Midweek Review
Was it part of continuing destabilisation project here?

The Aeroflot affair:
Justice Ministry yesterday interdicted the court official while recommending to Chief Justice Jayantha Jayasuriya that action should be taken against the lawyer concern. The BASL is yet to comment on the issue at hand
By Shamindra Ferdinando
Aeroflot flight SU 289 was preparing to take off from the Bandaranaike International Airport (BIA), on June 02, when a fiscal officer, from the Commercial High Court of the Western Province, walked in around 12.15 pm, soon after the end of day’s proceedings. The official was accompanied by Attorney-at-Law Aruna de Silva, who appeared for the plaintiff, along with Avindra Rodrigo, PC. They were instructed by F.J. & G. de Saram, the leading law firm from the colonial times.
The fiscal officer delivered a copy of the order issued by High Court judge S.M.H.S.P. Sethunge. The recipient of the court order was Acting Head of Air Navigational Services N.C. Abeywardena. The BIA was ordered to detain the aircraft, pending a case filed by Ireland-based Celestial Aviation Trading 10 Ltd., against the Russian state-owned Public Joint Stock Company Aeroflot. According to Justice Minister Wijeyadasa Rajapaksa the fiscal officer and lawyer Aruna de Silva had no right to threaten Mr. Abeywardena, with contempt of Court proceedings, if he allowed the Aeroflot flight to take off as there was no court order against him.
Justice Minister Rajapakse, being a veteran lawyer and a former President of the Bar Association of Sri Lanka, did not entirely spare the High Court Judge responsible for the exparte order. He said judges should be more mindful when issuing such exparte orders.
At the time the court officer delivered the warning, 191 passengers and 13 crew of the Airbus A 330-300 were on board. They were asked to get off the plane. The Aeroflot drama transpired in the Commercial High Court of the Western Province on June 03. The airline’s regional manager, for India and Sri Lanka, Sergey Evgenievich, was present in court.
On the following day, Russia summoned Sri Lanka’s Ambassador in Moscow, Prof. Janitha Abeywickrena Liyanage, to the Foreign Ministry, where Sri Lanka’s action was condemned. Russia demanded Sri Lanka to resolve the issue at hand, soon, to avoid having a negative impact on the traditionally friendly bilateral relations. What Moscow said was that there would be serious repercussions.
Viyathmaga activist Liyanage received appointment as Sri Lanka’s Ambassador in Moscow last October. Married to Prof. Sudantha Liyanage, she served as Vice Chancellor of the Gampaha Wickramarachchi University of Indigenous Medicine, prior to her taking up Sri Lanka’s top diplomatic post in Russia.
There hadn’t been a previous instance of a Sri Lankan Ambassador in Moscow being summoned to their Foreign Ministry. The Aeroflot affair has caused irreparable damage to Sri Lanka-Russia ties at a time Colombo needs retain its perennial friends among the international community.
Perhaps the crux of the issue, at hand, is there hadn’t been an enjoining order issued in respect of the second defendant Acting Head of Air Navigational Services N.C. Abeywardena. After having heard submissions by both parties, the court reiterated, on June 03, that there hadn’t been an enjoining order issued in respect of the second defendant. The public Joint Stock Company Aeroflot is the first defendant.
The court was told how Aeroflot flight was detained in spite of an assurance given by Sri Lanka to Russia that Aeroflot could operate to and from Colombo without an issue. The Counsel for the first defendant raised the issue while highlighting the embarrassment caused to Russia.
On behalf of the government, the Foreign Ministry issued the following statement on June 04: The Ministry of Foreign Affairs wishes to state the following with reference to the Aeroflot passenger aircraft flight SU-289 which is currently at the Bandaranaike International Airport (BIA).
On 2 June 2022, the Commercial High Court of the Western Province issued an Enjoining Order on the Aeroflot flight restraining it from taking off from Bandaranaike International Airport. The case relates to a commercial dispute between the Plaintiff, Celestial Aviation Trading 10 Limited, an Irish Company, against the first Defendant the Public Joint Stock Company Aeroflot and the second Defendant, Mr. N. C Abeywardene/Acting Head of Air Navigation/Airport and Aviation Services of Sri Lanka (AASL), Katunayake.
The matter is still pending final determination of the Court. This matter is also under consultation through normal diplomatic channels.”
Obviously, the Foreign Ministry hasn’t perused the Court proceedings or at least inquired from relevant parties before issuing the media statement. Had the Foreign Ministry done so, the shocking manipulation of the Court proceedings to pressure the Acting Head of Air Navigation would have come to their notice. The question is whether some of our officials are just playing dumb having been part of a foreign conspiracy to embarrass Russia and to exacerbate the dire situation in the country, already beset with a myriad of problems.
The Chief Justice, the Justice Ministry and the Bar Association of Sri Lanka (BASL) should also inquire into the highly contentious issue.
Angry reactions
Close on the heels of Russia’s angry reaction, SLPP lawmaker Rear Admiral Sarath Weerasekera took up the issue at hand with President Gotabaya Rajapaksa. In a two-page letter, the former Public Security Minister pointed out that the fiscal officer’s action against the backdrop of High Court judge Sethunge’s declaration that he didn’t issue an enjoining order in respect of the government or the Airport and Aviation Services Ltd.
The Colombo District MP questioned the detention of the Aeroflot flight in spite of Sri Lanka’s written assurance to Russia that Aeroflot was free to operate to and from the BIA without hindrance. The former Navy Chief of Staff warned that Sri Lanka shouldn’t be surprised if Russia felt that the government guaranteed Aeroflot freedom to operate to and from the BIA to lure them.
Lawmaker Weerasekera challenged Prime Minister Ranil Wickremsinghe’s assertion that the issue was a matter between two private parties. How could that be when all know Aeroflot operated flights to the BIA on written assurance given by the government?
Rear Admiral Weerasekera reminded the President of the support provided by Russia during the war against the LTTE and the constant backing Sri Lanka received at the Geneva-based United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC). The war veteran said that even after the war, China and Russia always stood by Sri Lanka as Western powers pursued Sri Lanka on the human rights front as they were smarting over the defeating of the LTTE. The MP declared that unless remedial measures were taken the country would have to face the consequences.
Lawmaker Weerasekera told the writer that there should be a wider investigation to ascertain whether utterly disruptive and manipulative action taken against Aeroflot was meant to cause a rift between Sri Lanka and Russia in line with the overall destabilization plan here mounted by the West. Weerasekera pointed out how disruption of Aeroflot flights could deprive Sri Lanka of much needed foreign currency and Russia being a key market for our tea that, too, would be in jeopardy. Sri Lanka’s economy couldn’t take any more shocks, MP Weerasekera said, emphasizing the responsibility on the part of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa to reverse the destabilization project.
Amidst heavy pressure, Sri Lanka, on Monday (06) lifted the alleged restriction imposed on the Aeroflot flight. But, the matter should not end there. The government should investigate the Aeroflot affair. Many believe it was certainly not isolated but part of a well-orchestrated campaign.
Sri Lankan Airlines suspended flights to Moscow, on March 26 citing ‘operational restrictions that are outside of the airline’s control.’
“The restrictions are in the form of international financial and aircraft insurance limits which have been imposed on Russia due to the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war, and directly impact SriLankan Airlines’ flight operations to Russia,” the airline said in a statement.
The airline maintained two weekly flights between Colombo and Moscow before the cessation of operations.
In spite of continuing sanctions, Aeroflot, on April 08, resumed regular flights to Colombo. Until the June 02 incident, flights arrived here three times a week, on Wednesday, Friday and Saturday, while the flights back to Moscow were operated on Thursday, Saturday and Sunday. Aeroflot suspended all flights on April 08 following US and EU sanctions.
Wimal issues warning
Federation of National Organisation, comprising the Patriotic National Movement (Dr. Wasantha Bandara), Patriotic National Front (Attorney-at-Law Nuwan Bellanthudawa), People’s Responsibility Centre (Wasantha Alwis) and People’s Voice for Justice and Sovereignty (Attorney-at-Law Madhaumali Alwis), in a joint letter, dated June 04, has sought President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s intervention.
The grouping has explained how various interested parties exploited the country and pursued strategies, detrimental to the Sri Lankan State. Dr. Wasantha Bandara told the writer the government seemed to have lost its bearings and was quite incapable of looking after Sri Lanka’s interests. Dr. Bandara said that the Aeroflot issue should be examined against the backdrop of Sri Lanka having entered into a controversial agreement with US-based New Fortress Energy last September. “Don’t forget the government finalized that deal at midnight. Our legal challenge failed to convince the Supreme Court.”
National Freedom Front (NFF) leader Wimal Weerawansa, who challenged the US energy deal in Court along with Vasudeva Nanayakkara and Udaya Gammanpila in spite them being members of the Cabinet at that time on Sunday (05) questioned the culpability of the executive, the legislature and the judiciary over the Aeroflot affair. The outspoken politician didn’t mince his words when he asserted the executive, then legislature and the judiciary were working together to transform the economic and political crisis to a human tragedy. MP Weerawansa declared that the government has allowed the situation to develop and those in authority were yet to take tangible measures to stabilize the economy.
At the onset of the briefing, MP Weerawansa said that the government was busy jeopardizing Sri Lanka’s relations with Russia after having antagonized China, two of Sri Lanka’s closest friends. The Aeroflot dispute is perhaps the worst during 65 years of diplomatic relations.
President of Sri Lankan Business and Professionals Society in Russian Federation, Jagath Chandrawansa, in a letter to President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, alleged that a deliberate attempt was being made to cause a rift with Russia. Chandrawansa alleged that the operation was meant to cause economic deterioration.
Chandrawansa, too, drew the President’s attention to the fiscal officers’ super-fast action and the government’s pathetic failure to thwart the clandestine project. Chandrawansa told the writer that Sri Lanka should be ashamed of the way the Aeroflot flight was handled after having requested the Russian national carrier to fly here.
Lawmaker Vasudeva Nanayakkara didn’t hesitate to speculate the possibility of the US being behind the Aeroflot affair. Declaring the incident at the BIA a conspiracy, the veteran politician alleged that the US wanted to deprive Sri Lanka an opportunity to procure crude oil from Russia at a much lower cost.
MEP Leader and Chief Government Whip Dinesh Gunawardena, too, declared that the Aeroflot issue should be addressed quickly. The Minister warned that remedial measures should be taken before the incident caused serious damage to bilateral relations and to the country’s economy through loss of vital tourist arrivals from Russia.
Former General Secretary of the Communist Party Dew Gunasekera has demanded an explanation from Premier Wickremesinghe over his alleged bid to downplay the incident. Gunasekera asserted that Sri Lanka was experiencing an extraordinary threat. The incident involving the Aeroflot flight underscored our vulnerability.
Russian backing for war effort
Russia and Ukraine were among the few countries that readily threw their weight behind Sri Lanka’s war effort. Sri Lanka acquired Soviet era Mi24 helicopter gunships from Ukraine and Mi-35 Hind copters from Russia. Mi-24 arrived in Sri Lanka in the first week of Nov 1995. Russian military personnel flew three gunships acquired on a wet lease from Colombo to Hingurakgoda air base. The Russians carried out actual combat operations beginning Nov 17, 1995. The Russians carried out missions along with the Air Force till February 1996. However, the Russians provided the required flying training till 2000. The Hingurakgoda headquartered famed No 09 squadron played a critical role in the overall war against the LTTE.
Sri Lanka sought superior helicopter capable of providing close air support against the backdrop of losing two Avros in April 1995 and one Pucara ground attack aircraft in July 1995. The LTTE changed the military environment with the introduction of heat-seeking missiles. Sri Lanka responded by deploying Mi-24s and subsequently Mi-35 capable of operating against missile attacks. As ground troops required close air support, the then government delayed ‘Operation Riviresa’ until the arrival of helicopter gunships. The deployment of Soviet gunships paved the way for the successful conclusion of ‘Operation Riviresa’ that brought the Jaffna peninsula under control by early 1996.
The celebrated No 09 attack helicopter squadron flew 222 combat missions during ‘Operation Jayasikurui’ conducted through May 1997 to Dec 1998. In addition to the three Mi 24 deployed in Nov 1995 and sent back to Ukraine for overhaul three years later, Sri Lanka during 1996-2001 period inducted 23 Mi 35 Hinds.
The No 09 attack squadron played a pivotal role during the successful Eelam War IV (Aug 2006 to May 2009). The LTTE never managed to neutralize the formidable No 09 attack squadron that quite clearly damaged their fighting capability.
In response to The Island queries, former Foreign Minister Rohitha Bogollagama said that he was quite perplexed at the way the government handled the issue, particularly the absence of an immediate initiative by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to redress the colossal damage that has been caused to the bilateral relationship that existed at its best terms between the two friendly countries.
Bogollagama issued the following statement: “Russia has remained a steadfast friend of Sri Lanka during the post-independence era and shadowing us against many a hurdles we confronted during the time of countering terrorism in Sri Lanka.
In the post period of defeating terrorism, Russia helped us to navigate through the International pressure and the accusations that were directed at us, by certain influential members of the UN body. Our regular visits and the reciprocity that was extended by Russia at the Heads of State and the Foreign Ministers level on a throughout basis was a clear manifestation of the closeness between our two countries.
Having said that the Aeroflot services had resumed to Sri Lanka at the behest of Sri Lankan Authorities giving an explicit assurance that their Aircraft shall not be detained or seized in Sri Lanka. On this undertaking, Aeroflot has commenced their services bringing us the much needed tourists and the foreign exchange.
The very enjoining order been vacated on the 6th of June itself clearly demonstrates the very point that if the Court intervention was sought immediately and efficaciously on 3rd of June itself, the protracted delay and the embarrassment caused could have been well mitigated. It would have definitely given a message with clarity that we stand well by Moscow, though there are procedures one may entail like that of the Judicial Process.
Furthermore, we have not witnessed a direct engagement at the highest echelon of power as a mitigatory step for the blow that shattered our friendship
I am rather disappointed that the authorities have failed to look at the overall impact of the repercussions associated in the Aeroflot now withdrawing their services to Sri Lanka over this incident, thus denying our country the much needed tourists arrivals and a global connectivity that Russia was maintaining.
It must be noted that Russia, China, India and Japan commands both Universal influence and connectivity, being four giants in Asia.
As an Asian Country, when the West is turning against Russia we could have easily enhanced our traditional relationship, which opportunity was completely lost, due to the mishandling of a trivial private litigation.
I stand to disagree with Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe stating that the Aeroflot case is not an issue between the two Countries, but a private legal issue. But unfortunately the fact that it is a state Aircraft of the Russian Government visiting Sri Lanka, at the explicit undertaking given by the Governmental Authorities in Sri Lanka has not been addressed and taken into account by the Hon Prime Minister in making this statement.
It is time, Sri Lanka assured our highest consideration and regret over this particular incident, by the Prime Minister to the Foreign Minister of Russia Sergey Lavrov, as a prudent means to restore the devastated bi-lateral Relations.
Thereby it is time to mature as a Country, to put “Sri Lanka First” and advance to become part of the Global Diplomacy as practiced by many countries, though small in size but mighty, in terms of one’s philosophy.”
Midweek Review
A look back at now mostly forgotten Eelam war in the aftermath of Kashmir massacre

In the aftermath of the Pahalgam massacre, Pakistan offered to cooperate in what it called a neutral investigation. But India never regretted the
catastrophic results of its intervention in Sri Lanka that led to the assassination of Rajiv Gandhi in May 1991, over a year after India pulled out its Army
from NE, Sri Lanka
In a telephone call to Indian Premier Narendra Modi, President Anura Kumara Dissanayake condemned the massacre of 26 civilians – 25 Indians and one Nepali – at Pahalgam, in the Indian controlled Kashmir, on April 22.
President Dissanayake expressed his condolences and reaffirmed, what the President’s Media Division (PMD) called, Sri Lanka’s unwavering solidarity and brotherhood with the people of India.
Having described the massacre as a terrorist attack, New Delhi found fault with Pakistan for the incident. Pakistan was accused of backing a previously unknown group, identified as Kashmir Resistance.
The Indian media have quoted Indian security agencies as having said that Kashmir Resistance is a front for Pakistan-based terrorist groups, Lashkar-e-Taiba and Hizbul Mujahideen fighting Indian rule in Kashmir. Pakistan says it only provides moral and diplomatic support.
Pakistan has denied its involvement in the Pahalgam attack. A section of the Indian media, and some experts, have compared the Pahalgam attack with the coordinated raids carried out by Hamas on southern Israel, in early October 2023.
President Dissanayake called Premier Modi on the afternoon of April 25, three days after the Pahalgam attack. The PMD quoted Dissanayake as having reiterated Sri Lanka’s firm stance against terrorism in all its forms, regardless of where it occurred in the world, in a 15-minute call.
Modi cut short his visit to Saudi Arabia as India took a series of measures against Pakistan. Indian actions included suspension of the Indus Waters Treaty (IWT) governing water sharing of six rivers in the Indus basin between the two countries. The agreement that had been finalised way back in 1960 survived three major wars in 1965, 1971 and 1999.
One-time Pentagon official Michael Rubin, having likened the Pahalgam attack to a targeted strike on civilians, has urged India to adopt an Israel-style retaliation, targeting Pakistan, but not realising that both are nuclear armed.
Soon after the Hamas raid some interested parties compared Sri Lanka’s war against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), and the ongoing Israel war on Gaza.
The latest incident in Indian-controlled Kashmir, and Gaza genocide, cannot be compared under any circumstances. Therefore, suggestions that India adopt Israel-style retaliation against Pakistan do not hold water. Also, Sri Lanka’s war against the LTTE that was brought to a successful conclusion in May 2009 cannot be compared with the conflict Israel is involved in.
Sri Lanka can easily relate to the victims of the Pahalgam attack as a victim of separatist terrorism that bled the country for nearly 30 years. India, however, never bothered to express regret over causing terrorism here.
Indian-sponsored terror projects brought Sri Lanka to its knees before President JRJ made an attempt to eradicate the LTTE in May-June 1987. JRJ resorted to ‘Operation Liberation’ after Indian mediated talks failed to end the conflict. Having forced Sri Lanka to call off the largest-ever ground offensive undertaken at that time with the hope of routing the LTTE in Vadamarachchi, the home turf of Velupillai Prabhakaran, followed by India deploying its Mi 17s on July 24, 1987, to rescue the Tiger Supremo, his wife, two children and several of his close associates – just five days before the signing of the so-called Indo-Lanka peace accord, virtually at Indian gun point.
First phase of Eelam war
During the onset of the conflict here, the LTTE routinely carried out raids on predominantly Sinhala villages where civilians were butchered. That had been part of its strategy approved by ‘controllers’ based across the Palk Straits. That had been a volatile period in the run-up to the July 29, 1987, accord. Although India established half a dozen terrorist groups here, the LTTE had been unquestionably the most violent and the dominant group. To New Delhi’s humiliation all such groups supported by it were wiped out by the marauding Tigers.
Those who compared the LTTE with Hamas, or any other group, conveniently forget that the Sri Lankan group caused significant losses to its creator. India lost over 1,300 officers and men, while nearly 3,000 others suffered injuries during the Indian deployment here (July 1987-March 1990).
The world turned a blind eye to what was going on in Sri Lanka in the ’80s. The war launched by India in the early ’80s against Sri Lanka lasted till the signing of the peace accord. That can be broadly identified as phase one of the conflict (1983 July – 1987 July). That first phase can be safely described as an Indian proxy war aimed at creating an environment conducive for the deployment of the Indian Army.
Having compelled President JRJ to accept deployment of the Indian Army in the northern and eastern regions in terms of the “peace accord”, New Delhi sought to consolidate its hold here by disarming all groups, except the one it had handpicked to run the North-East Provincial Council. The Indian Army oversaw the first Provincial Council election held on Nov. 19, 1988, to elect members to the NE council. The whole exercise was meant to ensure the installation of the Varatharaja Perumal led-EPRLF (Eelam People’s Revolutionary Liberation Forint) administration therein.
The second phase (1987 July – 1990 March) saw a war between the Indian Army and the LTTE. During this period, the Indian Army supervised two national elections – presidential on Dec. 19, 1988, and parliamentary on Feb. 15, 1989, that were won by Ranasinghe Premadasa and the UNP.
During that period, the UNP battled the JVP terror campaign and the South bled. The JVP that resorted to unbridled violence against the Indo-Lanka accord, at that time, has ended-up signing several agreements, including one on defence cooperation, recently, and the country is yet to get details of these secret agreements.
Raid on the Maldives
The second phase of the Eelam conflict ended when India pulled out its Army from NE Sri Lanka in March 1990. The sea-borne raid that had been carried out by Indian-trained PLOTE (People’s Liberation Organisation of Tamil Eelam) targeting Maldivian President Maumoon Abdul Gayoom, in Nov. 1988, is perhaps a significant development during the second phase of the conflict, though it was never examined in the right context.
No one – not even the Maldives – found fault with India for exporting terrorism to the island nation. India received accolades for swift air borne intervention to neutralise the PLOTE group. The Indian Navy sank a vessel commandeered by a section of the PLOTE raiders in a bid to escape back to Sri Lanka. The truth is that PLOTE, that had been trained by India to destabilise Sri Lanka, ended-up taking up a lucrative private assignment to overthrow President Gayoom’s administration.
India never regretted the Maldivian incident. It would be pertinent to mention that two boat loads of PLOTE cadres had quietly left Sri Lanka at a time the Indian Navy was responsible for monitoring in and out sea movements.
In the aftermath of the Pahalgam massacre, Pakistan offered to cooperate in what it called a neutral investigation. But India never regretted the catastrophic results of its intervention in Sri Lanka that led to the assassination of Rajiv Gandhi in May 1991, over a year after India pulled out its Army from NE, Sri Lanka.
Resumption of hostilities by the LTTE in June 1990 can be considered as the beginning of the third phase of the conflict. Having battled the Indian Army and gained valuable battle experience, the LTTE, following a 14-month honeymoon with President Ranasinghe Premadasa, resumed hostilities. Within weeks the LTTE gained the upper hand in the northern theatre of operations.
In spite of India banning the LTTE, after the May 1991 assassination of Gandhi, the group continued to grow with the funds pouring in from the West over the years. Regardless of losing Jaffna in 1995, the LTTE consolidated its position, both in the Vanni and the East, to such an extent their victory seemed inevitable.
But resolute political leadership given by Mahinda Rajapaksa ensured that Sri Lanka turned the tables on the LTTE within weeks after the LTTE appeared to be making significant progress at the beginning. Within two years and 10 months (2006 August – 2009 May) the armed forces brought the LTTE to its knees, and the rest is history. As we have said in our earlier columns that victory was soon soured. Spearheaded by Sarath Fonseka, the type of General that a country gets in about once in a thousand years, ended in enmity within, for the simple reason this super hero wanted to collect all the trophies won by many braves.
Post-war developments
Sri Lanka’s war has been mentioned on many occasions in relation to various conflicts/situations. We have observed many distorted/inaccurate attempts to compare Sri Lanka’s war against LTTE with other conflicts/situations.
Unparalleled Oct. 7 Hamas attack on Israel, triggered a spate of comments on Sri Lanka’s war against the LTTE. Respected expert on terrorism experienced in Sri Lanka, M.R. Narayan Swamy, discussed the similarities of Sri Lanka’s conflict and the ongoing Israel-Gaza war. New Delhi-based Swamy, who had served UNI and AFP during his decades’ long career, discussed the issues at hand while acknowledging no two situations were absolutely comparable. Swamy currently serves as the Executive Director of IANS (Indo-Asian News Service).
‘How’s Hamas’ attack similar to that of LTTE?’ and ‘Hamas’ offensive on Israel may bring it closer to LTTE’s fate,’ dealt with the issues involved. Let me reproduce Swamy’s comment: “Oct. 7 could be a turning point for Hamas similar to what happened to the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam in Sri Lanka in 2006. Let me explain. Similar to Hamas, the LTTE grew significantly over time eventually gaining control of a significant portion of Sri Lanka’s land and coast. The LTTE was even more formidable than Hamas. It had a strong army, growing air force and a deadly naval presence. Unlike Hamas, the LTTE successfully assassinated high ranking political figures in Sri Lanka and India. Notably, the LTTE achieved this without direct support from any country while Hamas received military and financial backing from Iran and some other states. The LTTE became too sure of their victories overtime. They thought they could never be beaten and that starting a war would always make them stronger. But in 2006 when they began Eelam War 1V their leader Velupillai Prabhakaran couldn’t have foreseen that within three years he and his prominent group would be defeated. Prabhakaran believed gathering tens of thousands of Tamils during the last stages of war would protect them and Sri Lanka wouldn’t unleash missiles and rockets. Colombo proved him wrong. They were hit. By asking the people not to flee Gaza, despite Israeli warnings, Hamas is taking a similar line. Punishing all Palestinians for Hamas’ actions is unjust, just like punishing all Tamils for LTTE’s actions was wrong. The LTTE claimed to fight for Tamils without consulting them and Hamas claimed to represent Palestinians without seeking the approval for the Oct.7 strike. Well, two situations are not absolutely comparable. We can be clear that Hamas is facing a situation similar to what the LTTE faced, shortly before its end. Will Hamas meet a similar fate as the LTTE? Only time will answer that question.” The above was said soon after the Oct. 2023 Hamas attack.
Swamy quite conveniently refrained from mentioning India’s direct role in setting up one of the deadliest terror projects in the world here in the ’80s.
Former Editor of The Hindu, Malini Parthasarathy, who also had served as Chairperson of The Hindu Group, released a list of politicians assassinated by the LTTE, as she hit back hard at those who raged against the comparison of the Hamas to the LTTE. The list included two Jaffna District MPs, Arumugam Murugesu Alalasundaram and Visvanathan Dharmalingam, assassinated in early Sept. 1985. Slain Visvanathan Dharmalingam’s son, Dharmalingam Siddharthan, who represents the Vanni electoral district on the Illankai Thamil Arasu Kadchi (ITAK), is on record as having said that the two MPs were abducted and killed by TELO (Tamil Eelam Liberation Organisation.) gunmen. The list posted by Parthasarathy included PLOTE leader Uma Maheswaran, assassinated in Colombo in July 1989. The LTTE hadn’t been involved in that killing either. Maheswaran is believed to have been killed by his onetime associates, perhaps over the abortive PLOTE raid on the Maldives in Nov, 1988. India never bothered at least to acknowledge that the Maldives raid was carried out by men trained by India to destabilise Sri Lanka. There is no doubt that Maheswasran’s killers, too, were known to the Indian intelligence at that time.
Before rushing into conclusions regarding Hamas and the LTTE, perhaps a proper examination of the circumstances they emerged is necessary. The two situations – fourth phase of the Eelam conflict and the latest Hamas strike on Israel and the devastating counter attack – cannot be compared under any circumstances. Efforts to compare the two issues is more like comparing apples and oranges, though mutually Tamils and Sinhalese have so many commonalities having intermingled throughout history like the Arabs and Jews.
It is no doubt Jews are a people that suffered persecution throughout known history under Assyrians, Babylonians to Romans and so forth. Such persecution includes expulsion of Jews from England in 1290 and from Spain 1492. So what Hitler and the Germans did was to take the historic process to another extreme.
Yet to blame the Palestinians and treat them like animals and to simply butcher them for the latest uprising by Hamas for all the humiliations and suffering they have been going through non-stop since Naqba in1948, from the time of the creation of Israel is to allow the creators of the problem, including the UK, the USA and United Nations to wash all their sins on the true other victims of this conflict, the Palestinians.
It would be pertinent to mention that Israel, in spite of having one of the world’s best fighting armed forces with 100 percent backing from the West, cannot totally eradicate Hamas the way Sri Lanka dealt with the LTTE. Mind you we did not drop 2000 pound bombs supplied by the US on hapless Tamil civilians to commit genocide as is happening in Palestine in the hands of the Israelis.
The circumstances under which the LTTE launched a large-scale offensive in Aug. 2006 and its objectives had been very much different from that of Hamas. The LTTE really believed that it could have defeated the Sri Lankan military in the North by cutting off the sea supply route from Trincomalee to Kankesanthurai and simultaneously overrunning the Kilali-Muhamalai-Nagarkovil forward defence line (FDL). The total collapse of the FDL could have allowed the LTTE to eradicate isolated fighting formations trapped north of the FDL. But, in the case of the Gaza war, the Hamas strike was meant to provoke Israel to unleash a massive unbridled counter attack that caused maximum losses on the civilians. As Hamas expected the Israeli counter attack has triggered massive protests in the West against their leaders. They have been accused of encouraging violence against Palestine. Saudi Arabia, Jordan and other US allies are under heavy pressure from Muslims and other horrified communities’ world over to take a stand against the US.
But in spite of growing protests, Israel has sustained the offensive action not only against Gaza but Lebanon, Yemen and Iran.
Instead of being grateful to those who risked their lives to bring the LTTE terror to an end, various interested parties are still on an agenda to harm the armed forces reputation.
The treacherous Yahapalana government went to the extent of sponsoring an accountability resolution against its own armed forces at the Geneva-based UNHRC in Oct. 2015. That was the level of their treachery.
By Shamindra Ferdinando
Midweek Review
The Broken Promise of the Lankan Cinema:

Asoka & Swarna’s Thrilling-Melodrama – Part III
“‘Dr. Ranee Sridharan,’ you say. ‘Nice to see you again.’
The woman in the white sari places a thumb in her ledger book, adjusts her spectacles and smiles up at you. ‘You may call me Ranee. Helping you is what I am assigned to do,’ she says. ‘You have seven moons. And you have already waisted one.’”
The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida
by Shehan Karunatilaka (London: Sort of Books, 2022. p84)
(Continued from yesterday)
Rukmani’s Stardom & Acting Opportunity
Rukmani Devi is still remembered for her incomparable singing voice and her studio photograph by Ralex Ranasinghe with its hint of Film Noir mystery and seduction, and for the role of Blanch Dubois she played in Dhamma Jagoda’s Vesmuhunu, an adaptation of Tennessee Williams’ A Streetcar Named Desire. This is a role she shared on alternate nights with Irangani Serasinghe in the late 60s or early 70s. (See my Island Essays, 2024, p114) She was immensely happy to be able to act in a modern western classic directed by a visionary theatre director like Dhamma Jagoda and it was to his credit that he chose to give her that role when all acting roles had dried up for her. I observed those rehearsals held at Harrold Peiris’ open garage.
I, too, am happy that Swarna has had a chance to perform again in her 70s. The question is, how exactly has she used that very rare opportunity to act in a film that has doubled its production cost within two months, and now showing in private screenings in multiplexes in Australia with English subtitles, with ambitions to be shown on Netflix and Amazon Prime. These outlets also now fund films and make challenging mini-series. Rani has clearly been produced and marketed with this global distribution in mind. How does this important fact affect Swarna’s style of acting and the aesthetics of Asoka’s script, are the questions I wish to explore in the final section of this piece.
A Sensational-Thrilling Political & Family Melodrama
‘Melodrama’ is a popular genre with a history that goes back to 19th century theatre in the west and with the advent of film, Hollywood took it up as it offered a key set of thrilling devices known as ‘Attractions’, for structuring and developing a popular genre cinema. The word ‘Melodrama’ is a compound of the Greek word for music ‘melos’ and drama as an action, with the connotation of a highly orchestrated set of actions. The orchestration (not only with sound but also the speed and rhythm of editing, dramatic expressive lighting, ‘histrionic’ acting, etc.,) always reaches toward thrilling climaxes and at times exaggerated display of emotions. The plots are sensational, propelled by coincidences and written to reach climaxes and dramatic reversals of fortune, and sudden revelations. Hollywood was famous for its happy endings with resolution of the dramatised conflicts, while Hindi melodramas and Lankan copies often ended sadly.
In the history of cinema there are highly sophisticated melodramas within Hollywood, classical Hindi cinema and also in European art cinema. Rainer Werner Fassbinder was one of the German directors who developed a modern ‘Brechtian-Melodrama’ of extraordinary political and aesthetic power in the 70s. And of course, there are very poorly conceived melodramas too like many of the Sinhala films which were copies of Indian prototypes. Melodramatic devices inflect the different genres of Hollywood, for example the Gangster Film, the Western and created durable genre types in character, e.g. the Gangster, the Lonesome Cowboy and Indians; all national stereotypes, one embodying the underbelly of American capitalism, an anti-hero and the other the American hero actualising The American Dream. ‘The Indian,’ merely the collateral damage of this phantasy!
When the stories were centred on women the genre classification was ‘Women’s Melodrama’ as it dealt with interpersonal relations, conflicts, and sadness centred on the home primarily. Feminist film theory has developed a vast archive of scholarship on the melodramatic genre, cross-culturally, with a special focus on Hollywood and Hindi cinema decades prior to the formation we now call Bollywood, made with transnational capital and global reach. It was assumed that the audience for the family melodramas was female and that as women, we enjoy crying at the cinema, hence the condescending name ‘The Weepies’. I cut my scholarly/critical teeth studying these much-maligned melodramatic films for my doctorate, which I had enjoyed while growing up in a long-ago Ceylon.
Asoka’s Melodramatic Turn
Asoka in Alborada, but more so in Rani has made melodramatic films with his own ‘self-expressive’ variations on the structure, with an ‘Art Cinema’ gloss. He has said that Rani is more like Alborada and unlike his previous films made during the civil war. This is quite obvious. Though the advertising tag line for Alborada claimed it as a ‘Poetic film that Neruda never made’ it was a straightforward narrative film. I have argued in a long essay (‘Psycho-Sexual Violence in the Sinhala Cinema: Parasathumal & Alborada’, in Lamentation of the Dawn, ed. S. Chandrajeewa, 2022, also tr. into Sinhala, 2023), that the staging of the rape of the nameless, silent, Dalit woman is conceived in a melodramatic manner playing it for both critique and exciting thrills. This is a case of both having his cake and eating it.
Swarna’s Melodramatic Turn
The film appears to be constructed, plotted melodramatically, to demonstrate Swarna’s ability to perform dramatic scenes of high excitement in areas of taboo, the opportunity for which is unavailable to a Sinhala actress, in a Sinhala film, playing the role of a Sinhala Buddhist mother, who has lost her son to an act of terror unleashed by the Sinhala-Buddhist State terror and Sinhala-Buddhist JVP.
In short, Swarna has been given the opportunity to demonstrate how well she can perform a range of Melodramatic emotions that go from say A to, say D. She has been given the chance to move smoothly from English to Sinhala as the middle classes do; use the two most common American expletives which are part of the American vernacular; drink for pleasure but also to the point of getting drunk; offer alcohol to her baffled domestic worker; coax her son and friends to drink; dance with them in an inebriated state; pour alcohol, whisky, not arrack, like one would pour water from a bottle; chain smoke furiously; dash a full mug of tea on the floor in a rage; crumple on the floor sobbing uncontrollably; shout at her loyal aid Karu; speak with sarcasm to a police officer insisting that she is ‘Dr Manorani …’ not ‘Miss or Mrs’, like feminists did back in the day; chat intimately with a minister of the government; look angrily and scowl at President Premadasa when he comes to the funeral house to condole with her; stage Richard’s funeral in a Catholic church with a stain glass window of the Pieta; to quote a well-known Psalm of David from the Bible, ‘Oh Absalom my son, Oh my son!’; etc.
Rani is Swarna’s chance to show that she can perform in ways that no Sinhala script has allowed a Sinhala actor to do up to now, that is, behave like the Sinhala cinema’s fantasy of how the upper-class Anglophone Lankan women behave. In short not unlike, but much worse, than the ‘bad girls’ in the Sinhala melodramatic genre cinema who always ended up in a Night Club, the locus of licentiousness that tempt them. I am thinking of Pitisara Kella from the 50s and a host of other films. Sinhala cinema simply cannot convincingly present the upper-class English-speaking milieu, with any nuance and conviction, it just feels very stilted, poorly acted therefore. Saying this is not class snobbery on my part. Even Lester James Peries from this very upper class and a Roman Catholic, in Delowak Atara couldn’t do it with Irangani Serasinghe and others. The dialogue meant to be serious or just plain normal sounded stilted and even funny. But when Lester did the Walauwa as in Nidhahanaya, it was brilliant, one of our classics. Brecht it was who said (on the eve of WW2, creating a Modern Epic mode of theatre in exile, that it’s not easy to make drama about current events. It’s much easier to look back with nostalgia at a genteel aristocratic Sinhala past for sure.
In taking the opportunity to explore kinetic and emotional behaviour considered to be taboo for a Sinhala woman, a fantasy Tamil woman has been fabricated. The plot of Rani is constructed by Asoka to provide Swarna the opportunity to indulge in these very taboos. In short, the fictional Tamil Rani offers Swarna an acting opportunity to improve her career prospects in the future. In so doing she has weakened her ability, I fear, to evolve as an actress.
A Domestic Melodrama: The House Suspended in a Void
If Swarna so desired, if the script ‘allowed her’ to, she could have tried to develop a quieter, more restrained and therefore a more powerful Rani. A friend of the family, when asked, said that, “The most striking feature of Manorani was her quiet, confident dignity, before and after Richard.” To testify to such a person, Asoka and Swarna could have asked the obvious question, did she have any close friendships formed as undergraduates, who supported her during this tragedy, as there certainly were cherished friends who shared her grief. After all, she was among the elite first generations of Ceylonese women to enter University in the 1940, to medical school at that!
Asoka and Swarna have entrapped their Rani in a vacuum of a house, friendless, with a little cross on Richard’s wall to signify religion. A lot of effort has gone into the set decoration and art direction of the house, as in Alborada, to stage a fantasy/phantasy melodramatic scenario. There is no real sensory, empathetic feel and understanding of the ethos (character), of this urbane Anglophone Ceylonese-Lankan mother and son, hence the fictionalised scenarios feel synthetic, cosmetic in the best traditions of the Sinhala genre cinema’s representation of the ‘excessive and even grotesque upper-class’. Except, here the Realism of the mise-en-scene (the old-world airy house and furniture and composition of the visual components) makes claims to a realist authenticity. A little modest research would have shown that Manorani and Richard moved from one rented apartment to another in the last few years of his life and when he was abducted, lived on the upper-floor of a house, in a housing estate in Rajagiriya. Asoka said in an interview that it wasn’t possible to find in Colombo the kind of old house they required for Rani. So, they went out of town to find the ideal house suited to stage their phantasy.
I suspect that it was Swarna who called shots this time, not Asoka who was recovering from a serious illness. He said that she brought the project to him and the producer and that he had no idea of making a film on Manorani, but added that he wrote the script within 3 months. I suspect that this Rani, (this out of control, angry, scowling, bad tempered, lamenting, hysterical Rani, reaching for the alcohol and cigarettes to assuage her grief, performing one sensational, thrilling melodramatic turn after another), was Swarna’s conception, her version of Manorani that she has nursed for 28 long years. Had she resisted this temptation to display her high-intensity acting-out skills yet again, she might just have been able to tap unsuspected resources within herself which she may still have as a serious actress. Its these latent affective depths that Rukmani Devi undoubtedly tapped when she was invited to play the drunken and lost Blanche Dubois, in A Streetcar Named Desire in Sinhala, as a desperate, drunken, aristocratic lady, in Dhamma Jagoda’s Vesmuhunu (1971?).

Jagoda / Irangani
It is reported that before going on stage, Rukmani Devi went on her hands and knees to pay her respects to Dhamma, not as feudal act of deference but to acknowledge his Shilpiya Nuwana, craft knowledge/intelligence’, as one very perceptive Sinhala critic put it. That gesture of Vandeema was foreign to the Tamil Christian Rukmani Devi, but nevertheless it shows her sense of immense gratitude to Dhamma for having taken her into a zone of expression (a dangerous territory emotionally for dedicated vulnerable actors), that she had never experienced before, so late in her life. But ‘late’ is relative to gender, then she was only in her 50s!
Challenge is what serious actors yearn for, strange beings who may suggest to us intensities that sustain and amplify life, all life. Swarna might usefully think about Rukmani Devi, her life and her star persona as a Tamil star in countless sarala Sinhala films, in whose shadow and echo every single Sinhala actress has entered the limelight, Swarna more so now than any other!
As for Asoka, he needs to rest and take care of himself before he commits himself to this recent track of films which are yielding less and less with each of the two films done back to back. His body of work is too important to trash it with this kind of half thought out ‘Tales of Sound and Fury’, which is a precise definition of Melodrama at its best. This film, alas, is not one of those.
That young Tamil women, often silent and traumatised, appeared following Sinhala soldiers in Lankan ‘civil-war cinema’ of the modernists, all male, is a troubling phenomenon. A ‘Sinhala Orientalism’, an exoticising of Tamil and Dalith young women as Other, is at work in some of the civil war films, as in Alborada and Rani. And then this very elevation always leads to unleashing psycho/sexual and/or other forms of violence, because the elevation (Mother Goddess in Alborada) only feeds violent male psychosexual phantasies, which in the Sinhala cinema often leads to the violence of rape and other forms of violence towards women, both Tamil and Sinhala. (To be continued)
by Laleen Jayamanne
Midweek Review
Thirty Thousand and Counting….

Many thousands in the annual grades race,
Are brimming with the magical feel of success,
And they very rightly earn warm congrats,
But note, you who are on the pedestals of power,
That 30,000 or more are being left far behind,
In these no-holds-barred contests to be first,
Since they have earned the label ‘All Fs’,
And could fall for the drug-pusher’s lure,
Since they may be on the threshold of despair…
Take note, and fill their lives with meaning,
Since they suffer for no fault of theirs.
By Lynn Ockersz
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