Category Archives: sri lankan society

The urge to migrate among Sri Lankan youth and the asylum-seeker issue in Australia

SARVIMuttukrishna Sarvananthan

The “Special Article” on illicit migration to Australia by boats from Sri Lanka by Emily Howie in the Economic and Political Weekly (August 31, 2103) …. http://www.epw.in/system/files/SA_XLVIII_35_310813_Emily_Howie.pdf

appears to be based largely on lot of conjectures. An article written by an Australian refugee advocate based on 20-30 personal interviews throughout Sri Lanka and citations from Australian (and limited Sri Lankan) newspaper articles is hardly convincing or credible. Continue reading

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“We lost the propaganda war,” President Rajapaksa tells Sheridan

Greg Sheridan in The Australian, 31 August 2013 where the title reads Sri Lanka: a nation at peace”

Mr 22-4 feb 2011SRI Lanka is no longer a story of conflict. It is now a story of development. So Mahendra Rajapaksa, Sri Lanka’s President, tells me in a stately sitting room in his presidential compound in Colombo. As if to bear out his message, I open the paper that day to find that Sri Lanka has formally abolished the venerable institution of the telegram, and similarly abolished the position of messenger. Continue reading

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Sheridan dips into the illegal immigration issue while visiting Lanka

Greg Sheridan in The Australian, 29 August 2013, where the title reads  “Sri Lanka holds back the tide”

“MY question is this: if people are really persecuted here, why don’t they go to India, which is two hours away? Why do they take a dangerous journey of 25 or 30 days in a boat to Australia?” So asks Vice Admiral Jayanath Colombage, commander of the Sri Lanka Navy, in the course of a long discussion in naval headquarters in Colombo.

cartoon by Eric Lobbecke

008969-130829-eric-lobbecke

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Politics and cricket: Rajapaksa and Pakistan; Sanga and the Cowdrey Lecture

Sangakkara in Reflective Chat with Haleel  Farisz  ….. http://cricketique.wordpress.com/2013/09/05/sangakkara-in-reflective-chat-with-haleel-farisz/

Mahinda Rajapaksa pushing Sri Lanka cricket back to Pakistan …..

http://cricketique.wordpress.com/2013/09/05/mahinda-rajapaksa-pushing-sri-lanka-cricket-back-to-pakistan/

ALSO SEE http://www.islandcricket.lk/columns/michael_roberts/155590201/incursions-and-excursions-in-and-around-sri-lankan-cricket

32b--Thilan injured Continue reading

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Remembering Lasantha: Discussion on Press Freedom across Canadian and Lankan borders

T lasantha wickrramatunga 1 lasantha wickrramatunga 44Sonali and Lal pay homage

T oronto, Ontario – August 30, 2013 — Leading journalists from Canada and Sri Lanka will come together for a panel discussion to examine press freedom and related human rights issues in Sri Lanka as part of a special event commemorating the life and times of leading Sri Lankan journalist and human rights activist Lasantha Wickrematunge.   Lasantha Wickrematunge was an internationally renowned journalist and Editor of The Sunday Leader, a national English-language weekly in Sri Lanka, and a reporter for TIME magazine. Known for his critical coverage of successive Sri Lankan governments, Wickrematunge was a lawyer and politician before turning to journalism permanently. After many years of threats to him and his family, he was assassinated on January 8, 2009. In his final editorial written shortly before his death, which was published posthumously, Wickrematunge alleged, “when finally I am killed, it will be the government that kills me.” The Government of Sri Lanka has denied any involvement in the matter and the case remains unsolved. In 2010, the International Press Institute declared Wickrematunge a World Press Freedom Hero.   Continue reading

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The WHEN & How of cricket retirement: Murali shows the WAY

Bill Ricquier SEE http://cricketique.wordpress.com/2013/08/26/the-when-and-the-how-issues-of-retirement-for-aging-cricketers/

MURALI AND MR

00-MURALI 4murali4-GALLE 2 00-MURALI 2- Murali in D-mirror 00-MURALI 3 Muralitharan7-160 00-MURALI 4--Murali carried

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Dilmah marks 25th Birthday at Sydney Opera House

Feisal Samath in Sunday Times

sYDNEY OOPERA HOUSE 22 DILMAH birthday Merrill Fernando with his sons

When Sri Lanka’s top tea brand, Dilmah marked 25 years in the global market, it celebrated the anniversary in style with 150 invitees at the Sydney Opera House! “I don’t think any Sri Lankan has had a celebration at this prestigious venue; We did,” said a proud and enthusiastic Merrill J. Fernando, widely considered Sri Lanka’s ambassador of tea and the flag bearer of ‘Pure (unblended) Ceylon Tea’ for more than two decades overseas.

Inviting the Business Times to his sprawling residence on Buthgamuwa road at Rajagiriya, Mr. Fernando tucked into an everyday Sri Lankan meal of stringhoppers, eggs, sambol, fish and potato curry with his fingers while going down memory lane to share the story of Dilmah and his success as an entrepreneur. The 83 year-old iconic tea businessman whose face has been on millions of Dilmah tea packets over the years, never in his wildest dreams imagined that boyhood visits to tea estates owned by families of school mates would transform him into an innovative tea producer. Continue reading

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A benign view of the tourist scene in Sri Lanka

Lisa Young, with titleAll smiles on the Teardrop isle”

Earlier this year British Airways’ only Sri Lankan Boeing 777 pilot landed one of the company’s jets in his home country for the first time in 15 years. Touching down in Colombo, the capital of the tear-shaped island off the southern tip of India, satisfied a life-long dream for Captain Kiran Mediwake. The airline’s absence in Sri Lanka was due to the armed conflict between the government and rebel group the Tamil Tigers, which destabilised the region from July 1983 until May 2009. The arrival of BA is further proof that the country is now open for business.

toursists--All-smiles-DN Continue reading

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Can elections fast-track development in Sri Lanka’s former conflict zone?

Irin News

Opposition party leaders in Sri Lanka’s north have long called for power devolution to the former conflict zone as a condition for lasting peace, but voters preparing to cast ballots in the Northern Province’s first election since the end of a separatist war in 2009 say power sharing means little if basic needs are unmet.  “First we need to be able to take care of ourselves financially before we get into sharing power,” Jeyam Subramanian, a voter from the northern town of Kilinochchi, told IRIN.
WATER TOWER NP Pic by Amantha Perera

There are some indications that the planned election has quickened the pace of development work.  When Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa recently met a high level delegation from China involved in billions of dollars worth of infrastructure projects in the island, he had one request: expedite the work on a nearly 400km expressway that would link the capital, Colombo, with the northern town of Jaffna. This came shortly after he oversaw the opening of a US$150 million garment factory in the northern town of Vavuniya.  And less than one week later, the government announced the country’s rail link to the north had reached the town of Kilinochchi from Colombo. The government said it was the first time in 23 years that the rail link, financed by the Indian government, had extended so far north. Continue reading

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Covering the Female Body: Transition seen in Buddhist murals from the 18th to 20th centuries

Asoka De Zoysa from his presentation at the National Trust Lecture Series in Lanka No. 38

What is the function of dress in society? Theoreticians on costume believe that human beings in most cultures wear clothes for one or more of the following reasons: Comfort and protection. This can be physical and psychological protection. Demonstrate economic and social status. Using branded apparel, designer wear for example. I may also add the Spiritual Status – Dress codes imposed on people visiting places of worship. Display cultural diversity: That is to demonstrate belonging to an ethnic group for example or a religious institution or groups of people of a “sub culture” upholding same values like the “Hippies” and “Punks”. Dress can also display the role played by the person wearing the costume in society in a given place: attire at Law Courts is a good example. Why should School prefects wear a blazer in the hot sun at the “Big Match”? Continue reading

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