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
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, December 31, 2014
2 children in critical condition after run over by Salman Khan backup vehicle!
- Wednesday, 31 December 2014
Two
children are receiving treatment at the ICU of the Colombo National
Hospital in critical condition after being run over on December 29 by a
backup vehicle providing security to Bollywood actor Salman Khan who was
in Sri Lanka for president Mahinda Rajapaksa’s election campaign, an
official of Welikada police traffic division told ‘Lanka News Web.’
The accident occurred at Ambagaha
Junction at Welikada. The presidential secretariat has ordered Welikada
police to hide this incident from the media. Accordingly, the traffic
division of Welikada police is treating it as a minor accident.
The police official said the vehicle
involved in the accident belongs to aviation services minister
Priyankara Jayaratne. Doctors have recommended that a foot one child be
amputated, while they are fighting to bring consciousness back for the
other child.
Alarmed by the incident, Salman had abandoned his visit and returned to India on the same night.
Also, the Indian high commissioner in
Sri Lanka has complained to the Indian external affairs ministry against
Salman’s campaigning on behalf of president Rajapaksa. As a result, the
Indian government has told the actor to return immediately.
- Wednesday, 31 December 2014
Is Mahinda Counting On Extremists To Help Him Win (Again)?
When I began this column, over seven months ago, I did not think that the threat to President Rajapaksa would come to fruition quite so quickly. Until the incidents at Aluthgama,
I thought it unlikely that anyone would be able to defeat him in a
Presidential election. After that I thought any reasonable candidate
would probably win, if there was unity in the opposition, but it seemed
unlikely that that would be achieved. And after Uva, when it seemed that
the government was on a slippery slope, I assumed Mahinda Rajapaksa
would have the sense to back down if he was unable to make the few
simple reforms and tough decisions that would have restored his
popularity.
But he failed to do so, perhaps because vast funds had been spent and
there would be nothing left for the sort of propaganda blitz he was
planning if the election had to be postponed till 2015. So it is likely
that he will soon be history. Fortunately he has an opponent who will
safeguard his position in history, and make sure that his victory
against terrorism in 2009 will not be forgotten. He then has little to
lose, if he is willing to accept defeat gracefully.
The same is not true
however of those who have profited from his Presidency, and I suspect
they will use every trick in the book to cling to power. But even they
are running out of tricks, and by now they have begun to realize that
the hammer and tongs approach they had decided on simply will not work.
Thus, though Temple Trees is full of visitors who are sumptuously
treated, everyone now knows who is paying for this, and many of the
invitees, who would rather not waste their time on long journeys, are
even less likely to vote for the President. Certainly, though they may
be more sophisticated than most, and to generalize from them would be
dangerous, colleagues at university have affirmed the need for change,
and their disgust at being forced to have dinner at short notice with
the President.Read More