Sinopec opens first renovated filling station with new image, facilities

Sinopec Lanka Energy Ltd., yesterday inaugurated its first renovated filling station at a grand re-opening ceremony in Trans Lanka Filling Station, Nawagamuwa, witnessing a major milestone on the company’s first anniversary since entering into Sri Lanka.

After seven months of smooth operation of all 150 stations, this new completion highlights Sinopec’s long-term commitment in revitalising the country’s energy sector. With continuous investments in renovation projects, facilities upgrading, and health, safety and environmental improvements, Sinopec empowers the sustained growth of dealers and partners.

Sinopec’s renovation principles encompass the exterior image and facilities upgrade, the unseen safety measurements that significantly improve safety and environmental protection standards and the training and development of the human resources.

Looking ahead, Sinopec plans to renovate the remaining 149 filling stations over the next three years and explore opportunities for 50 brand new stations. A vocational training and qualification grade system to fuel station staff will be built to help develop a more skilled workforce for the energy sector. A comprehensive customer service centre, which will be equipped with support in multiple languages is also to be introduced to effectively address inquiries from customers and dealers alike.

Sinopec Energy Lanka General Manager Wang Haini said: “Sinopec’s efforts in Sri Lanka are part of its broader commitment to enhancing the energy landscape through strategic investments in infrastructure and human capital development. Sinopec will be devoted to shaping high standards in Sri Lanka’s Petroleum Industry under the guidance of Ministry of Power and Energy and empowering Sri Lanka.”

She reaffirmed Sinopec’s dedication to a sustainable and prosperous future for Sri Lanka. Following the event, Sinopec extended its support to the local community by providing drinking water and food rations to those affected by the recent floods.

The celebration was graced by the State Minister D. V. Chanaka, Chinese Embassy Counsellor in charge of Economic Affairs Tang He Li and other distinguished guests.

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Russo-Ukraine conflict: Russia admits SL combatants’ part of state armed forces

Russian authorities have indicated to their Sri Lankan counterparts that a number of Sri Lankan ex-servicemen who travelled to the country are currently members of the Russian armed forces and are engaged in combat, The Daily Morning reliably learns.

The confirmation comes following a high-level meeting between Russian authorities and a group of diplomats from the Sri Lankan mission in Moscow last Thursday (30 May) evening, a senior government official close to the matter disclosed to The Daily Morning. During a press conference last week, State Minister for Foreign Affairs Tharaka Balasuriya told the media that Sri Lanka would approach the said meeting with an aim of getting clarification on if Sri Lankan ex-servicemen are indeed part of the Russian armed forces and to explore options to see them removed from front line service. Sri Lanka had also wanted to seek information on casualties and possible repatriation of wounded Sri Lankan nationals.

“Basically, it is now certain that they were recruited by the Russian government forces, and not a PMC (Private Military Contractor) like Wagner. They (Russian authorities) have confirmed the presence of Sri Lanka ex-servicemen in their fighting formations and that they are in it (combat). They have said that those who are there have signed agreements and they are bound by them. So, they have said our chaps can’t desert their posts and leave as they wish. Such moves have to be approved by the Russian military command,” the senior government official told The Daily Morning.

Many of the nearly 1,000 (known) Sri Lankan ex-servicemen who were scammed into travelling to Russia, under the pretext of being employed for administrative and logistic duties, have been pushed into front line combat on the Ukrainian front, with a number of injuries reported. Last week, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs stated that 16 Sri Lankans who have travelled to Russia under such pretext are believed to be ‘missing’, with a hotline established on the issue receiving nearly 460 complaints thus far about Lankans in Russian service, and one about a Sri Lankan in the service of Ukrainian forces.

Last week, Russian Ambassador to Colombo Levan Dzhagaryan fronted the press in Colombo with State Minister for Foreign Affairs Tharaka Balasuriya, where he strongly claimed that he was not aware of the type of agreements which the Sri Lankan ex-servicemen had signed to seek employment with Russian forces. He said he was awaiting information from Moscow and could not speak to the legality of such agreements. Dzhagaryan stressed that the Russian embassy in Colombo was not aware of such agreements when granting visas for the hundreds of Sri Lankans who have found their way into the ranks of the Russian armed forces. When asked about Russia’s policy on mercenaries fighting for them, Dzhagaryan stated that the Russian Government did not have an issue with ‘volunteers’ joining their ranks, pointing out that Ukraine had thousands of foreigners amongst their ranks.

It is learnt that many of those who made the journey to Russia, after getting a visit visa from the Russian embassy in Colombo, had signed an agreement which was drafted in English and did not specify they have to engage in combat duties. Many who did sign it have been promised Russian citizenship, pay in US dollars and the prospects of getting their families over, after a while. However, it is learnt that upon arriving in Russia, they have had to sign a Russian language Military Service contract, which had enlisted them into Russian armed forces service, and thereby are placed under Russian federal law and military law. As such, a quick repatriation of those in front line service in Russian seems a distant proposition at this stage. It learnt that some elements of the domestic law enforcement agencies who are investigating the scam and those arrested linked to it, view the scam as one that fits the ‘human trafficking’ category due to the misinformation and failure to inform the employee of the status and nature of the work he or she is travelling for. However, investigations are still ongoing and are in early stages.

A high-power Sri Lankan government delegation led by State Minister Tharaka Balasuriya was making plans to travel to Russia this week (5). During the Press conference Balasuriya said they were awaiting a confirmation of appointments from Moscow to meet with senior Russian diplomats and defence officials. However, it is now learnt Russia has not approved the meeting sought for this week, and that instead has given an appointment for the 26 June, a move a senior diplomat called ‘a delaying tactic’. Due to the change in appointments, Sri Lanka will have to reschedule the travel plans of the delegation.

“One victory for us, is that we have got them (Russia) to agree that they will screen our combat aged men when they apply for a travel visa. This will essentially stem the flow to Russia of our ex-servicemen. But getting back those who have already gone, will be a challenging task,” the diplomat opined.

Politicians who backed away after ’Aragalaya’ raising their heads again: Anura Kumara

Claiming that corrupt and rowdy politicians who backed away after the ‘Aragalaya’ have started to raise their heads again, NPP leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake said today that if the true aspirations of the Aragalaya are to be fulfilled, a government which maintains the true objective of the people’s uprising should be established.

Speaking at the NPP youth rally in Kurunegala, he said the National People’s Power (NPP) is the only political force and the government which could uphold the true aspirations of the people’s uprising in 2022.

He said politicians have not learnt any lessons from the Argalaya and said that instead they are humiliating the people’s uprising, claiming it an uprising of drug addicts.

Dissanayake said the people, especially the youth took to the streets for common aspirations without allegiance to any political force and added that however, they had aspirations for a good political situation.

“People expected a disciplined and lawful country free of fraud and corruption. They took to the streets for a common social objective. The rulers did not realise that. They humiliated it and said drug addicts and prostitutes engaged in the Aragalaya. These rulers never learnt a lesson even from such a massive uprising,” he said.

He said the politicians were marching along the same old path even after the Aragalaya where they have started to supress the people using their power and have started to sell state property.

Post-war reconciliation: Govt. ponders judicial powers for TRC, special court

Director General of the Interim Secretariat for the Truth and Reconciliation Mechanism (ISTRM), Dr. Asanga Gunawansa, PC, says the draft of the law to establish a Commission for Truth, Unity and Reconciliation in Sri Lanka can be amended to enable the proposed Commission for Truth, Unity and Reconciliation (CTUR) to have prosecutorial and/or judicial powers. Otherwise, a special court could be established to address the need, Dr. Gunawansa told The Island.

The top official said so in response to our query based on President Ranil Wickremesinghe’s recent declaration at the inauguration of the Clinical Training and Research Block at the Faculty of Medicine, University of Jaffna that his government was considering whether the TRC should wield judicial authority or a separate court should be set up based on TRC recommendations.

The President’s Media Division (PMD) quoted Wickremesinghe as having said he had tasked the relevant ministers in consultation with parliamentarians and ambassadors to draft legislation for parliamentary review. The President declared that the decision on prosecutorial and/or judicial powers for CTUR or special court was of paramount importance. Among those present on the occasion were Tamil National Alliance (TNA) lawmakers, M. A. Sumanthiran, PC, and Dharmalingham Siddharthan representing the Illankai Thamil Arasu Kachchi and People’s Liberation of Organization for Tamil Eelam (PLOTE), respectively. Eelam People’s Democratic Party (EPDP) leader Douglas Devananda was also present.

Asked to explain the status of the ongoing deliberations on the issues pertaining to prosecutorial and/or judicial powers for CTUR or establishment of a special court, Dr. Gunawansa said this was a matter that should be decided by the government.

The President’s Counsel said: “As any law to come into operation required the approval of the Parliament, it is eventually up to the Parliament to decide whether the proposed law should have provisions which enabled the CTUR to wield judicial power or for that purpose or the establishment of a special court. If a special court is to be established, then the relevant articles in the Constitution as well as the Judicature Act amongst other relevant laws may have to be carefully considered.”

Dr. Gunawansa added: “The objectives of any system of transitional justice are to provide for a platform for establishing truth, reconciliation, reparation for victims, taking measures for non-recurrence of violence and abuse of human rights and enabling legal action against abusers of human rights and criminal offenders.”

Responding to another query, the ISTRM Chief disclosed that the current draft of the proposed law that has been gazetted did not go as far as establishing a separate court. However, it included provisions which enabled the relevant competent authorities such as the Attorney General and the Police to consider criminal action pursuant to investigations based on information revealed during the truth-seeking process followed by the Commission and on the recommendations made by the Commission, Dr. Gunawansa said.

However, as the President declared in Jaffna, if pursuant to the consolations and discussions with the relevant stakeholders if it is felt that the proposed commission should have prosecutorial and/or judicial powers or in the alternative, a special court should be established for such purpose, then provisions can be introduced to the current draft of the law before it is presented to the Parliament, the official said.

Pointing out that the current draft of the proposed law had been initially developed over a period of time immensely aided by more than 7000 consultations conducted by the Consultations Task Force on Reconciliation Mechanisms (CTFRM) that was headed by the late Manouri Muttetuwegama. The CTFRM’s final report was presented in Nov 2016.

Since the establishment of the ISTRM in September 2023, under Dr. Gunawansa’s leadership the outfit has carried out approximately 65 consultations with the stakeholders and organized three discussion forums to engage with the interested parties to seek their views on the draft bill and the need for establishing a credible truth-seeking mechanism. ISTRM in line with its overall strategy has given a series of interviews to present the key features of the draft bill to the public.

Commenting on President Wickremesinghe declaration that the issues at hand were complex therefore demanded collective cooperation and engagement from all stakeholders and he discussed this matter with the members of Parliament from the North and the East, Dr. Gunawansa said that establishment of a system of transitional justice focusing inter alia on reconciliation and non-recurrence of violence required consensus amongst all stakeholders.

The armed forces brought the war to a successful conclusion in May 2009.

Dr. Gunawansa said; The ethnic issue and the related violence and civil war like situation that prevailed in the island during the period 1983 to 2009 has several root causes that needs careful consideration and they need to be addressed by implementing measures acceptable to all stakeholders. Even though we feel that there is peace in the island, especially in the north and the East since 2009, there are victims of violence and war from all races and ethnicities of our country spread out all over the island and these victims have continuing grievances which need to be addressed.

“It is in order to address the aforesaid concerns that the Cabinet under the guidance of the President has decided to present a law to establish a Commission for Truth, Unity and Reconciliation in Sri Lanka, to the Parliament for consideration and approval by the Parliament. This law is currently ready as a concept paper and has been Gazetted in all three languages to bring it into public domain so that all relevant stakeholders, including victims, civil society organisations, and politicians could examine it, comment on it and make suggestions.”

Referring to President Wickremesinghe reference to economic hardships and the failure on the part of successive governments to allocate required funds for the post-war reconciliation process, Dr. Gunawansa said in spite of difficulties the government established ISTRM to lay the foundation for setting up the CTUR, subject to the proposed law being approved by the Parliament.Dr. Gunawansa appreciated the support extended by President Wickremesinghe, Foreign Minister Ali Sabry, PC, and Justice Minister Dr. Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe, PC.

Severe weather claims 15 lives, affects thousands countrywide

The Disaster Management Centre (DMC) yesterday announced that severe weather conditions have resulted in 15 deaths and 23 injuries across the Sabaragamuwa, Northern, Western, Southern, North Western, Central, North Central, Uva and Eastern provinces.

A total of 3,727 families, comprising 11,864 individuals, have been impacted by the adverse weather.

In response, 2,611 people have been relocated to 21 designated safety locations.

The DMC evacuated residents from flood-prone areas along the Kalu, Gin, Nilwala and Kelani Rivers to safer places.

“General public is kindly requested to take adequate precautions to minimise damages caused by temporary localised strong winds and lightning during thundershowers,” the DMC noted in its general weather forecast.

Maximum rainfall 436.5 mm reported from Eheliyagoda area. The CEB said flood-affected area electricity supply was suspended as a precautionary measure.

The Meteorology Department has issued a ‘Red Alert’ for heavy rainfall, predicting showers exceeding 150 mm in the Western, Sabaragamuwa and North Western provinces, as well as in the Galle and Matara districts.

Consequently, the Education Ministry announced the closure of schools countrywide today (3).

The National Building Research Organisation (NBRO) issued a ‘Red Alert’ for landslides in Colombo, Ratnapura and Kalutara districts, insisting residents in identified areas to safer places.

Police Media Spokesman Nihal Thalduwa announced the establishment of a Special Operations Room with hotlines 0112-421820 and 0112-421111 for affected residents to seek assistance and coordinate with disaster relief groups.

President Ranil Wickremesinghe yesterday directed the Finance Ministry Secretary to promptly allocate funds to the District Secretaries to provide urgent assistance to those impacted by the adverse weather.

He also instructed relevant officials to collaborate with the Tri-Forces and Police to reconstruct all houses completely destroyed due to adverse weather, utilising Government funds, within the next two months.

The Irrigation Department issued flood warnings for several areas due to significant rainfall in the catchment areas of major rivers. Specific flood warnings include:

Kalu Ganga – Pelmadulla, Nivithigala, Elapatha, Kuruvita, Ratnapura, Ayagama, Ingiriya, Horana, Dodangoda and Millaniya DS areas.

Nilwala River – Pasgoda, Kotapola, Pitabeddara, Akuressa, Athuraliya, Malimbada, Kamburupitiya, Thihagoda, Matara and Devinuwara DS areas.

Kelani River – Dehiowita, Ruwanwella, Seethawaka, Dompe, Homagama, Kaduwela, Biyagama, Kolonnawa and Wattala DS areas.

Gin Ganga – Neluwa, Thawalama, Nagoda, Niyagama, Welivitiya-Divithura, Elpitiya, Akmeemana, Baddegama and Bope-Poddala DS areas.

Sri Lanka Railways reported that train services on the Kelani Valley line are limited to Waga railway station due to a bridge collapse between Waga and Kosgama, further complicating transportation amid the ongoing weather crisis.

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Schools across Sri Lanka closed owing to adverse weather

Schools across Sri Lanka were instructed to be closed, Monday, owing to adverse weather.

Flash floods wreaked havoc across Sri Lanka, Sunday, killing 14 people, with rivers overflowing and major cities, including parts of Colombo being inundated.

Among those killed were three people of the same family in Puwakpitiya.

The Department of Meteorology said that over 400 mm of rain was experienced in some parts of the country.

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History in flames: remembering the burning of Jaffna Library

At midnight on May 31, 1981, the Jaffna Public Library, the crucible of Tamil literature and heritage, was set ablaze by Sri Lankan security forces and state-sponsored mobs. The burning has since been marked by Eelam Tamils as an act of genocide.

Over 97,000 unique and irreplaceable Tamil palm leaves (ola), manuscripts, parchments, books, magazines and newspapers, housed within an impressive building inspired by ancient Dravidian architecture, were destroyed during the burning. Some texts that were kept in the library, such as the Yalpanam Vaipavamalai (a history of Jaffna), were literally irreplaceable, being the only copies in existence. It was one of the largest libraries in Asia.

The destruction took place under the rule of the UNP at a time when District Development Council elections were underway, and two notorious Sinhala chauvinist cabinet ministers – Cyril Mathew and Gamini Dissanayake – were in Jaffna. Earlier on in the day, three Sinhalese police officers were killed during a rally by the TULF (Tamil United Liberation Front).

Nancy Murray, a western author, wrote at the time ”uniformed security men and plainclothes thugs carried out some well organised acts of destruction”.

“They burned to the ground certain chosen targets – including the Jaffna Public Library, with its 95,000 volumes and priceless manuscripts…no mention of this appeared in the national newspapers, not even the burning of the library, the symbol of Tamils’ cultural identity. The government delayed bringing in emergency rule until 2 June, by which time the key targets had been destroyed.”

The burning continued unchecked for two nights.

Homes and shops across Jaffna town were also set alight by the mob, including the TULF headquarters and the offices of the Eelanadu newspaper.

Virginia Leary wrote in Ethnic Conflict and Violence in Sri Lanka – Report of a Mission to Sri Lanka on behalf of the International Commission of Jurists, July/August 1981, that “the destruction of the Jaffna Public Library was the incident, which appeared to cause the most distress to the people of Jaffna.”

The Movement for Inter-racial Justice and Equality said in a report, after sending a delegation to Jaffna,

“If the Delegation were asked which act of destruction had the greatest impact on the people of Jaffna, the answer would be the savage attack on this monument to the learning and culture and the desire for learning and culture of the people of Jaffna… There is no doubt that the destruction of the Library will leave bitter memories behind for many years.”

The scholar and community leader, Reverend Father David reportedly died from shock days after the incineration of his beloved institution. While his statue in the library courtyard is surrounded now by the spirit-soothing greens of local flora, his demise epitomises the loss suffered by every member of the Tamil nation alive on that day, and each generation born afterwards: the irrevocable loss of memories, of the lives and deaths of our predecessors, of the beauty they created as well as of the destruction they may have wreaked.

In 2001, then mayor of Jaffna Nadarajah Raviraj stated that the burning “is in my memory”. ”Still I feel like crying after 20 years,” he said. Mr Raviraj was assassinated in Colombo in November 2006. Still no-one has been held accountable for his murder.

Indian police uncover plot to murder Salman Khan and escape to Sri Lanka

AK-47 and M-16 rifles from Pakistan, minor sharpshooters and an escape plan to Sri Lanka – Indian police have uncovered chilling details of an assassination plot to kill Bollywood actor Salman Khan.

The Lawrence Bishnoi gang had allegedly conspired to strike Mr Khan’s car in Maharashtra’s Panvel, armed with weapons sourced from a Pakistani arms supplier.

The intricate plan, allegedly hatched by the Lawrence Bishnoi gang, involved a sophisticated network of operatives and a cache of high-powered weapons. According to Navi Mumbai police sources, the gang enlisted the help of 60 to 70 individuals, each assigned specific roles in the execution of the diabolical plot.

Central to the scheme was the use of minors as shooters. The plan aimed to strike at Mr Khan’s vehicle in Panvel or target his secluded farmhouse.

Among those arrested in connection with this are Dhananjay Tapesingh alias Ajay Kashyap, Gaurav Bhatia alias Nahvi, Vapsi Khan alias Waseem Chikna, and Rizwan Khan, each believed to have played a key role in the plot. Lawrence Bishnoi, who is currently in jail, his cousin Anmol Bishnoi, and associate Goldie Brar, allegedly facilitated the acquisition of the deadly weapons from the Pakistani dealer known only as Dogar.

Kashyap, a key member of the Bishnoi gang, lived in Navi Mumbai’s Kalamboli. He was in touch with a person identified as Sukha Shooter, who has Bishnoi’s photo as his profile picture. Kashyap and his cohorts held clandestine meetings in strategic locations such as the Panvel bus stand and railway station, plotting to execute their plans, including reconnaissance of Salman Khan’s properties.

Their footprint extends across multiple states and borders, with Kashyap’s trail leading to illegal arms depots in Kashmir, Ganganagar, and even the Pakistan border.

Following the execution of the attack, the attackers were instructed to flee to Kanyakumari in Tamil Nadu, where they would be ferried by sea to Sri Lanka. From there, arrangements were in place for their safe passage to another country, facilitated by Anmol Bishnoi, based in Canada.

Further investigations uncovered the gang’s collaboration with other criminal outfits, notably with the organisation formerly led by gangster Anand Pal, now overseen by his daughter Chinu.

On April 14, when two bike-borne men opened fire outside Mr Khan’s residence in Mumbai’s Bandra. After the incident, police arrested four suspects: Vicky Gupta and Sagar Pal, who were apprehended in Gujarat, while Anuj Thapan and another individual were detained in Punjab on April 26. In total, six arrests have been made, although Anuj Thapan died in police custody.

Source: NDTV

Whose ‘Trust’ Is Ranil After? By N Sathiya Moorthy

Ruling (?) UNP General Secretary Palitha Range Bandara’s suggestion to hold a national Referendum for postponing the Presidential and Parliamentary Elections reads typically Ranil. The suggestion or proposal comes just in the footsteps of incumbent Ranil Wickremesinghe’s public declaration that the Presidential Polls this year – as if he did not entertain the SLPP ally’s purported demand for him to order the Parliamentary Elections first.

According to Bandara, this Government and President Ranil require two more years to set the economy in order. He holds out the carrot, if it is one, that the Government needed further time to fulfil the Agreement with the IMF. He talked about a return to the 2022 situation, when the nation, both the Government and the People alike, went into a panic mode – and for the very right reasons and causes.

Whatever the outcome of the UNP’s proposal, the very fact that the Party has taken the courage to come out in the open with what to many would read like a preposterous proposition is only a reflection of Ranil’s current mood and self-confidence. When he feels secure of his position, and only then, has he played his game of confusing his friends and foes alike. Some games he won, some he lost – but in the final tally, the losses were too huge for him to manage.

Typically, there is this split in the UNP, where rival Sajith Premadasa walked out of the Party to form the SJB, which is since, the more popular of the two. Not every other UNP leader who walked out with Sajith trusted him to win elections for the Party, which Ranil had failed for years, but they trusted the other, even as a man, even less.

Right Man at the Right Place…

Ranil acolytes will have to only recall how at the end of the 2020 Parliamentary Polls, the nation’s GOP created history by not winning a single elected Seat. It managed to be allotted a lone Seat because of the prevailing PR system, not otherwise.

Ranil needed months to convince his even more ambitious colleagues, for him to be named to that sole Seat that the Party could manage. There was thus a period in the nation’s Parliamentary history when the UNP, for the very first time, did not have representation inside the House even when it had an allotted seat.

Ranil’s Prime Ministerial post first and the current Presidency, both through the back door, if in political terms, but mandated by the Constitution, owes to his grabbing the UNP’s solitary Seat in Parliament. That he did not divine the events and developments leading up to the Aragalaya protests and the forced resignation of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa goes without saying.

He was the right man at the right place at the right time. In comparison, his bête noire Sajith P was at the right place at the right time but proved to be the wrong man. When President Gota offered him the Prime Minister’s job after forcing his elder brother and political mentor Mahinda Rajapaksa to vacate the seat, Sajith dithered.

Sajith might have later said that he wanted power only with the people’s mandate. But his advisors seemed to have concluded that without the ability to break the SLPP’s parliamentary majority, he did not stand a chance to enjoy and enforce that power – first as Prime Minister, or whatever power he would get, and then the Presidency if at all it came his way.

A thinking /cunning Ranil concluded that he only needed to grab the Presidency and hand over a fait accompli to the SLPP Members of Parliament and through them the Rajapaksa leadership of the Party. He calculated, rightly, that no MP, especially from the SLPP, wanted to face the voter for a long, long time to come and pressure the Party leadership to toe the Ranil line. The Rajapaksas were thus left with no choice, or that seemed to have been Ranil’s early conclusion. He was proved right.

Single-window Source

It is this kind of conclusion that is hidden behind the current UNP proposal for a Referendum on postponing Parliamentary Elections by two years, so the SLPP Parliamentarians would be induced to pressure the leadership. The alternative would be for them to swell the Ranil ranks, but only if the incumbent could win the Referendum for them. That looks doubtful, especially if the Rajapaksas go their way and use the occasion to walk out of the coalition.

Will such a course end in Ranil losing Parliamentary support? Already, the SLPP Parliamentary group is split with supposedly a dozen MPs at the very least backing Ranil. The UNP expectation might be that at the appropriate time, the President could split the SJB comfortably. He may begin on a twin path, splitting the core Southern Party on the one hand and its minority allies from the Muslim and Upcountry Tamil community, on the other.

The question especially for Ranil is whether the SJB Parliamentarians would want to cross over if the President had become weak following the SLPP walk-out. The question is whether all of them could give the numbers that the SLPP is offering Ranil as a single-window source.

Fundamental Principles

For the SLPP, national organiser, Namal Rajapaksa lost no time in criticising the UNP’s Referendum talk. “Postponing Elections is not healthy for any Democracy. Extending the terms of the President and Parliament undermines the fundamental principles of a democratic society. Stability should come through the will of the people, not by delaying their voice,” he said on X.

Strong words, these, coming especially from a Rajapaksa. Whether true or not, it also shows the confident side of the clan, that they are ready to face the electorate, whatever the outcome. It thus makes the UNP, as the only Party to have proposed or enforced Referendums of this kind. In his time, JRJ got Parliament’s term extended by a year through a Referendum.

The question is simple. If the President is confident that the people would give a definite 50-plus vote for a Referendum proposed by him, won’t they vote him in for a longer, five-year, settled term, too?

On the reverse, will the people lose their ‘faith’ in the man whom they are possibly learning to ‘trust’ as their saviour in their hour of ‘national crisis’ – and Ranil may lose the personal constituency that he seldom had in his four-decades long political career but may have built up in the past two years of economic crisis? It’s a question that has no definite answers like the ‘Referendum’ proposal.

Spanner in the ‘Tamil’ works

What is not unsurprising in the melee is the way Ranil threw the spanner in the works of Tamil Parties in the North and the East to field a ‘Common Candidate’ for the Presidential Election. On a two-day trip to Jaffna and its neighbourhood, he is believed to have discussed the matter with former TNA Chief Minister Wigneswaran while calling on the ailing Tamil leader. It is another matter that Ranil is not known to have called on TNA veteran R Sampanthan, who too has been ailing and for a longer period – and stays only in the Capital, Colombo.

Prima facie, Ranil should be happy if the Tamils field a common candidate, but only if he is in the company of the Rajapaksas, whom the Tamils despise. Maybe, he is working the other way around to ensure at least a substantial share of the Tamil votes, common candidate or not, before deciding the SLPP’s line of thinking on the Referendum and early Parliamentary Polls – and thus the Rajapaksas, too.

Tamil parties having failed to come to a conclusion on the common candidate are set to discuss the matter at an open meeting called by ITAK Parliamentarian Sumanthiran, on 9 June. It is a personal initiative, so to say, but is worth the try.

Incidentally, Sumanthiran, who, like Sampanthan, is opposed to the idea of a ‘Common Candidate’, is not alone. Others like TELO’s Selvam Adaikalanathan and PLOTE’s Sitharthan too were present at the official functions of the President in their bastions. If that said something, Sumanthiran sharing the dais with Ranil, after having run him down completely since his becoming President, may be saying something even more.

About the Author:

The writer is a Chennai-based Policy Analyst/Political Commentator. Email: sathiyam54@nsathiyamoorthy.com)

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CID arrests suspected ISIS terrorist coordinator

The Criminal Investigation Department arrested a wanted suspect, Gerard Pushparaja Osman Gerard, suspected to be the person who co-ordinated the sending of the four alleged ISIS terrorists from Sri Lanka to India and who were arrested in India.

Earlier, the CID announced a reward of Rs. 2 million for information leading to the arrest of the suspect.

The suspect was arrested in a joint operaion conducted by the police in Colombo.

Sri Lankan security forces suspect that the 46-year-old suspect acted as a handler of the four Sri Lankan nationals who were arrested at Ahmedabad airport in India last week for suspected links with the banned Islamic State (ISIS) outfit.

The Gujarat Anti-Terrorist Squad (ATS) on May 19 arrested four Sri Lankans with links to the ISIS at the Sardar Vallabhai Patel airport in Ahmedabad. The ATS also seized three pistols and cartridges abandoned at a location in Ahmedabad based on geo-coordinates and seized a mobile phone from their possession.