OP-ED


What Nordic Leaders Can Learn From Narendra Modi

What Nordic Leaders Can Learn From Narendra Modi

By: Erik Solheim On Monday, 18 May, the world’s most popular politician will visit Norway. India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi will be received by King Harald, promote Indian business, meet with the Indian diaspora and attend an India-Nordic prime ministers’ meeting. The Nordic prime ministers should listen carefully. They have a lot to learn from their Indian counterpart. Whilst Nordic prime ministers barely enjoy a domestic approval rating of 30 per cent, Modi stands at around 70 per cent i


Erik Solheim

Erik Solheim

What Singapore’s Economic Blueprint Means for Sri Lanka — and How to Get There

What Singapore’s Economic Blueprint Means for Sri Lanka — and How to Get There

By Jeevan Thiyagaraja Singapore released its Economic Strategy Review on 13 May 2026 — a 32-recommendation blueprint built around three imperatives: sharpen competitive value, build agility, and embed resilience. At first glance, the two countries appear to occupy entirely different economic universes. Singapore is a mature, high-income city-state with USD 500 billion in GDP and decades of accumulated institutional capital. Sri Lanka is a lower-middle-income island of 22 million people, still e


Jeevan Thiyagaraja

Jeevan Thiyagaraja

Vijay’s Religion Didn’t Win or Lose Tamil Nadu — Governance Will

Vijay’s Religion Didn’t Win or Lose Tamil Nadu — Governance Will

By M.R. Narayan Swamy One day, dozens of children from a convent school flocked to the Kamakoti Peetam at Kanchipuram in Tamil Nadu to take the blessings of the now late Sri Chandrasekharendra Saraswati, undoubtedly one of modern India’s greatest and most revered Hindu saints. The Mahaperiyava, as he was addressed, gave each student, boy or girl, a banana as prasadam or holy offering. He later told his aides that many of the students were Christians, and it would not have been correct to offer


M.R. Narayan Swamy

M.R. Narayan Swamy

The Ones Who Warn Power: Why Every Nation Needs Its Brave Dissenters
Ngiam Tong Dow

The Ones Who Warn Power: Why Every Nation Needs Its Brave Dissenters

By Jeevan Thiyagaraja There is a particular species of public servant that institutions simultaneously need and resent. They are not contrarians for sport. They are not leakers or rebels. They are people who have earned, through decades of credibility and demonstrated competence, the standing to say the thing that everyone in the room has already thought but nobody will speak aloud. Call them institutional dissenters. Call them honest brokers. The label matters less than the function: they exi


Jeevan Thiyagaraja

Jeevan Thiyagaraja

Tamil Nadu Thrown Into Political Turmoil as Governor Blocks Vijay’s Path

Tamil Nadu Thrown Into Political Turmoil as Governor Blocks Vijay’s Path

By M.R. Narayan Swamy Tamil Nadu was in a state of unexpected flux as superstar Vijay battled with the New Delhi-appointed governor to get a crucial invite to prove his legislative majority, with some political parties saying the drama was being orchestrated by the government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi. After leading his Tamilga Vettri Kazhagam (TVK) to stunning victories in 108 seats in the 234-member Assembly, Vijay faced a sudden googly from Governor Rajendra Vishwanath Arlekar, who sa


M.R. Narayan Swamy

M.R. Narayan Swamy

The Tamil Nadu Illusion: What Sri Lankan Tamils Must Understand

The Tamil Nadu Illusion: What Sri Lankan Tamils Must Understand

By M.R. Narayan Swamy This happened just days after former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi was assassinated in May 1991. A prominent Tamil Nadu politician, a known vocal backer of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), desperately invited me to his government-provided house in Delhi. He badly wanted to know who had killed Gandhi at Siriperumbudur near Chennai. The Hindu newspaper had, until then, not scooped the infamous pictures of the killer team. When I reached his house, two young aide


M.R. Narayan Swamy

M.R. Narayan Swamy

Valikamam North Council Chief Accuses Police of Threats Over Effort to Reclaim Road Occupied by Thaiyiddy Vihara

Valikamam North Council Chief Accuses Police of Threats Over Effort to Reclaim Road Occupied by Thaiyiddy Vihara

JAFFNA, Sri Lanka — Tensions are escalating in Jaffna after S. Sugirthan, chairman of the Valikamam North Pradeshiya Sabha, accused police of attempting to obstruct efforts to reclaim a public road allegedly occupied by Tissa Rajamaha Viharaya, a Buddhist shrine constructed on disputed civilian land in Thaiyiddy. Mr. Sugirthan said he was summoned by Palaly Police and warned to abandon efforts to recover Bhavani Veethi, a road legally belonging to the local council but currently enclosed within


Our Reporter

Our Reporter

Sri Lanka's Unfinished Promise on Language Rights
Tamil Federal Party leader S.J.V. Chelvanayakam leads a peaceful protest against the Sinhala Only Act in 1956, as Sri Lanka’s post-independence language conflict began to reshape the nation’s future.

Sri Lanka's Unfinished Promise on Language Rights

By Jeevan Thiyagaraja From the riots of 1958 to a Charter that awaits— the long arc of a promise made, deferred, and still owed. Language is never merely a tool for communication. It is the vessel through which a person experiences dignity — or its absence. It was this question, left dangerously unanswered, that ignited the riots of July 1958. Decades of armed conflict followed. The path to healing has, in fact, been laid — in Parliament, in the Constitution, and in a Language Charter that n


Jeevan Thiyagaraja

Jeevan Thiyagaraja