23 April, 2024

Blog

Australia As A Model For Sri Lanka

By Siri Gamage

Dr. Siri Gamage

Sri Lankan immigrants to Australia and sometimes visitors consider Australia as a model that can be adopted for fundamental reforms in Sri Lanka (see Dr. Harsha Weerasinghe- A Good Australian Down Under, The Island 26.04.2018). This is a view that comes up in private conversations more than in the public debate. Such a viewpoint is often based on comparisons of governance, service provision, rule of law, cleanliness, orderly behaviour, functioning systems and institutions, norms and manners. Commendable aspects in the broader community such as voluntarism in disaster and emergency management, respect for privacy, egalitarianism, openness, non-interference in private life also contribute to forming such a view. Equal opportunities existing in many fields for individuals to progress in life in terms of education, employment and wealth creation – if they have the desire and motive -are other aspects worth noting (though structural barriers still exist for Aborigines, immigrants, ethnic minorities, women, those from rural and regional areas, and those in Lower Socio-economic groups). Before arriving at such a view where Australia is cited as a model that Sri Lanka can adopt, we need to explore some fundamental aspects of both societies carefully.

Both Australia and Sri Lanka have majorities in power i.e. Anglo Australians mostly born in the country in Australia and Sinhalese in Sri Lanka. Approximately their proportions come to about 75% of the population. English is the official language in Australia. As Australia has a significant non-English speaking background population, translation services are available in government departments, hospitals and other important institutions that provide various services.  In Sri Lanka, there are three official languages – Sinhala, Tamil and English.  Australia is run with a Westminster style government.  However, the country is divided into five States and a couple of territories. There is a Federal Government based in Canberra and State governments in Sydney (New South Wales), Brisbane(Queensland), Melbourne(Victoria), Perth (Western Australia), Hobart(Tasmania) and Adelaide (South Australia).  Thus, the country has a federal system of government. Leaders of State governments and territories plus the federal government meet annually to sort out governance issues such as the distribution of GST (broad based tax) income. State governments have control over education, policing, land, hospitals, fire service etc. The head of state in Australia is the Queen whose representative is the Governor. The governor performs constitutional duties and ceremonial roles. For example, when there is a new cabinet, members have to be sworn in before the Governor. Federal government provides annual grants to state governments.  However, state governments also levy indirect taxes, e.g. car registration, stamp duty for property transactions, fire levy. Federal government is in charge of collecting personal taxes and the indirect tax called the GST which is 10%. When people buy goods, and services this is added to the bill. 

Sri Lanka has a Presidential cum parliamentary system of governance since 1978. The President is elected directly in a separate election whereas the Prime Minister is selected by the MPS elected via the parliamentary election. Additionally, Sri Lanka has 9 Provincial Councils. Each Council has a chief minister and a Council of ministers. In each province, there is a Governor appointed by the President. Central government provides grants to Provincial Councils but the latter has revenue collection measures of its own also.  In Australia, state elections are won by different parties such as Liberal (sometimes with the support of national party) or Labour. There are situations when the federal parliamentary power is held by the liberal (and national) parties, power in some state governments is held by the Labour party. Nonetheless, functioning of the governments continue in an orderly manner.

Australia is a pleasant country to live. There is order in public life, people generally follow rules, respect each other, rules are applied equally irrespective of the status of a person, services are available with not much hassle, and people generally look after their own affairs without bothering others.  In times of distress, those around generally come to assistance.  The emergency services are well organised. If someone gets sick an ambulance can be called and within a reasonable time it arrives whether one is poor or rich (private medical funds pay for this service for their members). Those in low income or destitute categories are provided with a reasonable living allowance by the Federal government. This depends on one’s age, employment status, health and disability, whether single or having a family etc. When a society has order applicable to all, people have the ability to plan their activities with predictability. 

There is competition in the corporate sector. Thus, when an individual wants to get access to utilities such as telecommunication, water, electricity, they can access the better deals. To monitor the behaviour of companies there are various monitoring mechanisms e.g. Dept. of fair trading, competition commission. Consumers can take complaints to Ombudsmen in each industry also.  However, we have to understand that Australia is a high taxing country. Services are provided by the Federal and State governments from the taxes and levies collected from the people themselves.  

As a developed country, Australia is not generally reliant on foreign aid.  Instead it provides foreign aid to less developed countries.  However, there is this myth among people, particularly those who do not pay taxes, that the government is like Santa Claus handing various handouts.  One can’t blame them.  It is only those who pay taxes who feel the pain. A University lecturer with an annual salary of $90,000-100,000, usually pay between $25000-30000 personal income tax to the government (some work-related deductions are possible). The more one earns the more one pays tax.  When a person transfers his properties to family members, they have to pay stamp duty to the State government. If one lives in an apartment, there are multiple payments one has to pay in addition to the mortgage payment. This includes strata fees, water levy, Local Council rates, electricity, gas. The list goes on.  

However, many migrants, especially doctors and other professionals who came to Australia from Sri Lanka and other countries decades ago have been able to accumulate sufficient wealth enabling them and their children to enjoy a higher level of life that is not open to many middle and working-class families.  While such professionals with more than adequate wealth are able to enjoy an upper-class lifestyle with corresponding trappings of high life and culture, many of those in the middle to working class categories struggle to make ends meet as they have to juggle between the income they get from work and outgoings including for children’s education, housing, medical and so on.  It is only in later in their lives they are able to lead a restful life if their children also do well in education and work.  Many don’t enjoy such rest and comfort as children grow up according to city based Australian way of life which is basically a consumerist lifestyle.  Some children start living their own life and neglect parents whereas the majority I must say still care and respect their parents as they have grown up in an environment nurtured by religious and cultural values and norms of parents.

As such, it is risky to make simple comparisons and ask Why Sri Lanka can’t adopt the Australian system or the model? Beneath the beauty that we see in Australia, there is significant social and economic inequalities affecting the minorities, those in lower socio-economic groups, rural and regional areas, big cities, with disabilities and impediments etc. It is true that the State (both federal and State level) looks after those who are at the bottom layers of socio-economic hierarchy. Nonetheless, the globalised economy and free market policies have only benefitted some and not all. Rich gets rich. Poor gets poor.  A few in between move upward. Many moves downward also. 

Australia benefitted from the mining boom for a decade or more as the prices for coal, Iron ore and other minerals in the global market, particularly in China, were high. Large numbers of people from the cities and even abroad found lucrative jobs in remote areas where the multinational operations for mining etc. took place. Since the collapse of this market and income to the government by way of taxes, Australia has been struggling to generate alternative sources of work and income. One of the strategies adopted is to bring in close to 200,000 skilled immigrants annually and a large number of temporary skilled workers as well.  They make a significant contribution to the economy.  When an immigrant family arrives, they become consumers for goods and services. This is good for the corporate sector and finally the government.  

As Australian population is becoming aged, the country needs more people not only to boost the economy but also to undertake various roles in hospitals, aged care facilities, transport, call centres, and other service outlets.  Thus, one can see many from Asian countries working as nurses, age care workers, child care workers, and more.  Exports to China and other Asian countries from Australia including agricultural and animals continue.  However, Australia has developed service industries such as in education to compliment the agricultural and animal trade (beef, pork, poultry and fish).  Such industries are drawing billions of dollars to the country annually. 

Along with globalisation, free market economy and trade, there have been several negative aspects emerging also. This includes casualization of the workforce, stagnant wages, cutting down of working conditions (e.g. holiday loading), limits on trade union strike actions, and more. Public institutions such as universities have adopted executive style of management used in the corporate sector destroying collegial management structures and systems that existed before. This has made academics angry. They have reason to be angry as the majority of them in a given faculty or School are marginalised from the decision-making processes. Instead a few who are appointed by the Senior Executive of universities try to run the show by dictating terms to the rest (Compliance, efficiency, performance review, academic output, volume of student numbers, etc. have become buzz words in this new management culture). Where there are trade unions, such attempts are thwarted to some extent and seek negotiations to settle disputes among academics but it is an uphill struggle. Advertising and marketing campaigns by universities hide this reality within. In other institutions dealing with education, health, social services etc. also we can see this corporate style of management playing havoc in the name of efficiency and so on.

One commendable aspect of Australian society and the way it is organised is the strength of Local Government. While the Federal and State governments look after big picture issues, it is the Local Councils that look after the local matters such as roads, waste collection, water supply, maintenance of parks and public facilities, cleaning and more. An elected Council and a Mayor run these Councils.  For specific projects, they are able to apply for Federal or State funding. Elected members to parliaments at State and Federal levels, work cooperatively with Local Councils to promote their own areas and interests. During Festival times such as Christmas, Local Councils provide entertainment and lighting including fireworks displays for the community.  Within Local Council areas, there are numerous community organisations set up to address specific issues.  For example, charities, those working for sustainable development, solar, and wind power, youth work, women’s refuges. To help elderly living alone at home, there are services to provide food subsidised by governments. Sporting clubs and Service clubs such as Rotary and Lions also function at this level.

As stated earlier, Voluntary service is a hallmark of Australian community life. When floods, fire or other natural calamities occur, there is a State Emergency Service(SES) with trained volunteers, vehicles and equipment.  When there is severe storm or flood damage they spring into action. There is a Rural Fire Service which looks after fire control during summer months. These services are augmented with volunteers who otherwise do day jobs elsewhere. They can obtain leave from employers to perform such services.  

When a person retires, he/she usually volunteer a day or two to work in a charity or some community organisation.  A list of such organisations is maintained at the Local Council.  Some drive school buses. Others mind crossings near schools in the morning and afternoon. Citizens consider it is their duty to give something back to the society when they retire and have more time to spare in addition to enjoying life with grandkids etc.  Some help out in sporting clubs or service clubs such as the Rotary.  As there was a view that men do not access services for mental health issues, Men’s Sheds have sprung up in various localities. Men with nothing to do come and meet other men over a coffee, learn some skills such as in carpentry, mechanical work and so on.

Big cities such as Sydney and Melbourne – each will have over five million people – have overgrown. This is because so-called development has been city-centric rather than decentralised to the regions. This is a complain that many in regional areas make. State governments with Federal funding spend an unequal amount of funds to build infrastructure within cities including rail, roads, hospitals, sporting facilities, museums, convention centres. New immigrants also arrive in such big cities though a fraction move to rural and regional areas for a few years.  For example, instead of developing Cities like Newcastle and Wollongong which is about two hours’ drive from Sydney and connecting them with high speed rail, government leaders continue to spend the dollars on developing Sydney itself.  People, including new immigrants, youths from rural and regional cities flock to Sydney (and Melbourne, Brisbane etc.) in search of jobs while rural and regional cities decline in population or lack growth. Businesses in country towns struggle as a result.  Instead of developing fast rail between cities, planners are focused on further developing air travel within the country and freight transport on road.  One exception is the planned inland rail project between Melbourne and Brisbane through middle of Australia.  Thus, the planning for development is overwhelmingly city focused.  Developers from the private sector capitalise on this and build high rise apartments and office blocks at every available vacant piece of land making cities somewhat ugly looking. Unlike in Europe, USA or Canada, the architectural appearance of such apartments and office blocks -at least from the facade -look monotonous. They all l look like concrete blocks and boxes. There is an emerging trend for groups in cities to object to such over development. However, politicians do not seem to care.

What I tried to do here is to show that to say Australia can be a model for Sri Lanka is too simplistic without specifying what particular area is it? As someone who worked in the higher education sector, I do not recommend the Australian model of higher education to Sri Lanka(based on neoliberal economic principles rather than conventional public university concept) where the primacy is given to attract fee paying foreign students  at the expense of university collegial culture, style of governance and research performance (though the model is premised upon the view that more income from foreign students can enhance research etc.?). Instead, Sri Lanka needs a system focused on social justice, moral principles, personality development along with skills acquisition, service to the community instead of totally job oriented degree programs. Perhaps a few higher education institutions can go this path but the majority of State funded universities need to focus on the holistic development and nurturing of the individual. In terms of the governance, there are obvious lessons one can learn from Australia.  Anti-corruption is one aspect.  Rule of law is another. Separation of powers between the legislature, executive and the judiciary is another. Nonetheless, note that even in Australia the trust on elected politicians is declining. One reason for this is their closeness to the corporate sector and their lobbyists.  There are examples when politicians retire they accept appointments in the corporate sector often in areas where they held responsibility when in office. There is a growing disenchantment among the population about the performance of major political parties and a trend to support independents and minor parties.

Australia is a mainly Christian country with a Christian heritage.  This can be seen in wherever one goes. However, there is an increasing awareness of the Aboriginal heritage and the need to move forward together as a country.  This was apparent at least symbolically in the recently concluded Commonwealth Games opening and Closing ceremonies in the Gold Coast.  There is a long way to go to make key institutions such as the Federal parliament, judiciary, sports, commercial media, medical field, police and armed forces diverse.  Though there is a vibrant multicultural and ethnically, linguistically and religiously diverse community practicing their own traditional cultures and beliefs, there is a long way to go in terms of making Core institutions of society diverse. At least, it will take another 50-100 years to witness such diversity in the core institutions, especially if currently  high immigration levels continue.

One area where there is a difference between two countries is in the foreign policy. Both countries are in the Commonwealth but being a close ally of USA, Australia’s foreign policy is heavily influenced by US foreign policy and those of other Western nations, especially English-speaking countries. Sri Lanka still adopts a non-alignment policy. However, in the economic field both countries are oriented toward free market, neoliberal economic policies where the merits of competition, individual choice and free trade are admired.  

If Sri Lanka or Ceylon for that matter did not gain independence from Great Britain in 1948, it would have looked like Australia at a smaller scale. Many early immigrants from Sri Lanka    to Australia still believe Sri Lanka would have been better off to remain as a colony of Great Britain, especially looking at the deterioration of services, standards, democratic norms, corruption of politicians, lack of rule of law etc. While there is some truth to this view, the enjoyment of freedom from colonial rule is not comparable to other difficulties and disappointments people feel due to weaknesses in governance. Australian Aborigines have felt the pressures of colonial rule due to dispossession, racism, effects on traditional culture and way of living, alcoholism and more over the last two centuries. They are still struggling to live a decent life even with government programs of financial and other support. The effect of colonisation on their identity, culture, way of life and rituals has been very destructive. The view held by Anglicised, Westernised and well to do Ceylonese about a golden past during the British colonial period is one not shared by many Sri Lankans of later years who have made Australia home.

Whether one lives in Australia or Sri Lanka, there is no way one can live as frogs in a well. Countries and peoples are so well connected today with enhanced communication, travel etc. and the networks established between the diaspora and home countries.  As a result, many have adopted hybrid identities and ways of life. It is impossible and even unnecessary to try to live an ideologically purist life whether they be ethnically or religiously prescribed unless one desires to for personal and spiritual reasons. Such hybridity is founded on consumerist lifestyle produced by the multinational corporate sector in conjunction with the ruling classes in developed and developing countries. Materialism is the key driver. 

The irony is that as people get older and frail, subject to various illnesses and fragilities, including loneliness in some cases, they look for social security within the system they live in. Australia is blessed with governmental and non-governmental services available to the elderly, sick and frail.  Sri Lanka still adopts a family support system –instead of substantial state support) for this category of people while the religious establishments provide the spiritual support. Many Asian countries that have gone in the direction of neoliberal, free market economic principles and practices do not have substantial government welfare systems as one can see in Australia or for that matter other English-speaking countries. This is one attraction for many migrants to aspire to come to Australia. A country can be judged on the basis of what it does and how it takes care of the sick, elderly, frail and weak rather than how their ruling class live their life.  Australia can be proud of how it has organised services for these sorts of people.  

In both countries, communities are under threat from over development based on globalisation mantra and neoliberal free market economic projects-whether they be in infrastructure, mining, agricultural production, industrial and service areas such as education. They promote individualism rather than sustainability and community empowerment. Such ventures acquire land and want access to resources that people depend on. This is another topic to expand on another day.

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Latest comments

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    You have explained a system that has worked for you. How about the australian Aborginies. what do they say ? did you talk with them, With respect to Sri lanka, Sri lanka’s capitalism is complwtely import oriented. Out major source of revenue is the money sent by women working in the middle east, men working in south Korea and simply itis foreign remittances. Then the next problem is our parliamentary system is not democratic. It protects families, OLd bouys club. that keeps the same incompetatn and unsuccessful politicians at the top and they will never step down because they failed. I think even in australia one accusation, one blunder or one carelessness or not enough vigilence would be enough that politician to step down. Sri lanka has accepted and is implementing the economic models you say. But, is is for the benfit of the system that we have and that is protect the exiostence of the politicians and their hencmen. In the middle os these our trade unions are selfish and is highly politicized. Professionals are also highly politicized, they are too corrupt and they protect the old boys club. A Sri lankan academic or a professional that lives in the west would not live the same life that they live in that country. SO we have a specific culture that no one admits.

    • 4
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      Dr. Siri Gamage,

      Australia is the country Australians created for themselves. Sri Lanka is the country Sri Lankans created for themselves.

      Sri Lankans can’t create an Australia ……….. and Australians can’t create a Sri Lanka.

      Australians’ traits created Australia ……… Sri Lankans’ traits created Sri Lanka.

      Can monkeys live like pigs …….. or pigs live like monkeys? ……….. Don’t their inherent characteristics/traits matter/count?

      Years in academia can isolate one in an ivory tower far up in the clouds ……….. far away from reality ……….. :))

      Reality is very simple if people learn to face it.

  • 0
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    What happened to Singapore? Is it a failed model now? When little Singapore has failed to be a model, isn’t Australia too big to be a model for Sri Lanka? Sri Lanka’s only suitable model should be ‘batala-land’.

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    What ever models thsat should suit that country. for austrlians like countries their parents countries like UK and USA had been helpful throughout via meat, wheat and mineral reousrces mining. Many countries around the world suffer because they are being black mailed via drugs, they do not have rigths to sel l if we do not have GSP, or if we do not follow their political processes or unless we are NATO members. Even recently POPE complaiend to USA that syrian catholics and middle eastern old catholic societies are being desteoyed because Evengelists need to spread their will upon those people. Only the big countries that had very good brains had been successful. Even the mighty India had been tried to babotage. Modi was careful and and saved it. that is another side.

  • 3
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    Another problem in country is politicians sabotaging politicians. It is true since 1948 politicians were corrupt and they not very good leaders. Mahinda Rajapkse was also very corrupt but he was sabotaged by politicians listening to the west. Todate, Even Miathripala sirisena is being sabotaged by both Mahinda Rajapakse and Ranil. Ranil says he knows every thing in this world yet he would support or implement only if he is the Executive PM or Executive PResident. On ther othand we know he implmented very destructive programs to sri lanka and nerw medies do not know and they do not discuss at least the local newspapers an nothing at all in sinhapala newspapers. so, the voters remain in the dark. another problem is minorities do not resepct universal franchise offered by the democracy. Instead they want privileges which they call RIGHTS to be superior to the majority. Western countries support that.

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    If we take Dr Gamage’s advice we will have to do a few other things. We will also have to wipe out the indigenous peoples and kill them off through alcohol and drugs, sterilise them through vaccination, lick America’s backside to be the ‘white ‘power in Asia against China, have American spy centres etc. Sri Lanka today is doing the same thing with America. The problem with people like Dr Gamage is that they are easily impressed by neon lights, wide streets (on stolen land) and wealth stolen from other peoples you see in these countries. Dr Gamages of this world want us to be like them. They can’t see the ugly underbelly of these countries (US, UK, France, Germany, Australia, NZ, Canada). Think outside this colonial model Dr Gamage. You can have a future outside this imperialist model (that is not going to last for ever anyway).

    • 1
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      Dear Hethuvadia,

      You seem to have completely misunderstood the thrust of my argument in the article. Please re-read. I was responding to those who propose Australia as a model for Sri Lanka after seeing the bright lights in the streets, pubs etc and the hospitality of rich friends to emphasise the differences in two countries as well as the need to select particular aspects of Australan society that one feels as suitable for Sri Lanka on a rational basis.

  • 5
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    Siri Gamage ~ “Australia As A Model For Sri Lanka”

    Siri portrays only the good side of Australia. In a previous article he suggested that Lankan tertiary education go the way of Australia. Now this!
    Australia has the worst record as far as justice to aborigines is concerned. Not that long ago, aborigine-hunting was a weekend sport. Even now, the number of aborigine deaths in police custody cannot be explained rationally.
    The way Australia treats asylum seekers is an example of human’s inhumanity to humans.
    .
    However we wish you luck in your ambition to be ‘Australian of the year’ sometime.
    But we do not need your advice.

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      Knowing Australia, Dr Gamage is unlikely to become Australian of the Year ever because he is a Sinhalese. Those kinds of ‘lollies’ are reserved to please tools of ‘divide and rule’ plot, the Sri Lankan Tamil refugees in Australia. I will take a bet on this!

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      Pillai: Just curious – when did Australians last time do Aboriginal hunting for the provincial cup?

      <> I guess you are thinking about the human traffickers from their own countries – not Australia. Australians dont believe human trafficking is a good idea and have taken humane measures to stop this crimianl entreprise.

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    Scientists believe that onset of ALZHEIMER’S can strike from around 40
    and Srilankans need to check their leaders are all under that age limit
    and never to allow over 60’s to represent them because one sufferer in 20
    is thought to be under 65 ! They said we will be a Singapore and then
    Bangok and now Australia and they don’t understand that we are becoming
    another Zimbabwe , slow and steady !

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    Don’t forget that Australia is a continent by itself. It is one of the best resourced lands on the planet and it’s inhabitants will always enjoy a high standard of living. Although in the Southern Hemisphere itis together with NZealand not part of the Third world. Geographically it is an anachronism as it really should be in the North.The challenges facing Sri Lanka are quite different to those facing Australia.National security is of great concern as Indonesia a country with the highest density of population in the world ar its doorstep. Fortunately for Australia it’s neighbour Indonesia is moving at a rapid pace of development and is using its people as assets rather than liabilities and is foreseen to be an emerging economic giant.There are many features in Australia and Srilankathat make the two countries so different in character that it will be sheer naïveté to try to compare them with a view to one emulating the other.

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    K Pillai
    Australia treats genuine refugees with compassion. However bogus refugees mainly Tamils and Sinhalese as well, try to circumvent the system. Australia has an immigration policy aimed at securing the migration of people with certain skills. That is in addition to its intake of refugees. Bogus refugees from Sri Lanka have however made screening more tight and deservedly so. Don’t blame Australia for the strict policies on refugees,the blame should be on those people seeking a better life who are trying to sneak into the country. These queue jumpers should be dealt with contempt and never allowed in.

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    Mr Gamage’s comparison highlights differences between the two countries:
    ….’Anti-corruption is one aspect. Rule of law is another.’…

    In Sri Lanka, we have anti-corruption laws for the common man. Politicians and their supporters are exempt.

    Similarly, in Sri Lanka, we have Rule of Law. Selectively applied by the government in power. If you know somebody high up in government, then you may be able to have the Rule of Law apply only to the other person and not to you.

    It will take Australia a long time to catch up with us in theses two areas.

  • 4
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    Dr Gamage has forgotten Australia’s historic white’s only policy that was abandoned in the late sixties/seventies in order to speed up the development of Australia.

    The earliest Ceylonese migrants were the Burghers who we de facto made unwelcome with the Sinhala Only Act. They were able to migrate because they were able to prove that they had at least 75% European blood in their genealogy.

    Why did the Sinhalese chose to leave? Especially the younger generation who would have hugely benefited from the Sinhala Only Act. They have been totally unpatriotic in abandoning their motherland for a few material benefits. Many will probably return in their old age to enjoy the delights they left behind.

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    Dr Gamage seems quite emphatic in writing ‘I do not recommend the Australian model of higher education to Sri Lanka………’

    In Australia, students in higher universities are disciplined and regimented. Whereas in Sri Lanka we practice a unique type of ragging that makes sure that only the best and strongest survive. Then we encourage them to turn political and spend time disrupting university programs and life so that a three-year course takes four or five. Again, only the most determined survive, and end up with a degree that is fit only for bus conducting.

    I agree, the Australian model is not robust enough for Sri Lanka.

    ps: It looks like Dr Gamage has not succeeded in getting Australia to adopt the Sri Lankan model.

  • 4
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    A big difference between Sri Lanka and Australia is Australia’s record of sending its military to fight wars in other countries (since the Boer War in the 1890s). Australia’s present Governor-General Peter Cosgrove was one of the architects of the Australian invasion of Iraq and the illegal war there. Australia has played a role in bombing Korea, Vietnam and Cambodia and presently plays its part in dropping bombs in Afghanistan and the Middle-East. The militarism in Australia has bipartisan political support and the ANZAC legend is amplified and glorified with inappropriate jingoism year after year.

    There is also the atrocious treatment of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders to consider, abusive treatment of asylum seekers and psychiatric patients, a little-acknowledged undercurrent of racism and Australia’s historical support for the racist eugenics doctrines of Francis Galton and Leonard Darwin that still continue to impact of the government’s treatment of Aboriginal people.

    Also little known is Australia’s covert biological and chemical warfare industry (for which reason the weapons inspector that accused Saddam Hussein of having chemical and biological weapons was an Australian – Richard Butler). Australia has been a centre of biological and chemical warfare expertise since the Second World War, immediately after which Sir Frank MacFarlane Burnet at the University of Melbourne secretly urged the Australian military and government to invest in the biological and chemical warfare industries and use biological and chemical weapons offensively against the “teeming hordes of Coloured People” to Australia’s north (especially Indonesia).

    Australia is not a good role model for Sri Lanka or anywhere else, especially when it comes to human rights, racism, gambling, alcohol abuse, pharmaceutical corruption and militarism.

  • 1
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    Dr Gamage writes:
    …’A country can be judged on the basis of what it does and how it takes care of the sick, elderly, frail and weak rather than how their ruling class live their life.’

    The ruling class in Sri Lanka are very good at looking after their own too. See, will you, our top politicians (including our recent Presidents) make sure that their ‘elderly, frail and weak’ family members are well looked after; why, some even become Chairmen of National institutions, even though they haven’t a clue about public administration. They even get all the help to do business and earn commissions. Their dumbo sons get the opportunity to run riot and make a bloody public nuisance without suffering any legal stricture. Their daughters are left with licences that ‘normal’ citizens cannot get without big baksheesh.

    Our Sri Lanka is truly a land like no other (especially if you are on the ‘right side’)

    “Siripala, gaenda-ko mata, paddikama”

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    Whether ostensible exaggeration, or was a measured, concise words, Singapore PM Lee once said he modeled Singapore on Lankawe. Soulbury modeled on Britain. Siri Gamage saying Lankawe could be modeled on Australia. But Lankawe rulers want it modeled on devoid, Asian Miracle.

    We had said somewhere else that in Monarchy rule, as in the Tamil saying “what the path of King is, that is the path of subjects”, but in Democracy the opposite is true, i.e what the path of citizens is, that is path of rulers. As the rulers are for citizens, that are path, we have to use in search for which country we can model from. We need to know if the people of that land resemble the Lankaweyans, and if they have a successful government for them too. Then we can model Lankawe from them. When Universal Franchising was introduced imitating Britain, learned people opposed it. They were castigated that they are Castiest elitists, who have conflict of intere
    st in promoting educated peoples’ ruling. Iran is not comparable anywhere near to Lankawe on Democracy. But it is pretty equal to Lankawe on internationally its passport acceptance or Media men murders. Their women rights are better than MMDA or Sinhala Buddhism. On the International relationship, Iran may have little more friends than Lankawe. On its deal of nuclear proliferation controls, England, Germany, France and Russia like major Countries are with it. Lankawe had only communist countries like China, Cuba, and Russia on its side when it went to UNHRC. If one has to be MP in their ruling body, he/she has to be master degree graduate, not with 8th grade. All their Supreme Leaders have been multi field experts. Iranians like their government more than Lankans. Appe Aanduwa likes to deal with Iranian rulers. Can we model our EP and MPs from Iran, instead of UK or Australia? Can we change our leaders from Gamarala or Weerawansas to match with qualification of Iranians?

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    If you are not a hermit then you may want to have you life spent in useful manner. If your life is to be spent on useful way you have to have a world to live in. If you have to achieve your objects, you have to have a peaceful world. The world you live in needs to remain organized as livable. Then, you too need to have to fit into that world with your roles you under take. You need to remain as capable of living in an organized world. Jungle animals have freedom. They do not have government. They don’t look for organized world to live and they cannot become even domesticated. Ultimate freedom is not democracy. Democracy is a form of government, by that you will be ruled. If you want to be under democracy, you need to sacrifice your freedom of minimum to fit into that system. If you don’t compromise, you are not in that system. Further, one doesn’t enforce democracy on another one. Imposed is only hegemony. Voluntarily accepted one is the only democracy. We don’t tell anybody how to rule them. We only invite to be with us in our journey, instead of their open sky, but under our umbrella, protected.
    Now we can come to specific line in Siri Gamage’s eassy we intended to comment.

    So, theoretically we don’t accept Siri Gamage’s model searching to rule his “Sri Lanka”. But his excuse to us is he is a student of multiculturalist, sociologist and anthropologist, in search knowledge.
    ” Many early immigrants from Sri Lanka to Australia still believe Sri Lanka would have been better off to remain as a colony of Great Britain, ……………………….. While there is some truth to this view, the enjoyment of freedom from colonial rule is not comparable to other difficulties and disappointments………… Australian Aborigines have felt the pressures of colonial rule due to dispossession, racism, effects on traditional culture and way of living, alcoholism and more over the last two centuries.”

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    Australia is now and was a colony of Britain. The white population living there is British Whites. What Brittan did to Australia is only comparable to What the Sinhala Army did by overnight occupation of North East and East. In the North East their normal life is disturbed by the Sinhala Army. Tamil have launched three type of protest against Sinhala hegemony. Nothing is comparable to that happened after Britain started to enforce its rule based on Kandyan Convention. From the time they introduced the criminal code system 1833 to, until 1931 universal franchise introduction, they kept guiding the people, who had lived under the Monarchs and imperialist, to understand the self-rule. Then they gave freedom. Freedom is the main reason to overthrow hegemonies, but it didn’t happen in Lankawe to British rule. Though the neighboring country India was rebelling for more than a century, Lankawe never rebelled against Britain, but invited willingly. (Vickrama rajasingan’s descendants’ inspired minor dissident activities were there). Never a JVP erupted under British rule. Under British rule,“Sinhalese” never felt oppressed successively increasing manner under Sirimavo, JR, Richard P. or Old King and New King. Instead they felt more and more, lighter. In 1915, when Sinhala Leaders were imprisoned partially, it was appealed and the case was won. But when one obituary was placed on Daily News for Death of D.E.M. Ocracy, the Daily New was permanently nationalized any no leader ever after freed it. 1956 peaceful demonstration of Tamils were attacked by Government Hooligans. If we need to look at the people who are longing to have British rule to continued, it is those who lived part of their life under British rule and part under the Appe Aanduwa rule. It is they do know both than Siri Gamage, who doesn’t have the feeling of British rule, and further long period of his life is spent in British imitated rules (Hawaii & Australia).

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    Siri Gamage has not expressed his feeling about Australia (he described extensively their life style) , but he has indicated of the aboriginal’s feeling. My contention on that would be he may feel racism in Australia, but he is unlikely feeling the oppression that we felt in Lankawe and because of it left out of that hell or the one who felt the oppression and fought against the Colombo’s savage Hegemony. So in reality, Siri Gamage is not open or not obviously clear in his feeling of what is the lost freedom in British rule but he enjoyed under the savage Sinhala Hegemony rule. Lankawe extremism includes, after freedom, the rulers nationalized all Whites properties, and then got deported. Many Burgers voluntarily left instead of losing their properties. Lankawe deported Upcountry Tamils & forced Local Tamils go unemployed. Government organized pogroms to burn Tamils properties the south and made them landless refugees in their countries. Now Singhalese, who votes for these governments, like to live in Whites lands more than Tamils or burgers. But in South Africa, when Blacks received freedom, they preserved Whites’ properties & employments. This indicates the civilizational level difference between African Blacks and Lankawe Singhalese. When TRC model of South Africa was recommended by UN to bring back normalcy of the country, by a kind of Down syndrome, Lankawe Leaders rejected it.
    We can look at the economic prosperity under British rule too. In North East, all the massive school buildings are Tamil Philanthropist’s donor building. Even the University was opened in Ramanathan’s school building. Almost all Rapist Army Camps are/were donor schools. There is nothing new after Appe Aanduwa administration’s nationalizations. But other than Private British investments in Up Country Estates and Colombo Businesses, the British government did lot of Road works, Railways & Buildings for local administration offices for that time.

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    In North East, until the war, all government buildings were British time buildings. But the special thing I want to mention is the massive government Corporations like, Kanthalai Sugar Factory, KKS Cement Factory, Paranthan Chemical Factory, Vaalachchenai Paper Mill, Sabugaskantha Refinery all were opened and run under Tamils Ministries by Tamil administration. They were overwhelmingly profitable & really, really black elephant projects. They were not MiG purchase, Hangbangtota Harbor, nor even Sri Lanka Airline or Meethotamulla. But when they came fully under Sinhala admiration, without any modernizing or retooling, all of them are now closed down. Now, even with foreign intervention, none of them are reopened. For Refinery replacement it was quoted many in occasions by Iran, India, Japan, Singapore, Germany, and America. When an American Company quoted $1.1 B to retool it, Old Royals assigned it to Chinese company for $2.2B. Everybody knows what happened to Kanthalai Factory. Cement Factory Machineries were cut with iron cutting swards and transported to Colombo, free on Tamil’s trucks, and sold there for foreign companies to scrap metal price. (I believe there was case on that over Rapist Army or Old Royals or on both). Other than bribe taken Colombo Megapolis and self-grown new towns around there, there is no really planned development.
    Under British time, there were Sinhala Professionals (mainly lawyers) and politicians. But Sinhalese never did well under their admiration. Especially Sinhala Mass never utilized British laisse fairy economic system. Probably, they could not loot under the name of pogroms. LSSP started to care Upcountry workers. That time, Up country workers were not ok only because they were taken of advantage. One cannot categorize them as oppressed. Practically Sinhala Mass recoded as non performing crowd under all European rulers. This is why, when power came to their hand, Lankawe built its own model, Loot and Eat, which is still prospering. So Australian or any other British style based Lassie Fairy economic model will not deliver happiness to Sinhala Mass. Bottom up education, against the laziness creating Sinhala Buddhism is the one need.

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    The Australian model has little to with addressing the national question.
    It was a white settler state which owing to need for manpower selectively relaxed its racist immigration policy in ways that ensured that new immigrants will not be a threat to the White supremacist structure.
    Interestingly, the Asian immigrants are even less tolerant towards the aboriginal population.

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    Australia has 7 States and the Capitol Territory.
    It is perfect for the Size of the Country,
    Each State has a multitude of Nationalities. They all work in English.
    Greeks, Hindians, Vietnamese Chinese Arabs or Srilankans do not have separate states or even Municipal Councils let alone their own Police , own Land, own Courts and their own Language.
    Does our New Constitution match those characteristics of Australians?……

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      KASmaalam K A Sumanasekera

      If you like down under so much because of their political structure why don’t you leave this island, take a ride on a kallathonie (get some free advice from Namal, war crime denier Palitha Kohona, HLD M, baby, the former Sri Lankan consul-general in Sydney, Bandula Jayasekara, and SPURistas) and claim asylum and settle down happily ever after?

      Why bother us?

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        Yes, Why not? I am a good example that even failed SLAS officers in Sri Lanka who rose by holding pandam to the UNP (to Ranil and Premadasa) can come to Aus and settle in their old age!

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        Native Vedda;
        Only until the Native Australian Aborigines decide they have no use for the ‘Political Structure’ of the White Man and the Kallathonies from Sri Lanka!

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    Thank you Mr Gamage for sharing a very detailed info for us to look into in a patriotic way the benefits to be had following Australian success. I hope all our expats around the world look at their respective countries/system they live in and share with Mother Lankans similar detailed write up etc. We can pick and choose many good thinks from people and systems around the world for a future planning. it would be good that we have a “department specially assigned” to integrate knowledge/educational material/projects/technologies/codes and standards from our country men and women who lives and work abroad. Where all other departments can liaIse through this particular “department” as a focal point to connect us to the patriotic Lankans lives around the world. They can support the respective Sri Lankan consular services too in the respective countries with special requests for expert advise/due diligence work/supervision of project study works conducted outside for Sri Lanka etc. We need a united country want to progress as a “one nation” with equal respect for “all Mother Lankan Children” as “one for all and all for one” foundation for us to make this a reality. I think this will then unit all the diaspora around the world will help us to catch up with some lost time in progress. Nothing is Impossible and once more many thanks for a mindful writeup to share your thoughts with us all.

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    Dr Gamage has made a brave but futile comparison. Like comparing potatoes to vambattu. The thing is that we in Sri Lanka will in time get our act together. The last thing we need is to copy some other ‘model’ country, however attractive it is to our expatriates.

    Now, We maybe in the gutter as a country, bur many of us are looking at the stars.

    One day surely our people will see the light, and when they get it together we shall have a country worthy of respect. Have faith!

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    Sri Lankans can create a developed country and society ? Pigs can fly ?

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    “Lessons learned/Observations made in Australia shared with my Countrymen for their review/consideration” may be a good title as so many readers seem to be confused based on the comments and respond why it may not be a suitable comparison etc. I personally think the content is amazing even if you remove the title/the country name Australia and is in line with your previous articles too. Your observations and similar observations from other countries by others too can feed into our ” Master Plan”/check list for development work in our country. We pick and choose what is sustainable/what is Fair/what is needed in our “critical path” to develop and incorporate any missed out items to make our planning more comprehensive to meet our peoples immediate and long term needs.

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    “Both Australia and Sri Lanka have majorities in power i.e. Anglo Australians mostly born in the country in Australia and Sinhalese in Sri Lanka” – What about IQ levels Dr. Siri Gamage?

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    Latest news emanating from Australia is that they are going to ‘Australian of the Year 2018’ award Professor Siri Gamage. Aren’t we ashamed that we have not given this simple man even a Deshamanya Award?

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    This comment was removed by a moderator because it didn’t abide by our Comment policy.For more detail see our Comment policy https://www.colombotelegraph.com/index.php/comments-policy-2/

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    siri says we can learn from aust. he is right

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      Hello, We can; but, will we. Have we ever learnt anything from anybody!

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    i like siri

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