During the presidential and parliamentary elections, I made it a point to closely evaluate the individuals the NPP was promoting as the future leadership of Sri Lanka. What I saw then was deeply concerning — a lot of noise, a lot of hype, but very little real substance. There was no meaningful track record, no proven competence, just exaggerated narratives.
Fast forward a year into governance — and those concerns have been validated again and again.
What we are witnessing today is not just incompetence. It’s a dangerous combination of inexperience, arrogance, and a refusal to take accountability. A “we know everything” attitude paired with childish defensiveness when things go wrong.
The recent $2.5 million treasury scam is a perfect example.
Look at the chaos:
The Finance Secretary says it was a hacking.
The Deputy Minister says it was not a hacking.
Another claims investigations only started two days ago.
Others admit it wasn’t even reported properly.
Meanwhile, the Prime Minister is already declaring there��s “no corruption” — before the investigation is even complete.
Which version are we supposed to believe?
Even more alarming now we’re hearing that additional documents have gone missing.
This isn’t just mismanagement. This is systemic failure.
Sri Lanka doesn’t have the luxury of learning through trial and error at this level.
This is not about politics anymore. This is about competence, accountability, and the future of the country.
Right now, we are being governed by confusion, contradiction, and crisis.
We promised “system change”. We’re now experiencing “system failure”
We are having the SLIoT Challenge competition today (25.04.2026) at the University of Moratuwa. Come and cheer on the competitors from schools, universities, and open categories.
Invitation for submitting proposals for the provision of an electronic voting (e-voting) system
The IESL invites interested parties to submit proposals for the provision of a secure and reliable e-voting system for its elections. For more information - https://t.co/YbUA8EsFD9
A quarter of Australia’s fuel comes from refineries in Singapore.
That’s why I’m here, working with our international partners to keep fuel flowing for Australians.
Because when things are uncertain around the world, strong relationships with our neighbours matter more than ever.
🚨 #BREAKINGNEWS Secretary Hegseth says the problem with Iran is they spend money on weapons instead of improving lives in Iran. US has 771,880 homeless every night, 47.9 million US citizens live in homes without secured food. Fuck you Hegseth. 🚨