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RUGBY ALSO BELONGS TO AMBIGA

The easy way is to swim with the flow. But choosing the direction

that clearly appears to be the truth is the practice of media activity.

It is not easy. Sometimes they can even turn life into a challenge.

Especially in Sri Lanka, politicians have been accustomed to

standing up for their own opinions, not for the right opinions.

It is clear from the National Sports Council itself that the

government is strongly feeling the need to stand up for the wrong

decisions in rugby that are being pointed out by the media at this

moment in sports. The expectation at this moment is to end the

pro-Namal interest at the root of the rugby crisis with a political

victory, regardless of the law of the country. Therefore, a National

Sports Council has been appointed to ensure the identity of rugby

with a majority of rugby representation. We have written about it

before.In that regard, the Minister cannot ignore that the £50,000 fine

imposed on the Sri Lanka Rugby Administration an international

offender that has become a black mark not only on rugby in this

country but on the sport as a whole has played a role in the

decline of Sri Lanka Rugby. However, he will have to set that

aside and personally appoint its CEO as the Chairman.

Some individuals must be appointed despite their ineligibility

under the laws of the game. To mask this irregularity, the names

of Roshan Mahanama and Sidath Weththamuni figures known

for their clean reputations have also been included to lend

credibility and cover up the mess.

What we are witnessing here is the identity of a political faction

that cannot be detached from figures like Namal or Sunil Kumara.

It represents a mindset where highlighting the truth is viewed as

an act of influence, disrespect, and opposition. What this identity

defends is not just the £50,000 offenders, but also a broader

extension that tacitly endorses troubling actions, such as the

murder of Thajudeen a tragic chapter in the history of Sri Lanka

rugby and sports. The damage caused by any form of proud and

arrogant ideology is not insignificant. Rather than addressing the

fundamental issues related to the two points mentioned above, it

is becoming increasingly evident that the misguided belief that

opposing these issues harms one’s character goes beyond party

affiliation. It is, in fact, a reflection of the identity of our

politicians.To a society that still views sports as mere play, the murder of

Thajudeen, a player, may seem like the killing of just a boy who

played. When politics interferes and the politician sees no harm

in exploiting the situation, the incident is regarded as normal.

However, as politics becomes entangled, we witness how not

only the law of the country but also the Hippocratic Oath along

with its inherent nobility diminishes, tarnished by the dirty and

inhumane actions of political manipulation.

This process has been energized and a blessing for the security of

the people, and it is a moment when another narrow politics is

working in a similar way. But there is an ugly and noble coating.

The desire to confine the entire power in a narrow place as a class.

The above-mentioned evils are the result of making the

environment of this country a blessing without punishment so that

the culprits can go for a power recognized not only in the country

but in the world.

Although the Sports Minister, who was a Namal supporter, left

behind figures who always stood up for his interests. Roshan

Ranasinghe, who wielded great power in the Sports Council, is

considered an accomplice in some of the legal charges against

Namal. The current Sports Minister does not know that the Rugby

World Cup was also organized in this country by a group of

politically blessed people, outside the Rugby administration, in

collaboration with people who handle the wealth of this country,

so that they could spread their wings like octopuses.Therefore, not only in Sri Lanka but also in the rugby world, the

guilty parties who have ignored the mistakes of Sri Lanka are

making plans to seize the responsibility as a hereditary right. It is

a political tragedy that rugby powerhouses, who largely fit the

political identity of the current government, are showing great

interest in securing the legacy of a noble system with the blessings

of that same government.

In the final phase of the attempt to destroy rugby regionally by

sacrificing the country’s development funds to pay the £50,000

fine, political authorities should be working to revive the sport by

holding accountable those who have destroyed it, even if it means

banning the country’s sports administration. Yet, to this day,

because the local associations refuse to agree, those responsible

have lost their rugby positions, only to occupy prominent sports

roles elsewhere. What is happening now, despite the justice that

should be served, feels like burying the victim alive and covering

it with soil.

In an environment where the government thinks it is the children

of working people like farmers, laborers, fishermen, and the like,

under the power of a movement that has used young women like

Ambiga to attract votes on the country’s stages, instead of

standing up for the return of sports to their culture, a great wall is

being built that prevents them from entering.If a child from an ordinary family is given the opportunity to play

rugby in a college like Olcott in Galle, it is sad that the Southern

Province Rugby Administration should be helped to further

strengthen it, but it is sad that the government has the blessing to

trample them and deprive that class of its right constitutionally.

For several years, this unholy alliance, both domestically and

internationally, has been striving to strip ordinary Sri Lankans of

their right to rugby, reducing it to the pastime of a privileged few,

simply because the law was properly enforced. State officials and

politicians, who have disregarded the constitutional

representatives and overstepped the boundaries of the existing

constitution, are eroding the right to play sports for certain

classes. How tragic it would be if the plans of the elite who have

long enjoyed these privileges in sports club restaurants for a

fraction of the cost were executed by the very politics that serves

their interests.

After the tales that the red-tinted tea poured onto our tables by the

Ambigala generations is the very blood of the people, the plan to

deny justice to those who believed their sacrifices of blood, sweat,

and tears would be acknowledged is unfolding in rugby. This is

happening with the blessings of the same power that once upheld

those ideals. We are waiting. In Sri Lankan political ideology,

where correcting pointed-out wrongs is seen as disrespectful, it

has become the norm to commit to upholding injustice, whether

against one’s conscience or without regard for the will of others.

Because of the distance to that right, they fail to see the future

being lost for the children of the Ambiga.One day, when the Ambiga grow older and realize that fighting

for rights, which seem so far out of reach, is a political act, they

will be deeply shocked by the mistakes they have made and the

impact those choices will have on their future generations.

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