Monday, January 25, 2010

Blood, Sweat, Tears and finally Smile

Blood, Sweat, Tears and finally Smile
Don’t forget the yesterday – You enjoy the today thanks to the sweat, tears and the blood of war heroes and the ‘astute leadership’. As a team we won an enormous calamity, we can overcome smaller ones. Your decision may be a hard one, but vote wisely, not to regret again and again!! Please stand together in voting MAHINDA RAJAPAKSA for presidency again and protect hard won freedom and the future prosperity ….

Sunday, January 24, 2010

Mahinda Chintanaya takes Sri Lanka towards economic independence

Mahinda Chintanaya takes Sri Lanka towards economic independence
Sat, 2010-01-23 17:42 — editor
Sri Lanka
By Sugeeswara Senadhira
Colombo, 23 January, (Asiantribune.com):
Sri Lanka’s top economists are confident that the country would achive economic independence under the policies outlined in the Mahinda Chintanaya.
A group of the country’s eminent economists stated that for the first time in the country’s history, Sri Lanka is going to achieve economic independence using its geographical location under the economic policy of Mahinda Chintana – Vision for the future.
Addressing a press briefing at the Information and Media Ministry yesterday to analyze the economic policy of Mahinda Chintana – Vision for the future, Prof Buddhadasa Hevavitharana of the Peradeniya University, Prof W.D. Lakshman of Colombo University, Dr Lalithasiri Gunaruwan of the Colombo University and Dr Lloyd Fernando of the University of Sri Jayewardenepura said under the Mahinda Chintanaya, the economy is pulled from the front instead of pushed from the back.
They said the significance of the policy is to make sure that economic benefits are distributed among the public equally.
Since independence everyone was questioning about economic independence of Sri Lanka and only now under Mahinda Chintana, there is a clear strategy to achieve it, Prof Hevavitharana said. It is expected to achieve an eight percent growth rate by developing the country as a naval, aviation, commercial, energy and knowledge hub. Under this strategy the country’s economy will not be pushed from the back, it will be pulled from the front.
The strategy is already under way with the commencement of constructing the Hambantota harbour and other harbours, Mattala International Airport and many other projects. In 2005, Mahinda Chintana commenced after clearing the backlog created by previous regimes without developing infrastructure. He pointed out that countries such as Gibraltar, Singapore, Hong Kong and the Maldives have already advanced economically due to such policies.
Dr Lalithasiri Gunaruwan of the Colombo University said that the victory Sri Lankan economy achieved in the middle of a global economic crisis is maintaining a growth rate of six percent for a period of four years. Therefore, achieving a growth rate of eight percent is not a challenge for the country at all. In Mahinda Chintana – Vision for the future, it is very clearly stated where the country’s economy is heading for, how the mentioned targets could be achieved and what are the strategies that will be used to achieve targets. But in the other election manifestos, only the vision is there but nothing more than that. No target or strategy has been stated in it.
Prof W.D. Lakshman of Colombo University said that with the achievement of permanent peace in May 2009, Sri Lankan economy is now having the chance of leaping forward. The existing environment will certainly assist to achieve eight percent growth rate if a major disaster does not take place in the future. There should be a vision to achieve great achievements and there are some visions included in both election manifestos. The difference in Mahinda Chintana – Vision for the future is, it very clearly states how and when the vision can be realised. The strategies are clearly mentioned in it. The policy does not focus only on the services side of the economy.
Dr Lloyd Fernando of the University of Sri Jayewardenepura said that Singapore achieved its present economic status because of the vision the country had in the past under its leadership. Foundation for the vision included in Mahinda Chintana – Vision for the future has already been laid. For example, there is no other country in the world that issues a passport within 24 hours and Sri Lanka does it. Our State Departments, State hospitals and similar institutions have already been modernised and developed to a high standard. The country should walk forward further.

Vision for the future

Vision for the future

Mahinda Chinthana Idiri Dakma (Vision for the future) was launched last week renewing hopes and aspirations among Sri Lankan citizens for a brighter future. President Rajapaksa's national and foreign policies have always been beneficial to the development of the country. It was due to his far-sighted policy planning that the country was able to successfully survive the massive financial crises that hit most of the world economies.
Though huge financial allocations were made on war, the government could yet maintain a decent GDP growth rate during the past four years while implementing mega development projects. The Sunday Observer interviewed Indrajith Aponsu, Senior Lecturer in Economics of the University of Colombo and Dhamma Dissanayake, Senior Lecturer Political Science and Public Policy, University of Colombo who firmly believe that the country will move forward even further during his next tenure.
By Samangie WETTIMUNY
Excerpts:
The financial crisis which hit the world last year was similar or even worse than the crises that affected the world in the 30s. World economies were in shambles. Some of the fast growing economies in Asia such as Singapore and Malaysia experienced negative growth.
Indrajith Aponsu, Senior Lecturer in Economics, University of Colombo
Dhamma Dissanayake, Senior Lecturer in Political Science and Public Policy, University of Colombo
However, Sri Lanka managed to record a growth rate which was fairly decent and also it was good enough to keep the economy from going into negative growth.
"I would say it is commendable performance when you make a relative comparison to GDP growth in other countries." says Indrajith Aponsu, Senior Lecturer in Economics, University of Colombo . He attributes it largely to the policies of Mahinda Chinthana . "As I see the main reason is President's decision to create domestic growth through agriculture and other rural sector developments. It is an ingenious move."
Explaining further, he said that earlier more than 50% contribution to GDP was from the Western Province. Also Sri Lankan economy (more than 70%) was based on trade. In particular, our export sector was highly relying on foreign economies such as US and EU. Also we were relying on sectors like tourism. These were the sectors that were very badly affected by the global financial crisis.
"It is at this point that President's decision became so much prominent." "He went into promotion of agriculture in a big way that really compensated for the losses in the areas which were relying on foreign sectors, especially the industrial sector. This in a way had helped keep the GDP growth at a decent level relative to other countries."
As Senior Lecturer in Political Science and Public policy, Dhamma Dissanayake sees 'Mahinda Chinthana Vision for the Future' has almost all the relevant features of a successful manifesto. Though many politicians have the habit of presenting their manifestos before an election , they lack many of the salient features. It seems that they have not paid enough attention to the standard or quality of it.
" In the history we have had only a very few manifestos which were up to the required standard. For example, the manifesto which was presented by Lanka Sama Samaja Party in 1935, manifestos which were presented by former Prime Minister, S.W.R.D. Bandaranaike and by Samagi Peramuna respectively in 1956 and 1970 were much talked of as they were up to the standard. Since then it was President Mahinda Rajapaksa who could come out with a manifesto based on solid background."
As he further noted manifestos which carry mere promises are poor in quality. A manifesto should be always based on solid fundamental, conceptual and theoretical values."A fine example was People's Agenda presented by U.N.P. in 2004. However their present manifesto remains to be a mere set of promises and it is a pity that the rival party could not come out with a sound manifesto."
On the contrary the two manifestos presented by this government have clearly indicated their targets and also the ways and means of achieving them." It clearly states how the country should go forward while attracting other favourable international sources.
Maga Naguma
Indrajith Aponsu too held almost a similar view. He said that there is enormous potential for further development. "Maga Naguma" is a far-sighted program. As he said one of the major bottlenecks Sri Lanka has been facing throughout last several decades was the inability to connect up regions.
"It did not address the major issue of connecting up regions, connecting up provinces with the hub of the economy." If we are to attract more investors and if we want our investors to go out, we have to develop infrastructure-especially the roads. But it is always better to have a proper way to address the peripheral issues that may a rise."
As an economist Aponsu is certain that once the Hambantota Port is completed it will certainly bring immense economic benefits to the country.
"Plantation and garment sectors have always played a major role in our economy and these sectors had been major foreign exchange earners. But now it is time to look into more profitable avenues - it is of utmost necessity to create a mega sector that would pave the way for the emergence of new sectors.
"I think port development will be much bigger than any other sector we had. For the simple reason the geographical location of Sri Lanka. Its location has tremendous advantages both economically and geographically and even politically. It is very strange that none of our successive leaders ever realized the necessity of constructing a harbour. I am sure this will be a major service sector."
Hambantota harbour will pave the way for open-ended development.
Today the country is politically, economically and democratically stable and there is no doubt that the harbour will always be the hub of international attention. As he further noted the sector itself will be a highly value added sector. It will create a whole chain of economic affairs within the country. And also because Sri Lanka is an island nation, the harbour will create the potential for other sub ports to develop centering around mega ports. So this is going to create a major navigational hub. "Perhaps I'd imagine that we'd be a major competitor to one of the major shipping hubs in Asia-Singapore.
When asked about the low interest rates and its impact on investment Aponsu said that low interest rates in banks do not necessarily guarantee higher investment. Higher investment requires other factors such as environment, the future profitability and market opportunities.
"And I think low interest rates supported by political stability, clear economic vision without the major bottleneck, the war, will definitely create a very conducive environment to investments."
Share market reflects the investor confidence in a certain day. People do not walk into a share market if the share market is not going to perform well and the market performance is based on profitability of companies."
That the share market is doing extremely well, may be one of the best markets in the world-reflects the contrary to what some people argue. With the end of war the country will now attract foreign investors for a number of reasons. "Also it is not that investors are just coming here to make a profit and go away, but they will blend themselves into our culture. They will also want to have their people working here.
I am sure this country offers a lot."
As Dr. Aponsu noted with the North East expansion and other potential expansion priorities and linkages - we are establishing links with the rest of the world - investors are really lining up to get into this country.
Infrastructure development programs such as Uthuru Wasanthaya and Nagenahira Navodaya are far sighted projects that would help uplift the living conditions of people in the North and the East. "They of course need a change."
"I can comment on economic development in many perspectives. I think we have had in the first few years one of the finest economic growth performances in the history of Sri Lanka. Second, as stated earlier when the whole world was crumbling, we were able to maintain the economic growth within the ratio of 3-4% which I think is extremely commendable."
Industrial sector is one of the areas that could really pave the way for huge employment generation, high level income value addition, high sustainability and faster growth momentum. So there is no possibility that we can generate something in the short term and the medium term, unless we refocus on industrial sector and look for some viable industry which will complement and supplement the garment and other sectors.
As Aponsu sees in this particular four years, the way we have reached the grass roots level has made the income distribution far more even and widespread.
Foreign policy
As Dhamma Dissanayake says only two Sri Lankan leaders had so far been able to handle Sri Lanka's foreign policy independently without succumbing unnecessarily to international forces . First was former Prime Minister Sirimavo Bandaranaike and the second is none other than President Mahinda Rajapaksa. He has always been able to maintain the image and dignity of the country.
As mentioned earlier his emphasis on national economy helped Sri Lanka to face global financial crisis successfully.
Why should we reelect him as President.?
"Is it solely as a gesture of gratitude that we should reelect Mahinda Rajapaksa as president. " I asked Dhamma Dissanayake.
" Not necessarily." "If a person wants to cast his/her vote to Mahinda Rajapaksa as a way of expressing gratitude that is fine, but as I see that is not the reason why we should vote for him.
His capabilities are far ahead of his chief rival candidate. He proved his credentials by ending the LTTE terrorism which was ruining the country for the past thirty years, and also by implementing massive development projects ranging from agriculture to infrastructure development. The way he handled international relations is commendable.
He has proved himself to be a clever leader, a democrat at heart who represents a well-established political party. Need mail bonding? Bring all your contacts to Yahoo!Xtra with TrueSwitch

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Govt. brings in heavy guns to counter tigers

Govt. brings in heavy guns to counter OppositionMaj. Gen says some countries hindered war against LTTE‘Only 3 per cent of the war displaced remained to be re-settled in Trinco’
by Shamindra Ferdinando
Major General Prasanna Silva says that a section of the international community not only rejected Sri Lanka’s calls for arms, ammunition and equipment but also prevented aircraft carrying urgently needed items from flying over their airspace.
The former General Officer Commanding (GOC) of the 55 Division said that President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s government had bought in the required armaments to bolster the army’s firepower in spite of obstacles.
Silva, currently the GOC of the 22 Division headquartered in Trincomalee said that contrary to claims, the Rajapaksa government had provided a range of weapons and equipment, which helped the government forces to destroy the LTTE’s military wing last May.
Participating in a Sinhala language political programme aired over Rupavahini, the former Special Forces Commander paid a glowing tribute to the Sri Lanka Air Force for throwing its weight behind the army. Commenting on operations carried out by the 55 Division under his command, Silva said that the SLAF jets and helicopter gunships had made their task easier. The SLAF had facilitated the evacuation of the wounded, a challenging task, particularly when the infantry crossed a lagoon under fire, he said. Despite severe constraints, the SLAF had played a remarkable role, he said emphasising he had never seen the SLAF going all out during previous engagements. SLAF personnel had engaged in evacuation operations even risking their own lives, he said.
Silva said that the deployment of UAVs (Unmanned Aerial Vehicles) on surveillance missions had provided real time battle ground pictures to him, thereby helping him with decision making.
The government is under heavy fire for using senior Army officers to dispute Opposition presidential candidate General (redt) Sarath Fonseka. The Opposition said that the government shouldn’t have involved serving officers in its propaganda campaign directed against the former Army Commander. But regardless of criticism, senior officers, including Major General Kamal Gunaratne (former GOC of the 53 Division), Major General Shavendra Silva (former GOC of the 58 Division) and Major General Chagi Gallage recently appeared on State TV.
Maj. Gen. Silva said that there was absolutely no truth in the claim that the Army had killed LTTE cadres, who surrendered on the Vanni front. The Army had evacuated wounded LTTE cadres, some of them airlifted to hospital though some interested parties criticised the government for ill-treating the enemy. No one should forget that there were over 11,000 LTTE cadres in government custody, he stressed.
Silva said that the government should tell the world how the enemy was treated during the war and after the end of operations last May.
According to him, one of the primary reasons for their success was the availability of the required manpower. Challenging battlefield objectives couldn’t have been met without the Army receiving fresh recruits, he said.
During the final phase of the offensive, his Division advancing along the north-eastern coast rescued about 15,000 men, women and children without any loss of life among the civilians.
Responding to interviewer Chamuditha Samarawickrema, Silva said that at one point the Army had wondered whether they could hold their Muhamalai frontline let alone break through the LTTE northern defence line, a well built complex backed by artillery pieces, mortars and strong points.
Unlike any other previous leader, President Mahinda Rajapaksa had visited frontline troops to boost their morale.
The former soldier Defence Secretary, Gotabhaya Rajapaksa had, Maj. Gen. Silva said, brought the three services and the police together. He had acted swiftly and decisively, intervening to deploy the SLAF to evacuate a wounded soldier from Vakarai during the height of the battle in the East.
Since the end of the Eelam war last May, the government and security forces had done a tremendous amount of work in the Northern and Eastern Provinces, he said. In the Trincomalee District there were only three per cent of IDPs to be resettled. The resettlement process had been somewhat delayed due to slow progress in mine clearing operations, he said. The army de-mining units were primarily engaged in mine clearing operations in the Vanni thereby causing a delay in humanitarian de-mining operations in the Trincomalee District, where two areas were to be cleared. The second reason for the delay in completion of resettlement in the district was the need to relocate the war displaced elsewhere as the government had taken over their land for development work, he said.
The Army was actively supporting development work in the District in support of the government’s overall strategy to restore normalcy in the Northern and Eastern Provinces, he said.

President will poll 61 per cent of votes - Lakshman Yapa

President will poll 61 per cent of votes - Lakshman Yapa


Thursday, 21 January 2010
Minister of Mass Media and Information, Lakshman Yapa Abeywardana, today reiterated that President Mahinda Rajapaksa would poll 61% of the votes at the upcoming Presidential election.
Addressing the Media, at the Ministry of Information today, the Minister predicted at least one million majority for the President. He attributed the decrease in the votes of General Sarath Fonseka to be the unbecoming conduct of Fonseka who used abusive words on the election platform.“People will not like the dictatorial attitude of General Fonseka”, the Minister added. He further said the JVP was creating a fear psychosis in the country threatening civilians to surrender their Identity Cards. Elaborating on the ‘Mahinda Chinthana’ manifesto, the Minister said every Samurdi family will receive Rs 1000, with an additional allowance for children under 3 years old. For self employment Rs 100,000 will be offered. The minister said that adequate security will be provided to the civilians to cast their votes on the Election Day.

President only candidate with a work program - PM

President only candidate with a work program - PM
A program of work has been placed before the people under the Mahinda Chintana - Idiri Dekma that has never been presented by any candidate before, Prime Minister Ratnasiri Wickramanayaka said.
He said Phase Two of the Mahinda Chintana is not merely a series of promises but a program of work aimed at country's social, economic and cultural uplift.
The Premier was addressing an election rally in Godakawela.
Prime Minister Ratnasiri Wickramanayaka
He said the Government expects to make several changes in the administrative set up to accelerate the country's development.
They hope to establish Jana Sabhas in each Grama Sevaka division and by joining several Jana Sabhas to create a Gam Sabha.
"We decided to go back to the Gam Sabha system since it is the local administration that is nearest to the people to solve their various problems," he said.
The Prime Minister said the Gam Sabha system worked successfully in the past. The Premier opined that development cannot be confined to a single village, district or a province.
The Prime Minister said President Mahinda Rajapaksa never took decisions with an eye on the vote.
Even if he lost some votes he took decisions with the country's development in mind. The best example of this is the Norochcholai and Upper Kotmale power projects. All governments before this although drew up plans to commence these projects in the end did not go ahead due to ceratin pressures, he said.
In contrast President Rajapaksa faced these challenges head on and took decisions fearlessly because he was concerned for the future of the country.
The President always thought of the country first and took firm decisions for its benefit, the Prime Minister said.
He said steps are being taken to build five ports, two airports, modernise the road network and provide infrastructure.
Infrastructure is the key for a country's development and investors come only if there is proper infrastructure, Premier Wickramanayaka said.
"Earlier we only exported raw material but very soon we will shipping our own finished products to the outside world bringing massive foreign exchange to the country," he said.
The Premier observed that by growing food crops that can be grown locally, the Government's aim is not only to make the country self-sufficient in food but also introduce value added that would have a big demand in the international market. This, while reducing the outflow of foreign exchange would earn for the country massive foreign exchange. In turn farmers too would receive a good price for their produce, he said.
The President is the only candidate who had mapped out such a program for the country and his victory is assured.
"At a time we are about to turn a new chapter I ask you all to be active partners in this development program," the Prime Minister said.

President withstood international pressure

President withstood international pressure
Shirley Wijesinghe
President Mahinda Rajapaksa's unique leadership and firm stand against foreign pressure to stop the final battle against the LTTE led to the defeat of terrorism and to protect the country from division, former Foreign Secretary and Sri Lanka's permanent representative to the UN Dr Palitha Kohona said.
He added that this helped keep the moral of the three Armed Forces as well as the Police at a high level until the operation to eradicate the LTTE ended.
He was addressing a workshop organized by the young members' section of the Institute of Engineers to share their experiences during the war period, at the Sri Lanka Foundation Institute yesterday.
Dr Kohona said a majority of the western countries objected to the final humanitarian operation to release innocent Tamils who were under the grip of the LTTE. "There was more pressure on the Government with warnings of economic sanctions. Funds were suspended by some donor countries to Sri Lanka. Amidst this international pressure, the Foreign Ministry had to strengthen the close relationship with friendly countries such as China, Pakistan and Russia. India was always with us," he said.
Recalling the Government's efforts in 2005 to come to a negotiated solution to the terrorist problem in the country, he said President Rajapaksa had decided to conduct the humanitarian operation to liberate the innocent civilians after those peaceful efforts failed. "We cannot forget Erik Solheim's two visits to India during the military operations in the North. But India never listened to him."
Central Bank Governor Ajith Nivard Cabraal and Major General Shavendra de Silva also spoke.

Tharunnyata Hetak, Suba Anagathayak

Tharunnyata Hetak, Suba Anagathayak most attractive slogans:
President leads
*People feel President must be re-elected
*President leading in most districts
Nivantha KANUWANA
President Mahinda Rajapaksa will score a remarkable victory over Sarath Fonseka at the forthcoming Presidential Election, according to the results of an independent survey on National Development and Social Attitudes conducted by the Kelaniya University.
Releasing the results to the media at the Sri Lanka Foundation Institute yesterday Dr Rohana Laxman Piyadasa, Senior Lecturer of Mass Communications Department, Kelaniya University said that 62 percent of the people believe in the victory of President Mahinda Rajapaksa and 60 percent feels the President must be re-elected to ensure a brighter future for the country. At the same time only 36 percent believe in the victory of the common candidate Sarath Fonseka and the balance two percent voters did not fall in to any of the above two categories.
According to Dr Piyadasa the survey was conducted in three consecutive stages and yesterday’s released results were the final.
The sample size was 15,000 representing 20 percent of Government servants, 25 percent private sector employees, 30 percent self employees and 25 percent unemployed respondents covering all 25 administrative districts.
Survey results show that in most districts President Mahinda Rajapaksa dominates over Sarath Fonseka with an outstanding margin. In districts like Ratnapura, Galle, Kurunegala, Hambantota, Moneragala, Puttalam, Badulla and Polonnaruwa it will reach the peak with over a two thirds majority. In addition to the election predictions the survey has identified the Tharunnyata Hetak and Suba Anagathayak as the most attractive slogans in the entire media campaign.
Senior Lecturer of Economics Department, Kelaniya University Dr M.M. Gunathilaka pointed out that this election is one of the most media-sensitive elections in the recent past and it will influence a lot in the final result.
Ajith Dissanayake, Manoj Jinadasa and Saman Rajapaksha were among other lecturers who presented the survey results at the press conference and they described the statistical background of the survey. The same survey had been conducted in the 2004 General election and the 2005 Presidential election with accurate predictions.

Biggest Traitors in sri lanka, SF and Ranil

Don't Blame me or Fonseka for the demise of LTTE, It is Mahinda who did it - Ranil Tells LTTE TV
Leader of the United National Party (UNP), Mr. Ranil Wickramasinghe recently appearing on pro LTTE TV channel GTV (Global Tamil Vision) sought support of LTTE remnants for UNF-TNA-JVP candidate Sarath Fonseka at the forthcoming presidential election. Giving an interview to a programme named "Freedom Struggle", Mr. Wickramasinghe said neither him nor Fonseka should be held responsible for the military defeat of the Tamil Tigers. Asked why Tamil people should support Mr. Fonseka who was the commander of the Army during war, Mr. Wickramasinghe said that Fonseka was just carrying out the orders of the government but not fought on his own accord. "Break down of the process was a matter between the Government of Sri Lanka and the LTTE. When they got the Tamils to boycott (2005 election), Mr. Prbhakaran have had a different option. If he didn't have option then you can't blame anyone else, certainly not the service commanders who had led his services under the instruction of the government", he said. Explaining Mr. Fonseka's contribution in the he said that Mr. Fonseka only carried out the orders given. "Once the government gave the order, the service commanders have to go ahead and execute it. So, he was the commander who had to execute the orders given by the government... and the government gave the timeframe, and what should be done... and that's how the war developed", he said. Asked whether he had any involvement in engineering the rift between Karuna Amman and Prabhakaran, Mr. Wickramasinghe said he had nothing to do with it and he should be not blamed for that. "I have nothing to do with it, as you see Karuna today is with the government, I have not even met Karuna... Don't try to cover up everything by putting the blame on me ... Karuna is today a reality made by Mahinda Rajapaksa", he said. Throughout the interview Mr. Wickramasinghe tried to convince the audience that unless for his defeat at the 2005 presidential election the LTTE could be still in action. Also, he said that Mr. Fonseka has been tasked only to abolish the executive presidency and once it is accomplished an executive prime minister will have the power. GTV is a London based TV channel propagating for Tamil tribalism aiming at instigating racial violence in Sri Lanka . It is one of the major propaganda arms of the LTTE, carrying out false propaganda against Sri Lanka and its people. Political experts are in the view that UNF-TNA-JVP candidate Sarath Fonseka's campaign is aimed at deceiving both Tamils and Sinahalese in the country. "At Sinhala audiences , Fonseka tries to sell him as the only war hero who won the war singlehandedl... but for the Tamil communities he wants to show himself as a innocent government servant who had no other option than to carry out what he was asked to", one expert told ToL.

Sunday, January 17, 2010

Sri Lanka President says the country is more important to him than votes

Sri Lanka President says the country is more important to him than votesMon, Jan 18, 2010, 03:17 am SL Time, ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka.
Jan 18, Colombo: Sri Lanka President Mahinda Rajapaksa said the country and the future of its people are more important to him than gaining few votes to secure his presidency at the cost of the hard-earned freedom from terrorism.
President Rajapaksa, responding to a question raised by a journalist in an interview with media personnel on Sunday night said he did not agree to the conditions laid out by the Tamil National Alliance because that would mean going back to the pre-war LTTE era.
After 30 years of war sacrificing thousands of lives of soldiers and people and destruction of country's properties like Central Bank by the LTTE, he is not ready to give into the TNA demands, as they are asking for the same demands LTTE put forward, including dismantling the high security zones, North-East merger and division of the country, the President said.
He said his decision will not offend the Tamil people as they also want to enjoy the freedom and the development that came along with the end of the war in the region to uplift their lives. TNA cannot fool the Tamil people all the time, he said.
In reference to his large government the President said when he was handed over the country in 2005, the LTTE already had set up their armed forces, even an air force, banks, courts, schools, and the whole administrative structure in the North and East and he had to seek the support of every political party in the country to strengthen the parliament. The President said he had the choice of holding parliamentary elections to secure his power or to eliminate the terrorism and he chose the latter.
Offering ministerial portfolios was the only way to unify the southern political parties to back the government to go against the LTTE at the time, the President said, adding that it is not needed in the next government.
Responding to corruption charges, the President said the opposition UNP which has been in existence for 60 years and produced so many presidents and prime ministers couldn't find a candidate to go against the President because they knew that they would not win an election and the only thing they can say about the government is the corruption.
The President challenged the opposition to produce documentary evidence and prove those charges in a court of law. The opposition brought so many no-confidence motions against President Chandrika Kumaranatunga and why haven't they bring any against him alleging corruption, he asked.
When asked about the common opposition candidate General Sarath Fonseka's promise of giving 10,000 rupees to public servants, the President said anybody can promise anything but he cannot promise things he cannot do because he knows the condition of the country.
A pay rise does not have any value unless it is accompanied with development, elevation of standard of living and opportunities for the future, the President pointed out. He said his government is committed to uplift the lives of the people by providing better education to children, developing rural areas, improving health facilities and housing and other infrastructure.
A housing scheme is planned for providing 600,000 houses to people, which in turn will boost the employment opportunities for laborers, construction workers, and vendors. This is the real change the President said adding that the Sri Lankan people are intelligent enough to understand the difference between promises and deeds.
President Rajapaksa pointed out that the per capita income was only $1,000 when he assumed office in 2005 and now it is raised to $2,200. The public sector employment has been doubled to 1.2 million and the IT knowledge of the youth has increased from a 5% in 2005 to 35% at present.
Commenting on the accusation by opposition candidate that he is being called a traitor, the President said he has no need to sling mud at anyone and pointed out that Fonseka's spokesman Mangala Samaraweera was the first one to insult him before the war victory saying that General Fonseka is not even fit for the Salvation Army.
The President reminded the media personnel how the opposition downplayed the military victories by the government forces and opposed the war that they are capitalizing on now by convincing foreign countries to stop arms trade to the military. Even now, they are trying to bring the disrespect to the troops by the General's own statement that the army under his command committed war crimes, the President explained.
The President said he has fulfilled the promises set out in the first term and he has come before the people for a second term to bring the necessary political changes to address the grievances of all communities and to create a country full of opportunities for the their children. He said he has confidence in the Sri Lankan people that they would make a wise choice on January 26th.

"āļ…⎀ුāļģුāļ¯ු 30 āļš්‌ āļ­ි⎃්‌⎃ේ" āļ…āļ´ āļąොāļēෙāļšුāļ­් āļ­ාāļŠāļą āļ´ීāļŠāļąāˇ€āļŊāļ§ āļšāļģāļ¯āļģ āļšāļģāļ ්āļ āļŊ් ⎀āļŊāļ§ āļŊāļš්‌⎀ූ āļēුāļœāļē āļ…āˇ€āˇƒāļą්āļšāļģ āļ¯ැāļą් āļšි⎃ිāļ¸ āļĸාāļ­ි āļ†āļœāļ¸් āļˇේāļ¯āļēāļš්‌ āļąොāļ¸ැāļ­ි⎀ āļģāļ§ āˇ€ැ⎃ිāļēාāļ§ āļģāļ§āļ´ුāļģා āļ•āļąෑāļ¸ āļ­ැāļą

āļģāļ§ āļ´ුāļģා āļ•āļąැāļ¸ āļ­ැāļąāļš āˇƒැāļąāˇƒිāļŊ්āļŊේ āļĸී⎀āļ­් ⎀ිāļē ⎄ැāļšි āļ´āļģි⎃āļģāļēāļš්‌ āļ‹āļ¯ා⎀ෙāļŊා āļ…āˇƒ්‌āļœිāļģි āļ¸āˇ„ āļąා⎄ිāļ¸ි āļ´ිāļēāļ¯ා⎃ āļģāļĢ⎃ිං⎄ - āļ…āļ­ුāļģුāļœිāļģිāļē ⎄ා ⎃ුāļœāļ­් āļ´්‍āļģේāļ¸āļ­ිāļŊāļš - āļšāļŠු⎀ෙāļŊ "āļ…⎀ුāļģුāļ¯ු 30 āļš්‌ āļ­ි⎃්‌⎃ේ" āļ…āļ´ āļąොāļēෙāļšුāļ­් āļ­ාāļŠāļą āļ´ීāļŠāļąāˇ€āļŊāļ§ āļšāļģāļ¯āļģ āļšāļģāļ ්āļ āļŊ් ⎀āļŊāļ§ āļŊāļš්‌⎀ූ āļēුāļœāļē āļ…āˇ€āˇƒāļą්āļšāļģ āļ¯ැāļą් āļšි⎃ිāļ¸ āļĸාāļ­ි āļ†āļœāļ¸් āļˇේāļ¯āļēāļš්‌ āļąොāļ¸ැāļ­ි⎀ āļģāļ§ āˇ€ැ⎃ිāļēාāļ§ āļģāļ§āļ´ුāļģා āļ•āļąෑāļ¸ āļ­ැāļąāļš āļąිāļ¯āˇ„āˇƒේ āļœāļ¸āļą් āļšāļģāļą්āļąāļ§ - ⎃ැāļąāˇƒිāļŊ්āļŊේ āļĸී⎀āļ­් ⎀āļą්āļąāļ§ āļ´ු⎅ු⎀āļą් āļ´āļģි⎃āļģāļēāļš්‌ āļ‹āļ¯ා⎀ී āļ­ිāļļෙāļąāˇ€ා. āļ¸ේ āļŊැāļļූ ⎃ැāļąāˇƒිāļŊ්āļŊ - āļąිāļ¯āˇ„āˇƒ āļ¯ිāļœāļ§āļ¸ āļ´āˇ€āļ­්⎀ා āļœෙāļą āļēැāļ¸āļ§ āļ…āļ´ āˇƒිāļēāļŊු āļ¯ෙāļąාāļ¸ āļšāļŊ්āļ´āļąා⎀ෙāļą් āļļුāļ¯්āļ°ිāļēෙāļą් āļšāļ§āļēුāļ­ු āļšāˇ… āļēුāļ­ුāļēි. āļœāļ¸ේ āļ¯ිāļēුāļĢු⎀āļ­් ⎃āļ¸āļœāļ¸ āļģāļ§ේ ⎃ං⎀āļģ්āļ°āļąāļēāļ­් - āļ¯ිāļēුāļĢු⎀āļ­් āļœැāļą āļšāļŊ්āļ´āļąා⎀ෙāļą් āļš්‍āļģිāļēා āļšāļģāļą්āļą āļšිāļēා āļ¸ා āļ¸āļ­āļš්‌ āļšāļģāļąāˇ€ා"āļ…āˇƒ්‌āļœිāļģි āļ´ාāļģ්⎁්⎀āļēේ āļ¸āˇ„ා āļąාāļēāļš āļ…āļ­ිāļ´ූāļĸ්‍āļē āļ‹āļŠුāļœāļ¸ āˇ්‍āļģී āļļුāļ¯්āļ° āļģāļš්‌āļ›ිāļ­ āļąා⎄ිāļ¸ිāļ´ාāļĢෝ āļšāļŠු⎀ෙāļŊ - āļšොāļģāļ­ොāļ§ āļģාāļĸāļ¸āˇ„ා ⎀ි⎄ාāļģ⎃්‌āļŽ āļœ්‍āļģාāļ¸ āˇƒං⎀āļģ්āļ°āļą āļ¯āˇ„āļ¸් āļ´ා⎃āļŊේ 60 ⎀ැāļąි ⎃ං⎀āļ­්⎃āļģ āļ‹āˇ…ෙāļŊේ āļ¸ූāļŊ⎃ුāļą āļ…āļąු⎁ා⎃āļąāļē āļ´āˇ€āļ­්⎀āļ¸ිāļą් āļ‘āˇƒේ āļ´ැ⎀ැ⎃ූ⎄. ⎀ි⎄ාāļģාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ි - ⎄ේ⎀ාāļœāļ¸් āļšෝāļģ⎅āļēේ āļ´්‍āļģāļ°ාāļą āļ…āļ°ිāļšāļģāļĢ āˇƒංāļ āļąාāļēāļš āˇ„āļļāļģāļšāļŠ āˇƒෝāļˇිāļ­ āļąා⎄ිāļ¸ිāļēāļą්āļœේ āļ…āļąු⎁ා⎃āļąා āļ‡āļ­ි⎀ āļ¯āˇ„āļ¸් āļ´ා⎃āļŊේ āļ´්‍āļģāļ°ාāļąාāļ ාāļģ්āļē ⎄āļļāļģāļšāļŠ āˇƒුāļ¸āļąāˇƒාāļģ ⎄ිāļ¸ිāļēāļą් āļ´්‍āļģāļ¸ුāļ› āļ†āļ ාāļģ්āļē āļ¸āļĢ්‌āļŠāļŊāļē ⎀ි⎃ිāļą් āļ¸ෙāļ¸ āļ‹āˇ…ෙāļŊ ⎃ං⎀ිāļ°ාāļąāļē āļšāļģ āļ­ිāļļිāļĢි. āļ¸ෙāļ¸ āļ¯āˇ„āļ¸් āļ´ා⎃āļŊේ āļ†āļ¯ි ⎁ි⎂්‍āļē āļ¯ේ⎁āļ¸ාāļą්‍āļē āļ’. āļšේ. āļĸāļąāļš āļąāļą්āļ¯āļšුāļ¸ාāļģ āļ¸āˇ„āļ­ාāļœේ āļ°āļą āļ´āļģිāļ­්‍āļēාāļœāļēෙāļą් āļ’ āļ¸āˇ„āļ­ාāļœේ āļ´ිāļēා ⎀āļą āļ¸āˇ„āļ­ුāļą් āļ…āļŊ⎀āļ­්āļ­ āļ¸āˇ„āļ­ාāļœේ āļœුāļĢ āˇƒāļ¸āļģා āļ‰āļ¯ිāļšāļģāļąු āļŊැāļļූ āļąāˇ€ āļ¯āˇ„āļ¸් āļ´ා⎃āļŊ් āļœොāļŠāļąැāļŸිāļŊ්āļŊ āļ…āˇƒ්‌āļœිāļģි āļ¸āˇ„ා āļąා⎄ිāļ¸ිāļēāļą් ⎄ා āļ¯āļģ්⎁āļąāļ´āļ­ි āļ‰āļ­්āļ­ෑāļ´ාāļą āļ°āļ¸්āļ¸ාāļŊංāļšාāļģ ⎄ිāļ¸ිāļēāļą් āļ´්‍āļģāļ¸ුāļ› āļ¸āˇ„ ⎃ංāļāļģāļ­්āļąāļēේ āˇƒāˇ„āļˇාāļœිāļ­්⎀āļē āļ‡āļ­ි⎀ ⎀ි⎀ෘāļ­ āļšāļģāļą āļŊāļ¯ී. āļ‹āļ­්āˇƒāˇ€ ⎃āļˇා⎀ ⎄āļ¸ු⎀ේ āļ…āˇƒ්‌āļœිāļģි āļ´ාāļģ්⎁්⎀āļēේ āļ¸āˇ„ාāļąාāļēāļš āˇ„ිāļ¸ිāļ´ාāļĢෝ ⎀ැāļŠිāļ¯ුāļģāļ§āļ­් āļ¸ෙ⎃ේ āļ¯ āļ´ැ⎀ැ⎃ූ⎄. āļ…āļ´ āļšāļŊ්āļ´āļąා āļšāļģāļą්āļą āļ•āļąෑ āļ¸ේ ⎃āļ¸ාāļĸāļēේ āļ…āļ´ āļĸී⎀āļ­්⎀āļą āˇ€ිāļ§ āļ¸āļ§ āļ­ිāļēෙāļą āļ…āļēිāļ­ි⎀ා⎃ිāļšāļ¸් āļ…āļąෙāļš්‌ ⎄ැāļ¸ āļšෙāļąාāļ§āļ­් āļ­ිāļēāļąāˇ€ා, āļ¸āļ§ āļšිāļēāļą āļ…āļ¸ාāļģුāļšāļ¸්, āļ…āļ´āˇ„āˇƒුāļšāļ¸් āļ…āļąෙāļš්‌ ⎄ැāļ¸ āļ¯ෙāļąාāļ§āļ­් āļ­ිāļēāļąāˇ€ āļšිāļēāļą āļšාāļģāļĢāļē. āļ’ āļąි⎃ා āļ¸āļ§ āļēāļ¸් āļšි⎃ි ⎀ේāļ¯āļąා⎀āļš්‌. āļ¯ුāļšāļš්‌ āļ‡āļ­ි ⎀ෙāļąāˇ€ාāļ¯ෝ, āļ’ āļ¯ුāļš, ⎀ේāļ¯āļąා⎀ āļ…āļąෙāļš්‌ ⎄ැāļ¸ āļšෙāļąාāļ§āļ­් āļ‡āļ­ි ⎀ෙāļąāˇ€ා āļšිāļēāļą āļ‘āļš āļ­ේāļģුāļ¸් āļ…āļģāļœෙāļą āļšි⎃ි⎀ෙāļšුāļ§āˇ€āļ­් ⎄ිං⎃ා āļ´ීāļŠා āļšāļģāļą්āļą āˇ„ොāļŗ āļąැ⎄ැ. āļ¸ෛāļ­්‍āļģිāļēෙāļą්, āˇƒāˇ„āļēෝāļœāļēෙāļą් āļĸී⎀āļ­් ⎀āļą්āļąāļ§ āļ•āļąෑ āļšිāļēāļą āļ‘āļš āˇ„ැāļ¸ āļ¯ෙāļąාāļœෙāļ¸ āˇƒිāļ­ේ āļ­āļļා āļœāļą්āļąāˇ€ා āļąāļ¸් āļ…āļ¯ āļ…āļ´ේ ⎃āļ¸ාāļĸāļēේ āļ‡āļ­ි⎀āļą āļąොāļēෙāļš්‌ ⎀ිāļ¯ි⎄ේ ⎄ිං⎃ා āļ´ීāļŠා āļšāļŊ āļšෝāļŊා⎄āļŊ āļ¸ිāļąී āļ¸ැāļģුāļ¸් ⎀āļœේ āļ¯āļģුāļĢු āļ…āļ´āļģාāļ° āļšāļģ āļœැāļąීāļ¸ෙāļą් ⎀ැ⎅āļšී ⎃ිāļ§ිāļē ⎄ැāļšිāļēි. ⎄ොāļŗ āļ¯ේ⎁āļ´ාāļŊāļąāļĨāļēෙāļš්‌ ⎀ෙāļą්āļą āļąāļ¸් ⎁ිāļŊ්āļ´ āˇා⎃්‌āļ­්‍āļģāļē āļ…⎀⎁්‍āļēāļēි. āļœāļĢāļ°āļģ්āļ¸ āˇ€āļœේāļ¸ āˇ„ොāļŗ āˇ€ිāļąāļēāļ­් āļ…⎀⎁්‍āļēāļēි. ⎁ිāļŊ්āļ´ āˇා⎃්‌āļ­්‍āļģ⎀āļŊිāļą් ⎄ොāļŗ āļœුāļĢāļ°āļģ්āļ¸āˇ€āļŊිāļą් ⎃āļą්āļąāļ¯්āļ°āˇ€ āļ¯ේ⎁āļ´ාāļŊāļąāļēāļ§ āļļ⎄ිāļą āļ´ුāļ¯්āļœāļŊāļēාāļœෙāļą් āļģāļ§āļ§ - ⎃āļ¸ාāļĸāļēāļ§ āļ…⎄ිāļ­āļšāļģ āļšි⎃ි⎀āļš්‌ ⎃ිāļ¯ු⎀āļą්āļą āļ‰āļŠāļš්‌ āļąැ⎄ැ.

⎀ීāļģ⎀ං⎁ āļšිāļēāļąāˇ€ා ⎀āļœේ ⎆ොāļą්⎃ේāļšා ⎃āļš්‌⎀ිāļ­ි ⎀āļœෙāļēි

⎀ීāļģ⎀ං⎁ āļšිāļēāļąāˇ€ා ⎀āļœේ ⎆ොāļą්⎃ේāļšා ⎃āļš්‌⎀ිāļ­ි ⎀āļœෙāļēිāļ¸āļ¸ āļ…āˇ„āˇƒිāļą් ⎀ැāļ§ුāļĢු āļ¸ිāļąි⎄ෙāļš්‌ āļąො⎀ෙāļēි āļšිāļēāļą්āļąේ āļšāļģāļą්āļą āļ´ු⎅ු⎀āļą් āļ¯ේ ⎀ිāļ­āļģāļēිāļĸāļąāļ´āļ­ි āļ¸āˇ„ිāļą්āļ¯ āļģාāļĸāļ´āļš්‍⎂ āļļොāļģැāļŊ්āļŊේāļ¯ී āļšිāļēāļēි⎁ිāļģාāļą් āļģāļĢ⎃ිං⎄āļœāļ¸ෙāļ­්, āļąāļœāļģāļēෙāļ­් āļĸāļąāļ­ා⎀āļœේ āļ´්‍āļģ⎁්āļą āļ¸āļ§ āļ…āļ¸ුāļ­ු⎀ෙāļą් āļšි⎀āļēුāļ­ු āļąෑ. āļ¸āļ¸ āļœිāļģු⎀ාāļ´āļ­්āļ­ු⎀ේ āļœāļ¸āļšිāļą් āļšො⎅āļšāļ§ āļ†āļ´ු āļšෙāļąෙāļš්‌. āļŊāļļāļą 26 ⎀ැāļąිāļ¯ාāļēිāļą් āļ´āˇƒු⎀ āļ¸ේ āļģāļ§ේ āļĸāļąāļ­ා⎀āļœේ ⎄ෙāļ§ āļ¯āˇ€āˇƒ āļē⎄āļ´āļ­් āļšāļģāļ¸ිāļą් āļģāļ§ āˇƒං⎀āļģ්āļ°āļąāļē āļšāļģāļą්āļąේ āļēෑāļēි āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ි āļ¸āˇ„ිāļą්āļ¯ āļģාāļĸāļ´āļš්‍⎂ āļ¸āˇ„āļ­ා āļ´ැ⎀ැ⎃ීāļē.āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ි⎀āļģāļēා āļ¸ේ āļļ⎀ āļšිāļēා ⎃ිāļ§ිāļēේ āļ´āˇƒුāļœිāļēāļ¯ා āļļොāļģැāļŊ්āļŊ āļšැāļ¸්āļļāļŊ් āļ´ිāļ§ිāļēේ āļ´ැ⎀ැāļ­ි āļ‘.āļĸ.āļąි.⎃. āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ි⎀āļģāļĢ āļģැāļŊිāļē āļ…āļ¸āļ­āļ¸ිāļąි.āļļොāļģැāļŊ්āļŊ āļ‘āļš්‌⎃āļ­් āļĸāļąāļ­ා āļąිāļ¯āˇ„āˇƒ්‌ ⎃āļą්āļ°ාāļąāļēේ ⎃ං⎀ිāļ°ාāļēāļš āļ­ිāļŊංāļœ āˇƒුāļ¸āļ­ිāļ´ාāļŊ āļ¸āˇ„āļ­ා ⎀ි⎃ිāļą් āļ¸ෙāļ¸ āļģැāļŊිāļē ⎃ං⎀ිāļ°ාāļąāļē āļšāļģ āļ­ිāļļූ āļ…āļ­āļģ āļ…āļ­ි⎀ි⎁ාāļŊ āļĸāļąāļšාāļēāļš්‌ āļŠāļ§ āˇƒāˇ„āļˇාāļœී ⎀ී ⎃ිāļ§ිāļē⎄.āļ¸ෙ⎄ිāļ¯ී āļ­āˇ€āļ¯ුāļģāļ§āļ­් āļšāļ­ා āļšāˇ… āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ි āļ¸āˇ„ිāļą්āļ¯ āļģාāļĸāļ´āļš්‍⎂ āļ¸āˇ„āļ­ා,āļ´āˇƒුāļœිāļē āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ි⎀āļģāļĢāļē ⎀ෙāļŊා⎀ේ, āļ¸āļ§ āļļොāļģැāļŊ්āļŊ āļĸāļąāļ­ා⎀ āļ‡āļ¸āļ­ීāļ¸āļ§ āļąො⎄ැāļšි ⎀ුāļĢා. āļ’āļšāļ§ āˇ„ේāļ­ු⎀ ⎀ුāļĢේ āļ†āļģāļš්‍⎂āļš āˇ„ේāļ­ූāļą් āļ¸āļ­ āļ¸āļ§ āļļොāļģැāļŊ්āļŊ āļģැ⎃්‌⎀ීāļ¸ āļ…āļ¸āļ­āļą්āļą āļ‘āļ´ා āļšිāļēāļŊා āļšිāļēāļ´ු āļąි⎃ා. āļ‘āļ¯ා āļ’ āļģැ⎃්‌⎀ීāļ¸ āļ­ිāļļ්āļļේ āļœොāļŠāļš්‌ āļģෑ ⎀ෙāļŊා.āļ¯ැāļą් āļ‘⎄ෙāļ¸ āļ†āļģāļš්‍⎂ා⎀ ⎃āļ¸්āļļāļą්āļ° āļ´්‍āļģ⎁්āļąāļēāļš්‌ āļąෑ. āļ’āļšāļ§ āˇ„ේāļ­ු⎀ āļšොāļ§ිāļēා āļšāļ´ෝāļ­ි āļšිāļģීāļ¸āļēි.āļ¸āļ§ āļ…āļ´ේ āļ†āļ¯āļģāļĢීāļē āļĸāļąāļ­ා⎀ āļģāļ§ āļļාāļģāļ¯ෙāļą āˇ€ිāļ§ āļģāļ§ āļ¯ෙāļšāļ§ āļļෙāļ¯ිāļŊāļēි āļ­ිāļļුāļĢේ. ⎀ෙāļąāļ¸ āļˇූāļ¸ිāļˇාāļœāļēāļš්‌ āļ¸ු⎄ුāļ¯ෙāļą් āļ­ුāļąෙāļą් āļ¯ෙāļšāļš්‌ ⎀ිāļ­āļģāļš්‌ āļąෙ⎀ෙāļēි āļšොāļ§ිāļą්āļ§ āļšāļ´්āļ´āļ¸් āļ‘āļšāļ­ු āļšāļģāļą්āļąāļ­්, ⎀ෙāļąāļ¸ āļŠāˇ…āļ¸් ⎄ැāļŗුāļąුāļ¸්āļ´āļ­් āļ­ිāļļුāļĢා. āļ…āļ´ිāļ§ āļ‘āļ¯ා āļēුāļ¯්āļ° āļšāļģāļą්āļą āˇƒිāļ¯්āļ°āˇ€ුāļĢේ ⎀ෙāļąāļ¸ āļģāļ§āļš්‌ āļ‘āļš්‌āļš. āļļැāļģි ⎀ෙāļŊා⎀āļ­් āļŊෝāļšāļēේ āļ‘āļš āļģāļ§āļš්‌ ⎄ෝ āļŠāˇ…āļ¸ āļ´ි⎅ිāļ…āļģāļą් āļ­ිāļļුāļĢ āļąāļ¸් āļ­āļ­්āļ­්⎀āļē āļļāļģāļ´āļ­āˇ… ⎀ෙāļąāˇ€ා. āļ…āļ´ිāļ§ āļ‘āļ¯ා āļŊැāļļුāļĢේ āļ´ාāļģ්āļŊිāļ¸ේāļą්āļ­ු⎀ේ āļšāļŽා āļąාāļēāļšāˇ€āļģāļēා⎀ āļ­ෝāļģා āļ´āļ­් āļšāļģāļœāļą්āļą āļļැāļģි āļ†āļĢ්‌āļŠු⎀āļš්‌. ⎄āļ¸ුāļ¯ා⎀ ⎁āļš්‌āļ­ිāļ¸āļ­් āļšāļģāļą්āļą āļ…āļ´ි āļšāļ§āļēුāļ­ු āļšāˇ…ා. ⎄āļ¸ුāļ¯ා⎀ ⎁āļš්‌āļ­ිāļ¸āļ­් āļšිāļģීāļ¸ āļąි⎃ි āļŊෙ⎃ āļšāˇ…āļ¸āļąාāļšāļģāļĢāļē āļšāˇ…ා. āļ…āļ´ි āļēුāļ¯්āļ° āļšāļģāļą āļ…āļ­āļģේ āļ¸ු⎅ු āļŊෝāļšෙāļ¸ āļ†āļģ්āļŽිāļšāļē āļšāļŠා ⎀ැāļ§ෙāļą්āļą āļœāļ­්āļ­ා. āļŊෝāļšāļēේ āļ…ංāļš āļ‘āļšේ āļļැංāļšු ⎃ිāļēāļēāļš්‌ āļ´āļ¸āļĢ āļšāļŠා ⎀ැāļ§ුāļĢා. āļąāļ¸ුāļ­් āļ…āļ´ි āļ¸ේ āļēුāļ¯්āļ¯ෙāļ­් āļšāļģāļ¸ිāļą් āļģāļ§ේ āļ†āļģ්āļŽිāļšāļē āļģැāļšāļœāļ­්āļ­ා. āļ…āļ´ි āļģාāļĸ්‍āļē āļ¯ේāļ´āˇ… āļ‘āļšāļš්‌⎀āļ­් ⎀ිāļšුāļĢු⎀ේ āļąෑ. āļ¸ු⎅ු āļŊෝāļšāļēāļ¸ āļ†āļģ්āļŽිāļš āļ…āļģ්āļļුāļ¯āļēāļš āļœිāļŊෙāļ¯්āļ¯ී āļ…āļ´ිāļ§ āļ†āˇ„ාāļģ ⎄ිāļŸāļē āļ¯ැāļąුāļąේ āļąෑ. āļŊෝāļšāļēේ āļ­ෙāļŊ් āļ…āļģ්āļļුāļ¯āļēāļš āļœිāļŊෙāļ¯්āļ¯ී āļ…āļ´ිāļ§ āļ…⎀⎁ZH āļ‰āļą්āļ°āļą āļ‰āļģාāļąāļēෙāļą් āļŊāļļාāļœāļą්āļą āļ…āļ´āļ§ āˇ„ැāļšි⎀ුāļĢා. āļ…āļ´ි āļļāļŊāļēāļ§ āļ‘āļą āˇ€ිāļ§ āˇ€ිāļ¯ුāļŊි āļ…āļģ්āļļුāļ¯āļēāļš්‌ āļ¸āļ­ු⎀āļą āļļ⎀āļ§ āļ…āļąා⎀ැāļšි āļ´āˇ…⎀ුāļĢා. āļąāļ¸ුāļ­් āļ…āļ´ි ⎀ිāļ¯ුāļŊිāļē āļšැāļ´ු⎀ේ āļąෑ. āļ¸āˇ„ාāļ¸ාāļģ්āļœ āļ‰āļ¯ිāļšāˇ…ා. āļ¸ාāļģ්āļœ āļ‰āļ¯ිāļšāˇ…ා. āļœāļ¸ේ āļ´ාāļģ⎀āļŊ් āļšොāļą්āļš්‍āļģීāļ§්‌ āļšāˇ…ා. ⎀ිāļ¯ුāļŊි āļļāļŊාāļœාāļģ āļ‰āļ¯ිāļšāˇ…ා. ⎀āļģාāļēāļą් āļ´āˇ„āļš්‌ āļ‰āļ¯ි⎀ෙāļąāˇ€ා.āļąි⎀ා⎃ āļēෝāļĸāļąා āļš්‍āļģāļ¸ āļ‡āļģāļšු⎀ා. āļ…āļ´ි āļ’ āļ†āļšාāļģāļēāļ§ āļ‰āļ¯ිāļģිāļēāļ§āļ¸ āļœිāļēා. āļ…āˇ€āˇƒාāļąāļēේ āļ¯ී ⎄āļ¸ුāļ¯ා⎀ āļĸāļąāļ­ා⎀ āļ‘āļšāļ§ āļ‘āļšāļ­ු āļšāˇ…ා. āļģāļ§āļ§ āļ‘āļšāļ­ු āļšāļģāļœෙāļą āļģāļ§ āļąිāļ¯āˇ„āˇƒ්‌ āļšāļģāļœāļ­්āļ­ා. āļ¸ේ āļ­්‍āļģ⎃්‌āļ­āˇ€ාāļ¯āļēāļ§ āļ‘āļģෙ⎄ි⎀ āļēුāļ¯්āļ°ෙ āļšāļģāļą āˇ€ිāļ§ āļ¸ා⎀ ⎄ොāļģෙāļš්‌ ⎀ංāļ ාāļšාāļģāļēෙāļš්‌ āļŊෙ⎃ āļ´ෙāļąුāļąේ āļąෑ. āļ‘āļ­āļšොāļ§ āļ¸āˇ„ිāļą්āļ¯ āˇ„ොāļŗāļēි. āļēුāļ¯්āļ°ෙ āļ¯ිāļąු⎀āļ§ āļ´āˇƒ්‌⎃ෙāļ­් āļ´්‍āļģ⎁්āļąāļēāļš්‌ āļ­ිāļļුāļĢේ āļąෑ. āļ¸ැāļ­ි⎀āļģāļĢāļē āļ´්‍āļģāļšා⎁āļēāļ§ āļ´āļ­්āļšāˇ… āļ´āˇƒු⎀āļēි āļ¸ේ āļ…⎀āļŊාāļ¯ āļąāļœāļą්āļą āļœāļ­්āļ­ේ. āļ¸ේ⎀ා āļ¸āļŠ āļ´්‍āļģāļ ාāļģ.āļ¸āļ§ āļ…⎀ුāļģුāļ¯ු ⎄āļ­āˇ…ි⎄āļš āļ¯ේ⎁āļ´ාāļŊāļą āļ…āļ­්āļ¯ැāļšීāļ¸් āļ­ිāļēෙāļąāˇ€ා. āļ¸āļœේ āļ…āļ­ේ āļ¸āļŠ āļąෑ. āļŊේ āļąෑ. āļ¸āļ¸ āļĸāļąāļ­ා⎀ ⎀ි⎁්⎀ා⎃ āļšāļģāļŊāļēි āļ¸ෙāļ­āļąāļ§ āļ†āˇ€ේ. āļœිāļģු⎀ාāļ´āļ­්āļ­ු⎀ේ āļœāļ¸āļš āļ‰āļŗāļŊāļēි āļ¸āļ¸ āļ¸ෙāļ­āļąāļ§ āļ†āˇ€ේ. āļ¸āˇ„ා ⎀ෙāļŊ්āļēාāļēāļš්‌ ⎅āļŸ āļ­āļ¸āļēි āļ¸āļœේ āļąිāˇ€āˇƒ āļ­ිāļļුāļĢේ. āļ’ āļˆāļ­ āļ´ිāļ§ි⎃āļģ āļœāļ¸āļš āļ‰āļŗāļŊāļēි āļ¸āļ¸ āļšො⎅āļšāļ§ āļ†āˇ€ේ. āļšො⎅āļšāļ§ āļ‡āˇ€ිāļ­් āļąැ⎀āļ­ිāļŊා ⎄ිāļ§ිāļēේ āļļොāļģැāļŊ්āļŊේ. āļ¸āļ¸ āļšො⎅āļš āļąාāļŊāļą්āļ¯āļēāļ§āļ­් āļ´āˇƒ්‌⎃ේ āļ­āļģ්⎃්‌āļ§āļą් ⎀ිāļ¯්‍āļēාāļŊāļēāļ§āļ­් āļœිāļēා. āļ¸ේ āļļොāļģැāļŊ්āļŊේ āļ´ාāļģ⎀āļŊ් ⎄ැāļ¸ āļ‘āļšāļš්‌āļ¸ āļ¸āļ¸ āļ¯āļą්āļąāˇ€ා. āļ’ āļšාāļŊේ āļ¸āļ¸ āļ¸ේ ⎄ැāļ¸āļ­ැāļąāļ¸ āļ‡āˇ€ිāļ¯āļŊා āļœිāļēා. āļ¸āļ¸ āļ…āˇ„āˇƒිāļą් ⎀ැāļ§ුāļą āļšෙāļąෙāļš්‌ āļąෙ⎀ෙāļēි. āļ¸ිāļąි⎃්‌⎃ුāļą්āļœේ āļ¯ුāļš, āļšāļŗු⎅, ⎃āļ­ුāļ§, ⎃ැāļąāˇƒුāļ¸ āļœැāļą āļ¸āļ§ āļ…āļ¸ුāļ­ු⎀ෙāļą් āļšිāļēāļą්āļą āļ•āļąෙ āļąෑ. āļąāļœāļģāļēāļ­්, āļœāļ¸āļ­් āļ¸āļ¸ āˇ„ොāļŗāļ§ āļ¯āļą්āļąāˇ€ා. āļ¸ේ āļ¸ිāļąි⎃ුāļą්āļœේ ⎄āļ¯āˇ€āļ­ āļ¸āļ¸ āˇ„āļŗුāļąāļąāˇ€ා. āļ’ āļąි⎃ා āļ­āļ¸āļēි āļ¸ේ āļģāļ§ āˇƒං⎀āļģ්āļ°āļąāļē āļšāļģāļą්āļą āļ¸āļ§ āļ´ු⎅ු⎀āļą්. āļ¸āļ¸ āļ¸āˇ„ිāļą්āļ¯ āļ ිāļą්āļ­āļą 2005 āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ි⎀āļģāļĢāļēේ āļ¯ී āļ‰āļ¯ිāļģිāļ´āļ­් āļšāˇ…ා. āļ‘āļ¯ා āļ¸āļ¸ āļ´ොāļģොāļą්āļ¯ු ⎀ූ āļ´āļģිāļ¯ි āļēුāļ¯්āļ°āļē āļ…āˇ€āˇƒāļą් āļšāˇ…ා. āļœෞāļģ⎀ාāļą්⎀ිāļ­ āˇƒාāļ¸āļēāļš්‌ āļ‹āļ¯ා āļšāˇ…ා. āļ’āļšීāļē āļģāļ§ āļ­āˇ„⎀ුāļģු āļšāˇ…ා. āļ‘āļ¯ා āļ’ āļ¸āˇ„ිāļą්āļ¯ āļ ිāļą්āļ­āļąāļēේ āļšāļģුāļĢු ⎀āļŊිāļą් ⎃ිāļēāļēāļ§ 94 āļš්‌ āļ‰āļ§ුāļšāˇ…ා. 2010 āļ¸āļ¸ āļ‰āļ¯ිāļģිāļ´āļ­් āļšāˇ… āļ´්‍āļģāļšා⎁āļąāļēේ āļšāļģුāļĢු ⎃ිāļēāļēāļ§ āˇƒිāļēāļēāļš්‌āļ¸ āļ‰āļ§ු āļšāļģāļąāˇ€ා āļšිāļēāļŊා āļ¸āļ¸ āļ´ොāļģොāļą්āļ¯ු ⎀ෙāļąāˇ€ා. āļ¸āļ¸ āļļැāļģි āļąāļ¸් āļļෑ āļšිāļēāļąāˇ€ා. āļ¸ේ āļ¸āˇ„ිāļą්āļ¯ āļ´ු⎅ු⎀āļą් āļąāļ¸් āļ´ු⎅ු⎀āļą් āļšිāļēāļąāˇ€ා. āļ’ āļąි⎃ා āļ­āļ¸āļēි āļģුāļ´ිāļēāļŊ් āļ¯āˇƒāļ¯āˇ„āˇƒāļšිāļą් āļģාāļĸ්‍āļē ⎃ේ⎀āļš āˇ€ැāļ§ුāļ´් ⎀ැāļŠිāļšāļģāļąāˇ€ා āļšිāļēāļŊා āļąොāļšි⎀්⎀ේ. ⎀ි⎃ිāļ¯āˇ„āˇƒāļšිāļą් ⎀ැāļŠිāļšāļģāļąāˇ€ා āļšිāļēāļŊා āļąොāļšි⎀්⎀ේ.āļ…āļ´ි āļ¸ේ āļģāļ§ේ āļ¯āļģු⎀āļą්āļœේ āļ…āļąාāļœāļ­āļē ⎃ුāļģāļšිāļąāˇ€ා. āļ‹āļ´āļą්, āļąූāļ´āļą් āļ¯āļģු⎀āļą්āļœේ ⎄ෙāļ§ āļē⎄āļ´āļ­් āļšāļģāļąāˇ€ා. āļ´ැāļŊ්āļ´āļ­් āļĸී⎀ිāļ­ āļœෙ⎀āļą āˇƒිāļēāļŊු āļ¯ෙāļąාāļ§ āļąි⎀ා⎃ āļŊāļļාāļ¯ෙāļąāˇ€ා. āļ´ැāļŊ්āļ´āļ­්⎀āļŊ āļĸී⎀āļ­්⎀āļą āļĸāļąāļ­ා⎀ ⎃ැāļ´āˇ€āļ­් āļĸී⎀ිāļ­āļēāļš්‌ āļœෙ⎀āļą්āļą āļ…⎀⎁්‍āļē āļšāļ§āļēුāļ­ු āļēොāļ¯āļąāˇ€ා. āļ¯ැāļą් āļ´ිāļģි⎃āļš්‌ ⎄ොāļģ āļœි⎀ි⎃ුāļ¸් āļ…āļ­්⎃āļą් āļšāļģāļŊා. āļ‹āļ­ුāļģු āļąැāļœෙāļąāˇ„ිāļģāļ§ āˇƒ්‌⎀āļēං āļ´ාāļŊāļąāļēāļš්‌ āļ¯ෙāļą්āļą. āļŠāˇ…āļ¸ āļ†āļ´āˇƒු āļ¯ෙāļą්āļą āļ´ොāļģොāļą්āļ¯ු ⎀ෙāļŊා. āļ…āļ´ි āļ¯ිāļąාāļœāļ­් āļģāļ§ āļšෑāļŊි ⎀āļŊāļ§ āļšāļŠāļą්āļą āļ¯ෙāļą්āļą āļļෑ. āļ‹āļ­ුāļģු āļąැāļœෙāļąāˇ„ිāļģ āļ’āļšාāļļāļ¯්āļ° āļšāļģāļą්āļą āļģāļ§ āļ´ා⎀ාāļ¯ෙāļą්āļą āļ¸āļ¸ āļ‰āļŠāļ¯ෙāļą්āļąේ āļąෑ āļšිāļēāļŊා āļ¸āļ­āļš්‌ āļšāļģāļą්āļą āļ•āļąේ. āļ†āļģ්. ⎃āļ¸්āļļāļą්āļ°āļą් āļ¸ේ āļšාāļģāļĢා āļ´ි⎅ිāļļāļŗ āļ¸āļ§ āļšි⎀්⎀ා. āļ…āļģ ⎀ිāļ¸āļŊ් ⎀ීāļģ⎀ං⎁ āļšිāļēāļąāˇ€ා ⎀āļœේ ⎆ොāļą්⎃ේāļšා ⎃āļš්‌⎀ිāļ­ි ⎀āļœෙāļēි. āļ…āļ´ි āļšිāļēāļą්āļąේ āļ”āļļේ ⎀āļ§ිāļąා āļĄāļą්āļ¯āļē āļ…⎄āļš āļ¯ාāļą්āļą āļ‘āļ´ා. āļ‘āļ¯ා āļšාāļ­්āļ­āļą්āļšුāļŠි⎀āļŊ āļ´āļŊ්āļŊිāļēāļš āļēාāļĨා āļšāļģāļ¸ිāļą් ⎃ිāļ§ි 104 āļ¯ෙāļąāļšු āļ¸āļģාāļ¯ැāļ¸ු⎀ා. āļ’ āˇ€āļœේ ⎀ි⎁ාāļŊ āļĸී⎀ිāļ­ āˇ€ිāļąා⎁āļēāļšිāļą් āļ´āˇƒු⎀ āļ­āļ¸āļēි āļ…āļ´ි āļ…āļ¯ āļąිāļ¯āˇ„āˇƒ āļŊāļļා ⎃ිāļ§ිāļą්āļąේ.āļ…āļ´ි āļ¸ේ āļģāļ§ේ āļģාāļĸ්‍āļē āļ¯ේāļ´āˇ… āļšොāļŊ්āļŊ āļšāļąāˇ€ා āļšිāļēāļŊා āļļොāļģු āļ´්‍āļģāļ ාāļģ āļšāļģāļąāˇ€ා. āļ¸ේ āļļොāļģු āļ´්‍āļģāļ ාāļģ āļšāļģāļŊා āļģāļ§ේ āļĸāļąāļ­ා⎀ āļ¸ු⎅ා āļšāļģāļą්āļą āļļෑ. āļ¸āļ¸ āˇ€āļģāļš්‌ āļ¸ේ āļ¯ේ⎁āļ´ාāļŊāļąāļē āļąි⎃ා ⎄ිāļģāļœෙāļēāļ§ āļœිāļēා. āļąāļ¸ුāļ­් āļ¸āļ¸ āļ¯ේ⎁āļ´ාāļŊāļą āļ´āļŊිāļœැāļąීāļ¸් āļšāļģāļą්āļą āˇƒූāļ¯ාāļąāļ¸් āļąෑ. āļ¸ේ āļģāļ§ āļąිāļ¯āˇ„āˇƒ්‌ āļšāˇ…ා ⎀ිāļ­āļģāļš්‌ āļąෙ⎀ෙāļēි ⎃ං⎀āļģ්āļ°āļąāļē āļšිāļģීāļ¸āļ­් āļ¸āļ§ āļ´ැ⎀ැāļģුāļĢු ⎀āļœāļšීāļ¸āļš්‌. āļ¸ේ āļģāļ§ේ āļĸāļąāļ­ා⎀āļ§ āˇƒැāļ´āˇ€āļ­්, āļąිāļ¯āˇ„āˇƒ්‌ āļĸී⎀ිāļ­āļēāļš්‌ āļŊāļļාāļ¯ෙāļą්āļą āļ¸āļ§ āļ´ු⎅ු⎀āļą්. āļ’ āˇƒāļŗāˇ„ා āļŊāļļāļą 26 ⎀ැāļąිāļ¯ා āļļුāļŊāļ­් āļšො⎅āļē āļ‰āļ¯ිāļģිāļ´ිāļ§ āļšāļ­ිāļģāļē āļœāˇƒා āļ¸ේ āļĸāļēāļœ්‍āļģ⎄āļĢāļē ⎀ිāļĸāļēāļœ්‍āļģ⎄āļĢāļēāļš්‌ āļšāļģāļą්āļą. āļ”āļļāļ§ āˇƒුāļļ āļ…āļąාāļœāļ­āļēāļš්‌.āļĸාāļ­ිāļš āļąිāļ¯āˇ„āˇƒ්‌ āļ´ෙāļģāļ¸ුāļĢ āˇƒāļˇාāļ´āļ­ි āļ´ාāļģ්āļŊිāļ¸ේāļą්āļ­ු āļ¸āļą්āļ­්‍āļģී ⎀ිāļ¸āļŊ් ⎀ීāļģ⎀ං⎁ āļ¸āˇ„āļ­ාāļ¸ේ āļ‘⎅ැāļš āļ­ිāļļෙāļą්āļąේ āļ¸ෙāļģāļ§ āļ´āˇ€āļ­්⎀āļą āˇ€ැāļ¯āļœāļ­්āļ¸ āļ­ීāļģāļĢාāļ­්āļ¸āļš āļ¸ැāļ­ි⎀āļģāļĢāļēāļš්‌. āļģāļ§ේ āļ…āļąාāļœāļ­āļē āļ´ි⎅ිāļļāļŗāˇ€ āļ­ීāļą්āļ¯ු āļœāļą්āļą āļ¸ැāļ­ි⎀āļģāļĢāļē āļ¸ෙāļēāļēි. āļģāļ§ේ āļšොāļ­ැāļą āļļැāļŊු⎀āļ­් āļ¸ේ āļģැ⎃්‌⎀āļą āļĸāļąāļ­ා⎀ āļšිāļēāļą්āļąේ āļ¸āˇ„ිāļą්āļ¯ āļģාāļĸāļ´āļš්‍⎂ āļē⎅ිāļ­් āļ¸ේ āļģāļ§ේ āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ි ⎀ෙāļąāˇ€ා āļšිāļēāļą āļ‘āļš āļ´āļ¸āļĢāļš්‌ āļąෙ⎀ෙāļēි. āļ¸ෙāļē ⎀ිāļĸāļēāļœ්‍āļģ⎄āļĢāļēāļš්‌ ⎀āļą āļļ⎀āļēි.āļģāļ§ āˇƒං⎀āļģ්āļ°āļąāļē āļšāļģāļą්āļą, ⎄ැāļŠāļœāˇƒāļą්āļą, āļœොāļŠāļąāļœāļą්āļą, ⎃ෞāļˇාāļœ්‍āļē⎀āļ­් āļšāļģāļą්āļą āļ­ිāļļෙāļą āļ¸ැāļ­ි⎀āļģāļĢāļē āļ¸ෙāļēāļēි. āļ…āļŊිāļēා āļ¸ේ āļ¸ැāļ­ි⎀āļģāļĢāļēේ āļąෑ. āļ­āˇ€āļ­් āļšුāļĸීāļ­ āˇ€āļą āļąි⎃ා āļ¸ැāļ­ි⎀āļģāļĢāļēāļ§ āļģāļąිāļŊ් āļ†āˇ€ේ āļąෑ. ⎆ොāļą්⎃ේāļšා āļšāļģāļœැ⎄ු⎀ා. ⎆ොāļą්⎃ේāļšා ⎄ිāļ­ු⎀ා āļēුāļ¯්āļ¯ේ āļšāļģāļŊා āļŊāļļāļ´ු āļšීāļģ්āļ­ිāļēෙāļą් āļšොāļ§āˇƒāļš්‌ āļ”⎄ුāļ§āļ­් āļ­ිāļēෙāļąāˇ€ා āļšිāļēāļŊා. āļŊāļļāļą 26 ⎀ැāļąිāļ¯ා ⎆ොāļą්⎃ේāļšාāļ§ āļ‡āļ¸āļģිāļšා⎀āļ§ āļēāļą්āļą āļœු⎀āļą් āļ§ිāļšāļ§්‌āļ´āļ­් ⎀ෙāļą් āļšāļģāļą්āļą āˇƒිāļ¯්āļ°āˇ€ෙāļŊා.āļ¸ේ ⎆ොāļą්⎃ේāļšා āļēුāļ¯්āļ¯ෙ āļšāļģāļ´ු āļģāļĢ⎀ිāļģු⎀āļą් āļĸාāļ­්‍āļēāļą්āļ­āļģ āļ…āļ´āļšීāļģ්āļ­ිāļēāļ§ āļ´āļ­් āļšāˇ…ා. āļ¯ැāļą් āļ‹āļą්āļ¯ෑ āļšිāļēāļąāˇ€ා āļ¸ේ āļēුāļ¯්āļ¯ෙ āļ”āļš්‌āļšොāļ¸ āļšāˇ…ේ āļ‹āļą්āļąැ⎄ැāļŊු. āļ‘āļ­āļšොāļ§ āļœු⎀āļą් ⎄āļ¸ුāļ¯ාāļ´āļ­ිāļ§ āļ…āļĢ āļ¯ුāļą්āļąෙāļ­් ⎆ොāļą්⎃ේāļšාāļ¯? āļąා⎀ිāļš āˇ„āļ¸ුāļ¯ාāļ´āļ­ිāļ§āļ­් āļ‹āļ´āļ¯ෙ⎃්‌ āļ¯ුāļą්āļąේ āļ‹āļą්āļ¯ැāļ¯? āļ´ොāļŊි⎃්‌āļ´āļ­ිāļ§ āļ‹āļ´āļ¯ෙ⎃්‌ āļ¯ුāļą්āļąෙāļ­් āļ‹āļą්āļ¯ැāļ¯? ⎆ොāļą්⎃ේāļšාāļ§ āļąිāļēෝāļœ āļ¯ුāļą්āļąෙāļ­් ⎆ොāļą්⎃ේāļšාāļ¯? āļ­āˇ€ āļ§ිāļš āļ¯āˇ€āˇƒāļšිāļą් āļ¸ේ āļ´ුāļ­්‍āļģāļēා āļšිāļēāļēි āļ…āļ¸්āļ¸ āļ­ාāļ­්āļ­ා āļąෙ⎀ෙāļēි, āļ¸āļ¸āļ¸ āļ­āļ¸āļēි āļ­āļąි⎀āļ¸ āļ‰āļ´āļ¯ුāļąේ āļšිāļēāļŊා.āļēුāļ¯්āļ¯ේ āļ…āˇ€āˇƒාāļą āļšāļģāļą āļšොāļ§ āˇ†ොāļą්⎃ේāļšා āļŊංāļšා⎀ේ ⎄ිāļ§ිāļēේ āļąෑ. āļ‘āļ­āļšොāļ§ āļ”⎄ු ⎄ිāļ§ිāļēේ āļ ීāļąāļēේ. āļ ීāļąāļēේ āļēුāļ¯ āļ…⎀ි ⎃āļ¸ාāļœāļ¸āļš්‌ āļ‘āļš්‌āļš āļœāļąුāļ¯ෙāļąු āļšāļģāļą්āļąāļēි āļ”⎄ු āļ‘āļģāļ§āļ§ āļœිāļēේ. āļ’ āˇƒāļ¸ාāļœāļ¸ āļœාāļąේ ⎄ෝāļ§āļŊ් āļļිāļŊ් āļœෙ⎀āļŊා. āļšාāļŊා āļļීāļŊා āļąාāļŊා āļ‘āļēා āļ‘⎄ෙ ⎃āļ­ුāļ§ු ⎀ෙāļ¯්āļ¯ිāļēි āļąāļą්āļ¯ිāļšāļŠාāļŊ්⎀āļŊ āļ…āˇ€āˇƒāļą් ⎃āļ§āļą āˇ€ුāļĢේ. āļ‘⎄ෙāļ¸ āļ†āļēුāļ° āļœේāļą්āļą āļģāļ§ āļœිāļē ⎆ොāļą්⎃ේāļšා āļ¸ෙāļģāļ§āļ§ āļ‘āļąāļšොāļ§ āļēුāļ¯්āļ¯ෙ āļ‰āˇ€āļģāļēි. āļ‘āļ¯ා āļ’ āļšāˇ… āļœāļąුāļ¯ෙāļąු⎀āļ§ āļ…āļąු⎀ āļ¸ෙāļģāļ§āļ§ āļ†āļēුāļ° āļąැ⎀āļš්‌ āļ†āˇ€ා. āļ’āļš āļ¯ැāļą් āļ‘āļ´ා āļšිāļēāļŊා āļ†āļ´āˇƒු ⎄āļģ⎀āļŊා āļē⎀āļą්āļą āļœෝāļ¨ාāļˇāļē āļģාāļĸāļ´āļš්‍⎂ āļ¸āˇ„āļ­්āļ­āļēා āļ­ීāļģāļĢāļē āļšāˇ…ා. "āļ‡āļœේ ⎀ෛāļģāļē" āļ”⎄ුāļœේ ⎀ෛāļģāļē āļļ⎀āļ§ āļ´āļ­්⎀ුāļĢේ āļŠāļ§ āļ´āˇƒු⎀āļēි.āļ’ āļ´ුāļ­්‍āļģāļēāļ§ āļ…āļ¯ āļēුāļ¯්āļ¯ෙāļ§ āˇ€āˇ… āļšāļ´āļ´ු āļģāļąිāļŊ් ⎀ිāļš්‍āļģāļ¸āˇƒිං⎄ āļ‘āļš්‌āļš āļ‘āļšāļ§ āļ‰āļą්āļą āļ´ු⎅ු⎀āļą්āļ¯? āļ…āļ¯ āļģāļąිāļŊුāļēි, ⎃ෝāļ¸ෙāļēි āļ‘āļšāļ§ āļļāļ¯ාāļœෙāļą āļ‰āļą්āļą āļĄාāļēාāļģූāļ´āļēāļš්‌ āļ‰ංāļœ්‍āļģී⎃ි āļ´ු⎀āļ­්āļ´āļ­āļš āļ´āˇ… āļšāļģāļŊා āļ­ිāļļුāļĢා. āļ‘āļ¯ා āļĸ.⎀ි.āļ´ෙ. āļąිāļģ්āļ¸ාāļ­ෘ āļ†āļ¯āļģāļĢීāļē āļģෝ⎄āļĢ āˇ€ිāļĄේ⎀ීāļģ āˇƒāˇ„ෝāļ¯āļģāļēා āļļොāļģැāļŊ්āļŊේāļ¯ී āļ…āļ¸ු āļ…āļ¸ු⎀ේ āļ¸āļģා āļ¯ැāļ¸ු⎀ āļ‹āļą් āļēා ⎀ෙāļŊා. āļ¸ේ āļģැ⎅ āļ‘āļšāļ§ āļ‘āļšāļ­ු ⎀ුāļĢේ āļšො⎄ොāļ¸āļ¯? āļšිāļēāļą්āļąේ āļ¸āļ§ āļ´ෙāļģ āļģāļ§.. āļšිāļēāļŊා āļ…āļąේ āļ¸āļœේ āļšāļ§.āļ¸āļąෝ āļœāļąේ⎂āļą් āļ…āļ¯ āļ¸ේ ⎄⎀ුāļŊෙ. āļ‘āļ¯ා āļēුāļ¯්āļ¯ෙ ⎀ෙāļąāļšොāļ§ āļļāļ§āˇ„ිāļģ āļąිāļēෝāļĸිāļ­āļēāļą් āļŊංāļšා⎀āļ§ āļ‘āļąāļšොāļ§ āļ¯ෙāļ¸āˇ… āļ­āļģුāļĢāļēෝ āļ…āļ­ුāļģුāļ¯āļą් āļšිāļēāļŊා āļļෝāļŠ්āļŊෑāļŊි āļ‹āˇƒ්‌⎃āļą් āļēුāļ¯්āļ¯ෙ āļąāļ­āļģ āļšāļģāļą්āļą āļšිāļēāļŊා āļšෑ āļœāˇ„āļ´ු āļąāļŊ්āļŊ āļ¸āļŊේ āļœāļąේ⎂āļą්. āļ…āļąෙāļš්‌ āļ´ැāļ­්āļ­ෙāļą් ⎄āļšීāļ¸්, āļ§ී. āļ‘āļą්. āļ’. āļ‘āļšāļ­් āļ‘āļš්‌āļš āļœි⎀ි⎃ුāļ¸් āļœāˇ„āļŊා. āļ¸ෙāļą්āļą āˇ†ොāļą් ⎃ේāļšාāļœේ ⎄⎀ුāļŊ. āļ§ී. āļ‘āļą්. āļ’. āļ‘āļš āļšිāļēāļą්āļąේ āļšොāļ§ිāļēāļœේ āļ´āļŊු⎀. āļ­්‍āļģ⎃්‌āļ­āˇ€ාāļ¯āļēāļ§ āļ´āļĢ āļ¯ෙāļą්āļą āļ­āļ¸āļēි ⎆ොāļą්⎃ේāļšා āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ි āļ…āļ´ේāļš්‍⎂āļšāļēා āļšāˇ…ේ. āļ§ී.āļ‘āļą්.āļ’. āļ‘āļš āļ‘āļš්‌āļš āļœāˇ„āļ´ු āļœි⎀ි⎃ුāļ¸ āļ´āļ­්āļ­āļģ⎀āļŊ āļ­ිāļļුāļĢා. āļ¸ේ āļ´ා⎀ාāļ¯ීāļ¸ āļļāļģāļ´āļ­āļŊāļēි. āļ§ී.āļ‘āļą්.āļ’ āˇ„ෙ⎀āļ­් āļ¯ෙāļ¸āˇ… āļĸාāļ­ිāļš āˇƒංāļ°ාāļąāļēāļ­් āļ‘āļš්‌āļš āˇ†ොāļą්⎃ේāļšා āļœāˇ„āļ´ු āļœි⎀ි⎃ුāļ¸ āļ´ි⎅ිāļļāļŗ āļ’ āļ¯ෙāļ¸āˇ… āļ¸āļą්āļ­්‍āļģී⎀āļģුāļ¸ āļšāļģුāļĢු āļšිāļēāļąāˇ€ා. āļšොāļą්āļ¯ේ⎃ි āļ­ිāļēෙāļąāˇ€ා. āļ¸ේ āļ´ා⎀ාāļ¯ීāļ¸ āļļāļģāļ´āļ­āļŊāļēි. ⎃āļ¸්āļļāļą්āļ°āļą්āļŊා āļąිāļšāļą් ⎆ොāļą්⎃ේāļšාāļ§ āļ‹āļ¯āˇ€් āļšāļģāļēිāļ¯?āļ…āļ´ි āļ…āļˇිāļēෝāļœ āļšāļģāļąāˇ€ා āļ´ු⎅ු⎀āļą් āļąāļ¸් āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ි⎀āļģāļĢāļēāļ§ āļ´ෙāļģාāļ­ු⎀ āļģāļąිāļŊ්, āļ¸āļąෝ, ⎆ොāļą්⎃ේāļšා, ⎃āļ¸්āļļāļą්āļ°āļą් āļ‘āļšāļ§ āˇ€ාāļŠි⎀ෙāļŊා āļ´ු⎀āļ­්āļ´āļ­් ⎃ාāļšāļ ්āļĄා⎀āļšāļ¯ී āļšිāļēāļą්āļą āļ¸ේ āļœි⎀ි⎃ුāļ¸ āļœැāļą. āļœි⎀ි⎃ුāļ¸ේ āļšොāļą්āļ¯ේ⎃ි āļ¸ොāļąāˇ€āļ¯ āļšිāļēāļŊා. āļ…āļ´ි āļ¯āļą්āļąāˇ€ා āļ¸ේ ⎄⎀ුāļŊāļ§ āļ¸ේ āļœāˇ„āļ´ු āļšොāļą්āļ¯ේ⎃ි āļ‘āļšāļ§ āˇ€ාāļŠි⎀ෙāļŊා āļšිāļēāļą්āļą āļļෑ. āļ¸ේ āļ´ා⎀ාāļ¯ීāļ¸ āļģāļ§āļ§ āļšිāļēāļą්āļą āļ’ āļ…āļēāļ§ āļļෑ. āļĄේ. ⎀ී. āļ´ී. āļ‘āļšāļ­් āļ…āļ¯ āļšāļ­ා āļąෑ. āļĄේ. ⎀ී. āļ´ී. āļ‘āļš āļšිāļēāļąāˇ€ා ⎆ොāļą්⎃ේāļšා āļœේ āļ†āļĢ්‌āļŠු⎀āļš āļ…āļœāļ¸ැāļ­ි ⎃āļģāļ­් āļąāļą්āļ¯ āˇƒිāļŊ්⎀ා āļŊු. āļģāļąිāļŊ් āļšිāļēāļąāˇ€ා āļ‘āļēාāļŊු ⎀ිāļ°ාāļēāļš āļ…āļœāļ¸ැāļ­ි. āļ¸ේāļš āļ…⎀ුāļŊāļš්‌. ⎆ොāļą්⎃ේāļšා ⎀ිāļ°ාāļēāļš āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ි, āļģāļąිāļŊ් ⎀ිāļ°ාāļēāļš āļ…āļœāļ¸ැāļ­ි. ⎃āļģāļ­් āļąāļą්āļ¯ āˇƒිāļŊ්⎀ා āļ‡āļœāļ¸ැāļ­ි.āļ¸ේ āļ…āļą්āļ­āļģ් āļĸාāļ­ිāļšāļē āļœොāļŠāļąāļœāļą āļ…⎀ුāļŊāļš්‌. āļ¸ිāļąීāļ¸āļģු āļ­්‍āļģ⎃්‌āļ­āˇ€ාāļ¯āļēāļ§ āļē⎅ි āļ´āļĢ āļ¯ෙāļą āˇƒෙāļŊ්āļŊāļ¸āļš්‌. āļ…āļ°ිāļģාāļĸ්‍āļē āļļāļŊ⎀ේāļœ āˇ€āļŊ ⎀ු⎀āļ¸āļąා āļ‰āˇ‚්āļ§ āļšāļģāļą āˇ„āˇ€ුāļŊāļš්‌. ⎆ොāļą්⎃ේāļšා ⎄ොāļģා ⎄ොāļģා āļšිāļēāļŊ āļģාāļĸāļ´āļš්‍⎂āļ§ āļšිāļēāļąāˇ€ා.āļšāˇ€ුāļ¯ āˇ„ොāļģා... ⎄āļēිāļšෝāļ´් ⎄ොāļģා, āļąීāļŊ ⎄ොāļģා, āļšāļ¸්āļļ ⎄ොāļģා, āļ´āļ§්‌āļ§ āˇ„ොāļģා.... āļĸāļąāļ­ා⎀ āļ’āļš āļ¯āļą්āļąāˇ€ා.āļŊāļļāļą 26 ⎀ැāļąිāļ¯ා āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ි⎀āļģāļĢāļēෙāļą් āļ¸āˇ„ිāļą්āļ¯ āļģාāļĸāļ´āļš්‍⎂ āļē⎅ිāļ­් āļ¸ේ āļģāļ§ේ āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ි ⎀ෙāļąāˇ€ා.āļ‘āļ¯ා 2005 āļ¯ී āļļāļŊāļē āļ‰āļŊ්āļŊු⎀ේ āļ­්‍āļģ⎃්‌āļ­āˇ€ාāļ¯āļē āļ´āļģාāļĸāļē āļšāļģāļŊා āļ¸ේ āļģāļ§ āļģāļšිāļą්āļąāļēි. āļ¸ෙ⎀āļģ āļĄāļą්āļ¯āļē āļ‰āļŊ්āļŊāļą්āļąේ āļģāļ§ āˇ„āļ¯āļą්āļąāļēි. āļģāļ§ āļœොāļŠāļąāļœāļą්āļąāļēි. ⎃ං⎀āļģ්āļ°āļąāļē āļšāļģāļą්āļąāļēි. ⎀ංāļ ා⎀, āļ¯ූ⎂āļĢāļē āļąැāļ­ි āļšāļģāļŊා āļģැāļŠිāļšāļŊ් āļ´ාāļŊāļąāļē āļ‡āļ­ි āļšāļģāļą්āļą āļ­āļ¸āļēි āļ¸ේ āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ි⎀āļģāļĢāļē āˇ€āˇƒāļģ āļ¯ෙāļšāļšāļ§ āļ´ෙāļģාāļ­ු⎀ āļ­ිāļļ්āļļේ. āļ¸ේ ⎃ාāļ¸āļēේ āļ´්‍āļģāļ­ිāļŊාāļˇ āļŊැāļļෙāļą්āļąේ āļŠāˇ…āļŸ āļ´ාāļŊāļąāļēේāļ¯ීāļēි. āļ‘āļąි⎃āļēි āļ…āļ´ි āļ¸āˇ„ිāļą්āļ¯ āļģාāļĸāļ´āļš්‍⎂āļ§ āˇ€ිāļĸāļēāļœ්‍āļģ⎄āļĢāļēāļš්‌ āļŊāļļාāļ¯ිāļē āļēුāļ­්āļ­ේ.āļšො⎅āļš āļ¸āˇ„ āļąāļœāļģ ⎃āļˇා⎀ේ ⎀ිāļ´āļš්‍⎂ āļąාāļēāļš āˇ€ා⎃ුāļ¯ේ⎀ āļąාāļąාāļēāļš්‌āļšාāļģ āļ¸āˇ„āļ­ා - āļ¸ෙāļē āļ¸ේ āļģāļ§ේ ⎀ැāļ¯āļœāļ­් āļ¸ැāļ­ි⎀āļģāļĢāļēāļš්‌. 1956 āļ¯ී āļ¸ේ āļģāļ§ āļ´්‍āļģāļļāļŊ ⎀ිāļ´āļģ්āļēා⎃āļēāļšāļ§ āļŊāļš්‌ ⎀ුāļĢා. 1970 āļ¯ී āļ‘āļē āļ‰āļ¯ිāļģි āļ´ිāļ¸්āļ¸āļš්‌ āļ´ැāļą්āļąා. 2005 āļ¯ී āļ…āļ´ි āļ­āˇ€āļ­් āļ‰āļ¯ිāļģිāļēāļ§ āļœිāļēා. āļĸාāļ­ිāļš āļąිāļ¯āˇ„āˇƒ, āļ´්‍āļģāļĸාāļ­āļą්āļ­්‍āļģ⎀ාāļ¯āļē, āļĸāļąāļ­ා āļļāļŊāļē, ⎃āļ¸ාāļąාāļ­්āļ¸āļ­ා⎀, āļ¸ිāļąි⎃්‌ āļ…āļēිāļ­ි⎀ා⎃ිāļšāļ¸් āˇƒāˇ„āļ­ිāļš āļšāļģāļą්āļą āļ•āļąෑ.āļ´්‍āļģāļ°ාāļą āļšāļŠāļ‰āļ¸් āļšි⎄ිāļ´āļēāļš්‌ āļ´āˇƒු āļšāļģāļŊāļēි āļ…āļ´ි āļ¸ෙāļ­āļąāļ§ āļ†āˇ€ේ. āļąāˇ€ ⎁ි⎂්āļ§ාāļ ාāļģāļēāļš්‌, āļ…āļŊුāļ­් āļēුāļœāļēāļš්‌ āļļි⎄ි⎀āļą āļŊāļļāļą 26 ⎀ැāļąිāļ¯ා āļ¸āˇ„ිāļą්āļ¯ āļģාāļĸāļ´āļš්‍⎂ āļ¸āˇ„āļ­්āļ­āļēāļ§ āˇ€ිāļĸāļēāļœ්‍āļģ⎄āļĢāļēāļš්‌ āļŊāļļාāļ¯ෙāļą්āļą āļ¸ේ āļĸāļąāļ­ා⎀ ⎃ූāļ¯ාāļąāļ¸්. āļ´āˇƒුāļœිāļē āļēුāļ¯්āļ¯ෙ āļ¸ු⎅ු āļŊෝāļšෙāļ¸ āļ‡āˇƒ්‌ āļ¸ේ āļģāļ§āļ§ āļ‘āļŊ්āļŊ āļšāļģāļą්āļą āˇƒāļ¸āļ­් ⎀ුāļĢා.āļšිāļēුāļļා⎀ āļšිāļēāļą āļŊෝāļšāļēේ āļ´ුංāļ ිāļ¸ āļ´ුංāļ ි āļģāļ§ āˇ€āļœේ ⎁්‍āļģී āļŊංāļšා⎀ āļšිāļēāļą āļ‰āļą්āļ¯ිāļēāļą් ⎃ාāļœāļģāļēේ āļ¸ුāļ­ු āļ‡āļ§āļēāļ­් āļ¸ු⎅ු āļŊෝāļšāļēāļ¸ āļ¯ැāļš්‌āļšෙ āļ‘āļ¯ා. āļšිāļēුāļļා⎀āļ§ āļšැ⎃්‌āļ­්‍āļģො āļąāļ¸් ⎁්‍āļģී āļŊංāļšා⎀āļ§ āļ¸āˇ„ිāļą්āļ¯ āļēāļą āļ¸āļ­āļē ⎃්‌āļŽාāļ´ිāļ­ āˇ€ෙāļŊා āļ‰āˇ€āļģāļēි. āļ…āļ´ේ āļąාāļēāļšāļēා āļ”⎄ුāļœේ āļąිāļģ්āļˇීāļ­āļšāļ¸ āļŊෝāļšāļēāļ§āļ¸ āļ´ෙāļą්āļąු⎀ා. āļŊෝāļš āļ…āļ°ිāļģාāļĸ්‍āļē⎀ාāļ¯āļēāļ§ āļ‘āļģෙ⎄ි⎀ ⎃ිāļē āļļāļŊāļē āļ´ෙāļą්āļąු⎀ා.āļ…āļ´ි ⎀⎀āļ¸ු, āļģāļ§ āļąāļŸāļ¸ු āļšිāļēāļŊා ⎀ැāļŠāˇƒāļ§āˇ„āļąāļš්‌ āļšāˇ…ා. āļŊෝāļšāļēāļ¸ āļ†āˇ„ාāļģ āļ…āļģ්āļļුāļ¯āļēāļš āļœිāļŊෙāļ¯්āļ¯ී āļ…āļ´ි āļ†āˇ„ාāļģ⎀āļŊිāļą් ⎁āļš්‌āļ­ිāļ¸āļ­් ⎀ුāļĢා. āļŊෝāļšāļēāļ¸ āļļිāļē⎀ ⎃ිāļ§ිāļą āļ­්‍āļģ⎃්‌āļ­āˇ€ාāļ¯āļē āļ¸ුāļŊිāļąුāļ´ුāļ§ා āļ¯ැāļ¸්āļ¸ා. ⎀ී āļ§ිāļš, āļ‘⎅⎀⎅ු āļ§ිāļš āļ…āļ´ි ⎀⎀āļą්āļą āļœāļ­්āļ­ා. āļ…āļ°ිāļģාāļĸ්‍āļē⎀ාāļ¯āļēāļ§ āļ‘āļģෙ⎄ි⎀ ⎀āļ āļąāˇ€āļŊිāļą් āļąෙ⎀ෙāļēි āļ´්‍āļģාāļēෝāļœිāļšāˇ€āļ¸ āļ¸ු⎄ුāļĢ āļ¯ුāļą්āļąා. āļĸāļąāļ­ා⎀āļœේ āļ¯ිāļēුāļĢු⎀, āļģāļ§ේ ⎃ං⎀āļģ්āļ°āļąāļē āļ‡āļ­ි āļšāļģāļą්āļąේ āļ‘⎄ෙāļ¸āļēි. ⎃āļ¸ාāļĸ ⎃ාāļ°ාāļģāļĢāļ­්⎀āļē, āļĸāļąāļ­ා āļ´āļģāļ¸ාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­්‍āļēāļē āļģāļšිāļą්āļą āļ´ු⎅ු⎀āļą් āļ‘āļšāļ¸ āļąාāļēāļšāļēා āļ¸āˇ„ිāļą්āļ¯ āļģාāļĸāļ´āļš්‍⎂āļēි.āļ´්‍āļģ⎀ීāļĢ āļąි⎅ි āļœීāļ­ා āļšුāļ¸ාāļģ⎃ිං⎄ āļ¸āˇ„āļ­්āļ¸ිāļē - āļ āļģිāļ­ āļාāļ­āļąāˇ€āļŊāļ§ āļšැāļ¸ැāļ­ි āļąෑ. āļąāļ¸ුāļ­් āļ¸ේ āļ­ීāļģāļĢාāļ­්āļ¸āļš āļ¸ො⎄ොāļ­ේ āļ¸āļ§ āļ¸āļœේ āļēුāļ­ුāļšāļ¸ āļ‰āˇ‚්āļ§ āļšāļģāļą්āļą āˇ€ෙāļŊා.āļ­්‍āļģ⎃්‌āļ­āˇ€ාāļ¯āļē āļ´āļģාāļĸāļē āļšāļģ āļ…āļ´ āļĸāļēāļœ්‍āļģ⎄āļĢāļē āļŊැāļļු⎀ේ āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ිāļ­ුāļ¸ාāļœේ āļąාāļēāļšāļ­්⎀āļē āļąි⎃āļēි. āļ…āļ¯ āļ…āļ´ි āļ´ාāļģāļš āļ­ොāļ§āļš āļļැ⎄ැāļŊා āļąිāļ¯āˇ„āˇƒේ āļēāļąāˇ€ා. āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ිāļ­ුāļ¸ා āļ…āļ´ිāļ§ āļ¯ුāļą්āļą āļąිāļ¯āˇ„āˇƒ āļąි⎃āļēි āļ¸āļ¸ āļ¸ේ āļ¯ේ⎁āļ´ාāļŊāļąāļē āļœැāļą āļšāļ­ා āļšāļģāļą්āļąේ. āļ…āļ´ි āļ…āļ´ේ āļēුāļ­ුāļšāļ¸ āļ‰āˇ‚්āļ§ āļšāļģāļ¸ු. āļģāļ§ āļąිāļ¯āˇ„āˇƒ්‌ āļšāˇ… āļ¸ෙāļ­ුāļ¸ා āļģāļ§ āˇƒං⎀āļģ්āļ°āļąāļē āļšāļģāļą āļļ⎀ ⎃ිāļšුāļģුāļēි. āļēුāļ¯්āļ¯ේ āļ­ිāļļිāļēāļ¯ීāļ­් āļšāļģāļ´ු āļ¸ේ ⎃ං⎀āļģ්āļ°āļąāļē āļ…āļ´ිāļ§ āļ´ේāļąāˇ€ා. ⎀ිāļ´āļš්‍⎂āļēේ āļļොāļģු āļ´්‍āļģāļ ාāļģ⎀āļŊāļ§ āļģැ⎀āļ§ෙāļą්āļąේ āļąැāļ­ු⎀ āļļුāļ¯්āļ°ිāļ¸āļ­්⎀ āļšāļ§āļēුāļ­ු āļšāļģāļŊා āļ¸ේ āļģāļ§ේ āļ‰āļ¯ිāļģි ⎃ං⎀āļģ්āļ°āļąāļēāļ§ āļ‰āļŠ āļ¯ෙāļą්āļą āļšිāļēāļŊා āļ¸āļ¸ āļĸāļąāļ­ා⎀āļœෙāļą් āļ‰āļŊ්āļŊāļąāˇ€ා.āļļොāļģැāļŊ්āļŊ āļ‘.āļĸ.āļąි.⎃. ⎃ං⎀ිāļ°ාāļēāļš āļ­ිāļŊංāļœ āˇƒුāļ¸āļ­ිāļ´ාāļŊ āļ¸āˇ„āļ­ා - āļ…āļ¯ āļļොāļģැāļŊ්āļŊāļ§ āļ…āļ­ි⎀ි⎁ාāļŊ āļĸāļąāļ­ා⎀āļš්‌ āļ‡āˇ€ිāļ­්. āļ¸ේ āļĸāļąāļ­ා⎀āļœෙāļą් āļ…āļ´ි āļ‰āļŊ්āļŊāļą්āļąේ āļ‘⎅ැāļšෙāļą 26 ⎀ැāļąිāļ¯ා āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ි⎀āļģāļĢāļēෙāļą් āļ¸āˇ„ිāļą්āļ¯ āļģාāļĸāļ´āļš්⎂ āļ¸āˇ„āļ­්āļ­āļēāļœේ āļĸāļēāļœ්‍āļģ⎄āļĢāļē ⎀ිāļĸāļēāļœ්‍āļģ⎄āļĢāļēāļš්‌ āļšāļģāļą්āļą āļšිāļēāļŊāļēි.2005 āļ¯ී āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ි⎀āļģāļĢāļē ⎀ෙāļąු⎀ෙāļą් āļ‰āļ¯ිāļģිāļ´āļ­් āļšāˇ… "āļ¸āˇ„ිāļą්āļ¯ āļ ිāļą්āļ­āļąāļēේ" āļ´ොāļģොāļą්āļ¯ු⎀āļŊිāļą් ⎃ිāļēāļēāļ§ 94 āļš්‌ āļ´āˇƒුāļœිāļē āˇ€āˇƒāļģ ⎄āļ­āļģෙāļ¯ි āļ‘āļ­ුāļ¸ා āļ‰āļ§ු āļšāˇ…ා. āļ¸ූāļŊිāļšāļ¸ āļ¯ේ āļēුāļ¯ āļĸāļēāļœ්‍āļģ⎄āļĢāļē, āļ‘āļ´āļ¸āļĢāļš්‌ āļąො⎀ේ āļģāļ§ේ āļ†āļģ්āļŽිāļšāļē, āļšෘ⎂ිāļšāļģ්āļ¸ාāļą්āļ­āļē, āļšāļģ්āļ¸ාāļą්āļ­ āļąāļœා⎃ිāļ§ු⎀ූ⎀ා. āļ‘āļ´āļ¸āļĢāļš්‌ āļ¯ āˇ€āļģාāļē, ⎀ිāļ¯ුāļŊිāļļāļŊාāļœාāļģ, āļĸāļŊ ⎀ිāļ¯ුāļŊි āļļāļŊාāļœාāļģ āļ‰āļ¯ි āļšāˇ…ා. āļģāļ§ේ āļĸāļąāļ­ා⎀āļ§ āˇƒුāļļ āļ…āļąාāļœāļ­āļēāļš්‌ ⎀ෙāļąු⎀ෙāļą් āļ¸āˇ„ිāļą්āļ¯ āļ¯ිāļąāˇ€ීāļ¸ āļ¸ේ āļĸāļąāļ­ා⎀āļœේ āļēුāļ­ුāļšāļ¸ āˇ„ා ⎀āļœāļšීāļ¸āļēි.⎀ෙ⎅ෙāļŗ āˇ„ා āļ´ාāļģිāļˇෝāļœිāļš āļšāļ§āļēුāļ­ු āļ‡āļ¸ැāļ­ි āļļāļą්āļ¯ුāļŊ āļœුāļĢ⎀āļģ්āļ°āļą āļ¸āˇ„āļ­ා - āļģāļ§ේ āļ…āļąාāļœāļ­āļēāļ§ āˇ€ැāļ¯āļœāļ­් āļ­ීāļģāļĢāļēāļš්‌ āļœāļą්āļą āļ¯ිāļąāļē āļŊāļļāļą 26 ⎀ැāļąිāļ¯ාāļēි. āļąිāļ¯āˇ„āˇƒිāļą් āļ´āˇƒු āļŊංāļšා⎀ේ āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ි⎀āļģු āļšි⎄ිāļ´ āļ¯ෙāļąෙāļš්‌ ⎃ිāļ§ිāļēා. āļąāļ¸ුāļ­් āļąිāļ¯āˇ„āˇƒිāļą් āļ´āˇƒු āļŊංāļšා⎀ේ āļ‘āļšāˇ€ිāļ§ āļ…āļˇිāļēෝāļœ āļģැ⎃āļš්‌ ⎃ාāļģ්āļŽāļšāˇ€ ⎀ි⎃» āļ‘āļšāļ¸ āļąාāļēāļšāļēා āļ­āļ¸āļēි āļ¸āˇ„ිāļą්āļ¯?āļ…āļ¯ āļģāļ§āļ§ āļœෞāļģ⎀ාāļą්⎀ිāļ­ āˇƒාāļ¸āļēāļš්‌ āļ‹āļ¯ා⎀ෙāļŊා. āļ¯ැāļą් āļ­ිāļēෙāļą්āļąේ āļģāļ§ āļœොāļŠāļąāļŸāļą්āļą. āļ’ āļšāļ§āļēුāļ­්āļ­ āļšāļģāļą්āļą āˇ„ැāļšි āļąාāļēāļšāļēāļ­් āļ¸āˇ„ිāļą්āļ¯āļēි. āļēුāļ¯්āļ° āļšāļģāļą āļ…āļ­āļģේ āļģāļ§ේ āļĸāļąāļ­ා⎀ āļļāļŠāļœිāļą්āļąේ āļ­ිāļļ්āļļේ āļąෑ. āļŊෝāļšāļēේ ⎀ෙāļąāļ­් āļģāļ§āˇ€āļŊ āļēුāļ¯්āļ° āļšāļģāļą āˇ€ිāļ§ āļĸāļąāļ­ා⎀āļ§ āļ´ීāļŠා ⎀ිāļŗිāļą්āļą āˇƒිāļ¯්āļ° āˇ€ුāļĢා. āļąāļ¸ුāļ­් āļ…āļ´ේ āļąාāļēāļšāļēා āļēුāļ¯්āļ¯ෙ āļšāļģāļą āļ…āļ­āļģ āļģāļ§ේ ⎃ං⎀āļģ්āļ°āļąāļēāļ­්, āļ†āļģ්āļŽිāļšāļēāļ­්, āļšāļģ්āļ¸ාāļą්āļ­āļēāļ­්, āļšෘ⎂ිāļšāļģ්āļ¸ාāļą්āļ­āļēāļ­් ⎃ාāļģ්āļŽāļšāˇ€ āļšāˇ…ා.

āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ි āļ¸āˇ„ිāļą්āļ¯ āļģාāļĸāļ´āļš්‍⎂ āļ¸āˇ„āļ­ා āļē⎅ි āļ¸ේ āļģāļ§ේ āļĸāļąāļ´āļ­ි āļšāļģ⎀ීāļ¸ āļēāļąු āļ¸ේ āļģāļ§ේ āļ…āļąාāļœāļ­ āļ´āļģāļ¸්āļ´āļģා⎀ āļĸāļēāļœ්‍āļģ⎄āļĢāļē āļšāļģ⎀ීāļ¸ āļēෑāļēි āļļොāļģැāļŊ්āļŊ ⎁්‍āļģීāļŊāļąිāļ´ āļ´්‍āļģāļ°ාāļą āˇƒං⎀ිāļ°ාāļēāļš āļļ⎃්‌āļąා⎄ිāļģ āļ´āˇ…ාāļ­්

āļ¸āˇ„ිāļą්āļ¯ āļģාāļĸāļ´āļš්‍⎂ āļē⎅ි āļĸāļąāļ´āļ­ි āļšāļģ⎀ීāļ¸ āļēāļąු āļ…āļ´ේ āļģāļ§ේ āļ…āļąාāļœāļ­ āļ´āļģāļ´ුāļģ āļĸāļēāļœ්‍āļģ⎄āļĢāļē āļšāļģ⎀ීāļ¸āļēිāļ­ිāļŊංāļœ āˇƒුāļ¸āļ­ිāļ´ාāļŊ āļļāļ­්āļ­āļģāļ¸ුāļŊ්āļŊāļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ි āļ¸āˇ„ිāļą්āļ¯ āļģාāļĸāļ´āļš්‍⎂ āļ¸āˇ„āļ­ා āļē⎅ි āļ¸ේ āļģāļ§ේ āļĸāļąāļ´āļ­ි āļšāļģ⎀ීāļ¸ āļēāļąු āļ¸ේ āļģāļ§ේ āļ…āļąාāļœāļ­ āļ´āļģāļ¸්āļ´āļģා⎀ āļĸāļēāļœ්‍āļģ⎄āļĢāļē āļšāļģ⎀ීāļ¸ āļēෑāļēි āļļොāļģැāļŊ්āļŊ ⎁්‍āļģීāļŊāļąිāļ´ āļ´්‍āļģāļ°ාāļą āˇƒං⎀ිāļ°ාāļēāļš āļļ⎃්‌āļąා⎄ිāļģ āļ´āˇ…ාāļ­් ⎃āļˇා āļ¸āļą්āļ­්‍āļģී āļ­ිāļŊංāļœ āˇƒුāļ¸āļ­ිāļ´ාāļŊ āļ¸āˇ„āļ­ා āļ´ැ⎀ැ⎃ීāļē. āļļොāļģැāļŊ්āļŊේ āļ´ැ⎀ැāļ­ි āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ි āļ¸āˇ„ිāļą්āļ¯ āļģාāļĸāļ´āļš්‍⎂ āļ¸āˇ„āļ­ාāļ§ āˇƒāˇ„ාāļē āļ´ිāļĢි⎃ ⎀ූ āļĸāļą āˇ„āļ¸ු⎀āļšāļ¯ී ⎃ුāļ¸āļ­ිāļ´ාāļŊ āļ¸āˇ„āļ­ා āļ¸ේ āļļ⎀ āļ´āˇ… āļšāˇ…ේāļē. ⎃ිāļēāļŊු āļĸාāļ­ි ⎄ා āļ†āļœāļ¸්⎀āļŊāļ§ āļ…āļēāļ­් āļšො⎅āļš āļ¯ි⎃්‌āļ­්‍āļģිāļš්‌āļšāļēේ āļĸāļąāļ­ා⎀ āļ…āļ¯ āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ිāļ­ුāļ¸ා ⎀āļ§ා āļ´ෙ⎅ āļœැ⎃ී ⎃ිāļ§ිāļą āļļ⎀ āļ´ැ⎀ැ⎃ූ āļ­ිāļŊංāļœ āˇƒුāļ¸āļ­ිāļ´ාāļŊ āļ¸āˇ„āļ­ා āļ¸ෙ⎃ේāļ¯ āļšීāļē. āļ…āļ¯ āļ‘āļĸාāļ´ āļąාāļēāļš āļģāļąිāļŊ් ⎀ිāļš්‍āļģāļ¸āˇƒිං⎄ āļ¸āˇ„āļ­ා āļ´ොāļ¯ු āļ…āļ´ේāļš්‍⎂āļšāļēාāļ§ āļĄāļą්āļ¯āļē āļ¯ෙāļą āļŊෙ⎃ āļ‘āļĸාāļ´ āļ´ාāļš්‍⎂ිāļšāļēāļą්āļœෙāļą් āļ‰āļŊ්āļŊීāļ¸āļ§ āˇƒාāļ¯ාāļ ාāļģāļ­්āļ¸āļš āļ…āļēිāļ­ිāļēāļš්‌ āļąැ⎄ැ āļ­āļ¸ āļ´āļš්‍⎂āļē ⎃ුāļģāļš්‍⎂ිāļ­ āļšāļģ āļ‘⎄ි ⎃ිāļēāļŊු āļąාāļēāļšāļēāļą් āļ‘āļšāļ¸ුāļ­ු āļšāļģ āļ´āļš්‍⎂āļēāļ§ āļ¯ැāļš්‌āļ¸āļš්‌ āļŊāļļාāļ¯ීāļ¸āļ§ āļ‘āļ­ුāļ¸ාāļ§ āļąො⎄ැāļšි ⎀ී āļ­ිāļļෙāļąāˇ€ා. āļ‘āˇƒේ āļ­ිāļļිāļēāļ¯ී ⎀ෙāļąāļ­් āļ…āļ´ේāļš්‍⎂āļšāļēāļšුāļ§ āļĄāļą්āļ¯āļē āļ¯ෙāļą āļŊෙ⎃ āļ‰āļŊ්āļŊා ⎃ිāļ§ීāļ¸āļ§ āļ”⎄ුāļ§ āļ­ිāļļෙāļą āļ…āļēිāļ­ිāļē āļšුāļ¸āļš්‌āļ¯?. āļĸāļąāļģාāļŊ් ⎆ොāļą්⎃ේāļšා āļ¸āˇ„āļ­ා āļĸāļēāļœ්‍āļģ⎄āļĢāļē āļšāˇ…ොāļ­් āļ”⎄ු āļšි⎃ිāļ¸ āļ´āļš්‍⎂āļēāļšāļ§ āļ…āļēිāļ­ි āļąැāļ­ි āļąි⎃ා āļ­āļ¸āļą්āļ§ āˇ„ිāļ­āļą āļ¯ේ āļšāļģා⎀ි. āļĸ⎀ිāļ´ෙ ⎄ා āļ‘āļĸාāļ´āļē āļ‡āļ­ු⎅ු ⎃ෙ⎃ු āļ´āļš්‍⎂ ⎃āļ¸āļœ āļœි⎀ි⎃ුāļ¸් āļąැāļ­ැāļēි āļ¯ැāļąāļ¸āļ­් āļ´්‍āļģāļšා⎁ ⎀ී āļ‡āļ­ි āļąි⎃ා āļ¸ේ āļ­āļ­්āļ­්⎀āļē āļ…āļ´āļ§ āļ­ේāļģුāļ¸් āļœāļą්āļą āļ´ු⎅ු⎀āļą්. āļ­ි⎃්‌ āˇ€āˇƒāļģāļš āļēුāļ¯්āļ°āļē āļąිāļ¸ා āļšāļģ āļģāļ§ āˇƒං⎀āļģ්āļ°āļąāļē āļšāļģා āļœෙāļą āļēāļą āļ¯ෙ⎀ැāļąි āļœāļ¸āļąāļ§ āļ¯ාāļēāļš āˇ€ෙāļ¸ිāļą් āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ිāļ­ුāļ¸āļą් āļ¯ිāļąāˇ€ීāļ¸āļ§ āļļොāļģැāļŊ්āļŊ āˇƒāˇ„ āļšො⎅āļš āļ¯ි⎃්‌āļ­්‍āļģිāļš්‌āļšāļēේ ⎃ෙ⎃ු āļ†āˇƒāļąāˇ€āļŊ āļ…āļ´ි ⎃ිāļēāļŊු āļ¯ෙāļąා ⎃āļ¸āļœāļ¸ āļ…āļ­්⎀ැāļŊ් āļļැāļŗāļœෙāļą āļšāļ§āļēුāļ­ු āļšāļģāļ¸ු. āļ¸āļŊāļēා⎃ිāļēා⎀ේ āļ¸āˇ„āļ­ීāļģ් āļ¸ො⎄ොāļ¸āļŠ් āļ¸āˇ„āļ­ා ⎀āļ§ා āļĸāļąāļ­ා⎀ āļ´ෙ⎅ āļœැ⎃ුāļĢේ āļ”⎄ු āļ¯ේ⎁ීāļē āļ ිāļą්āļ­āļąāļē āļ´ෙāļģāļ¯ැāļģි⎀ āļģāļ§ āļąැං⎀ීāļ¸āļ§ āļš්‍āļģිāļēා āļšāˇ… āļąි⎃āļēි. āļ…āļ¯ āļ…āļ´ේ āļĸāļąāļ´āļ­ිāļ­ුāļ¸āļą් ⎀āļ§ා āļĸāļąāļ­ා⎀ āļ‘āļš්‌ āļģොāļš්‌⎀ ⎃ිāļ§ිāļą්āļąේ āļ‘āļ­ුāļ¸āļą්āļœේ āļ‘āļ¸ āļ ිāļą්āļ­āļąāļē āļąි⎃āļēි.

āļ…āļąේ āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ිāļ­ුāļ¸āļąි, āļ¸ේ āļšොāļ§ිāļēා āļšāļ¸්āļ¸ුāļ­ු āļšāļģāļŊ āļ¯ාāļą්āļą

āļĸāļąāļ´āļ­ි āļšāļŗු⎅ෙāļą් āļģෝ⎄āļŊ āļ­ෙāļ¸ුāļĢ āļ¯āˇ€āˇƒāļš්‌ !āļšැāļļිāļ­ිāļœොāļŊ්āļŊෑ⎀ āļģෝ⎄āļŊāļ§ āļšිāļŊෝāļ¸ීāļ§āļģ් āļšීāļ´āļēāļš්‌ āļ¯ුāļģිāļą් āļ¸āˇ„ා āļ´ිāļ´ිāļģුāļ¸් ⎄āļŦāļš්‌ āļ‡āˇƒිāļĢ. āļģෝ⎄āļŊ āļ¯ āļ¯ෙāļ¯āļģිāļĢි. āļ¸ිāļąිāļ­්āļ­ු āļšිāļ´āļēāļšāļ§ āļ´āˇƒු āļģෝ⎄āļŊāļ§ āˇ€ා⎄āļą āļ´ෙ⎅āļš්‌ ⎅āļŸා ⎀ිāļē. āļģෝ⎄āļŊ් āļ…ංāļœāļąāļē āļ‰āļŠ āļ¸āļ¯ි ⎀ිāļē. āļ’ āˇ„ැāļ¸ āˇ€ා⎄āļąāļēāļšිāļą්āļ¸ āļ´ිāļ§āļ­āļ§ āļœෙāļąා⎀ේ āļŊේ āļ´ෙāļģෙāļą āļ¸ිāļąි⎃්‌ ⎃ිāļģුāļģුāļē. āļģෝ⎄āļŊ āļšූāļšී āļœුāļŊāļš්‌ āļļāļŗු ⎀ිāļē. āļģෝ⎄āļŊ් ⎃ේ⎀āļš āˇƒේ⎀ිāļšා⎀ෝ ⎀⎄ා āļ’ āļ¸ිāļąි⎃්‌ ⎃ිāļģුāļģු āļ´ි⎅ිāļœāļ­්⎄. āļšැāļļිāļ­ිāļœොāļŊ්āļŊෑ⎀ āļ´්‍āļģāļ¯ේ⎁āļēේ āļœැ⎄ැāļąු āļ´ිāļģිāļ¸ි āļģෝ⎄āļŊāļ§ āļ¯ි⎀ āļ†āˇ„. āļŊේ āļ´ිāļģුāļĢු āļ’ āˇƒිāļģුāļģු āļ”āˇƒāˇ€ාāļœෙāļą āļģෝ⎄āļŊ āļ­ු⎅āļ§ āļœෙāļą āļ†āˇ„ා. 2006 āļĸුāļąි 15 ⎀ැāļąිāļ¯ා āļ´ෙāļģ⎀āļģු⎀ේ ⎃ිāļ¯ු⎀ූ āļ¸ේ ⎃ිāļ¯ු⎀ීāļ¸් āļšැāļļිāļ­ිāļœොāļŊ්āļŊෑ⎀ āļģෝ⎄āļŊේ ⎄ෙāļ¯ිāļēāļš āˇ€āļą āˇ€ිāļ¸āļŊා ⎄ේāļģāļ­් āļ¸āˇ„āļ­්āļ¸ිāļē āļ´āˇƒුāļœිāļēāļ¯ා āļ¸ෙ⎃ේ ⎃ි⎄ිāļ´āļ­් āļšāˇ…ා āļē. āļ‘āļ¯ා āļ¸ා āļŠිāļēුāļ§ි āļ•⎆් ⎀ෙāļŊා āļ…āļ´ේ āļąි⎀ා⎃āļēāļ§ āļēැāļ¸āļ§ āˇƒූāļ¯ාāļąāļ¸් ⎀ෙāļŊāļēි ⎄ිāļ§ිāļēෙ. āļ‹āļ¯ේ ⎄āļ­āļ§ āˇ€ිāļ­āļģ āļļෝāļ¸්āļļ ⎄āļŦāļš්‌ āļ†āˇ€ා. āļ’ āˇ€ෙāļŊා⎀āļ§ āļēāļšා ⎀ැ⎀ āļ´ැāļ­්āļ­ේ āļ‰āļ¯āļŊා āļļ⎃āļēāļš්‌ āļ‘āļąāˇ€ා. āļ’āļšāļ§ āļļෝāļ¸්āļļ āļ­ිāļēāļŊāļ¯ āļ¯āļą්āļąෙ āļąැ⎄ැ āļšිāļēāļŊ āļ¸āļ§ āˇ„ිāļ­ුāļĢා. ⎀ිāļąාāļŠි 15 āļš්‌ ⎀āļ­් āļœිāļēේ āļąැ⎄ැ āļģෝ⎄āļŊāļ§ āļŊේ āļ´ෙāļģෙāļą āļ­ු⎀ාāļŊāļšාāļģāļēෝ āļœේāļąāˇ€ා āļ´ෙāļąුāļĢා. āļ¸āļ¸ āˇ„ිāļ§ිāļēේ āļąිāļŊ āļ‡āļŗුāļ¸ිāļą් āļąො⎀ෙāļēි. āļ’āļ­් āļ¸āļ¸ āļ­ු⎀ාāļŊāļšාāļģāļēāļą්āļ§ āļ´්‍āļģāļ­ිāļšාāļģ āļšāļģāļą්āļą āļ´āļ§āļą් āļœāļ­්āļ­ා. āļ…āļ´āļ§ āļ´ෙāļąුāļĢා āļ¸āˇ… ⎃ිāļģුāļģුāļ­් āļ”āˇƒāˇ€ාāļœෙāļą āļ‘āļąāˇ€ා. āļ¸ේ ⎀ෙāļŊා⎀ේ āļ¸ු⎅ු āļ´āˇ…ාāļ­ෙāļ¸ āļ¸ිāļąි⎃්‌⎃ු āļ‹āļ¯āˇ€්⎀āļ§ āļ†āˇ€ා. āļ¸ේ āļ¸āļąු⎃්‌⎃āļšāļ¸ āļ‹āļ­ුāļģා āļœිāļē āļ¸ො⎄ොāļ­āļš්‌. āļ…āļ´ේ āļģෝ⎄āļŊේ ⎄ිāļ§ිāļēේ ⎀ෛāļ¯්‍āļē⎀āļģු 4 āļ¯ෙāļąāļēි. ⎄ෙāļ¯ āļšාāļģ්āļēāļēāļ¸āļĢ්‌āļŠāļŊāļē 3 āļēි. ⎃ාāļ­්āļ­ු ⎃ේ⎀ිāļšා⎀ෝ 14 āļēි. āļŠිāļēුāļ§ි āļ•⎆් ⎀ෙāļŊා āļœිāļēāļ´ු āļ…āļēāļ­් āļ¸ේ ⎀ෙāļŊා⎀ේ ⎀ාāļ§්‌āļ§ු⎀āļŊāļ§ āļ†āˇ€ා. āļ…āļ´āļ§ āļŊෙāļŠුāļą්āļ§ āˇƒේāļŊāļēිāļą් āļ¯ෙāļą්āļą āˇƒේāļŊāļēිāļą් āļļāļ§ āļģāļŗāˇ€āļą āļ­ිāļļුāļĢෙ ⎄āļ­āļš්‌ āļ…āļ§āļš්‌ āļ´āļ¸āļĢāļēි. āļœāļ¸ේ āļ¸ිāļąි⎃්‌⎃ු ⎃ේāļŊāļēිāļą් āļļෝāļ­āļŊ් āļ”āˇƒāˇ€ාāļœෙāļą āļŊෙāļŠ්āļŠු ⎅āļŸ āˇ„ිāļ§ිāļēා. āļŊෙāļŠ්āļŠුāļą්āļ§ āˇƒේāļŊāļēිāļą් āļ¯ුāļą්āļąේ āļ‘⎄ෙāļ¸āļēි. āļ´āļĢ āļ…āļ¯ිāļą āļ­ු⎀ාāļŊāļšාāļģāļēෝ āļļේāļģාāļœāļą්āļą āˇ€ි⎁ාāļŊ ⎃āļ§āļąāļš්‌ ⎀ාāļ§්‌āļ§ු āļ‡āļ­ු⎅ේ ⎃ිāļ¯්āļ°āˇ€ුāļĢා. āļ¸āˇ…āˇƒිāļģුāļģු āļšොāļģිāļŠෝāļģāļēේ āˇƒāˇ„ āļ…āļŊුāļ­ āˇ„āļ¯ාāļœෙāļą āļēāļą āˇ€ාāļ§්‌āļ§ු⎀āļŊ āļ­ැāļą්āļ´āļ­් āļšāˇ…ා. āļļāļŊāļą්āļą āļļැ⎄ැ āļ´ුංāļ ි āļļෝāļąිāļš්‌āļšො ⎀āļœේ ⎅āļ¸āļēි āļšෑ⎅ි, āļšෑ⎅ි ⎀āļŊāļ§ āļšැāļŠිāļŊා, ⎀ාāļ§්‌āļ§ු⎀ āļ¸ිāļąි⎃්‌⎃ුāļą්āļœෙāļą් āļ´ිāļģුāļĢා. āļ‘āļ­ැāļą āļ‘āļšāļ¸ āļෝ⎂ා⎀āļš්‌. āļšිāļ§්‌āļ§ු⎀ āļ´ාāļ­ āļģෝ⎄āļŊ්⎀āļŊ ⎀ෛāļ¯්‍āļē⎀āļģු ⎄ෙāļ¯ිāļēෝ ⎃ාāļ­්āļ­ු ⎃ේ⎀ිāļšා⎀ෝ āļ’ āļģෝ⎄āļŊ්⎀āļŊ ⎀ා⎄āļąāļ­් āļ…āļģāļœෙāļą āļ†āˇ€ා. āļ¸ිāļąි⎃ුāļą් āļĸී⎀āļ­් āļšāļģ ⎀ීāļ¸āļ§ āļ¸ේ āļ­āļģāļ¸් ⎃āļ§āļąāļš්‌ āļšāļģāļ´ු āļ¯āˇ€āˇƒāļš්‌ āļ¸ා āļ¯ැāļš āļąැ⎄ැ. āļšෑ āļœāˇ„āļąāˇ€ා, ⎄āļŦා ⎀ැāļŊāļ´ෙāļąāˇ€ා, āļšොāļ§ිāļēāļ§ āˇාāļ´ āļšāļģāļąāˇ€ා. āļ’ āļ¸ිāļąි⎃්‌⎃ුāļą්āļ§ āˇ€ාāļ§්‌āļ§ු⎀ෙāļą් āļ´ිāļ§āļ­āļ§ āļœි⎄ිāļą් āļ‰āļą්āļą āļšි⎀්⎀āļ§ āļ…⎄āļą්āļąෙ āļąැ⎄ැ. ⎀ාāļ§්‌āļ§ු⎀āļ§ āļ‘āļąāˇ€ා. ⎀ාāļ§්‌āļ§ු⎀ āļ‘āļšāļ¸ āļ¸ිāļąි⎃්‌ āļ´ොāļ¯ිāļēāļš්‌. āļ…⎅ුāļ­ිāļą් ⎄āļ¯āļą āˇ€ාāļ§්‌āļ§ු⎀ේ āļ¸āˇ… ⎃ිāļģුāļģු ⎅āļŸ āˇ€ැāļŊāļ´ෙāļą āļœැ⎄ැāļąුāļą්āļœේ āļ´ිāļģිāļ¸ිāļą්āļœෙ ⎄āļŦ āļ‹āˇƒ්‌⎀ āļąැāļŸුāļĢා. āļ¸ේ āļ¸āˇ„ āļ¸ිāļąි⎃්‌ āļ´ොāļ¯ිāļē āļ…āļ­āļģිāļą් ⎃ෙāļąāļŸ āļ´ීāļģාāļœෙāļą āļšෙāļąෙāļš්‌ āļ‰āļ¯ිāļģිāļēāļ§ āļ†āˇ€ා. āļ…āļ´āļ§ āļ…āļ¯āˇ„āļœāļą්āļą āļļෑ. āļ¸ේ āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ි āļ¸āˇ„ිāļą්āļ¯ āļģාāļĸāļ´āļš්‍⎂ āļ¸āˇ„āļ­ා. āļ…āļ´ේ āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ිāļ­ුāļ¸ා. āļ¸ිāļąි⎃්‌⎃ුāļą්āļœේ āļšෑāļœැ⎄ිāļŊ්āļŊ āļąැāļ­ි ⎀ුāļĢා. āļœො⎅ු ⎀ුāļĢා. "āļ…āļąේ āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ිāļ­ුāļ¸āļąි, āļ¸ේ āļšොāļ§ිāļēා āļšāļ¸්āļ¸ුāļ­ු āļšāļģāļŊ āļ¯ාāļą්āļą," āļšෙāļąෙāļš්‌ āļšෑāļœāˇ„āļŊ āļšී⎀ා. āļ¯āļģු⎀ා āļąැāļ­ි⎀ුāļĢ āļ¸āˇ€āļš්‌ āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ිāļ­ුāļ¸ාāļœේ āļ…āļ­් āļ¯ෙāļš āļ…āļŊ්āļŊා āļœāļ­්āļ­ා. āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ිāļ­ුāļ¸ා āļ‡āļœේ āļ‹āļģ⎄ි⎃ිāļą් āļ…āļŊ්āļŊා āļœāļ­්āļ­ා. āļ‘āļ­ුāļ¸ා āļ‡āļœේ āļ‹āļģ⎄ි⎃ ⎃ො⎅⎀āļ¸ිāļą් ⎄āļŦāļą්āļąāļ§ āļ´āļ§āļą් āļœāļ­්āļ­ා. āļ‡āļēāļ­් ⎄āļŦāļąāˇ€ා. āļ‘āļ­ුāļ¸ාāļ­් ⎄āļŦāļąāˇ€ා. ⎀ාāļ§්‌āļ§ු⎀ේ ⎃ිāļ§ි āļ…āļ´āļ­් āļ‘āļ­ුāļ¸ා ⎃āļ¸āļŸ āˇ„āļŦāļą්āļąāļ§ āļ´āļ§āļą් āļœāļ­්āļ­ා. āļ’ āļ¸ො⎄ොāļ­ේ āļ¸ු⎅ු ⎀ාāļ§්‌āļ§ු⎀āļ¸ āļšāļŗු⎅ිāļą් āļ´ිāļģුāļĢා. "āļ…āļąේ āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ිāļ­ුāļ¸āļąි āļ”āļļāļ­ුāļ¸ා āļ¸ෙ⎄ෙ āļ†āˇ€ේ āļ‡āļēි. āļ­āˇ€ āļšිāļŊෝāļ¸ීāļ§āļģ් 5 āļš්‌ 6 āļ¯ුāļģිāļą් āļšොāļ§ි āļ‰āļą්āļą āļ¸ුāļŊāļ­ි⎀් āļšැāļŊේ. āļ¸ේ āļģෝ⎄āļŊ් āļ‰āļŠāļ¸āļ§āļ­් āļ‹āļą් āļ‘āļąāˇ€ා. āļ…āļ´ි āļēුāļąි⎆ොaāļ¸් ⎀āļŊāļ§ āļ‹āļŠිāļą් āļšāˇ…ු āļģෙāļ¯ි āļ‡āļŗāļœෙāļą āļģෑāļ§ āˇ€ැāļŠ āļšāļģāļą්āļąේ. āļ‹āļą් āļ…āļ´ිāļ§ āļ­āļģ්āļĸāļąāļē āļšāļģāļąāˇ€ා. āļ¸ේ āļ´āˇ…ාāļ­ āļšොāļ§ි āļšāļ§āļš්‌ ⎀āļœෙāļēි. āļ‡āļēි āļ¸ෙ⎄ෙāļ¸ āļ†āˇ€ේ. āļ”āļļāļ­ුāļ¸ා āļ´āļģි⎃්‌⎃āļ¸් ⎀ෙāļą්āļą āļ•āļą. āļ¸ෙ⎄ෙāļ¸ āļœāļ¸āļą් āļ‘āļą්āļą āļ‘āļ´ා." āļ‘āļš්‌ āļģෝ⎄āļŊ් ⎃ේ⎀ිāļšා⎀āļš්‌ ⎄āļŦ āļąāļŸා āļšි⎀්⎀ා. āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ිāļ­ුāļ¸ා ⎅āļŸāļ§ āļ´්‍āļģිāļēāļą්āļ­ āļšිāļēāļŊා āļ­ාāļ­්āļ­ා āļšෙāļąෙāļš්‌ āļ­āļ¸ාāļœේ āļ¯āļģු⎀ාāļœේ āļ¸āˇ… ⎃ිāļģුāļģ āļ”āˇƒāˇ€ාāļœෙāļą āļ†āˇ€ා. "āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ිāļ­ුāļ¸āļąි, āļ¸āļœේ āļ¯āļģු⎀ා āļ¸āˇ…ාāļ§ āļšāļ¸āļš්‌ āļąැ⎄ැ. āļ¸āļ¸ āļ”āļļāļ­ුāļ¸ාāļœෙāļą් āļ‰āļŊ්āļŊāļą්āļąේ āļ¸āļœේ āļ¯āļģු⎀ා āļ¸āļģාāļ´ු āļšොāļ§ිāļēා āļšāļ¸්āļ¸ුāļ­ු āļšāļģāļą්āļą āļšිāļēāļŊāļēි. āļ¸ුāļą්āļ§ āļ‰āļŠ āļ¯ෙāļą්āļą āļ‘āļ´ා." āļ”⎄ු āļ¯ āˇ„āļŦāļą්āļąāļ§ āļ´āļ§āļą් āļœāļ­්āļ­ා. "āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ිāļ­ුāļ¸ා āļ‘āļ¯ා āļ´ැāļ¸ිāļĢිāļēේ āļšි⎃ිāļ¸ āļ†āļģāļš්‌⎂ා⎀āļš්‌ āļąැāļ­ි⎀. āļ‘āļ­ුāļ¸ා āļ‘āļą āļļ⎀ āļ´ොāļŊි⎃ිāļē⎀āļ­් āļ¯ැāļąāļœෙāļą āˇ„ිāļ§ිāļēේ āļąෑ." āļšැāļļිāļ­ිāļœොāļŊ්āļŊෑ⎀ āļ´්‍āļģාāļ¯ේ⎁ීāļē ⎃āļˇා⎀ේ āļ¸āļą්āļ­්‍āļģී⎀āļģāļēāļšු ⎀āļą āļšේ āļ āļą්āļ¯්‍āļģ⎃ේāļšāļģ āļ´ුංāļ ිāļļāļĢ්‌āļŠා āļ¸āˇ„āļ­ා āļ…āļ´ āˇƒāļ¸āļœ āļšීāļē. āļš්‌āļŊේāļ¸ෝ āļļෝāļ¸්āļļ āļ¯ෙāļšāļš āļ´්‍āļģ⎄ාāļģāļēāļ§ āļœොāļ¯ුāļģු ⎀ූ āļšැāļļිāļ­ිāļœොāļŊ්āļŊෑ⎀ āļ´ැāļ¸ිāļĢෙāļ¸ිāļą් ⎃ිāļ§ි āļ’ āļļ⎃āļēේ ⎀ැāļŠි āļ¯ෙāļąා āļ…āļēāļ­් ⎀ුāļēේ āļēāļšා⎀ැ⎀ āļœāļ¸āļ§ āļē. āļ´්‍āļģāļ¯ේ⎁ීāļē ⎃āļˇා āļ¸āļą්āļ­්‍āļģී āļ´ුංāļ ිāļļāļĢ්‌āļŠා āļ¸āˇ„āļ­ාāļœේ āļœāļ¸ āļ¯ āļēāļšා⎀ැ⎀āļē. āļ…āļąුāļģාāļ°āļ´ුāļģ ⎀⎀ුāļąිāļēා āļ¯ි⎃්‌āļ­්‍āļģිāļš්‌ āļ¸ාāļēිāļ¸ේ āļ´ි⎄ිsāļ§ි, āļ¸ුāļŊāļ­ි⎀් āļšැāļŊāļēāļ§ āļ¯ āļ¸ාāļēිāļ¸් ⎀ූ, āļēāļšා⎀ැ⎀ේ āˇ€āˇƒāļą්āļ­ āļ āļą්āļ¯āļą āˇƒෙāļąāˇ€ිāļģāļ­්āļą āļąāļ¸ැāļ­ි āļœ්‍āļģාāļ¸ාāļģāļš්‌⎂āļš āļˇāļ§āļēා ⎀⎀ුāļąිāļēා⎀ āļšāļ ්āļ āļšුāļŠිāļēේ āļ¯ී ⎀ෙāļŠි āļ´āˇ„āļģāļšිāļą් āļ¸ිāļē āļœිāļēේāļē. āļ”⎄ුāļœේ āļ…⎀āļ¸āļŸුāļŊāļ§ āˇƒāˇ„āļˇාāļœි ⎀ීāļ¸ āˇƒāļŗāˇ„ා āļ’ āļœāļ¸ේ āļ´ිāļģි⎃āļš්‌ 2006 āļĸුāļąි 15 ⎀ැāļąිāļ¯ා āļ‹āļ¯ෑ⎃āļą āļ’ āļœāļ¸ āˇ„āļģ⎄ා āļēāļą āļļ⎃āļēāļšāļ§ āļœොāļŠ āˇ€ූ⎄. ⎄ිāļ¸ි⎀āļģු āļ¯ෙāļąāļ¸āļš්‌ āļ¸ාāļ­ෘ ⎃ාāļēāļąāļēāļšāļ§ āļēāļą āļœැāļļිāļĢි āļšාāļą්āļ­ා⎀ෝ āļšීāļ´ āļ¯ෙāļąෙāļš්‌ āˇƒāˇ„ ⎅āļ¸āļēි āļšීāļ´ āļ¯ෙāļąෙāļš්‌ āļ¯ āļ’ āļļ⎃āļēේ ⎃ිāļ§ිāļē⎄. āļšිāļŊෝāļ¸ීāļ§āļģ් 7 āļš්‌ āļ´āļ¸āļĢ āļ¯ුāļģ āļœāļ¸āļą් āļšāˇ… āļļ⎃āļē āļ­ුāļšāˇƒāļš āˇƒāˇ€ි āļšāˇ… āļš්‌āļŊේāļ¸ෝ āļļෝāļ¸්āļļ 02 āļšāļ§ āˇ„āˇƒු⎀ිāļē. āļļ⎃āļēේ āļģිāļēෑāļ¯ුāļģු ⎀ි⎃ි⎀ිāļē. ⎃ුāļš්‌āļšාāļąāļ¸ āļąිāļ¯āˇ„āˇƒ්‌ ⎀ිāļē. āļļ⎃āļē āļ¸ීāļ§āļģ් 70 āļš්‌ āļ´āļ¸āļĢ āļ¯ුāļģāļ§ āļ‡āļ¯ී āļœිāļēේāļē. āļļෝāļš්‌āļšු⎀āļš āˇ„ැāļ´ී āļ´ාāļģේ ⎀āļ¸් āļ´ැāļ­්āļ­āļ§ āļ‘āļē āļ´ෙāļģ⎅āļĢ. āļ¯ොāļģ⎀āļŊ් ⎀ැ⎃ිāļĢ. 160 āļš්‌ āļ´āļ¸āļĢ āˇ€ූ āļ¸āļœීāļą්āļœෙāļą් ⎀ැāļŠි āļ¯ෙāļąෙāļš්‌ āļ¸āˇ…⎀ුāļą් āļļ⎀āļ§ āļ´āļ­්⎀ූ⎄. āļ…āļąෙāļš්‌ āļ…āļēāļœේ ⎃ිāļģුāļģු āļļිāļŗුāļĢ⎄. āļ…āļ­්āļ´ා āļšැāļŠුāļĢු āļ†āļļාāļ°ිāļ­āļēෝ āļļ⎀āļ§ āļ´āļ­්⎀ූ⎄. āļļ⎃āļē āļ‘āļšāļ¸ āļŊේ ⎀ිāļŊāļš්‌ āļļ⎀āļ§ āļ´āļ­්⎀ිāļē. āļ¸ිāļēāļœිāļē 64 āļ¯ෙāļąා āļ…āļ­āļģ āļˇිāļš්‌⎂ූāļą් ⎀⎄āļą්⎃ේāļŊා āļ¯ෙāļąāļ¸āļš්‌, ⎅āļ¸āļēි 15 āļ¯ෙāļąෙāļš්‌ āˇƒāˇ„ āļœැāļļිāļĢි āļ¸āˇ€ු⎀āļģු āļšීāļ´ āļ¯ෙāļąෙāļš්‌ āļ¯ āˇ€ු⎄. āļ­ු⎀ාāļŊ āļŊāļļා āļĸී⎀ිāļ­ āļšාāļŊāļēāļ§āļ¸ āļ†āļļාāļ°ිāļ­ āļŊāļšුāļĢු āļ‹āļģුāļ¸ āˇ€ූ āļ´āļĢ āļģැāļšුāļĢු āļšීāļ´ āļ¯ෙāļąෙāļšු ⎃āļ¸āļœ āļšāļ­ා āļļ⎄ āļšිāļģීāļ¸āļ§ āļ…āļ´āļ§ āˇ„ැāļšි⎀ිāļē. āļēāļšා⎀ැ⎀ āļœāļ¸ේ āļšේ. āļē⎃āļ´ාāļŊ āļ¸āˇ„āļ­ා āļ‘āļēිāļą් āļ‘āļš්‌ āļ…āļēෙāļšි. 51 ⎄ැ⎀ිāļģිāļ¯ි āļ”⎄ු āļ‘āļ¯ා āļšāļ ්āļ ිāļšුāļŠිāļēේ āļ¸āˇ…āļœෙāļ¯āļģāļ§ āļēැāļ¸āļ§ āļļ⎃āļēāļ§ āļąැāļŸුāļĢේ ⎃ිāļē āļļිāļģිāļŗāļ­්, āļ´ුāļ­ාāļŊා āļ¯ෙāļ¯ෙāļąාāļ­්, āļ¯ු⎀āļ­්, āļ¸ුāļĢුāļ´ුāļģාāļ­් ⎃āļ¸āļœāļē. āļ¸ුāļĢුāļ´ුāļģා āļ¯ු⎀āļœේ āļ´ුāļ­ාāļē. āļē⎃āļ´ාāļŊ ⎃ිāļ§ිāļēේ āļļ⎃āļēේ ⎄ිāļ§āļœෙāļąāļē. āļ”⎄ු ⎅āļŸāļ¸ āļ…āˇƒුāļąේ āļļිāļģිāļ¯āļ­් āļ¯ු⎀āļ­් ⎄ිāļŗāļœෙāļą āˇƒිāļ§ිāļē⎄. āļ¸ුāļĢුāļ´ුāļģා āļ¯ු⎀āļœේ āļ‹āļšුāļŊේāļē. āļļෝāļ¸්āļļේ āļ´ිāļ´ිāļģීāļ¸āļ­් ⎃āļ¸āļœāļ¸ āļ”⎄ු āļ‡āļ¯ āˇ€ැāļ§ිāļĢ. āļ”⎄ුāļ§ āļļිāļģිāļŗāļ­්, āļ¯ු⎀āļ­්, āļ¸ුāļĢුāļ´ුāļģාāļ­් āļ¸ැāļģී ⎀ැāļ§ෙāļąු āļ´ෙāļąිāļĢ. āļ‘āļš්‌ āļ´ුāļ­āļšුāļœෙ āļ…āļ­āļš්‌ āļļිāļŗිāļĢ. āļ¯āļ­් ⎄āļ­āļš්‌ āļšැāļŠිāļĢ. āļ”⎄ු āļšැāļŊāļĢි ⎀ි⎁්⎀⎀ිāļ¯්‍āļēාāļŊāļēේ ⎁ි⎂්‍āļēāļēෙāļšි. āļē⎃āļ´ාāļŊ āļ¸āˇ„āļ­ා āļ¯ිāļą 45 āļš්‌ āļ…āļąුāļģාāļ°āļ´ුāļģ āļģෝ⎄āļŊේ āļąāļ­āļģ⎀ී āļ´්‍āļģāļ­ිāļšාāļģ āļœāļ­්āļ­ේāļē. āļšැāļŠුāļĢු āļ…āļ­ිāļą් āļ¯ැāļą් ⎀ැāļŠāļš්‌ āļšāˇ… āļąො⎄ැāļš. āļ”⎄ු āļ¸ෙ⎃ේ āļšී⎀ේāļē. "āļ¸ුāļŊāļ­ි⎀් āļšැāļŊේ āļ…āˇƒāļŊ āļœāļ¸āļš āļĸී⎀āļ­්⎀āļą āļ…āļ´ āļ¯ිāļœු āļšාāļŊāļēāļš āˇƒිāļ§ āļšොāļ§ිāļą්āļœෙāļą් āļ´ීāļŠා āļŊැāļļු⎀ා. āļ‹āļą් āļ¸āļœේ āļļිāļģිāļŗ āļ¯ු⎀ āļ¸ුāļąුāļ´ුāļģා āļ¸āļ§ āļąැāļ­ිāļšāˇ…ා. āļ­āˇ€āļ­් āļšී āļ¯āˇ„āˇƒāļš්‌ āļ¯ෙāļąා āļ‹āļą් āļąි⎃ා ⎀ිāļąා⎁ ⎀ෙāļą්āļąāļ§ āļ‡āļ¯්āļ¯. āļ¸ේ āļ­්‍āļģ⎃්‌āļ­āˇ€ාāļ¯ීāļą්āļœෙāļą් āļģāļ§āļ­් āļ…āļ´āļ­් āļļේāļģාāļœāļą්āļą āļ¸āˇ„ිāļą්āļ¯ āļģාāļĸāļ´āļš්‍⎂ āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ිāļ­ුāļ¸ාāļ§ āˇ„ැāļšි⎀ුāļĢා. āļ‘āļ¯ා āļ‘āļ­ුāļ¸ා āļšැāļļිāļ­ිāļœොāļŊ්āļŊෑ⎀āļ§ āļ†āļ´ු ⎄ැāļ§ි āļ¸ා āļ¯ැāļš්‌āļšේ āļąැ⎄ැ. āļąāļ¸ුāļ­් āļ¸āļœේ āļ¯ු⎀āļœේ ⎃ැāļ¸ිāļēා ⎀āļą āļ´්‍āļģිāļēāļą්āļ­, āļ¸āļœේ āļ¸ුāļąුāļ´ුāļģාāļœේ āļ¸āˇ…āˇƒිāļģුāļģ āļ¯ෑāļ­ිāļą් āļ”āˇƒāˇ€ාāļœෙāļą āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ිāļ­ුāļ¸ා ⎅āļŸāļ§ āļœිāļēා. āļ¸ේ āļšොāļ§ිāļē āļ‰āļš්‌āļ¸āļąāļ§ āļšāļ¸්āļ¸ුāļ­ු āļšāļģāļą්āļą āļšිāļēāļŊා āļ”⎄ු āļ‘āļ­ුāļ¸ාāļœෙāļą් āļ‰āļŊ්āļŊු⎀ා. āļ‘āļ­ුāļ¸ා āļŠāˇ…āļŸ āļ¸ා⎃ෙāļ¸ āļ¸ා⎀ිāļŊ්āļ†āļģු āļ…āļ¸ුāļĢ āļļේāļģාāļœāļą්āļą āļšොāļ§ිāļēා ⎃āļ¸āļœ āļēුāļ¯්āļ°āļē āļ´āļ§āļą් āļœāļ­්āļ­ා. āļąැāļœෙāļąāˇ„ිāļģ āļ´āļ¸āļĢāļš්‌ āļąෙ⎀ෙāļēි, āļ‹āļ­ුāļģු āļ´āˇ…ාāļ­āļ­් āļ…āļŊ්āļŊාāļœෙāļą āļ´්‍āļģāļˇාāļšāļģāļą් āļ‡āļ­ු⎅ු āļ­්‍āļģ⎃්‌āļ­āˇ€ාāļ¯ී āļąාāļēāļšāļēāļą් āļ”āļš්‌āļšොāļ¸ āˇ€ිāļąා⎁ āļšāļģāļąāļ­ුāļģු āļ’a āļēුāļ¯්āļ°āļē āļœෙāļą āļœිāļēා. āļ¯ැāļą් āļšොāļ§ිāļēා āļšāļ¸්āļ¸ුāļ­ුāļēි. āļ…āļ´āļ§ āļ¯ැāļą් ⎃ැāļąāˇƒිāļŊ්āļŊේ āļ‡āˇ€ිāļ¯ිāļą්āļą, ⎀ැāļŠāļšāļģāļą්āļą āļ´ු⎅ු⎀āļą්. āļ´āˇƒුāļœිāļē āļšාāļŊāļēේ āļ…⎀ුāļģුāļ¯ු āļšීāļ´āļēāļš්‌āļ¸ āļ…āļ´āļ§ āļšුāļšුāļģු ⎀āļœා āļšāļģāļą්āļą, āļœොāļŠ āļļෝāļœ āļ¯āļ¸āļą්āļą āļ‰āļŠ āļŊැāļļුāļĢේ āļąෑ. āļšූāļšුāļģු, ⎀āļ­ුāļ´ිāļ§ි ⎀āļŊ් āļļි⎄ි⎀ෙāļŊා āļ­ිāļļුāļĢේ. āļ¯ැāļą් āļ…āļ´ි āļļිāļē⎃ැāļš āļąැāļ­ු⎀ ⎀āļœා⎀ේ āļēෙāļ¯ෙāļąāˇ€ා. āļ…āļ´ේ āļœāļ¸ේ ⎄ැāļ¸ āļ´āˇ€ුāļŊāļšāļ§āļ¸ āļšොāļ§ිāļēා ⎀ිāļ´āļ­්āļ­ි āļšāˇ…ා. āļąāļ¸ුāļ­් āļ¯ැāļą් āļ…āļ´āļ§ āˇƒැ⎄ැāļŊ්āļŊු⎀ෙāļą්, ⎃ැāļąāˇƒිāļŊ්āļŊෙāļą් āļ‰āļą්āļą āļ´ු⎅ු⎀āļą්. āļ¸ේ āļ­āļ­්āļ­්⎀āļē āļ…āļ´āļ§ āļŊāļļා āļ¯ුāļą් āļ’ āļ¸āˇ„ිāļą්āļ¯ āļģාāļĸāļ´āļš්‍⎂ āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ිāļ­ුāļ¸ාāļ§ āļļුāļ¯ුāļļ⎀ āļŊැāļļේ⎀ා. āļ‘āļ­ුāļ¸ා āļąැ⎀āļ­ āˇ€ාāļģāļēāļš්‌ āļ…āļ´ේ āļģāļ§ේ āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ි⎀ේ⎀ා āļšිāļēāļŊා āļ…āļ´ි āļ´āļ­āļąāˇ€ා. āļ¸ේ ⎀āļœේ ⎀ේāļŊා⎀āļš āļ‘āļ­ුāļ¸ා āļ…āļ¸āļ­āļš āļšāļģāļą්āļą āļ´ු⎅ු⎀āļą් ⎀ෙāļą්āļąේ āļšāˇ…āļœුāļĢ āļąොāļ¯āļą්āļąා āļ…āļēāļ§. āļ…āļ´ේ āļœāļ¸් āļ´āˇ…ාāļ­ෙ āļšāˇ€ුāļģුāļ­් āļ…āļ¯ āļ‘āļšāļ­ු⎀ෙāļŊා āļ‰āļą්āļąāˇ€ා āļ‘āļ­ුāļ¸ාāļœේ āļĸāļēāļœ්‍āļģ⎄āļĢāļē ⎀ෙāļąු⎀ෙāļą්. āļ¸ා āļ¸ැāļģුāļĢāļ­් āļ¸āļœේ ⎁āļģීāļģāļēේ āļ‡āļ§ āļšෑāļŊ්āļŊāļš්‌ ⎄āļģි āļ…āļģāļœෙāļą āļœි⎄ිāļŊ්āļŊා āļ‘āļ­ුāļ¸ා ⎀ෙāļąු⎀ෙāļą් āļšāļ­ිāļģāļē āļŊāļšුāļĢු āļšāļģāļą්āļą āļšිāļēāļŊා āļ¸āļ¸ āļšිāļēāļŊා āļ­ිāļēෙāļąāˇ€ා. āļ‘āļ­ුāļ¸ා ⎀āļœේ āļąාāļēāļšāļēෙāļš්‌ āļļි⎄ි⎀ුāļĢේ āļąැāļ­්āļąāļ¸් āļšොāļ§ිāļēා āļ­ාāļ¸āļ­් āļ¸ුāļŊāļ­ි⎀් āļšැāļŊāļēේ āļ‰āļą්āļąāˇ€ා. āļ‘⎄ෙāļ¸ āˇ€ුāļĢා āļąāļ¸් āļ…āļ´āļ§ āļ‰āļą්āļą āˇ€ෙāļą්āļąේ āļļāļēේ āļœැ⎄ි āļœැ⎄ී. āļ‘āļ­ුāļ¸ා āļ…āļ´ āļģැāļšāļœāļ­්āļ­ āļ‘āļš āļ…āļ¸āļ­āļš āļšāļģāļŊා āļ¸ේ ⎀ෙāļŊා⎀ේ āļ…āļ´ි ⎀ැāļŠ āļšāļģāļąāˇ€ා āļąāļ¸් āļ’āļš āļ¸āˇ„ āļ´ාāļ´āļēāļš්‌. āļ…āļ´ි āļšāˇ…āļœුāļĢ āˇƒāļŊāļšāļą්āļą āļ•āļą. āļēāļšා⎀ැ⎀ ⎃ි⎃ිāļģ āļšුāļ¸ාāļģ āļ¯ි⎃ාāļąාāļēāļš āļ¸āˇ„āļ­ා āļ¯ āļ¸ේ āļļ⎃āļēේ āļœāļ¸āļą් āļšāˇ… āļ…āļēෙāļšි. "āļ¸ා āļļ⎃āļē āļ¸ැāļ¯ āˇ„ිāļ§āļœෙāļą āˇ„ිāļ§ිāļēෙ. āļ´ිāļ´ිāļģුāļ¸් ⎄āļŦāļš්‌ āļ†āˇ€ා. āļ¸āļ§ āˇƒි⎄ිāļē āļąැāļ­ි⎀ුāļĢා. ⎃ි⎄ිāļē āļ‘āļąāļšොāļ§ āļ¸ා ⎃ිāļ§ිāļēේ āļ…āļąුāļģාāļ°āļ´ුāļģ āļŊෝ⎄āļŊේ āļ¯ැāļŠි ⎃āļ­්āļšාāļģ āļ’āļšāļšāļēේ. āļ¸āļœේ āļ¯āļšුāļĢු āļ…āļ­ āļšැāļŠිāļŊා. āļ’ āļ…āļ­ිāļą් āļ¯ැāļą් ⎀ැāļŠāļšāļģāļą්āļą āļļැ⎄ැ. āļ¸āļœේ āļ…āļ¸්āļ¸āļ­්, āļ…āļēිāļēාāļ­්, āļ¸ේ āļ…āļąāļ­ුāļģේāļ¯ී āļąැāļ­ි⎀ුāļĢා. āļ¸ා ⎅āļŸāļ§ āļ† āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ිāļ­ුāļ¸ා āļ¸āļœේ ⎄ි⎃ āļ´ිāļģිāļ¸ැāļ¯ "āļ­ෙāļģු⎀āļą් ⎃āļģāļĢිāļą් āļ”āļļ ⎃ු⎀āļ´āļ­් ⎀ේ⎀ා"āļēි āļšී āļļ⎀ āļ¸ා ⎅āļŸ āˇƒිāļ§ි ⎄ෙāļ¯ිāļēāļš්‌ āļšී⎀ා. āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ිāļ­ුāļ¸āļąි, āļ…āļ´ි āļ”āļļāļ­ුāļ¸ාāļ§ āļĢāļē āļœැāļ­ිāļēි. āļ¸ෙāļ ්āļ āļģāļšāļŊ් ⎄ිāļ§āļ´ු āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ි⎀āļģුāļą්āļ§ āļšāļģāļą්āļą āļļැāļģි⎀ුāļĢ āˇ€ැāļŠāļš්‌ āļ”āļļāļ­ුāļ¸ා āļšāˇ…ා. āļšොāļ§ිāļēා āļ´āļģාāļĸāļē āļšāˇ…ා. āļ¸āˇ„ āļšොāļ§ිāļēා āļ´්‍āļģāļˇාāļšāļģāļąුāļ­් āļ‰āˇ€āļģāļēි. āļ¯ැāļą් āļœāļ¸ේ āļ…āļē āļļāļēේ ⎄ැංāļœෙāļą්āļąේ āļąැ⎄ැ. āļ‰āļŠāļ¸් ⎀āļŊ ⎀āļŊ් āļšāļ´āļŊා ⎀āļœා āļšāļģāļąāˇ€ා. āļšුāļšුāļģු ⎄āļ¯āļŊා ⎀āļœා āļšāļģāļąāˇ€ා. āļ¸ේ āļ­āļ­්āļ­්⎀āļē āļ‡āļ­ි āļšāˇ… āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ි āļ¸āˇ„ිāļą්āļ¯ āļģාāļĸāļ´āļš්‌⎂ āļ¸āˇ„āļ­ාāļ§ āļ…āļ´ි āļšāˇ…āļœුāļĢ āˇƒāļŊāļšāļąāˇ€ා."āļēāļšා⎀ැ⎀, āļ‰āļŗිāļœොāļŊ්āļŊෑ⎀ āļ´්‍āļģාāļŽāļ¸ිāļš āˇ€ිāļ¯ු⎄āļŊේ ⎄āļ­āļģ⎀āļą āˇ€āˇƒāļģේ ⎁ි⎂්‍āļēāļēāļšු ⎀āļą āļŊāļš්‌⎂ාāļą් āļ¸āļ°ු⎁ංāļš āļ°āļģ්āļ¸āļ´ාāļŊ āļ…āļ´ āˇƒāļ¸āļœ āļšāļ­ා āļšāˇ…ේāļē. "āļ…āļ´ේ āļ­ාāļ­්āļ­ා āļēූ. āļļී. āļ°āļģ්āļ¸āļ´ාāļŊ. āļ­ාāļ­්āļ­ා āļ‘āļ¯ා āļļෝāļ¸්āļļāļēāļ§ āļ…⎄ු⎀ුāļĢා. āļ¯ැāļą් āļ‰āļą්āļąේ āļ…āļ¸්āļ¸āļēි āļ¸ාāļēි ⎀ිāļ­āļģāļēි. āļ…āļ¸්āļ¸āļēි āļ¸ාāļēි āļ‘āļ¯ා āļ­ාāļ­්āļ­ා āļļāļŊāļą්āļą āļ‰āˇƒ්‌āļ´ිāļģිāļ­ාāļŊෙāļ§ āļœිāļēා. āļ­ාāļ­්āļ­ා āļ¸āˇ… āļ¸ිāļĢි āļœොāļŠāļš āˇƒිāļ§ිāļąāˇ€ා āļ¸ා āļ¯ැāļš්‌āļšා." āļ¸ෙāļļāļŗු āļšāļ­ා āļšිāļēāļą āļ­āˇ€āļ­් āļ¯āļģු⎀ො āļ¸ේ āļœāļ¸ේ ⎃ිāļ§ිāļ­ි.āļąිāļšāˇ€ැ⎀, āļ‰āļŗිāļœොāļŊ්āļŊෑ⎀, āļ­āļŊ්āļœāˇƒ්‌⎀ැ⎀, āļ¸ොāļģ⎀ැ⎀, ⎄āļŊ්āļ¸ිāļŊ්āļŊ⎀ැāļ§ිāļē, āļ¯ුāļ§ු⎀ැ⎀, āļģ⎅⎀āļąා⎀, āļ´ුāļŊිāļēංāļšු⎅āļ¸, āļ´ා⎅ු ⎄āļŊ්āļ¸ිāļŊ්āļŊෑ⎀ āļ†āļ¯ී āļœāļ¸් āļģැ⎃āļš āļ…āļ´ි āļ‡āˇ€ිāļ¯්āļ¯ෙāļ¸ු. ⎄ැāļ¸āļ­ැāļąāļšāļ¸ āļšොāļ§ි āļˇී⎂āļĢāļēāļ§ āļœොāļ¯ුāļģු ⎀ූ āļ…āļēāļēි. āļ”⎀ු⎄ු āļ¯ැāļą් āļĸී⎀ිāļ­āļē āļ…āļŊුāļ­ෙāļą් āļ´āļ§āļą්āļœෙāļąāļē. ⎀āļŊ් āļļි⎄ි⎀ූ āļ‰āļŠāļ¸් āļ‘⎅ි⎀ේ. āļšāļŊāļš්‌ āļ´ුāļģāļą් ⎀ී āļ´ැ⎀ැāļ­ි āļšුāļšුāļģු ⎀āļŊ āļąිāļēāļģ āļļැāļŗේ. āļŊිāļēāļ¯ි āļšැāļ´ේ. āļ­ැāļą āļ­ැāļą āļąිāļŊ්āļŊ āļœāˇ„āļą āļœොāļēāļ¸් āļ¯ āļ´ෙāļąේ. āļē⎅ි āļ´ිāļļිāļ¯ෙāļą āļœāļ¸්āļ¸ාāļą āļ…āļ´ි āļ¯ුāļ§ුāļ¸ු. āļ¸ේ ⎄ැāļ¸āļ­ැāļąāļ¸ āˇ„ැāļ¸ āļąිāˇ€āˇƒāļšāļ¸ āļ‹āˇ…ුāˇ€āˇƒ්‌⎃āļ§ āļ‰āˇ„⎅ිāļą් ⎃ිāļēāļŊු āļ¯ෙāļąාāļœේāļ¸ āļœෞāļģ⎀āļē āļŊāļļāļą āļĄාāļēාāļģූāļ´āļēāļš්‌ ⎀ෙāļēි. āļ’ āļ¸āˇ„ිāļą්āļ¯ āļģාāļĸāļ´āļš්‌⎂ āļĸāļąාāļ°ිāļ´āļ­ිāļ­ුāļ¸ාāļœේ āļĄාāļēාāļģූāļ´āļēāļēි. āļ”⎀ු⎄ු āļ¸ෙ⎃ේ āļšිāļēāļ­ි. "āļ…āļ´āļ§ āļ‘āļ­ුāļ¸ාāļœෙāļą් āļ´ිāļ§āļ§ āļēāļą්āļą āļļැ⎄ැ. āļ‘āļ­ුāļ¸ා āļ´āˇ„⎅⎀ුāļĢේ āļąැāļ­්āļąāļ¸් āļēුāļ¯්āļ°āļē āļ¯ිāļœāļ§āļ¸ āļēāļąāˇ€ා. āļ¸ේ āļœāļ¸්āļ¸ාāļą āļ¸ුāļŊāļ­ි⎀් āļšැāļŊේ ⎃ිāļ§ිāļą āļšොāļ§ිāļēාāļ§ āļ…āļēිāļ­ි ⎀ෙāļąāˇ€ා. āļ‘āļ¯ා āļ…āļ´ේ āļąෑāļēāļą්āļœේ āļ¸āˇ…āļšāļŗāļą් āļ…āļ­āļģāļ§ āļ­ු⎀ාāļŊ ⎀ූ āļ…āļ´ේ āļąෑ āļ¸ිāļ­ුāļģāļą් āļ…āļ­āļģāļ§ āļ‘āļ­ුāļ¸ා āļ† āˇ„ැāļ§ි, ⎄āļŦා ⎀ැ⎅āļ´ුāļĢු ⎄ැāļ§ි āļ…āļ¸āļ­āļš āļšāļģāļą්āļą āļ…āļ´ිāļ§ āļļැ⎄ැ. āļ‘āļ­ුāļ¸ා āļ…āļ´ේ āļšෙāļąෙāļš්‌. āļ…āļ´ේāļ¸ āļšෙāļąෙāļš්‌. āļ…āļ´ි āļ…āļ´ේ āļĄāļą්āļ¯āļē āļ¯ෙāļą්āļąේ āļ‘āļ­ුāļ¸ාāļ§āļ¸āļēි."

Canadian Tamils for Peace and Democracy support President Mahinda

At Kurunegala rally:
President pledges to end thuggery
Chaminda Perera in Kurunegala
*One minute silence for slain UPFA supporter
*We will defeat any conspiracy
*Govt will protect unitary status of country
While condemning the killing of an UPFA supporter in Madurankuliya by a group of gunmen on Saturday, President Mahinda Rajapaksa said he will not allow thuggery to take root in the country under any circumstances. The President was addressing over 100,000 people who flocked to the Maligapitiya grounds in Kurunegala in support of his victory at the upcoming election.
President Rajapaksa along with the Ministers observed one minute’s silence as a mark of respect to the UPFA supporter who was shot dead by an armed group, before he commenced his address.
“We should not give any room to the person who thinks that he can get political mileage by killing innocent people,” he said.
“We will put a full stop to thuggery and conspiracy to divide the country by remerging the North and the East on January 26,” he stressed. He added that the people of this nation gave him power at the eleventh hour to save the country which was under the threat of LTTE terrorists and their followers in the South.
The President reiterated that part of the country was handed over to the terrorists by an agreement and by the time he came into power and the terrorists have set up their own administration for a separate State.
The President stressed the Government pioneered liberating the country from the clutches of terrorism to ensure a better-country for posterity.
He said several traders were engaged in a futile attempt to create an artificial rice shortage in the country by hiding their stocks. The President reminded that this type of consipiracy was in place during 1977 and all hidden stocks came out after the 1977 General election.
He said that the people are ready to teach a lesson to these bogus traders and the conspirators who are involved in betraying the country on January 26. The President said that he is familiar with the life in the rural village as he hailed from one of the most under developed villages in the South.
“Certain elements have said on election platforms that I will be sent to a cottage in a rural village after the election. He said these elements of the pampered class have neither seen a cottage nor experienced the life in rural villages in the country”, he said.
He added that he did not sell any property belonging to the State during his entire tenure as the President. He said the Government has brought several State ventures which were privatized by previous administrations under its control during the past four years.
President Rajapaksa said some weak leaders in the country did not identify LTTE members as terrorists in fear of their lives at that time.
He stressed that more than 30,000 service personnel sacrificed their lives to safeguard the unitary state of the country and the Government is bound to protect and promote the unitary state of the country.
He said that the Government has clearly outlined in the Mahinda Chinthanaya that the Government is committed to protect and promote the unitary status of the country.
Enterprise Development and Investment Promotion and Media and Information Minister Anura Priyadarshana Yapa, Rural Industries Minister S.B. Navinna, Nation Building Minister and Hiriyala SLFP Organizer Salinda Dissanayake and NFF Leader Wimal Weerawansa also spoke.
President will romp home
Lakshmi de Silva
President Mahinda Rajapaksa will win the forthcoming Presidential poll with an absolute majority as it is clearly seen that all sections of people in the country are rallying round him, SLFP General Secretary, Agriculture and Mahaveli Development Minister Maithreepala Sirisena said yesterday.
Addressing a SLFP press conference at the Mahaveli Centre he said the President had clearly made the people understand his leadership in winning the humanitarian operations against the LTTE terrorists and also implementing mega development programs that accelerated the economic development of the country.
The people strongly felt the freedom from fear that existed even when President Mahinda Rajapaksa was elected four years back. Today they were enjoying the newly won freedom and were rallying in massive numbers at the public meetings held to support his candidature, the Minister noted.
Continuing he said on the other hand the NDF candidate’s behaviour and words used in addressing the public appears crazy and is an indication of his defeat.
He sometimes used the slang used in the army by some high ups on lower ranks. The UNP and the JVP have started unleashing violence like the cases in Tangalla or Anamaduwa as they want to use violence to instill fear into people.
They will have to face the repercussions of their own violence as the public were aware of their past records.
Three public opinion polls have been conducted and each one showed that President Mahinda Rajapaksa was miles ahead of the NDF candidate. The UNP and the JVP could live in their dreams for another few days but on January 27 they will wake up with the reality of realizing that President Mahinda Rajapaksa cannot be defeated.
President an exceptional leader - Ven Chandrarathana Thera
Sandya Karunaratne and Chinta Ranasinghe
President Mahinda Rajapaksa is an exceptional leader who destroyed the utopian dream of Eelam that was about to be built through 30 years of armed might, All Island Young Bhikkhu Organization President Ven Debokkawe Chandrarathana Thera said. The Thera said President Rajapaksa is the only leader who can actively intervene politics, economics, social and cultural matters adding that Sarath Fonseka is a stranger to these concepts.
If the country is to witness a bright future, it is President Mahinda Rajapaksa who should be elected leader at the Presidential Election and all members of the Sangha would join together to deny State power falling into the hands of a dictator like Sarath Fonseka.
He said: “Whenever the country was in peril it was the Bhikkhus who first became alert to the warning signs”.
The Thera was addressing a media conference at the SLFI recently. The Thera also said the role played by the Sangha from historical times to protect the sovereignty of the country should not be trivialized.
“Our organization had raised its voice on behalf of the unitary State since 2008. We will never issue statements for political gain.
We have taken a neutral stand. Today, the National Bhikkhu Front is making statements that mislead the people. We ask the people not to be carried away by such views.”
National Young Bhikkhu Organization Secretary Ven Aranwala Sumana Thera said they have not come forward to speak on behalf of any political party.
“There are among us those who hold different political views.
Certain Bhikkhus have even given up positions and high office and join us to protect the unitary state, independence and territorial integrity of the country.
This is social duty cast upon us,” he said.
The Thera observed that President Mahinda Rajapaksa had defeated all efforts to divide the country honouring his pledge made in 2005.
“However, a conspiracy is being hatched to once again divide the country and Opposition alliance led by Sarath Fonseka is attempting install a totalitarian regime in the country,” he said.

Canadian Tamils for Peace and Democracy support President
The Canadian Tamils for Peace and Democracy, a prominent civil rights group comprised of Sri Lankan Tamils living in Canada has pledged its fullest support to President Mahinda Rajapaksa at the forthcoming Presidential election. According to ToL sources in Toronto, the group has passed a resolution unanimously to support President Rajapaksa to be re-elected and as their only candidate for the Presidency.
The most recent confirmation of support came from the Executive Committee of CatPad, during their extraordinary meeting held on January 12, 2010 and ratified its support to the strong leadership given by President Mahinda Rajapaksa to eradicate terrorism and restore democracy in the North and East of Sri Lanka.
In a press release today the group also requests their brethren in Sri Lanka to follow its path to strengthen the hands of President Mahinda Rajapaksa to take forward the task of not only defeating terrorism in the North and East but also to strengthen the democracy by developing the province economically and socially which are interconnected with peace and political stability in the country.
The Press Release in full: “We urge our Tamils in the North and East to remember our past days under the LTTE warmongers and the communal UNP regime that supported them to establish a de facto government, which recognized LTTE, the most ruthless terrorist outfit in the World as the sole representative of the Tamils. Let us not forget those horrible days under the LTTE.
Their forceful recruitment of our beloved children, military training for young and old, killing of innocent civilians and moderate Tamils, suicide bombings, sufferings and sorrows followed by brutal war unnecessarily forced by the LTTE.
Remember the precious lives of all communities lost by the brutality of LTTE and their sole supporter the UNP. Let us not forget the plight of our Tamil speaking Muslims whose lives were ruined by the cruel LTTE.
We urge our Tamils in the North and East, to support a courageous leader who stood up for democracy for the Tamils and Peace for all Sri Lankans. We urge our Tamil speaking Muslims to rally behind President, Mahinda Rajapaksa, who brought them back to the North, the land of their ancestors.
Remember the UNP which not only permitted the high powered transmission equipment presented by the Norwegian Government without duty to the Voice of Tigers but also exercised their powers in government to strengthen the LTTE militarily during the pact signed with the LTTE in February 2002. The loss to the nation is well-known to the people of Sri Lanka. There is not a single family in Sri Lanka who was not affected by the unholy alliance of the UNP and LTTE, which ruined most of the men, women and children in Sri Lanka.
“We the Canadian Tamils for Peace and Democracy urge the Tamil community to vote for President Mahinda Rajapaksa, a leader who stood firmly against all international pressure and brought terrorism to an end in our motherland. Mahinda Rajapaksa is a leader who freed thousands of Tamils from the Vanni regime and showed a new path to Peace and Democracy. He is a President who saved our beloved children from the LTTE clutches, removed their cyanide capsules and relieved them from becoming suicide bombers. Give the President another chance to develop the North and East to regain our past glory.
Let us become once again the most educated community and stronger business community and become the backbone of our Nation.
Let us all live together with our Muslim and Sinhala brothers as one family.
“To achieve all our dreams let us unite together and vote for a President who has the ability to make this happen. Vote for President Mahinda Rajapaksa.
“Defeat the unholy alliance of Terrorist TNA (Tamil National Alliance alias Terrorist National Alliance) and the communal UNP.
“Defeat separatism. Defeat Sarath Fonseka.
“Every Vote to President Mahinda Rajapaksa is a vote for Peace.
“Every Vote for Sarath Fonseka is vote for Piece (Division of Sri Lanka).
“Your every vote counts!
“Vote for President Mahinda Rajapaksa!
Vote for a United Sri Lanka!”

Sunday, January 3, 2010

Sri Lanka will not be held back by threats, the President says

Sri Lanka will not be held back by threats, the President saysFri, Jan 1, 2010, 05:59 pm SL Time, ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka.
Jan 01, Colombo: Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa today said the country will not be held back by threatened economic sanctions or withdrawn trade concessions imposed by outside forces when the people are moving towards a decisive stage in the country's political development.
Issuing a New Year's message today President Rajapaksa pledged to develop the country in the new decade into a regional hub for ocean and air traffic and a knowledge-based society.
"We shall build on the foundation already laid in the construction of harbors, airports, extensive road networks and the marked increase in IT literacy in Sri Lanka," he said.
The President took the opportunity on behalf of the nation to thank all service personnel who willingly made the supreme sacrifice and to their mothers, fathers, spouses and the children.
President Rajapaksa pledged to focus more on development and continue the massive projects the government had started amidst the fighting with the rebels.
He expressed hope that the government will be able to fulfill the aspirations of the people for progress and prosperity as a nation, and a land of peace and unity for the children.
"We look forward with a commitment to heal the wounds of the past and also resist the pressures from abroad that stand in our way in this great task; as we stood firm against uninvited interference in our efforts to defeat terrorism," he said.
The President, appreciating the countries that supported Sri Lanka during the crucial battle with the rebels, said that Sri Lanka is committed to strengthen and sustain the relationships with them.
"We remain committed to a strengthened and sustained friendship with the countries that supported us in full measure to defeat terrorism and bring peace to our people. Similarly, we shall foster and encourage good relations with those who recognize and respect our sovereignty and encourage us in ways to move on the path to peace and prosperity," he said.
Sri Lanka has been criticized by the Western governments and organization for its conduct during the final stages of the war against the Tamil Tiger rebels. The European Union has even recommended suspending the generalized system of preferences plus (GSP+) trade facility to Sri Lanka due to its alleged human right violations.

Last modified on: 1/4/2010 8:30:36 AM Frederica reconfirms Fonseka's allegation

Frederica reconfirms Fonseka's allegation
His clarification no retraction :
Editor Frederica Jansz in an article titled Her Story ... published yesterday in the Sunday Leader reconfirmed the authenticity of the interview given by former Army Commander and Chief of Defence Staff General Sarath Fonseka to the newspaper alleging that the Defence Secretary had ordered the killing of surrendering LTTE leaders.
Excerpts from the article:
"The interview proceeded as a series of questions and answers on major topics and issues and a transcript of the interview ... appeared in the Sunday Leader of December 13, 2009.
"..I asked the General what really happened.... Fonseka made the allegation that would later appear in the newspapers.
"He claimed he had heard that Gotabhya Rajapaksa ordered any surrendering LTTE cadres to be shot, and related the story of Pulidevan and Nadesan's surrender... It seemed obvious that an allegation of this magnitude deserves special attention...
"Realising the impact such striking allegations would have, at 9.45 a.m. before the paper went to print on Saturday I once again contacted Sarath Fonseka.
"During a 20 minute phone conversation the General reiterated that he stood by the allegation....
"Fonseka then said he was willing to go on record with his claim and he assured me that he would not back down. Only with that assurance did we go to print. Despite ... pressure it is notable that after its publication the General stood by the story. In a press conference he gave on Sunday afternoon at the JAIC Hilton, documented by the BBC, he made no effort to deny the story....
"At a meeting with the Chairman of the Sunday Leader, Lal Wickremetunga on Monday, December 14, senior UNP leaders together with Samaraweera and the JVP insisted that a retraction was necessary as the story had damaged Fonseka's reputation as a patriot...
"However, as a journalist and as someone who committed to the truth I refused to publish a fraudulent retraction....
"Later that same day, December 14, I met the General at approximately 2.45 p.m. whereupon he reiterated that he could not deny what he had said...
"Mangala Samaraweera and Vijitha Herath however remained adamant demanding that the Leader publish a partial retraction.....
"Finally, we agreed on a compromise whereby a clarification written by Sarath Fonseka would appear in the Sunday Leader of December 20, 2009 issue.
This clarification emphasizes a technical point and is in no way a retraction. "Under immense pressure...and unable to flatly deny what he knew to be the truth the General waffled and issued what was neither a clarification nor a retraction.
"However over the following days his advisors and supporters would insist that Fonseka had denied the story. The move from clarification to retraction and denial proved to be a disaster...
"Finally, the JVP threatened to sue the Sunday Leader for defaming Fonseka.
"However, the UNP side of the Opposition Alliance assured us that no Letter of Demand would be forthcoming."
Courtesy : Daily News

We must stand united - Prime Minister

We must stand united - Prime Minister
The Administrative and Financial Regulations governing public servants are not meant for doing no work at all, Prime Minister Ratnasiri Wickramanayaka said.
“They should be used for guidance to provide an efficient service to the public. I am always prepared to give political leadership to any employee who takes correct decision in the interest of the public,” Prime Minister Wickramanayaka said.
The Prime Minister made these revelations while inaugurating the official functions of the Prime Minister’s Office with the dawn of the New Year.
“It is Government’s objective to make a self-sufficient and self-reliant Sri Lanka in a peaceful and ethical atmosphere,” he said.
“Just as the way our people showed their unity when the tsunami struck Sri Lanka, it is also necessary for us to stand united in our task to make a self-sufficient Sri Lanka,” the Prime Minister said.
“We must also look back at what we have done in the past.
“Last year, our Forces were able to eliminate the LTTE terrorism from this soil under the able leadership of the Government.
“We must also begin our activities for the new year with a sense of self-confidence.
“We have a duty to render an honest service to the masses,” the Prime Minister said. Prime Minister’s Secretary Mahinda Bandusena, Private Secretary Indika P. Chandrathilake, Additional Secretary S.S. Miyanawela, Coordinating Secretaries

Wimal challenges again

Wimal challenges again
Hiran H. Seneviratne
National Freedom Front Chairman Wimal Weerawansa called upon New Democratic Front Presidential candidate Sarath Fonseka or any nominee of his within the next 48 hours for a live television debate in any private channel to disprove his son-in-law’s alleged arm deals.
Fonseka held the post of Army Commander for four years and during that period he had purchased arms and military hardware through a company registered in USA belonging to his son-in-law, Weerawansa said. Weerawansa said he has ample documentary proof with all facts and figures on these deals carried out by Fonseka’s son-in-law.
He said the address in the US Green Card and the son-in-law’s company address is similar and he had misled the US Government as well. The Army Commander placed orders for purchase and procurement of arms and military hardware up to US$ 25 million and these dealings were done through his son-in-law’s company registered in USA, Weerawansa alleged.
Therefore, this is a golden opportunity for him to prove his cleanliness and transparency before the Presidential election, he said.
Weerawansa also said that the Sunday Leader Editor has also replied well to JVP MP Lal Kantha’s challenge on Fonseka’s controversial statement to their Sunday newspaper and that itself indicates that he challenged without any proof.
Engineering Services and Construction Minister Dr Rajitha Senaratna said that every citizen should be grateful to President Mahinda Rajapaksa for ending the three decade war. During his four year period, the President launched massive development projects and provided a large number of employment.
Minister Senaratna said upto 2006, the Chief of Defence Staff was the head of the tender board on purchasing and procurement of arms and military hardware into the country and Fonseka’s son-in-law paid all taxes to the US Government under his name on these arms purchasing and procurement.

War won due to correct leadership - Minister

War won due to correct leadership - Minister
The war victory is a result of a collective effort made by the Head of the Armed Forces, Commanders of the three Forces and the Police. Some people are trying to claim credit saying they won the war because of that person and this person.
Thanks to the political leadership which took heroic and accurate decisions unbiased to West, the Forces were able to win the war, said Local Government and Provincial Councils Minister Janaka Bandara Tennakoon. He was speaking at the opening of a new power plant at Galapamula in the Galewela Divisional Secretariat Division.
“Former leaders had to obey the west and stop the war even though victory was in sight.
Western countries tried to influence President Mahinda Rajapaksa in many ways to stop the war. Today we have the strength to stand on our feet as an independent nation because of the President’s correct decision,” the Minister said.