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2009 is our country’s Year of English and
IT. With the liberation of our people from
the clutches of terrorism which destroyed
our country for more than 25 years, 2009
will also be our country’s Year of Peace,
our country’s Year of Reconciliation, and
our Year of true Independence, said
President Mahinda Rajapaksa at the
ceremonial launch of "2009 - Year of English
and Information Technology" at the
Presidential Secretariat, today.
"It promises to be the year in which all our
people, - irrespective of caste, race,
locality, language or religion, - begin to
march together, as the sons and daughters of
Mother Lanka towards a common goal of
development and prosperity," the President
today.
The "Year of English & IT" is launched as a
major initiative of the Government to help
Sri Lanka meet the demands of the 21st
Century in skills and capacities, making the
availability as a Life Skill for the rural
sector.
President Rajapaksa said his government lays
emphasis on the unmistakable need to
urgently equip the people, especially the
youth, with proficiency in the English
language on the one side and to provide them
with access to computers and internet
facilities, through the rapid development of
use of information technology, on the other.
English and IT shall therefore be used by
our government as instruments of rural
empowerment; as powerful tools that could
make the villages of our country a
meaningful part of the global village.
The President said while he recognized
English to be an important tool of rural
empowerment, its penetration across the
country and especially, into the rural
hinterland has been held back by constraints
of a very different nature. "English was and
still continues to be perceived and
delivered as a gateway to elite status and
an emblem of class and privilege. The
curriculum and teaching methods followed in
our country, which place importance not on
the use of it for communication, but on its
rules of grammar, and on perfect
pronunciation, have only served to maintain
it as the exclusive preserve of a selfish,
privileged class and a tool of social
repression."
Full text of the speech
Honourable Ministers,
Excellencies,
Mr Narayana Murthy, Chairman, Infosys,
Secretary to the President,
Members of the English and I.T Task Force,
Distinguished Invitees,
Friends.
I am very happy to take part in this event
that celebrates the launch of the Year of
English and IT and to formally declare 2009
the Year of English and IT in our country.
In the ‘Mahinda Chintana’, my election
manifesto, which received the endorsement of
the people, we recognized the importance of
rapidly creating a knowledge society in Sri
Lanka. To make the idea of the global
village, more meaningful to our people, we
stressed the importance of linking the
villages and townships in all the provinces
and districts of our country with the
outside world of knowledge. And to achieve
this objective, the ‘Mahinda Chintana’ lays
emphasis on the unmistakable need to
urgently equip the people, especially the
youth, with proficiency in the English
language on the one side and to provide them
with access to computers and internet
facilities, through the rapid development of
use of information technology, on the other.
English and IT shall therefore be used by
our government as instruments of rural
empowerment; as powerful tools that could
make the villages of our country a
meaningful part of the global village.
In the use of IT for rural empowerment, we
can be proud of the success achieved in the
past few years. Whereas in November 2005,
only 5% percent of the population had
literacy in IT, by the end of 2008, the IT
literacy rate had increased to as much as
23% with considerable progress in the rural
areas. The establishment of 579 Nenasalas or
rural tele-centres and 2,500 IT labs in
schools, has been largely instrumental for
this increase. Our goal is to increase the
number of Nenasalas to 1,000 and to reach
50% IT literacy by the end of 2010.
As for English, which we recognize to be
another important tool of rural empowerment,
its penetration across the country and
especially, into the rural hinterland has
been held back by constraints of a very
different nature. English was and still
continues to be perceived and delivered as a
gateway to elite status and an emblem of
class and privilege. The curriculum and
teaching methods followed in our country,
which place importance not on the use of it
for communication, but on its rules of
grammar, and on perfect pronunciation, have
only served to maintain it as the exclusive
preserve of a selfish, privileged class and
a tool of social repression.
The Presidential Task Force on English and
IT has adopted several radical measures to
transform English teaching method and
curriculum in our schools to make the
language user-friendly and less elitist.
Thus, English will progressively be
perceived and delivered to the children of
Sinhala and Tamil speaking homes, no more as
a ‘subject’ but as a ‘tool of
communication’, for speaking and for seeking
knowledge and employment.
Our country is greatly inspired by the
dramatic success of India in the fields of
IT and English in recent years. It is for
this reason that we have turned to India in
addition to other countries for technical
support to strengthen our own endeavours. We
are honoured by the presence today of Mr.
Narayana Murthy, the ‘Father of IT in India’
and the Chairman and Mentor of the world
famous ‘Infosys’. His Special Address has
given us a very interesting perspective on
empowering rural people with knowledge in
IT. We are confident that his association
with our national initiative, which starts
today will certainly continue into the
future. We are equally honoured by the
presence of Professor Abhai Maurya, the Vice
Chancellor of the English and Foreign
Languages University of Hyderabad, India’s
Centre of Excellence for the Teaching of
English. He has already launched the process
of re-training of our teachers in the
delivery of ‘Spoken English’ to our schools
with the generous assistance of the Indian
government.
2009 is our country’s Year of English and
IT. With the liberation of our people from
the clutches of terrorism which destroyed
our country for more than 25 years, 2009
will also be our country’s Year of Peace,
our country’s Year of Reconciliation, and
our Year of true Independence. It promises
to be the year in which all our people, -
irrespective of caste, race, locality,
language or religion, - begin to march
together, as the sons and daughters of
Mother Lanka towards a common goal of
development and prosperity.
When marching forward into the future as a
single people, it is my view that the
Sinhala and Tamil speaking people should
engage with one another in each other’s
language. I therefore visualize for the
future a bi-lingual Sri Lankan society.
Individual programmes in this direction are
already being implemented in the Ministries
of Public Administration and Education with
the facilitation of the Ministry of
Constitutional Affairs and National
Integration. However, I shall be directing
my officials in the near future, to take
steps to prepare a Comprehensive National
Master Plan with disaggregated Action Plans
for realizing a bi-lingual public service
and a bi-lingual nation within a specified
but realistic time frame. With the
assistance of the Minister of Constitutional
Affairs and National Integration, we will
drive this programme with dedication and
commitment till the desired results are
achieved.
English, on the other hand, will be our
language to reach out to the world and
access the global pool of knowledge and
technology. As the national initiative on
English gathers momentum and achieves
desired results, I visualize, in fact, a
tri-lingual Sri Lankan society in the long
run.
Our government’s policy framework, Mahinda
Chintana, clearly lays down our policy on
language. The strong link between language
and culture is recognized and respected. To
the people of my country, Sinhala and Tamil
are not mere tools of communication. They
encapsulate our values and world-views, give
expression to our inner feelings and define
our cultural categories. They embody the
soul of our people. They confer to us our
distinct identity.
Therefore, the Presidential Task Force on
English and IT will ensure that the national
initiative should be designed in such a way
that English is delivered purely as a ‘Life
Skill’ that is desired for its utility
value, as a vital tool of communication with
the outside world of knowledge, and a skill
that is required for employment. We will
ensure that there will be a complete break
with the past, where in our country English
was rolled out as a vehicle for creating
disaffection towards our national cultures,
national ethos and national identity, for
alienating our people from their roots and
for creating social and cultural divisions
among them.
The declaration of the Year of English and
IT today is thus a benchmark which coincides
with the end of terrorism and the clearing
of the political space for the expression of
the resolve of the Sri Lankan people to
march together as one proud people towards a
future of peace and prosperity. In the
global environment of today, English and IT
are two essential tools for the achievement
of our goal.
Marking the beginning of 2009 as a point of
reference, the national initiative on
English and IT will expand under my
direction through a diversity of programmes
and activities. Facilitated by the
Presidential Task Force on English and IT, I
call for this important national initiative
the unstinted support and cooperation of all
government ministries and agencies both
central and provincial, the private business
sector, which has most to gain from its
success and civil society organizations
interested in the development of the
country. I am confident that this national
initiative will also draw the generous
support of the international community.
Thank you.
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