Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Lanka, the Land of the Rising Sons or…?

- By Gamini Weerakoon

We sat back amidst all this hullabaloo about the Covid pandemic, curfews, drug racketeeri­ng and match fixing and, with a month to go for the general election, reflected on an issue which journalist­s are prone to do: Whither Sri Lanka after the election?

Reflecting in the lingo of horse racing, we looked at the runners in the race to parliament and realized that there are quite a few thoroughbr­eds lined up. There is the Rajapaksa political patriarch, Mahinda with the brothers Chamal and Basil, closely followed by son Namal. There are the two sons Yoshitha and Rohitha who are not running this time but have plenty of political potential.

Sajith Premadasa is the leader of the large breakaway party, the Samagi Jana Balavegaya. He is the son of former President Ranasinghe Premadasa.

The leader of the UNP is Ranil Wickremesi­nghe, who has generation­s of political blood coursing through his veins. His father Esmond was no common or garden politician but a press baron more powerful than ruling politician­s and performed many a political miracle. Ranil is the nephew of President J.R. Jayewarden­e.

The leader of the Mahajana Eksath Peramuna (MEP) is Dinesh Gunawarden­a, son of the ‘Father of Sri Lankan Marxism’ Philip Gunawarden­a.

Tissa Vitharane is the leader of the Samasamaji­st Party, the oldest Marxist Party of Lanka and is the nephew of the acknowledg­ed leader of the party, Dr. N.M. Perera. Vitharane is not running in this election.

Considerin­g this impressive lineup of leaders -- although some are now long in the tooth -- we wondered whether Sri Lanka could become the Land of the Rising Sons after the election. But then we realised that most of these sons and nephews were in the last parliament and even in those before it.

Thus, would it fit into the descriptio­n given in this column last Sunday: Old arrack in new plastic bottles?

The Unsung Heroes of the Covid-19 War

With the general elections just one month away a new brand of ‘heroes’ is being marketed. They are the ‘Covid-19 Heroes’ who are said to have saved the country from the pandemic.

The Glory of the National Saviour, the second time over is being conferred on Gotabaya Rajapaksa by the Rajapaksa backers of the Pohottuwa party although the President has not made such a direct claim. But this is inevitable because President Rajapaksa having scored his presidenti­al victory with the backing of the Pohottuwa and is calling for a two-thirds majority at the election with the support of the pro-Rajapaksa party to implement his mandate. Already he wears the crown of National Saviour of Lanka from terrorism together with his brother. The Rajapaksas need not be coy about this new title because it is the inevitable fallout of the president and the prime minister being from one family, the same party and the same government.

The Covid pandemic was, no doubt, considered a ‘war’ by President Rajapaksa, an ex- military officer who fought it in the only way he knew: a military operation. He appointed Army Commander Shavindra Silva as the chief of operations who set about the task like going to war. Of course, the actual battle was against the deadly enemy virus, about which he knew not very much. It was the task of the medical personnel on the field -- men and women -- doctors, nurses, humble hospital workers who cleaned the wards, particular­ly the immaculate­ly kept Intensive Care Units, medical technologi­sts, right down to those who carried corpses to the mortuary and crematoriu­m workers .

These personnel, in the opinion of many observers, are the heroes of the Covid-19 pandemic. Since most of them lived at home with their families, they risked carrying the deadly virus home and infecting their loved ones.

Thus, when soldiers risked being killed on the battlefiel­d, they were not endangerin­g those at home far away. The medical personnel particular­ly doctors and nurses were risking the lives of their entire families, every day. They had no lengthy time for relaxation away from their infected patients because of the great demand for their services. Not even a day could be spared, for some of them who had to be back at work the next day and so it went on, day after day.

Perhaps the process has still not come to an end for these intrepid people. They surely must be the undisputed heroes in this unusual ‘war’.

There were reports that they lacked basic protective equipment -masks, gowns and gloves -- at the initial stages. Whether some of these dedicated medical profession­als perished in their valiant attempt, we are not aware but if so the dead as well as these surviving unsung heroes cannot be forgotten.

The poor salary scales of nurses and minor employees of the Health Department are well known. They have to be rewarded not in the way of monuments but increased salary scales and prospects for advancemen­t of their careers. Nurses should be provided opportunit­ies to become medical practition­ers.

Trade unions of doctors and nurses have over the years contribute­d much to the public opprobrium that has been building up against their profession­s. Wildcat strikes staged not in their profession­al interests but for political interests of the union leadership has been a main reason. The excuse of ‘a few bad eggs’ as cited in the United States today and ‘a few rotten mangoes’ in South Asia is no longer acceptable.

Rotten eggs and rotten mangos seem to accumulate in plenty in these times and have to be rid of soon. In Lanka, dedicated doctors and nurses have converted much of the public ill-will against their profession­s to that of appreciati­on by the commitment exhibited during the pandemic.

To the discerning public these medical personnel should be the heroes of Covid 19 War and if a superhero is called for, we suggest Dr. Anil Jasinghe, the Health Services Director General, who directed the real battle against the deadly virus from start to finish. (Gamini Weerakoon is a former

editor of The Sunday Island, The Island and Consulting Editor

of the Sunday Leader)

Trade unions of doctors and nurses have over the years contribute­d much to the public opprobrium that has been building up against their profession­s. Wildcat strikes staged not in their profession­al interests but for political interests of the union leadership has been a main reason. The excuse of ‘a few bad eggs’ as cited in the United States today and ‘a few rotten mangoes’ in South Asia is no longer acceptable.

 ??  ?? Nurses wearing yellow and white PPE in the forefront of the COVID-19 battle.They should be provided the opportunit­y to become medical practition­ers
Nurses wearing yellow and white PPE in the forefront of the COVID-19 battle.They should be provided the opportunit­y to become medical practition­ers

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