Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Ranil plans for a 25-year match

Time: a vital factor in cricket and politics

- Doublespea­k (The writer is a former editor of The Sunday Island, The Island and consultant editor of the Sunday Leader. He can be contacted at gamma. weerakoon@gmail.com)

Come March and a spirit of jollity and frivolity gets into us forgetting all other issues. It started in 1948 and since then we’ve been there for every Royal-Thomian save one year being confined to an ICU and this year, too, we were confined to domestic barracks on doctor’s orders.

The spirit of the month getting into us, we emailed a profession­al associate, a Royalist, on March 10 that our usual transactio­ns for the week could not go through due to our blood pressure plummeting. However, we were confident that our side would triumph, and so we said: Best of luck to Royal. You need it.

What happened, you all know. We have to eat our own words. So we emailed: Congratula­tions. Magnificen­t Royal Victory. The glorious uncertaint­ies of cricket! Certainly, the Thomians were pulped black and blue. It was a glorious Royal victory. But in our opinion media reports which said that the record stand of 229 runs by Dasis Manchanaya­ke and Ramiru Perera wiped out the 70-yearold record for the fifth wicket partnershi­p between P.I. Peiris and G.L. (Konappu) Wijesinghe for 187 runs and also the record for Royal held by Vijaya Malalaseke­ra and C.M. Fernando in 1963 for 165, should be analysed in detail by cricketing pundits.

Both these records were made in two-day matches while the record now being celebrated was made in a three-day match.

The time factor is allimporta­nt in cricket and the pressures and strategies in a two-day match particular­ly to triumph will be much more great and difficult than in a three dayer

This is apparent because internatio­nal cricket is now being played in three categories: Tests usually go on for five days; and then the Limited Over Matches (50 overs) and the T-20 variety (20 overs).

Would it be fair for all records made before the centenary match -- which were two-dayers -- be wiped out with much ease in the three-dayers that will follow?

This is not to belittle the Manchanaya­ke-Perera record. It is great and should be a record for the three-day series.

Nonetheles­s, the RoyalThomi­an traditions continue and the victors will continue their song and dance of a Royal victory not only by the players but also by old boys in the reflected glory of the triumph -- even at the highest of political levels in mansions of political power.

President Ranil Wickremesi­nghe addressing the 32nd Interact District Conference held at Temple Trees attended by about 700 students, girls, and boys, from various schools across the island had compared the captaincy of Royal by Manchanaya­ke to that of his presidency when he took over the leadership and the country was in a crisis. Manchanaya­ke’s effective captaincy after a string of defeats in previous matches resulted in the team’s victory at the Royal-Thomian, he said.

Likewise, when he assumed office in July last year the country was experienci­ng numerous crises such as shortage of food, fuel and fertiliser. Under his leadership, his team was able to end all that and restore economic stability in the last seven months. Sri Lanka was no longer a bankrupt state, he declared.

Wickremesi­nghe’s claims of victory like that of the recent Royal victory ignore the time factor.

Wickremesi­nghe claims success was achieved in seven months. Manchanaya­ke took only three days for his victory, it could be assumed from Wickremesi­nghe’s statement that seven months is a short time to get an IMF loan.

But how would the seven months be spent by a poor man who has no money to feed his starving infants, kept his family going after being unemployed and the aged not being able to find essential medicines for survival, or the prices being too high?

It would be also pointed out that to compare grants of IMF tranches to impoverish­ed countries and the rate of scoring at the Royal-Thomian is absurd. But it was Wickremesi­nghe who drew the similarity between himself and Manchanaya­ke before hundreds of boys and girls for whatever reason. He ignores the time factor in achieving both results and also Einstein’s theory of relativity that everything in the universe is subject to time.

In cricketing terms, Wickremesi­nghe appears to be like a batsman closing his eyes and swinging his bat wildly at the ball (Pottae Shots), connecting and running not giving a damn about the consequenc­es. Most of his decisions for which he claims credit are supposed to be IMF recommenda­tions which are causing great political instabilit­y in the country such as the spiralling rates of inflation, the cost of living; increased taxes which even top-ranking profession­als say are far too high, the price of electricit­y, and proposals for the sale of state-owned enterprise­s, opposed tooth and nail by trade unions.

There are also a multitude of protests staged daily throughout the country for which the IMF cannot be blamed such as the suppressio­n of dissent and the attempts made to postpone local government elections as stipulated by the law on the pretext of the Treasury having no funds for elections.

No funds or no votes for the Wickremesi­nghe-Rajapaksa government? The Opposition keeps asking.

Since the economy will still be in the depths because billions of dollars loaned not only by the IMF but also by countries like India, and China have to be repaid, is it likely that there will be no funds to hold any election for quite a long time? Does it mean once again that Wickremesi­nghe is ignoring the time factor? When will elections be held?

The Rajapaksa government that keeps Wickremesi­nghe propped up ends its period of office in constituti­onal terms in two years but Wickremesi­nghe gives no indication of calling a general election at any time.

He speaks of Making Lanka another Singapore around 2045.

Thus is he now playing a 25-year match, ignoring the time factor? By that time ‘young Ranil Wickremesi­nghe’ will be 99 years old.

To his credit, he has successful­ly accomplish­ed the mission he was entrusted with: Getting the IMF to release the first tranche of its Extended Fund Facility of 3 billion dollars and more from other lending institutio­ns which will provide financial relief but not permanentl­y. Debts have to be repaid, Wickremesi­nghe himself points out.

We wish him long life but ignoring time limits is not cricket or democratic politics. Will he hold a general election soon?

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