Is the national security of the country sufficient?
The country has been covered by a wave of murders. Ganimulla Sanjeevaka is being killed within the authority of the law. Although criminal investigations have been speeded up, doubts have been raised about the vision of the government. The leader of the opposition said that the occurrence of such incidents in the court is a downfall of my society and his statements are true. The underworld is challenging the government that came to power and promised to eliminate the underworld in the judicial system that upholds the rule of law.
No person is guilty until a court hears a case, he is only a suspect. But the person disguised as a lawyer made Sanjeeva guilty and sentenced him to death and finished the job of the judge. So, comrades, this shot does not challenge the legislature, the executive and the entire judicial system? Can you imagine the impact of that shot?
You understand that the conversation about national security, which developed as a subject after the Second World War, is not enough in this country. Some people in this country believe that the only threat to national security was the Thirty Years' War. But a decade after the end of the war, that is, the Easter attack on April 21, 2019, as well as the lives of ordinary people who are killed daily, fall under national security. The current responsible parties must create a dialogue about national security that goes beyond political archetypes.
National security is a multifaceted aspect that includes economic, human, political, civil and climate change. The Armed Forces Police is only one side of it. The story of Sri Lanka's underworld is also related to this because even though it is in the underworld, the members of the lower ranks, the civilians, have no protection. Even though the new shop is being blown up by the underworld, it is receiving ammunition from foreign countries. Accordingly, this is a crisis that has collided with the world.
So what is left now is not the debate about the underworld that challenges the country's first chair, but the national one
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