16 Jan 2015 - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}
It was 53 years ago when a disgruntled section of military and police high-ups planned a Coup d’etat on the night of January 27, 1962 against inexperienced Sirimavo Bandaranaike’s newly formed government. The conspirators believed the politicians were dragging the country to disaster through maladministration, rapid Sinhalisation and poor economic planning. The coup named ‘Mission Operation Holdfast’ was expected to be accomplished within a few hours around on Saturday night. The six leaders of the planned attempt were all high ranking officers that included both the retired and in-service Police, Army, Navy; also joined by a Senior Civil Servant.The conspiracy was hatched in Colombo Clubs by the leaders, Col F. C. de Saram, Col Maurice de Mel [Army] Royce de Mel [Commander Navy], Sydney de Soyza (Retd.) and CC Dissanayake [both DIGs] and Douglas Liyanage, CCS. Stanley Senanayake, SP Colombo, who was brought in only in the morning of the D-day by the coup leaders spilled the beans by afternoon to his father-in-law, P de S Kularatne, MP and a government supporter to be conveyed to Sirimavo and the IGP a few hours ahead of the scheduled take-over.


Col F. C. de Saram, the mastermind, who captained Ceylon in Cricket was a cousin of SWRD. Doulas Liyanage a cousin of Felix and Sydney the younger brother of Stanley de Soyza, former Finance Minister under both Bandaranaikes. C C Dissanayake, DIG, was the grandfather of Ravi Karunanayake, new Minister. Lastly, Stanley Senanayake was the father-in-law of Rosy, new Deputy Minister. The suspects were tried by a special courts which imposed a twenty-year sentence and confiscation of all property, who appealed to the Privy Council UK, to be freed by them.
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