A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
(Full Story)
Search This Blog
Back to 500BC.
==========================
Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, November 1, 2014
Sex For Slots
( November 1, 2014, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) The
Opposition has demanded, in Parliament, a thorough probe into a sex
scandal that has rocked Sri Lanka Cricket and stringent action against
the culprits. UNP MP Ajith P. Perera said some of the women cricketers
had been compelled to have sex with certain officials to secure places
in the national team. The government claimed action had already been
taken and President Mahinda Rajapaksa and Sports Minister Mahindananda
Aluthgamage had ordered two separate investigations into the
allegations.
What’s this world coming to when sportswomen cannot play for the country
without gratifying the carnal desires of some sickos in the garb of
officials? Some principals demand and obtain sexual favours from mothers
desperate for admitting their children to public schools. Unless these
sexual predators are brought to justice as a national priority no woman
will be safe in this country.
Time was when mothers asked their sons to stop playing cricket and
concentrate on their studies to achieve success in life. But, today, it
is the other way around; mothers pressure their sons to stop studying
and play cricket at a tender age so as to be able to make all the money
in the world in a few years and live happily ever after. Former World
Cup winning Sri Lankan skipper Arjuna Ranatunge has famously said that
the rot in our cricket set in the day cricketers started playing for
money. No truer word has ever been spoken of the game! It needs to be
added that the situation took a turn for the worse the day politicians
started meddling with the cricket administration and crooks got
catapulted to top positions thereof.
When politics and not merit becomes the sole criterion for selecting top
officials of any sports control body dregs go places and ruin those
institutions. Sri Lanka Cricket has been no exception. There are, of
course, some decent men there, but they are voiceless and wary of
standing up to the rogues for fear of reprisal. The media, former
players and many others have fought quite a battle all these years to
reverse this trend but in vain so much so that cricket has ceased to be
the gentleman’s game it used to be.
Susanthika Jayasinghe also complained of harassment at the hands of a
powerful politician in the Kumaratunga government (1994-2000). Others
may have given in but being made of sterner stuff Susie courageously
fought back and the politico had to beat a retreat. She went on to put
Sri Lanka on the map by winning an Olympic Silver. Susie’s greatest
achievement, in our book, was not her much coveted medal but her great
escape from that randy politico blinded by lust!
Politicians responsible for appointing sexual predators to the top
notches of sports bodies cannot absolve themselves of the blame for this
sorry state of affairs. The onus is on them to keep their pet beasts on
a tight leash.
The so-called Cricket Board is Sri Lanka’s Augean Stables. It stinks to
high heaven and cleaning it is a Herculean task. The government is
apparently determined to keep it that way. The place is perennially in
dire financial straits because crooks help themselves to its funds with
impunity. Worse, they ride rough shod over good players who refuse to
toe their line. These elements are ruling the roost and lining their
pockets as they are servile and malleable enough to pander to the whims
and fancies of their political masters at the expense of the interests
of the game.
One should not be so naïve as to expect anything to come of the ongoing
investigations into the Sri Lanka Cricket sex scandal. The sickos who
have used their political connections to secure high posts are likely to
be let off the hook because the victims may not want to come forward to
give evidence against them for obvious reasons.
(The writer, editor of the “The Island”, where this piece was original appeared)