Law & order will be withdrawn from PM – Rajitha

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Law & order will be withdrawn from PM – Rajitha
Answering a question about the government’s inability in the cabinet reshuffle matter and in the appointment of members to LG bodies, Senaratne said certain issues could arise, since the country was being run by a unity government. He said the situation has become more complex due to a new electoral system, including technical issues over women’s representation etc. that will be settled by March 20.
 
The cabinet spokesman also referred to the matter of former Central Bank governor Arjun Mahendran against whom a warrant has been issued over the CB bond auctions. It will take some time, but he too, will be brought home, just like in the case of Udayanga Weeratunga, for questioning, said Senaratne.
 
He also said the situation in Ampara has now been brought under control, and those responsible were being arrested. It will be looked into if a certain group was behind the incident, he said.
 
Meanwhile, the cabinet yesterday approved the national audit act subject to amendments. Also, it discussed a request for Rs. 2,500 million to buy 100 megawatts of electricity from the private sector as an urgent requirement if the dry weather continues.
 
Ashika Brahmana

Police having a say in subject minister’s appointment ?

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Police having a say in subject minister’s appointment ?
These police officers have told the president and the prime minister that they opposed giving him the position. They were the one who were promoted during the Rajapaksa regime and did its bidding under direct orders from Gotabhaya Rajapaksa. They did not enforce the law, but protected those responsible for the murders, attacks, abductions and other crimes.
 
They know that if Fonseka is appointed the minister and the law enforced properly against the Rajapaksas and their henchmen, they too, will be in trouble. The police and the law enforcement authorities are responsible for ensuring the law and order situation, and they should have no say as to who would be the minister in charge. Up to now, police, AG’s Dept. and other institutions coming under the ministry did not enforce the law properly. The president experienced its repercussions at the recent mini-polls. At least now, he should take the correct and bold decisions.

Thugs sent to beat parents who protested because netball teacher allegedly assaulted student

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 Thugs sent to beat parents who protested because netball teacher allegedly assaulted student


Thugs sent to beat parents who protested because netball teacher allegedly assaulted student

A male sports teacher has been taken into custody over an incident of allegedly assaulting a 15 year old schoolgirl of Gampola Nugawela Nayapana Maha Vidyalaya.

The victim has said that she was not able to attend netball practices as she was sick; at which moment the sports teacher had lost his temper and had assaulted the girl after which she was hospitalized. Though the
schoolgirl was admitted to Gampola Teaching Hospital with injuries sustained in the assault, the police have not initially not taken steps to arrest the teacher concerned.

In the process a group of parents have protested in front of the school to the effect that injustice had been done and on that occasion some thugs who appeared on behalf of the said teacher had arrived on the scene and had created trouble and dispersed them after which a heated situation had flared up. 

The girl under reference had been following netball practices and as she had felt sick last Monday she had told that she was not able to attend practices. This teacher had then beaten up the girl after which the parents of the girl had lodged a complaint about it with Gampola Police and Pussellawa Police. However, no proper inquiry was conducted for 5 days neither by the school nor the police which then provoked these parents to engage in a peaceful protest in this connection on Friday (23). During their protest a crowd of young men and young women who supported the teacher who emerged from the school grounds had grabbed the placards of protest in the hands of the protestors who engaged in this peaceful protest and had torn them apart. They had even damaged cameras of mediamen who had been present there.

Subsequently, Gampola and Pussellawa Police who arrived at the spot have brought the matter to a settlement with Pussellawa Police arresting the suspect teacher. He was then produced before Nawalapitiya Magistrate Mr. Shrinith Wijeysekera on Friday afternoon and was released on a bail of Rs. 50000. It was one Eranda Deshapriya Bandara Nagahawatta living in Harangala who was thus arrested. When Mr. Upali Hennayaka, the principal was questioned about this, what he said was that he was not present in school at the time of that incident.

Prez - Fonseka meeting - a positive response from the President - update

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Prez - Fonseka meeting - a positive response from the President - update


Discussions on vesting the ministry of Law and Order to Mr Sarath Fonseka ended up with a positive response from the president, informed sources say. 

After around 2 hours of lengthly discussions, now Field Marshal Sarath Fonseka is to meet up the president again  tomorrow morning at 9 am.

We will bring you details as it happens. Stay tuned with us.   

110 appeals to Right to information commission this year

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110 appeals to Right to information commission this year
The commission officially began its activities on 26 March 2017 and the number of appeals it received during that year was 355. It also received 110 appeals so far this year. Ranasinghe said 110 of these have been investigated and rulings given.
 
According to him, the commission meets eight times a month and takes up at least 10 appeals a day, which will be doubled in due course. Delays occur when the appeals have not been filed properly. Ranasinghe also said that a few of the appeals were found to be about requests for information that could not be provided legally.
 
Daya Nettasinghe

CMC to hold meetings at rented place

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CMC to hold meetings at rented place
The CMC presently has a meeting hall for a capacity of only 55 members, but that number has risen to 119, together with the overhang sets, following the recent local government polls. 
 
Municipal councilor V.K.A. Anura said a venue for the meetings would be decided once the new mayor took oaths in the position. He said they would most likely rent a hall, also having interpreter facilities, at the BMICH.
 
Daya Nettasinghe

Yahapalana govt.’s irresponsible and destructive borrowing spree

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Yahapalana govt.’s irresponsible and destructive borrowing spree

The yahapalana government has been irresponsible and reckless in borrowing money from its inception. Under my government, Sri Lanka Development Bonds (SLDBs) were issued only twice a year to borrow an average of around USD 350 million per year. This too, was at the height of the biggest infrastructure building programme since independence. However in the year 2015, without any such projects, the yahapalana government issued SLDBs on no less than nine occasions, followed by six in 2016 and four in 2017 and have up to now borrowed USD 7.7 billion from this source alone. 

In the past three years, a further USD 9 billion has been borrowed through sovereign bonds, currency swaps, syndicated loans and the IMF Extended Fund Facility - a total of USD 16.7 billion in foreign currency borrowings alone. During this same period they have made Rupee borrowings of around Rs.6 trillion as well. Even though a part of this massive volume of debt, like the Indian currency swaps and the shorter duration SLDBs and rupee bills and bonds have been paid off, from their first year in power this government has been borrowing and repaying, and borrowing to repay in a vicious cycle that has been rapidly gaining momentum. The Debt to GDP ratio which my government managed to reduce from 91% in 2005 to 71% by the end of 2014, had shot up to nearly 81% by the end of 2015 according to IMF report No: 16/371 and a Peradeniya University don estimates it to be bordering on 90% by the end of 2017. 

The yahapalana government’s borrowing spree was occasioned by the huge increase in expenditure in 2015 due to the special allowance given and the reduction in the prices of  fuel and gas and certain commodities made to win the last parliamentary election. Even though the government claims they have been forced to borrow in order to pay back the loans taken by my government for infrastructure projects, the biggest such projects including the Norochcholai power plant, the Southern Expressway, the Hambantota harbour, the Colombo-Katunayake expressway and the Mattala airport all put together cost less than USD 3.9 billion and repaying these long term loans taken at concessionary rates of interest was never a strain on the economy. 

On 26 January, President Maithripala Sirisena stated at a meeting with media heads, that my government had taken Rs. 10 trillion in local and foreign loans but only 1.1 trillion of that is accounted for as assets and that there is no record of what happened to the remaining Rs. 9 trillion. Later, on 7 February, just as campaigning for the local government elections ended, the Auditor General suddenly called a media conference and stated that nobody knows what our real national debt is because debt had been concealed over the past ten years, by being shifted to state owned enterprises and other government entities without being included in the public debt. He also stated that Sri Lanka’s total debt amounts to Rs. 10 trillion but the balance sheet indicates only Rs.1.1 trillion in assets. Everyone knew that the government would come up with some kind of a gimmick at the last minute with a view to influencing the election result. This time, the gimmick meant to mislead the voter came in the form of this talk about debts and assets. 

According to Article 154 of our Constitution, the Auditor General’s Constitutionally mandated task is to audit all agencies of the central government, all provincial councils and local authorities and every enterprise in which the state owns more than 50% of the shares and he is the last person in the country who can claim that he does not know how much is owed by each of these institutions. His claim that we have borrowings of more than Rs.10 trillion and assets amounting only to Rs. 1.1 trillion was even more insidious and misleading. Sri Lanka’s state accounts are prepared on the ‘modified cash basis’ which is consistent with international standards and is accepted by multilateral bodies like the IMF. This system records receipts and payments and places no emphasis on the balance sheet or on the valuing of a state’s assets. The ‘accruals accounting system’ which places emphasis on the valuation of assets is not used in our country in the preparation of state accounts. 

Appointments to high posts are now made by the yahapalana President on the recommendations of the ten yahapalanites sitting in the Constitutional Council – which explains the conduct of the Auditor General on the eve of an election. Through his irresponsible comments, the Auditor General basically condemned in public the audits of his predecessors of the past ten years. The Central Bank had to step in to reassure the financial markets by issuing a statement contradicting the Auditor General’s claims and pointing out that Sri Lanka’s debts are accurately recorded and that we have an unblemished  record in servicing that debt. It is in the middle of all this insanity that the government has introduced the Active Liability Management Bill in order to give wings to their borrowing spree. 

Parliamentarian Bandula Gunawardene has already petitioned the Supreme Court pointing out among other things that this Bill undermines the authority of parliament over financial matters, undermines the Central Bank’s management of public debt and vests the executive arm with unrestricted power in utilising the money borrowed. Under this proposed law, the executive will be able to raise over Rs. One trillion in debt and make regulations about how that money will be used. Even if Parliament subsequently refuses to endorse the manner in which the money has been utilized, what was done on the authority of the Minister in the intervening period, would still be legally valid. Furthermore, so long as it can be established that they acted in good faith, no civil or criminal liability whatsoever will attach to those involved with regard to the manner in which this money is used. 
Given the scandals that have already taken place in the issuance of public debt under this government, the danger inherent in this proposed law is obvious. Therefore, the Active Liability Management Bill should be resolutely opposed by every citizen of Sri Lanka. 

Mahinda Rajapaksa

Former President of Sri Lanka

Dear Una, we too miss you!

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Dear Una, we too miss you!

Last morning (26), the United Nations Family came together to collectively observe a moment of silence in remembrance of the life and legacy of  their beloved Ms. Una McCauley.

The funeral service is planned to take place on Friday, 2 March 2018 in Colombo, Sri Lanka. The remains will lie at the Jayaratne "Restpect" Parlour, Bauddhaloka Mawatha, Colombo 8, from 1.30 p.m. - 3.30 p.m. The cremation will be at 4.00 p.m. at the Borella Cemetery. Most of people who come to offer their last respect will be Sri Lankans without any doubt.   

Ms. McCauley  was in Sri Lanka for 6 years and commited herself for UNO for lasr last 17 years. As the first female UN Resident Coordinator in Sri Lanka, she was a bold, inspiring, and strong leader. Her untexpected demise was a shock to everyone who worked closely with her including LGBT activists. Their sorrow and pain is quite visible in Facebook and other social media in the country.  

As the most senior UN Official in the country, Ms. McCauley led the UN Country Team of 21 Resident and Non-Resident UN Agencies and acted as the representative of the UN Secretary-General in Sri Lanka. She was a passionate and caring humanitarian, and dedicated her life to serve people of the world. She served in Sri Lanka for six years; two years as UN Resident Coordinator and UNDP Resident Representative, and prior to this, four years as the UNICEF Representative in Sri Lanka. Previously, she was the UNICEF Representative for Panama and Togo, and worked at the UNICEF offices in Sudan, Kenya, and Angola. She was instrumental in developing policies and strategic frameworks on leading global issues in a number of countries.  

Ms. Una, 54, was on medical leave, undergoing treatment, when she was passed away. Despite the fact of that being an Ireland and UK citizen and having her children and husband there, she has chosen this soil of Borella cemetery as her final resting place. Now she is ready to sleep calmly and rest in peace beside another well known English lady, Jean Munasinghe nee Horban who devoted her entire life for unwavering commitment towards this island. After 20 years of unnoticed silence, now our Jean will have beloved Una beside her. 

Dear Una, not only the UNO, we too miss you forever. 

- Radika Gunaratne

"She was a deeply committed professional with such dedication, understanding, and empathy" - President Maithripala Sirisena at the UN Compound in  Colombo, expressing his deepest sympathies to the mother of Late UnaMccauley."Photo Credit- UN Sri Lanka

 

Shuffling or striding forward ?

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Shuffling or striding forward ?
The Yahapalana coalition is not the first Government to opt for a reshuffle in an attempt to save some face and it certainly won’t be the last. When the odds are stacked against them, all governments to date have reshuffled their deck, hoping to create a false sense of strengthened resolve to meet their obligations to the voting public, instilling in the latter some confidence that their vote was not in vain. 
 
Whether or not the current administration will be any different even after a second reshuffle is yet to be seen, but the key appointment of Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe taking over the Law and Order portfolio seems to indicate a renewed push at fighting corruption and fast-tracking major cases that have languished for three years. 
 
The rest of the reshuffle is significant for its few changes. In this instance those who did not get shuffled bring hope for economic stability and continuation of this Government’s reform agenda. The fact that the UNP managed to fend off challenges to key ministries such as Finance, International Trade and National Policies is indeed a positive. 
 
Dr. Harsha de Silva has been promoted to a ministerial position, giving him much clout and considerable power to manage the economy, including authority over the Central Bank. His role in coordinating with the Finance Ministry on balancing fiscal and monetary policy would be crucial to Sri Lanka as it heads to high debt repayment years from 2019. Continuity is crucial for any government and retaining key ministers from the last reshuffle is a positive development that should not be seen as a sign of weakness by the president but rather a genuine effort to maintain policy consistency.
 
The UNP, as before, has managed to hold onto the trump cards during the reshuffle, but now it has the grave task of creating tangible change for the masses. The switch in State enterprises should not be allowed to deflate into a hiring spree into loss-making enterprises but focus on restructuring and making these public companies independent of sucking up public funds. This Government has to get down to business before politics takes over once again.
 
Whatever route this reshuffle ends up taking, one thing is clear: despite the brave face put on by the Government, cracks have emerged and both constituent parties are desperately trying to keep their ‘unity’ intact - at least on the surface. 
 
Inspired by the Local Government result, the Joint Opposition is all too happy to use the situation to its advantage by highlighting the Government’s inability to stay united and work for the benefit of the masses. 
 
It is doubtful that, given its rising unpopularity, any amount of reshuffling is going to save this Government come 2020, until and unless it puts its house in order. Time is running out. Both the president and the prime minister have said they accept the people’s verdict and will work to swiftly implement change within the mandate they were given in 2015. The people are waiting.
 
ft.lk

PM, Fonseka having crucial meeting

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PM, Fonseka having crucial meeting
Fonseka returned home yesterday from an Indonesia visit and was asked to be present for a meeting with the PM this morning. Await details.

Kiriella objects to omission of state banks

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Kiriella objects to omission of state banks
At yesterday’s cabinet reshuffle, PM Ranil Wickremesinghe proposed that the banks be returned to the finance ministry. However, Kiriella opposed it, saying he has a mechanism to prevent corruption and irregularities rampant in state banks. He warned that he would not accept the ministry without the state banks.

Press release by ministry

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 Press release by ministry


Press release by ministry

According to a gazette released by Ministry of Finance last week, a beneficial and advantageous opportunity was provided by granting vehicle permits which has  so far not been afforded by any government to government executive
officers is actually a special feature.

According to this new system an opportunity would be made available to import vehicles without any tax  burden (zero tax) and it is something special that Benz CLA, Honda CRV, Honda civic, Toyota CHR Turbo, Toyota Premio and Toyota Allion could be imported with a concession of about 50 lakhs. Seen below is the press release by the ministry in respect of the said concession.





Kohli, Dhoni and key bowlers rested for Nidahas Trophy

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Kohli, Dhoni and key bowlers rested for Nidahas Trophy

India also rested several other limited-overs regulars in fast bowlers Bhuvneshwar Kumar and Jasprit Bumrah, wristspinner Kuldeep Yadav and allrounder Hardik Pandya. Kuldeep had missed the three T20Is in South Africa with an injury.

The five new inclusions in the squad were wicketkeeper Rishabh Pant, allrounders Vijay Shankar and Washington Sundar, batsman Deepak Hooda and fast bowler Mohammad Siraj.

"We've kept in mind the workload and upcoming schedule while finalising the team for Nidahas Trophy," chairman of selectors MSK Prasad said. "The high-performance team has suggested that adequate rest should be given to our fast bowlers to help improve athletic performance, maximise rest and prevent injury. MS Dhoni was not available for selection as he had requested for rest."

India have only just finished their first tour of a long away season. Some of the rested players had extremely heavy workloads in South Africa. Pandya played every game on the tour - three Tests, six ODIs and three T20Is - while Kohli and Bumrah missed only one T20I each. India's next tour is in July, when they travel to England, but their players will play the IPL in April and May, and a home Test against Afghanistan in June.

Pant returned to the side after enjoying success in India's domestic limited-overs tournaments. He was joint top-scorer during Delhi's title-winning campaign in the Syed Mushtaq Ali T20 tournament - in January, he smashed the second fastest T20 hundred - and made a 93-ball 135 against Himachal Pradesh in the 50-over Vijay Hazare Trophy. Pant had last played for India in July 2017, when he made a laboured 38 against West Indies.

Baroda's Hooda and Tamil Nadu's Shankar have been regulars in India A teams over the last few years. Hooda was among the top-scorers in the Vijay Hazare Trophy this season, making 352 runs at 50.28, while Shankar is fresh off scores of 84 and 100. Both Hooda and Shankar have been part of India squads in the past, but neither of them is capped. Sundar and Siraj were both part of India's team for the limited-overs games against Sri Lanka just before the South Africa tour. Siraj has had particularly good form since, picking up three five-wicket hauls in seven 50-over matches for Hyderabad and topping the bowling charts with 23 wickets.

The tri-nation series involves Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, and begins on March 6. Each team will play the other twice, before the final on March 18.

Squad - Rohit Sharma (capt), Shikhar Dhawan, KL Rahul, Suresh Raina, Manish Pandey, Dinesh Karthik, Deepak Hooda, Washington Sundar, Yuzvendra Chahal, Axar Patel, Vijay Shankar, Shardul Thakur, Jaydev Unadkat, Mohammad Siraj, Rishabh Pant

cricinfo

Containing Mahinda’s racist and kleptomaniacal neo-populism Crisis of govt and latent crisis of state

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Containing Mahinda’s racist and kleptomaniacal neo-populism Crisis of govt and latent crisis of state

The dark side is unifying and mobilising. Those who are for democracy, the Jan 8 Movement, the left in all its complexions, national minorities and liberals must prepare to join battle. In 2015 we decided on a common candidate to use as a lever to resolve a Single Issue, restoration of democracy. Democracy has been restored; the lever MS has rotted and been discarded; no problem. If the price of liberty is eternal vigilance, then the people must reawaken every time peril returns.

About half the LG councils are "hung" in the sense that no one party has a clear majority to form an Administration. This is a consequence of Compensatory Proportional Representation (CPR). I described CPR with an illustrative table in my column on 4 Feb. Take Jaffna MC; the ITAK polled about 37% and was awarded 16 seats (FPP+PR). All others shared 63% and secured 26 seats (FPP+PR); Gajendra Kumar’s party 13 in total, the EPDP 10 and smaller entities 6 seats. Fifteen of the ITAK’s seats were FPP; only one PR. GK’s party and the EPDP won 9 FPP seats between them, but pocketed a thumping 13 PR places under CPR. Had it been an all-FPP, 40-constituency election, the ITAK would have bagged about 30. (All numbers are for illustration).

This pattern has repeated itself all over the Island; not one LG body in Jaffna District has a single-party majority. SLPP got 40% to 50% in many Sabhas but is unable to form an Administration since the balance of power lies with others, UNP, JVP, UPFA/SLFP or CWC. Wheeling and dealing goes on; as usual in Lanka, politicos are bought and sold by the crate. Those who anticipated a power struggle and crisis between a RW-MS Centre and an MR Periphery bungled their arithmetic, again.

Crisis of Government, not State

I remember reading 10 days ago in the pro-Rajapaksa Island newspaper (not to be confused with Sunday Island) an assertion that the polls ushered in a state of Dual Power. Rubbish it did not! In revolutionary Paris in 1848 real power (physical control of the city, its institutions and the streets) was contested; two regimes were at war. The writings of Pierre-Joseph Proudhon describe it well. It was dual power, though the term was coined 50 years later by Lenin to describe chaotic conditions in Petrograd from Feb to Oct 1917 when two governments, two armies, two state-powers prevailed. The nearest Lanka came to dual power was in the Vanni in the 1990s when two states overlapped. The currency was Colombo’s, Colombo paid salaries, sent food and ran services, while the LTTE had an army, police, Ministries (Forestry, Agriculture etc) and levied taxes. Two governments ruled the same people and the same territory simultaneously. It is like that in Syria and Iraq’s Kurdish territories now. Only a novice would call the post LG-election predicament in Sri Lanka dual power.

Still, let’s not quibble over terminology; is there a latent crisis of state power, is dual power on the horizon, are we heading there? I don’t think so; but here’s a hypothetical scenario, and were things to go this way, it would be dual power. Say Rajapaksa mobilises his crowds for direct action, say the streets are occupied with throngs demanding Ranil’s removal, say Ranil refuses and the President is trapped (he cannot dismiss the PM without a vote of no-confidence in parliament). Say fired up masses flaunt de-facto power like in Cory Aquino’s yellow revolution, say relations between LG bodies and the centre break down, the country becomes ungovernable and the military wavers. Now that would be dual power, but we are nowhere near, and most unlikely to get there - except what I will say later regarding the national question.

One other comment before moving on. Prof Hoole’s "Devolving Powers to Women . ." (Island 19 Feb) is lucid and essential reading to understand how the 25% minimum quota for women will be implemented. Many people are not clear how this excellent new provision will be executed.

Can the Unity Government recover?

A crisis of state power it is not, but a crisis of government is upon us. If Ranil goes as PM - possible only if his party wills it - it can be used to advantage by yahapalana. Whether RW continues as party leader while, say #, becomes PM is beside the point. The odds favour the status quo, that is a MS-RW-Administration (MS-RW-A) enduring, but be that as it may, what will the UNP do to try to recover by 2020? It will have to undercut Mahinda-SLPP’s three trump cards; racism, the corruption dilemma and cost of living. This yahapalana menagerie is incapable of addressing the first, but it can make headway on the other two.

The government has blackened its copybook by consorting with rogues and killers. If corrupt Ministers - there are stacks - had been prosecuted and thrown behind bars, if the Lasantha case had not been wilfully derailed by powers at the top, if rogues like Mr Tenpercent, Mr MIG and Mr SL-Airlines were in prison, then MS-RW would not be spat upon as now. If the UNP hopes to rebuild barricades by 2020 it will have to make amends for harbouring criminals. I doubt it has the willpower, balls and guts to mount even a belated offensive to throw felons into whatever pit they deserve to be dumped in (unfortunately the death penalty has been abolished). If the UNP acts even now (forget MS he is dead meat) it could improve its electoral prospects. Those calling for Fonseka to be Law & Order Minister are sending the same message in their own way.

A key statistic is that 1.49 million UNP voters (13.04% of valid votes cast) abstained in Feb 2018 compared to August 2015. If the UNP cannot win back this vote bank it does not have a hope in hell. Also note that if, say, half these votes had been cast, the apparent percentage of the SLPP would have slipped from 44.7% to 40.7%, the SLFP/UPFA from 13.4% to 12.2%, and so on with others. I make this remark because, perhaps, chastened UNP voters may not boycott in such large numbers in future Provincial, General and Presidential elections.

Let me touch on cost of living concerns. How is MS-RW-A (or MS-#-A) likely to respond to the popular demand for more goodies to eat and enjoy – long-term development be damned! I am not a UNPer and have no role advising it; my job is to judge what it is likely to do. My answer is it will swing to economic populism. Mangala’s perspective and budget were long-term and development oriented – it is not neoliberal, notwithstanding the ‘analysis’ of left ignoramuses. It is growth-oriented capitalism. Not my cup of tea, but my point is that this will be pruned. Guardian angels in the IMF will permit more deficit financing (jargon ‘fiscal loosening’), allow increased debt (jargon ‘debt slippage’) - it’s the mutts who come after 2020 who will pay - and wink at concessions to consumption over development (jargon ‘hand-outs’).

People want to eat, drink and enjoy, no! The culture of sacrificing present consumption for future betterment is not Lankan, unlike the ethos of East Asia. So, our ensnared government will shift gear to give people what they want. What I anticipate for the next two years is that MS-RW-A (or MS-#-A) will swing in a populist direction to recoup lost electoral ground. Even privatisation – good riddance if Sri Lankan Air goes – will be for the purpose of raising cash to feed the masses. Ranil has attributed the defeat to economic setbacks, this of course is to deflect attention from his failure to fight corruption, but it does indicate that more "hand-outs" are on the way.

Populist economics and an aggressive drive to lock up Rajapaksa era crooks and murderers may pay dividends. My view is that with no other options, this will be the government’s game plan.

Dead-end for Tamils

As for the national question, prospects are bleak. Political prisoners will not be released, return of military occupied land to owners will be at snail’s pace and fittings will be looted before return, rehabilitation at 5000 a year will take 20-30 years to complete, and what about devolution and the constitution? Rajapaksa chauvinism killed devolution, Sirisena was an accomplice. Race and religion, overt or subliminal, have been bigoted for 70 years; deep racial pathology changes very slowly, if at all. Even if the government contains pressure by addressing corruption and easing cost of living concerns, the one trump in the Rajapaksa-SLPP pack that can do much mischief is racism.

The Tamils and the TNA are up the gum tree; the poor sods have been taken for a ride for the fifth or sixth time. They are better off buying real-estate from Elon Musk to settle on planet Mars than to expect justice from the Sinhalese. Tamil nationalism will strengthen, overshadowing a progressive trend in Kilinochi (Chandrakumar) and pluralism in Mannar and Vavuniya.

There will be no devolution, constitutional amendments may scrap the executive presidency but not devolve power to minorities, no police powers, no release of political prisoners, minimal resettlement, inadequate reconciliation and aggravation of the psyche of alienation. This is where a crisis of state power will ripen, slowly but surely; this is Lanka’s latent crisis of state.

The government will awaken to the tactical benefits of economic populism and it cannot evade the corruption quagmire any longer, but it cannot do anything about the Tamils. However, it is neither the government or its supine leaders, but mobilisation of people – including of course the lower rungs of the UNP - that can be a bulwark against tyranny. Hey, any UNP Ministers ready to discard comfortable sinecures and come join and organise the real struggle? Welcome!

Law and Order for Fonseka who said that fraudsters would be nabbed within 6 months Reshuffle of ministers this evening (23)

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 Law and Order for Fonseka who said that fraudsters would be nabbed within 6 months Reshuffle of ministers this evening (23)

Law and Order for Fonseka who said that fraudsters would be nabbed within 6 months 

Reshuffle of ministers this evening (23)

The reshuffling of ministers which was kept dragging and was being postponed  could however be definitely executed this evening (23), reports say.

By now, according to rumours that have circulated, some of them apparently have indeed come true.
The vital decision of bestowing the portfolio of Law and Order would thus be effected. Since Sarath Fonseka has told a few days back that if the position of Law and Order is transferred to him he would show within 6 months how fraudsters would be cornered within the space of 6 months; news sources forecast that revolutionary decisions would be offing in future, accompanied with this decisive move. It is also expected that Lakshman Kiriella's portfolio of minister of Higher Education and Highways would be restricted only to Higher Education, news sources predict.

State ministers such as Ravindra Samaraweera, Sujeewa Senasingha and deputy ministers such as Dr. Harsha de Silva and Ajit Perera are to be appointed as ministers outside the cabinet while ministers Mahinda Amaraweera and Dayasiri Jayasekera are to be added with other portfolios too. In the meantime, Department of Archaeology including some allied subjects are supposed to be transferred to Akila Viraj Kariyawasam. 

Three-wheeler minimum hire increased upto Rs. 50

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 Three-wheeler minimum hire increased upto Rs. 50


Three-wheeler minimum hire increased upto Rs. 50

Since prices of three-wheeler spare parts have gone up, the the All Island Three-wheeler Association has announced that trishaw charges would be increased from 26th next month. This was mentioned by Mr. Sunil Jayawardena, chairman of the association at the media briefing
held at the headquarters at N.M. Perera Mawatha, Borella day before yesterday (20).

He said that this decision was arrived at after a request was made several times from the Ministry of Transport and Ministry of Finance to bring down prices of spare parts. In this connection therefore he said that the hire charged for the second kilometer would be increased by Rs. 50.

He also said that it is a big obstacle to continue in their industry because of the injustice they have to face from leasing companies and that even though complaints to this effect were directed to the ministries concerned, no justified settlement was made. They said that they would look forward to complaining to the Human Rights Committee in connection with this injustice created by the said companies.

The chairman finally mentioned that there are about 50 lakhs dependent on 10 lakhs of three-wheel drivers and that if no quick solution is forthcoming where the government is concerned, these  number of votes will be utilised against the government at the next elections. 

Vipassana meditation has not led any body to Nibbana

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Vipassana meditation has not led any body to Nibbana

THE BOAT PEOPLE By Sharon Bala

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THE BOAT PEOPLE By Sharon Bala

The second involves the internment of almost 24,000 Canadian citizens of Japanese origin in the Slocan Valley by the British Columbia Security Commission between 1941 and 1949.

The arrival of the refugees is fictionalized through the voices of the widower Mahindan, a resourceful father rendered unscrupulous by the circumstances of a terrible war, who has arrived with his 6-year-old son, Sellian, and Priya Rajasekaran, a law student assigned to represent the refugees. Grace Nakamura, an adjudicator for the Immigration and Refugee Board, provides the connection to 1941 through her mother, Kumi. The latter, her mind laced with dementia, sallies forth like a Greek chorus to insist that subjecting foreign asylum seekers to the processes established by rule of law is the same as the forced removal and incarceration of law-abiding citizens. It’s a false equivalence that blights a novel already struggling under the weight of political opinion: Balas vilifies the Canadian Border Services Agency and the draconian immigration laws and penalties that can be traced to the prime minister at the time, Stephen Harper, and sings the praises of the Canadian Tamil Congress, an organization designated as a terrorist group by the United Nations Security Council that appears here as the Tamil Alliance.

The “compassionate” lens promised on the jacket copy proves elusive. The novel is burdened by a heavy-handed use of emotive prose. Bala is particularly fond of the diminutive, the “small” of things, hands, wounded children — all designed to elicit sympathy. Stock characters crowd the narrative. One of them, Grace’s world-weary colleague Mitchell Hurst, shows up no fewer than four times to make declarative statements about what a neophyte she is at this business of adjudicating asylum. Bala also labors to explain things that do not require explanation, from immigration law (“there can be a gap between policy and practice”) to Border Services (“the agency responsible for patrolling the perimeter, the country’s official boundaries”).

Less than 10 pages into this novel, a lawyer says: “The truth is immaterial. … Do the claimants appear to be telling the truth? That is what matters.” His words are echoed by Mahindan toward the end of the book: “What is important is not what is true or false. The important thing is what these people, the Canadian authorities, believe is true and false.” It’s an interesting premise that, if allowed to float, might have permitted the novel to reach safe harbor. Instead, Bala frog-marches readers toward a foregone conclusion: The government is vindictive; the refugees, innocent.

The author plays with time through flashbacks told in the present tense, an innovative approach well suited to capturing the upside-down nature of refugee narratives. With a treasure trove of material — what can’t a writer do with a boatload of refugees? — it is mystifying that Bala has chosen to ignore the obvious: letting us see the refugees as perfect in their imperfections rather than rendered as pawns in this political narrative, just as they were trapped in a war not of their choosing. There is one character, Mahindan’s champion bargainer of a wife, Chithra, who in flashbacks lights up the page with her presence and prescience, the energy she brings to her marriage, her friendships and her pregnancy. One is left wishing Chithra had made it to Canada. Her youthful vitality and fierce personality would have helped the author dispense with a multitude of middling characters and political invective and given us a heroine worth cheering for.

- Newyork Times

NYS2018: A platform for young peace builders

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NYS2018: A platform for young peace builders

The Ministry of National Co-Existence, Dialogue and Official Languages, University of Jaffna, University of Visual and Performing Arts , Ministries of Education in Northern, North Central, Eastern, Central, Western and Southern Provinces together with  Sri Lanka Development Journalist Forum (SDJF) are organizing  National Youth Summit 2018  under the theme of “Dialogue for sustainable peace and development schedule to be held from 20th -21st April at BMICH and University of Visual and Performing Arts respectively.

The organizers are expecting more than 250 youths from across the country from all the ethnic and marginalized groups to come together, network, strengthen their role in peace building in Sri Lanka. To facilitate smooth discussion and dialogue among youth, several interactive sessions, workshops, exhibition and speeches are lined up on the summit’s thematic areas. The Summit will be focusing on specific thematic areas such as Youth inclusion in SDG agenda, Youth and non-violence, Youth and social change, Youth in community development, Youth inclusion in national dialogue, Youth, social justice and equality, Youth, social media and hate speech, National Policy for youth inclusive peace-building and Youth in transitional justice process.  

The summit is to create a platform for youth to network and strengthen their role in peace building. In 2015, the SDJF organized its first National Youth Summit, themed ‘Capturing local voices and strengthening democracy’ which serves as the precursor to the current event.

There has never been a better time than now to bridge the gap and encourage those with passion for peace building within the youth, where 54.1% of this largely monolingual population has said that they never had been interacting with a person from another ethnic group as a close friend. (National Human Development Report 2014)

Keeping this in mind, the two day summit aims at creating a common space for the peace loving youth to strengthen their network through various innovative and creative sessions. Among highlighted sessions, the short-film screening, photography exhibition and the series of training workshops can be specially noted. The youth will be able to collaborate, participate and conduct experience sharing and networking sessions. Parallel to these events, the NYS2018 will host training sessions which are more focused on the practical aspects of youth leadership in peace building and related topics.

The Sri Lankan famous resource persons and trainers are invited to conduct these sessions.

If any person or organization interested to share their working experience with above themes, or if you have any interesting idea to promote peace and development in Sri Lanka are invited to submit your short summary in 250 words to NYS2018@LDJF.org. For more information please visit http://www.ldjf.org/youth-summit or facebook/sdjf.

Bollywood actor Sridevi passes away

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Bollywood actor Sridevi passes away
Born as Shree Amma Yanger Ayyapan, Sridevi worked in Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam and Kannada films before entering Hindi films. She started acting in the late 1960s, but her performance in Malayalam film Poombata (1971) won her the state award for best child artist.
 
Sridevi made her Bollywood debut as a child artist in Julie (1975). Her first adult role was at the age of 13 in Tamil film Moondru Mudichu (1976). Sridevi went on to become one of the biggest female stars India ever had. The government of India awarded her Padma Shri, the fourth highest civilian honour, in 2013.
 
Her most remarkable films include Sadma, Chandni, Himmatwala, ChaalBaaz, Mr India, Nagina, Mawali, Tohfa and Gumrah among others.
 

IGP says will resign within 24 hrs. if Fonseka is appointed

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IGP says will resign within 24 hrs. if Fonseka is appointed

It is now uncertain if Fonseka will be given the law and order ministry, with the probability now down to 20 per cent from 80 pc. Mahinda Rajapaksa loyalists close to president Maithripala Sirisena are trying to prevent that from happening.

Before Fonseka left on a visit to Indonesia, the president summoned him and said, “I will handover law and order to you. I need good results within a year.” Fonseka responded, “I do not need one year, sir. Six months is enough. I will show results within six months.”

Then, the two had discussed for about one hour about how the ministry should function. The president referred the arrangements to the prime minister, who has already done that. But, now, the president has become hesitant. Fonseka is due back home tomorrow.

He should have been given the position as he was prepared to lead efforts to catch the corrupt, fraudsters and plunderers who destroyed the national economy and to recover the lost national wealth from them. Now, even presidential advisors like Athuraliye Rathana Thera are opposing his appointment.

Most want to see the ministry given to a person without any personality, as all have skeletons in their closets. The Rajapaksas who were bent on forming a new government last week have abandoned that and are now trying to prevent Fonseka from appointed the law and order minister. The corrupt policemen too, are worried. All of them are now getting together to work against Fonseka.

‘Our children’s desires, sir’, a talk between two fathers

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‘Our children’s desires, sir’, a talk between two fathers
Lakshman Kiriella, who is in danger of losing his highways and higher education portfolio, recently took a team to a top figure to discuss the cabinet reshuffle. Seeing him, that powerful figure inquired from Kiriella, “Oh, Mr. minister. I’ve received many complaints against you. You are the minister, but your daughter runs the ministry. They say nothing can be done if there is nothing in it for the daughter? If things go on like that, you will surely lose the ministry.”
 
Kiriella answered, “Don’t you know, Sir, our children’s desires? We will not remain in power for ever. They too, should do something for themselves. This is not a small ministry either.”
 
That top figure started to say something, but Kiriella intervened and went on, “Now see, your daughter too, is accused of many things? Things are like that, Sir. Our children should do something for themselves when we are in power. Who knows what will happen to us tomorrow.”
 
The top figure did not say what he was going to say, but just gave Kiriella a smile and kept silent.

MPs obtain bribes to fill BoC positions

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MPs obtain bribes to fill BoC positions
The interviews for these jobs have been called, not by the bank, but by the enterprise development ministry of the UNP general secretary. The MPs and officials have obtained between Rs. 300,000 and Rs. 500,000 for each job opportunity, according to complaints being received by the BoC.
 
The general manager should act upon these complaints. That position is held by Senarath Bandara, who assumed duties yesterday. He is a relative of UNP MP Ashok Abveysinghe. He was made the GM in order to cover up the complaints. Sudath Gunasekara, an officer senior to him, was sidelined for the position by Kabir Hashim, accusing him of being a Rajapaksa loyalist. The chairman position of the bank too, is to change soon, say bank sources.
 
We will expose the acts of corruption that have taken place in the BoC one by one.

Kabir, Kiriella to exchange ministries; cabinet reshuffle on Sunday?

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Kabir, Kiriella to exchange ministries; cabinet reshuffle on Sunday?
Reports say enterprise development minister Kabir Hashim and highways minister Lakshman Kiriella will exchange their ministries. The latter has been under accusations, mainly over the central expressway project and in the purchase of vehicles for the ministry, as reported by us. Hashim too, has been accused similarly. Mangala Samaraweera, Champika Ranawaka and other powerful ministers will have no changes to their subjects.

Why Malik Samarawickrama should take a back seat..?

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Why Malik Samarawickrama should take a back seat..?

This episode was the closest that the UNP leader got, to be removed from office. 

Unlike before in many of his leadership struggles, the challenge was from inside the party and he had the UNP working committee or the party stalwarts coming to his rescue, because of a lack of a credible alternative. No doubt this is the first time Prime Minister Wickremesinghe faced the real threat of being removed and being pushed aside. So hopefully for the sake of the people this is a wake up call for him and his friends holding positions in the current government. 

But do his friends really care about his welfare? 

The Prime Minister’s problems are largely two fold and it is nothing new to the Prime Minister. It is history repeating itself with the same players in the saddle doing the same thing. The two big problems the Prime Minister has always been plagued with are ; one: he just not know how to relate and connect with the masses, as a result he ends up making statements that are totally out of sync with the people and offers solutions that the public don’t want or appreciates. 

Second and the biggest issue he is confronted when he is in power, is his friends. Starting with Malik Samarawickrama, Charith Ratwatte, SriLankan Airlines Chairman, Thilak Marapana , R Swaminathan so on. These people instead of making the Prime Minister look good, they only help him to isolate himself further and further from the public. 

All the appointments done by Party Chairman Samarawickrama and the team to various institutions have backfired on the Prime Minister. Chairman Samarawickrama and his friends can survive only because of their friendship to the Prime Minister, therefore it is in their interest to protect the Prime Minister. Samarawickrama will be the first to be shown the door if their is a change in the leadership in the UNP. 

At this moment of time he can do a world of good to the Prime Minister by stepping aside and there by giving the freedom to the Prime Minister to work with elected politicians who have a real interest for the welfare of the people of our country. If Samarawickrama can spend some time surfing the WWW he would know how popular he is and what impact that is having on the Prime Minister’s popularity and his political future. 

As a one time popular scrum half of Royal College Colombo 7 Mr Samarawickrama should look to the game of rugger for some advice and do what is good for the country as against his desire to hangin as a Minister and party Chairman at any cost pushing the Prime Minister to political oblivion. That would be a real tragedy for Srilanka. For the sake of the Prime Minister he should take a back seat for the Prime Minister and UNP to recover. The UNP needs a breath of fresh air to breathe again.

- A UNP Stalwart

16 year old child flying a kite ... falls and dies

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 16 year old child flying a kite ... falls and dies


16 year old child flying a kite ... falls and dies

A 16 year old child who had been flying a kite in Chavakachcheri in Jaffna has died after falling into an unprotected well day before yesterday, Chavakachcheri police say.

Jeyakumaran Deesan of Kayal, Chavakachcheri had been flying a kite in the company of another
friend of his and the deceased child in fact had been focusing his eyes on the kite high above and in the process had been running backwards during which moment he had fallen into an unprotected well; thereby losing his life, according to Chavakachcheri police. No sooner he had fallen, the friend had immediately run home and informed the elders and come to the scene with them. However, after the victim was taken to Chavakachcheri hospital, he had breathed his last. Chavakachcheri police further said that this accident had taken place because the said well was not noticed at first glance from outside and it being unprotected as well with the children themselves not paying due attention.

Blast in Diyatalawa passenger bus carrying group of army officers

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 Blast in Diyatalawa passenger bus carrying group of army officers


Blast in Diyatalawa passenger bus carrying group of army officers

A passenger bus travelling towards Bandarawela and coming from Jaffna to Diyatalawa early this morning (20) has suddenly exploded and had caught fire in the process. As a result, 19 persons inside the bus have sustained injuries and admitted to
Diyatalawa Hospital. The reason for the blast and fire that broke out following the blast has still not been revealed as such.

It was revealed that the majority of passengers were army and air force personnel. The army media spokesman said that the number of army officers so injured were altogether 12 in number.















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