Adverse “Currents” of Iranian War Impacting on Sri Lanka

ONE: Another Iranian Warship in Lanka’s Vicinity?

News Item headlined: “Sri Lanka attempting to ensure security of second Iranian warship – minister ”

The vessel is outside the island nation’s territorial waters, but within its exclusive economic zone, a minister has told parliament
Sri Lanka attempting to ensure security of second Iranian warship – minister 

Sri Lanka is attempting to ensure the security of the crew of an Iranian vessel near the island’s territorial waters, a minister told parliament on Thursday. The development comes a day after a US submarine torpedoed an Iranian frigate in the Indian Ocean about 40 nautical miles away from the city of Galle, claiming 87 lives.

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Victor Ivan: Working Through Complexity ……. A Colossus In A Way

Lionel Bopage in GROUNDVIEWS, 27 February 2026

A year after Victor Ivan’s passing, the contradictions that defined him still feel alive. He was one of the prominent individuals who braved all odds, including a lifelong partial disability, to leave an indelible mark on media. An activist, political analyst and author shaped by the works of Bertrand Russell and Mahatma Gandhi, he was never politically neutral. His loyalties were often volatile and shifted in unexpected ways. He accommodated opposing views but he did so only on his own terms.

Victor Ivan, also known as Podi Athulae, embodied the contradictions of political activism and journalism. His journey from revolutionary insurrectionist to pioneering investigative journalist reveals the complex moral terrain navigated by those who challenge power in turbulent societies. His legacy remains contested. Some celebrated him as a fearless truth teller while others criticised him as an opportunistic political figure who navigated between principles and survival with unsettling ease.

Continue reading

2 Comments

Filed under Uncategorized

Sri Lankans Spearhead Rescue of Iranian Survivors

Item in Al-Jazeera, 4 March 2026, with this headline “US submarine sank Iran’s warship off Sri Lanka coast, says Hegseth”

Sri Lanka says it recovered several bodies and rescued 32 wounded sailors after the frigate sank just outside the island’s territorial waters.

Sri Lanka Iran
An ambulance leaves a navy camp after the Iranian ship sank off Sri Lanka, March 4, 2026 [Thilina Kaluthotage/Reuters]

Continue reading

1 Comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Sideshots in Facebook on the Israeli’s Sinking of An Iranian Frigate near Lanka

Charith Senanayake in FACEBOOK, early March 2026

Conclusion… or just the dramatic beginning of the Iranian warship drama,.…………………….. https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/3/4/at-least-100-missing-after-iranian-military-ship-sinks-off-sri-lanka-coast

Off the sunny shores of Lanka, a plot worthy of a naval Netflix series unfolded….!!!  Ali Khamenei’s sailor boys were heading home after a naval exercise in India.  On their way or called back “ගෙදර යන ගමන්” (on the way home) they reportedly had an unexpected roadside check at sea….courtesy of Uncle Sam’s boys.

What happened next? An SOS call sent across the waters and guess who answered? Our own brave lads from little “Hunduwa” the ever reliable Sri Lanka Navy. Neutral waters or not, paperwork later, humanity first. Swift response. No drama. Just action.

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Remembering KM Chellappah, Founder oF Jaffna Public Library

Item in the Daily News, 5 March 2026, entitled  “Jaffna honours Father of the Library”

The Jaffna Public Library recently hosted a commemoration to mark the 130th birth anniversary of its pioneer, Kanagasabai Mudalithambiyar Chellappah (1896–1958). This event celebrated a chapter in the history of Jaffna’s libraries. It was organized jointly by Mayor Vivekanandaraja Madivadani and the library administration.

The proceedings were presided over by Jaffna Municipal Commissioner S. Krishnenthiran and Chief Librarian Anushiya Sivakaran, drawing a large gathering of academics, library staff, and social activists. K.M. Chellappah was recognised not merely as a judicial officer during the British colonial period, but as the prime visionary of the free library movement.

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Finn Smashes & Smothers South Africa via Six-Hitting Spree

Deivarayan Muthu

Flying Finn launches NZ into the final with record ton

South Africa were knocked out by the pairing of Henry-Ravindra with ball and Allen-Seifert with bat

Du Plessis: Finn Allen combines strength and smarts in his batting

New Zealand 173 for 1 (Allen 100*, Seifert 58, Ravindra 13*, Rabada 1-28) beat South Africa 169 for 8 (Jansen 55*, Brevis 34, McConchie 2-9, Ravindra 2-29) by nine wickets

On Saturday, New Zealand had nervously tuned into Sri Lanka vs Pakistan, wondering if they could sneak into the semi-final. Matt Henry was on the way back home from Colombo for the birth of his second child. New Zealand’s build-up to the semi-final was just as uncertain as they waited anxiously for their bowling spearhead to return. On Wednesday, their performance in the semi-final was anything but uncertain as they KO’d South Africa, who were unbeaten until this game, and launched New Zealand into their second men’s T20 World Cup final.

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

RIP …. Rear Admiral Udaya Bandara

From The Island …https://island.lk/brilliant-navy-officer-no-more/

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

How the 1987 Sri Lanka Crisis Exposed the Rules-Based Order

Dr Tony Donaldson 

The 1987 Sri Lanka crisis serves as a quintessential case study in the inherent contradictions of the “Rules-Based International Order.” During this episode, India violated Sri Lankan airspace—blatantly ignoring sovereignty to conduct a “humanitarian” airdrop—only to immediately pivot toward enforcing sovereignty through a treaty designed to bar other foreign powers from the island. This illustrates a defining characteristic of hegemonic power: by maintaining fluid and selective definitions of “legitimate intervention,” a hegemon preserves maximum strategic flexibility.
TD PIX 3  ….
The United States and its Western allies frequently employ this same duality. These double standards are not failures of the system; they are core components of how it functions to sustain global hierarchies. While the West defends these inconsistencies as a “Lesser of Two Evils”—arguing that an imperfect system is better than a “Law of the Jungle”—this is a false dichotomy. In reality, the Rules-Based International Order is not an alternative to the Law of the Jungle, but rather a sophisticated rebranding of it. It is a system where might makes right, and the interests of the powerful are prioritized at the expense of everyone else.
Furthermore, this modern Law of the Jungle has evolved beyond mere military aggression. It is now fundamentally financial. Through the weaponization of sanctions and the control of global banking systems like SWIFT, the “Rules-Based Order” can starve a population into submission without ever formalizing a declaration of war. We have seen the devastating results of this evolution from the “club to the ledger” in Syria, Iran, Libya, Iraq, Yemen, and Cuba. Ultimately, a system that uses the language of law to justify the starvation of nations is not just an inherently predatory architecture of power, it is evil.

1 Comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Trincomalee and the Cold War Calculus of 1987: India’s Disastrous Intervention in Sri Lanka

KKS Perera …. responding to a circular request from The Editor, TPS, for “Thoughts and/or Lessons for the World from the Consequences of the Indian Government’s Military Intervention in Sri Lanka in 1987″  ... ………with highlights and photographs being the work of  the Editor’s hand.

History seldom unfolds in neat moral binaries. The crisis of 1987 between India and Sri Lanka was not simply about humanitarian concern for Tamil civilians, nor solely about ethnic conflict within the island. It was also deeply shaped by Cold War geopolitics, regional insecurity, and strategic rivalry. To understand the Indo-Sri Lanka Accord, one must situate it within India’s broader anxieties at the time, including its suspicion of American influence in South Asia and its concern over strategic assets such as Trincomalee harbour.

Continue reading

1 Comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Organ Donation in Colombo: A Vital Service Honoured

Zanita Careem in The SUNDAY ISLAND, I March 2026

At the core of Jayewardene Hospital is the Organ Transplant Unit. For hundreds of patients suffering from end stage organ failure, the hospital has become a place of renewed possibility. Many arrive after years of dialysis, physical exhaustion and emotional strain. Through transplants they are given not extended life but a return to normally. For the doctors each transplant is a responsibility. For the recipients it is a new beginning. And for donor families it is a way for love to endure beyond loss.

The Organ Donation Day at Sri Jayewardenepura General Hospital unfolded as a deeply moving tribute to life, loss and the extraordinary courage that connects the two. Bringing together donor families, medical professionals and survivors whose lives have been transformed, the event was not merely ceremonial, but it was profoundly humane.

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized