Velupillai Pirapaharan in his presentation of self in Che Guevara mode
Fire-Storm Images, II: The Indian Intervention, 1987
Naval rating Wijemuni Rohana de Silva attempts to hammer — deliver guti, so to speak — Premier Rajiv Gandhi for the humiliation imposed on Sri Lanka Through the insertion of an Indian Peace Keeping Force as the main pillar of the Indo-Lanka Accord. This incident occurred during the guard of honour on his arrival to finalize the Accord. Note that after serving his period of imprisonment for this act WR de Silva contested parliamentary elections under the JVP banner in his home area down south. I have been reliably informed that The cameraman was Sena Vidanagamage — what a camera strike!
Filed under historical interpretation, indian armed forces, Indian Ocean politics, LTTE, military strategy, power politics, power sharing, prabhakaran, Rajiv Gandhi, security, self-reflexivity, Sinhala-Tamil Relations, sri lankan society, unusual people, vengeance, war reportage, world events & processes
Fire-Storm Images, I: The Sinhala Tamil Gulf Emerges
SWRD Bandaranaike woos a crowd on Sinhala language enthusiasts
Bandaranaike was an eloquent speaker in both English and Sinhala. This image captures his rhetorical vigour while on the stage… Continue reading
Peddling Gross Falsehoods on Sri Lanka’s Public Debt and Economics
The LANKA GUARDIAN introduced an essay by the banker Ajit Kanagasundaram with the following note: “Over 90 percent of government revenue currently goes on debt servicing, mainly to China, and the concessionary capital repayment moratorium on multi-lateral agency loans will soon expire. What happens then?” The article is entitled “Sri Lanka: Plight at the end of the Tunnel” and can be read at https://www.slguardian.org/2017/07/sri-lanka-plight-at-the-end-of-the-tunnel/
Readers should visit the web-site for the full article. Since economic data on this topic is Greek to me, I sent an immediate inquiry to a few specialists I had met at a Marga gathering [relating to the Gamani Corea Foundation] on Saturday … and have followed it up by embracing a few others with the same inquiry. The short responses from Dushni Werakoon, Godfrey Gunatilleka and Nishan de Mel, indicate that Kanagasundaram and the Lanka Guardian are peddling nonsense. Continue reading
Filed under accountability, doctoring evidence, economic processes, elephant tales, governance, historical interpretation, island economy, landscape wondrous, politIcal discourse, self-reflexivity, slanted reportage, sri lankan society, the imaginary and the real, world affairs, world events & processes







