Shelton Ranaraja

Shelton Ranaraja (Sinhala: ෂෙල්ටන් රණරාජා; 3 November 1926 11 August 2011) was a Sri Lankan lawyer, politician and deputy minister.


Shelton Ranaraja
ෂෙල්ටන් රණරාජා
Deputy Minister of Justice
In office
1977–1988
Member of the Sri Lankan Parliament
for Senkadagala
In office
1960–1965
Preceded byNoel Wimalasena
Succeeded byNoel Wimalasena
In office
1977–1988
Preceded byNoel Wimalasena
Personal details
Born(1926-11-03)3 November 1926
Ranwala, Ceylon
Died11 August 2011(2011-08-11) (aged 84)
Kandy, Sri Lanka
Political partyUnited National Party
Spouse(s)Chandra Ranaraja
Alma materCeylon Law College
ProfessionLawyer
EthnicitySinhalese

Early life and family

Ranaraja was born on 3 November 1926 in Ranwala near Kegalle in central Ceylon.[1][2] He was the son of landowner and politician P. B. Ranaraja.[2] His father contested the 1931 State Council elections for the Galagedara, losing by 1,055 votes to P. B. Nugawela and unsuccessfully contested the seat at the 1936 State Council elections.[2] His father also ran in the 1952 parliamentary elections as the UNP candidate for Dambulla, losing to H. B. Tenne. His father however subsequently served two terms as a UNP nominated Senator in the Senate of Ceylon.[2][3]

Ranarajara was educated at Trinity College, Kandy and S. Thomas' College, Mount Lavinia.[2][4] He was a keen sportsman, obtaining colours in athletics, boxing, cricket and swimming.[2][4] He also played in the 1945 Royal–Thomian match.[2][4] After school he joined Ceylon Law College where he captained their cricket team.[2]

Ranaraja was married to Chandra, daughter of S. H. Mahadiulwewa.[4][5] They had five daughters - Premila, Aruni, Siromi, Shamila and Anjali.[4][5]

Career

Ranaraja and his father qualified as lawyers in December 1949, Shelton as a proctor and his father as an advocate.[2][6] Ranaraja practising law in Kandy.[2]

Despite his family being staunch supporters of the United National Party (UNP), Ranaraja stood as the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) candidate for Senkadagala at the July 1960 parliamentary election. He won the election by a narrow margin of 25 votes and entered Parliament.[7] In December 1964 the SLFP government tried to nationalise Lake House, Ceylon's largest newspaper group which was seen as a supporter of the opposition UNP.[2] Ranaraja was one of 14 government MPs who voted against the nationalisation, defeating the government by one vote and precipitating the 1965 parliamentary election which the SLFP lost.[2][4] Ranaraja and the other rebellious MPs were expelled from the SLFP.[2]

Ranaraja did not contest the 1965 parliamentary election, concentrating instead on his legal practice.[2][4] In 1973 Ranaraja joined the UNP upon the invitation of new leader J. R. Jayewardene and was appointed party organiser for Senkadagala.[2][4] Ranaraja stood as the UNP candidate in Senkadagala at the 1977 parliamentary election and was re-elected to Parliament.[8] Following the election he was appointed Deputy Minister of Justice in the new UNP government.[2][4][9][10]

In 1980, when the UNP government passed a law depriving SLFP leader Sirimavo Bandaranaike of her civic rights, Ranaraja opposed the move in cabinet and was not present when the law was debated in Parliament.[2]

In July 1981 the Tamil United Liberation Front (TULF) tried to move a motion of no confidence against the UNP government.[2] In retaliation the UNP brought an unprecedented motion of no confidence against Leader of the Opposition and TULF leader A. Amirthalingam.[2] The motion against Amirthalingam, which was signed by 36 UNP MPs, was instigated by Neville Fernando though it is believed to have had the support of Jayewardene who was now President.[2] The motion was taken up in Parliament on 23 July 1981 when, as Amirthalingam rose to defend himself, he was shouted down by the UNP who had 141 of the 168 seats.[2] Speaker Bakeer Markar refused to let Amirthalingam speak at which point the TULF MPs walked out.[2][11] The SLFP and Communist Party also tried to object to the motion but were over-ruled by the Speaker on technicalities.[2][11] They too walked out, leaving no opposition MPs in the chamber to discuss the motion of confidence against the opposition leader.[2][11] UNP backbencher MPs rose up one after another to verbally abuse Amirthalingam and other TULF MPs, threatening to horsewhip, lynch, shoot and even tear their bodies apart up using an ancient form of punishment.[2] When the vote was taken on 24 July 1981 the motion of no confidence against Amirthalingam was passed by 121 votes to one.[2] The sole MP to vote against the motion was Ranaraja.[2][12][lower-alpha 1] Ranaraja's principled action was met by abuse from his fellow MPs who labelled him "Shelton Nadaraja" (Nadaraja is a Tamil name).[2]

When the Black July anti-Tamil riots erupted in July 1983 Ranaraja persuaded the police in Kandy to lock up known troublemakers in order to minimise violence in the city but hard-line nationalist minister Cyril Mathew got them released and the riots soon spread to Kandy.[2] Following the Welikada prison massacre Sri Lankan security forces tried to dispose of the murdered prisoners' bodies but Ranaraja and permanent Secretary Mervyn Wijesinghe managed to save the bodies so that judicial inquests could be held.[2] After the Anuradhapura massacre by the militant Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam in May 1985 Ranaraja was urged by some Sinhalese people to expel Tamils from Kandy but Ranaraja refused, saying that it was their duty to protect Tamils.[2]

Following the passing of the thirteenth amendment and the creation of the newly merged North Eastern Province the TULF recommended to President Jayewardene that Ranaraja be appointed governor of the province but Ranaraja refused Jayewardene's offer.[2][13] Ranaraja resigned from the government in November 1988 over Jayewardene's refusal to dissolve Parliament (it had been more than 11 years since the previous parliamentary election).[14] When Parliament was eventually dissolved in December 1988 the UNP leadership requested that all incumbent UNP MPs apply to be candidates in the forthcoming parliamentary election.[2] Ranaraja refused and as a result wasn't selected as a candidate.[2]

After retiring from politics Ranaraja devoted his life to law, social service, cricket and his family.[2] He retired from law in 1999 after fifty years at the bar.[2][6] He was appointed to the Human Rights Commission in Kandy in 2001 but resigned after discovering that its recommendations were not being implemented.[2]

Ranaraja was president of the Central Province Cricket Association and Kandy District Cricket Association and captain of the Kandy Lawyers cricket team.[15] He died on 11 August 2011 in Kandy due to cancer.[4][15]

Electoral history

Electoral history of Shelton Ranaraja
Election Constituency Party Votes Result
1960 July parliamentary[7]SenkadagalaSLFP6,100Elected
1977 parliamentary[8]SenkadagalaUNP17,972Elected

Notes

  1. Other sources say that Ranaraja abstained from voting on the motion of no confidence against Amirthalingam.[11][13]
gollark: Just don't have a way to declare const globals. Globals are bad and ungood anyway.
gollark: ÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆ no.
gollark: It was used as a very weird DSL to control the backend of a network of neural-interfaced flying pigs on... Airsomething?, a creative-ish CC server.
gollark: For your information, I once implemented an extremely bad Lisp!
gollark: `let x = whatever` would have been very nice.

References

  1. "Directory of Past Members: Shelton Ranaraja". Parliament of Sri Lanka.
  2. Jeyaraj, D. B. S. (6 August 2016). "Shelton Ranaraja : Principled Politician and Conscience-Keeper of the Nation". The Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka).
  3. "Parliamentary Debates (Hansard)" (PDF). 206 (7). Parliament of Sri Lanka. 10 February 2012: 1069. Retrieved 10 January 2017. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  4. "Death of Shelton Ranaraja". Daily FT. 12 August 2011.
  5. Dharmadasa, Sumangalika (21 March 2016). "Chandra Ranaraja (nee Mahadiulwewa)". The Island (Sri Lanka).
  6. Wikramanayake, Mihiri (19 December 1999). "A man few and far between". The Sunday Times (Sri Lanka).
  7. "Result of Parliamentary General Election 1960-07-20" (PDF). Election Commission of Sri Lanka.
  8. "Result of Parliamentary General Election 1977" (PDF). Department of Elections, Sri Lanka.
  9. Sri Lanka Year Book 1977 (PDF). Department of Census and Statistics, Sri Lanka. pp. 17–18.
  10. Sri Lanka Year Book 1982 (PDF). Department of Census and Statistics, Sri Lanka. pp. 12–14.
  11. "Opposition Walk-Out" (PDF). Tamil Times. 1 (1): 19. October 1981.
  12. Sri Kantha, Sachi (17 November 2001). "The Pirabhakaran Phenomenon - Part 23: Standing up Against India's Imperial Itch". Ilankai Tamil Sangam.
  13. "Parliamentary Debates: Official Report" (PDF). Hansard. Parliament of Sri Lanka. 206 (7): 1073–1075. 10 February 2012.
  14. de Silva, Mervyn (15 November 1988). "State of Siege: Fear is the Key" (PDF). Lanka Guardian. 11 (14): 3.
  15. Abdeen, S. M. Jiffrey (12 August 2011). "Shelton Ranaraja no more". Daily News (Sri Lanka).
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