N. Q. Dias

Neil Quintus Dias, CCS, commonly known as N.Q. Dias, was a Sri Lankan civil servant. A career officer of the Ceylon Civil Service, he was the Permanent Secretary of Defence and Foreign Affairs from 1960 to 1965, serving as the de-facto Chief Adviser to Prime Minister Sirimavo Bandaranaike and as Ceylon's High Commissioner to India from 1970 to 1972.[1]

N.Q. Dias
Born
Neil Quintus Dias

Died
NationalitySri Lankan

A Sinhalese Buddhist nationalist, N.Q. Dias was known for planning and executing many of the Sinhalese Buddhist nationalist policies of the Bandaranaike's Freedom Party.[2][3]

Education

Born in Panadura, Dias was educated at Trinity College, Kandy. He graduated from the University of London, gaining a BA degree and was enrolled as a Barrister from the Middle Temple.[4]

Civil service

Passing the Ceylon Civil Service (CCS) entrance exam, Dias was appointed to the CCS as a cadet by the Governor of Ceylon in January 1936. His first appointment as a cadet was to the Batticaloa Kachcheri, where he served as Additional Police Magistrate from June. In April 1937, he was transferred to the Jaffna Kachcheri and served as the Additional Police Magistrate, Jaffna. In August that year he was appointed as Assistant Secretary to the Minister for Communication and Works. Promoted to CCS Class II in December 1937, he was attached to the General Treasury and in July 1939 in addition to duties he was appointed Deputy Director of Civil Aviation and Registrar of Aircraft and Assistant Secretary to the Minister for Communication and Works August 1939. In the following years he was appointed to several other positions, Assistant Government Agent (Emergency) Beliatta (January 1942), Matugama (March 1943), Gampola (May 1944); Assistant Government Agent, Mannar (November 1945); Assistant at Matara to the Government Agent Southern Province (June 1948); Acting Assistant at Hambantota to the Government Agent Southern Province (June 1948); Assistant at Trincomalee to the Government Agent Eastern Province (October 1949) and in February 1951 he was appointed Government Agent, Sabaragamuwa Province. In October 1953, he was appointed Registrar of Lands and of Marriages, Births and Deaths.[4] Following the election of S. W. R. D. Bandaranaike, Dias was appointed first Director of Cultural Affairs in 1956, serving until 1959.[5]

Nationalism

An ardent nationalist, Dias was noted for wearing national dress since 1949, which was uncommon for a CCS officer. He established close ties with the Buddhist clergy and he was the founding President of the Government Services Buddhist Association and an officer bearer of the Public Services and Local Government Services Buddhist Societies Federation formed in 1954.[6]

Although a member of the civil service and as such required to be politically neutral, Dias was a silent strategist uniting the all the local Buddhist chapters (Nikayas) under the Eksath Bhikku Peramuna and helped forged the Mahajana Eksath Peramuna, a four-party coalition with a no-contest pact with the Lanka Sama Samaja Party and the Communist Party of Sri Lanka, lead by Bandaranaike. Mahajana Eksath Peramuna won a landslide victory in the 1956 general elections, defeating the United National Party and paving the way for Bandaranaike to become Prime Minister. In the years that followed, he became disappointed in Bandaranaike for his limited nationalist reforms.[7]

Bandaranaike's adviser

Following the Bandaranaike assassination, and a brief period of political turmoil, his widow Sirimavo Bandaranaike took over his party and carried forward his nationalist policies and socialist reforms, having become the first female Prime Minister in the world. Dias had become the informal chief adviser to Bandaranaike. As a result he was on the list of government officials to be arrested during the attempted military coup in 1962.[8]

Secretary of External Affairs and Defence

Soon after the attempt coup, he was appointed Permanent Secretary of Defence and Foreign Affairs. In this capacity he implemented policies to change the composition of the army to match the demographically ratios of the population, increasing the number of Singhala Buddhist officers in the armed forces.[9]

Curbing Tamil separatism

In April 1961, Bandaranaike declared a state of emergency in the northern province and ordered the army to clear the Satyagraha organized by the Tamil Federal Party against the Language policy of the government. In response to this incident and Chelvanayakam's claim that "we resorted to direct action to win our freedom" during the satyagraha, Dias proposed the increase of armed forces deployed to the northern and eastern province and called for the formation of military bases in Arippu, Maricchikatti, Pallai, Thalvapadu, Pooneryn, Karainagar, Palaly, Point Pedro, Elephant Pass, Mullaitivu and Trincomalee to counter possible rise of Tamil separatism. He further expanded Operations Monti to create the Task Force Anti Illicit Immigration (TFAII) in 1963 to counter illegal immigration from South India. The TFAII would function from 1963 to 1981 when it was terminated with the on set of the Sri Lankan Civil War.[7]

Later life

He retired in 1965, following the defeat of Bandaranaike in the election that year. In 1966, he was arrested and tried for the involvement in an alleged coup attempt. The case was subsequently dismissed when the jury unanimously acquitted all of the accused in a plot to overthrow the legally elected government due to lack of evidence. When the Sirimavo Bandaranaike was re-elected in 1970, Dias was appointed as Ceylon's High Commissioner to India, serving till 1972.

See also

References

  1. Former Sri Lankan Envoys to India Archived 2011-07-28 at the Wayback Machine
  2. Jiggins, Janice (2010). Caste and Family Politics Sinhalese 1947-1976. Cambridge University Press. p. 133. ISBN 978-0-521-13378-4.
  3. The Untold Story Chapter 18: Srimavo - weeping arrogance
  4. Government of Ceylon (1954). The Ceylon Civil List, 1954. Ceylon Government Press. p. 35.
  5. Former Directors
  6. Historical Sketch About GSBA
  7. Jayaweera, Neville. "The making of a nationalist Experiences that shaped NQ's nationalist resolve". The Island. The Island. Retrieved 30 June 2019.
  8. Jeyaraj, DBS. "50th ANNIVERSARY OF ABORTIVE COUP D'ETAT CONSPIRACY IN JANUARY 1962". Daily Mirror. Daily Mirror. Retrieved 1 July 2019.
  9. Jayaweera, Neville. "A memorable evening with General Sir John Kotalawala PC, KBE, CH, K.StJ Prime Minister of Ceylon 1951-1956". Island. Retrieved 2 July 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.