Singapore’s Trafigura gets 7-month diesel contract

The Cabinet of Ministers at their meeting on Monday, agreed on awarding the contract to supply diesel for seven months, starting 15 November, to Singapore’s Trafigura Ltd., following competitive bids.

The Government said the move follows seven bids called from registered suppliers of Ceylon Petroleum Corporation (CPC).

‘Bids were called from the registered suppliers of CPC to purchase five shipments of diesel (0.05% M.S.) barrels of 1,400,000 +/- 5% for the period of seven months from 15 November 2025 to 14 June 2026,’ Acting Cabinet Spokesman and Minister Vijitha Herath said at the post-Cabinet meeting with the media yesterday.

Accordingly, the Cabinet of Ministers approved the proposal tabled by Power Minister Eng. Kumara Jayakody to award the relevant contract for Vitol Asia (Singapore) Ltd., as recommended by the High-Level Standing Procurement Committee appointed by the Cabinet of Ministers.

Acer and Metropolitan redefine innovation: Next@Acer 2025 showcases technology future in Sri Lanka

The spirit of innovation came alive at Next@Acer: Sri Lanka 2025, was recently held at the Waters Edge Grand Ballroom, where Metropolitan Technologies Ltd., the authorised distributor for Acer in Sri Lanka, unveiled the brand’s latest line-up of next-generation laptops, AI-powered devices, and productivity devices set to shape 2026 and beyond. For nearly four decades, Metropolitan has proudly represented Acer in Sri Lanka, building a trusted legacy of partnership, service, and customer confidence. As part of the Metrocorp Group, Metropolitan carries a heritage of over 67 years of excellence, innovation, and leadership across technology, office automation and engineering sectors, a testament to its enduring contribution to Sri Lanka’s business and consumer technology landscape.

This year’s Next@Acer event brought together an audience of industry partners, dealers, and technology enthusiasts to witness Acer’s newest breakthroughs first-hand. A plethora of Copilot+ PCs, Acer’s latest leap in AI-powered computing, were also unveiled, marking a bold step into the next era of intelligent performance. Among the highlights was the debut of the Acer Swift Air, the company’s newest and lightest 16-inch laptop, weighing just 1.09 kilograms, setting new benchmarks in portability and design. From the ultra-light Acer Swift Edge 14 AI and AI-driven Swift 14 AI, to the performance-packed Predator Helios Neo 16 AI and Predator Helios 18 AI, the evening showcased Acer’s full spectrum of solutions, spanning consumer, corporate, and gaming needs. The line-up also included innovative portable single and dual-display monitors, built for professionals on the move. All Acer devices sold in Sri Lanka come with two or three-year warranties, reflecting the brand’s commitment to long-term reliability and customer satisfaction.

Representatives from Acer Computer Singapore Pte Ltd., including Managing Director Chia Li Shi, graced the event, highlighting Acer’s vision to expand its presence and elevate the digital experience for Sri Lankan consumers and businesses alike. The highlight of the evening was the Acer Partner Awards 2025, which recognised outstanding performance across the island. Awards were presented in three categories, Recognition Awards, Excellence Awards, and the coveted Elite Top Performer Awards, honouring the best of the best among Acer’s dealer network in Sri Lanka. As the curtains closed on a night of inspiration, recognition, and innovation, Next@Acer: Sri Lanka 2025 stood as a proud reminder of Metropolitan’s unwavering partnership with Acer, empowering Sri Lanka’s digital journey for decades to come. Acer products are available at Metropolitan MCentre branches, at authorised dealer points islandwide and online at https://mcentre.lk/.

Kia unveils all-new and exciting 2026 Sorento Hybrid and EV5

Kia Motors Lanka has set the stage for a new era in Sri Lankan motoring with the simultaneous unveiling of two landmark models-the 2026 Kia Sorento Hybrid and the Kia EV5-at an exclusive preview in Colombo.

This dual launch marks Kia’s most significant introduction to the local market since the lifting of Sri Lanka’s import restrictions on motor vehicles, and comes at a time when the industry is being reshaped by a wave of electrification. In a market awash with new entrants and electric options, Kia Motors said it has chosen to make a statement of substance-uniting heritage and innovation in two vehicles that together embody the brand’s evolution from admired SUV maker to innovator in sustainable mobility.

Kia Motors (Lanka) Chairman Mahen Thambiah said: ‘Today’s unveiling symbolises the bridging of two worlds, the trusted Kia legacy that Sri Lankans know and love, and the bold, electrified future that defines our global direction. The Sorento Hybrid continues the story of an icon, while the EV5 opens a new chapter in Kia’s journey towards full electrification.’

He disclosed that in addition to the internal combustion engine (ICE) models in the market, Kia will be launching three all-new Hybrid models besides the Sportage, Sorento and Carnival already offered, as well as three new electric models in 2026 to supplement the EV9, EV6 and EV5 offered to the market.

A familiar name in Sri Lanka’s premium ‘D’ segment, the Kia Sorento has built its reputation as a versatile, high-performing SUV that rivals leading European and Japanese marques for capability and comfort, but without the inflated price tag. The fifth-generation 2026 Sorento Hybrid (HEV) continues this legacy, combining bold design, advanced hybrid technology, and a remarkably human-centred interior to deliver a driving experience that is as intelligent as it is instinctive.

KIA Asia Pacific Sdn. Bhd. President and CEO Kiseok Ahn KIA Motors (Lanka) Chairman Mahen Thambiah

The new Sorento’s exterior is defined by its confident stance and sophisticated detailing. Vertically-oriented tail lamps, muscular rear contours, and a distinctive black cladding and skid plate reinforce its commanding presence, while the interior introduces a new benchmark for refinement and space. With seating for up to seven, the cabin embodies Kia’s philosophy of ‘natural intelligence’ – minimalist design, clean horizontal lines, and flowing surfaces that calm the senses and maximise usability.

An integrated 12.3-inch driver cluster and 12.3-inch touchscreen infotainment display anchor the cockpit, offering an immersive, connected experience enhanced by intuitive controls and a premium 12-speaker Bose sound system. The driver’s Integrated Memory System, Smart Power Tailgate, and generous cabin configuration further accentuate comfort, practicality, and luxury.

Under the hood, the Sorento Hybrid’s 1.6L petrol-hybrid powertrain combines efficiency and agility with the option of 2WD or AWD drivetrains. The ride quality benefits from new bushings and frequency-sensitive dampers for smoother control and dynamic responsiveness on varied terrain.

Safety and vigilance are integral to the Sorento Hybrid’s DNA. A suite of Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS)-including Smart Cruise Control, Surround View Monitor, and Reverse Parking Collision-Avoidance Assist-keeps the driver supported and secure in all conditions.

From its sophisticated form to its hybrid heart, the 2026 Sorento Hybrid reflects Kia’s commitment to human-centred innovation and sustainable performance-an evolution of an icon, re-engineered for a new era.

Debuting alongside the Sorento, the Kia EV5 marks the brand’s first electric vehicle introduction to the Sri Lankan market and a bold step into Kia’s fully electrified future.

Positioned as a compact electric SUV designed for millennial families, the EV5 draws inspiration from its larger siblings, the EV6 and EV9, while bringing the brand’s visionary ‘Opposites United’ design philosophy to life. Built on Kia’s dedicated E-GMP (Electric Global Modular Platform), the EV5 blends versatility, advanced technology, and class-leading efficiency to redefine what electric mobility means for everyday drivers.

Its performance credentials speak for themselves. The EV5’s standard variant houses a 64 kWh battery with a 160 kW motor, delivering a range of up to 400 km per charge (CLTC standard), while the long-range version extends this to 555 km. Kia’s acclaimed heat pump system ensures consistent battery performance even in extreme conditions, while the regenerative braking and i-Pedal system enable drivers to accelerate and slow using a single pedal, maximising convenience and energy efficiency.

Inside, the EV5 reimagines space itself. With an interior designed to feel more like a home lounge than a car cabin, it offers a serene environment of recycled PET fabrics and Bio-PU leather, three-zone climate control, and Panoramic Wide Display technology combining dual 12.3-inch screens with a 5-inch climate display. Kia’s Connected Car Navigation Cockpit (ccNC) system provides real-time connectivity and over-the-air software updates, while the Kia Connect Store allows owners to upgrade and personalise features without visiting a dealership.

Safety remains uncompromising, with seven airbags, reinforced structure, and Kia’s full suite of Advanced Driver Assistance Systems. Together, they create an electric SUV that is not just futuristic in concept, but deeply practical and family-oriented in execution.

‘The EV5 isn’t just an addition to Kia’s global electric line-up,’ Thambiah noted. ‘It represents our vision of where mobility is headed-efficient, connected, and emotionally engaging. The arrival of the EV5 in Sri Lanka is not just a launch, but a signal that the electric future has arrived.’

Dulanjana takes over as Sri Lions Head Coach

Dulanjana Wijesinghe

Sri Lankan rugby stalwart Dulanjana Wijesinghe is set to embark on a new chapter, officially taking the helm as Head Coach of Sri Lions SC for the upcoming 2025/2026 season. The appointment marks a significant step for both the former Wesley College star and the club, with the new season kicking off later next month.

Wijesinghe brings a wealth of experience and a proven track record from the domestic rugby scene to his new role.

His credentials are deeply impressive, blending a celebrated playing career with extensive coaching experience. As a former Wesley College player in 2008 and 2009, he was the highest try scorer in his final year.

He transitioned seamlessly into coaching, first handling his alma mater, Wesley, from 2016 to 2020, before moving to St. Joseph’s College.

Most notably, Wijesinghe has been serving as the Head Coach of the prestigious St. Joseph’s College rugby outfit, a role he held in 2024 after a three-year stint as their Assistant Coach from 2021. Concurrently, he honed his skills at the club level, working as an Assistant Coach with Police SC from 2022-2024.

This move to Sri Lions SC represents a carefully planned progression in Wijesinghe’s coaching career. His immediate experience as a Head Coach at a top-tier school, combined with his recent involvement in the club game, positions him perfectly to elevate Sri Lions.

DIMO joins forces with young racing star Yevan David

With a shared mission to enhance Sri Lanka’s position on the global stage, leading diversified conglomerate DIMO and young racing prodigy Yevan David have forged a partnership that redefines the country’s path to the international motorsport arena.

Yevan’s exposure to motor racing started at the tender age of six, when he went karting with his father at Sri Lanka’s premier facility, the Sri Lanka Karting Circuit (now SpeedBay) in Bandaragama. Showing great promise, his family recognised that this could be Yevan’s true calling, and by 2015, he was competing in kart racing in Singapore. Showcasing his talent and masterful driving technique, he was soon racing in Malaysia and Macau as well. By 2017, ten-year-old Yevan became the IAME Asia Series X30 Champion in the Cadet category. The following year, he secured the X30 Asia Cup in the Cadet Category, winning the race at the very place he first stepped into a kart – SpeedBay, Bandaragama. From there, he continued in professional kart racing before entering the worlds of Eurocup3, Formula 4, and Euroformula Open in 2024. In 2025, he stormed to a sensational rookie season in the Euroformula Open Championship, clinching the Rookie trophy as well as securing the overall second place in the Championship. He will become the first Sri Lankan to compete in FIA Formula 3.

Yevan David said, ‘I am confident that this partnership will spur us to succeed, to shine, and to take the Sri Lankan flag further into the world of motorsport. It represents far more than a collaboration-it’s a shared belief that Sri Lanka can stand shoulder to shoulder with the best in global racing.’

DIMO Executive Director Rajeev Pandithage said, ‘DIMO has always been at the forefront of automotive trends and innovations in Sri Lanka, and we pride ourselves on supporting local young talent to reach the global arena. Yevan’s effervescent energy, inimitable talent, and racing spirit are all qualities that bring us immense pride as a nation. We believe this partnership enables us to enhance Sri Lanka’s position on the global stage.’

DIMO believes this partnership with Yevan David will help place Sri Lanka on the global motorsport map.

Beyond racing, this collaboration captures a national vision to see Sri Lanka thrive on the global stage and to inspire young talent to chase their dreams without boundaries.

Shuttlers and wrestler shows promise

Sri Lanka’s young shuttlers showed exceptional talent and fighting spirit at the Asian Youth Games (AYG) 2025 producing some of the country’s finest badminton performances in recent history. The quartet of Nethmi Rathnayake, Padumudu Randiligama, Sithuli Ranasinghe, and Keneth Aruggoda led the charge with remarkable victories in both singles and mixed doubles, bringing pride to the island nation.

In the Mixed Doubles Sri Lanka got off to a flying start when Nethmi Rathnayake and Padumudu Randiligama teamed up to record a convincing 2/0 win over, Qatars Alma’s Almoki and Noor Abel displaying excellent coordination and attacking flair. Their seamless teamwork and strong net play gave Sri Lanka early momentum in the tournament.

Meanwhile, Keneth Aruggoda and Sithuli Ranasinghe also performed admirably in their opening encounter, though their campaign came to a halt in the pre-quarterfinals against China’s Xing Zhibo and Chen Sihan, who prevailed 2/0. The Sri Lankan pair fought gallantly, but the Chinese duo’s speed and precision ultimately proved too strong.

Rathnayake and Randiligama too advanced to the pre quarter finals, to fall short against the experienced Indonesian combination of Raihan Pramono and Athresia Candani, who secured a straight-sets victory. Despite the loss, the Sri Lankan pair’s earlier dominance reflected their growing maturity and potential on the Asian stage.

In the singles event, the island’s young players made a strong impression. Sithuli Ranasinghe defeated the Maldives’ Aminath Farha 2/0, displaying confidence and sharp shot selection. However, her inspiring run ended in the pre-quarterfinals when she went down to Yin Yi Qing of China, one of the region’s top-ranked juniors.

Keneth Aruggoda was equally impressive, overcoming Faroozan Ahmed of the Maldives 2/0 with an aggressive all-court game. His consistency and composure stood out, signalling his potential to develop into one of Sri Lanka’s future badminton stars.

Padumudu Randiligama also made his mark, defeating Rathana Viraksak of Cambodia 2/0 in a confident display. Though his singles journey concluded in the early knockout rounds, his dual success in both singles and mixed doubles underlined his versatility and stamina. Padumudu Randiligama

At the time of going to press Keneth Aruggoda was to take on Indonesian Maharishiel Gain in the pre quarters while Pamuditha Randiligama to take on Leo Jing Yu of China for a possible quarter final move.

Together, these performances marked a new chapter for Sri Lanka’s badminton, proving the nation’s youth can now challenge established Asian nations. Their technical growth and mental resilience stood out throughout the competition.

Meanwhile, in wrestling, Vinod Dilshan delivered a valiant effort in the 45 kg category, defeating John Malazarte of the Philippines 13/8 to reach the semifinals. However, his Bronze Medal hopes faded when he was overpowered by Adilet Mukanbetov of Kyrgyzstan and later fell just short against Mirjaiol Mukammilov of Uzbekistan.

Despite falling narrowly short of medals, Sri Lanka’s young shuttlers and wrestlers di

Epic Technology Group dominates at National ICT Awards 2025

Epic Technology Group reaffirmed its supremacy in Sri Lanka’s ICT and fintech landscape by securing the highest number of awards at the 27th National ICT Awards – NBQSA 2025, organised by the Sri Lankan section of BCS, The Chartered Institute for IT.

The prestigious awards ceremony was held on 10 October 2025 at Hotel Taj Samudra, Colombo. Epic claimed an impressive eleven awards, including four Golds, the highest total and Gold awards achieved by any organisation this year.

Epic’s leadership in banking and finance, its core domain, was prominently displayed through multiple accolades.

The company won the Gold Award (Consumer – Banking, Insurance and Finance) for ‘E-Switch with FraudGuard and Reconciliation’ and the Bronze Award in the same category for ‘UBgo NEO Banking Hub.’ Securing both Gold and Bronze at the national level underscores Epic’s unmatched strength and depth in the financial technology sector. The company also earned the Silver Award (Business Services – Finance and Accounting Solutions – Fintech) for ‘Epic SELF Smart Financing Suite,’ reinforcing its dominance in innovative financial solutions.

As Sri Lanka accelerates its digital economy, the need for secure digital transactions has become paramount. Epic’s ‘E-Switch with FraudGuard and Reconciliation’ addresses this critical need through a robust, end-to-end framework that safeguards transactions across banking ecosystems. Its Gold Award win highlights both the platform’s technological excellence and its vital role in strengthening trust and resilience in Sri Lanka’s digital financial infrastructure.

Epic’s contribution to public sector digitalisation was recognised with the Gold Award (Business Services – Security Solutions) for ‘LCNC Framework with Digital Signing Engine.’ The solution enables government institutions to adopt modern private-sector practices through workflow automation and secure digital signing, improving efficiency, reducing operational costs, and enhancing citizen service delivery, marking a transformative step in Sri Lanka’s public sector digital evolution.

Branchless and agency banking, a globally proven model for delivering real-time financial services to underserved, underbanked, and unbanked communities, was brought to life in Sri Lanka through Epic’s ‘Bank2U – Financial Inclusivity Backbone.’ The solution won the Gold Award (Inclusion and Community: Regional, Rural, and Remote Services) and the National Overall Silver Award, demonstrating its pivotal role in advancing financial inclusion and empowering economic participation at the grassroots level.

Epic extended its innovation beyond financial services with the ‘Affiniti Environment Monitoring System (EMS)’, a critical IoT solution for high-stakes operational environments. Recognised with the Gold Award (Industrial: Resources, Energy and Utilities), this accomplishment marks Epic’s successful expansion into mission-critical technologies that enhance operational resilience and sustainability across industries.

Epic’s prowess in data intelligence and automation was further acknowledged with the Data Analytics Technology of the Year Award and the Silver Award (Business Services – Professional Services Solutions) for ‘CollectMate – Legal Management System.’ These recognitions highlight Epic’s growing influence in data-driven automation, redefining how organisations manage recoveries and litigation workflows while driving smarter, analytics-powered innovation across Sri Lanka’s professional services sector.

Epic Technology Group Executive Chairman Dr. Nayana Dehigama said: ‘This recognition is yet another testament to Epic’s unwavering passion for innovation and excellence. For over 27 years, we have continued to push boundaries and pioneer transformative solutions that redefine how technology empowers lives and businesses across Sri Lanka.’

Managing Director and CEO Viraj Mudalige said: ‘Our success at NBQSA 2025 is a testament to the strength of our team and our relentless commitment to quality. Each award fuels our drive to raise the bar for Sri Lankan ICT, further advancing the nation’s digital economy and empowering sustainable growth through cutting-edge, world-class solutions.’

Law, morality, and re-founding of the republic – Part 2

The remedy lies in a People’s Constitution – abolishing the Executive Presidency and restoring parliamentary primacy under a prime minister answerable to the legislature

Abstract

This second part of ‘No Kings’ turns from the social to the institutional, tracing how Sri Lanka’s republican ideal has been hollowed out by judicial compromise, constitutional distortion, and selective enforcement. It revisits the 1988 Fourteenth Amendment and the inertia of the 2023 Anti-Corruption Act to show how law has become theatre while impunity endures. Drawing on Eliot Cohen’s idea of political gravity and David Brooks’s call for moral mobilisation, it argues that reform must join moral clarity, civic organisation, and programmatic precision. The essay concludes with a call for a People’s Constitution – abolishing the Executive Presidency, restoring parliamentary primacy, and re-anchoring the Republic in Cicero’s ideal: law above rulers, not rulers above law.

Bridge from Part 1

In the first part of this series, I argued that Sri Lanka’s political and economic life now bends under a Newtonian-Ciceronian gravity: promises betrayed generate an equal and opposite reaction. This second part turns from the social to the institutional – from public frustration to the structures that sustain it – asking how law became a captive of appetite and what a republican restoration might require.

4. Rule-of-law stress points

The Mt. Lavinia Magistrate’s Court incident crystallised a wider anxiety: that justice is unequal and disciplinary power selective. When citizens see some actors above consequence while others are humiliated by procedure, they mobilise not only against policy but on behalf of principle.

One of the greatest betrayals of the covenants of the executive, Parliament, and judiciary towards the people of Sri Lanka occurred in 1988, and the disjunction between law and practice is nowhere clearer than in the afterlife of the Fourteenth Amendment enacted that year. Article 99A, inserted under executive pressure, allowed defeated or non-contesting candidates to enter Parliament by party nomination – a direct violation of republican equality and the people’s franchise. The Supreme Court, instead of defending the constitutional principle that sovereignty is non-transferable, sanctioned the distortion. That single judicial compromise hollowed out the representative basis of the Republic. More than three decades on, the pattern endures: in the 2024 elections, the AKD administration appointed two defeated candidates to Parliament under the same defective provision while proclaiming a crusade for the rule of law.

Even the Anti-Corruption Act No. 9 of 2023, enacted to harmonise with the United Nations Convention against Corruption, has not altered that reality. Its architecture is impressive on paper, but enforcement remains uneven. The Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption (CIABOC) has been largely inert, and the Supreme Court reluctant to confront the constitutional breach that enables this revolving impunity. Thus, while the legal superstructure exists, the moral foundation – the idea that law must bind power before it disciplines the powerless – remains fractured.

As retiring Justice Gamini Amarasekara cautioned in his 2025 valedictory address, the gravest threats to judicial independence now arise not from external coercion but from within – when judges trade conscience for comfort and silence becomes complicity [5].

The erosion of judicial independence, once theoretical, has now entered the realm of documented allegation. A formal complaint lodged before CIABOC on 1 July 2025 alleges that Chief Justice Jayantha Jayasuriya PC and three other Supreme Court judges – Preethi Padman Surasena, S. Thurairaja, and Priyantha Jayawardena – acted in breach of Sections 73, 93, 107 and 111 of the Act [1][2]. The complaint cites failures to recuse from conflicted cases, manipulation of court panels, and selective discipline – acts amounting to the use of judicial office for ‘improper benefit or advantage.’

That the allegation concerns the apex court reveals the depth of institutional inversion: the very body charged with interpreting the Anti-Corruption Act now stands accused under it. The moral paradox Cicero feared – the guardians of law becoming its violators – has taken literal form. AKD, once hailed as a crusader for the rule of law, has since offered the same Chief Justice – Jayantha Jayasuriya, a figure of tainted reputation – the prestigious post of Sri Lanka’s Permanent Representative to the United Nations, bypassing the foreign-service route.

The Act’s hollowness is further exposed by its treatment of asset declarations. Though CIABOC has clear authority – under Section 163(1)(e) to receive and examine declarations and Section 163(2) to audit discrepancies – that authority lies dormant. Declarations are filed, stored, and forgotten: rituals of compliance masquerading as instruments of integrity. They remain mere ornaments, like tropical birds flaunting their plumage – a tableau worthy of David Attenborough’s lens.

As the No Kings protests in the United States reaffirmed that law binds rulers as well as citizens, Sri Lanka’s present moment shows not an absence of legal structure but a failure of institutional momentum. Fusing David Brooks’s argument in ‘America Needs a Mass Movement – Now’ (The Atlantic, 14 October 2025) – that grievance becomes civic power only when morally anchored [3] – with the Newtonian and biological metaphors I developed in Daily FT (‘Newtonian physics, traditional biology and Sri Lankan politics – Part 2’) [4], we see that the mass of elite privilege continues to absorb the force of law, resisting acceleration, while declarations of wealth act like decorative plumage on political species long mutated.

Worse, enforcement of the Act has taken on a partisan rhythm: selective exposure of opponents validates the ruling party’s moral narrative while shielding its allies. To wield law as theatre is to empty it of meaning. What should affirm justice instead parades as propaganda – a spectacle of integrity masking a culture of impunity.

This fracture marks the pivot from legality to appetite, from the Republic as res publica to the presidency as res privata. It is here that Cicero and Cato’s ancient warning acquires modern force.

Cicero warned that judicial corruption is the most insidious tyranny because it hides private interest in the robes of virtue. When judges turn law into a tool for institutional preservation, they enact what he called ‘the betrayal of the Republic by its own guardians.’

5. Institutional memory

The Aragalaya repertoire did not vanish. It lies dormant, ready to be recalled by any mix of economic shock, opacity, or judicial partiality. Gravity works on habits as much as headlines.

David Brooks’s essay ‘America Needs a Mass Movement – Now’ shows how grievances can mature into moral mobilisation. He warns that without a disciplined, values-centred movement, democracies sink into autocracy through resignation, not revolution. Applied to Sri Lanka, Brooks’s insight underscores that grievance alone does not create renewal; it must be organised and moralised to counter the cynicism that sustains elite dominance [3].

Brooks frames mobilisation as a three-fold task – moral clarity, organisational density, and programmatic specificity – each relevant to Sri Lanka’s predicament.

Moral clarity – The claim is not partisan but constitutional: no secret deals, no selective justice, and no collective punishment through fiscal adjustment without social floors. This is Cicero’s virtue politics in modern form – the belief that a republic’s health depends on truth as common property, not a monopoly of power.

Organisational density – Unions, student bodies, professional associations, faith communities, women’s groups, and provincial networks must federate. Without this lattice, protest days exhaust themselves. Organisation converts indignation into civic architecture – the social equivalent of Cohen’s political gravity pulling power back into law’s orbit.

Programmatic specificity – Tie institutional repair to material relief: fair taxation, targeted protection for the vulnerable, transparent publication of agreements, auditable asset declarations, and safeguarded protest rights. Linking these reforms converts outrage into order – a transition from burst to blueprint, from anger to authorship.

6. Cicero and Cato in Colombo: Law vs. Appetite

Placed in a Ciceronian frame, Sri Lanka’s crisis is not only economic but moral. Since 1978 the presidency has served less as restraint than armour, each administration rehearsing the same supremacy – the will of the ruler over the rule of law.

The current presidency intensifies this through a weekly theatre of diversion: staged unveilings and choreographed announcements that shift attention from scrutiny to spectacle. The result is res privata displacing res publica – laws as performance, not restraint.

Cicero warned that judicial corruption is the most insidious tyranny because it hides private interest in the robes of virtue. When judges turn law into a tool for institutional preservation, they enact what he called ‘the betrayal of the Republic by its own guardians.’

In today’s Sri Lanka, where allegations against the Chief Justice must pass through structures he controls, the line between res publica and res privata vanishes. The Mt. Lavinia episode thus matters beyond its facts: it is a parable. Where law is displayed rather than applied, where process humiliates the weak and shields the well-connected, the Republic’s guardians become its narrators. Once law reflects the ruler instead of restraining him, citizenship thins into clientship.

7. Why a Sri Lankan ‘No Kings’ is plausible

On present trajectories, Sri Lanka holds all the ingredients for broad, peaceful mobilisation.

Trigger conditions: a harsh budget without legitimacy, opacity over strategic deals, and justice controversies revealing unequal treatment.

Bridging narrative: sovereignty through legality, not noise – the refrain: same law for all, same truth for all, same sacrifice for all.

Movement mechanics: non-violence training, legal-defence cells, detainee tracking, rights hotlines, community kitchens and childcare for strike days, decentralised hubs, and document-watch teams for MoUs, tenders, and appointments.

Do these things and protest becomes constitutional pedagogy – citizens teaching institutions how to behave. That is the Ciceronian answer to personality politics and propaganda: refuse the theatre, insist on the law.

8. Closing turn: Political gravity will do its work

Cohen shows why overreach cannot float forever; Brooks shows how societies turn shock into structure. Sri Lanka must decide whether gravity acts through disorder – sudden eruptions that burn and fade – or through ordered civic power.

Political gravity cannot work where moral gravity is suspended. The CIABOC complaint is more than a legal filing; it is a civic test. Ignored, it will confirm that Sri Lanka’s institutions have entered the Ciceronian stage of decay – law sanctifying appetite, guardians becoming gravediggers.

Constitutional change by necessity

The 1978 Constitution demands a two-thirds majority and referendum for reform – thresholds that shield presidents from restraint. Yet when legality obstructs legitimacy, change can arise by necessity. History shows constitutions replaced not by decree but by popular authorship. A charter born from a broad civic mandate and endorsed by a simple-majority referendum could claim legitimacy as sovereign renewal. From Tunisia to South Africa, such transitions prove that when people refound their republic, law follows freedom.

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FT Link

Part 1 of this article can be seen at https://www.ft.lk/opinion/From-No-Kings-to-No-Clients-Political-and-economic-gravity-Part-1/14-783527

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A People’s Constitution: From Presidency to Prime Ministership

To reverse decay, Sri Lanka must look beyond personalities to structure. The 1978 framework, fortified by executive entrenchment, cannot reform itself; power rarely yields voluntarily. The remedy lies in a People’s Constitution – abolishing the Executive Presidency and restoring parliamentary primacy under a prime minister answerable to the legislature.

A People’s Congress, representing every local division and community, could meet annually to deliberate on the nation’s course. Members would serve honorarily, compensated only for service, not patronage. Those implicated in corruption or complicity with the current order should be barred constitutionally from national office.

Such a settlement would turn protest into authorship – citizens not merely resisting rulers but refounding the Republic. In that moment, Sri Lanka would realise Cicero’s ideal of a commonwealth: the people’s affair, governed by reason and bound by justice.

Footnotes:

[1] Complaint lodged with the Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption (CIABOC), 1 July 2025, alleging breach of Sections 73, 93, 107 and 111 of the Anti-Corruption Act No. 9 of 2023.

[2] YouTube video reference: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gAiXGGcU19c

[3] David Brooks, ‘America Needs a Mass Movement – Now,’ The Atlantic, 14 October 2025.

[4] Jayalath Bandara Adikarige, ‘Newtonian physics, traditional biology and Sri Lankan politics – Part 2,’ Daily FT, 1 May 2025. https://www.ft.lk/columns/Newtonian-physics-traditional-biology-and-Sri-Lankan-politics-Part-2/4-776033

[5] Justice Gamini Amarasekara, Farewell Address, Supreme Court of Sri Lanka, February 2025; reported in Daily Mirror, 12 February 2025.

Thai World Junior Championship 2025

The 16th Singha Thailand World Junior Championship organised by the Thailand Golf Association will be conducted at the Royal Hua Hin Golf Course, from 30 October to 2 November. The competition will feature four days of intense golf across a 72-hole format. Kaya Daluwatte, the recently concluded Asian Youth Games (AYG) 2025 bronze medallist, will compete in the Girls’ individual (15-18 years) event.

Meanwhile, 7th-placed Reshan Algama and Adhithya Weerasinghe from AYG 2025 will compete in the Boys’ individual (15-18 years) and team events. This will be a significant moment for youngster Thejas Rathiskanth, who will feature in the Boys’ individual (15-18 years) event.

Experienced Mithun Perera will be the Coach and Manager of the outfit. (SJ)

Budget deficit more than halves YTD Sept. 2025

Sri Lanka’s fiscal performance continued to strengthen, with the Budget deficit more than halving in the first nine months of 2025, according to the Finance Ministry’s latest Fiscal Review Report.

The deficit fell 54.5% year-on-year (YoY) to Rs. 441.4 billion in the first nine months of 2025 from Rs. 970 billion a year earlier, mainly due to higher revenue collections, which grew 31% YoY to Rs. 3.83 trillion from Rs. 2.93 trillion. The primary account surplus more than doubled to Rs. 1.4 trillion.

Income tax revenue rose 12% to Rs. 831 billion, while VAT brought in Rs. 1.24 trillion, up 31% from a year earlier. Customs accounted for nearly half of total tax receipts, collecting Rs. 1.7 trillion and achieving 80% of its annual target.

The Inland Revenue Department contributed Rs. 1.64 trillion, reaching 75% of its estimate, while the Excise Department collected Rs. 168 billion, or 70% of its goal.

Revenue from import VAT climbed 42% to Rs. 605 billion, while excise duties almost doubled to Rs. 552 billion.

On the expenditure side, total spending rose 10% to Rs. 4.3 trillion, driven by a rise in recurrent expenditure to Rs. 3.8 trillion.

Capital spending and net lending declined 2% to Rs. 455 billion, while interest payments increased 8.6% to Rs. 1.9 trillion.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) in its last review earlier this month noted the Government’s improving fiscal performance, but there was a lot more to be done.

The release of the next tranche under Sri Lanka’s $ 3 billion Extended Fund Facility (EFF) will depend on Parliament approving a 2026 Budget aligned with the program’s fiscal and debt sustainability goals.

The IMF said that the 2026 Budget should be in line with program parameters to continue building fiscal space on the back of strong revenue measures and prudent spending execution.

It noted that improving tax compliance, broadening the tax base, and addressing revenue leakages remain key to sustaining fiscal progress, while efficient spending and stronger public financial management will help preserve fiscal discipline.

Debt restructuring is nearing completion, the IMF said, adding that sustained reform momentum, particularly in public finance, State enterprise governance, and anti-corruption measures, will be critical to maintaining stability and investor confidence.

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Govt. earns Rs. 349 b from vehicle imports in first nine months

Vehicle import tax revenue surges 818% YoY

Vehicle import duties surged 818% year-on-year to Rs. 349 billion in the first nine months of 2025, up from just Rs. 38 billion a year ago, according to the Finance Ministry’s latest Fiscal Review Report.

According to CBSL data released in September 2025, vehicle imports reached $ 193 million in July, boosting the total to $ 668 million for the first seven months of the year.

Govt. earns…

The value of motor vehicle imports is expected to reach $ 1.5 billion this year, up from the earlier projection of $ 1.2 billion, Central Bank Governor Dr. Nandalal Weerasinghe said last week.

This means the Governor expects vehicle imports to total $ 830 million in the last five months of 2025.

Earlier this month the International Monetary Fund (IMF) noted that the Government’s fiscal performance has been strong, primarily supported by taxes on motor vehicle imports.

But the revenue boost from vehicle import taxes is seen as temporary and not a structural improvement in Sri Lanka’s revenue administration.