4 July, 2026

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The Students Protests 1975-76 At University Of Peradeniya That Ousted President Vithanage & Sirimavo’s Dictatorship

By G.G.P. Abesekara

Book review: The Students protests 1975-76 at University of Peradeniya that ousted President Vithanage and Sirimavo’s dictatorship

The book launch ceremony of Dr Rajasinghe Bandara, ‘The Students protests 1975-76 at University of Peradeniya that ousted President Vithanage and Sirimavo’s dictatorship’ was held at Mahaweli Centre Auditorium, Colombo 7, at the beginning of this month. The former speaker, Mr Karu Jayasuriya was the chief guest. Mr. Mahinda Deshapriya, former Election Commissioner and the veteran diplomat and political scientist Dr Dayan Jayatilleka delivered the main speeches.  I was among the audience.

The book is about the tyranny of the University President P.W. Vithanage who was appointed by Prime Minister Sirimavo Bandaranaike after sacking of the immensely popular previous President Prof George Kodithuwakku. The action of the government outraged the entire students community and they started protesting against newly appointed President Prof P.W. Vithanage from the very day he was appointed. The protests broke out in the middle of the night after hearing the bad news.  I was the president of the students’ council at that time.

The government-controlled media had been trying to justify its action with fake news that claimed Prof George Kodithuwakku failed to control the ragging. They claimed that the female student Rupa Rathnaseeli tried to commit suicide to avoid ragging, by jumping from the top floor of Ramanathan Hall.  However it was totally misleading, by this time ‘rag season’ was over. I went to the scene with Prof George Kodithuwakku and talked to the female students of Ramanathan Hall to understand the truth. In fact she had fallen from the balcony of 7th wing. The book reveals the mystery, why it happened.

From the day Prof Vithanage assumed duties, as the president university was a hostile environment to him. Police had been deployed, at dawn, throughout the university before his arrival. He tried to control the university like a ‘police state’. His tyranny continued. Students as well as university trade unions had been demanding his removal, but the government didn’t listen. The end result was a tragedy. On 12 November 1976, with the brutal police attack on the innocent students, one student was shot dead and more than 200 students were badly injured.  In the aftermath of the brutal police attack, massive protests broke out all over the country against the government.  Millions of ordinary people including school children came to the streets to protest. As a result Sirimavo Bandaranaike government collapsed. This was the story unfolds in the book as you watching a movie.  According to Rajasinghe Bandara, Dayan Jayatilleka was the first reader of the book and he had praised ‘Raja your book visualise the history as we watching a drama’   

The author describes the history from an eyewitness account, as he had been an active participant of the protests and the action committee.

As I had been the president of the students’ council between 1975-76, I have an in-depth knowledge about the protests, stories, the truth and lies and the tyranny of Prof Vithanage that has been described in the book. Dayan Jayatilleka and Mahinda Deshapriya were active participants of the protests and the action committee. They made the stories in the book live among the audience with their own experience. As they were talking about their experience about the brutal police attack on innocent students on the 12th November, the audience held their breath.

Dayan was mainly addressing the new generation about the importance of leaning from the history at the time they are getting ready to vote for new president. Dayan gave a vivid analysis about how Sirimavo’s government and the opposition leader JR Jayewardene played to the gallery during the time of the protests. He said ‘Sirimavo and JR shared the same political ideologies; same as elite political leaders do today, but they pretended to ordinary people they were against each other.

Mahinda Deshapriya was talking about the day of horror on the 12th November and the students’ protests on the previous night. He was talking about the truth and lies about the history of the protests confirming the facts and figures in the book. Mahinda said ‘The media claimed Rupa Rathnaseeli Tried to commit suicide by jumping from the balcony but in fact she fell from the balcony.’ When I was the assistant election commissioner, one day, I met Ronnie Gunasinghe, the former HQI Mathale Police station, the man who ordered to shoot at the students.  He said to me about the lies he said to Wimalarathna commission to justify the shooting’

In my opinion as the reader of the book, I can say without any hesitation, the way the author presents the history; the stories, the protests and the events unfolds in front of the reader like in a movie because he visualises the events, paragraph after paragraph and chapter after chapter. As I was reading, it brought me back to my young age at the University.

There are different tones of the book the reader can hear as he is reading. The tones have been set according to the settings: sometimes it is the tone of the young lives, sometimes humorous, sometimes horrifying; for example when the author describes the ragging and Vithanage’s character it is humorous, when he describes the police attack it is horrifying.

Every chapter has interesting and sensible title that helps to maintain the curiosity from begging to end. For example Nidhi Vedi Hanthana Avadikala Rae,

The day Hanthana was awoken in the middle of the night.

‘When lion kneels people assume he had fallen but they don’t know lion kneels to jump again.’ – Prof Vithanage.

When there is a dictatorship in a country the media is under control of the regime. Therefore, the citizens do not have the opportunity to read the truth. Same thing happened under Sirimavo Bandaranaike regime. But now you have the opportunity to read the truth.

This book contains a newspaper article, which was written by the author when JR Jayewardene government proposed to close down Peradeniya University permanently at the foothills of Hanthana in 1986. As a result, the government withdrew the plan. It also contains postface that links the past to the present explaining why there had been a 30-year long civil war and how our country fell into bankruptcy in the hands of corrupt rulers.

I can firmly say that this is the only book about the complete and true history of the dark era of university of Peradeniya between 1975-76. Therefore it is worth reading to learn from the past, at the time our people prepare to vote for another president.

*G.G.P. Abesekara was the president of the students’ council of University of Peradeniya between 1975-76, during the time of the protests against Prof P.W. Vithanage. After the graduation he worked for several government boards and corporations at senior managerial levels. His last job was the General Manager Ceylon Fishery Harbours Corporation

Latest comments

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    Mr Abeysekara:
    “I went to the scene with Prof George Kodithuwakku and talked to the female students of Ramanathan Hall to understand the truth. In fact, she had fallen from the balcony of 7th wing. The book reveals the mystery, why it happened”.
    We too were students in the uni in 1975 and were part of the student community who boycotted our final year examination in Jan 1976 in protest against the arrest of (a) student leader(s)- (I think you were one of them) that led to temporary closure of the university. But this is not the point that I want to raise now. What objective evidence that Rajasinghe Bandara has presented in his book on the mystery behind poor Rupa jumping from the balcony in 1975? It is well documented that Rupa was terrified by ragging. Even if the incident had taken place outside the rag season (as you claim) if she was terrified by ragging (as all hapless freshers were at the time), how can you or your friend Bandara conclusively say that ragging had nothing to do with her attempt to jump from the hall? By the way, she ended up as a cripple and took her life in 2002.

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      Hi MJA,
      Thank you for raising the doubts. I am the author of the book. The book clearly answers what actually had happened based on the information I received from reliable sources. I would suggest you to read the whole book to understand the truth. I cannot describe here what is in it, curiosity is vital when you read a book.
      Good to know you were among students community in 1975,76

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        Hi RB, My comment was directed more to the book reviewer and the standard of his critique. Without reading the book and without seeing whether objective evidence has been presented in the book on the Rupa Rathnaseeli incident (49 years later!) it would not be fair to critique the book. As for ragging I am of a very strong view that ragging- even in the mildest form should never be condoned as it boils down to bullying and harassment. If I get the opportunity to come across your book happy to read and verify myself the evidence that you have presented to the contrary. I have read writeups where the family members of Rupa, being interviewed, have categorically mentioned that Rupa was traumatized by ragging. RAGGING IS A BIG NO. I know many students who have left Peradeniya or have refused to come to Peradeniya due to ragging. I can check with my female batchmates- residents of the Ramanathan Hall during the incident who might be able to throw more light. Cheers

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    I was a Pera student much later than the times mentioned in the article, yet my time was equally chaotic too. I was there in 88/89 when the JVP/DJV terror was at helm as well as the counter terrorism unleashed by the government was full on! It was a horrible time where law and order was owned by the fascists of both sides and all innocent people and students were the ultimate victims. Campus was like a saloon door then, open for a week, closed for the next two weeks…and so on. It was such a tumultuous time to do higher studies, so I took off one year to go and work in a bank in Colombo, only to return to studies when all that madness was over. As a politically alert student but independent, I have heard so many stories related to the Weerasooriya incident. It was all about a failed government that appointed a very unpopular VC who tried to hegemonize his draconian laws on students and finally ended up with utter disaster one student paying the price with his life! Sadly, Pera has a long history with such incidents since the major student riots that started in the mid-60s. Contd…

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    Contd….Despite all that chaos, one thing I can still lovingly cherish in my memory is the serenity of the landscape. And the beauty of everything around it. There is no other university in SL that can beat the nature, plants, streams, landscape at Pera. Hantana surrounding the entire campus background and of course the bordering majestic Mahaweli were jewels in the crown! I don’t think anyone who studied there there can ever forget the exquisite Yellow Poui and Robarosia in April either. It was so charming and serene and also unique to Peradeniya campus. Absolute sublime!

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