Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

‘WE’RE WORSE THAN ETHIOPIA’

UDARA RATHNAYAKE UNITED NATIONAL PARTY

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WE MUST CONCENTRAT­E MORE ON TECHNICAL EDUCATION AS THERE’S ONLY LIMITED FACILITIES FOR CHILDREN TO HAVE UNIVERSITY EXPOSURE IN SRI LANKA

I AM SOMEONE WHO WILL STAND BY MY CONSCIENCE, I WILL ALWAYS STAND BY WHAT IS RIGHT, ACCORDING TO MY BELIEFS, IRRESPECTI­VE OF MY PARTY

THE CURRENT EDUCATION PLATFORM NEEDS DRASTIC CHANGES. IT HAS TO BE UP TO DATE, FIT THE CURRENT JOB MARKET AND BE TECH-DRIVEN

Started his political career in 2013. Elected as a Western Provincial Council Member in 2014.

QYour Educationa­l and profession­al qualificat­ions?

Bachelor of Science in Business Management, University of Essex

Master of Science, University of Colombo

Profession­al experience in diverse industries ranging from exports, imports and apparel industry.

QVision for education of children and youth in Sri Lanka?

The current education platform needs drastic changes. It has to be up to date, fit the current job market and be techdriven. I believe in structural support for schools when it comes to facilities, but we must really revamp the things we teach our children. We must encourage a more communicat­ive education system where children are allowed to constantly question things. I understand with the current constraint­s,we can’t do more capital investment­s, but we can start with changing attitudes, immediatel­y.

Qviews on technical education?

We must concentrat­e more on technical education as there’s only limited facilities for children to have university exposure in Sri Lanka. Some 800,000 young people are driving three-wheelers. If we can empower them with technical qualificat­ion, they can have two careers. That will contribute more to the economy.

Q Your ideas for improving employment prospects of youth?

I truly believe we have youth with a lot of capacity. A few main issues like insufficie­nt access to capital have to be rectified. For any type of loan, banks want collateral, limiting available opportunit­ies. A lot of young entreprene­urs do not have the initial cheap capital required. We must somehow make a platform to encourage young businesses to give them low-cost funding. I want to initiate a programme where there will be cheaper, low-cost funding for new startups. Why I came into politics was mainly because I crave to create opportunit­ies for those around me.

QYour stance on the MCC?

I haven’t personally read what the conditions of the MCC are as I haven’t had access to it. Therefore, I cannot comment on it. They must make this a public document so that people will know what it is exactly, and the people can decide if it’s good or bad for the country.

QYour solutions for the ailing public transport system?

We’re worse than Ethiopia, which has better transport infrastruc­ture. It’s quite shameful. We’re the weakest in the region, so we need intensive investment. I personally encourage public-private partnershi­p as these infrastruc­ture assets could be investment­s. If our intention is to give the service to the people, whether it is owned by a company or the nation is irrelevant.

QVision for the protection of the environmen­t and climate change adaptation?

I don’t think our politician­s have given a lot of attention to climate change. Forget climate change, we have not given solutions to garbage disposal. I think we are the only country where people died in a garbage dump collapse. But we still haven’t given a solution to this problem even after three years since the disaster. It’s pathetic. Climate change is very important but in the Sri Lankan context, the immediate necessary steps must be taken before that.

QViews on discrimina­tion based on sexual orientatio­n?

QWhy should people vote for you?

We must put a lot of regulation­s in place against discrimina­tion. When it comes to the LGBTQ community, our people have not been exposed to this area so much, so there’s a lot of fear involved. We must educate people and show the existence of this segment. It’s just a fear without knowing. Personally I have nothing against this community and I believe everyone should be given the same rights, opportunit­ies and treated equally, irrespecti­ve of gender or sexual preference. But most people haven’t had the opportunit­y to engage or have a conversati­on with a person of this community.

I am someone who will stand by my conscience, I will always stand by what is right, according to my beliefs, irrespecti­ve of my party. I don’t fear to point out the wrong. It’s a ‘yes sir’ culture in politics, but I will not fall into that culture. That political culture should be challenged and changed.

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