Columns
Home » ColumnsSirisena gets tough, pro-JO organisers fired, cases against Rajapaksa family expedited
As parties prepare for local polls, possibly on January 20, President rules out any rapprochement with rival faction UNP also finalises list for 335 local councils while Basil claims new party confident of winning a majority Cabinet dispute over expressway project, Ranawaka and other ministers critical of high cost, but Kiriella flares back President Maithripala [...]
Victory looms but doesn’t bloom
My dear Satellite, I haven’t written to you in a long time but I feel I must do so now, especially after hearing that you have been appointed as the Blue party organiser for Attanagalla, the electorate so dearly nursed by the ‘B’ family for generations. I am sure we will see you and hear [...]
Mihin Lanka financially dying without flying
It’s the case of a state enterprise losing more money under closure than when it is operational. The Cabinet of Ministers decided only months earlier to shut down Mihin Lanka – which has been swallowing up public funds since it was set up on October 27, 2006 by the previous Mahinda Rajapaksa administration. Just this [...]
An exponential deterioration in the accountability of public funds
Sri Lanka’s parliament celebrated 70 years of parliamentary democracy on October 3 with a ceremonial sitting. The speeches made by parties representing all shades of political persuasions had plaudits as well as serious criticisms of the seven decades of parliamentary practice. This in itself is a tribute to democratic freedoms of a parliamentary democracy. However [...]
Sri lanka’s ‘bread and circuses’ sideshow
Juvenal’s beautifully scornful castigation of the people being diverted by ‘bread and circuses’ (panem et circenses), has a specific application in the present day. That cynical tactic served the Roman emperors well in turning the attention of bored plebians away from pressing national issues and civic duties. Catching the gleeful imagination of the public Sri [...]
Broken pledges send diplomacy down the drain
Those who followed the intense campaigns ahead of the two elections in 2015 to oust Mahinda Rajapaksa’s government from power will probably recall the promises made with gay abandon by those who sought change. Those who really believed the promised changes would come and clean government installed, must surely be wondering now whatever happened to [...]
Will Lanka’s constitutional scapegoat face sacrificial slaughter on the people’s altar?
The JRJ constitution, passed with a five sixth majority in 1978, has been used, since the late 1990s, as a convenient scapegoat for politicians on both sides of the political divide to pile upon its back the blame for their own political failures to deliver the goods promised to the nation. Two presidents Chandrika Bandaranaike [...]