Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Jai Hind! Sri Lanka in danger of becoming 29th pranth of India

Jaishankar plays Modi’s Viceroy and moves to direct local issues

- By Don Manu 'THE SUNDAY-BEST SUNDAY SLAM' ‘Jana Gana Mana’?

On Monday morn visiting Indian Foreign Minister Dr. S. Jaishankar made a pit stop at a Lanka Indian Oil Company filling station in Colombo to personally inspect how the Indian fuel supplied by his Government under the Indian credit line was being distribute­d to the hordes of Lankans queued outside to pump their tanks.

Minister Jaishankar tweeted on his hands-on approach stating he had been briefed by LIOC’S Managing Director Gupta, stating, “Indian LoC of US$ 500 million is helping Sri Lankan people in their everyday life.”

At least someone was taking an interest. Even if it was the new self- appointed guardian of our fate who had just purchased the rights over this nation’s destiny and was checking on the welfare of its leaderless citizens. The same could not be said of the nearly defunct local outfit’s fuel manager, Lokuge who when asked by a journalist that evening, whether he had ever inspected a filling station and inquired of supply and distributi­on problems, said, he most certainly had, “when I travel each morning, I look at the sheds as I pass.”

And that was not all the duties that was cut out for India’s Foreign minister Jaishankar, who played the role of Modi’s Viceroy to the letter, during his three-day stay in Lanka to hold bilateral talks with the Lankan Government and to attend the Bay of Bengal states’ summit held in Colombo.

**On Tuesday morn he was at it again. With his eye on the ball on all things Sri Lanka, he was horrified to read a twitter message from Sirasa NewsFirst. It said: “Scheduled surgeries at the Peradeniya Hospital were suspended due to a shortage of medicines. Only emergency surgeries are taking place.” It was 9.51am.

Man of action Jaishankar didn’t waste time. He plunged straight in to tackle the issue. He ordered the Indian High Commission to act on it pronto; and tweeted: “Disturbed to read this news. Am asking High Commission­er Baglay to contact and discuss how India can help.”

One Indian, Sonali, was over the moon at the Foreign Affairs Minister’s response to the crisis. She tweeted in reply, ‘’India again at rescue mission. I am proud of my country. Jai Hind.’’

Sadly no Lankan could echo the same pride and joy. They could only remain in silent shame, along with Health Minister Rambukwell­a who did not care to tweet his thanks to India’s Foreign minister for showing not only concern but also offering help in a crisis. While the Indian team were giving a ball by ball commentary on the steps being taken to resolve the c r i s i s, neither did Rambukwell­a bother to tweet what remedial measures he and his ministry were taking to resume planned surgeries at Peradeniya Hospital.

Meanwhile, the Indian High

Commission­er had been busy. Before noon they tweeted back: “High Commission contacted Prof. Lamawansa, Hon. VC and the Dean of Medical Faculty of Peradeniya University and requested to know their requiremen­ts for medicines to continue regular and scheduled surgeries.’’ The time was 11.28am.

On Tuesday, Peradeniya Hospital Doctor, Dr. Thilakarat­hna told the media that the decision on Monday to temporaril­y halt all routine surgeries had been reverted because the Health Ministry had promised supplies by the evening.**

Did Indian interventi­on trigger early resolve? Not according to the Health Minister. On Wednesday, Rambukwell­a told reporters, “We had done the needful even before Jaishankar knew of the suspension. On Tuesday by 7 am we had already taken action. We had collected the drugs and made arrangemen­ts to dispatch it to Peradeniya.”

Good. And hats off to his efficiency. But hadn’t Rambukwell­a told the media five days before, “We have critical medicines for the next month”? Had there been a lapse in his ministry’s monitoring system that essential drugs for surgeries had not been supplied on time? Or did the Peradeniya surgeons discover the medical chest was bare only after they had scrubbed for the op?

On Wednesday a journalist also asked Rambukwell­a whether the Health Ministry could cope with the present crisis. His answer was: ‘ There are few problems but we can very well handle the problem by ourselves. The day we cannot cope, then we will inform you.’’

Happily, he may not have to do so. As a cabinet minister of this Government, which has followed the perilous policy of seeking treatment only after the disease has turned terminal and spread, Rambukwell­a may be spared in the future the terrible task of telling the people that the medical system has collapsed despite his best secretive efforts to save it.

Thanks to India, after it has achieved its neo-colonialis­t objectives, no longer will Lankans have to be brought to the brink of the precipice for relief to arrive.

India’s Foreign Minister J a i s h a n k a r ’ s and High Commission­er’s tweets on Tuesday may be a forerunner of things to come. Both gave short shrift to diplomatic norms and breached protocol which holds that foreign nations must channel any form or offer of aid through the host Government.

Jaishankar’s exercise was a typical ‘hearts and minds’ op suavely conducted to show India’s magnanimit­y: a tacit acknowledg­ment that with the acquisitio­n of greater rights over Lankan territory, including her territoria­l waters, India recognises her concomitan­t duty to ensure the welfare of the Lankan people.

Already within these last three months, two agreements have been signed. The first, an Indian credit line of USD 500 million, signed on February 2, yielded the Trinco oil tanks and other interests in India’s favour. The second, the Cabinet approved MRCC agreement was signed on Monday in return for a further Indian credit line of USD one billion. It grants India the right to supervise our seas. Furthermor­e, the second agreement allows India to build hybrid power projects on Lanka’s northern islets.

Certainly India, thanks to her timely throw of a billion dollar lifeline to buy Indian fuel and Indian food to drive the Lankan economy and feed the Lankan people, has scooped the Lankan sweepstake­s; and, with the Government’s newly found source for easy dollars to stay propped in power, has Lanka on a leash begging for more to extend, what Gammanpila called this week, ‘Apaya’s interval’.

Hardly had the ink dried on the MRCC treaty signed in exchange for India’s billion dollar lifeline, the Government was on its knees again, begging for an extra one and a half billion dollar credit

line. CB Governor Cabraal confirmed Lanka has sought a further USD 1.5 billion from India. According to the Reuter report, New Delhi has indicated it would meet the request for the new line.

Why has India suddenly turned into such an easy touch for Lanka to sponge on? Or is India secretly claiming Lanka’s soul, part by part, by sating the Lankan junkie’s financial craving, joint by joint?

Rather than India being a soft sponge, hasn’t dollar strapped Lanka rendered herself to be squeezed dry? That she lies spread eagled to be ravaged at will? That she lets India, while New Delhi’s sun shines, to make hay in Lanka under the cover of her dire adversity?

And the Government is more than willing to oblige. In fact it is begging to be beggared more with its latest plea for another USD 1.5 billion to make it temporaril­y stable. What new collateral will India seek this time to stamp a larger footprint on the isle?

No wonder India’s Foreign Minister Jaishankar dumped diplomatic niceties this week to direct local welfare operations as Modi’s viceroy representa­tive in Lanka whose fiat, none in the government would dare override. And that’s only for starters.

It is said that in 1945, J. R. Jayewarden­e called for Ceylon to be made another pranth of India for which he was branded a traitor. But it f JR dreamt of an Indian summer for old Ceylon, then, 77 years on, it is fast becoming a virtual reality. Even as the Hawaiian Isles - 2000 miles away from USA - became the 50th state of America in 1959, Lanka is well on Modi’s chartered course to become the de facto 29th Pranth of India.

PS Anyone knows of a good Sinhala translatio­n of Nobel prize winning Bengali poet Rabindrana­th Tagore’s – the only man who has written the national anthem of two countries, India and Bangladesh – much sung

May come in

 ?? ?? MY MONEY, MY PETROL: India’s External Affairs Minister Jaishankar at Lanka Indian Oil Company filling station on Monday in a hands-on inspection of Indian fuel distributi­on and supplies granted by India on credit line
MY MONEY, MY PETROL: India’s External Affairs Minister Jaishankar at Lanka Indian Oil Company filling station on Monday in a hands-on inspection of Indian fuel distributi­on and supplies granted by India on credit line

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