Saturday, June 27, 2020

An Extraordinary Gazette Notification

Reproduction

An Extraordinary Gazette Notification



by Prof. Savitri Goonesekere


During the last few weeks, the media has paid a great deal of attention to fundamental rights cases filed in our Supreme Court. The electronic media, typically expressed half-truths or incorrect information on what these cases were about. Sadly, but perhaps not unexpectedly, opposition parties who should have been concerned with the matter, failed to contradict the toxic messages on the TV, regarding this litigation in the Supreme Court. Most people thought that the petitioners were just being nasty, trying to prevent a General Election, and challenging the President’s right to dissolve Parliament. Opinions expressed, in analyzing the legal provisions were either dismissed as irrelevant legal jargon, or another contribution to partisan politics.
When the Supreme Court dismissed all the petitions, on June 2, 2020, after long hearings, without giving reasons, there was closure on the debate. Their Lordships had expressed a unanimous opinion that all the petitions had no merit, and that was the end of the matter.   

Some of us, analyzing the issue of postponed elections and incapacity to summon a new Parliament, due to Covid 19, requested the President in public appeals to act under Article 70 (7) of the Constitution. This article empowered him to reconvene the dissolved Parliament, issuing a new proclamation of dissolution, with dates for a General Election and summoning of the new Parliament, when the public health crisis was over. He was empowered to take such action by the Constitution, in response to “an emergency.”  However, he refused to exercise this power. Government spokesmen told us all that the President had decided that there was no emergency or an issue of public security that demanded exercise of those powers. And yet on the very night of the Supreme Court judgment the President issued an extraordinary Gazette notification  of June 2, 2020, setting up a Presidential Task Force  on the rationale of ensuring “the security of the country”, i.e. to build “a secure country, and a disciplined virtuous and lawful society,” also implying an ongoing breakdown of law and order.

Understanding these events, the Constitution, our fundamental rights as citizens, and the exercise of Presidential power, are matters that should concern us. These happenings can at some point impact on all our lives. Especially when, for so many years we all agreed that this country’s governance had been destroyed because of the Executive Presidency. The recent litigation on fundamental rights, and the Extraordinary Gazette notification that followed, are matters that we should reflect on, even as we go to the polls to cast our votes at the next General election.

Fundamental Rights Litigation May- June 2020 on Postponement of General Elections 2020 and Summoning of New Parliament
This litigation was NOT based on the illegality of the President’s Proclamation of March 2, 2020 dissolving Parliament. This was VALID in law and NOT challenged by those who brought these cases to the Supreme Court. The fundamental rights petition was filed on three major grounds:

a)     That Article 70 (5) of the Constitution made it very clear that after the General Election was held on a date set by the original Proclamation of Dissolution,  the new Parliament had to  meet “on a date NOT LATER THAN THREE MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF” the original proclamation. A variation by a subsequent Proclamation of the President had to conform to that date. The only exception was if the President exercised his powers under subsection 7 of that same Article 70, on the basis that there was an emergency that made “an earlier meeting of (the dissolved) Parliament necessary.” The President refused to exercise this power.  The three-month limit for summoning of Parliament in the original Proclamation was exceeded on June 2, 2020. The petitioners therefore argued that the legal period for summoning the new Parliament had lapsed, and the original Proclamation had therefore become void or lost its legality.

b)     The second key premise was that the Elections Act provisions (Section 24(1) (c) and Section 10), linked the Elections Commission’s notice on the date of the General Election to the Presidential Proclamation. Therefore, when the three-month period for summoning the new Parliament lapsed, the Commission could not vary the date of the General Elections by its own actions. This also required interpreting the provisions of the Elections Act on postponing the election in an electoral district due to an emergency or unforeseen circumstance, and whether this referred to the General Election in the whole island as defined in Article 170 of the Constitution.

c)    The third issue was the impact of postponement of elections and absence of a date set for summoning the new Parliament, on financial oversight.  This required an interpretation of Article 150 (3) on the President’s power to make withdrawals from the Consolidated Fund after a dissolution of Parliament.

There were other arguments, but these were the key issues that required a determination by court. It was these issues that created the context for an important Constitutional case that would also define the scope of Presidential powers in relation to Parliament. As important and defining in relation to governance of the nation, as the Dissolution of Parliament case of 2018. Except for his Lordship the Chief Justice, many if not all the judges in the five judge Bench also participated in the unanimous Full Bench decision of the HNJ Perera CJ Court in 2018. Those of us who study the jurisprudence of our apex court and teach it to law students, looked forward to a  Supreme Court decision worthy of the best of the jurisprudence that has emerged from our highest court. After ten days of argument before the Supreme Court, we all awaited a decision on what we considered an important Constitutional law case, on the powers of the two key organs of governance - Parliament and the Executive President. To our amazement, the Court unanimously dismissed all the petitions without giving any reasons.

It was disappointing to read and listen to media accounts of the advocacy in our highest court, in these cases. These reports may have been inaccurate. But summaries provided suggested that while the Petitioners’ lawyers were analyzing the law, on the above key issues of Constitutional interpretation, the respondents’ lawyers focused on the political dimensions and  did not respond with counter legal arguments. They constantly questioned the good faith of the petitioners in coming to court, attributing political bias.
The President of the Bar Association sometime ago issued a statement suggesting that decisions of the courts should not be commented on by lawyers. However, critical review of court decisions has been an important part of both judicial decision making and legal education in Sri Lankan and other legal systems, for decades.

The jurisprudence and advocacy associated with great justices of the appellate courts, and brilliant practitioners of the legal profession, focused on review and critique of case law. My late husband RKW Goonesekere delivered the Desmond Fernando PC Memorial Oration at the invitation of the Bar Association. His theme was a critique of the Supreme Court decision that held that there were no limits to the Presidential term of office, despite specific provisions in the Constitution of 1978. That decision was overturned by the 19th Amendment passed by a 2/3 majority in Parliament. I recall as a young lecturer commenting on a judgment of his Lordship late HW Tambiah QC on the Tesawalamai. His Lordship and I were at a seminar on the personal laws. His Lordship came up to me later, smiled and said “your comments were very interesting. But you know unfortunately judges don’t have a right of reply!”

It is in this spirit that some of us still believe that the serious study of case law is important for practitioners and judges, law teachers and students, and especially all those interested in issues of law and justice. It is respectfully submitted that the hearing of these important fundamental rights petitions over 10 days, and the Court’s refusal of leave to proceed without reasons, has left the interpretation of Article 70 of the Constitution, and the relevant provisions of the Elections Act shrouded in mystery. In discussing this case in classrooms and other fora we will not know what their Lordships thought was the meaning of the three-month limitation on the Dissolution Proclamation so clearly set out in the Constitution.  Nor will we know their views on the important matter of the link between the Election Commission’s Gazette notification on the date of a General Election, and a Presidential Proclamation dissolving Parliament.

There have also been some unfortunate outcomes. The date of the General Election will be decided by the Elections Commission on some future date they consider acceptable.  We do not have a Parliament and a President accountable to Parliament. The life of the new Parliament will begin on some uncertain date in the future. There is no provision in the Constitution for the President to summon a new Parliament by a Proclamation that does not conform to a Proclamation of Dissolution as specified in Article 70. The court has not indicated to us how such a new Parliament can or will be summoned.

Sadly, and most significantly there is now a perception among the Government and the People that the Constitution and laws are really irrelevant in governance. The manner in which the petitioners were vilified by many senior President’s Counsel for the respondents, and their motives questioned, has set new norms and standards that we also witnessed in the Court of Appeal in the well-known Gotabaya Rajapaksa Citizenship case. One can only hope that their Lordships of the Supreme Court will contribute to changing this negative trend, reiterating once again the views of his Lordship Chief Justice HNJ Perera and the Full Bench in the Dissolution of Parliament Case 2018. His Lordship Chief Justice Perera delivering the judgment of the Full court said  that the right to litigate violations of fundamental rights is an “inalienable right” of our people and the “grundnorm “ (basic norm) and “gives life and meaning to the “Sovereignty of the People” recognized by the Constitution.   
The Gazette Extraordinary of  June 2, 2020

The Presidential Proclamation that immediately followed the Supreme Court decision set up a Task Force of exclusively military personnel with a wide mandate  “to build a secure country” and “a disciplined and lawful society”.  The Task Force is headed by the Defence Secretary. Members of the Task Force are the Commanders of the three armed forces, the Acting IGP, and several other senior military officers holding office in these forces. Directors of State Intelligence and the Directors of Intelligence of the Navy and Air Force are also members. A few retired army military officers have also been appointed.

This Presidential initiative is said to have been taken in the exercise of powers given by Article 33 of the Constitution. Not a single article or sub article of this provision in the Constitution refers to such a power or powers.  Even a broad power stated in Article 33 (2) (h) refers to the President acting in conformity with international law. The issue of public security is dealt with specifically in Chapter 18 of the Constitution. When the President exercises powers under that Chapter and the Public Security Ordinance, he must also communicate with Parliament. But now we have no Parliament, and there is no indication when the new Parliament will be summoned. 
The President said there is no national emergency or reasons of public security to exercise powers under Article 70 (7) of the Constitution. It was argued for the respondents that there is no emergency due to Covid 19 or a public security rationale. Yet the Elections Act expects the Elections Commission to postpone elections in an electoral district in a situation of “emergency or unforeseen circumstances.” And the President appoints, on the very day the Supreme Court order was delivered, military men with a mandate on “public security” outside the provisions of the Constitution. This is almost a public statement that the Constitution and laws are token symbols and procedures.

The mandate and powers of the Task Force are very wide
They are tasked with ‘curbing the illegal activities of social groups who are violating the law, “which is harmful to free and peaceful existence of society.” Eliminating the “drug menace” is within the mandate of the Task Force. Given the current inclination of administrators to disregard legal provisions, and a failure to understand their scope and application, we do not know what will be recognized as “violating the law”. We also do not know what the phrase “social group” will be interpreted to mean. Will this include trade unions, all professional and civil society organizations, faith groups?
The Task Force has wide powers to investigate, obtain information and issue directives. A reference to “respecting the rule of law and justice” and equal protection of the law” appears in a disconnected manner in the text, not inspiring any confidence that these phrases will be interpreted with reference to the Constitution or specific and important legal norms and standards.
All public servants, and personnel in corporations and public institutions (a term that could include state universities) are subject to the authority of the Task Force and must co-operate with it, provide information and follow directives. Failure to do so, or a dereliction of duty will be reported to the President. The President has already announced that officers in State Banks who do not follow government instructions will be dismissed.

A culture of political decision making and abuse of power especially in the last 15 years has crippled many state institutions including universities.  Persons holding responsible public office are often silent spectators in decision making, fearing to speak truth to power.  A tongue lashing by the President of senior officials in the banking sector may please those who want the President to exercise dictatorial powers in governance.  Will these institutions too be crippled in the same way, at a time when the country desperately needs the economy to be managed with professionalism, personal integrity and commitment?
The status of the independent Commissions like the Elections Commission, Human Rights Commission, the Commission on Disappearances, the Public Services and Police Commissions, and the RTI Commission, in relation to the mandate of the Task Force has not been clarified. Can they too receive directives that must be complied with?
This Extraordinary Gazette notice is truly extraordinary for giving authority to the military as a significant agent of civil governance, outside the framework of the law and the Constitution. This Task Force may well fulfill the vision of all those fellow country men and women who think future national development and progress demand dictatorial and authoritarian governance. Dr U Pethiygoda writing in the Island newspapers (30th/31st May 2020), considered Parliamentary democracy and the franchise irrelevant in governance. His desire to reject worthless institutions and norms, and his request to the President to create a disciplined society with his Presidential “whip”, appear to have been realized. Dr. Pethiyagoda will consider himself very fortunate. What the future will hold for those of us who still believe in democracy and the limitation of State power in the public interest, is anyone’s guess.

Friday, June 26, 2020

Blessing of Coronavirus SHUTDOWN or LOCKDOWN


Blessing of Coronavirus SHUTDOWN or LOCKDOWN

The natural evolution of shutdown was to find solutions for few of my questions in evolution of life on earth, especially the pre-biotic era that made it conducive for life to evolve in very slow steps.

1.Why chirality or spin or left handedness in molecules?

2. Why sex differentiation instead of simple binary division?

3. Could there be half life half chemical scenario?

4. How the interaction went on and succeeded eventually?

The initial problem was that I limited myself to three forms of matter.

It should have been four or more.

1. Gas

2. Liquid

3. Solids

The answer came from my son’s inquiry into why there are lines going across the Television screen horizontally and why not vertically?

4. I delved into the liquid crystal world that easily bend light in many directions in a material as thin as 100 nanometers.

5. My friend the Coronavirus come to help me.
It has 10 to 20 and 100 to 120 particle sizes in the form of RNA.

6. I told my son the Coronavirus can enter the Television screen as he watches it and the Coronavirus size is just the size of the Liquid Crystal Screen and bit less.

In theoretical sense the light can energizes the chirality of the semi-liquid particles in million ways.

So seven of our visible light stream is minor matter for the man who makes the cheap television screens for third world consumption.

Few of the pixels breakdown would bring a big aberration in the picture we see.

A thick television screen like Cathode Ray Tube can withstand the pixel aberrations much better but it costs more to build it and it consumes more electricity.

In reference, I told him first television was black and white and turning it to colour was an enormous achievement in my time.

Even though, I do not watch TV now I had an assortment of black and colour TV sets I purchased with hard earned money.

By the way when, I was in New Zealand I rented the TV and decided never to invest on a TV but computers (even before Windows) run on Unix.

My entry into Linux was logical consequence and I was quite adept at it then even coding.

I wanted to write the code for few Linux games (only handicap Linux had) and I have the book but misplaced the coding CDs (Why type every line but copy from the CD).

Back to the liquid crystal scenario, the the primordial soup was steaming with particles that made liquid crystals at random.

RNA came first in my story of the evolution albeit it did not make liquid crystals readily.

Then came DNA and time was right for the RNA to dictate terms with DNA.

The pre-biotic soup had the right ingredient, in the form of Liquid Crystals.

The next step the biotic with binary division was inevitable.

The binary division and chirality worked hand in glove.The liquid crystal state was also conducive for formation of cell membrane. 
To me formation of cell membrane with polarity was enigmatic, to say the least.
It has bilayers, one which is water phobic (repelling) and the other hydrophillic (water loving).
Liquid crystals could have been of many layers to begin with, its one sided spin arrangement allowed the formation of tiny globules (hydrophobic inside and outer hydrophilic surface bathing in liquid or water) that coalesce to form bigger globules of the size of pre-biotic cell formation.

Addition of RNA and much later DNA gave the ability of binary reproduction.

That does not mean in another world system with another system the chirality is in opposite direction is impossible but probable.

Like matter takes precedent here by making one atom in excess of antimatter that annihilated the antimatter, it is physically possible for one antimatter in excess matter to make a world system of antimatter realm.

In other words given time anything can happen in the physical world and not the way the Bible had predicted.

 
Chaos and uncertainty principle are hard at work!


Reproduction

Last Puzzle is the Life Puzzle

I am intrigued by how life evolved on our planet.
I won't exclude the fact that life would have traveled from outer space in a tiny meteorite (mostly improbable).
Leave that argument aside for the time being.

How to approach the problem?

Top down approach?
Bottom up approach?

Either way I am going to get bogged down somewhere around one (1) billion years into the past.

The premises are many.

1. Origin of cellular life is incredible.
Almost impossible in a hostile environment.

2. It happened very very slowly.

3. In its progress toward self perpetuation, there were many obstructions including bombardment of meteorites.

4. It went through five mass extinctions.
Currently it is well into its sixth extinction.

5. There could have been half life half chemical scenario.

How the interaction went on we do not know.

6. Cellular life is so labile it does not leave tell tale stories or leave behind markers in stromatolites.

7. Earth is a living planet and it does not have its oldest rocks available for study.
Its oldest rock is only two and a half billion years old.
Earth life of four and a half billion is estimated from meteorites.

There is two billion years of missing history which we have to surmise.

8. In addition there were catastrophes.

9. I am comfortable with the last 500 million years of its evolution of that the last 3 to 5 million is matter of fact biology being unraveled.

10. How could I dissect the first 500 hundred of the last billion years.

11. In addition there are many other questions.

WHEN?
WHERE?
HOW?
Life originated?

12. What was the smallest living particle?

We seem to assume that we know a lot.

On the contrary we know very little.

We are stuck with the hereditary and survival of the fittest scenario that would suit only the last 5 million years, assuming mitochonridal mutations is rare.

In fact, major mitochondrial mutations are very very rare.
It is our energy store.
If it goes haywire life cannot exist in the current oxygen rich planet with cellular life.

This preamble is for further dissection by my friends far and near.

There are number of salient points that were not available to Darwin that cannot be ignored.


They did not come by chance.

My premise is that evolution brought order to the world (universe) without it.

There was economy in participation.

Assimilation of two carbon units, twenty amino acids coded by a few purines and pyrimidines, about 20,000 variants of structural proteins with only levo-rotation (no dextro-rotatoion of sugar molecules) are convincing evidence that it started at one point in modern evolution continued albeit slowly.

But nitty gritty of evolution and diversion of species were determined not by nucleus but by mitochondrial evolution.

Mitochondria were very resistant to mutation and they occur once in every 3 to 5 million year intervals.

When that happened drastic changes happened to the primates (erect posture, language acquisition and larger brain) in evolution.

How it happened in an ovum is a mystery by all accounts and we do not have mitochondrial data to evaluate.

For example we have giant mitochondria in salivary glands and in yeasts.

Yeast mitochondria can hijack nuclear DNA and that is one way of mitochondrial evolution.

Mitochondria evolved by endosymbiosis.

Mitochondria originated by a endosymbiotic event when a bacterium was captured by a eukaryotic cell. 

The organelles have far fewer genes than an independent bacterium, and have lost many of the gene functions that are necessary for independent life (such as metabolic pathways).


Thursday, June 25, 2020

Duality, Chirality (Spin) and Order out of Disorder


Duality, Chirality (Spin) and Order out of Disorder

I have no intention of bringing in order (a chaotic system to begin with) into an already disorderly system but to see the fallacy of such an attempt.
Order is mainly seen, in the biological systems by necessity of Darwin’s theory of survival.
In the Universe the chaos is the natural way be that it may be black holes, dark energy and dark matter.
But the man made a big mistake (his mind is the most chaotic system of energy dispensation) in recent history by necessitating orderly organization in the name of Church with mega capital power.
The Church exists to give functionality to capitalism (by Carl Marx’s rendering of Western System of politics) and for its own monetary success in the name of its followers and subtly for global expansionism.

It will never empty its banks in the name of socialism.


Even the socialism in Russia survives on the corridors of Russian Orthodox Church.

Before Church was created it needed a mighty creator and creating order out of nothing (non existent universe before) to begin with.
 
A very big “Big Bang”!

Big Bang explains only 5% of the Universe and rest was negated by default.

When one makes a big falsification in the beginning of explanation, lots and lots of smaller lies had to be created in the name of mankind’s ready consumption.

The construction of a concept of a creator overseeing a disorderly universe was the biggest lie.

The rest is series of smaller lies and the mankind was never liberated or emancipated and a liberator has to be announced who comes in the future tense.

What is the role of mathematics?

Mathematic also tries to bring order by estimation or probability statistics.

Only an approximation but never absolutes in a chaotic background chatter of cosmic energy or background radiation.

We always see the past and never the present of the visible edge of the universe (delay in receiving the light energy by light years).

Even though, we can see the past we are unable to see the future, since the future would seem not to evolve in our understanding of the present moment which is moving relatively fast.

In philosophical sense this present moment has neither corresponding time in the past nor in the future.

So trying to freeze the mind in meditative trance may have tragic consequences to the master (the mind) and the slave (self image or the soul).
So let the mind stream flow like a river to a calm sea (if there is any such thing) till it finds randomness it richly deserves in its own accord.

In other words, let your mind be your slave rather than your master!

Then you are free to cerate your own religion or association but not be a part of a made up regime, be that it may be in politics, religion, science or philosophy.

You become your own creator or destructor and, then happiness or unhappiness will become relative consequences.

Wednesday, June 24, 2020

Corona Reality and Covid Philosophy


Corona Reality and Covid Philosophy

Corona reality is that the “ The God is not great” but the Tiny RNA polymerase is greater than the mankind’s capacity to withstand the mother nature’s secrets, which in this world of reality is about 4 billion years and not the stated 2700 years or less of Bible history of concocted nonsense!

I wanted to start this piece “That the Corona, the elder brother went in search of Reality and the younger brother Covid, went in search of Philosophy and neither met afterwards.

But I must say in spite of not knowing the reality did not stop philosophers from asking the right question at the right time.

The point I am driving at is very simple.

Spanish flu was endemic at the time of William James.

Millions died in the pandemic and that had probably made William James to revise his religious beliefs and become a philosopher of note.

The travesty is that hundred years had passed mankind's way and another virus of more virulent and potent has come to surface and man has neither made giant strides in philosophy nor religion.

I reserve my  opinion on science more so NOW not knowing the logics of dark matter and dark energy expanding the universe.

One of them was William James and he was deliberately stopped by the Church hierarchy, be that it may be Pope or Bishops with power struggle within the institution.

His book in 1902 was not allowed in academic institutions (mostly the Church and all the universities including American are vested with Gods, even the current President Trump has vouched to protect God if not institutions of Science) and after 100 years that book is in print and I bought a copy.

He studied medicine and later slanted his efforts on psychology.

I believe he had read Buddhism in some sense and described the mind as a stream that flows (river analogy) but stopped short of expanding into Abhidhamma.

His words like hysterical, pathological and delusional propensities of Bible readers and subsequent editors of Bible and Quran are all psychological connotations that the Church nor the Mullahs did not understand due to dogmatism of that age.

The coronavirus bare the impotency of the derived gods of many kinds including Buddhism and Hindu traditions.

My contribution here is that the aliens who visited here 5000 years or so ago for experiments on us (with a novel virus which the China had secretly copied from a sample inadvertently left at a Pyramid of Egypt -GIZA) did not see that Chinese are better than Japaneses in pirating Intellectual properties of any country.
I think Chinese are currently investigating on the virus that Chandana Jayaratne (not Dilith Jayaweera who has the sole property of current Ceylon News) claims and believes that came from space and in the possession of Colombo University’s archived leaves of Ceylonese history documents, which are older than our Universe.
By the way, I am not happy with the 5% or less of the physical world but the 95% of the dark matter and dark energy.

The ever expanding universe baffles me.

The multi-verses and alternative realities of physics beyond the reach of our physics or "New Science" is yet to materialize.

If it is not within our reality but will it be within the scope of philosophical conundrum?

My mind ponders and it is the biggest mysterious power we all have. 

Do not leave any dogmatism to rein within.

I call it the open mind.

Tuesday, June 23, 2020

Sri Lankan runner's 'victory' in defeat! June 22, 2020, 8:07 pm

The runner was a senior in my village school run by the Church.

Mr. Tommy Arther who was our coach used to say.

"What matters is participation not winning".

Karu took the advice to the extreme by taking an extra lap at Tokyo! 

I only stuck to 100 meters (yards to be precise) where I was successful in the school and later in the University. 

I was my own coach! 

Reproduction

Sri Lankan runner's 'victory' in defeat!



Sunny Island by Ruhunu Puthra

In the year 1964, the Olympic Games were held in Japan. We were Ceylonese back then.

The best long distance runner of Sri Lanka at the time, R.J. Karunananda ran in the 10,000 metres event (400 meters x 25 laps). Twenty nine athletes from 17 nations participated in the event.

He found that with four more laps for him to run, William Mills of the United States had already romped home. Even after the others had finished running an undaunted Karu, proceeded to run the remaining four laps, with rare courage and firm determination, as a lone runner.

When he ran his first lap, some spectators jeered and at the 2nd lap, the crowd fell silent. Then there was applause, followed by massive cheering. The whole stadium was reverberating with the chant 'Karu Ceylon! Karu Ceylon!'

Finally, he finished the race amidst tumultuous cheering and a standing ovation from 60,000 spectators. On hearing it, the Duke of Edinburgh, who was the chief guest, came out to congratulate 'the most spirited loser' of the Olympic Games.

Soon after the race, he was interviewed by the press. Karu told the reporters "The Olympic spirit is not to win but to take part. So I came here, I took part in the 10,000 metre event and completed my rounds."

He was acclaimed as a hero by the Japanese media. Even though he did not win any medal, he won the hearts of many admirers all over the world and was the true winner of the people.

One would have thought that it was the end of the heroic story. It was not to be. The Japanese Government in its wisdom thought otherwise. His story was made into a chapter in a text book, accompanied by his photograph, as a life lesson in determination, integrity, courage, self-confidence and persistence, for the children.

Karu received a warm welcome when he returned to Sri Lanka.

Born on May 21, 1936, Karu was a soldier in the Sri Lanka Army. He continued to serve his motherland as a dedicated soldier when in 1975, he 'drowned' in the Namal Oya Tank.

Ranatunga J. Karunananda is an unsung Olympic hero of Sri Lanka.

WHO Announces Biggest Single Day Rise in COVID-19 Cases Globally


 Reproduction

WHO Announces Biggest Single Day Rise in COVID-19 Cases Globally


By Kashmira Gander

The World Health Organization has reported the biggest increase in coronavirus cases in a single day, with the Americas bearing the brunt. 
According to a situation report by the U.N. health agency, 183,020 new cases were reported in the 24 hours preceding 10:00 CEST, June 21.

The total included 116,041 in the Americas, 20,248 in South-East Asia, 18,975 in the Eastern Mediterranean, 17,922 in Europe, 8,464 in Africa, and 1,370 in the Western Pacific.

Six months since the coronavirus that causes COVID-19 was first identified in the central Chinese city of Wuhan, Hubei province, 468,331 people have died in 8,952,428 cases, according to Johns Hopkins University. A total of 4,440,000 people have recovered.
As shown in the graphs by Statista below, the U.S. has the most confirmed cases at 2,279,879. That amounts to over a quarter of known cases worldwide. The U.S. is followed by Brazil, at 1,083,341, and Russia with 583,879. 
The U.S. also has the most recorded deaths at 119,977, versus 50,591 in Brazil and 42,717 in the U.K.

Amanda M. Simanek, associate professor in epidemiology at the Joseph J. Zilber School of Public Health, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, told Newsweek the surge in cases may be the result of lockdown measures being eased too soon and/or increasing testing capacity with more cases getting detected.
"In many states, recent increases in cases are related to outbreaks of COVID-19 in food production facilities and congregate settings such as jails or assisted living centers where there is often rapid spread and a high number of cases detected in a short time frame, particularly when targeted testing is carried out," she said.
However, Peter Drobac, a physician and specialist in infectious diseases and public health at the Saïd Business School at the University of Oxford, U.K., told Newsweek the idea increased testing is behind the rise is not supported by evidence.
"I'm extremely concerned that too little is being done to slow the spread of the virus in states where we're seeing surges," he said. "Political leaders are waving it away as a statistical anomaly. Many testing, contact tracing and isolation programs are still weak or non-existent. People are tired, anxious, insecure. Local governments are headed towards fiscal cliffs. And yet, this is just the beginning of the pandemic."


Comparing, BSD versus Linux distributions' Development

My Approach
I am an old guy interested in Linux over 15 years or so and using Linux ONLY for over the past 8 years.
I have tried almost all except ARCH and Absolute Linux (very difficult in the past not NOW with Manjaro and Absolute Linux Live available, it is manageable-It was only installable image, then).
I loved the Live Image where I can run on RAM (one need at least 4 GB RAM for virtual testing-very SLOW and draggy) and see the effects.
I only use Debian now.
All the other distributions I love are on portable external devices (single or multiple).
I love KDE plasma desktop.
The Western Desktop of RubeccaBlack is beautiful. 
Open BSD has a live CD for booting with Internet connection.
If you have a SLOW Internet it takes over 5 hours.
What I do is install it on a external disk and go to sleep and check its funtionality in the morning, leisurely.
I am OLD and LAZY now.
The warning for young guys is that, one has to be patient to USE or TEST Linux.

It a large COLLECTIVE ENTERPRISE unlike Microsoft or Apple.

By the way, RubeccaBlack probably a derivative of Open Mandriva is an excellent Linux distribution (short on packages, though) to try.



Reproduction

Comparing, BSD versus Linux distributions' Development  
Comparing-apples-to-BSDs asks: 

I was reading one of the old articles from the archive. One of the things mentioned was how the BSDs have a distinct approach in terms of packaging the base system relative to userland apps, and that the Linux distros at the time were not following the same practice. Are there Linux distros that have adopted the same approach in modern times? If not, are there technical limitations that are preventing them from doing so, such as some distros supporting multiple kernel versions maybe?

DistroWatch answers: In the article mentioned above, I made the observation that Linux distributions tend to take one of two approaches when it comes to packaging software. Generally a Linux distribution will either offer a rolling release, where virtually all packages are regularly upgraded to their latest stable releases, or a fixed release where almost all packages are kept at a set version number and only receive bug fixes for the life cycle of the distribution. Projects like Arch Linux and Void are popular examples of rolling, always-up-to-date distributions while Fedora and Ubuntu offer fixed platforms.

Basically, with few exceptions, Linux distributions all fell into those two categories where the rolling releases were constantly changing and fixed releases tended to fall behind (or out of date).

The BSDs, in contrast, tend to take an alternative approach. Operating systems like FreeBSD and OpenBSD provide a fixed core (or base) operating system. The base tends to be small, stable, and only changes in small evolutions on a set schedule. The cores of the main BSD branches are fixed. Meanwhile most applications which you can install on the BSDs (LibreOffice, Firefox, the desktop environment, etc) are kept up to date with their upstream versions. The base operating system is fixed and stable while the applications the user runs can be kept up to date with the latest and greatest. This allows the BSDs to offer close to cutting-edge applications without risking a routine update breaking the core of the operating system.

A big part of why the BSDs have this stable core (and updated third-party applications) while Linux distributions tend to take an all-or-nothing approach to version upgrades is the BSDs are developed with all the core operating system components as part of one large project. The FreeBSD kernel, command line tools, filesystems, and base libraries are all handled by the same team. Third-party applications (typically called ports) are made available by another team. In other words, FreeBSD is a whole operating system with almost all the key parts made by one organization.

Linux distributions, on the other hand, are mostly collections of third-party components that are wedded together and managed by a package manager. Debian and Slackware, for the most part, don't develop much of their own software. Most of the work these projects do is to take separate components and weld them together to make an operating system out of independently developed parts. The Linux kernel is made by one team, the core libraries by other teams, the installer by another team, the userland tools by yet another team - all of them operating with their own separate goals and schedules. Linux distributions are made up of hundreds, sometimes thousands, of packages made by teams other than the one publishing the distribution.

This means that Linux distributions do not have one core operating system with key components managed by one team. The kernel, C library, init software, and userland tools come from separate places and their updates are generally not coordinated. This makes it hard for Linux projects to maintain a small, static core while end-user applications get updated.

While difficult, it is not entirely unheard of for some Linux distributions to attempt to maintain a small, stable core platform while regularly updating desktop applications. Some projects take a semi-rolling release approach. If you have used PCLinuxOS or Chakra GNU/Linux you will have seen this in action. The kernel, lower level graphics libraries, and core tools tend to upgrade slowly while desktop applications are updated as new releases come out. Semi-rolling releases can work for a while, but eventually the core components need to "jump ahead" occasionally to keep up.

Some Linux projects attempt to make an image of an operating system and add third-party bundles or containers on top of them. The Fedora CoreOS distribution does this. It maintains a fixed core on which people can add containers or package bundles. The core system in this case is not necessarily fixed, but because it is updated as a whole (rather than as individual packages) the idea is that the core image should always work. The core image approach allows for faster upgrades and keeps the core system somewhat isolated from the applications running on it, but lacks flexibility compared to the semi-rolling and BSD approaches.

A more flexible, and increasingly common solution, is to have a minimum Linux distribution that runs portable packages, such as Flatpak or Snap packages. Portable packages ship with their own dependencies, making them independent of the core operating system and therefore able to update separately from the base distribution and they can be frequently upgraded. The base distribution can then act as a long-term support (LTS), fixed release that is rarely upgraded, much the same way the BSDs handle upgrades. Unfortunately, portable packages are often very large, do not integrate with the host desktop properly, and managing them requires a second package manager to be installed on the operating system.

One more solution is backports. A backport is an updated program which is built to run on an older, fixed-release distribution. Generally backports are kept in their own, separate package repository and added to LTS distributions such as CentOS, Debian or Ubuntu. A backport can be handled by the distribution's default package manager, which is convenient when compared to portable package solutions. However, backports are rarely well tested (compared to the core package repositories), and in my experience, frequently break things on the parent distribution. This makes backports flexible but adds risk of breaking functionality or dependencies on the base operating system.

In short, while there are technical hurdles (such as distributed development) which make it harder for Linux distributions to provide the same sort of base platform isolated from third-party applications, it is possible for Linux distributions to offer this approach. There are several solutions available, each with their strengths and weaknesses. None of these approaches is exactly the same as the BSDs, but some of them are similar and offer some of the same benefits.


Sunday, June 21, 2020

The Central Bank in August elections Bond-smacked in 2015, Public Scolding in 2020:

Reproduction

Bond-smacked in 2015, Public Scolding in 2020:



by Rajan Philips

A new normal has landed. In a stunning development last week, Sri Lanka’s President upbraided Central Bank’s senior officials, and before that Bank of Ceylon officials, for apparently failing to follow government directives and implement specific measures to stimulate the ‘lockdown’ or ‘social-distance’ economy. The bankers were not given the benefit of social distance in what a newspaper called, "back-to-back barrage on the banking sector."

The specific trigger for the meltdown in protocol was the Central Bank’s apparent failure to implement a "proposal made by the President to provide Rs. 150 billion worth of refinancing to banks by accepting the outstanding due as collateral." According to the President, "the Government owes a huge sum of money to companies due to mismanagement in the past;" and this is the outstanding due that the government wants to "be kept as a security for banks to release loans to them. Then they can run the economy. This is a money circulation process. This is a very simple tactic and this is a basic economic principle. But, what are you doing?" The President riled.

The Central Bank officials said nothing during the barrage. They went back and with the approval of the Monetary Board announced the rolling out of new credit schemes to provide commercial banks with additional concessionary funds for a total of Rs 150 billion, to lend to businesses at 4% interest "to revive the economy." In addition, as has been reported, "a new dedicated credit scheme funded by the Central Bank" is to be made available at the same concessionary rates to the "construction sector enterprises," whose unpaid outstanding dues would appear to be at the root of all the public scolding, to borrow from licensed commercial banks, using guarantees issued by the Government equivalent to the amount on past due contract payments.

In a parallel development, Sri Lanka’s Tourism Development Authority has reached an agreement with the Bank of Ceylon, under which the Bank will provide loans at 4.0 percent interest to hotels and travel agencies and restaurants registered under the Tourism Authority, to pay salaries for 144,000 persons for the next six months, based on the EPF/ ETF records supplied by registered tourist industry employers, subject to a corporate guarantee or personal or independent guarantor acceptable to the bank. In addition, the Bank of Ceylon announced its readiness to extend its facilities to multiple sectors as well reduce interest rates. Meeting with People’s Bank’s officials, days after his meeting Central Bank officials, President Rajapaksa called on the state banks "to utilize relief announced by the Central Bank to strengthen the economy and the people affected by COVID-19 pandemic."

In what might be seen as a Main Street/Bank Street split, the President’s rebuke has been welcomed by some as a long overdue antidote to alleged reluctance in the banking sector to "think outside the box" and to be preoccupied with "theoretical reasons" against expanding credit or money supply. Businesses, who complain about the firewall at the banks that stop them from getting loans, are now happy that the President’s intervention will finally bring much needed relief. A spokesperson for small and medium businesses has expressed confidence that "we can now be optimistic of an economic revival." As well, while welcoming the 4% interest rate, small businesses also favour credit being disbursed "on a business basis and on business track records rather than on a collateral basis, because a majority of small businesses have had "massive losses and are unable to show significant collaterals at the moment."

On the other hand, the barrage on the banks has caused head scratching in the more conventional banking and business circles, who also fear of the fall outs for the country’s precarious external sector and financial credibility abroad. To think outside the box, it has been said, one must be used to thinking inside the box, first. Suffice it, for now, to take note of the birth of a new-normal economic principle in Sri Lanka, that if the government owes money to a company or companies for contractually provided goods and services, and if the government is unable to make those payments, then it can direct the country’s banks to extend loans to those companies using their outstanding dues as collateral, for the stated purpose of letting the companies run the economy.

This is a new understanding of the concept of economic stimulus, and a new paradigm for banks and their depositors in the utilization of money that is held between them in law and in trust. Although, there are ways to utilize depositors’ money for public purposes within the law and without breaking trust.

For want of a parliament

What the President’s advisers may not have informed the President is that in no country in the world, only the Central Bank, or the banking sector, has been solely responsible for taking initiatives to address the current Covid-19 economic crisis. Everywhere, governments, legislatures and the banks have acted aggressively but in concert with one another. By far the only exception is Sri Lanka, where there is no legislature to deal with a totally unprecedented health and economic situation. And it is equally totally unfair to blame the Central Bank for apparentlynot doing what other Central Banks are doing, when everywhere the Banks are not doing anything alone except in co-ordination with their respective governments, especially their legislatures. Put another way, for want of a parliament in Sri Lanka, the poor Central Bank got blackguarded.

In the US, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell has met several times with (Democratic) Speaker (of the House of Representatives) Nancy Pelosi and Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin, but hardly ever with (Republican) President Donald Trump. And last week, while Sri Lankan Central Bank Governor and officials were getting their dressing down, Chair Powell and fellow Governors were appearing before US lawmakers to report on the state of the US economy in the midst of the coronavirus crisis. Anyone who follows these matters will know that the US Congress (the House and the Senate) passed legislation with unprecedented (Republican and Democratic) bipartisan support, approving two trillion US dollars as ‘relief package’ for the American people. The Federal Reserve only provided the monetary tools for implementing a good part of the relief package (as it should be properly called as there is nothing to stimulate when the economy is shut down to escape the virus).

It has been the same story of joint action by legislatures and Central Banks in practically every country with a constitutional government, presidential or parliamentary. Sri Lanka, to repeat, is the sole, and sore, exception. In India, the articulate former Congress Finance Minister never misses a moment to criticize the Modi government and its Finance Minister, Nirmala Sitharaman, for coming up short on fiscal initiatives to match the monetary policies initiated by the Reserve Bank of India.

To add a different comment, in passing, the once highflying Modi government is now beleaguered on all fronts, including the Himalayas. Besides taking the blame for the mounting Covid-19 cases, the Modi government has to pacify its enraged Hindutva supporters and explain what it is going to do after the loss of 20 Indian soldiers in a literally sticks and stones border battle with the Chinese. The BJP has to come up with better ways to govern than scapegoating Muslims, browbeating Pakistan, clamping down on Kashmir, and, now, getting into a border fight with the Chinese. The fickle nature of political fortunes should not be lost on the new Administration in Colombo.

Nor should it be lost on the Administration that Sri Lanka’s Central Bank had already initiated measures analogous to those by other Central Banks, but acting within far greater constraints. What is missing in Sri Lanka, and to a far greater extent than practically anywhere else and especially among other South Asian countries, are the matching fiscal initiatives. It is no secret that Sri Lanka’s economic situation was in terrible shape even before COVID-19, and that creates huge limitations for the Central Bank’s maneuverability.

While central banks in developed economies can make decisions and operate with relative independence from external forces, their counterparts in developing economies are constrained to be far more mindful of the external implications of domestic initiatives, especially the implications for balance of payments and the currency. This has been the case ever since international capital flows and trade became more important than foreign aid for developing countries. It is unreasonable, therefore, for Sri Lanka’s political leaders, President Rajapaksa now and former Finance Minister Ravi Karunanayake previously, and now again, to blame the Central Bank for not aggressively dancing to the tunes of their fly-by-night advisers. 

And to publicly pick on the qualifications and salaries of bank officials is terribly beyond the pale.

It is a strange coincidence that in two August, or not so august, elections - first in 2015 and now in 2020, the Central Bank is caught in the eye of the political storm. Although there is no political storm to speak of for the upcoming election, President Gotabaya Rajapaksa chose to remind Central Bank officials of the 2015 bonds scam: "You were there when the Central Bank bonds scam was executed, he said. "If you supported them to commit this crime, there is no reason for all of you not to join hands with me to deliver justice. Public must be made aware of the issue of how we move forward with this kind of officials. The people of this country have bestowed a great power on me to build this country. I request all of you to allow me to build this country."

It is stranger logic to suggest, while invoking the electorally bestowed power, that someone who allegedly was party to an earlier crime should join hands with the government to deliver justice. Perhaps that is the way political karma now works in Sri Lanka - those who commit crimes in one regime, get a second chance to deliver justice in the next. The truth of the matter is that no one from the Central Bank who met with the President may have had anything to do with the 2015 bond scam, or anything before or after. And Professor W.D. Lakshman who stepped in as Governor as a matter of national service – he too had to be at the receiving end of the barrage. 
Hopefully, he received some personal apology, either before or after the scolding. 
Regardless of individuals, it is the institutions that are being tarnished. The Parliament is irreparably damaged. 
The Central Bank is now taking its turn. 
What will be next?

Postscript: 

In my article last Sunday (Archaeology politics and prejudice clouding Vistas of Prosperity and Splendour), there was an inadvertent error in the attribution of the Ibbankatuawa archaeological excavation in Dambulla. 

The Ibbankatuawa (IBB) megalithic cemetery was first excavated by Raja De Silva of the Department of Archaeological Survey of Ceylon in 1970. A dozen years later, in 1982, the late Senake Bandaranayake recommenced excavation as part of the Dambulla cultural triangle project. 

Excavations continued intermittently in 1983/84, 1986, and again from 1988 to 1990. Priyantha Karunaratne was involved in the excavation both at the IBB cemetery and the nearby IBB settlement area. 

I acknowledge the information kindly provided by Manel Fonseka.