Hon. Namal Rajapaksa, Attorney-at-Law
Recent Speeches
The speech is too brief to summarize meaningfully. The Hon. Namal Rajapaksa's contribution consists solely of a request to respond, without any substantive argument, proposal, or policy position expressed.
Read full text →Namal Rajapaksa raised several accountability concerns directed at the Government, including the forgery of 17 passports allegedly involving a Secretary within the relevant Ministry, which he stated remains unresolved. He demanded clarity on the authorization of the release of two narcotics-linked containers from the Port, asking specifically whether the President, the Minister responsible for Police, or the Inspector General of Police signed the written release order. He also called on the Government to engage constructively with trade unions and medical professionals, and urged the implementation of effective measures to address rising underworld violence and killings.
Read full text →Hon. Namal Rajapaksa criticised the Government's response to the murder of an attorney, arguing that official attempts to link the deceased to organised crime effectively normalise the killing and implicate the Government itself in criminal networks, while deflecting accountability from the President's Office or Prime Minister's Office. He challenged the Government's inconsistency in deploying the military and police during crises such as strikes and Cyclone Michaung while refusing to formally honour war heroes or acknowledge their role in ending the conflict. He further accused the Government of hypocrisy regarding the 2022 *Aragalaya* protests, alleging that members of the current administration helped instigate unrest that led to deaths, only to assume power without accountability to those affected. Rajapaksa concluded by calling for a broader, constructive vision to rebuild the economy and society rather than reliance on political intimidation and narrow partisan interests.
Read full text →Namal Rajapaksa criticised the government on several fronts, arguing that policies on import levies, fertiliser distribution, paddy purchasing, and cyclone relief (referencing the Ditwa cyclone) have failed farmers and rural communities, and that presidential promises of compensation up to Rs. 10 million for disaster-affected families were not honoured, with relief cheques reportedly bouncing. He raised allegations of mismanagement and corruption in the allocation of government-quota employment slots for Israel, claiming that 750 trained applicants have waited 10–12 months without deployment while private agencies facilitate travel for those who can afford to pay. He also challenged the government's claims regarding national security, contrasting its stated guarantees with a recent double murder of a lawyer and his wife near the Akuregoda Army Headquarters. Rajapaksa called on the government to intervene on behalf of farmers, fulfil its employment commitments, and address these security concerns.
Read full text →Hon. Namal Rajapaksa made a brief closing appeal, urging the Government to guarantee the safety of fishermen and to refrain from making disparaging remarks about religious leaders. He also cautioned the Government against actions that could incite communal tensions, while implicitly criticizing its stance on the matter.
Read full text →Hon. Namal Rajapaksa raised several criticisms of the current Government across multiple policy areas. He questioned the release of 323 red-labelled containers and two drug-flagged containers without transparent investigation, and called for impartial enforcement of anti-money laundering and public property laws. He criticised the Government's handling of Independence Day commemorations for failing to explicitly acknowledge the military defeat of the LTTE, arguing this distinction separates counter-terrorism from ethnic discrimination. He also raised concerns about assaults on Sri Lankan fishermen within national waters, the non-delivery of promised fishing technology, and reportedly bounced cheques issued to cyclone relief recipients, demanding confirmation that those payments have since been honoured. Additionally, he cautioned against public disparagement of religious leaders and accused the Government of stoking communal tensions for political purposes.
Read full text →Hon. Namal Rajapaksa raised several distinct concerns during his speech. On microfinance regulation, he cited over 200 reported suicides in 2021 linked to informal debt, calling for fair regulatory mechanisms that clearly separate microfinance from pyramid schemes and digital currency, and reminded the government of commitments made to affected communities in Polonnaruwa while in opposition. He sought clarification from the Deputy Minister of Defence regarding an Iranian vessel reportedly attacked within Sri Lanka's Exclusive Economic Zone, questioning how the vessel entered those waters, whether it was linked to any undisclosed agreement with the government, and what obligations Sri Lanka bears to provide maritime security within its EEZ. He also criticised what he characterised as politically motivated detentions under the guise of Easter Sunday attack investigations, attributing weakened intelligence capacity to the previous Yahapalana administration. Finally, he pressed the government on its preparedness for economic spillover effects from the Middle East conflict, including impacts on remittances, Gulf airspace tourism routes, and tea exports, urging long-term strategic planning rather than a short-term or politically driven approach.
Read full text →