Editorial
Wheels within wheels

Wednesday 9th March, 2022
Sri Lanka-UNHRC relations have been replete with complexities, irony, policy contradictions and volte face. Mahinda Rajapaksa went to the UNHRC during the JVP’s reign of terror (1987-89) as part of a campaign to bring international pressure to bear on the late President Ranasinghe Premadasa to stop suppressing democracy on the pretext of fighting southern terrorism. After becoming the President, Rajapaksa started condemning those who complained to the UNHRC about human rights violations as traitors. During the Premadasa government’s brutal counterterror campaign against the JVP, the LTTE defended Sri Lanka at the UNHRC to the hilt! Pro-LTTE activists are now pushing for UNHRC resolutions against this country.
Politicians and terrorists are not alone in making policy contradictions and about-turns anent the UNHRC. One may recall that on 05 March, 2014, Archbishop of Colombo His Eminence Malcolm Cardinal Ranjith lashed out at those who internationalised Sri Lanka’s internal problems, which, he said, could be solved without any foreign intervention. He said several nations had introduced a resolution against Sri Lanka, calling for an international investigation into allegations of human rights violations, and if any citizen in Sri Lanka attempted to take internal conflicts outside or bring external conflicts inside, such actions would create space for arbitrary international intervention in a sovereign nation. It is a supreme irony that exactly eight years on, the Cardinal has had to call for UNHRC assistance to have the Easter Sunday attacks probed properly, the masterminds behind them traced and justice served!
The baffling complexity of the Easter Sunday terror attacks is clear from the shifting perceptions thereof. First, the Archbishop of Colombo declared that the Easter Sunday carnage was part of an international conspiracy. Speaking at St. Sebastian’s Church, Katuwapitiya, on 21 July 2019, he flayed President Maithripala Sirisena and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe for failing to resist the foreign conspiracy to destabilise the country. He also blamed them for having weakened and demoralised the intelligence services to please their international partners and NGOs. He said he would not accept the findings of the commissions appointed by President Sirisena and Parliament, and criticised the UN for being more interested in the welfare of the terror suspects taken into custody than in helping the victims of the Easter Sunday attacks. Later, testifying before the Presidential Commission of Inquiry (PCoI), the Cardinal reiterated his position.
The witnesses who stated there had been ‘an external hand or conspiracy behind the attacks’, according to the PCoI, were the Archbishop of Colombo, former President Sirisena, former Minister Rauf Hakeem, former Minister Rishad Bathiudeen, former Governor Azath Salley, SJB MP Mujibur Rahman, former SIS Director SDIG Nilantha Jayawardena, former STF Commandant SDIG M. R. Lateef, former Chief of Defence Staff Admiral Ravindra Wijegunaratne, former SDIG CID Ravi Seneviratne and former CID Director Shani Abeysekera.
Subsequently, the National Committee for Easter Sunday attacks, in a letter to President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, raised several questions, based on statements made by four Opposition politicians—Champika Ranawaka, Anura Kumara Dissanayake, Manusha Nanayakkara and Harin Fernando—in Parliament casting suspicions on the intelligence services. The signatories including the Cardinal demanded to know whether investigations had been conducted to find out if an intelligence officer had met Jamil, the suicide bomber, who had been detailed to attack Taj Samudra; they also stressed the need for identifying an intelligence officer, known as ‘Sonic-Sonic’, who had met a National Thowheed Jamaath member, called Zahran II, allegedly responsible for persuading the ISIS to take responsibility for the Easter Sunday attacks.
In his statement at the UNHRC, the Archbishop of Colombo has mentioned a political conspiracy. He has said, “The first impression of this massacre was that it was purely the work of a few Islamic extremists. However, subsequent investigations indicate that this massacre was part of a grand political plot.” He has repeated what Attorney General Dappula de Livera said about the terror attacks. The government insists that the mastermind behind the Easter Sunday attacks is Naufer Moulavi, who is in custody, but others claim he is not the one who masterminded the carnage. Wheels within wheels!
Police investigations into the Easter Sunday carnage are still on, and they may drag on indefinitely. Those who are seeking justice are not ready to wait any longer as evident from the Cardinal’s appeal to the UNHRC. The government ought to be flexible and considerate enough to heed the concerns of the Church leaders, the surviving victims and the family members of those who perished in the terror attacks; the only way to allay their doubts and suspicions may be to launch a fresh probe into the Easter Sunday carnage and conduct it in a transparent manner. The government should be able to do so if it has nothing to hide.
Editorial
People have spoken

Thursday 8th May, 2025
Sri Lankans have spoken, and what they have said is being interpreted in different ways. That the ruling NPP would be the overall winner in Tuesday’s local government (LG) polls was a foregone conclusion. Its stunning win in last year’s general election, where it obtained 159 out of 225 seats in Parliament, was still fresh when the country went to the polls again. A decline in its vote share was also expected. The Opposition managed to recover lost ground to some extent, but it has a long way to go before it can make a decisive comeback.
JVP General Secretary Tilvin Silva, addressing a press conference yesterday morning, sought to downplay the NPP’s failure to prevent a drastic drop in its vote share during the past six months or so; he claimed that the local government polls were called ‘village elections’, where voters were swayed by various factors other than national issues. That may be generally so, but the NPP made an otherwise grassroots level voting event assume the same importance as a national election, with President Anura Kumara Dissanayake himself leading its LG election campaign. The President and Prime Minister Harini Amarasuriya fervently appealed to the people to vote for the NPP in the LG elections and help consolidate its hold on power. The NPP polled 6.86 million votes (61.56%) in the last parliamentary election, but it could obtain only 4.5 million votes (43.2%) in Tuesday’s LG polls.
Tilvin argued that the NPP’s performance had been better than the SLPP’s in the 2018 LG polls. What he left unsaid was that the SLPP polled 44.6% of votes and secured 231 councils and 3,360 seats while it was in the Opposition, with the UNP-led Yahapalana government and President Maithripala Sirisena going all out to queer the pitch for it. In contrast, the NPP faced Tuesday’s LG polls after winning a presidential election and parliamentary polls late last year. It won 266 councils with 3,926 members. However, it will be able to form stable administrations on its own in only about 133 LG institutions, according to reports available at the time of going to press. This figure is subject to change.
Many local councils, including the Colombo MC are hung, and their members will have to elect their heads. The NPP, which has condemned all its political rivals as rogues, will not be able to enlist the support of the Opposition members to muster working majorities in such councils.
The NPP has come to terms with the fact that its popularity is on the wane, and growing public disillusionment is beginning to weigh on its government. Votes it polled in the North and the East in the last general election helped it secure a two-thirds majority in Parliament. Its support base has shrunk significantly in those parts of the country, where the traditional Tamil political parties have made a comeback. The ITAK has secured 307,657 votes (2.96%) and 377 seats; it has won 37 councils.
The NPP did everything in its power to win the LG polls. The President, the Prime Minister, and all MPs including ministers, were actively involved in its election campaign; the government obviously outspent its rivals in electioneering, gave pay hikes to state workers and subsidies to farmers, put on a mammoth show of strength on May Day, held a relic exposition, branded the Opposition as a bunch of thieves and promised jobs to the youth. Most of all, President Dissanayake himself issued a veiled threat of fund restrictions for the councils to be won by parties other than the NPP. But the government failed to achieve the desired result. Instead of trying to mislead the public, the NPP should figure out what the people have given it a knock for, work on its mistakes and improve its performance. Mere rhetoric won’t do.
Similarly, the Opposition should stop labouring under the delusion that the NPP’s broken promises, the anti-incumbency factor and adverse social media campaigns against the NPP leaders, will enable it to turn the tables on the incumbent government. The SJB, the SLPP, the UNP, etc., have been able to improve their electoral performance significantly, compared to that in the last general election, but they have a lot more ground to cover before they can savour power. The SJB’s votes have increased from 1.9 million (17.66%) in last year’s parliamentary election to 2.2 million (21.6%). The SJB has secured 14 local councils, but it would have been able to bag some more if it had changed its campaign strategy and worked harder. The SLPP, too, has made significant gains; its votes have increased from 350,429 (3.14%) in last year’s general election to 954,517 (9.17%).
The Opposition parties, too, would do well to heed the message the people have conveyed; they have to work harder to win back public trust and secure enough popular support to win elections.
Thankfully, another election has passed without violence or rigging. The Election Commission and the police deserve praise for a job well done.
Editorial
Hurtful propaganda

Wednesday 7th May, 2025
Smearing opponents has become the dominant form of electioneering in Sri Lanka. All political parties unflinchingly resort to mud-slinging during election campaigns, and they are quite adept at making lies indistinguishable from the truth. They float various claims and counterclaims, and leave the public confused and unable to make informed decisions in elections.
One of former President Ranil Wickremesinghe’s close aides, Thusitha Halloluwa, created quite a stir on the eve of Tuesday’s local government polls. He levelled a very serious allegation against President Anura Kumara Dissanayake himself; Dissanayake had made a questionable investment in Greece while calling the Opposition politicians corrupt, he said.
The government let out a howl of protest, and lost no time in reporting Halloluwa to the CID, which amply demonstrated its selective efficiency once again by launching a prompt investigation into the NPP’s complaint. Halloluwa has been summoned to the CID. Having claimed that he has irrefutable evidence to support his claim, he will have to disclose it when he visits the CID today. Will the CID act in a similar manner if complaints are made against the government politicians that they have made statements derogatory of Opposition politicians?
Unsubstantiated allegations against key opposition figures formed a central pillar of the NPP’s election platform. Some NPP politicians claimed that the Rajapaksa family had stashed away billions of dollars in Uganda, and asked for a mandate to bring the stolen money back. Later, one of the NPP MPs who propagated that claim admitted that she had told the public a lie, and argued that anyone had a right to lie! The NPP carried out such propaganda attacks on its political rivals relentlessly, and the media gave them wide publicity, helping it turn public opinion in its favour. What if the Opposition politicians also make complaints to the CID that the NPP made false allegations against them?
Some NPP notables even made complaints to the CID about an alleged conspiracy to tarnish their reputation; they claimed that the Opposition was employing devious methods to have the public believe that they were falsely claiming academic titles. It is doubtful whether the CID has any time left for its regular duties and functions after it investigates government leaders’ complaints against their opponents.
Hardly a day passes without an underworld killing being reported. On Monday, a gunman killed a youth in what resembled a scene from a 1920s Chicago gangster film. CCTV footage shows the victim running away after being shot twice, in Mount Lavinia, and the gunman running after him and shooting him at close range on the Galle Road. These killings show how bold crime syndicates and their death squads have become of late. The police and the CID are apparently not up to the task of neutralising the nether world of narcotics and crime. So, it is hoped that the police will concentrate more on their operations against organised criminal gangs while investigating complaints from government politicians.
The police set up a special unit called the FCID (Financial Crimes Investigation Division) to probe allegations of corruption against the political opponents of the UNP-led Yahapalana government, which the JVP also backed. Given the sheer amount of political work the CID has to handle at present, it looks as if the police had to set up a special unit to probe complaints from the ruling party members so that the CID can devote more time to criminal investigations. That unit can be called the PCID (Political Complaints Investigation Division).
Some media rights groups have expressed serious concern about reports that the government is contemplating legal action against the media outfits that carried Halloluwa’s claim. One of the main reasons why the NPP succeeded in winning elections was wide media coverage of its unsubstantiated allegations against its rivals. So, the question is whether the NPP, which came to power, with the help of social media and a section of the mainstream media, has any moral right to institute legal action against the media for relaying unproven allegations.
Editorial
An election day thought

Tuesday 6th May, 2025
Elections to 339 local government (LG) institutions are set to take place today––at long last. The terms of the local councils, which were last elected in 2018, lapsed in 2022, but the then SLPP government extended them by one year. In 2023, President Ranil Wickremesinghe derailed the LG polls by refusing to allocate funds. A legal battle resulted in the Supreme Court ordering, last year, that the LG elections be held soon.
As many as 75,589 candidates are vying for 8,287 seats in local councils; there are 4,877 wards in all LG institutions. Having campaigned really hard, the main political parties claim to be confident of victory, but many councils are likely to be hung.
The LG polls are held under the mixed proportional system—60% of the councillors are elected on the ward basis under the first-past-the-post system; others are elected under the Proportional Representation system. The new electoral system has led to a two-fold increase in the number of local council members.
Sri Lanka has too many politicians and state employees, as is public knowledge. It is popularly said in this country that ‘if one kicks a wayside bush at random, more than a dozen politicians and state employees will jump out’. The ratio of state employees to citizens is 1:15. There are 225 MPs, 455 provincial councillors, and about 8,287 local council members. There is no fixed number of LG members; the number tends to increase due to the new electoral system, which allows for overhang seats––the LG members elected on the ward basis from a political party or an independent group in excess of its entitlement under the PR system.
It does not make sense to maintain so many elected people’s representatives at the national, provincial and grassroots levels.
The National List (NL), which provides for the appointment of 29 MPs on the basis of political parties’ or independent groups’ shares of the nationwide votes in parliamentary polls, has been abused all these years to appoint defeated candidates and others to Parliament. Some NL appointments even undermine the Constitution; political parties craftily use Section 64 (5) of the Parliamentary Elections Act No 1 of 1981, as amended in 1988, to fill NL vacancies which are engineered, in most cases, to circumvent Article 99A of the Constitution; thus, the persons of party leaders’ choice are appointed to Parliament via the NL. This sordid practice has severely eroded public trust in the electoral process. Successive governments have not cared to amend the Parliamentary Elections Act and the Constitution to prevent defeated candidates and others from being appointed as NL MPs, and therefore the NL mechanism should be done away with.
The Provincial Council (PC) system has become a white elephant, but successive governments have considered it a fait accompli due to Indian pressure. All nine PCs have functioned without elected representatives since 2017! Even the JVP, which is currently in power, as the main constituent of the NPP coalition, has bitten the bullet and chosen to ensure the perpetuation of the PC system, which it went all out to sabotage, albeit in vain, by unleashing mindless terror and destroying lives, in the late 1980s. Serious thought should be given to reducing the number of PC members.
The number of LG members must also be reduced drastically. Many local council wards can be merged, especially in urban areas.
There have been campaigns for controlling the populations of crop-raiding wild animals, such as monkeys. Curiously, no such effort has ever been made to reduce the number of people’s elected representatives, who cause far worse damage to the economy than all crop-depredating wildlife combined. The same goes for the ever-burgeoning public service, which has become a metaphor for inefficiency.
As for today’s election, every vote counts. Happy voting!
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