By Marlon Dale Ferreira
From rugby’s South Korea visa debacle to boxing’s Jakarta disaster, Sri Lankan athletes are once again being betrayed by the system. Four selected boxers, three male athletes and one female boxer, were denied the chance to represent Sri Lanka at the Asian Under-23 Men and Women Open Boxing Championship in Jakarta, Indonesia, despite being selected, issued official letters, and forced to raise their own funds for the trip.
Sri Lankan sport is no longer facing isolated administrative mistakes.
It is facing a collapse of responsibility.
In rugby, selected national players were denied the chance to represent the country against South Korea because of a visa fiasco.
Now, in boxing, four selected athletes, three males and one female boxer have been denied the opportunity to represent Sri Lanka at the Asian Under-23 Men and Women Open Boxing Championship in Jakarta, Indonesia, after being selected, issued official letters, and forced to raise their own funds for the trip.
This is not bad luck.
This is administrative vandalism.
Boxers Robbed After Selection
The four boxers selected for the Jakarta championship had reportedly earned their places after qualifiers.
They had trained, sacrificed, sparred and fought their way into national selection.
The Sri Lanka Boxing Association had allegedly issued official letters allowing them to collect money from donors and well-wishers to cover overseas travel expenses.
After those funds were reportedly collected, their dreams were still crushed.
Due to an issue between the Sri Lanka Boxing Association and the Ministry of Sports, the necessary approval to proceed was allegedly not granted.
That means young athletes selected to make their international debuts were denied the chance to represent Sri Lanka after doing everything asked of them.
A Defeat More Painful Than Losing In The Ring
For a boxer, losing a bout is painful.
But being denied the chance to enter the ring after selection is worse.
A loss inside the ring at least comes after courage, effort and national representation.
This is different.
This is a defeat delivered by officials, paperwork, ego, incompetence and administrative failure.
These athletes were not beaten by opponents from Kazakhstan, India, Uzbekistan, Thailand or Indonesia.
They were beaten by the system that was supposed to send them there.
Rugby Fiasco Repeats In Boxing
The pattern is frighteningly familiar.
Sri Lanka Rugby recently suffered international humiliation after the national team was unable to travel for its Asian Rugby Championship match against South Korea because the required visas were not secured in time.
The match was cancelled.
Sri Lanka’s players were denied the opportunity to compete.
Yet, even after that embarrassment, no meaningful accountability followed.
No resignation.
No public admission of responsibility.
No official publicly carried the burden of failure.
Now boxing appears to have walked into its own version of the same disaster.
Different sport, same disease.
Who Is Responsible?
When national athletes are selected and then denied international participation, someone must be held responsible.
It cannot be dismissed as a misunderstanding.
It cannot be buried under official silence.
It cannot be passed between the Ministry and the Association until public anger dies down.
If the Sri Lanka Boxing Association issued letters, allowed athletes to raise funds, and then failed to secure the necessary approvals, its officials must answer.
If the Ministry delayed, blocked or failed to communicate requirements clearly, the Ministry must answer.
If both sides failed, then heads must roll on both sides.
A Boxer Is Already Dead
The Jakarta shame comes only days after Sri Lankan boxing was shaken by the death of 22-year-old Army boxer Nawoshadha Vimukthi Kaushalya of Mawanella.
He reportedly died after sustaining injuries following an Inter-Regiment Novices Boxing Meet in Panagoda.
The allegations surrounding that bout are deeply disturbing.
He is said to have received repeated illegal blows to the back of the head.
The referee allegedly issued only a caution instead of properly warning the offending boxer and stopping the contest when dangerous conduct continued.
Boxing professionals and spectators have questioned why the fight was not stopped before tragedy struck.
Referee Appointment Must Be Investigated
The referee who handled the bout is alleged to be the brother of the current Sri Lanka Army Boxing President.
If true, that raises a serious concern over whether official appointments are being made on competence or connection.
A novice boxing tournament requires experienced, alert and properly qualified referees.
Novices are still learning defence, ring awareness and survival under pressure.
That is exactly why the official in the ring must be capable of stopping danger before it becomes disaster.
If more qualified referees and internationally recognised technical officials were available, why was this particular official appointed?
Who appointed him?
Was there a conflict of interest?
Was competence sacrificed for familiarity?
Hushed Funeral, Silent System
Even the aftermath of Kaushalya’s death has raised disturbing concerns.
It is alleged that the funeral of the fallen 22-year-old soldier-boxer was conducted quietly.
There are also claims that his parents may have been influenced not to pursue charges.
These claims must be investigated immediately.
If a young soldier dies after a sporting contest, the system has no right to hide behind uniforms, internal reports or polite silence.
His family deserves the truth.
His fellow boxers deserve protection.
The country deserves accountability.
Where Was The Mainstream Media?
Equally disturbing is the silence from much of the mainstream media.
A young Sri Lanka Army boxer is dead after a bout.
A national sporting system is under suspicion.
Yet the tragedy has not received the prominence it deserves from major television and print platforms.
Had this happened in another country, the questions would have been relentless.
Who failed him?
Was the referee qualified?
Was medical care immediate?
Was the bout properly supervised?
Was there a cover-up?
In Sri Lanka, silence too often becomes the first shield of the powerful.
Boxing’s Broken System
The Sri Lanka Boxing Association has already faced repeated criticism over governance, administration, financial questions, selection issues and alleged disregard for rules.
Yet the system has been allowed to continue.
Now the sport is facing two disasters at once.
One young boxer is dead.
Four selected boxers have allegedly been denied their international debut.
This is no longer a paperwork problem.
It is a crisis of leadership.
Minister Cannot Sleep Through This
Minister of Sports Sunil Kumara Gamage cannot continue to appear selective in how he deals with sports bodies.
Some associations have faced firm action for lesser shortcomings.
Yet Sri Lanka Rugby and Sri Lanka Boxing appear to have been allowed to stumble from one scandal to another without the same level of decisive intervention.
Sri Lanka Rugby’s international standing has suffered.
Sri Lanka Boxing now carries the stain of a young boxer’s death and the humiliation of athletes allegedly denied participation after selection.
How many warnings does the Ministry need?
How many athletes must suffer?
How many dreams must be destroyed?
How many families must grieve?
Blood On Whose Hands?
The question is brutal, but unavoidable.
When a boxer dies after alleged illegal blows, when the referee’s conduct is questioned, when appointments appear linked to influence, and when earlier warnings about boxing administration were ignored, where does responsibility end?
Does it end with the referee?
Does it end with Army boxing officials?
Does it end with the Sri Lanka Boxing Association?
Does it reach the desk of the Minister of Sports?
The system cannot celebrate medals and abandon responsibility when athletes are harmed.
Heads Must Roll
This is the moment for action, not statements.
The Sports Minister must order an immediate independent inquiry into Kaushalya’s death.
The referee appointment, bout footage, medical response, ringside safety, post-fight handling and alleged pressure on the family must all be investigated.
The Sri Lanka Boxing Association must be suspended pending inquiry if governance failures are established.
An interim committee should be appointed to restore safety, transparency and accountability.
The Jakarta selection failure must also be investigated separately.
Athletes who raised funds after official letters were issued must be told why they were denied travel.
If officials misled them, those officials must go.
Rugby And Boxing Need Accountability
Sri Lanka Rugby and Sri Lanka Boxing are now symbols of a deeper sporting rot.
In rugby, players were denied an international match because visas were not secured.
In boxing, selected fighters were allegedly denied a continental tournament because of administrative conflict.
In boxing again, a young Army boxer is dead.
This is destruction dressed up as administration.
If no one resigns, if no one is suspended, if no one is prosecuted where necessary, then Sri Lankan sport is telling athletes that their dreams, bodies and lives are expendable.
Wake Up Before Another Tragedy
Minister Gamage must wake up from this shallow slumber now, not after the next death, not after the next cancelled tour, and not after the next athlete is humiliated.
Sri Lankan athletes are not toys for incompetent officials. They are not fundraising machines for associations that cannot complete approvals. They are not bodies to be placed in rings without proper protection, and they are not national representatives to be stranded by visa failures or buried by silence.
The rugby fiasco embarrassed the country. The Jakarta boxing failure crushed young athletes. The death of Nawoshadha Vimukthi Kaushalya should shame the entire sporting establishment.
If this does not force heads to roll, then the destruction of Sri Lankan sport is not accidental. It is being permitted.
