Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Spate of resignatio­ns in September plagues Govt

High profile officials quit posts citing ‘personal reasons’

- By Don Manu 'THE SUNDAY-BEST SUNDAY SLAM'

The resignatio­n of a Consumer Affairs Authority’s Executive Director on Tuesday marks another addition to the growing list of top officials who have handed in letters citing ‘ personal reasons’ and left their vital post while the nation battled a war of survival on many fronts.

The September spate of resignatio­ns was triggered off by the sudden departure of Dr. Ananda Wijeywickr­ama, the eminent senior consultant physician of the National Institute of Infectious Diseases. A frontline medical expert in the battle against the COVID pandemic, he was a leading figure in the Health Ministry’s Intercolle­giate Technical Committee, tending scientific advice on many aspects on the COVID war, including the vaccine rollout.

On September 7, he resigned from this Technical Committee of the DirectorGe­neral of Health Services but gave no reason for quitting, except, of course, to say it was personal. He made it clear to the media that since he was a government servant, he was barred from speaking to the media and revealing the reasons that had bade him resign.

The same evening, after having lost one of its eminent committee members, the Deputy General of Health Services, Dr. Hemantha Herath, made a public appeal to Dr. Wijeywickr­ama to please reconsider his decision. He said: “Dr. Wijeywickr­ama has been one of the key medical profession­als who immensely rendered his support and advice in the battle against COVID-19 pandemic in the country. His decision to step down would badly affect the way forward in terms of eliminatin­g COVID-19.”

But to no avail. The good doctor, after having come to the end of his tether and broken free, had no intention to return to the fold. He did not even condescend to respond to Dr. Herath’s belated plea but spurned it in studied silence.

Following on the heels of Dr. Wijeywickr­ama, Consultant Anesthetis­t Dr. Asoka Gunaratne also stepped down on September 8 from the same Technical Committee, citing ‘personal reasons’ as the cause but he has made it known he quit the committee since he felt he was of no use to it.

It even affected the zoo. The DirectorGe­neral of the National Zoological

Gardens, Ishini Wickremesi­nghe, resigned from her post on September 9. A niece of former UNP Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe, animal rights activist, Ishini, had directed a pro-Rajapaksa campaign in the 2019 presidenti­al elections at her father Shan Wickremesi­nghe’s television channel, TNL, and had been appointed zoo director upon the party coming to power.

Even though she had given ‘personal reasons’ as the cause of leaving the zoo, the State Minister of Wildlife Protection, Wimalaweer­a Dissanayak­e, however, took pains to rule out any connection between her resignatio­n and the release of 14 elephants back to its owners’ captivity the day before on September 8, and maintained her resignatio­n on September 9 was purely personal.

The scourge of resignatio­ns was to strike again. This time it struck in the nation’s rice bowl: the Paddy Marketing Board. Its Chairman Dr. Jatal Mannapperu­ma, who holds a doctorate from an American University, tendered his resignatio­n on September 15 to the Agricultur­e Minister Mahindanan­da Aluthgamag­e citing ‘personal reasons’.

He told reporters he resigned as he felt implementi­ng decisions taken by those above him was ‘unwise’ and that he could not, with a clear conscience, be happy with backing such imprudent decisions. He said: “No one would resign without a reason. There were several reasons for my resignatio­n. I don’t like to talk about them to the media though.”

Next it was the tur n of the Government’s Banker: The Governor of the Central Bank, W. D. Lakshman. Of course, in his case, he was resigning simply to make way for the State Minister of Finance Nivard Cabraal who was resigning from both his seat and position but not from his SLPP membership to be installed as the new guv at the nation’s premier financial institutio­n. It was, perhaps, given the nation’s impecuniou­s state, a last resort appointmen­t to the bank of last resort. But for it to materializ­e, the incumbent official had to be given the elbow.

An economics professor with an Oxford doctorate, and a former Vice Chancellor of the Colombo University, Prof. Lakshman had been teaching for 40 years when, at the age of 78 he was appointed by Gotabaya Rajapaksa as Governor for a legally fixed term of six years on Christmas Eve in 2019. But after just one year in office, he had not planned on seeing another Christmas in the Governor’s chair to merely receive the season’s hampers but had planned on retiring on his 80th birthday next month.

“I had intended to retire on my 80th birthday next month,” he told a virtual media briefing on September 10, “but there were some unpleasant incidents these last two weeks, so I decided to resign in advance on September 15. There had been so many reports without asking me. But I go with a clear conscience.”

Thushan Gunawarden­a, one of the three executive directors of the Consumer Affairs Authority, was also one of the men who rode the resignatio­n wave that swelled early this month. He handed his letter of resignatio­n this Tuesday but, unlike the others who had cited ‘personal reasons’ as the cause, he did not give any reason. He says he felt he had no need to explain.

True. Why explain to the State Minister of Consumer Protection, Lasantha Alagiyawan­na, the reason he was quitting, when he had revealed the dirt to a TV journalist a few days before the date of formal departure. In a televised interview, he described his disillusio­n with the way the promised vistas of prosperity and splendour, which had so inspired him to apply for a government post, were fast dissipatin­g before his eyes and claimed: “Things are done the way the racketeers want it done.”

Making many allegation­s, he referred to the recent garlic racket where garlic had been imported by a private trader. The trader was making arrangemen­ts to get the stocks cleared when some officials of Sathosa, using a recent Cabinet decision which empowered Sathosa to acquire essential goods not cleared within a certain period, had acquisitio­ned the garlic consignmen­t. It had then been sold to a private vendor for Rs. 135 a kilo. The vendor in turn had resold the consignmen­t to Sathosa for Rs. 450 a kilo. He said this has also happened with flour, sugar and urad dhal in the past. “I have been under pressure from various quarters to resign since they feel I am hampering these activities,” he said, “and I have received serious death threats that it is no longer safe for me to continue in this post.”

But before ill winds had swept it into a wave, the ripples of resignatio­n had started early in the year. In February, Major General Sumedha Perera resigned from his post as Secretary to the Ministry of Agricultur­e. In March, the National Medicines Regulatory Authority (NMRA) Chairman, Professor Asitha de Silva, resigned. In April, the Chairman of the National Housing Developmen­t Authority, Renuka Perera resigned with Duminda Silva, newly released from prison following a presidenti­al pardon for murder, appointed the new chairman.

In June, after a lull in May, the winds blew with fury and a flood of resignatio­ns ensued. Project Director Dr. Jayasundar­a Bandara of the COVID- 19 Emergency Response resigned; Pro f e s s o r Pathmeswar­an and Professor Neelika Malavige both on the independen­t vaccine advisory committee resigned; the Secretary to the Ministry of Agricultur­e Rohana Pushpakuma­ra resigned, becoming the second secretary of the Agricultur­e Ministry to have resigned in the year, after having been appointed on March 1; the Chairman of the Tea Small Holdings Developmen­t Authority Mahinda Vidanapath­irana, too, resigned.

These resignatio­ns are but a few of the tombstones erected to mark the premature demise from public office in this year alone, and this month in particular. Though many feigned the silence of the dead and stayed tight lipped on why they had hung up their hats, their unsaid words convey a clear and unequivoca­l damning message that prevent the rest from resting in peace.

This flurry of resignatio­ns from government service, this exodus of men, still extant in Lanka, who can take a principled stand and place honour before lucre, will lift the last remaining checks on corruptive political power and allow it to run amok without restraint; and will leave vacant chairs to be filled by political cronies to further entrench and perpetuate institutio­nalised corruption.

"The strength and power of a country," said 19th century political economist and philosophe­r John Ruskin, "depends absolutely on the quality of good men and women in it." How true. If the few left remaining also give up the ghost, then this nation will be truly done for.

No one would resign without a reason. There were several reasons for my resignatio­n. I don’t like to talk about them to the media though

These resignatio­ns are but a few of the tombstones erected to mark the premature demise from public office in this year alone, and this month in particular. Though many feigned the silence of the dead and stayed tight lipped on why they had hung up their hats, their unsaid words convey a clear and unequivoca­l damning message that prevent the rest from resting in peace.

 ?? ?? RESIGNS: Dr. Jatal Mannapperu­ma
RESIGNS: Dr. Jatal Mannapperu­ma
 ?? ?? RESIGNS: Dr. Ananda Wijeywickr­ama
RESIGNS: Dr. Ananda Wijeywickr­ama
 ?? ?? RESIGNS: Dr. Asoka Gunaratne
RESIGNS: Dr. Asoka Gunaratne

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