26 April, 2024

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Lakshman Kadirgamar – The Father I Remember

By Ajita Kadirgamar

Ajita Kadirgamar

Typically on a parent’s birth or death anniversary family members make a trip to the graveyard, place flowers, say a silent prayer or shed a tear. April 12, 2013 marks the 81st birth anniversary of my father Lakshman Kadirgamar, and for the first time since his assassination eight years ago I am here for his birth anniversary, on Sri Lankan soil where the dastardly deed took place.

However I have nowhere to go to remember him, pay respects or even reminisce. My father’s parents, four brothers and sister, all long departed, never received the remains of their beloved youngest son and sibling into the family grave. My father has no symbolic earth-bound resting place, no urn containing ashes, no headstone, nowhere to lay flowers.  Upon his death eight years ago, his ashes were unceremoniously stolen from us, his children and rightful family, despite pleas for at least a fair share. Knowing my father as we his family did,  he would have wanted at least some part of his remains to be returned to their rightful place within the family plot, for he was fiercely proud of his ancestry and of the family name.

For me the past ten years living in the US, during which time he was assassinated, meant there were no daily reminders of my father’s greatness or his standing in Sri Lankan society. But now that I am back in the motherland there is no escape. His name comes up in every socio-political conversation whether public or private, his statue stands tall in the heart of the city, total strangers from all walks of life, upon learning of my connection to him, praise his life and mourn his premature loss. His memory will live on no doubt as a great son of Sri Lanka, forever etched in history.

Kadirgamar with Ajita

What do I remember of my father? I called him dada and he called me ‘sweetheart’ or Ajj all his life.  Growing up, on the very, very rare instances he admonished me, he would call me by my full name. And then I knew it was serious business.

He traveled extensively his whole life. When I was a young girl he would bring me Barbie dolls, lacy stockings and socks, baked beans, chocolate, pencils, erasers and other luxuries that were not available in Sri Lanka in the austere 60’s and 70’s of my youth. I was the envy of all my classmates when I brought my stationery treasures to school or wore my stockings and socks to birthday parties.

I do remember when I was very young, sometimes on a Sunday morning as he lazed in bed with the newspapers, I would breeze in, jump on the bed and coerce him to lie flat on his stomach so that I could  walk up and down on his spine like a tightrope walker or pretend I was a cowgirl riding a horse. Ever patient, he would humour me.

My father was of course the consummate lawyer, always holed up in his chambers located at the front of the house, or appearing in various courts around the country, or travelling around the world. So we did not see much of him. But I would frequently skip in and out of his chambers, past the clerk, other lawyers and clients. He would always acknowledge my presence even if he was in the midst of something important. I was a familiar sight to all of the client and lawyer colleague ‘uncles’ too, usually riding my bike up and down the driveway or the lane, sitting in a tree or on a wall or engaged in some other tomboyish activity.

For the first decade of my life, he had to be summoned, even coerced from his law chambers to pose with my brother and I for annual birthday photos during our parties. This was something he hated apparently, since he can be seen frowning in most photos, his mind no doubt on the case he was analysing or the notes he was taking at the time.  When he was not dictating letters, he always wrote his copious notes by hand. In fact I don’t recall him ever using a typewriter and certainly not a computer. I doubt that even in the last years of his life he ever transitioned to computer and cell phone technology. Yes, he was old school in many ways.

He is of course best remembered for his fine speeches, some prepared, some off the cuff, for he was a master of the English language. When I was in my teens and in the throes of writing essays and sitting exams, he presented me with his Oxford English Dictionary which he had used at Law College and at Balliol College. Dedicating it to me he wrote, “When in doubt, look it up”. I too inherited his love, respect and awe of the written word and even though I am more likely to look up a dictionary or Thesaurus online these days, his dictionary will be passed on to my son who also demonstrates remarkable writing skills.

Kadirgamar with grandson Keira

Growing up in Ceylon, I was always aware of how sociable and well loved my father was. He had a grand assortment of very close and dear friends. They were Hindu, Buddhist, Muslim, Burgher – such an eclectic mix, such wonderful personalities with names like Ananda, Sandy, Vichu, Fritz, Gordon, Ralph, Singha, Terry, Malli, Douglas. He loved their company, and craved stimulating conversation. He relished spending one-on-one time with them on the verandah or in the garden at Anderson Road and later at Thunmulla Junction, talking about the law, politics, world affairs, and the good old days, all the time sipping their drinks and smoking their cigarettes. During the many years he spent in Switzerland at the UN, I think he felt socially isolated and he missed the camaraderie and old boy’s network that makes Sri Lanka so special. On his trips to Colombo therefore, he would meet up with as many friends and colleagues as possible, getting his full dose of social life  and intellectual revitalisation before returning to the routine and mundane lifestyle of the western world.

He did love the water. Childhood family holidays in Trinco, Passekudah, Kalkudah and Bentota would find him leisurely swimming laps in the hotel swimming pool or bobbing around carefree in the ocean even after the sun had set. How ruthless that he was killed as he stepped out of his own private swimming pool, after doing what he loved, the only activity that allowed him a modicum of freedom and relaxation.

As a lifelong sports enthusiast and prize winning Trinity College and Colombo University athlete (cricket, rugby, athletics) I know it pained him not to be able to go and watch the various matches and tournaments like a common citizen. He sacrificed every personal and social activity that we all take for granted to live as a virtual prisoner, whisked in and out of cars and buildings, surrounded by security at all times. In the early days of his political career and when the security risks were at their height, he apologised for not being able to go shopping personally to buy birthday or Christmas gifts for me or my son. I still have a hand written note he wrote with an apology and a cash check attached instead.

When packing to return to Sri Lanka at the beginning of this year I was faced with the mammoth task of sorting through all my belongings which have traveled around the world with me over the past 40 years. There were birthday cards, letters, telegrams and postcards he sent me during his travels in the 60’s and 70’s to England, Vietnam, India, Switzerland, France and other places. I could not bring myself to burn or shred them like I did a lot of other less sentimental material. And so these yellowing, fading mementos, in the absence of any of his other personal possessions which should rightfully have come to us his children, have once again traveled across the ocean and lie packed in a box, to be stored away for posterity.

My memories of him during our years in Oxford in the early 70’s seem to revolve around him smoking his pipe or cigar, both of which I hated for their pungent odor. I would scold him and tell him to stop the ‘disgusting habit’, which was for him a well deserved respite from the stresses of his life, and he would just keep puffing away, much to my annoyance. I will always remember him in his study – every house we ever lived in had to have a study – hundreds of law volumes stacked ceiling high, wearing his brown corduroy jacket, seated behind his desk with a cigar or pipe in hand, the desk lamp casting a halo of smoky light around him. This was the man in his element, the brilliant mind at work.

I used to love his white barrister’s wig and black robe which he had to wear when appearing at the Bar in London.  Once,  for a school play at Wychwood School in Oxford, I acted the part of a lawyer and he allowed me to borrow the wig and robe as my costume. I looked very dignified and authentic in my role and the other English girls were quite in awe of me.

Dada enjoyed gardening for a brief time while living in rural France. He planted some trees in the large, rather bare garden and enjoyed pruning and caring for the roses in summer. He also loved wine and he and my mother would go on wine buying excursions around France. How he would have loved one day to own a house with a proper wine cellar where he could store his treasures.

During my teenage years in Switzerland, one of the things we often did together was drive into Geneva  from the suburbs where we lived to buy the Sunday English newspapers for him and my favourite chocolate for me. Sometimes I hitched a one way ride with him to meet up with friends in the city. When we lived in a small village in France he and my mother would take turns to drive to the Swiss/French border to pick me up around midnight when I took the last bus home from the city on weekend nights. Once I turned eighteen and got my driver’s license he was very generous about lending me his old beat up car in the evenings and on weekends, for we lived out of the city and my social life was restricted by the train schedule.

In 1982 with just one suitcase in hand I came to Colombo on summer vacation from Switzerland where I was studying languages at the University of Geneva. That summer vacation turned into a 20 year stay due to a timely meeting my father arranged for me with the then Chairman of the Sri Lanka Rupavahini Corporation, M.J. Perera. SLRC had just launched and was looking for people with any kind of background in TV. I had coincidentally just completed a brief apprenticeship at TV Suisse Romande and when M. J. Perera heard this he readily offered me a job. We all agreed that the newly created Western Music section would be the best fit for me. So even a little experience was better than none at all and I became one of the pioneer producer/directors at the station. I soon got my first break as an interviewer, transferred to the Newsroom, and went on to enjoy a career that spanned 20 years in the public eye.

Thus my father was instrumental in the launch of my TV career. Once I had become a familiar face and name, whenever my father came to Colombo on UN business, the immigration and customs officers at the airport would ask if he was related to me, the Kadirgamar on TV. I think he got quite a kick out saying I was his daughter and of course he was proud of my achievements. The tables turned naturally once he entered politics and then everyone would ask me if I was related to him! I would say yes, that’s my father, and jokingly add “but I was famous long before he was!”

Much has been written about Lakshman Kadirgamar the lawyer, the intellectual, the statesman and the orator and though his whole life may have been a rehearsal for the leading role he was to play on the Sri Lankan political stage, I believe he remained a simple man at heart, with few needs but many dreams and plans for this island of ours.

Sadly, he never got to totally fulfill his role as a grandfather to my son, a role I believe he would have excelled at. His parting gift to his only grandchild, during a rare high-security orchestrated visit just before we left Sri Lanka for the US was a tie pin, something the child, now turned adult, cherishes.

We were never to see him alive again. The final time my brother, son and I saw him he was lying in a coffin, wearing his Trinity tie and tie pin, two items I suspect he may have wanted his son or grandson to have.

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Latest comments

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    Oh what a nice autobiography of Ajita and on such an auspicious occasion of her father’s 81st Birthday I would not say anything about her Dada, me being a Tamil and fighter for the human rights and liberation of the Tamils.

    It is a fact that “Kakkaikum Than Kunchu, Pon Kunchu”.
    Ajita’s beloved cousin can translate it for her. We all love our parents and it is very personal.

    So it is her dear Dada and I am glad she writes fondly about him and her happy and cherished memories. We who knew the whole family of the Kadirgamars and her wonderful mother would not disclose anything on this forum as it would be inappropriate.

    For our family, my older brother Charles’s premature death at 67, also has a Kadirgamar connection. It was Ajita’s step mother who falsely complained that Charles gave some wrong advise or assurances which landed him in the notorious jails of Sri Lanka for 55 days where he developed a serious heart condition. The Sunday Times editor Sinha Ratnatunge also did his lobby via his newspaper, the reasons of which I would not discuss here.

    After President Rajapakse was installed as President in November 2005, my brother Charles was released from jail but he was already at the Nawaloka hospital by then, being treated for his heart condition. Soon after he left for Australia to his wife and children never to return alive. However, his children and his wife have decided to bury half his ashes in Colombo in our father’s grave in Jawatte in the family plot.

    At least we are happy that his ashes were not stolen and thrown on the wayside like Ajita’s father’s ashes thanks to his Sinhala Buddhist second wife. It is sad to hear Ajita’s story about the ashes of her father. I am also happy for Ajita that her father’s statue is not thrown away in the backyard as it was done for 3 or years when former Foreign Minister Bogollagama insisted that the statue should not be erected at that location…

    Lakshman Kadirgamar undoubtedly was a clever man, lawyer and was very successful from his school days and enjoyed tremendous success throughout his life. It is rather unfortunate that for political reasons he decided to hurt the Tamils badly, and that terrible memory will never be erased among all Tamils. My brother has been a close friend of his from the riots of 1977, which Ajita would easily remember as a young teenager.

    Mr. Kadirgamar was certainly very fond of his children and grand children and had discussed many things with my brother Charles days and weeks before his death, as I recall during my vacation in Colombo in July and August 2005. His personal diary also confirms that fact and Ajita should try and recover that diary from her step mother after the Police (CID) had returned it to her. That rightfully belongs to his children.

    Donald (Jayantha) Gnanakone.

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      Donald Uncle,

      “It is rather unfortunate that for political reasons he decided to hurt the Tamils badly, and that terrible memory will never be erased among all Tamils.” Ha..ha! Have you assumed Daya Master’s role? Playing Spokesman for the LTTE?

      LK never aspired to gain cheap publicity by championing tribalism. That was the remarkable difference of LK.

      He did not confine himself to primitive tribal ideologies. Be it Tamil or Sinhalese. He rose above them. Embraced the whole of our country. And all of her people. Sri Lankans could not hide their admiration of LK, in return.

      Be assured nobody can erase LK’s legacy in Sri Lanka. Certainly, not jealous, vindictive Bogollagama. Not even cowards of the LTTE that snatched his life. Through a hole in a wall. And then ran away like rats.

      Sri Lanka loves the man too much. LK’s place in our country’s history is eternal.

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        Totally agree.

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      Dear Donald,

      Thanks for that update. Capt.Charles was a dear friend to me. I am not sure if you are aware of the fact, that my parents (Edwards) lived with him in Aussie for a short while when they needed help. Would love to get in touch with you, if you could send me your email. All the best.

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      Lakshman Kadiragamar was too human for this generation of Sri Lankans. Like India which outgrew the Mahathma, Sri Lankan society has gone on ahead, hurling itself into an abyss of which the bottom is still not apparent…

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    If it consoles you, Lakshman Kadirgamar is very much alive in the hearts and minds of most Sri Lankans.

    I still recall the day his life was so cruelly taken. I remember what I was doing, who broke the news to me and how. The fury I felt at his assasins, unworthy of mentioning by name.

    I regeret Lakshman Kadirgamar never had the opportunity to lead Sri Lanka as its PM or President.

    His grandson has an awful lot to be proud of.

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      The public should have access to the report on Kadirgamar murder investigation.
      First of all is the investigation over please?

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      I regeret Lakshman Kadirgamar never had the opportunity to lead Sri Lanka as its PM or President.

      Whose people prevented him from becoming the PM? Even the JVP was in favour of that !
      Instead we had MR being appointed and the rest is history….

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        What stopped LK from becoming PM was MR’s greed and impatience for that position. Nothing else.

        Besides LK was no wild animal to win at any cost. He was a gentleman. He was not burning to become SL’s PM, just for the sake of it.

        Yes, racists among Sinhalese would have protested. But, there was no way they could stop it. LK was way too popular among average Sinhalese man and woman.

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          Find the real murderer who Killed LK. No investigation was held but blamed the killing on LTTE and real murderer was not found.

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            I agree.

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    Entire nation is proud of your father. I several time visit your fathers coffin, founder of peace in Sri lanka. But that peace, how many days remain in sri lanka. Same community oppose when plan to appoint prime minister of Sri lanka.You also still in our eyes.Select the UNP party & come to politics.

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      Never come to dirty politics for the sake of your son

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      @Yehiya,
      Just wondering if you are a professional visitor to graveyards. How much is your salary?

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    I have never met your father,
    never seen your father,
    But Read lot about him.
    As a gentleman who had all the Qualities, I admire him and Respected him,

    We, Sri lankan, lost our learned future President of Sri Lanka

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      I wish kADIRGAMAR could be the premier of the country under CBK, then we would not have MR in his position today to maraud the nation.

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    Your much beloved daddy most unfortunately represented the rift between the sophisticated, urban educated and civilized Tamils of Colombo – who had no big issues with the Sinhalese, and the rest of the Tamils brutalized by the Sinhalese. Their reaction, as they had not hob nobbled with the Sinhalese as humans made them see only the brutality and the blatant racism of the state.

    They could not imagine a future with the Sinhalese. Many still cannot. Your dad did. May he be blessed.

    He was the last of the Ceylonese.

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    Ajita

    Can I ask you why your father failed to practise fair and sensible politics? In early 90s, mad VP ordered the population of Jaffna to vacate their homes. Over 5000 people on foot and without any basic facilities arrived in the Vanni. These people went through hell. The UN became very concerned and offered to send relief item to these people but your heartless father refused to receive any relief item from any organisation. I heard many people perished without basic provisions.

    But on he other hand, when an oil refinery caught fire due to an LTTE attack you father immediately sent out SOS for international assistance to put out the fire.

    I don’t think your father is a great politician but a cunning AH licker of the regime for positions, post and wealth and comfort.

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      Correction: over 500000 people…

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        you are misinformed,

        I bet You were Not With That Jaffanites who ran away to vanni obeying KILLER V P.

        You have to ask first from Dead V P.
        But V P received, what he deserved.

        How come L K is responsible e for Some Killer’s order.
        I THINK YOU BETTER SCRATCH YOU HEAD LITTLE BIT.

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          Amaraya
          In my books, both VP & Kadirgamar are rotten creatures. I have no respect for these sub-humans…!!

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            better rewrite those books and add M R AND Psychopath Family.

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              Already rewritten “Ma Hinder Chindanaya”. Pkease read it

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      Real Peace

      Kadirgamar left lucrative positions, posts, wealth and comfort in the West to defend his motherland.

      And defend his country, he did. Well. With much pride. And no fear.

      Sounds like you are very upset about that. That is your problem though.

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      Why forget the Pirabakar & LTTE,all the ways poor people in all communities suffered. Even war victory not reach to majority sinhalease, it also limited to one family.

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    Ajita has no need to regret anything. Lakshman still lives in the hearts and minds of people who knew him. And he still lives for her ‘beyond the veil’-close enough to touch in spirit- because love has no barriers at all. This is the truth-she only has to open her eyes a little wider.

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    Thanks Colombo Telegraph for publishing the reminiscences of Ajita Kadirgamar. Lakshman Kadirgamar was an illustrious son of Sri Lanka who was killed by the LTTE for the wrong reasons. The lives of two great Tamil intellectuals of our time, Lakshman and Neelan, were taken away by the LTTE simply for trying to do the right thing.

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      Naga

      What you say is well documented in the history of this island.

      However what you failed to mention is the fact that for racist reasons he was denied the premiership of this island by non other than the SLFP to which he sacrificed his life.

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        You Mean that Somebody At SLFP looking for leadership, ARRANGED A CONTRACT KILLING, THROUGH L T T E To ELIMINATE L K.

        [LIKE gilmart election bribe to V P].

        Because he was becoming a star mark and more populrer among ordinary folks of sri lanka.

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          JULAAMPITYE AMARAYA

          I have no further information on your assertion though I love conspiracy theories.

          The pertinent question one should ask oneself is how did LTTE manage to penetrate high security zone and camp for many days until they hit the high value target?

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      Ltte Not killed Mr. Kadirgamar.It well organized crime. One day it will come out.

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    Ajita, do you have any comments/thoughts on:

    ‘’ With the end of the conflict between Sri Lankan government forces and the Liberation Tigers for Tamil Eelam (LTTE or ‘Tamil Tigers’) in 2009, normality has returned for much of the population of Sri Lanka. But for members of the country’s two main minority groups – Tamils and Muslims – living in the north and east of the country, harsh material conditions, economic marginalisation, and militarism remain prevalent. …. The UN Independent Expert on Minority Issues should be granted an invitation by the government to visit the country in order to report to the United Nations Human Rights Council on the situation of minorities in Sri Lanka’’ – No war, no peace: the denial of minority rights and justice in Sri Lanka, Report by Minority Rights Group International, 19 January 2011

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    dear Ajita
    Pls accept our deepest sympathies. Lakshman was an exceptional intellectual and a great sportsman having won all the prizes and trophies at Trinity College. His greatest problem was that he wished to identify himself with Sinhala Buddhist chauvinism and felt rather ashamed that he was a Tamil. It is very sad that he was not able to share his intelligence and talent with his revered grandson.
    Bensen

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    Tamils hate Lakshman. Thank God, he is no more.

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      Not tamils but the Ltters hate him.

      That you should make clear to the readership here. Kadirgamar war a great son that lanka has ever produced. Had his genuine efforts failed, MR would not have claimed a victory against LTTERs. Thanks to Kadirgamar under CBK, almost any developed country banned the LTTE on their soils, even if Tamil diasphora continued their money collections not respecting all these. I have met Tamils that went hide when the money collectors appointed by LtterS came to their doorsteps. I mean in Germany, France, UK and Switzerland.

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        I’m anti LTTE and I hate Kadirgamar. FYI please.

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          but many respect him.
          I respect him for his service. I dont need to have love affair with him. But I simply know others that have done more to get LTTE banned on the foreign soils than LK.
          If not for his fearless effort, MR or no one could have defeated the LTTE and claimed the war victory.

          War was not born within shortly before MR was elected to his office.
          I also believe – even if CBKs govts failed to crush LTTERs, but her GOVTs had bought all sophisticated weapons of collosal amounts – and that were then used by MR terms. The war victory was not because of vision of MR but it was a collective deal.

          And no other FMs were in the same calibre as LK – today the F ministry is messed up. Their appointments are ridiculous incl tea taster -with zero experience in Foreign service but being related to the Rajapakshes become dimplomats and amabassadors. Today the situation is 100 times lower than the times of LK.

          So all these are facts, I know it from many others that worked in Foreign missions in the states – THAT TODAY ‘S JALIYA WICKRAM is low level candidate that SL ever has produced to represent the country in the US.

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          Real Peace

          I think you hate life in general. LOL.

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      Hear, hear. I remember seeing this vermin on “Hard Talk” years ago, and feeling nauseated afterwards.

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        AGAIN YOU PSYCHOPATH.
        A Sadist to the core.

        Another sxxt eating Pig.

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      LTTE hated him. True.

      That is a tremendous honour to any true son of Sri Lanka.

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        That is the greatest insult for him

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      Not only tamils. Even Bogollogama hated him.Still does.

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    I have been to your place for Sunday lunch just over the border in France, and can recall those years when your Dad was attached to the UN.

    I am sorry for the pain you still appear to have as a result of the break up, and hope you get some closure on this visit.

    This is a touching tribute of a father from his daughter, and I respect that without reservation.

    In the end it is memories that we retain of our dearly departed, and if they are good, that is all one can ask for. Thanks

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    Naga – Are you absolutely certain the killing was an LTTE job. There are many who believe otherwise – and it had to do more of matters of a personal nature.

    Senguttuvan

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      apologists for the LTTE spread this story. LK made some mistakes. he should have championed the cause of the Tamils rather than trying to be better Sinhalese than Sinhalese, probably due to Sugandhi’s influence. But he was an honest man. LTTE killed him as they killed Neelan. Let them accept it.

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      food for thought.
      some say that the P-TOMS blabla ran a wedge btw. CBK and LK, and that consequently, his security was curtailed, not long before the fatal gunshot by the swimming pool. Some people who held key positions (or, rather read that in the singular…) may also have feared Kadirgamar’s existence at the nadir of politics, especially if those people (again read in the singular) shared a close friendship with Sarath Nanda Silva (and Silva’s ploy on sending CBK home). Kadirgamar was the only non Sinhalese man of his generation who could have successfully campaigned for high office at a national level (despite his poor command of the Sinhalese language). This alone would have given some people (read that in the singular, once again), to seek ways of getting rid of him.

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        what fantasies? LTTE killed him and rejoiced his death. His mistakes are a different issue.

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          Yours is a conclusion of convenience rather than a rational one. LK was given 100-person strong, 24-7 security detail, and still got assassinated in the highest-ever security zone in the Capital City! The country’s most elite, topnotch Police/CID/DIG couldn’t bring the investigation to a conclusion. Are we to then conclude that we have such a miserably impotent security and Police?
          Further, Bagwathi personally insisted on including investigation of LK’s assassination in his list for Independent investigations by the Special Commission that he headed. He suspended his investigation declaring that the State itself was unabashedly undermining the investigations.
          Still you think it is a foregone conclusion as to who killed LK? That sounds rational to you? One needs to get the head out of the sand eventually!

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            Stop beating about the bush and tell us WHO you think killed Cock Robin?

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      LK was shot within the heart of the HSZ manned by sentries, where the Police and Forces Security vehicles were on the prowl 24 hrs of the day. Had the Police and the Forces were keen to apprehend the assassin/s, they could have easily cordoned the area under five minutes, more so it being during the day and would have caught the culprits. However it took more than two hours for the area to be cordoned and searched, thus giving room for the assassin/s to escape? WHY? Therefore it is doubtful whether it was really a LTTE job, although they may have been more than happy to take the credit.

      Ajita, please pardon me for expressing the following views as they are no secrets to anyone, anymore.

      a. LK was undoubtedly an erudite scholar with a matching personality unlike SWRD. Had he retained his marriage to include you as family he would have been certainly held in high esteem, to be emulated and exalted. Further none would have found fault with him if he had to separate from your mother. But the manner how you all were treated by his second spouse even younger than you, does not augur well for his judgement to have married the second time round with some one, so much his junior.

      b. LK should have never entered Politics. Even if he did he should have stuck to his principles of Honesty. LK went on to compromise with corrupt CBK after he clearly advised her against the Thawakkal deal. It did not stop with that, he continued to aid and abet her with Air Lanka, Shell Gas and a number of other shady deals. He even praised the murderous JVP as decent boys, when he found they were promoting him to be the PM at that time. It is here, the doubt that comes to my mind as to who really killed LK? the obvious person who feared he will lose his chance of becoming the PM, to become the President later, if LK lived and that is MR? It is from then onwards after MR secured the post of PM and had his plans of becoming the President, that Sripathi, Jeyaraj F. crowd went on accusing Ranil of ‘Ali-Koti’ givisuma, whereas it was MR who really had struck a deal with VP, with the help of the US and the Indians. So is it any surprise, before Sripathi and Jeyaraj could reveal more about the deal with the LTTE and LK’s murder, they were made silent for whose benefit?

      c. I was rather dismayed when I learned that LK had scuttled the chances of a school mate of his, Jayantha Dhanapala getting CBK not to lend her support to him to vie for the UN Sec Gen post. It was a poor shot indeed below the belt. May he rest in peace!

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        Gamini

        In other words LK should have lived his life according to your design for his life?

        Otherwise, he deserves to get shot by the LTTE?

        Thnx a lot for your analysis anyway.

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          Ben, LK need not have lived his life according to my design. There are certain norms in civilized society, pertaining to marriage, fidelity, honesty, piety and decency. When individuals are of eminent standing, they are mirrors for the society to reflect the above mentioned values, hence they should be more circumspect than others. Otherwise there are many who are erudite scholars in society, individuals who have held high office, but will never earn the respect of the people. In general LK won that respect from the masses although he faltered on a few towards the end. I agree LK was a genial person and streets ahead compared to that scum bag of a another Trinitian Sarath N Silva, who is a down right cad and a murderer who got Judge Sarath Ambeypitiya killed, having connections to the under world, working hand in glove with MR before they fell out. LK was killed by a sharp shooter from the Forces itself, using Thalayasingham’s house and I do not for a moment condone the dastardly act. Who was the obvious beneficiary from LK’s demise? None other than MR, another murderer with a history of contract killings right through his political carrier engaging wambottas, only to liquidate the lot after becoming the President.

          Emil, when I referred LK and JD were school mates, I did not infer they were class mates. They differ in age about six to seven years and were at Trinity about the same time. Besides LK and JD had met on many an occasion while serving the UN. It would have been nothing but right as a senior Trinitian to have done what ever possible to a Junior Trinitian, but not pull the rug under the feet. That is what I meant. I do admit that LK belonged to an Illustrious family that Sri Lanka can be certainly proud off, the envy of many of the present mediocrity holding office today. My attempt was not to demonize him, but I hold Principles over individuals, even if LK was my best friend of family member.

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        Many commentators here seem bent on the beatification of Lakshman Kadirgamar while others seem determined to demonise the man(in typical Sri Lankan fashion?!)
        He was a bright student, an excellent athlete in school, and an essentially decent person. What happened once be began to develop political ambitions only time will truly tell.
        Jayantha Dhanapala attended the same school as LK, but to call someone many years his junior a “schoolmate” is pushing it. In fact I doubt that JD and LK were even at Trinity at the same time!
        Kadirgamar belonged to the “Colombo elite” of the Tamil population and, to anyone checking on his brothers’ and father’s track records, this will be patently obvious. The father was a preeminent legal luminary as was LK’s eldest brother,Sam. Brother Rajan went on to command the Sri Lanka navy.
        Give credit where credit is due, by all means, but let’s not go overboard about a man who was ambitious and possessed the frailties that most humans do.

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          Agree with Emil van der Poorten to a large extent.

          It is not fair to the departed man that we elevate him to a super human being. He was not. He was like most of us, I guess. Surely, he must have had many weaknesses. And must have made many wrong judgements during the course of his life. We should not try to take that humananity away from Kadirgamar.

          But, he did fill a void in Sri Lankan politics. He was above racial politics. Fearless. Intellectual. Patriotic. Most Sri Lankans were proud to see him representing us internationally. Despite his elite background (Trinity and all brothers at Royal College, Colombo 7 address etc.), he connected with the average Sri Lankan naturally. Sri Lankans recognized the decency and resourcefulness of the man.

          What I resent is the idea that somehow he deserved to get shot. Because he put the LTTE where it belonged. His weapons were his words. Nothing else. He put the LTTE firmly in the dustbin of history.

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        I have somewhere that you Gamini was not respecting LK. U were criticising him all the time. But you have been having a great love affair with RW – whatever silence he has been showing while the country is burning – is no matter for you.

        For me, we should have leaders of LK calibre- but right at the moment there are none on any of the bunches. Perhaps, among the uni professionals you may find some candidates that many could consider as the common leader to lead the island nation.

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    Dear Ajitha,
    your lovely dada used by sinhala budhist babarians. They used him for his name as a tamil( doesnt know tamil, never know single word) to show the world.any way what he done to tamil question…nothing, as your dad i am sorry…as a tamil my self i will never forgive any tamils supporting this evil sinhala regimes…

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      Muthu

      Having a “Hissy Fit” of LTTE tribalism?

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        A very good lesson for Tamils who support the Sin Hala regime. KP Karuna Doglas – I think they are much smarter than LK. They know how to play the game.

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      What her Lovely dada was not a baby to have abused. He was a scholar produced by Oxford. So I dont think you guys could put him down in that way.

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      LAKSHMAN, WAS AT TCK DURING MY TIME.WE WERE IN THE SAME TAMIL CLASS.
      WE WERE IN THE SCOUT TROOP.GREAT ATHLETE.ABOVE EVERYTHING A GREAT
      GENTLEMAN.I FEEL HE SHOULD NOT HAVE GOT INVOLVED IN POLITICS.
      I AM TRULY PROUD I KNEW HIM.

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    He did love the water.

    Yes, he loved the water very much. That is why he died in his luxury swimming pool , while Tamils in the Wanni barely had a piece of bread, thanks to CBK’s embargo on the Wanni.

    We were never to see him alive again.

    Ah, but you saw plenty of his embezzled money, no doubt. After all, his master CBK bought mansions and luxury curtains in UK.

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      What are you Lester? An animal perhaps! What is your problem?

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        Good observation. Humans are animals. The human’s phylum is Chordata (vertebrate). The human’s class is mammalia. It’s order is primate (the same as apes). It’s family is Hominidae (apes that have no tail and can gather food with their hands.) The Human’s sub-family is Homininae. It’s tribe is Hominini. It’s genus is Homo and it’s specie is scientifically named Homo Sapiens. Any further questions? :)

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          Somebody please refer this “Lester” guy to a local Psychologist of good reputation.

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            Ben Hurling

            Why?

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              A respected old man and an excellent Spokesman for Sri Lanka was shot dead in cold blood. His only crime was his words against the LTTE.

              Lester celebrates the killing with total lack of empathy for the victim’s dauhgter.

              Surely, the guy is disturbed. Needs therapy. Have sympathy.

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              Hurling is full of more hot air than the Hindenburg . As I said earlier, Kadirgamir was enjoying his luxuries (swimming pool, five-star hotel accommodations broad, driver, servants, etc.) while malnourished Tamil children suffered because of the Sri Lankan embargo on essentials to the Wanni. Of course there were other grave injustices committed on the Tamils as well, under the reign of his paymaster CBK, while Lakshman himself flew first-class around the globe, begging rich Caucasians to ban to the LTTE.

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              *to ban the LTTE

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          You Are A real sadist.

          and a failure of your life.
          so you want to take revenge from society.

          Go commit suicide.

          Better for you and Every body.

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            Ananda Coomaraswamy is still a well-known name the world over especially in the field of history of art. His mother was white and almost all his marriages were to white women. His name was a tourist attraction in SL until the present regime decided to erase that name by removing the name of the street.
            Lakshman Kadirgamar remarried a Sinhalese so the petty Sri Lankans used him then desecrated his ashes because he ultimately has no Sinhala blood. In another 20 years no one will know him because the west does not even know him because he was a politician. It is very sad that he got into politics. A couple of days before his death at London he informed BBC “We have not received a red cent of Tsunami Money” really the kids had broken their piggy banks?

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              Not only ashes but the wealth. A good ploy. The poor fellow didn’t learn the trick. Everything gone to ashes. Ultimately they got rid of him and blamed it on you know who?

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            YOU ARE SICK AMARAYA

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        No problem. The problem was with LK

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      Forgive this Lester guy.

      He has forgotten his medication this morning.

      Tablets keep his LTTE inspired Ethno-Nationalistic rage in check normally.

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        @ Hurling,

        You seem like a bitter fellow. Did Kadirgamar employ you to clean his commode? The great thing about capitalism: there are many ways to earn SLR 10.

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          Lester

          You would have been a good assistant for Kadir.

          Unfortunately for you, the world now knows what “Babu” did to Premadasa at VP’s behest. People are not naive anymore.

          Despite your qualifications, you would have been considered unworthy of a single visit to Kadirgamar household.

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            Correct Hirling, I would have been unwelcome at Kadirgamars home. Unlike you, my resume goes well beyond mopping and butler duties.

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              Most butlers are highly respected professionals. Their word is their bond. You trust them without question.

              Real butlers do not backstab or plot to kill their employer while in service or afterwards. Or plan assasination while pretending to lick his master’s boot for years.

              That kind of scumbags are only found in the fan base of the LTTE.

              Good luck with your job search Lester.

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              @ Hurling,

              Glad to know you will come running with egghoppers and Passion Fruit, if I clapped my hands. After all, that is the “respectable work” of a butler. Cheers!

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        WHO IS THE BEN HURLING?? COMMENTING ON ANYTHING AND EVERTHING AS IF HE IS GOD. [Edited out]

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      Lester, you are a freak of nature – very hateful even after someone was killed. I hope you kith and kins are killed in similar way for freaks to make fun of.

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        @ Riza,

        The only freak of nature was your leader (SAW). Kadirgmair was a war criminal; war criminals should expect to die brutal deaths. At least he died with a single bullet; your brothers in Saudi prefer the ax and castration.

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          Lester,

          You display all the symptoms of a victim of emotional child-abuse. You should seriously seek medical help before you inflict serious harm on yourself or others.

          You have made yourself as transparent as glass through the comments you make, not only on this particular thread, but others on CT too.

          Perhaps you should lie low until medically treated.

          You may never realise that you are seriously ill mentally, but it is obvious to others, especially those of my profession.

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            PERFECT DIAGNOSIS

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            Just ignore his comments – or better ask him to get married to LEELA.. No way, I can digest leela’s comments. So is the world – filled with various kind of people. Some are beyond all bearing :(

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            The funny thing is I probably know more about your “profession” than you. Psychology/psychiatry is utter nonsense. There is nothing “scientific” about psychology/psychiatry. Surely you have heard of the famous Rosenhan Experiment?

            The Rosenhan experiment was a famous experiment into the validity of psychiatric diagnosis…. The study concluded “it is clear that we cannot distinguish the sane from the insane in psychiatric hospitals” and also illustrated the dangers of dehumanization and labeling in psychiatric institutions…

            http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosenhan_experiment

            Then of course, there is Thomas Szaz, the famous Swiss psychiatrist who showed once and for all that mental illness is a myth.

            If you want to argue actual facts, as opposed to making ad hominem attacks, then feel free to do so. But I am quite sure you’re just an annoyed Muslim, and the only the “psychology” you know is how to keep your wife wrapped in 24 layers. :)

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              Lester,

              I once had a patient just like you. He was completely in denial of his mental condition caused by untreated acute depression.

              Like you he too scoffed at psychiatry and called it bluff. He eventually committed suicide.

              Patients with mental disorders such as yourself always think that they are sane and others are all mad. This is normal with your condition. So please seek help asap!

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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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              @ Psychologist:

              Post with your true Islamic name. Are you afraid of your beliefs, hiding behind Western ideas like “psychology?”

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              Lester,

              How are you so sure Psychologist is a Muslim?

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            defending a sadistic sinhala state worse than anything else , lester was right to rejoice this war criminal’s death.

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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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      Aho Lester

      Unlike your blood sucking podian VP, Mr. LK never stole poor people at gun point. Do not inslut a man with a good heart who had moderate ideas and beleived in co-exsitance.

      Thanks to your beloved teraa leader podian Praba, suffering for poor tamils could contiune for few more generations till people like you have this sort of peculiar mindsst.

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    True, LK was and is still hated by Jaffna Tamils, especially those who were and are still in love with the LTTE. This is the truth let us accept it.

    But LTTE hated the Jaffna Tamils as well. They made them into gun fodder.

    LK had to choose between the racist over educated Tamils and the ….(self edited)….. Sinhalese. Perhaps he found them less racist than the over educated JTs. CBK leaves little trail of racism while dear Praba was oozzing with it. Between the two, LK I think made a reasonable choice.

    The big difference is that the Sinhalese respect him – for the wrong reason. The Tamils clearly don’t, neither do they respect Neelan, Padmanaba and all other non-racist Tamil leaders.

    LK helped liberate the Tamils from LTTE at a terrible cost and he paid dearly for it.

    Ajitha, your dad was and still is admired for his courage, principles and sacrifice he has made.

    Once the JTs come to terms with the cost of their own racism they too will come to admire him. Because they are over educated, they are rather slow learners. So please be patient.

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      LK wanted rise up faster He used a trick. That backfired and those he helped eliminated him. His family knows it very well. That is why his daughter is writing about him now. If she step out of line she knows what will happen to her. The same fate that his father faced. Even LK knew about this at his last stage of his life but it was too late for him to get out from the den. He paid the ultimate price. This is what happens when you play a game that you are not good at. See Karuna and Doglas and KP are they not true heroes according to your definition. But they are smarter than LK

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    Mr Kadiragamar was a true and patriotic son of Srilanka who rose above petty ethnic divisions to try and find a solution for all Srilankans. It is a pity to see some people using this forum, where his daughter remembers him fondly on his birth anniversary, to mud sling and insult his memory. The little minds who insult him here will not be remembered or relevant tomorrow as Mr Kadiragamar’s memory will be. His daughter and grandson have so much to be proud of.

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      And to feel sorry for him. They dont have anything from their father and grand father who abandoned them for the sake of power.

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    Ms. Kadirgamar… A well writtten essay about your relationship with your Dad. As a Sri Lankan, I was proud to hear him speak on behalf of us. I did not have to hide my face in shame! He articulated his point of view well and that convinced many to agree with him.
    Today, we have a bunch of fools running the country and us Sri Lankans are the bigger fools for tolerating them.
    It appears your Dad’s ashes have gone the way the house he rented from the Blackler sister has. I recall a story about how Blackler’s sisters (last European to head John Keells) had rented a home to the Kadirgamar’s in Colombo 7 and through some shenanigans it was literally stolen from them. I guess greed pervades all levels of society. Education is really no panacea !

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    I read one of his articles. He is a good writer and academic. I really admire his fluency in English. His academic skills and arguments are solid. I really enjoy reading his writing

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      [Edited out] You are using different names – CT

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    Haters will always Hate

    Dear Ajitha, Your father will be always loved, Not all tamils are LTTE, so what about Karuna Amman. Mr Lakshman was an honest man, as he was educated from a good school in a good city, he acted as a True Sri Lankan. Clever Man your Father was. tell your son to be proud of his grandfather, May he Rest in Peace…

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    Yes, I agree. This is a touching tribute by a daughter to a father.Let us keep it at that level without disturbing the sentiments by dragging on other issues.It may be that I empathize with the writer for the reason that Lakshman and I were contemporaries in that we were of the same age,he being older to me by three months and we were contemporaries in the University, he in the Faculty of Law and I in Arts. As the father of three daughters, I myself can very well understand how relationship grow between a father and daughter.Ajith has recalled how she hated the smell of Dada’s pipe and Cigars. I myself recall how my eldest daughter disliked my smoking pipes, cigarettes and cigars in our apartment in Paris and even the harsh language she used when arguing with me over the smell and fumes.

    I had left the Foreign Service long before Lakshman became the Foreign Minister but I recall Jayantha Dhanapala who was Dirctor General at the time asking me to call on Laksman saying that things were very professional at the Foreign office under Lakshman.I met Lakshman only once after I retired from the Foreign Service. That was when the then lady French Ambassador introduced to him me as a former Ambassador to France at a dinner hosted on the occasion of France -Sri Lanka diplomatic relations.
    I recall writing in the newspapers that Lakshman was well worthy of being appointed the Prime Minister of the country. President Kumaratunga was under other pressures at the time.i think it was Mangala Samaraweera who opposed it and not Mahinda Rajapaksa as someone stated.
    Let me take the opportunity to pay my respect to this great son of Sri Lanka.

    Bandu de Silva

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    Hi Colombo Telegraph,

    Thank you for publishing this article , but I wonder you have done it to scorn on of the greatest son of Sri Lanka as you usually do to other patriots.

    Sri Lanka enjoys peace today both Sinhalese and Tamils because of the work of this great man . It was because his gallant work that world realized the true nature of Tamil Tiger tribalism. Or else tribal crap like Donald Gnanakoons would be still making money over the sufferings of Sri Lankan people . Why are you giving such prominence to this guy’s posts .

    If this guy did the same hateful things he did to our people to a county like US he would have been droned down long time back.. I wish Mr. Kadiragamar’s daughter wrote this letter to some other publication . Sri Lanka salute your father and respects his family forever ..

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      Can you expect more from refugees? Live with it because you are still reading it.

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    A true patriot of Sri Lanka and Trinity College

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    Ajitha,

    I am very proud of my country ( occupied by criminals now) because how lucky LK is to remembered by his daughter and of course many sympathisers in Srilanka. I wished other children had the opportunity to remember their loving fathers in the way you remember your dada. The criminals and Sinhalese thugs would give a biscuit before massacre the children with machine guns in other country while trying to occupy others land.
    you are lucky because your dada was an enemy for a country where civilised people lives.not thugs and criminals! otherwise you would not be in a position to remember your dada today?

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    No other way to show gratititude to your dad, well done. I am a great admirer of your dad, I do not know the reason yet, Is it because of his intellect, charisma, personality or his sacrifice etc…..

    I hope his legacy will live longer in SL politics.

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    unlike jeyaraj fernandopulle and muttaiah muralitharan your father had his roots in jaffna. if the above two didn’t have any feelings for north east tamils i can understand. in my opinion your father didn’t give a monkey about north east tamils. if i put it bluntly your great grand parents sold their religon for money and your father sold his race for power. end of story.

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      At last,
      Velupullai Pirpaharan Sold the proud Sri lankan tamil’s dignity to a Vulture called Mahinda Jarapassa.
      taking a bribe and got a bullet on the head, lifting a white flag .

      That is the End of the great story of tamil’s history.

      DO NOT FORGET the biggest betrayal of a fraud Tamizar called V P.

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    This is a moving tribute by Ajita Kadirgamar, daughter of a great statesman and true patriot – Lakshman Kadirgamar! Reading between the lines, it is easy to draw the conclusion that Ajita is a simple person conveying the love and admiration for a father who was a household name in Sri Lanka.
    I agree with Mr. Sanjaya Anuruddha’s comments on an earlier post. Colombo Telegraph is obliged to control the other posts to this worthy tribute. They should not allow this to be a forum where cheap people are permitted to contribute to meaningless chatter or play to the gallery. I believe the post by Donald H. Gnanakone is totally out of line and too personal.
    Lakshman Kadirgamar is a man who gained international respect for his intelligence, intellectual brilliance, oratory, personality and patriotism. He is a Prime Minister Sri Lanka never had! In fact.

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      @Obeyasekera…. If I wanted to get personal, I have tons of such information. This was not the forum for it.
      I am a true Tamil and not just with a Tamil name.
      This is not the last, that Tamils like me would say and write about Laksman Kadirgamar or any other Kadirgamar new or old.

      I have no idea who you are so I cannot comment, nor do I want to.

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        Ha..ha! Donald “The True Tamil”.

        Donald really makes such a lot out of his ethnicity. As if all others who are not Tamil do not have a heritage to be proud of.

        Donald, whether you are a True Tamil, just a decent man with a Tamil name or even a Sinhalese, in a few years time, we will all be dead. And whether you like it or not, will be food for worms.

        So, take it easy Donald. Do not take these things too far.

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        Ha ha Donald Uncle

        Word of the Era – “A True tamil” who funded the terrorism generously to make the entire tamil generation to the edge of grave.

        How is your humanright activites now a day uncle?

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    If Kadirgamar had become the Prime Minister instead of the corrupt and criminal Mahinda Rajapaksa would Sri Lanka have avoided the sorry state it is in now?

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      What has to happen happens!

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      Piranha,why are we talking so much about the prime minister post.It is just a ceremonial thing now and nobody cares who is the primeminister.If you ask many srilankan children they will not even know who isn the primeminister but they certainly will know who is the president and also who is gothabaya and basil rajapakshe.Ultimately it is the power that counts because through the power you have you do things and become the subject of conversation around the dinner table,whereas teh powerless prime minister position is not anymore considered a worthwile topic for conversation in srilanka.

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    It is obvious that most Sinhalese love Kadir. All LTTE lovers hate him pathologically.But there are many Tamils who admire his multiple qualities.
    Anybody who criticized LTTE had one fate waiting and specially a Tamil had no chance. Many of our Tamils contributing to this forum talk free and openly now as LTTE is gone forever!

    Sadly we lost him at his prime, and with that lost the possibility of having a Tamil President.

    He was undoubtedly Sri Lanka’s best statesman ever!

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    Ajitha I remember the last time I met him. he was after his operation and was in a sarong when I took a picture as a souvenenir.I cherish this. Ranga Kalansooriya was with me when we interviewed him.
    I was aasigned to fly to Jaffna and cover the post of the Elephant Pass debacle. I learned more about him there than I had done as a courts reporter in Colombo.
    He knew my cousin Patrick in Geneva and we often talked about Geneva. He was a gentleman and a great one at that. You should not give a thought to the racist remarks the pro-separatists make because people like Neelan Thiruchelvam and he were always one who did not want the loss of lives. He was for a political solution and when people like Donald Gnanakoon start getting on their high horses to put him down it is because they were “no-bodies”. People like Prabakaran were feared not respected. Your father was respected and that makes a world of difference.

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