this pressure which the Cardinal publicly welcomed. But those assurances, like many others before them, did not materialise in the form of tangible outcomes.

Ending Impunity

Progress in the investigation of the Easter bombings comes at a time when the government has already made forward movement in pursuing economic accountability. High-profile arrests and legal actions against formerly powerful politicians for corruption are being carried out in a way never witnessed before. For many decades, impunity has been the practice in government at the highest levels. Economic crimes and political violence in which the protagonists were suspected to be of government-origin were pursued only half-heartedly in the past. Charges were often framed, suspects were taken into custody, but invariably the process broke down mid-way and the suspects were released. This time around those who have been charged have had their cases taken to court where they have been given exemplary sentences.

In the case of the Easter bombing, the testimony of survivors and the documentation of intelligence failures are now being brought back into the spotlight. Investigations into key actors, including the alleged role of former paramilitaries turned politicians like Pillayan show that this is no longer a nominal exercise. The challenge for the government is to ensure that this momentum does not wane. The legal and institutional frameworks need to be allowed to function without interference. No matter how politically sensitive, the Sri Lankan people need answers, and more importantly, justice.

Sri Lanka has suffered for decades from a culture of impunity that has bred cynicism and mistrust. The present government has taken early steps to reverse that trend. It is too early to say whether this will lead to full justice. There are indications that the government is sequencing its priorities: first, economic crimes and now political crimes like the Easter attacks; later, possibly, war crimes. The wounds of the war years are deep and divisive. Pursuing accountability for wartime abuses may demand more political capital than the government currently possesses or wishes to expend, and it is likely that such steps will be undertaken more cautiously—and later.

In the case of the Chemmani mass graves the government seems to be allowing the judicial investigations to proceed independently, unlike in the case of the Mannar and Matale mass graves by previous governments. Permitting the Chemmani probe to proceed signals that the era of blanket impunity might finally be drawing to a close and the integrity of Sri Lanka’s democratic institutions is being secured. If a crime like the Easter bombing, which has defied a satisfactory conclusion for over six years is successfully investigated and prosecuted, it may open the space for deeper scrutiny of the past, including the war years. It is up to the independent institutions, judiciary and civil society to push this process forward.

by Jehan Perera

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Reflections on Cuba, BRICS and geopolitics

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Cubans marching in Havana against the blockade and the State Sponsors of Terrorism designation in December 2024. (Handout picture)

I returned to the US, from Cuba, just a few hours before Donald Trump signed a memorandum on 30 June, 2025, tightening the long-standing US economic blockade against Cuba. The memorandum includes a statutory ban on US tourism to the neighbouring island.

Despite a long fascination for the island nation, I did not volunteer for the Venceremos Brigade to Cuba during my college years. Finally, my wish to see the legendary island of anti-imperialist revolution—the so-called ‘last bastion of socialism in the western hemisphere’—came true.

I enjoyed Cuba’s resplendent land and waters, the vibrancy of its music and dance, and the warm hospitality of its racially integrated people. I visited the impressive places and monuments of its colonial and modern history, receiving a wealth of interesting and intriguing information from my wonderful Cuban guides and other sources.

The history of Cuba is one of struggle and transformation. The original Taino people were extinct due to the Spanish conquest. The Revolution of 1898 brought liberation under scholar-poet Jose Marti, only to be followed by US neocolonial rule from 1902 to 1959. During the latter part of this period, the Batista dictatorship and his American business and Mafia connections dominated the island.

The armed struggle, culminating in the 1959 Revolution, led by Fidel Castro, Camilo Cienfuegos, Che Guevara and others, transformed the nation. The Cuban Communist Party, under Fidel Castro’s rule (1959-2008), implemented widespread confiscation and wealth redistribution. Throughout this period and up to date, the US has maintained occupation of Guantanamo Bay (the first US overseas military base) under a 1903 perpetual lease agreement, following the Spanish-American War.

Cuba’s Present Crisis

Unfortunately, what I encountered in my homestays and travel around the island was far from the thriving socialist society I had hoped to see. The once magnificent buildings in Havana and other cities are dilapidated and the streets strewn with litter. Lacking reliable public transportation, people stand on streets around the island patiently waiting to catch rides from any vehicle that will stop—among them, the still widely used pre-Revolution American cars and horse-drawn carriages.

The island is currently facing its worst economic crisis, since the 1959 revolution. Long and daily power cuts, scarce internet connection, food and medicine shortages, and high prices, are the realities of present-day Cuba. Some staple items like beans are nowhere to be found; rice production has declined and much is now imported. Sugar, too, has become an import in Cuba, which, until recently, was the leading sugar exporter in the world.

People cannot make ends meet with their meager incomes—a doctor’s monthly salary is approximately US$50. Even by conservative World Bank estimates, 72% of all Cubans live below the poverty line. Beggars seem to be everywhere, with the African community descendant from slavery being the most economically victimised.

Young professionals, products of the island’s renowned free education and healthcare systems, are emigrating to the US, Europe, and elsewhere, leaving mostly the elderly behind. Cuba reportedly lost some 13% of its 11 million population between 2020 and 2024, due largely to emigration. Financial remittances from emigrants are essential for their families’ survival at home.

In private, people complain bitterly about government mismanagement and corruption, expressing concern about the island’s future and people’s survival. Given state authoritarianism and repression, there is no independent media, visible organised resistance, or public demonstrations.

The Cuban government blames US sanctions and blockade, operative since the early 1960s, for the island’s economic strangulation. In contrast, the US and its Cuban-American supporters blame socialism for Cuba’s failures.

Notwithstanding claims to be a leader of the international Non-Aligned Movement, Cuba withstood the 1961 CIA-backed Cuban-American Bay of Pigs invasion and the 1962 Cuban missile crisis by aligning itself with the Soviet Union, eventually becoming its client state. The dismantling of the Soviet Union in 1992 and the recent Covid crisis have dealt severe blows to the Cuban economy and society. The decline in tourism, one of the most important sectors of the Cuban economy, will be further impacted by Donald Trump’s recent statutory ban on US tourism.

Is the opening of Cuba to neo-liberal capitalism—including global finance capital, the IMF, international intervention by the US (and its Cuban-American supporters awaiting return of land and business confiscated by the Cuban Revolution)—the solution to Cuba’s current economic crisis?

The Path Forward

Government mismanagement, corruption, repression and authoritarianism, economic collapse, agricultural decline, lack of employment, shortages of fuel and food, rising prices, powerlessness, despair and labour emigration characterise much of the world following neoliberal policies today. These countries also face the threats of international intervention, regime change, sanctions and blockades if they attempt to strike out on independent paths of economic and political development outside western-dominated neoliberalism.

Is BRICS the alternative to both authoritarian socialism and neoliberal capitalism, the path to resolving the crisis in Cuba and much of the world?

The Global South-led BRICS constitutes Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa, Egypt, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Iran, and the United Arab Emirates, as well as 10 partner countries, including Cuba, Belarus, Bolivia, Kazakhstan, Malaysia, Nigeria, Thailand, Uganda, Uzbekistan, and Vietnam. Today, the BRICS countries together are estimated to account for 56% of world population, 44% of global GDP.

The BRICS alliance provides a much-needed platform to explore alternative mechanisms, like the New Development Bank and bilateral trade agreements, to reduce reliance on Western financial institutions, such as the IMF and currencies, specifically the US dollar. While BRICS rejects certain aspects of Western dominated geopolitics and hierarchical North-South relations, it upholds neoliberal economic principles: competition, free trade, open markets, export-led growth and globalisation, unfettered technological expansion.

BRICS aims to advance its members within the existing global capitalist order, rather than create a fundamental alternative to the capitalist paradigm which prioritizes profit-led growth before environmental sustainability and human well-being. As such, corporate hegemony, concentration of wealth by a global elite spanning the North and the South, as well technological and military domination, are not challenged. Neither does BRICS challenge political authoritarianism within its member countries or the possibility of the emergence of forms of authoritarian capitalism. Composed of countries unequal in size, economic and military power, BRICS may also easily reproduce unequal exchange and new forms of colonialism in south-south relations.

False Alternative

Although barely noticeable to a visitor, China is quietly replacing the former Soviet Union as Cuba’s benefactor, expanding its economic activities on the island. Since 2018, Cuba has joined China’s Belt and Road Initiative, the massive infrastructural project connecting some 150 countries around the world. While the US is tightening its trade blockade, China has become Cuba’s largest trading partner and the primary provider of technology for infrastructure, telecommunications, renewable energy sources, the tourism industry, and other important areas of Cuba’s development.

Some critics of US imperialism tend to see China as a benevolent alternative to US and western domination. There are claims that certain media outlets, promoting such perspectives, may be linked to a funding source, associated with China. Even if it is true, the political and military intentions of Chinese economic expansion can only be known in the future.

According to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, China has increased its nuclear arsenal by 20% from an estimated 500 to over 600 warheads in 2025. According to US government sources, China has also established satellite intelligence infrastructure or ‘spy bases’ in Cuba that can target the United States commercial and military operations. Cuba, located only some 90 miles from the Florida coastline, could well be drawn into the geopolitical confrontation between the United States and China as it was during the Cold War between the US and the Soviet Union, the Cuban Missile Crisis being a case in point.

Even though the world is moving towards an inexorable market and technologically controlled reality, the rationality of this trajectory must be questioned. The need for balanced ecological and social frameworks upholding bioregionalism, local control of resources, food self-sufficiency need to be considered. Freedom of expression, right to dissent, and collective organising undermined by both neoliberal capitalism and socialist authoritarianism must be upheld. This requires the awakening of consciousness to create a human society founded on wisdom and generosity over competition and exploitation.

The words of the great nineteenth century Cuban patriot, Jose Marti (1853-1895) are still applicable to the transformation needed in both Cuba and the world:

“Happiness exists on earth, and it is won through prudent exercise of reason, knowledge of the harmony of the universe, and constant practice of generosity.”(Courtesy IDN in-depth News)

(Dr. Bandarage  has served on the faculties of Brandeis, Mount Holyoke and Georgetown  and is the author of books, including Colonialism in Sri Lanka; The Separatist Conflict in Sri Lanka, Sustainability and Well-Being: The Middle Path to Environment, Society and the Economy, Crisis in Sri Lanka and the World and numerous other publications on global political economy and related subjects. www.bandarage.com)

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Multi-faceted Sri Lankan celebrity … checking out land of birth

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With Mirage in Dubai as a guest artiste

I was sent a video of Noeline Honter doing the song ‘Beauty and the Beast’, with Maxi Rosairo, live on stage.

The clip, I was told, was from The Island Music Awards, held in the late ‘90s … probably 1994.

Believe me, their performance was simply awesome … the vocals, the voices, the passion, the expression, the enthusiasm. Yes, that is what singing is all about. And no lyric-stands, planted in front, for guidance.

Well, the good news I have for you is that Noeline Honter will be in our midst next month (August) and she will be seen in action at three events, in Colombo.

Noeline will be featured at Gatz, Cinnamon Life, on Sunday, 24th August, and again on 20th of September.

Her first date at Gatz will be with the group Terry & The Big Spenders, while her 20th September performance will be with Mirage.

Noeline will also be performing at the BMICH, on the 30th of August, at a concert, ‘Vibes of Yesterday.’

The show, which is in aid of the Apeksha Hospital, Maharagama, will also feature several other artistes. The band in attendance will be the ‘Expressions.’

Noeline indicated to us that she is very much looking forward to her date with Mirage.

Noeline’s first band … her very own Galaxy

“It will be really exciting as I’ve performed with this wonderful outfit several times, as a guest artiste, touring the Middle East and other parts of the world, and also joining them on stage at their regular gigs in Dubai.”

In Sri Lanka, Noeline was not only known for her singing, she was also immensely popular as a TV presenter … winning several awards in both categories – singing and TV presenter.

In addition, she had her own Academy of Training, and she continues with her English training, Down Under, conducting several training programmes online to students, in many countries.

Noeline’s contribution to the field of television news, in Australia, commenced in 2008, in the role of Executive Producer and Presenter of ‘Sri Lanka News weekly,’ a news programme telecast on Channel 31, in Melbourne.

This multi-faceted Sri Lankan celebrity now presents interview programmes on Channel 31, where she features a gamut of mainly Sri Lankan musicians, resident in Sri Lanka and around the world. This is a chat show with musical clips by the featured artistes.

Noeline had her own band in the scene here … Galaxy, comprising Mohan Sabaratnam (drums), Kamal Perera (guitar), Joe Thambimuttu (bass/keyboards/vocals), Kumar Pieris (keyboards), and Ricky Senn (sax/trumpet /brass).

Noeline Honter: Three events in Colombo

Her trip to Sri Lanka, in August, she says, is mainly to be with her family, and to visit some of her favourite places, like Yala, Trincomalee, etc

“When I come over in August, it will be nearly three and a half years since I left the beloved land of my birth.”

Noeline is now based in Australia and says she is absolutely delighted to have the opportunity of sharing time with her son, Ryan, in Adelaide, and her daughter, Jaimee, in Melbourne.

Yes, a name that will never ever be forgotten, especially in the local Western music scene – Noeline Honter.

Go check her out at Gatz, Cinnamon Life, on 24th August and 20th September, 2025.

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