Sajith-Ranil equation, Opposition alliance, Tamil question and foreign policy By Dr.Dayan Jayatilleka

Sajith Premadasa has declared that he will not reunite with Ranil, nor will the SJB realign with the UNP. (https://www.ft.lk/front-page/Sajith-dismisses-future-alliance-with-Ranil/44-756217)

That makes perfect sense. The electricity price hikes, VAT shock, hollowing of public health and education, and mounting hunger will cumulatively obliterate Ranil’s presidential prospects. If he stalls the election, a social firestorm will obliterate much more.

Why should Sajith and the SJB buy tickets on that Titanic? If they do so, the irresistible public compulsion to “throw the rascals out” will include them, and the protest vote will have only one channel. As in 1970, 1977 and 2019-2020 a unipolar or one-party-dominant outcome will ensue, wrecking the democratic system’s equilibrium.

Lines of demarcation

That said, Sajith must explain why he says ‘no’, beyond the banality of “Ranil is with the Rajapaksas who ruined the country”. What if Ranil and the UNP are willing to swap the Rajapaksas and the SLPP for Sajith and the SJB?

Sajith must draw the line of demarcation between him and Ranil, the SJB and the UNP, in substantive terms of economic and social strategy, policy paradigm, developmental program, and political ideology. That is possible only if he stands firmly on the foundation of President Premadasa’s development philosophy which includes “economic, political and social democracy”.

Sajith must guarantee that his economic team doesn’t ‘unite’ or ‘align’ with Ranil’s program and ideology. If the SJB looks like the UNP, walks like the UNP and quacks economics like the UNP, it is a twin, an avatar or extension of Ranil’s UNP.

The SJB economic platform represents policy continuity with Ranil, not change. The Harsha-Eran economic model has 5 pillars which make it morphologically Ranilian:

(1) Renewed access (through an IMF rubber-stamp) to the foreign money markets, i.e., a return to the original addiction.

(2) A castrated Central Bank incapable of state intervention to offset external shocks i.e., do a Mahathir.

(3) Unilateral rewriting of the Social Contract in favour of foreign and local big capital, by scrapping labour and land reform laws.

(4) Unfettered, maximum—not optimum—privatisation and foreignisation of the economy, deleting the state and cooperative sectors.

(5) Retention of the 2017 foreign exchange law which facilitates outflow and loss to the country of hard currency earnings.

Weighed-down by the albatross of Harsha’s Economic Blueprint, Sajith is handicapped in 2024 in his ability to compete with the JVP-NPP by losing the liability of a UNP profile as Ranasinghe Premadasa so easily did in 1988.

On economics and external affairs, SJB ideologues are set to resume the 2015-2019 Ranil-Mangala-UNP project and policy trajectory. This positions the SJB as part of the problem, not the solution; part of the old elitist Establishment, not the agency of progressive change. Thus, during the post-Aragalaya period and the Ranil presidency, SJB has failed to enthuse the public imagination.

Wickramaratne’s warped worldview

I read with a mix of interest and incredulity, ex-banker Eran Wickramaratne’s profound pronouncements in Parliament on Sri Lanka’s foreign policy.

“…We belong to the non-aligned movement, which is a platform only. Our Foreign Policy must be multi-aligned with nations and global agencies which are currently yielding global power,” he said…He opined that the foreign policy strategy and engagement must have economic diplomacy at the core of its policy formulation…”

(https://www.ft.lk/news/SL-s-passport-ranking-reflective-of-its-foreign-policy-Eran/56-756124)

‘Multi-alignment’ was custom-tailored for India. It suits Delhi’s membership of the Quad and its close friendship with Russia. This policy is affordable by a country as vast, wealthy, populous and powerful as is India. Significantly, even middle-powers and fellow members of BRICS such as Brazil and South Africa have not renounced nonalignment in favour of ‘multi-alignment’.

The stance of most states in the global South in relation to the Ukraine war has been described by US scholars as ‘the new nonalignment’ and as confirmation of Shivshanker Menon’s conceptual commendation a few years ago of ‘Non-Alignment 2.0’.

Multi-alignment for India and Sri Lanka would mean two vastly different outcomes. It reminds me of the tale of two friends, a hen and a pig, walking down the road looking hungrily for a place to eat. They spot a place with a board that announces ‘Open for Breakfast! Bacon and Eggs!’ “Let’s go in, I’m starving” the hen says to the pig. The pig replies “No way! You go in, it would be easy for you, but for me it would mean a total commitment”.

For a small island such as Sri Lanka, ‘multi-alignment’ would mean inviting the power-projection by and the presence of contending Great Powers or their equivalent of an ‘East India Company’, carving out our compact space into spheres of influence.

Given our axiomatic geopolitical location, this would nullify Sri Lanka’s independence, sovereignty, territorial integrity and unity. We would lose whatever multi-directional (multi-vector) autonomy we have in the world arena.

Given American military enabling of Israel’s Gaza bombing, the two US carrier battle-groups backstopping Israel, and the appalling US veto at the UN Security Council of the resolution calling for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, what stance would a ‘multi-aligned’ rather than a ‘non-aligned’ Sri Lanka adopt on the Gaza war?

How could we be multi-aligned to both the USA and China in the context of sharp competition and contention? Sri Lanka’s national interest is better served by remaining ‘nonaligned between’ rather than ‘multi-aligned with’ contending Great Powers.

An increasingly frequent term in international discourse, including that of Prime Minister Modi as Chairman of G20, is the ‘Global South’. While straying into the realm of foreign policy, Eran Wickramaratne and Harsha de Silva have conspicuously avoided any acknowledgement of Sri Lanka’s identity as belonging to the Global South, which must surely anchor our foreign policy in an ontological sense. Similarly conspicuous by its absence in their discourse is a commitment to a multipolar world.

Meanwhile “economic diplomacy” is crucial but is certainly not “the core” of [foreign] “policy formulation” as Wickramaratne supposes. Kissinger would have been shocked to his core.

Alliance impeded

A 2024 version of the 2015 Yahapalanaya strategy will lack its most essential component: a credible dissident faction of the centre-left, at the time personified by Maithripala Sirisena, the popular General-Secretary of the SLFP. Today’s equivalent would be an alliance in which the main partnership would be between the SJB and the FPC led by Dullas Alahapperuma, i.e., a Sajith-Dullas ticket or as close to one as our presidential system which has no Vice-Presidential spot can get. This would balance an SJB-led bloc and give Sajith a capacity for outreach to disaffected MR-SLFP-SLPP voters.

As our Sunday sister-paper spotlighted in its Politics column, the main obstruction to an Opposition alliance seems to be the SJB’s commitment to its para-Ranilist/para-UNP Economic Blueprint.

“…One was a heated debate last Wednesday among parliamentarians of the Freedom People’s Congress (FPC), a breakaway group from the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP), to form a common front with the main opposition Samagi Jana Balavegaya (SJB). For months now, the FPC has been talking to SJB leadership but has not been able to reach an understanding on an acceptable economic policy. At a meeting this week, the majority view was that they should agree to a political tie-up only based on a set of mutually acceptable terms…It was agreed that the FPC has another meeting with SJB leader Sajith Premadasa to further determine future action.” (https://www.sundaytimes.lk/231210/columns/constitutional-council-the-crisis-continues-541856.html)

Roshan Ranasinghe, a decent enough young Pohottuwa politician, just doesn’t have Dullas Alahapperuma’s and Charitha Herath’s heft and the FPC’s market-niche. Without the FPC as main partner, the SJB’s alliance will look like an old-fashioned ‘UNP plus minority parties’ bloc, albeit with Sajith’s sporadic sprinkling of populism as thin overlay. If Dullas’ FPC partners with the SJB on an economic platform of a liberal market character rather than a new, progressive-centrist Common Program, it will splinter as well as lose its vote-base as Sirisena’s SLFP did in alliance with Ranil’s UNP.

That the stumbling block of the (Advocata-advised) economic platform hasn’t been removed by Sajith even in the pragmatic interests of clinching a deal with the FPC and catapulting a broad progressive alliance as Presidential Election Year 2024 commences, is evidence of the extent of ideological capture by the party’s neoliberal right-wing, and the degree to which it looks set to dominate policy in a Sajith administration. These rightist policy ideologues will do the same damage to a possible Sajith presidency that Ranil-Chandrika-Mangala did to the Sirisena presidency and its social base.

Tamil question, political solution

The Oct 7th Hamas attack and Israel’s monstrously evil war on the Palestinian people of Gaza –75% of those slaughtered being women, children and elderly, says the UN– prove conclusively that problems which are political at the root, require political solutions or political settlement.

In the case of Israel/Palestine the obvious framework was a two-state solution as agreed upon in Oslo. It has since been rendered inoperable by Israel’s slicing away of territory through an aggressively annexationist settlement policy. Meanwhile a one-state solution is blocked by Israel’s apartheid model.

If there are territorial swaps, the two-state solution may still be salvageable. If the apartheid system is abandoned or overthrown, a one-state solution is possible. For now, the situation is bloodily, tragically intractable.

Sri Lanka is lucky that way.

Ours was never an issue of invasion of neighbours, settlements, annexation, and Occupation as condemned by resolutions of the UN Security Council, i.e., international law.

Nor is there is internal apartheid, especially after the re-enfranchisement of the hill country Tamil people. All citizens have a right to vote and each and every minority can punch its electoral-demographic weight, especially under the electoral system of proportional representation.

The military dimension was decisively deleted and a UN Human Rights Council endorsement decisively won (May 2009).

Unlike the 1993 Oslo Accords, the 1987 political settlement is intact, though inoperative because of the opportunistic chicanery of the Yahapalanaya UNP-TNA in 2015-2017.

That political settlement is the system of elected Provincial Councils created by the 13th amendment in the wake of the Indo-Sri Lanka Accord.

The Global Tamil Forum’s Suren Surendiran has always been impressively intelligent and it is a pity he won’t contest Sri Lanka’s parliamentary election. However, President Wickremesinghe played it more cannily when talking to the GTF. He scrolled the political calendar, beginning with the Presidential election, saying that the constitutional changes or change of Constitution would have to follow the elections. This left the door open for him to tempt Tamil voters while pre-empting a backlash.

The Provincial Councils cannot be unfrozen as long as Wickremesinghe is in office, not merely because he was the PM who sabotaged them, but also because he cannot be seen to spend on a PC election (primarily) for the North and East before holding the constitutionally dictated Presidential election 2024.

Which post-Ranil dispensation will be most conducive to a settlement of the ethnic issue? Certainly not the one that promises the Tamils the most generous solution, but rather the one that is more likely to be capable of delivering a sustainable solution.

Throughout the island’s political history, an Oppositional or governing alliance with a minoritarian profile has been the worst for the defence and advancement of minority rights and autonomy. This has been proved from 1956 to 2019.

In the formation of an Opposition Alliance, the pressure will be on the SJB to commit to the 2015 Constitutional change package. That pressure will come from the TNA in the process of forming an Opposition alliance at the beginning of Presidential Election year 2024. The SJB’s Eran Wickramaratne will support the TNA’s MA Sumanthiran in that effort. Sumanthiran himself will be more stridently insistent than usual because the succession struggle in the TNA is underway.

A TNA hard-sell will prove problematic for Sajith Premadasa and the SJB, but not because they will be open to chauvinist criticism from the NPP-JVP, which doesn’t display a trace of Sinhala- Buddhist chauvinism and is quite decided in its critique of discrimination, commitment to pluralism and retention/reactivation of the existing Provincial Council system. The threat to the SJB is that the NPP-JVP’s modernist, inclusive, moderate stance will be more in consonance with the vast majority of post-Aragalaya Sinhala voters, than will an SJB-TNA bloc with its 2015 Mangala Samaraweera designed, revealingly minoritarian profile.

If Sajith promises a return to the 2015-2019 process of a new Constitution, he will run for the presidency with a quasi-federalist ball-and-chain on his left leg, accompanying the Economic Blueprint ball-and-chain on his right leg.

If an SJB administration attempts a TNA-driven Constitution, the required Referendum will be a fast-track for the Sinhala Far Right.

If a Referendum is ought to be bypassed as urged by the 2015-2019 Constitutional change advisors, then an accursed cycle will repeat itself, beginning with a replay of JR Jayewardene’s March to Kandy against the Bandaranaike-Chelvanayakam pact of 1957. The ex-Gotabaya camp will swing into action, especially in the Eastern province where GR engaged in neo-Netanyahu-ism through his handpicked Governor and presidential Eastern Task Force.

Buddhist card

The problem cannot be addressed by burnishing Sajith’s genuine Buddhist credentials. The Senanayake UNP had a Sinhala-Buddhist profile as befits a conservative-liberal party. It sought to weaponise Sinhala-Buddhism against the Left. Piety and philanthropy didn’t save the UNP from the Hartal of 1953 and the landslide electoral defeats of 1956 and 1970.

Ranasinghe Premadasa, a Sinhala Buddhist who achieved a great deal as Minister of Buddha Sasana while simultaneously practising a multi-religious policy even more pronounced than Sajith’s, made it unambiguously clear that the broad-basing of a government, specially a UNP government, and buffering it against an ethnic majoritarian backlash to which the UNP was prone, resided not so much in the Senanayake formula of Sinhala Buddhist traditionalism but precisely in the domain of progressive socioeconomic policy, i.e., of equitable growth and rapid social upliftment. President Premadasa countered ethnoreligious majoritarianism with socioeconomic majoritarianism in which he firmly anchored his multi-lingual, multi-religious, multi-ethnic, multi-cultural pluralism.

As a parallel track (not a Track B), the Tamil and Muslim parties should open a serious dialogue with Anura Dissanayake and the NPP-JVP. The Left may prove a better delivery-vehicle because it is less vulnerable than the SJB with its neo-UNP, or not-quite-post-UNP vibe.

Intellectual sophistication

I was amused to read in the pages of an influential mainstream newspaper, the pronouncement of a popular young columnist, economic liberal and right-winger, that “the JVP…doesn’t have intellectual sophistication”.

I would love to watch a television debate of any 6-member panel of the UNP, SJB, SLPP or a combination, face off against a JVP-NPP panel of Anura Dissanayake, Bimal Ratnayake, Sunil Handunetti, Prof Hiniduma Sunil Senevi, Prof. Liyanage Amarakeerthi and Dr. Harini Amarasuriya. It is the Establishment’s good fortune and the JVP-NPP’s flawed tactics that deprive AKD’s camp of the formidable Pubudu Jayagoda, Duminda Nagamuwa and Wasantha Mudalige.

Anura and the NPP-JVP could find themselves electorally thwarted, not by their foes but by unrecognised complexity of terrain and time. Uneven development and intermediate strata make united fronts and alliances imperative. AKD and the NPP-JVP aren’t Gramscian enough, yet.

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More Tamil diaspora organisations speak out against GTF’s ‘Himalayan Declaration’

More Tamil diaspora organisations have spoken out against a declaration signed by the Global Tamil Forum (GTF) and Sinhala Buddhist clergy, stating it gives Sri Lankan president Ranil Wickremesinghe an “opportunity to hoodwink the international community”, as backlash continues to grow this week.

The GTF had met with Wickremsinghe in Colombo last week, where the group handed over a ‘declaration’ it had signed with several Sinhala Buddhist monks.

A statement signed by British Tamils Forum (BTF), Centre de Protections des Droits du Peuple Tamoul-France, Irish Tamils Forum (ITF), Solidarity Group for Peace and Justice (SGPJ – South Africa), Swiss Tamil Action Group (STAG) and Tamil Movement Against Genocide (Mauritius), said the move by GTF last week caused “scepticism and dismay among the Tamil people whether this meeting was political motivated to deceive Tamil people and the international community”.

“To add to fuel to Tamil peoples’ concern the whole process of this ‘declaration’ had been kept secretive without any consultation process,” said the statement. “It is paramount that any declaration such as ‘Himalayan Declaration’ should have been consulted with the victims and brought to the public domain prior to the meeting. This did not occur.”

Several of the organisations that signed the statement condemning the move had previously been part of the GTF. The GTF was a major Tamil diaspora umbrella organisation at its formation in 2009, however its membership now consists of only the Canadian Tamil Congress (CTC) and Norwegian Tamil Forum (NTF), as well as individual members.

The organisations said that the GTF had already been involved in “a similar process in 2015 with the then President Maithiripala Sirisena when Ranil Wickremasinghe was the Prime Minister and that failed miserably as expected”.

“It took over 5 years for GTF to realise the entire process was an illusion conveniently crafted by the Sri Lankan government led by Maithiripala and Ranil Wickremasinghe aiming to drag the UNHRC process and manage the increasing call to restructure the state to ensure nonrecurrence of past violence.”

“Knowing Ranil Wickremasinghe’s past of manipulating matters to his advantage, GTF’s meeting will provide Ranil an opportunity to hoodwink the international community to sweep Tamils’ outcries under the carpet in the guise of success in talking with Tamil diaspora organisations and to promote support for the proposed Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) model for the resolution internally,” it continued.

Several diaspora organisations have already spoken out against the GTF declaration, and reiterated their commitment for Sri Lanka to be referred to the International Criminal Court for genocide and for an international monitored referendum to be conducted in the Tamil homeland.

In the North-East too, the leader of the Tamil National People’s Front (TNPF) told the Tamil Guardian that he has refused to meet with the GTF, labelling the initiative a “whitewash”, whilst the Tamil Eelam Liberation Organisation (TELO), a constituent party of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA), denounced the Sri Lankan government-backed as “irresponsible” and one that “misdirects our entire political aspirations”.

Police recording ethnicity of residents in Colombo, other areas

The Police are recording information of residents in Colombo, and other areas, including their ethnicity, Parliament was informed today.

Public Security Minister Tiran Alles told Parliament that recording the details of residents in Colombo and other parts of the country was a continuing process and was nothing new.

He denied claims the religion of the public were being recorded by the Police.

The Minister was responding to concerns raised by opposition MP Mano Ganesan.

The MP alleged that Tamils in Colombo were once again the target of a Police operation to record their details.

However, Alles insisted that not just Tamils but the details of even Sinhalese people were being recorded.

He said this was being carried out as a security measure to identify any criminals who have moved to other parts of the country.

Chinese company was given a chance to open 250 petrol sheds to sell fuel. Is it an investment? Is it an intake of technology or capital?

Claiming that China’s Sinopec project to open 250 petrol sheds is not an investment, NPP MP Anura Kumara Dissanayake said today that even local businessman Dudley Sirisena could have done the same if he was given a chance.

He told Parliament that a real investment must bring technology and capital to the country.

“The Chinese company was given a chance to open 250 petrol sheds to sell fuel. Is it an investment? Is it an intake of technology or capital? Even Dudley Sirisena could have opened 250 petrol sheds. It is not an investment,” he said.

US Special Representative for Racial Equity and Justice to visit Sri Lanka

Desirée Cormier Smith, the U.S. Special Representative for Racial Equity and Justice, is set to embark on her inaugural journey to South Asia, with Sri Lanka as a focal point.

From December 11 to 15, she will traverse the cultural landscape of Colombo, Nuwara Eliya, and Kandy, engaging with diverse communities to bolster the U.S. government’s commitment to advancing human rights and equality in Sri Lanka.

During her week-long visit, Special Representative Cormier Smith will engage in crucial meetings with Malaiyaha Tamils, civil society groups, and government officials. The discussions will emphasize the U.S. government’s unwavering support for initiatives aimed at uplifting marginalized ethnic communities in Sri Lanka.

A highlight of her visit will be the launch of the U.S. Embassy’s English Access Scholarship Program in Nuwara Eliya. This State Department-funded global initiative focuses on providing English language skills to bright, economically disadvantaged students. Special Representative Cormier Smith’s presence at the launch underscores the United States’ commitment to fostering education as a tool for empowerment and inclusion.

In a bid to empower the youth of the Malaiyaha Tamil community, Special Representative Cormier Smith will present awards to 25 students who have successfully completed an intensive three-month bootcamp dedicated to content creation. This innovative program aims to equip young individuals with valuable job skills, enhancing their economic prospects and contributing to their community’s overall development.

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GTF does not fully capture the “unified voices of the organizations that collectively represent our community.”

Six global organisations representing the Tamil diaspora have called for broader representation of their community pertaining to initiatives that foster dialogue and collaboration for a harmonious and inclusive Sri Lanka.

This was in response to recent discussions the Global Tamil Forum (GTF) and a group of esteemed Buddhist monks had with President Ranil Wickremesinghe.

During the discussions, the Joint Himalayan Declaration, a collaborative effort between the GTF and the Buddhist delegation which advocates for a pluralistic Sri Lanka that actively promotes the well-being of all its communities, was presented to President Wickremesinghe.

Issuing a joint statement, the Australian Tamil Congress (ATC), Federation of Tamil Sangams of North America (FeTNA), Ilankai Tamil Sangam, Tamil Americans United PAC, United States Tamil Action Group (USTAG) and World Thamil Organization noted that the GTF, which now represents only a few individuals of the Tamil diaspora, does not fully capture the “unified voices of the organizations that collectively represent our community.”

Pointing out that the GTF no longer holds the representation it once did, they called for wider engagement with organisations representing the Tamil diaspora.

Full text of the statement by the six Tamil diaspora organisations is found below.

“As representatives of the Tamil Diaspora, we have learned through media sources about the recent initiative by a section of the Sinhala-Buddhist clergy and southern civic society. It is unfortunate that these groups have begun discussions with a selected and limited representatives of the Tamil Diaspora.

This engagement, primarily with the Global Tamil Forum (GTF), which now represents only a few individuals of the Tamil Diaspora, does not fully capture the unified voices of the organizations that collectively represent our community.

It is important to note that the GTF no longer holds the representation it once did. Since its formation in September 2009 in Paris, France, the majority of the original 14 countries / Tamil-organizations, including 10 from Europe, have dissociated from the GTF.

Additionally, organizations such as the British Tamil Forum, Australian Tamil Congress, and United States Tamil Action Group (USTAG), formerly known as USTPAC, have also left the GTF.

As a result, any outcomes from this engagement lack the support of the majority of the Tamil Diaspora and thus, are of limited significance and credibility.

It is imperative to acknowledge that the key organizations listed below within the Tamil Diaspora, which closely align with the views of the Tamil people in the North-East, have developed their position through extensive dialogues with members of the grassroot community.

These discussions have involved civil society leaders, religious figures, families of the disappeared, and academic communities, including those from the Universities of Jaffna and Batticaloa. The cardinal principles widely accepted during these discussions by the Tamil Civil Society and Diaspora include:

An internationally conducted and monitored Referendum that allows people living in the north-eastern region of the island of Sri Lanka prior to 1948 and their descendants to find a democratic, peaceful, permanent political solution that meets Tamils’ legitimate aspirations.
An interim International Protection Mechanism to be established in the north-eastern region of the island due to existing excessive military presence and occupation.
The Repeal of the Sixth Amendment to the Sri Lankan Constitution to provide freedom of political rights to the people.
The referral to the International Criminal Court with respect to genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes, and investigation and legal action before the International Court of Justice under the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide and the Convention against Torture.
We appeal to the Sinhala-Buddhist clergy and southern civic society to understand, acknowledge and embrace these aspirations.

Such a progressive step would demonstrate a significant shift towards reconciliation among all communities and contribute to finding a just and lasting resolution to the Tamil National question, paving the way for a stable, secure and prosperous Sri Lanka.”

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Sri Lanka opposition leader rubbishes reports of reunion with president

There will never be an alliance between Sri Lanka President Ranil Wickremesinghe and opposition leader Sajith Premadasa, the latter has told parliament, denying reports of a coming team-up of the two rivals.

“Some organisations that propagate falsehoods have gotten together, having taken money perhaps from the government, and are saying Ranil and Sajith are teaming up. Ranil and Sajith will never come together,” Premadasa said speaking parliament Monday December 11 morning.

“I’m saying this right here in parliament. I wish to tell these unscrupulous media organisations to not make these false statements,” he added.

Premadasa was responding to a purported report that President Wickremesinghe’s United National Party (UNP) and Premadasa’s Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB), which broke off from the UNP, are considering burying the hatchet and reuniting to contest next year’s elections as one party.

There has been some speculation that senior members of the SJB, whose centre-right politics is not ideologically far removed from that of Wickremesinghe, are not opposed to the idea of working under the president.

For his part, President Wickremesinghe continues to reiterate his calls for the SJB to support him in his International Monetary Fund (IMF)-backed reform agenda. He has repeatedly extended an open invitation to his erstwhile UNP colleagues to join him.

Wickremesinghe’s administration currently comprises predominantly the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) whose MPs — 134 of them — voted to make him president following the resignation of his predecessor Gotabaya Rajapaksa.

The SJB and other opposition groups have accused Wickremesinghe of “protecting” the Rajapaksa family that controls the SLPP in exchange for their support, an allegation that Wickremesinghe’s defenders chalk up to realpolitik.

At least three prominent members of the SJB have so far switched their loyalty to Wickremesinghe: Tourism Minister Harin Fernando, Labour & Foreign Employment Minister Manusha Nanayakkara, and MP Vadivel Suresh who was named an advisor to the president just last week.

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Tamil Nadu Chief Minister demands release of Indians detained in Sri Lanka

Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M K Stalin on Monday urged the Centre in India to ensure the early repatriation of the Indian fishermen arrested in Sri Lanka recently.

He pointed out that the attacks on the fishermen have been on the rise of late and have had serious repercussions on the lives and safety of the Indian fishermen.

“Therefore, I request you to direct the Indian mission in Sri Lanka to initiate urgent measures to repatriate the apprehended fishermen and their boats,” the Chief Minister said in a letter addressed to Union External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar.

As many as 12 fishermen who set out for fishing from Nagapattinam harbour and 13 others who went fishing from Karaikal were apprehended by the Sri Lankan Navy on December 9. Another fishing boat was damaged by the patrol vessel of the Sri Lankan Navy, he said in the letter.

(Press Trust of India)

MP Mano Ganesan Raises Concerns Over Tamil Persons’ Registration in Police Jurisdictions, Questions Necessity in Post-War Sri Lanka

Member of Parliament Mano Ganesan raised critical questions regarding the ongoing registration of Tamil persons within specific police jurisdictions in Sri Lanka.

Ganesan queried the necessity of such registrations, emphasizing the absence of war and terrorism in the country. He questioned the ownership of the police force, asking whether it belongs to Tiran Alles, Ranil Wickremesinghe, or Deshabandu Tennakoon.

Ganesan’s remarks sparked discussions about the need for transparency and the protection of individual rights in the post-war era.

The registration process in police areas, including Kirulapone, Wellawatta, Dehiwala, Bambalapitiya, Narahenpita, Kotahena, Mattakkuliya, and Modara, has raised concerns among citizens and policymakers alike, prompting a closer examination of the motivations behind this initiative.

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Parliament passes VAT (Amendment) Bill

The Third Reading of the Value Added Tax (Amendment) Bill was passed in Parliament with amendments on Monday evening (11 Dec.).

The Bill was passed with a majority of 45 votes, with 100 MPs voting in favour, and 55 voting against the Bill.

Accordingly, the House approved a hike in VAT up to 18% from the current 15%, ahead of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) preparing to approve the second tranche of a $2.9 billion bailout for the crisis-hit country.

Earlier today, the Second Reading of the Bill was passed in Parliament with a majority of 57 votes.

A total of 98 MPs had voted in favour of the Bill, while 41, including former Minister and SLPP MP Roshan Ranasinghe and the opposition, had voted against it.

The debate on the Value Added Tax (Amendment) Bill commenced this evening (11 Dec.), after a proposal to debate the Value Added Tax (Amendment) Bill was passed in Parliament earlier today.

The Bill was initially scheduled to be taken up for debate on Sunday (10 Nov.), however, the parliamentary session was adjourned by Deputy Speaker Ajith Rajapakshe due to a lack of quorum.

The debate on the Second Reading of the Value-Added Tax (Amendment) Bill and the Finance Bill was taken up in the House last morning, during which State Minister of Finance Ranjith Siyambalapitiya said VAT would be imposed on 97 out of the 138 goods that were previously freed from the tax, in a bid to boost state revenue.

Speaking further, the State Minister said that Short Message Service (SMS) in fixed telephone networks will also be subjected to VAT, given the increased number of text messages sent.

However, medicines, equipment used by disabled persons, rice flour, wheat flour, vegetables, fruits, liquid milk, and the ‘Suwaseriya’ ambulance service will not be subjected to VAT, the state minister assured.