Articles
-
Homosexuality originally classified as “Mental Disorder” – No one is born Gay.
How the politicized removal of homosexuality from medical classification sparked a global ideological movement – at the cost of science, child welfare, and societal norms. Psychiatry’s redefinition of homosexuality, under activist and financial pressure—not science—sparked a global domino effect that..
-
A Brewing Storm: Why the Government Must Now Move with Caution
There’s a rising current in the air — and we’ve seen it before. The same YouTubers. The same digital actors. The same voices who orchestrated regime change against Gotabaya Rajapaksa are stirring again. Politicians are angry over arrests. Sections of..
-
Silent Agents, Sold Nation: How Sri Lanka’s Sovereignty is being traded by its own”
Silent Agents, Sold Nation: How Sri Lanka’s Sovereignty Is Being Traded by Its Own A deep dive into how political elites are enabling foreign capture of Sri Lanka’s national assets — one MoU, one silent betrayal at a time. Sovereignty is..
-
PART 7 – 35 Indo-Lanka Agreements – An Urgent Appeal to the JVP/NPP Leadership
To the leadership of the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) and its political alliance, the National People’s Power (NPP): You rose to power on the promise of sovereignty, accountability, national dignity, and liberation from external control—both economic and political. Many voted for..
-
PART 6 – 35 Indo-Lanka Agreements – Geopolitical Risks, Strategic Precedents & the Indian Footprint in Sri Lanka
Beyond bilateral cooperation, the 35 Indo-Lanka agreements signed from Dec 2024 to April 2025 raise serious geopolitical, strategic, and national security implications. Sri Lanka now finds itself entangled in India’s broader ambitions—from energy corridors and religious soft power to maritime dominance and digital..
-
PART 5 – 35 Indo-Lanka Agreements. Unconstitutional? Legal and Sovereignty concerns
Since December 2024, the Anura Kumara Dissanayake government has signed or exchanged 35 bilateral agreements and MoUs with India, covering sensitive sectors such as defense, energy, ports, education, and digital surveillance. However, none of these agreements have been debated in Parliament, disclosed to..
-
PART 4 – 35 Indo-Lanka Agreements – From Anti-Imperialism to Indian Alignment
Domestic Reactions and the Ideological U-Turn of the NPP-JVP Government. For decades, the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP)—and by extension, the National People’s Power (NPP)—stood as fiery critics of foreign influence, imperialism, neoliberalism, and foreign debt dependency. Their ideological framework centered..
-
PART 3 – 35 Indo-Lanka Agreements – Strategic Entrapment or Regional Partnership?
How India Could Leverage the 35 Agreements to Dominate Sri Lanka. While bilateral cooperation between nations is common in an increasingly interdependent world, the sheer volume, strategic scope, and opaque execution of the 35 agreements signed between Sri Lanka..
-
Part 2: Strategic Impact Assessment of the 35 Agreements Signed Between Sri Lanka and India (Dec 2024 – Apr 2025)
While the volume of agreements signed between President Anura Kumara Dissanayake’s government and the Modi administration marks an unprecedented acceleration in bilateral cooperation, the true significance lies in the strategic depth, structural implications, and sovereignty risks embedded within each agreement. This section..
-
Part 1: The 35 India–Sri Lanka Agreements under President Anura Kumara Dissanayake (Dec 2024 – Apr 2025)
A Landmark Shift in Bilateral Engagement or a Rapid Path to Strategic Overreach? Within just five months of assuming office, President Anura Kumara Dissanayake embarked on a historic recalibration of Sri Lanka’s foreign policy — marked by an unprecedented volume and..





