US envoy in Sri Lanka discusses obstacles faced by upcountry families

The US Ambassador to Sri Lanka, Julie Chung, met upcountry families and discussed the economic and political obstacles they face.

She also spoke to them about their aspirations for better housing, education, and opportunities to improve their livelihood.

“This morning, I met with Hill Country families (many of whom have ties to the region going back 200 years) to hear directly about the economic and political obstacles they face and their aspirations for better housing, education, and opportunities to improve their livelihood,” the Ambassador tweeted.

The Ambassador is on a visit to Nuwara Eliya and has met several people from all walks of life.

During the visit she announced that the US Embassy in Sri Lanka will expand the US State Department’s English Access Microscholarship program to provide two years of free after-school English language instruction to youth of diverse backgrounds in Nuwara Eliya.

During her visit, she also met with prospective teachers for the program who shared the challenges they face in meeting learners’ needs and their plans to equip the next generation with the language skills to empower youth to follow their dreams.

She also spoke about the importance of equality and expanding women’s contributions to legal professions at the National Law Conference.

The Ambassador noted that the judicial sector is vital for upholding the rule of law and protecting the freedoms that sustain democracy.

India’s first international cruise from Chennai to Sri Lanka to be flagged off today

India is set to launch its first-ever international cruise from Tamil Nadu to Sri Lanka operated by Cordelia Cruises, and the maiden voyage will be flagged off by Indian Minister of Ports, Shipping and Waterways Sarbananda Sonowal. The event is scheduled to take place on Monday, June 5, from Chennai, with the cruise ship heading to the city of Jaffna in Sri Lanka.

A program has been organized at the ITC Grand Chola Hotel in Chennai at 11 am, where Shipping Minister Sonowal will participate. The event aims to highlight the significant developments undertaken by the Central government for the Chennai Port over the past nine years, according to a News18 report.

The cruise, titled the Cordelia Empress, will officially be inaugurated by Minister Sonowal at 5 pm from the Chennai Cruise Terminal, marking the beginning of the journey.

The cruise tour package will allow tourists to visit the ports of Hambantota, Trincomalee, and Jaffna in Sri Lanka, before returning to Chennai.

Cordelia Cruises will offer regular services on this route, providing tourists with options for 3-night, 4-night and 5-night cruise packages.

The cruise vacation will take tourists to stunning destinations in India and Sri Lanka’s East Coast.

The itinerary includes ports of call in Hambantota, Trincomalee, and Jaffna. In Hambantota, tourists will have the opportunity to explore the wildlife at Yala or Udawalawe National Park, as well as visit a turtle hatchery farm.

Additionally, they can enjoy walking through the Galle Dutch Fort and hiking to the Diyaluma Waterfall.

In Trincomalee, tourists will have the chance to observe dolphins and whales up close and engage in various water sports activities. The destination offers options such as whale watching, dolphin watching, snorkelling at Pigeon Island, and more.

Finally, in Jaffna, tourists can indulge in a peaceful beach retreat and explore the sacred temples and shrines of Sri Lanka.

Onboard the cruise, passengers will have access to world-class restaurants and bars offering international and Indian cuisines, as well as onboard entertainment and premium accommodation options.

Comfortable staterooms are available for passengers to relax and recharge after a day filled with onboard activities and entertainment.

The ship offers various accommodation choices, including Oceanview Staterooms, Suites, Mini-Suites and the premium Chairman’s Suite.

Source – CNBC

Ports, funding and aid bring Sri Lanka closer to China

Rather than heed warnings from its allies and neighbours, Sri Lanka is pushing ahead with embracing China to tackle its economic woes.

Ignoring warnings from the United States, according to which Sri Lanka’s problems are rooted in its dependence on China and its mega infrastructure projects (which represent a security issue for India), Sri Lankan leaders are pressing on.

Sri Lanka’s goal is to get new financing and assistance from the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), as evinced by the latest deal signed in May with the China Merchants Group for a logistics port complex in the capital worth US$ 392 million.

Launched in 2014 and due for completion in 2041, Colombo Port City’s US billion investment to rival Dubai is but the latest of Chinese-funded mega infrastructure projects in Sri Lanka.

China already has some of the most important ports in the world, with at least 10 of the top 100, along with several smaller ports on the coastline and inland, key to support export chains.

“According to the Liner Shipping Connectivity Index (LSCI), which scores countries and their respective container ports,” China is a leader since “about 80 per cent of global trade is moving by sea,” said economic analysts Viraj Samarakoon, speaking to AsiaNews.

That is why, “tapping into maritime shipping networks has been central to China’s strategy of export-led economic development.”

For scholars Samantha Hewapathirana and Anuradha Wijetillake, “Beijing’s efforts to shape global maritime connectivity do not end on China’s borders. The scale of China’s activities has raised questions about potential impacts on recipient countries, including broader implications of Beijing’s growing economic influence.”

An example of this is the port of Hambantota leased to a Chinese state-owned company to pay off (or reduce) Sri Lanka’s debt to China. This has sparked concerns about Chinese economic influence and the potential risks for smaller countries of signing expensive development deals with China, especially with respect to their territorial sovereignty.

Economic analyst Sanuth Wijewardena explains that “since 2021, Sri Lanka has undergone high fiscal deficits, with unprecedented levels of inflation as well as price surges of basic and essential commodities, including medicines. Due to depleted foreign reserves, Colombo announced that it would suspend foreign debt payments in April 2022.”

At the time, its “foreign debt totalled US$ 34.8 billion,” Wijewardena notes, “with nearly half from market borrowing and its largest lenders were China, the Asian Development Bank and World Bank.”

Source: Asia News

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President again calls for SJB support: But we want a general election first: Tissa

While revealing that President Ranil Wickremesinghe had called Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) to join the government collectively, SJB National Organizer Tissa Attanayake said his party had told the President to hold a general election first.

“We have told the President that a general election should be held first to find out the opinion of the people. We have told him that we will consider supporting him depending on the fresh mandate of the people,” Attanayake told a media briefing.

“The President told us to work with him collectively, but the main issue is that he is allied with the wrong people. He is with the SLPP which is responsible for the current economic crisis. This is the main reason which is stopping us from working with the President,” he said.

“At the same time we do not welcome the recent comments made by the President at the Law conference. He has said people are tired of elections and no party will secure 50 percent of the votes in future elections. We feel that the President is trying to imply that the election map of the country will be folded temporary and no elections will be held in the near future. The right thing which the President could do is to hold a referendum and seek the people’s consent to temporarily postpone elections. However, we request the President to hold any election, be it Presidential, general, provincial councils or even the local government elections without further postponements,” he added.

At the same time the SJB National Organizer said the President’s remarks may have been aimed at the court cases with regard to postponement of pending local government elections.

EC opposes govt. move to appoint its henchmen to monitor local councils

The Election Commission (ECSL) has opposed a move by the government to appoint representatives of the Chairpersons of the Regional Development Committee to monitor local government institutions.

ECSL Chairman Nimal G. Punchihewa told The Island that the government had informed the ECSL of its plan to appoint representatives of the Chairpersons of the Regional Development Committee to monitor the local government bodies and the ECSL had decided to write to the Ministry of Local Government opposing the move, he said. A Chairman of a regional development committee ESD a representative of a particular political party and it would be unfair by other parties for such appointments to be made, the EC Chairman said.

Punchihewa said that the administration of local government institutions could be done through Municipal Commissioners and Divisional Secretaries.Many political parties had complained against the government move, he said.

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Sri Lanka early presidential poll will require constitutional amendment: expert

Sri Lanka President Ranil Wickremesinghe who is reportedly looking for an early popular mandate will need to seek a constitutional amendment repealing a provision that prevents a president elected by parliament from calling an early presidential election.

Human rights lawyer Gehan Gunatilleke told EconomyNext on Monday June 05 that the amendment, as any other constitutional amendment, will require a two-thirds majority in parliament. Additionally, he said, if the Supreme Court determines that any provision of the amendment is inconsistent with one of the entrenched clauses in the Constitution, the amendment bill must also be approved by the people at a referendum.

According to Gunatillake, it can be argued that the repeal of the provision in question – article 31(3A)(e) of the constitution – will not result in any inconsistency with any entrenched clause.

“However, it is the Supreme Court that will ultimately decide the matter,” he said.

Wickremesinghe was elected in July 2022 under article 40 of the constitution which provides for parliament electing one of its members to fill a vacancy in the office of the president for the remainder of the departing president’s term of office. This was after ex President Gotabaya Rajapaksa resigned following mass anti-government protests at the height of last year’s economic and political crises.

According to Gunatillake, as things stand now, a fresh presidential election can be held only after the remainder of what was originally Rajapaksa’s term ends in November 2024 as, as per article 30(2), a presidential term shall be five years. Though article 31(3A)(a) gives an incumbent president the power to call an election at the end of four years to seek a second term in office, article 31(3A)(e) posits that a president elected by parliament under article 40 shall not have the power to call an early election. It provides: ‘A person succeeding to the office of President under the provisions of Article 40 shall not be entitled to exercise the right conferred on a President by sub-paragraph (a) of this paragraph.’

“So, the current President – who was elected by parliament under article 40 – does not have the power to call an early election. Only a constitutional amendment to repeal article 31(3A)(e) can enable him to call an early election, said Gunatallike.

This means President Wickremesinghe will have to seek a constitutional amendment repealing article 31(3A)(e) which, as noted by Gunatallike, will require a two-thirds majority in parliament and, depending on the Supreme Court’s determination, the approval of the public at a referendum though a case can be made the amendment will not result in any constitutional inconsistency.

Parliament support well in excess of a two-thirds majority for such an amendment is likely given that the main opposition Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) has already declared its support for an early presidential election.

Opposition and SJB leader Sajith Premadasa, whose party endorsed him on May 16 at its presidential candidate, said that he intends to form an SJB-led alliance of opposition parties in the event of an early election, which Wickremesinghe is widely speculated to call.

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Talks underway for a new political alliance

Several parties in the opposition have decided to form a new political alliance.

Kumar Welgama, Rajitha Senaratne, Patali Champika Ranawaka and SLPP breakaway faction are presently holding talks on a possible union among them, ‘Deshaya’ reports.

Their plan is to leave the main opposition and contest elections together, said a spokesman for parties at the talks.

Meanwhile, the government too, is holding discussions on campaigning for future elections.

The president has chaired a preliminary meeting with leaders of government affiliate parties and ministers.

Prime minister Dinesh Gunawardena, MP Vajira Abeywardena and senior presidential advisor Sagala Ratnayake attended the talks.

The president urged all to have proper coordination with a single-most objective.

SLPP general secretary Sagala Kariyawasam said a steering committee should be appointed after talks with each affiliate party, a proposal also endorsed by minister Susil Premajayantha.

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Sri Lanka elected Vice President of UN General Assembly

Sri Lanka has unanimously been elected as a Vice President of the 78th session of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA).

Accordingly, Mohan Peiris, Permanent Representative of Sri Lanka to the United Nations, will assume the relevant position for the Asia Pacific region from 2023 September to 2024 September.

Sri Lanka was amongst the 21 countries unanimously named as Vice Presidents by all 193 member states in accordance with the following pattern; six representatives from the African states, five from the Asia Pacific states, one representative from the Eastern European states, two representatives from Latin American and Caribbean states, two representatives from Western Europe and other states and five representatives from the permanent members of the Security Council.

Morocco, Bolivia, Congo, Estonia, Gambia, Iceland, Malaysia, Iran, Senegal, Singapore, Suriname, Uganda, Uzbekistan, Zambia and the Netherlands are also amongst the 21 Vice Presidents who were elected for the 78th UNGA session due to take place from 12 – 25 September.

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Election Commission opposes political appointments to monitor LG bodies

The Election Commission of Sri Lanka has expressed its discontent towards the recent decision to appoint a representative of the Chairman of the Regional Development Committee to monitor local government institutions.

Accordingly, Chairman of the Commission, Attorney-at-Law Nimal. G. Punchihewa noted that the matter would be brought before the Ministry of Local Government, in writing, tomorrow (05 June).

Explaining their reason for concern, Punchihewa noted that such an appointment could politicise local government institutions given that the Chairman himself is a representative of a particular political party.

Thus, he explained that this would be unfair to those affiliated with other political parties.

Further deeming the appointment an unnecessary one, the Election Commission chairman pointed out that the coordination required within local government institutions can be done through municipal commissioners and divisional secretaries.

A rising power; India’s “extended neighbourhood”

Sri Lanka’s international relations and its importance keep surfacing more often than not in recent times. Its economy is being ‘supervised’ by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) while big power dynamics in the Indo-Pacific region have brought the country under the radar of foreign listening posts monitoring its every move. Sri Lanka is truly walking on eggshells.

This week, the Chinese Vice Foreign Minister was in Colombo; in India, its Foreign Minister announced how it wants to expand its ‘neighbourhood first’ policy to an ‘extended neighbourhood’; and Sri Lanka went ahead with the UN Nuclear Test Ban Treaty to please those that are calling for a stop to further testing (read Iran and North Korea) even if a host of countries, including nuclear powers like India and Pakistan are refusing to sign it. The latter subject was a hot topic at the recently concluded Hiroshima pro-Western alliance G-7 summit and comes in the backdrop of an escalating conflict in Ukraine with the omnipresent threat of a nuclear war if things take a nastier turn for Russia.

The Chinese Vice Foreign Minister’s visit was a regular one for bilateral talks. The Chinese were thanked for their eventual support in the debt restructuring negotiations and Sri Lanka’s clinching passage through the Paris Club for the IMF Extended Fund Facility. Coincidentally, or otherwise, the Government signed a contract with China’s petroleum distributor to engage in fuel distribution in Sri Lanka.

The visit also coincided with comments across the Palk Strait by the Indian Foreign Minister who spoke of a ‘Greater India’, both in influence and ambition as well as in geographical reach with an ‘extended neighbourhood’. The Minister outlined New Delhi’s mission and vision that involves islands in the Indian Ocean, Gulf countries and nations even in South East Asia. With Sri Lanka very much within this arc of influence, already facing challenges of a Greater Indian reach, it is now official that India wants to expand “what should be our neighbourhood”, as the Minister calls it.

Speaking on ‘Modi’s India’ – a “Rising Power”, the title itself betrays New Delhi’s view of the new world and India’s role in it. The Minister said it was time to use the “complex global landscape” to India’s advantage as a global power. He then referred to the example of how “generous” India was in coming to Sri Lanka’s assistance last year. “What we have done for Sri Lanka is bigger than what the IMF has done,” he said, and went on to add that any visitor to Sri Lanka “will note the popular perception that has accrued for that action.”

That, of course, is debatable. Sri Lanka went bankrupt and India bailed it out in its darkest days. How altruistic was its action though, is another matter. It was generally considered in Colombo that while India’s Finance Minister was adopting more open-handed philanthropy, its Foreign Minister was driving a hard bargain demanding MoUs for the Trincomalee oil tanks, Colombo Port terminals and wind farms in the north in return. The IMF’s demands are different, not for real estate in Sri Lanka.

And the narrative continues. The former Governor of the Eastern province (who seems to have had no clue of realpolitik and went ahead to twin the province with a province in China) was sent home by Colombo and replaced with a politician whose first port of call after his appointment was to ‘India House’.

The Indian Foreign Minister took the China issue head-on. He called for “some kind of equilibrium”, a welcome call for better relations. Such an equilibrium will bring peace to the neighbourhood no doubt, and countries like Sri Lanka can rest easy concentrating on trade and economic development with peace in the Indian Ocean without India imitating China’s ‘String of Pearls’ in the same seas. Sri Lanka, the ‘Pearl of the Indian Ocean’ is going to get well and truly entangled in these competing strings.

The islets of Kachchativu and even Delft in the north of Sri Lanka are highly vulnerable to an extended neighbourhood of India. Already, Indian fishermen consider the territorial waters in and around the Palk Strait and the Gulf of Mannar as their ‘legitimate traditional fishing grounds’. The revenue accruing to India from the stolen fish catch is not factored into the balance sheets with Sri Lanka though.

This is what India has wanted to be for years – since testing its nuclear capacity successfully in 1974, and declaring itself a nuclear weapons state 25 years ago. Now it has the added economic muscle to flex. It is asserting itself in total alliance with the United States and the major military and economic powers of the world, having long abandoned the Non-Aligned Movement, and even the regional group, SAARC.

With the US President asking for his autograph, the Australian PM calling him a rock star and the Papua New Guinea leader touching his feet, the Indian PM is only human to feel he is on a trip taking his country to new heights in global recognition. Despite the recent electoral setbacks at home, the PM will be visiting the US and France soon, hosting the G 20 summit and rubbing shoulders with world leaders.

The Nepal PM was in New Delhi this week with a 100-strong delegation to literally mend fences over border disputes, and discuss trade and economic issues which include Indian projects in his country. It would do well for Sri Lanka’s strategic studies fellows to follow the outcome of these talks. China is also present in Nepal, and like in Sri Lanka, India considers this more than an irritant, that of an encroacher in its ‘extended neighbourhood’.

On this weekend of Poson poya, which marks the introduction of Buddhism to Sri Lanka, even Buddhism is being used by both India and China as a tool of diplomatic soft power in Nepal, Bhutan, Sri Lanka and the countries of South East Asia (see related story on Sunday Times 2 Page 3). Covertly, forces are at work to undermine the religion in the Buddhist world.

It is worth recalling that Buddhism spread to Persia in the west and Japan in the east from India centuries ago without conquering armies and bloodshed. Today’s world is different as the Indian Foreign Minister said. Then there were no nuclear weapons, F-16 jets or naval flotillas. In the future, armed conflicts between competing nations will likely be waged from air-conditioned war rooms through computers and Artificial Intelligence. That is the new complex global landscape.

Source: Sunday Times Srilanka