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Wednesday, 30 June 2021

1,864 COVID-19 patients detected; total rises to 259,089


  • 18,250 PCR tests carried out
  • Divulapitiya, Peliyagoda, Prisons and New Year clusters exceed 251,000 patients
  • Over 77,000 patients detected from Western Province during third wave
  • 30,107 persons under medical care, recoveries rise to 225,952 


By Shailendree Wickrama Adittiya-Thursday, 1 July 2021

Sri Lanka’s COVID-19 detections yesterday rose to 259,089 with 1,864 persons testing positive for the virus.

The Health Promotion Bureau states that 18,250 PCR tests were carried out yesterday.

COVID-19 patients detected yesterday include 1,786 persons from the New Year cluster and the Divulapitiya, Peliyagoda, Prisons and New Year clusters now have a cumulative patient count of 251,614.

The cumulative patient count includes 156,923 persons from the New Year cluster, 82,785 persons from the Peliyagoda cluster, 7,051 persons from the New Year cluster, and 3,059 persons from the Divulapitiya cluster.

The Epidemiology Unit states that 5,165 Sri Lankan returnees from overseas and 328 foreigners have also tested positive for COVID-19 in the country.

The district distribution of COVID-19 patients shows 61,352 persons from Colombo, 45,022 persons from Gampaha, 28,612 persons from Kalutara, 13,730 persons from Kurunegala, and 13,254 persons from Kandy.

Detections during the third wave of the pandemic include 29,055 persons from Colombo, 26,488 persons from Gampaha, and 21,554 persons from Kalutara.

The district distribution takes into account the patients detected on Tuesday, of which 348 were from Colombo, 280 from Gampaha, 198 from Kalutara, 113 from Galle, and 93 from Ratnapura.

The Epidemiology Unit states that 1,717 persons tested positive for COVID-19 on Tuesday, including 1,687 persons from the New Year cluster, 22 persons from the Prisons cluster, and eight Sri Lankan returnees from abroad.

At present, 30,107 persons are undergoing medical treatment and 1,139 persons suspected of having COVID-19 are under observation.

The country’s COVID-19 recoveries yesterday rose to 225,952 with hospitals discharging 2,481 persons.

US Congress Resolution 413: Option For Sri Lanka To Choose Either Confrontation Or Conciliation



By Thambu Kanagasabai –

Thambu Kanagasabai

The recently tabled US 413 Resolution in the US Congress led by Ms. Ross breathes fresh air, confidence and hopes for the Tamils, particularly the victimized Tamils whose grievances which commenced in 1948 reached the climax with the genocidal war crimes committed during the war [2006-2009] 

However, structural genocide has now taken a strong hold on their lives compounded with denial of accountability and non-dispensation of justice and reparations for the victims.

The UNHRC Resolutions of 31/1, 34/1, 37/1, and 40/1, sponsored by core members including USA, UK and Germany were met with contempt, rejection and denials of Sri Lankan Governments which consider accountability and justice as anathemas, irrelevant and interference with Sri Lanka’s sovereignty and integrity which are exploited as convenient shields of impunity for defying the Resolutions. 

Under these circumstances when the victimized Tamils are living pessimistically and desolately without hopes for remedies, US Resolution 413 in the Congress has sprung like an oasis in the desert for the victims in the Tamil community as a whole. 

This Resolution has highlighted the 12 years grievances of Tamils, exposed the sinister design, malignant motives and hidden agenda of Sri Lankan Governments to gloss over, delay, deny, defeat and discard those Resolutions slapping the faces of UN, UNHRC and the International community.  

The Resolutions’ salient features are as follows:-

[1] For 12 years, Sri Lanka has failed to take any simple action on those Resolutions successfully employing the dilly dallying deceptive tactics. 

[2] Sri Lanka has even failed to implement its own commitments, Recommendations like the LLRC of 2012 and Paranagama Commission Report on Enforced Disappearances – 2014.

[3] Sri Lanka has failed to initiate any local independent impartial investigation including offering reparations, thereby has buried the values of accountability and justice. 

[4] Sri Lanka excels in doling out occasional promises meant for instant consumption, but without any good faith for compliance and implementation.

[5] It is high time that the hollow promises and time buying tactics of Sri Lanka are exposed for suitable actions by the UN, UNHRC and the International Community. 

[6] The promised accountability and justice have been thrown overboard while Sri Lanka’s system of entrenched impunity is boosted and nourished infusing more flesh and blood. The April 19, 2021 Resolution tabled in Parliament by Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapakshe has elevated impunity at its highest pedestal where the Security Forces and State Officials involved in the alleged commission of war crimes etc. including bribery, corruption and money laundering are out of the reach of the long arm of the law shielding any prosecution. Adding insult and compounding miseries of victimized Tamils, those convicted and jailed for the massacres of innocent Tamil civilians like the TRINCO MASSACRE OF 5 STUDENTS, are pulled out of the jails to walk free, an act of insult and a blot on the judiciary and legal system.

[7] The US Resolution 413 has hit hard at the Government’s dereliction of obligations to implement and enforce the provisions of Enforced Disappearances Act of 2011 including the Office of the Missing Persons [OMP] which are almost archives and forgotten.

[8] The Resolution has also slammed the Sri Lankan Government’s denial of democratic rights to the people living in the North and East by postponing the Provincial Council elections, the only semblance of power sharing mechanism half-heartedly granted to the North and East under the much criticized Indo/Sri Lanka Accord of 1987. 

[9] Sri Lanka’s open challenge and defiance of UN, UNHRC and the International Community is fully exposed with its blatant breaches of several promises made to the world organizations particularly pledging to repeal the dreaded draconian Prevention of Terrorism Act of 1978.

[PTA]. On the contrary, PTA has now become the Government’s main weapon to hunt down the media, and anyone opposing or daring to criticize the Government and its top Officials. There is no iota of doubt that the PTA will remain as the frontal armoury to advance the dictatorial agenda by intimidation and threats of violence against peaceful protesters like the threats made against the families of the disappeared who have been protesting day and night in the North and East for more than four years.

[10] Increased surveillance, intimidation and threats against Muslims including arbitrary arrests like the arrest of a Muslim Poet Ahnaf Jazeem.

[11] The 20A Amendment to the constitution has placed the President above the laws of Sri Lanka by granting full impunity from prosecutions for any civil and or any criminal acts committed by him in his official capacity as President during the term of his office. 

Coupled with the US Resolutions is the European Union’s Resolution which is calling for the immediate repeal of PTA and implementation of its own promises.

There is no doubt that the President has assumed supremacy over the legislature, judiciary and executive aided by his family members who are holding several Ministerial and sub Ministerial positions controlling about 16 Ministries and Departments. Undoubtedly Sri Lanka’s fate of the mangled democracy’s survival hangs at the whims and fancies of Rajapaksa and it appears there is little hope it will emerge unscathed during Rajapaksas’ reign unless and until UN and International community take the necessary punitive measures against Sri Lanka without delay.

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Sri Lanka: Pardons a Meager Response to Abusive Law

Repeal Prevention of Terrorism Act to Meet International Commitments

President Gotabaya Rajapaksa addresses parliament in Colombo, Sri Lanka on August 20, 2020.  © 2020 Akila Jayawardana/NurPhoto via AP


June 29, 2021 

(New York) – The Sri Lankan government’s pardon of 16 prisoners convicted under the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA), however welcome, does not address the urgent need to repeal the draconian law, Human Rights Watch said today. The European Parliament recently adopted a resolution calling for the European Union to consider withdrawing preferential access to its market unless the Sri Lankan government complies with its commitments to replace the law and uphold human rights.

To mark a Buddhist festival on June 24, 2021, the government of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa pardoned 94 prisoners, including 16 people convicted under the PTA. The law has long enabled arbitrary detention and confessions obtained through torture, and been used primarily against members of Tamil and Muslim minorities. The president also pardoned a political ally, Duminda Silva, a former member of parliament who was convicted for the 2011 murder of a rival politician.

“President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s recent pardons highlight the need for genuine rule of law in Sri Lanka, not favors to friends or blatantly cynical measures to keep trade preferences,” said Meenakshi Ganguly, South Asia director. “The release of people imprisoned for years under the Prevention of Terrorism Act in no way removes the need to replace the abusive law or the need for pressure from Sri Lanka’s partners to do so.”

The 16 PTA prisoners pardoned had in most cases been imprisoned for over a decade because of alleged links to the defeated separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). They were either nearing the end of their sentences or had already been incarcerated for a period exceeding their sentence.

Since taking office in 2019, the Rajapaksa administration has used the PTA particularly against members of the Tamil and Muslim communities, while taking no action against those inciting violence and discrimination against minority groups. Among those still detained under the act are Hejaaz Hizbullah, a Muslim human rights lawyer who has been in custody since April 14, 2020, and Ahnaf Jazeem, a Muslim poet who has been held since May 16, 2020, for a book of verses promoting peace and tolerance.

Rather than repealing the PTA, in recent months Rajapaksa has taken steps that make it even more abusive. In March, new regulations were announced that would allow the authorities to incarcerate anyone accused of causing “religious, racial, or communal disharmony” for up to two years without trial. In June, the president announced that a police facility in Colombo, which has been a notorious torture site, would be used for holding PTA prisoners.

“The number of people arrested in the north and east under the PTA is increasing,” a lawyer whose own organization has been targeted under the law told Human Rights Watch. Under Rajapaksa, the security forces have harassed and intimidated numerous civil society groups and human rights defenders, especially in the Tamil-majority north and east.

For many years there have been domestic and international calls to replace the PTA with rights-respecting legislation. United Nations experts and human rights groups including Human Rights Watch have extensively documented grave abuses under the PTA.

The European Parliament’s June 10 resolution urged the European Union to suspend Sri Lanka’s access to preferential trading terms known as GSP+ unless Sri Lanka fulfills its international human rights obligations, including a specific May 19, 2017 commitment to replace the PTA. In 2020, the Rajapaksa government backtracked from that commitment, but following the European Parliament resolution, it announced renewed plans to replace the law.

The European Commission should consider launching the process of heightened scrutiny known as an “enhanced engagement” with the Sri Lankan government under the GSP+ scheme, setting out a timeline and concrete benchmarks for replacing the PTA and fulfilling other human rights obligations, Human Rights Watch said.

President Rajapaksa’s decision to pardon Silva, who was among four people convicted of murder for the shooting death of Bharatha Lakshman Premachandra and three others during a local election campaign event in 2011, highlights the government’s disregard for accountability for serious crimes. The Supreme Court upheld the conviction in 2018.

The United Nations human rights office condemned the pardon as “another example of selective, arbitrary granting of pardons that weakens rule of law and undermines accountability.” The United States ambassador to Sri Lanka, Alaina Teplitz, welcomed the early release of PTA prisoners but said that pardoning Silva undermines the “rule of law.”

The Bar Association of Sri Lanka said that without a transparent rule-bound procedure, “The pardon granted to Duminda Silva would be unreasonable and arbitrary and will result in erosion of the Rule of Law and result in loss of public confidence in respect to the administration of justice.”

Such a procedure needs to include obtaining a report from the trial judges before granting a pardon, as required under the constitution, the bar association said. Similar concerns over the arbitrary use of the presidential pardon were raised in 2020 when Rajapaksa pardoned Sunil Ratnayake, a soldier convicted of killing eight Tamil civilians.

Rajapaksa has also undermined the rule of law by forming a presidential commission that recommended dropping charges against dozens of his allies and relatives who are under investigation or on trial for alleged human rights abuses or corruption. He has also undermined the independence of the judiciary by passing an amendment to the constitution that gives the president full control over the appointment of senior judges.

“President Rajapaksa’s assault on the rule of law heightens with each passing day,” Ganguly said. “Sri Lanka’s international partners need to keep up the pressure until there is genuine reform to end systemic abuses, and not allow themselves to be deflected with unreliable promises or empty gestures.”

 Judges, lawyers, detectives, danger..! Danger..!! Danger...!!! Death threats following Kudu Duminda's release by his underworld disciples who grew up in freedom

 


Chadrapradeep writes

(Lanka-e-News -30.June.2021,3.00PM) Arumadura Romelo Duminda Silva alias 'Kudu Duminda' who was a mass murderer as well as a drug kingpin of Sri Lankan drug trafficking was released from prison unconditionally and sent home. Lanka e news is reported that high court judge Padmini Ranawaka who pronounced the first death sentence to Duminda and the judges who upheld the death sentence, Thusitha Mudalige, the lawyer who prosecuted Kudu Duminda on behalf of the Attorney General's Department and Shani Abeysekera who conducted the CID investigation has death threats.

With the release of their leader, Kudu Duminda's underworld comrades are chanting "We will take revenge on all those who executed our boss".

The easy targets of these underworlds are retired judges who currently have no protection. Kudu Duminda was first sentenced to death by High Court Judges M.C.B.S. Moraes and Padmini N Ranawaka. The appeal court judges Nalin Perera, Buwaneka Aluvihare, Priyantha Jayawardena and Vijith K. Malalgoda presided over by Chief Justice Priyasad Dep upheld the judgment.

Retired judges have more threats..

Former Chief Justices Priyasad Dep, Nalin Perera and Padmini N Ranawaka have retired. The biggest threat is to them. Judge Chamath Moraes is safe because he is in duty in Fiji. Since Priyantha Jayewardene is a pro Rajapaksa ally he has no threat. Although Buwaneka Aluvihare and Vijith K. Although Malalgoda are on duty now with security they too were not unaffected by Kudu Duminda's underworld.

His brother Reno de Silva's who campaigned for the release of his brother Kudu Duminda campaigned mostly through his drug channel targeting Padmini Ranawaka who proouced the first death sentence. Padmini Ranawaka was in vain insulted and subjected to revenge by the voice of a stupid actor who is now imprisoned because of his mouth. The revenge was so great that even though she retired, her pension has been suspended to this day. Judge Ranawaka had spoken with a stupid actor on the phone shortly after Kudu Duminda's verdict was announced, but Reno de Silva was sly and created a false impression that she had influenced Kudu Duminda's verdict. This has now ingrained in the hearts of the underworld disciples who are overjoyed with the release of Kudu Duminda.

Thus, the most threatened judge is none other than former judge Padmini Ranawaka.

Threats against Shani and Thusitha Mudalige..

Attorney-at-Law Thusitha Mudalige who prosecuted Duminda is now ill and SSP Shani Abeysekera who conducted the investigations against Duminda, has been suspended and his firearm seized. Therefore, they are easy targets of Kudu Duminda's disciples.

Shani Abeysekera is already under serious threat. It happens with the most despicable ban on the work of that outstanding detective. Police seized not only the pistol and gun provided to the detective but also ammunition bought with his personal money with the permission of the Ministry of Defense. Now the great police detective who convicted and prosecuted about 82 major crimes from 1996 to 2020 until his duty was suspended is disarmed and made him an easy target for the criminals.

Shani will be suspended on January 7th 2020. Later that night, a man spoke on his phone in a female voice, threatening to kill not only his life but also his wife and two children.

Be ready to carry the corpses of your wife and children..

The person calling from a VOIP number marked 501 and threatened Shani as "You F . . .all your acting is over now, We are very happy now, Instead of washing pots at Ranjan Ramanayake's house, come and wash pots in my house pots. We have been waiting for a long time to give you a good treatment, before we take revenge from you, be ready to carry the corpse of your wife and two children. How happy we can be to see what we do for you and your family. You son of a bitch we will never keep you alive. We can see wherever you are going. You will be burned to death, remember this is our turn now” 

He informed about this to the IGP in writing the next day, unfortunately until to date no investigation has been carried out but he was remanded in custody. It is very easy for Gotabhaya's security forces to find out whether the VOIP phone number 501 is legal or not but they deliberately neglect, Doesn't that mean that the Gotabaya government is involved in that threat?

Shani Abeysekera, who was released on bail today, is also under serious threats from henchmens of the drug Kingpin who have revived up with the release of Kudu Duminda.

The threats of Kudu Duminda's disciples cannot be ignored..

"We will take revenge on all those who executed our boss." Lanka e News does not ignore the above threat imposed by Kudu Duminda's followers because they have a lot of money in their drug network and there is nothing that money cannot do in Sri Lanka, and we have a good assessment of what can happen in a Sino-Rajapaksa colony where the police and the CID have become the Rajapaksa's checkpoint, combined with the state power of the Rajapaksas.

Judges, lawyers, detectives, danger..! Danger..!! Danger...!!!

Chadrapradeep

Translated by Robinhood

---------------------------
by     (2021-06-30 09:35:11)

Parliament and Parliamentary Democracy in Sri Lanka: A Brief Political History


Photo courtesy of Culture Trip

Today is the International Day of Parliamentarism


PROF. JAYADEVA UYANGODA-06/30/2021

Parliament has been a theme of many political debates in Sri Lanka since the establishment of the country’s first modern parliament in 1947. The narrative of Sri Lanka’s parliament has been intertwined with the stories of modern democracy, changing constitutional architecture of the state and political agendas of different elite groups vying for state power. The chronicle of Sri Lanka’s parliament is also an account of the vicissitudes of the country’s post-independence politics.

The introduction of the principle of elections based on limited franchise in 1910 and then the universal adult franchise in 1931 were early turning points during the formative phase of parliamentary system in colonial Sri Lanka. What evolved during the period between 1910 and 1947 was a proto-parliamentary system in the sense that the legislature was still an institution of the colonial state, the voters were not politically free citizens, and there was no independent political community bearing political sovereignty.  The State Council established in 1931 on the basis of universal adult franchise was the forerunner to the parliament proper inaugurated in 1947. The post-independence parliament functioned in its original form till 1972 without any major disruption. There were however arguments for its remaking through an agenda of  decolonization so that the parliament could become an authentic symbol of national independence.

Since 1970, the nature, composition, role and powers of parliament have been subjected to alteration several times. Directions of such alterations shaped by ideological commitments of various power blocs, group interests of  competing class alliances and political elites, personal ambitions of individual political leaders, and occasionally the popular expectations for better governance.

Original design

Sri Lanka’s parliamentary government was originally designed by framers of the Soulbury Constitution generally in line with the Westminster model with some minor deviations.

The British model of parliamentary government had three specific features. Firstly, it had a bi-cameral legislature, reflecting class divisions within the British society. The interests of the ordinary people were represented in one House and interests of the landed and wealthy elites in the other. Members of the first, appropriately named the House of Commons in accordance with the English class values, were elected directly by the voters, or the ‘people.’ Members of the other Chamber, the so-called ‘Upper House’ that had an equally apt name, the House of Lords, were not people’s representatives. They were not elected through popular vote either. The hereditary head of state – King/Queen – was an institution of parliament symbolizing the monarchy which was never abolished in the process of Britain’s long democratic revolution. Thirdly, the political executive, or the Cabinet of Ministers, was part of the legislature in the sense that its members were also members of parliament, and they were collectively accountable to parliament.

Following that model, Sri Lanka’s parliament too consisted of a bi-cameral, or two-chamber, legislature as well as the British monarch. In the Sri Lankan version of parliament, the two chambers were re-named as the Senate and the House of Representatives.  Naming the second chamber as ‘Senate’ was not in line with the Westminster tradition. Rather, it was a legacy of Roman republicanism. However, that has never been a point of controversy among Sri Lanka’s constitutional experts.

Meanwhile, Sri Lanka’s parliament had one major  deviation from the British parliamentary model.  The Soulbury Constitution had imposed limitations on the legislative sovereignty of Sri Lanka’s parliament.

Two controversies

Two major issues of controversy soon arose surrounding Sri Lanka’s first parliament. The first was the question whether parliament, with limitations on the scope of its legislative powers under the minority protection clause of 29 (2), had really embodied people’s expectations for full political independence from colonial rule. The question at the core of this controversy was the following: If parliament was not conferred with full and sovereign legislative power, could the ‘nation’ be viewed as really free, fully independent? The second was the ethnic majoritarian turn which Sri Lanka’s parliament took no sooner than the country received political independence.

Those who spearheaded the debate on the first theme were Sri Lanka’s Left parties and the Sinhalese nationalists. Both sides, although with different political agendas, shared the position that in the absence of a parliament with sovereign legislative powers, political independence of 1948 was incomplete. While the Sinhalese nationalist forces argued for the replacement of Section 29 (2) with a new clause removing the legislative limitation on parliament, they also advanced a novel idea that Sri Lanka should be made a republic within the British Commonwealth. This was a key recommendation of the Buddhist Inquiry Commission Report of 1953.

Meanwhile, the Left proposal for a republic had echoed both French and socialist republican notions of freedom of the political community. It also had a legal justification, elaborated by Lanka Sama Samaja Party’s (LSSP’s) Dr. Colvin R de Silva. Since a legal revolution was required to alter or rescind Section 29 (2), making Ceylon a republic through a popular mandate for a constituent assembly was the only option available. The example of Irish Republic of 1921 was perhaps in the back of Dr. de Silva’s mind.

Meanwhile, the nationalist and socialist parties – SLFP, LSSP and CP – got their much awaited opportunity to create a fully sovereign parliament and a republic. That was in 1970 when their United Front coalition of the SLFP, LSSP and CP received a two-thirds majority seats in parliament.  However, as we will see later, a ruling party securing a two-thirds majority in parliament has always been quite harmful to the health and well-being of Sri Lanka’s parliamentary democracy.

Majoritarian parliamentarism

The majoritarian turn which Sri Lanka’s parliament took at its very inception reflected an inevitable fate of modern parliamentary democracy in ethnically plural societies.  As Arendt Lijphart, an American political scientist noted in his comparative research on democracy in parliamentary systems, has shown, the principle of majority rule had an inherent weakness. It enabled a numerically strong ethnic group in plural, multi-ethnic societies to transform not only the legislature, but also the entire system of democratic government, into an instrument to serve the interests of the ethnic majority at the expense of the minorities. Tightly built into the structures of electoral and parliamentary politics, ethnic majoritarianism is a specific type of  democratic deviation of which Sri Lanka continues to be an example.

The enactment by post-independence parliament of the citizenship and franchise reform laws in 1949, within just one year of independence, marked the beginning of an irreversible process. It pushed Sri Lanka’s parliamentary democracy into a trap of ethnic majoritarianism and ethnic bargaining of the zero-sum type. The makers of the official language legislation of 1956 and the First Republican Constitution of 1972, the Sri Lanka Freedom Party and its socialist allies of different hues. faithfully followed the ethnic-majoritarian footsteps of their senior political rivals in the United National Party, with greater conviction and determination. Only the eloquent speeches delivered in parliament by opposition MPs on both occasions, not the legislative enactments themselves, that still remain as testimony to the vibrance of Sri Lanka’s parliamentary democracy  in moments of grave setbacks.

Republican recasting of Parliament

Re-making of Sri Lanka’s parliament in line with the principles of republicanism in 1972 marked a major turning point in the evolution of Sri Lanka’s parliamentary democracy. It brought to an effective end the presence of Westminster parliamentary model in Sri Lanka’s constitutional practice. At the same time, the damage which the First Republican Constitution did to Sri Lanka’s parliamentary democracy is second only to what the Second Republican Constitution was to make a few years later in 1978.

If we take any new Constitutions as embodiment of projects of power forged by elites with specific political and ideological agendas, the 1972 and 1978 constitutions were championed by two elite groups who shared a thoroughgoing skepticism, for different reasons, about the utility of liberal parliamentary democracy to advance their political interests.

In 1972, the United Front coalition of socialists and Sinhalese nationalists  found an opportunity to drive Sri Lanka decisively away from the old style parliamentary democracy that had been designed in line with the late seventeenth century Lockean principles of liberal, minimum government. It was also an opportunity for them to put into practice ideas that had been crystalized in their polemical attacks on the Soulbury constitutional  model. Constitutionalizing ‘Popular Sovereignty’ was the foremost political and ideological goal of the socialist and nationalist makers of the 1972 constitution. They proclaimed Sri Lanka to be a Sovereign Republic and made a hybrid constitution mixing features of parliamentary democracy with that of a Socialist Republic. The single-chamber House of Representatives  was re-named as ‘National State Assembly’, a name that reminded one the name of the French Parliament after the Revolution of 1789, ‘National Assembly’. It gestured to the commitment of some influential framers of the 1972 constitution to move away from the English Westminster Parliamentary model and embrace the French Republican parliamentary model along with some features of socialist constitutionalism.

In 1972, there was also a peculiarly instrumentalist approach to the meaning, purpose and functions of parliament as a key state institution. It was more a socialist republican parliament than a liberal democratic one. The constitution declared,  in words borrowed from the socialist political vocabulary, that the National State Assembly (NSA) was to be “the supreme instrument of state power in the Republic.” Thus, the NSA was also the institutional embodiment of people’s sovereignty and thus exercised the legislative, executive and judicial powers of the people. Unlike in the case of Soulbury parliament, the republican parliament’s legislative power was declared “supreme.” No authority, institution or person, including the judiciary, had the power or jurisdiction “to inquire into, pronounce upon, or in any manner call into question the validity of any law” passed by the NSA. This clause was clearly a slap on the face of those who drafted the Soulbury constitution and allowed implicitly the principle of judicial review of legislation, a facility earlier used by Tamil minority citizens to challenge discriminatory legislation passed by the previous parliament. With its legislative supremacy firmly established, the NSA still lacked any measure of institutional autonomy; it was an ‘instrument’ in the hands of the political leadership of the regime, an influential section of which saw parliament as the key state institution to be utilized as a facilitator of socialist transformation. In other words, parliament was given so much power and authority by the 1972 constitution not to empower the citizens who elect its members, but the regime and its elites that controlled parliament for their own ends.

Thus, the way in which socialist constitutional thought, along with French Republicanism, had inspired the specific illiberal features of Sri Lanka’s parliament under the First Republican Constitution of 1972 warrants some acknowledgement, although belatedly.

The Second Republican Constitution of 1978 continued to re-create this model of illiberal Republican parliament with added features that gave the constitution ’s republican framework a few de Gaulle style autocratic features as well. Mr. J. R. Jayewardene and his reputed legal team made the parliament powerless and utterly subservient to the ‘leader’, who was to become the unelected President of a republic as the  head of the executive. To emphasize the  supremacy of the executive over the legislature and the latter’s devalued status, J. R. Jayewardene, its architect, introduced to the world his new constitutional scheme as ‘an executive presidential system.’ Moving decisively away from the Westminster model of parliamentary-cabinet government that had an implicit framework of separation of powers, the 1978 constitution brought both parliament and the cabinet under total domination exercised by one individual, the President who was simultaneously the head of state, head of government, head of the cabinet and also head of the ruling party. The political and constitutional change of 1978 marked the culmination of a process of the rise of the executive branch of Sri Lankan state over the legislature that began in 1972. Subordination of parliament to the executive headed by individuals with authoritarian-autocratic agendas has been the key general feature of new template of executive-legislature relations as defined by the 1978 Constitution, except during 2015-2019 when the 19th Amendment restored the powers of parliament vis a vis the executive.

Failed reforms

The blow that Sri Lanka’s parliamentary democracy received in 1978 has been so debilitating that several attempts to restore Parliament-centric Cabinet government through constitutional reform have failed. In fact, when there was mounting criticism of the presidential system with arguments for its total abolition, one option brought to the table was returning to the pre-1972 parliamentary system with some adjustments.  The first occasion when an electoral promise for returning to parliamentary government was made in 1994 by the People’s Alliance (PA), consisting of the SLFP, LSSP and CP. However, in the absence of a consensus between the PA government and the opposition UNP to ensure the passage of new reform proposals in parliament with a two-thirds majority support, Sri Lanka’s presidential system could easily survive during 1995-2001.

During the subsequent years, particularly after 2005, the Presidential system could find its most ardent defenders and beneficiaries from among its harshest critics of yesteryear, the SLFP and Left leadership.  Interestingly the presidential rule of President Mahinda Rajapaksa from 2005 to 2014 also led to a vigorous renewal of the argument among the oppositionist forces for returning to parliamentary – cabinet government, with a President reduced to the status of a ceremonial Head of State with no executive powers. Ironically, it became the UNP’s turn now to spearhead the new campaign for the abolition or reforming the presidential system within a framework of parliamentary government.  Tired of a presidential system marked by autocratic style of governance, abuse of power with impunity, contempt for checks and balances and the rule of law, relentless greed for personalized political power, and normalization of repression, public opinion once again turned in favour of abolishing the Presidential system.

A fresh coalescing of various reform constituencies eventually contributed to the emergence of  a broad new coalition, bringing together the UNP and a breakaway group from the SLFP and civil society groups, to win the Presidential election in January 2015. However, political elites within the new yahapalanaya (‘Good Governance’) regime could not reach a consensus on the proposal for abolishing the presidential system altogether. While one faction pressed for the restoration of parliamentary-cabinet model of government, the other faction made a case for the retention of the presidency, with reduced powers. The latter’s key argument was that parliamentary-cabinet government headed by a prime minister would not guarantee either political stability or a strong leadership to ensure national security while functioning as the symbol of national sovereignty.

This defence of the presidential system, advanced by one strand of thought within the yahapalanaya coalition, also had an implicit critique of the pure model of parliamentary democracy. According to this critique. parliamentary democracy would produce only inherently weak governments. Faced with the prospects of minority ethnic insurgencies and terrorist threats, Sri Lanka’s national security interests require political stability under a president with executive powers, who would not depend on parliamentary support for political survival. The eventual compromise between the parliamentarist and presidentialist approaches to constitutional reform in 2015 was the 19th Amendment. It produced a  hybrid parliamentary-presidential government, with a new balance of power favouring parliament., If permitted to operate after 2019, reformist provisions of the 19th Amendment would have contributed to further consolidation of the parliamentary-cabinet government.

Parliament after 20th Amendment

However, the year 2019 saw the renewal of the argument for a quick and complete restoration of the executive presidential system. The activation of Islamic militancy highlighting  the urgency of national security preparedness and the emergence of a presidential hopeful with a personal ambition to become Sri Lanka’s all-powerful leader of destiny were the two major factors that once again put to halt the consolidation of parliamentary democracy in Sri Lanka. Gotabaya Rajapaksa, Sri Lanka’s new President, brought back, through the 20th Amendment to the Constitution, the original ‘executive presidential system’  designed by Mr. J. R. Jayewardene nearly fifty years ago. Rajapaksa and his party, Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP), totally ignored the rich political debate that had subjected the presidential system to critical scrutiny and evaluation. He even demonstrated his antipathy to the autonomy of parliament as guaranteed by the 19th Amendment when he began to rule the country  ignoring parliament, particularly its powers of law making and controlling the executive, and financial control. The period of covid pandemic, beginning March 2020, was one in which the constitutional role of Parliament was ignored by the executive. That is also the period during which Sri Lanka entered a new phase of executive authoritarianism. One defining feature of executive authoritarianism in Sri Lanka since 1978 has been the devaluation and marginalization of parliament as an institution of government.

As Sri Lanka’s experience since 1978 shows, the rise of presidentialism has been also a story of rapid decline of parliamentary democracy. Sri Lanka’s presidentialism has a template that has a dual approach to parliament. The first is the taming of the parliament, making it ineffective, incapable of self – assertion and wholly subservient to the head of the executive branch of the state. The second is making the parliament superficially strong with a two-thirds majority for the ruling party to which the President belongs, and simultaneously turning it into an instrument of presidential rule. Thus, the two-thirds parliamentary majority for the ruling party in Sri Lanka’s presidential system of government is in practice a bane for parliamentary democracy.

As Sri Lanka’s past and current experience shows, governments with two-thirds majority have always undermined parliamentary democracy  and pushed the country’s  politics and the constitution into illiberal, authoritarian and autocratic transformations. Ambitious politicians with personal agendas have used their two-thirds parliamentary majorities  to coerce the parliament to abdicate its powers, duties and responsibilities in order to serve egoistic political goals of ambitious of leaders who think of themselves as men of destiny.  Legislative power of parliament has been repeatedly abused by such rulers obsessed with executive power to undermine the parliament’s role as the main institutional agency of popular sovereignty and democracy.

Meanwhile, parliamentary democracy has survived only under governments with unstable parliamentary majorities. However, reformist governments with unstable majorities cannot restore parliamentary democracy through constitutional reform. This in turn gives rise to a paradox which is very difficult to resolve: restoration of parliamentary democracy in Sri Lanka requires the commitment of a new reformist political force, capable of securing a two-thirds parliamentary majority as well as the office of the President. It also requires a sustainable coalition of both the executive and legislative branches of the state. The head of the executive in such a coalition should be prepared to abdicate the huge range of powers and privileges attached to his/her position for the larger good of the people.  Amidst such formidable obstacles, the restoration of Sri Lanka’s parliamentary democracy seems to require a new type of legal revolution.

Preparing for ‘beyond GSP Plus’


By Neville Ladduwahetty- 

In the midst of all the challenges that Sri Lanka is currently facing, the prospect of having to prepare itself for a possible temporary withdrawal by the European Union (EU) of its tariff preference in favour of developing countries known as GSP+ at this particular juncture, when the whole world is desperately trying to cope with the effects of a pandemic, runs counter to the EU’s own mission of helping developing countries through GSP+. This preferential treatment is extended to Low and Middle Income countries as classified by the Word Bank. According to this classification the Gross National Income (GNI) of Low Middle Income Countries varies between $1036 and $4045, while GNI of Upper Income Countries varies between $ 4046 and 12535.

The GNI per capita in Sri Lanka has hovered around $4000 depending on the method of calculation. Therefore, reaching a GNI per capita greater than $4046 is not much of a stretch. However, the issue is that a GNI in excess of $4046 needs to be sustained for three consecutive years for Sri Lanka not to qualify for tariff preference; a benchmark that is applicable for normal global conditions. Sri Lanka reached the Upper Income Status in 2019 prior to COVID-19. If not for COVID-19 Sri Lanka could have maintained the growth momentum for three years and beyond, in which event Sri Lanka would have lost the benefits of tariff preference. The fact that no allowance is made for a shortfall in GNI per capita due to a global pandemic, the consequences of which are experienced by every country, is not only deeply regretted but also lacks acknowledgement of reality. If such an allowance is made for 2020 and 2021 there is a strong possibility that Sri Lanka could reach the Upper Income status in 2021 and the requirement for three consecutive years would have been met. In such an event Sri Lanka would have lost tariff preference for GSP+ anyway. Therefore, the EU should seriously consider adjusting the threshold for Upper Income category for countries such as Sri Lanka that hover around the lower limit of Upper Income, instead of waiving temporarily or otherwise, GSP+ based on standards that do not apply for unprecedented global catastrophes.

As stated by former Director General, Dhammika Senasinghe, for Europe, Central Asia, the EU and Commonwealth, of the Foreign Ministry of Sri Lanka at a business forum, “As Sri Lanka progress to graduate to upper middle income states in the future we will be not qualify for the GSP+ benefits, which means we would need to work out on a special trading arrangement with the EU whilst highlighting our climate change related vulnerability also under the sustainable development criteria.” (ECONOMYNEXT, June 23, 2021).

Therefore, Sri Lanka has to prepare for the day when it is not eligible to GSP+. Since this is a real prospect, the Government should set up a group that is knowledgeable and experienced in trade related issues, preferably with international experience to prepare a proposal that could serve as a blue print for negotiations with the EU. The mandate for such a team should be to provide the same tariff preferences as the current scheme, or better for substantially all trade.

 

GSP+ to HELP DEVELOPING

COUNTRIES

According to the European Commission, GSP+ is a “Special Incentive Arrangement for Sustainable Development and Good Governance”. Furthermore, the Commission states: “The GSP+ scheme is designed to help developing countries assume the special burdens and responsibilities resulting from the ratification of 27 core International Conventions on human and labour rights, environmental protection and good governance as well as from the effective implementation thereof. It does so by granting full removal of tariffs on over 66% of tariff lines covering a very wide array of products including, for example, textiles and fisheries”.

Despite these inducements nearly 75% of the 193 countries remain in the Low or Upper Income category, as per the World Bank. Furthermore, only eight (8) countries are beneficiaries of the GSP+ scheme. They are, Armenia, Bolivia, Cape Verde, Kyrgyzstan, Mongolia, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. Therefore, there has to be an explanation why more Low Income Countries are not attempting to take advantage of the tariff preference and work towards becoming an Upper Middle Income country. For instance, India, Nepal, Bhutan and Bangladesh are not beneficiaries. Perhaps each of these countries have negotiated and initiated arrangements outside the constraints of GSP+ Therefore, there is a need to study the policies and strategies adopted by these countries including Vietnam, in order to stay competitive without the benefits of tariff preference of GSP+.

 

SITUATION in SRI LANKA

The former DG cited above opined that “Sri Lanka utilization rate of facilities is around 55- 58 percent, while Pakistan is 96 percent and the Philippines is 73 percent. Confirming this situation during the 14th Trade Policy Review of the European Union held on 18th February 2020, at the WTO, Geneva, the Sri Lankan delegation stated: “judging from Sri Lanka’s two years’ experience, the utilization rate of the GSP+ facility by Sri Lankan exporters stand relatively low at 55 – 60%, due to several reasons, including difficulties of qualifying GSP preferential Rules of Origin Criteria. For instance, more than half of the apparel exports of Sri Lanka enter the EU market without availing the GSP+ facility, but paying relatively high import duties compared to other industrial goods”.

Continuing the Sri Lankan Delegation stated: “Sri Lanka is in the verge of losing the EU GSP/GSP+ benefits from 01st January 2023, if this Status continues for two consecutive years. Sri Lanka has already flagged this situation and wishes to negotiate an alternative bilateral preferential trade mechanism or alternatively, a special scheme of preferential market access for small and vulnerable countries in the upper middle-income category.

Whatever measures Sri Lanka adopts to improve the rate of utilization of facilities, the stark fact facing Sri Lanka is how to use the facilities offered by the EU when Sri Lanka is recognized as an Upper Income Country. How to prepare for such an eventuality should be the focus of the government. In such a context, the dire warnings by commentators about the prospect of losing the benefits of GSP+ on grounds of the status of Human Rights in Sri Lanka, highlighted by the UN Human Rights Commissioner and the ineffective measures adopted to address accountability and reconciliation by the Core Group, would be secondary to losing GSP+ on grounds that Sri Lanka is recognized as an Upper Income Country not only for its economic gains but also for its noteworthy achievement in the field of Human Development that in fact surpasses some of those within EU’s 27 Members.

If Sri Lanka is to undergo experiences similar to what it had to endure with the withdrawal of GSP+ in 2010 on grounds of the Human Rights situation in the country, the prediction is that many factories and commercial establishments would close down and thousands would lose employment at a time when the public is already facing unprecedented hardships due to COVID-19. Therefore, instead of waiting for the axe to fall, Sri Lanka should adopt a “proactive approach” as suggested by the Free Trade Zone Manufacturers Association (FTZMA). However, it would have been helpful if the FRZMA had specifically proposed such an approach.

 

GEOPOLITICAL DIMENSIONS of the EU RESOLUTION

The Resolution of the EU Parliament having given regard to related documents and a Preamble with paragraphs A to K, proceeds to adopt nineteen (19) Resolutions. Nearly all the issues Resolved either impact on issues within the domestic jurisdiction of Sri Lanka or relate to GSP+ except for paragraph 18 of the Resolution which states: “Expresses, concern about the growing role and interference of China in Sri Lanka”. The question that naturally arises is whether the real reason for Paragraphs 14 and 18 to co-exist in the same Resolution is because of genuine concern for Human Rights or because of concern for China’s “growing role and inference of China in Sri Lanka?

Paragraph 14 states: “Underlines that the GSP+ scheme offered to Sri Lanka has made a significant contribution to the country’s economy, from which exports to the EU have increased to EUR 2.3 billion, making the EU Sri Lanka’s second-largest export market; highlights the ongoing monitoring of Sri Lanka’s eligibility for GSP+ status and stresses that the continuance of GSP+ trade preferences is not automatic; calls on the Commission and the European External Action Service (EEAS) to take into due account current events when assessing Sri Lanka’s eligibility for GSP+ status; further calls on the Commission and the EEAS to use the GSP+ as a leverage to push for advancement on Sri Lanka’s human rights obligations and demand the repeal or replacement of the PTA, to carefully assess whether there is sufficient reason, as a last resort, to initiate a procedure for the temporary withdrawal of Sri Lanka’s GSP+ status and the benefits that come with it, and to report to Parliament on this matter as soon as possible”.

If the EU hopes to use a temporary withdrawal of GSP+ to make matters difficult for Sri Lanka because of China’s growing role in Sri Lanka, the EU may be acting against its own interests of staying engaged with Sri Lanka because China is bound to grab the opportunity and entrench itself even further. Therefore, it is in the interest of the EU to stay engaged with Sri Lanka and negotiate an arrangement special to Sri Lanka, conscious of the fact that Sri Lanka would not be eligible for GSP+ anyway, in the very near term.

CONCLUSION

After wading through paragraph after paragraph of the EU Resolution, the only two paragraphs that matter are paragraphs 14 and 18. While the former intends to explore the prospect of a “temporary withdrawal” of GSP+ as leverage to advance Human Rights in Sri Lanka, the latter is concerned with the “growing role and interference of China in Sri Lanka”. While a temporary withdrawal is bound to hurt Sri Lanka at a moment of unprecedented hardship due to COVID-19, there is a strong possibility that China would take advantage and step into the breach. Such an outcome would not be in the interests of the EU and the recently stated resolve of the G7 to Build Bigger and Better (B3B), in order to counter the growing global imbalance created by China’s Belt and Road initiative.

Instead, it would be far more prudent for the EU to stay engaged with Sri Lanka because doing so is in its own interest and that of the West, and recognize that Sri Lanka is on the threshold of becoming an Upper Income Country, and in keeping with such a prospect work out arrangements as stated in Article 4 of EU’s GUIDE to SRI LANKAN EXPORTERS. Article 4 states: “Sri Lanka would become ineligible for the GSP+ scheme should the EU conclude a Preferential Trade Agreement with Sri Lanka, which provided the same tariff preferences as the scheme, or better, for substantially all trade. The EU is currently not negotiating any further trade agreements with Sri Lanka”.

Gotabaya Is Bad, But Pardoning Duminda Silva Has Made Him Evil

Gotabaya Rajapaksa


By Vishwamithra –

“If there is something to pardon in everything, there is also something to condemn.” ~ Friedrich Nietzsche

Placed precariously in the annals of contemporary times, Sri Lanka has had to confront many situations which are apparently conspiring to drag it down to a pit where only failed-states inhabit. Her current rulers have unqualifiedly subordinated the national interests to their own greedy and selfish profits. Relegating their own subjects, the voters of the country, to a second or third-hand tier, the President and his Cabinet of Ministers are being held in a choking grip. Sheer political impotence is their invisible badge- a shameful one indeed.

The popular judgment amongst the rural folks is that Sri Lanka is a ‘cursed nation’. The traditional values based on teachings of most scientific and compassionate religious beliefs, also known as Buddhism, discovered, revealed and widely expounded by Siddhartha Gautama Buddha, have all fallen by the wayside. The kings and queens who ruled ancient Ceylon, although they all assumed such high office to rule the country as a ‘one-man-rule’, at least an overwhelming majority of them, were never questioned as to their patriotism and commitment to the rule of law. Examples are many as to their rule and their modus operandi in dealing with multiple crises, economic, military or social, their principles of governance and above all their abiding obligation to law and order are lastingly chronicled in various historical records, including the Mahāvasa, the Great Chronicle.    

Historians have fact-checked and recorded these events and incidents carefully. Their painstaking commitment to telling the truth and their verification of the authenticity of the contextual pertinence is beyond question. However, as usual, any historical record of a nation is gravid with exaggerations and when the proverbial flowers are picked out and discarded, what remains as a factual record is palatably digested by the subject generations that followed the real-time citizenry of the country.      

Almost all- political pundits, University academics, private sector CEOs, higher echelons of the government service, , rich, poor, the middleclass, Sinhalese, Tamil, Burgher and Muslims, they all knew that Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga was the worst political leader Ceylon produced, at least since Independence. Now she can exhale a sigh of satisfaction that she is no more considered to be occupying that contemptible bottom layer of the ladder anymore. She’s been outdone by the present fellow, Nandasena Gotabaya Rajapaksa. In incompetence, lack of empathy, dishonesty, cynicism, corruption and political impotence, Gotabaya is miles ahead, not a very teeming station to be in, in nation-building or state-governance.

Gotabaya Rajapaksa came into power with a bang. He had built his reputation as a ‘master doer’, a man who could produce results from almost nothingness. His advertising agency did a masterful job of creating and then projecting a colossal image of a modern day ‘Dutu Gemunu’; liberating the country from the manacles of Tamil expansionism was an integral part of his persona so created. Despite the widely-held belief in the country that his family’s rule from 2005 to 20014 was brazenly corrupt, downright dishonest and unyieldingly nepotism-rooted, the gross failure on the part of the Ranil/Maithripala combo government to prosecute the Rajapaksas to a permanent political end ensured the comeback of the same family, this time led by an untested ‘anti-hero’ who ran away from the Northern war when the going got tough. So was written another sad chapter of Sri Lanka’s post-independent history.

The victory at the Parliamentary elections that followed the Presidential elections further tightened the stranglehold the Rajapaksas had on the wretched citizenry of Lanka. This untested ‘anti-hero’ is being tested by mother of all tests. The Covid-19 pandemic is running rampant in the country and its third wave seems to be more threatening and all-encompassing than the dreaded LTTE soldiers. The Covid pandemic is no isolated event; its consequences have generated many effects that in themselves have performed the dubious task of being cataclysmic causes. The cause and effect theory is having its own cycle of life, making a mockery of the Rajapaksa-incompetency and corruption.

The so-called ‘Viyathmaga’ pundits couldn’t foresee nor forecast the resultant economic debacle that followed. Viyathmaga is supposed to be an assembly of men and women, well-educated, placed in high offices in both public and private sectors and equally well-versed in contemporary events and futuristic phenomena. Yet when their real knowledge, experience, skills and competence were put to a crunching test, all that knowledge, experience, skill and competence seemed to have flown out the window. They are as impotent, weak and incapable as an ordinary street vendor. At least a street vendor is equipped with that rare quality of street-smartness and common sense and above all undiluted patriotism. A street vendor would not barter his love for the country for a quick buck.

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Dire warning on negative effects of organic manure for Sri Lanka’s entire tea industry

Introduction of organic fertilisers will escalate production costs and will transform tea from that of a poor man’s beverage to the drink of the limited rich segment of a society. Hence, the proposal needs re-thinking, in the greater interest of the country and its people – Pic by Shehan Gunasekara


By I.D. Gooneratne-
Wednesday, 30 June 2021

With my experience, based on 45 years of hands-on, direct experience in the tea industry, I wish to issue a dire warning about the Sri Lankan tea industry: If inorganic fertiliser is withdrawn, the productivity of Sri Lanka’s tea lands will certainly decline to uneconomic levels. 

This will lead to a severe drop in foreign exchange earnings, resulting in a drastic decline in the earning capacity of all owners of tea lands – including tea smallholders which account for the majority of production and employment. Less tea at the weekly auctions would provide ample opportunity for our competitors to capture the traditional tea markets, which Sri Lanka currently holds. 

What follows is an explanation of the science to back this claim – which is certainly more than what has been offered in defence of organic fertiliser. 




History of fertiliser use in Sri Lankan tea 

Since the commencement of the tea industry in 1867, the entire extent of tea was of seedling tea of Chinese or Cambodian varieties. Subsequently, large ‘leaf’ Assamica tea from India was introduced, to improve tea productivity per unit of land and the quality of the tea liquors. 

However as the genetic characteristics of seedling tea vary from a tea bush to another, the scope of improving productivity with seedling material was limited. 

In 1958 the Tea Research Institute (TRI) broke new ground with the introduction of vegetatively propagated (VP) tea. The initial series ‘TRI 2000 series’ achieved yields of over 3,000 kg of made tea, per ha of land. 

However it became evident that the nutrients available in the soil were grossly insufficient to support enhanced productivity without the application of chemical fertilisers, to compensate for nutrient deficiencies in the tea soil and also replenish what has been removed by way of crop. 

Comprehensive research was undertaken by TRI on tea nutrition and the scientists arrived at the principle of the ‘replacement ratio’; that is, for every 100kg made tea, the soil has to be replenished with 10kg Nitrogen (N) per hectare. 

This was the minimum quantity of N required to sustain the productivity of the tea lands. If at any stage the N ratio to that of harvested crop was reduced, tea bushes displayed systems of N deficiency, making the plucking surfaces appear yellowish and the tip of tender buds to develop a pink coloration. (TRI 2025 clone) 

Together with Nitrogen, the other two nutrients phosphate and potash (P & K) too were applied. After a period of time, in consultation with TRI, it was found that mere replacement of nutrients was unsatisfactory to explore the cropping potential of a productive VP tea field. Studies were conducted to expand the ratio to 12kg N per 100kg of made tea harvested. There was response to enhanced dosages of NPK fertiliser mixtures of up-to 360N per hectare and the yields of the clonal tea reaching above 3,000 kg made tea per hectare. 

I would not hesitate to mention here that it is the inorganic fertilisers that enabled Sri Lanka to achieve national productivity level of 2,200 kg made tea per hectare in few years, in the final decade of last century.

The TRI has now introduced the latest TRI 5000 series which too depends heavily on inorganic fertilisers, and it is well known that all cultivars respond only to inorganic fertiliser. Conversely, it is absolutely impossible to fulfill fertiliser requirements with organic manure, where the N content is only 2%.



Impact of organic fertiliser with its low nutrient content on made tea

Approximately 90% of energy in a tea bush is utilised for its own maintenance and the balance 10% is for crop production. Tea fields have to be nurtured with proper agricultural practices and fortified with adequate levels of NPK fertiliser, in accordance with the cropping potential of the fields, for growth and frame development (physiology of tea bush). 

In the event, the tea fields do not receive their requisite quota of NPK nutrients, they display signs of tiredness or exhaustion by producing excessive single leaf or ‘banji leaf’. This results from reduced shoots forming with a bud and two or three leaves. Pluckers, who are incentivised to gather as much crop as possible to enhance their earnings, are reluctant to harvest single leaf or banji leaf due to their lower weight, compared to that of normal ‘flush’. 

As a consequence, this single or banji leaf matures and find its way to the factory during subsequent harvests. This single ‘hard’ banji leaf is not suitable for manufacture and makes the end-product appear ‘brownish/ greyish and flaky’ with hardly any liquoring qualities. This is what ends up as refuse tea. 

Thirty years ago, permissible refuse tea content of manufactured tea was 6%, but with labour shortages hindering consistency of plucking frequencies refuse tea is around 10% or more. In such an environment, the immediate ad hoc use of organic manure with its low NPK content will not only lower the standard of the made product, but will also increase the refuse tea content.

The degree of black pigmentation in the appearance of made tea is a trade demand and adds value to the product. With the proposed changes to nutrition, it is unavoidable that we will see drastic reductions in NPK, which translates to a deteriorating quality of tea, which will lead to irreversible damage to the brand of Ceylon Tea. 

 

Impact of organic fertiliser with low levels of NPK on tea frames

The frame of a tea bush is the main driver of crop production. The productivity of a tea bush is inversely proportional to its number of branches; higher the number of branches, larger the crop and vice versa. After pruning, the bushes are tipped to a height of 6” above the pruned level. In the case of a VP fields, having a four-year pruning cycle period, the height of the bushes has to be systematically raised by adding new leaves to the plucking table, to replace the old leaves which have served their period of usefulness, having contributed towards production. 

In the first and second years after pruning, the height of the bushes has to be raised eight to 10 inches and in the third and fourth years, the bushes should attain a height of six to eight inches. This exercise will ensure that the tea bush frames are developed to have healthy branches that will serve as the primary base for crop production in the future years. 

Based on four decades of first-hand experience, it is my candid opinion that if the present fertiliser is replaced with organic manure, with its low levels of NPK, the size of the bushes will erode, resulting in massive crop loses. This will rapidly reach a stage where even if these practices are later reversed, and best agricultural practices restored, it would not be possible to resurrect bushes to their previous status.

I believe it will also be most prudent for the Government, before embarking on this exercise, to select at least two productive plantations to test their proposals under the management of the TRI for a period of two years and thereafter, assess the performance.

There are two million people engaged directly and indirectly in the tea industry. Their future will be in jeopardy if inappropriate fertiliser policies are introduced without sufficient research to prove their effectiveness, especially if these policies backfire. 

Tea is nature’s gift to mankind and is the cheapest drink in the world with positive health attributes to prevent coronary heart deceases, various forms of skin, stomach oesophagus, lungs, colon, breast and prostate cancers and dental decay. (The research papers and two books on tea and health are available at the TRI.)

Introduction of organic fertilisers will escalate production costs and will transform tea from that of a poor man’s beverage to the drink of the limited rich segment of a society. Hence, the proposal needs re-thinking, in the greater interest of the country and its people.

(The writer is former Director of J.E.D.B, III, Regional Agricultural advisor to 20 tea estates, Consultant, functioned as Deputy Director, Extension Services of the TRI and Advisor, Tea Manufacturing, John Keells Ltd. for six years.)