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.”
Features
Remembering Ernest MacIntyre’s Contribution to Modern Lankan Theatre & Drama
Humour and the Creation of Community:
“As melancholy is sadness that has taken on lightness,
so humour is comedy that has lost its bodily weight”. Italo Calvino on ‘Lightness’ (Six Memos for the New Millennium (Harvard UP, 1988).
With the death of Ernest Thalayasingham MacIntyre or Mac, as he was affectionately known to us, an entire theatrical milieu and the folk who created and nourished Modern Lankan Theatre appear to have almost passed away. I have drawn from Shelagh Goonewardene’s excellent and moving book, This Total Art: Perceptions of Sri Lankan Theatre (Lantana Publishing; Victoria, Australia, 1994), to write this. Also, the rare B&W photographs in it capture the intensity of distant theatrical moments of a long-ago and far-away Ceylon’s multi-ethnic theatrical experiments. But I don’t know if there is a scholarly history, drawing on oral history, critical reviews, of this seminal era (50s and 60s) written by Lankan or other theatre scholars in any of our languages. It is worth remembering that Shelagh was a Burgher who edited her Lankan journalistic reviews and criticism to form part of this book, with new essays on the contribution of Mac to Lankan theatre, written while living here in Australia. It is a labour of love for the country of her birth.
Here I wish to try and remember, now in my old age, what Mac, with his friends and colleagues from the University of Ceylon Drama Society did to create the theatre group called Stage & Set as an ‘infrastructure of the sensible’, so to speak, for theatrical activity in English, centred around the Lionel Wendt Theatre in Colombo 7 in the 60s. And remarkably, how this group connected with the robust Sinhala drama at the Lumbini Theatre in Colombo 5.
Shelagh shows us how Bertolt Brecht’s plays facilitated the opening up of a two-way street between the Sinhala and English language theatre during the mid-sixties, and in this story, Mac played a decisive role. I will take this story up below.
I was an undergraduate student in the mid-sixties who avidly followed theatre in Sinhala and English and the critical writings and radio programmes on it by eminent critics such as Regi Siriwardena and A. J. Gunawardana. I was also an inaugural student at the Aquinas University’s Theatre Workshop directed by Mac in late 1968, I think it was. So, he was my teacher for a brief period when he taught us aspects of staging (composition of space, including design of lighting) and theatre history, and styles of acting. Later in Australia, through my husband Brian Rutnam I became friends with Mac’s family including his young son Amrit and daughter Raina and followed the productions of his own plays here in Sydney, and lately his highly fecund last years when he wrote (while in a nursing home with his wife and comrade in theatre, Nalini Mather, the vice-principal of Ladies’ College) his memoir, A Bend in the River, on their University days. In my review in The Island titled ‘Light Sorrow -Peradeniya Imagination’ I attempted to show how Mac created something like an archaeology of the genesis of the pivotal plays Maname and Sinhabahu by Ediriweera Sarachchandra in 1956 at the University with his students. Mac pithily expressed the terms within which such a national cultural renaissance was enabled in Sinhala; it was made possible, he said, precisely because it was not ‘Sinhala Only’! The ‘it’ here refers to the deep theatrical research Sarachchandra undertook in his travels as well as in writing his book on Lankan folk drama, all of which was made possible because of his excellent knowledge of English.
The 1956 ‘Sinhala Only’ Act of parliament which abolished the status of Tamil as one of the National languages of Ceylon and also English as the language of governance, violated the fundamental rights of the Tamil people of Lanka and is judged as a violent act which has ricocheted across the bloodied history of Lanka ever since.
Mac was born in Colombo to a Tamil father and a Burgher mother and educated at St Patrick’s College in Jaffna after his father died young. While he wrote all his plays in English, he did speak Tamil and Sinhala with a similar level of fluency and took his Brecht productions to Jaffna. I remember seeing his production of Mother Courage and Her Children in 1969 at the Engineering Faculty Theatre at Peradeniya University with the West Indian actress Marjorie Lamont in the lead role.
Stage & Set and Brecht in Lanka
The very first production of a Brecht play in Lanka was by Professor E.F. C. Ludowyk (Professor of English at Peradeniya University from 1933 to 1956) who developed the Drama Society that pre-existed his time at the University College by expanding the play-reading group into a group of actors. This fascinating history is available through the letter sent in 1970 to Shelagh by Professor Ludowyk late in his retirement in England. In this letter he says that he produced Brecht’s The Good Woman of Szechwan with the Dram Soc in 1949. Shelagh who was directed by Professor Ludowyk also informs us elsewhere that he had sent from England a copy of Brecht’s Caucasian Chalk Circle to Irangani (Meedeniya/Serasinghe) in 1966 and that she in turn had handed it over to Mac, who then produced it in a celebrated production with her in the role of Grusha, which is what opened up the two way-street between the English language theatre of the Wendt and the Lumbini Theatre in Sinhala. Henry Jayasena in turn translated the play into Sinhala, making it one of the most beloved Sinhala plays. Mac performed in Henry’s production as the naughty priest who has the memorable line which he was fond of reciting for us in Sinhala; ‘Dearly beloved wedding and funeral guests, how varied is the fate of man…’. The idiomatic verve of Henry’s translation was such that people now consider the Caucasian Chalk Circle a Sinhala play and is also a text for high school children, I hear. Even a venal president recently quoted a famous line of the selfless Grusha in parliament assuming urbanely that folk knew the reference.
Others will discuss in some detail the classical and modern repertoire of Western plays that Mac directed for Stage & Set and the 27 plays he wrote himself, some of which are published, so that here I just want to suggest the sense of excitement a Stage & Set production would create through the media. I recall how characters in Mac’s production of Othello wore costumes made of Barbara Sansoni’s handloom material crafted specially for it and also the two sets of lead players, Irangani and Winston Serasinghe and Shelagh and Chitrasena. While Serasinghe’s dramatic voice was beautifully textured, Chitrasena with his dancer’s elan brought a kinetic dynamism not seen in a dramatic role, draped in the vibrant cloaks made of the famous heavy handloom cotton, with daring vertical black stripes – there was electricity in the air. Karan Breckenridge as the Story Teller in the Chalk Circle and also as Hamlet, Alastair Rosemale-Cocq as Iago were especially remarkable actors within the ensemble casts of Stage & Set. When Irangani and Winston Serasinghe, (an older and more experienced generation of actors than the nucleus of Stage & Set), joined the group they brought a gravitas and a sense of deep tradition into the group as Irangani was a trained actor with a wonderful deep modulated voice rare on our stage. The photographs of the production are enchanting, luminous moments of Lankan theatre. I had a brief glimpse of the much loved Arts Centre Club (watering hole), where all these people galvanised by theatre, – architects, directors, photographers, artists, actors, musicians, journalists, academics, even the odd senator – all met and mingled and drank and talked regularly, played the piano on a whim, well into the night; a place where many ideas would have been hatched.
A Beckett-ian Couple: Mac & Nalini
In their last few years due to restricted physical mobility (not unlike personae in Samuel Beckett’s last plays), cared for very well at a nursing home, Mac and Nalini were comfortably settled in two large armchairs daily, with their life-long travelling-companion- books piled up around them on two shelves ready to help. With their computers at hand, with Nalini as research assistant with excellent Latin, their mobile, fertile minds roamed the world.
It is this mise-en-scene of their last years that made me see Mac metamorphose into something of a late Beckett dramatis persona, but with a cheeky humour and a voracious appetite for creating scenarios, dramatic ones, bringing unlikely historical figures into conversation with each other (Galileo and Aryabhatta for example). The conversations, rather more ludic and schizoid and yet tinged with reason, sweet reason. Mac’s scenarios were imbued with Absurdist humour and word play so dear to Lankan theatre of a certain era. Lankans loved Waiting for Godot and its Sinhala version, Godot Enakan. Mac loved to laugh till the end and made us laugh as well, and though he was touched by sorrow he made it light with humour.
And I feel that his Memoir was also a love letter to his beloved Nalini and a tribute to her orderly, powerful analytical mind honed through her Classics Honours Degree at Peradeniya University of the 50s. Mac’s mind however, his theatrical imagination, was wild, ‘unruly’ in the sense of not following the rules of the ‘Well-Made play’, and in his own plays he roamed where angels fear to tread. Now in 2026 with the Sinhala translation by Professor Chitra Jayathilaka of his 1990 play Rasanayagam’s Last Riot, audiences will have the chance to experience these remarkable qualities in Sinhala as well.
Impossible Conversations
In the nursing home, he was loved by the staff as he made them laugh and spoke to one of the charge nurses, a Lankan, in Sinhala. Seated there in his room he wrote a series of short well-crafted one-act plays bristling with ideas and strange encounters between figures from world history who were not contemporaries; (Bertolt Brecht and Pope John Paul II, and Galileo Galilei and a humble Lankan Catholic nun at the Vatican), and also of minor figures like poor Yorik, the court jester whom he resurrects to encounter the melancholic prince of Denmark, Hamlet.
Community of Laughter: The Kolam Maduwa of Sydney
A long life-time engaged in theatre as a vital necessity, rather than a professional job, has gifted Mac with a way of perceiving history, especially Lankan history, its blood-soaked post-Independence history and the history of theatre and life itself as a theatre of encounters; ‘all the world’s a stage…’. But all the players were never ‘mere players’ for him, and this was most evident in the way Mac galvanised the Lankan diasporic community of all ethnicities in Sydney into dramatic activity through his group aptly named the Kolam Maduwa, riffing on the multiple meanings of the word Kolam, both a lusty and bawdy dramatic folk form of Lanka and also a lively vernacular term of abuse with multiple shades of meaning, unruly behaviour, in Sinhala.
The intergenerational and international transmission of Brecht’s theatrical experiments and the nurturing of what Eugenio Barba enigmatically calls ‘the secret art of the performer’, given Mac’s own spin, is part of his legacy. Mac gave a chance for anyone who wanted to act, to act in his plays, especially in his Kolam Maduwa performances. He roped in his entire family including his two grand-children, Ayesha and Michael. What mattered to him was not how well someone acted but rather to give a person a chance to shine, even for an instance and the collective excitement, laughter and even anguish one might feel watching in a group, a play such as Antigone or Rasanayagam’s Last Riot.
A colleague of mine gave a course in Theatre Studies at The University of California at Berkeley on ‘A History of Bad Acting’ and I learnt that that was his most popular course! Go figure!
Mac never joined the legendary Dram Soc except in a silent walk-on role in Ludowyk’s final production before he left Ceylon for good. In this he is like Gananath Obeyesekere the Lankan Anthropologist who did foundational and brilliant work on folk rituals of Lanka as Dionysian acts of possession. While Gananath did do English with Ludowyk, he didn’t join the Dram Soc and instead went travelling the country recording folk songs and watching ritual dramas. Mac, I believe, did not study English Lit and instead studied Economics but at the end of A Bend in the River when he and his mates leave the hall of residence what he leaves behind is his Economics text book but instead, carries with him a copy of the Complete Works of Shakespeare.
I imagine that there was a ‘silent transmission of the secret’ as Mac stood silently on that stage in Shaw’s Androcles and the Lion; the compassionate lion. Mac understood why Ludowyk chose that play to be performed in 1956 as his final farewell to the country he loved dearly. Mac knew (among others), this gentle and excellent Lankan scholar’s book The Foot Print of the Buddha written in England in 1958.
Both Gananath and Mac have an innate sense of theatre and with Mac it’s all self-taught, intuitive. He was an auto-didact of immense mental energy. In his last years Mac has conjured up fantastic theatrical scenarios for his own delight, untrammelled by any spatio-temporal constraints. And so it happens that he gives Shakespeare, as he leaves London, one last look at his beloved Globe theatre burnt down to ashes, where ‘all that is solid melts into air’.
However, I wish to conclude on a lighter note touched by the intriguing epigram by Calvino which frames this piece. It is curious that as a director Mac was drawn to Shakespearean tragedy (Hamlet, Othello), rather than comedy. And it becomes even curiouser because as a playwright-director his own preferred genre was comedy and even grotesque-comedy and his only play in the tragic genre is perhaps Irangani. Though the word ‘Riot’ in Rasanayagam’s Last Riot refers to the series of Sinhala pogroms against Tamils, it does have a vernacular meaning, say in theatre, when one says favourably of a performance, ‘it was a riot!’, lively, and there are such scenes even in that play. So then let me end with Calvino quoting from Shakespeare’s deliciously profound comedy As You Like It, framed by his subtle observations.
‘Melancholy and humour, inextricably intermingled, characterize the accents of the Prince of Denmark, accents we have learned to recognise in nearly all Shakespeare’s plays on the lips of so many avatars of Hamlet. One of these, Jacques in As You Like It (IV.1.15-18), defines melancholy in these terms:
“But it is a melancholy of mine own, compounded of many simples, extracted from many objects, and indeed the sundry contemplation of my travels, in which my often rumination wraps me in a most humorous sadness.”’
Calvino’s commentary on Jacques’ self-perception is peerless:
‘It is therefore not a dense, opaque melancholy, but a veil of minute particles of humours and sensations, a fine dust of atoms, like everything else that goes to make up the ultimate substance of the multiplicity of things.’
Ernest Thalayasingham MacIntyre certainly was attuned to and fascinated to the end by the ‘fine dust of atoms, by the veil of minute particles of humours and sensations,’ but one must also add to this, laughter.
by Laleen Jayamanne ✍️
Features
Lake-Side Gems
With a quiet, watchful eye,
The winged natives of the sedate lake,
Have regained their lives of joyful rest,
Following a storm’s battering ram thrust,
Singing that life must go on, come what may,
And gently nudging that picking up the pieces,
Must be carried out with the undying zest,
Of the immortal master-builder architect.
By Lynn Ockersz ✍️
Features
IPKF whitewashed in BJP strategy
A day after the UN freshly repeated the allegation this week that sexual violence had been “part of a deliberate, widespread, and systemic pattern of violations” by the Sri Lankan military and “may amount to war crimes and crimes against humanity,” India praised its military (IPKF) for the operations conducted in Sri Lanka during the 1987-1990 period.
Soon after, as if in an echo, Human Rights Watch (HRW) in a statement, dated January 15, 2026, issued from Geneva, quoted Meenakshi Ganguly, Deputy Asia Director at the organisation, as having said: “While the appalling rape and murder of Tamil women by Sri Lankan soldiers at the war’s end has long been known, the UN report shows that systematic sexual abuse was ignored, concealed, and even justified by Sri Lankan government’s unwillingness to punish those responsible.”
Ganguly, who had been with the Western-funded HRW since 2004 went on to say: “Sri Lanka’s international partners need to step up their efforts to promote accountability for war crimes in Sri Lanka.”
To point its finger at Sri Lanka, or for that matter any other weak country, HRW is not that squeaky clean to begin with. In 2012, Human Rights Watch (HRW) accepted a $470,000 donation from Saudi billionaire Mohamed Bin Issa Al Jaber with a condition that the funds are not be used for its work on LGBT rights in the Middle East and North Africa. The donation was kept largely internal until it was revealed by an internal leak published in 2020 by The Intercept. Its Executive Director Kenneth Roth got exposed for taking the kickback. It refunded the money to Al Jaber only after the sordid act was exposed.
The UN, too, is no angel either, as it continues to play deaf, dumb and blind at an intrepid pace to the continuing unprecedented genocide against Palestinians and other atrocities being committed in West Asia and other parts of the world by Western powers.
The HRW statement was headlined ‘Sri Lanka: ‘UN Finds Systemic Sexual Violence During Civil War’, with a strap line ‘Impunity Prevails for Abuses Against Women, Men; Survivors Suffer for Years’
HRW reponds
The HRW didn’t make any reference to the atrocities perpetrated during the Indian Army deployment here.
The Island sought Ganguly’s response to the following queries:
* Would you please provide the number of allegations relating to the period from July 1987 to March 1990 when the Indian Army had been responsible for the Northern and Eastern Provinces of Sri Lanka and the Sri Lanka military confined to their camps, in terms of the Indo-Lanka accord.
* Have you urged the government of India to take tangible measures against the Indian Army personnel for violations perpetrated in Sri Lanka?
* Would you be able to provide the number of complaints received from foreign citizens of Sri Lankan origin?
Meenakshi responded: Thanks so much for reaching out. Hope you have been well? We can’t speak about UN methodology. Please could you reach out to OHCHR. I am happy to respond regarding HRW policies, of course. We hope that Sri Lankan authorities will take the UN findings on conflict-related sexual violence very seriously, regardless of perpetrator, provide appropriate support to survivors, and ensure accountability.
Mantri on IPKF
The Indian statement, issued on January 14, 2026, on the role played by its Army in Sri Lanka, is of significant importance at a time a section of the international community is stepping up pressure on the war-winning country on the ‘human rights’ front.
Addressing about 2,500 veterans at Manekshaw Centre, New Delhi, Indian Defence Minister Raksha Mantri referred to the Indian Army deployment here whereas no specific reference was made to any other conflicts/wars where the Indian military fought. India lost about 1,300 officers and men here. At the peak of Indian deployment here, the mission comprised as many as 100,000 military personnel.
According to the national portal of India, Raksha Mantri remembered the brave ex-servicemen who were part of Operation Pawan launched in Sri Lanka for peacekeeping purposes as part of the Indian Peacekeeping Force (IPKF) almost 40 years ago. Mantri’s statement verbatim: “During the operation, the Indian forces displayed extraordinary courage. Many soldiers laid down their lives. Their valour, sacrifices and struggles did not receive the respect they deserved. Today, under the leadership of PM Modi, our government is not only openly acknowledging the contributions of the peacekeeping soldiers who participated in Operation Pawan, but is also in the process of recognising their contributions at every level. When PM Modi visited Sri Lanka in 2015, he paid his respects to the Indian soldiers at the IPKF Memorial. Now, we are also recognising the contributions of the IPKF soldiers at the National War Memorial in New Delhi and giving them the respect they deserv.e” (https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleseDetailm.aspx?PRID=2214529®=3&lang=2)
One-time President of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), and ex-Home Minister Mantri received the Defence Portfolio in 2019. There hadn’t been a similar statement from any Modi appointed Defence Minister since he became the Prime Minister in 2014.
Perhaps, we should remind Mantri that Operation Pawan hadn’t been launched for peacekeeping purposes and the Indian Army deployment here cannot be discussed without examining the treacherous Indian destabilisation project launched in the early ’80s.
Nothing can be further from the truth than the attempt to describe Operation Pawan as a peacekeeping mission. India destabilised and terrorised Sri Lanka to its heart’s content that the then President JRJ had no option but to accept the so-called Indo-Lanka accord and the deployment of the Indian Army here to supervise the disarming of terrorist groups sponsored by India. Once the planned disarming of terrorist groups went awry in August, 1987 and the LTTE engineered a mass suicide of a group of terrorists who had been held at Palaly airbase, thereby Indian peacekeeping mission was transformed to a military campaign.
Mantri, in his statement, referred to the Indian Army memorial at Battaramulla put up by Sri Lanka years ago. The Indian Defence Minister seems to be unaware of the first monument installed here at Palaly in memory of 33 Indian commandos of the 10 Indian Para Commando unit, including Lieutenant Colonel Arun Kumar Chhabra who died in a miscalculated raid on the Jaffna University at the commencement of Operation Pawan.
BJP politics
Against the backdrop of Mantri’s declaration that India recognised the IPKF at the National War Memorial in New Delhi, it would be pertinent to ask when that decision was taken. The BJP must have decided to accommodate the IPKF at the National War Memorial in New Delhi recently. Otherwise Mantri’s announcement would have been made earlier. Obviously, Modi, the longest serving non-Congress Prime Minister of India, didn’t feel the need to take up the issue vigorously during his first two terms. Modi won three consecutive terms in 2014, 2019 and 2024. Congress great Jawaharlal Nehru is the only other to win three consecutive parliamentary elections in 1951, 1957 and 1962.
The issue at hand is why India failed to recognise the IPKF at the National War Memorial for so long. The first National War Memorial had been built and inaugurated in January 1972 following the Indo-Pakistan war of 1971, but under Modi’s direction India set up a new memorial, spread over 40 acres of land near India Gate Circle. Modi completed the National War Memorial project during his first term.
No one would find fault with India for honouring those who paid the supreme sacrifice in Sri Lanka, but the fact that the deployment of the IPKF took place here under the overall destabilisation project cannot be forgotten. India cannot, under any circumstances, absolve itself of the responsibility for the death and destruction caused as a result of the decision taken by Indira Gandhi, in her capacity as the Prime Minister, to intervene in Sri Lanka. Her son Rajiv Gandhi, in his capacity as the Prime Minister, dispatched the IPKF here after Indian,trained terrorists terrorised the country. India exercised terrorism as an integral part of their overall strategy to compel Sri Lanka to accept the deployment of Indian forces here under the threat of forcible occupation of the Northern and Eastern provinces.
India could have avoided the ill-fated IPKF mission if Premier Rajiv Gandhi allowed the Sri Lankan military to finish off the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in 1987. Unfortunately, India carried out a forced air-drop over the Jaffna peninsula in June, 1987 to compel Sri Lanka to halt ‘Operation Liberation,’ at that time the largest ever ground offensive undertaken against the LTTE. Under Indian threat, Sri Lanka amended its Constitution by enacting the 13th Amendment that temporarily merged the Eastern Province with the Northern Province. That had been the long-standing demand of those who propagated separatist sentiments, both in and outside Parliament here. Don’t forget that the merger of the two provinces had been a longstanding demand and that the Indian Army was here to install an administration loyal to India in the amalgamated administrative unit.
The Indian intervention here gave the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) with an approving wink from Washington as India was then firmly in the Soviet orbit, an opportunity for an all-out insurgency burning anything and everything Indian in the South, including ‘Bombay onions’ as a challenge to the installation of the Eelam People’s Revolutionary Liberation front (EPRLF)-led administration in the North-East province in November 1988. How the Indian Army installed ex-terrorist Varatharaja Perumal’s administration and the formation of the so-called Tamil National Army (TNA) during the period leading to its withdrawal made the Indian military part of the despicable Sri Lanka destabilisation project.
The composition of the first NE provincial council underscored the nature of the despicable Indian operation here. The EPRLF secured 41 seats, the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress (SLMC) 17 seats, Eelam National Democratic Liberation Front (ENDLF) 12 and the United National Party (UNP) 1 in the 71-member council.
The Indian intelligence ran the show here. The ENDLF had been an appendage of the Indian intelligence and served their interests. The ENDLF that had been formed in Chennai (then Madras) by bringing in those who deserted EPRLF, PLOTE (People’s Liberation Organisation of Tamil Eelam) and Three Stars, a PLOTE splinter group led by Paranthan Rajan was accused of committing atrocities. Even Douglas Devananda, whose recent arrest over his failure to explain the disappearance of a weapon provided to him by the Sri Lanka Army, captured media attention, too, served the ENDLF for a short period. The ENDLF also contested the parliamentary polls conducted under Indian Army supervision in February 1989.
The ENDLF, too, pulled out of Sri Lanka along with the IPKF in 1990, knowing their fate at the hands of the Tigers, then honeymooning with Premadasa.
Dixit on Indira move
The late J.N. Dixit who was accused of behaving like a Viceroy when he served as India’s High Commissioner here (1985 to 1989) in his memoirs ‘Makers of India’s Foreign Policy: Raja Ram Mohun Roy to Yashwant Sinha’ was honest enough to explain the launch of Sri Lanka terrorism here.
In the chapter that also dealt with Sri Lanka, Dixit disclosed the hitherto not discussed truth. According to Dixit, the decision to militarily intervene had been taken by the late Indira Gandhi who spearheaded Indian foreign policy for a period of 15 years – from 1966 to 1977 and again from 1980 to 1984 (Indira was assassinated by her Sikh bodyguards in that year). That disastrous decision that caused so much death and destruction here and the assassination of her son Rajiv Gandhi had been taken during her second tenure (1980 to 1984) as the Prime Minister.
The BJB now seeking to exploit Indira Gandhi’s ill-fated decision probably taken at the onset of her second tenure as the Premier, came into being in 1980. Having described Gandhi’s decision to intervene in Sri Lanka as the most important development in India’s regional equations, one-time Foreign Secretary (December 1991 to January 1994) and National Security Advisor (May 2004 to January 2005) declared that Indian action was unavoidable.
Dixit didn’t mince his words when he mentioned the two major reasons for Indian intervention here namely (1) Sri Lanka’s oppressive and discriminating policies against Tamils and (2) developing security relationship with the US, Pakistan and Israel. Dixit, of course, didn’t acknowledge that there was absolutely no need for Sri Lanka to transform its largely ceremonial military to a lethal fighting force if not for the Indian destabilisation project. The LTTE wouldn’t have been able to enhance its fighting capabilities to wipe out a routine army patrol at Thinnaveli, Jaffna in July 1983, killing 13 men, including an officer, without Indian training. That was the beginning of the war that lasted for three decades.
Anti-India project
Dixit also made reference to the alleged Chinese role in the overall China-Pakistan project meant to fuel suspicions about India in Nepal and Bangladesh and the utilisation of the developing situation in Sri Lanka by the US and Pakistan to create, what Dixit called, a politico-strategic pressure point in Sri Lanka.
Unfortunately, Dixit didn’t bother to take into consideration Sri Lanka never sought to expand its armed forces or acquire new armaments until India gave Tamil terrorists the wherewithal to challenge and overwhelm the police and the armed forces. India remained as the home base of all terrorist groups, while those wounded in Sri Lanka were provided treatment in Tamil Nadu hospitals.
At the concluding section of the chapter, titled ‘AN INDOCENTRIC PRACTITIONER OF REALPOLITIK,’ Dixit found fault with Indira Gandhi for the Sri Lanka destabilisation project. Let me repeat what Dixit stated therein. The two foreign policy decisions on which she could be faulted are: her ambiguous response to the Russian intrusion into Afghanistan and her giving active support to Sri Lanka Tamil militants. Whatever the criticisms about these decisions, it cannot be denied that she took them on the basis of her assessments about India’s national interests. Her logic was that she could not openly alienate the former Soviet Union when India was so dependent on that country for defense supplies and technologies. Similarly, she could not afford the emergence of Tamil separatism in India by refusing to support the aspirations of Sri Lankan Tamils. These aspirations were legitimate in the context of nearly fifty years of Sinhalese discrimination against Sri Lankan Tamils.
The writer may have missed Dixit’s invaluable assessment if not for the Indian External Affairs Ministry presenting copies of ‘Makers of India’s Foreign Policy: Raja Ram Mohun Roy to Yashwant Sinha’ to a group of journalists visiting New Delhi in 2006. New Delhi arranged that visit at the onset of Eelam War IV in mid-2006. Probably, Delhi never considered the possibility of the Sri Lankan military bringing the war to an end within two years and 10 months. Regardless of being considered invincible, the LTTE, lost its bases in the Eastern province during the 2006-2007 period and its northern bases during the 2007-2009 period. Those who still cannot stomach Sri Lanka’s triumph over separatist Tamil terrorism, propagate unsubstantiated allegations pertaining to the State backing excesses against the Tamil community.
There had been numerous excesses and violations on the part of the police and the military. There is no point in denying such excesses happened during the police and military action against the JVP terrorists and separatist Tamil terrorists. However, sexual violence hadn’t been State policy at any point of the military campaigns or post-war period. The latest UN report titled ‘ACCOUNTABILITY FOR CONFLICT RELATED VIOLENCE IN SRI LANKA’ is the latest in a long series of post-war publications that targeted the war-winning military. Unfortunately, the treacherous Sirisena-Wickremesinghe Yahapalana government endorsed the Geneva accountability resolution against Sri Lanka in October 2015. Their despicable action caused irreversible damage and the ongoing anti-Sri Lanka project should be examined taking into consideration the post-war Geneva resolution.
By Shamindra Ferdinando ✍️
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