Protests in Negombo against the militarisation of the country

A protest had been staged in Negombo against the militarisation of the entire country, particularly in the North and East.

The protest, which was held in the Negombo city on Thursday (5) evening, had been organised by the Christian Solidarity Movement (CSM).

Activists displayed banners which read ‘withdraw Kotelawala Bill’ and ‘put an end to the militarisation of the entire country including North and East’ as the protesters’ main slogans, and it included other slogans such as ‘we condemn arresting school principals, teachers and political activists’, ‘do not militarise education’, ‘do not lay a hand on free education’ and ‘let’s oppose militarisation.’

CSM had taken steps to hold the protest in accordance with safety measures such as wearing masks and maintaining social distancing.

Civil activists stated that a large number of police officers in uniform had been deployed to the venue of the protest.

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Some 20,000 Jaffna district families left out of housing schemes

With more than 20,000 Jaffna district war-affected families not being included in any state housing development programmes, when the list of housing beneficiaries for war-affected people was showcased in Divisional Secretariat offices recently, there were allegations of administrative flaws in the selection process of beneficiaries and political influence.

Among the complaints received from various Divisional Secretariats, the highest number were from Chavakachcheri, Tellipalai and Kopay. War-affected, landless families requested the authorities to include them in the current housing programmes. Currently, it is a mandatory requirement for a family to possess a deed of land to be eligible for the programme.

The project, implemented by the State Ministry of Rural Housing and Construction and Building Material Industries Promotion has introduced two housing schemes valued Rs 600,000 and Rs one million. Under this programme, 1532 houses valued at Rs one million and 630 houses valued at Rs 600,000 were allocated to the Jaffna district.

Jaffna District Secretary K. Mahesan acknowledged that there were complaints about the selection process of the beneficiaries, but pointed out that the demand for housing is high in the region and authorities are re-evaluating the list to select the most suitable and deserving families.

“It is natural people are approaching the elected representatives to ensure their names are being included in the list but we are evaluating their eligibility through a carefully designed points-based system. In this process we are working with other actors including elected representatives and community leaders,” Secretary Mahesan said.

According to the District Secretary, the Divisional Secretariats received more requests than complaints to include them as beneficiaries.

“There were complaints by some who opted to go for the Rs one million scheme only. We cannot do that. We have to select beneficiaries according to the eligibility requirements put in place by the Ministry,” Secretary Mahesan said.

Among those families who were left out of the housing project is a family with a member who is a person with disabilities. This family is from Punnalikattuvan in the Uduvil Divisional Secretariat.

Former Northern Governor Suren Raghavan has written to the Jaffna District Secretariat explaining the plight of this family and urged that it be included in the scheme.

Even after the war came to an end more than a decade ago, the Jaffna district’s war-affected people’s housing needs have not been met. More than 20,000 families lack proper housing facilities, according to the Jaffna District Secretary.

Recently, the Northern Governor’s Secretary S. Mohanathan wrote to Divisional Secretaries through the Jaffna District Secretary, instructing them to address the concerns of the allegedly flawed selection process.

As a Co-Chair of the District Development Committee (DDC), the Governor’s Secretary informed the Divisional Secretaries that Governor P. S.M. Charles would authorise the project only after complaints were resolved.

Following the re-evaluation process of both housing schemes, more than 250 beneficiaries were replaced.

The Jaffna District Secretary also stressed the need to ensure the deserving families were included in the project as beneficiaries, since he had found that more than 750 houses that were built in the district under similar housing programmes in past were currently not occupied by the families.

“There could be more reasons for this scenario but we are careful in our evaluation process that amidst huge demand for housing needs in the district, this project reached out to the needy beneficiaries,” Secretary Mahesan said.

So far eight Divisional Secretariats finalised the lists of beneficiaries after the re-evaluation process and published them on the official website of the District Secretariat. Once the list of beneficiaries was finalised, the project was scheduled to be implemented before the end of this year, according to the District Secretary.

Get vaccinated against COVID without delay, Govt. urges public

The government has urged the members of public not to go out unnecessarily as Delta variant of concern of SARS-CoV-2 is spreading at an alarming speed.

In a notice, the Department of Government Information stated that approximately 1.5% of virus infections end in deaths.

“Every individual is at risk of contracting the virus,” the department stressed, appealing to the public to get themselves vaccinated against COVID-19 without delay.

Further, the government called for strict adherence to health guidelines in order to mitigate the spread of infections.

Public is advised not to attend wedding ceremonies, funerals or any other events where large numbers of people gather.

The government also reminded the public to make sure to wear face masks at public places, to wash hands properly from time to time and to maintain two-meter distance with others.

Meanwhile, reports revealed that leading private hospitals have also exceeded their capacity as COVID-19 infections in the country continue to soar.

The administrations of several private hospitals have announced that they are forced to halt admission of patients amidst the exacerbating situation.

In this backdrop, Deputy Director-General of Health Services, Dr. Hemantha Herath stressed that the spread of the Delta COVID-19 variant is expected to accelerate in the coming days.

Responding to a question raised by the media during a press conference held earlier today, Dr. Herath revealed that nearly 20% – 30% of novel coronavirus patients detected at present are infected with the Delta variant.

Meanwhile, Prof. Suneth Agampodi, the Chairman of Department of Community Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and Allied Sciences, in Rajarata University, speaking to BBC Sinhala on Sri Lanka’s pandemic situation, warned that the number of COVID victims reported in the country daily can increase to 150 following the next two weeks.

Sri Lanka is still not too late to prevent this impending surge in death toll, he said further, calling for proper measures to admit all patients who arrive at hospitals, to provide home-based care for low-risk patients, to transport patients and to provide emergency services.

He also urged the government to impose full-scale measures to restrict public movement.

In a tweet posted on August 01, Prof. Agampodi had cautioned that Sri Lanka would experience 80-90 COVID-related deaths per day by the 10th of August. “Urgent behaviour change is required among the general public and false assurance should be discontinued.”

Fears of “parliament cluster” emerge as three Sri Lanka MPs test positive for COVID-19

With three parliamentarians testing positive for COVID-19 on Friday (06), bringing total legislators infected in Sri Lanka to at least 18 to date, concerns have been raised over the possibility of a “parliament cluster”.

Ruling Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) legislators Rohana Dissanayaka (Matale district) and Thisakutti Arachchi (Badulla district) along with main opposition Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) MP Dilip Wedaarachchi tested positive for the virus on Friday, Serjeant-at- Arms Narendra Fernando said.

Two sources at the parliament told EconomyNext that concerns have been raised if the latest infections could result in a “parliament cluster”. The sources said all three MPs had been in the parliament during this week’s sessions with one legislator participating three full days.

“There was a general announcement in the parliament today asking MPs and other staff to take maximum precaution if they have had contacts with the three,” one source who did not wish to be named said.

“CCTV footage shows one MP move around in the parliament,” the source said.

Friday’s infections come three days after Agriculture Minister and Kandy district MP Mahindananda Aluthgamage, who had earlier vowed not to be vaccinated until vulnerable groups have been jabbed, tested positive for COVID-19 while being in self isolation.

Sri Lanka’s parliamentarians were asked to get vaccinated with AstraZeneca in mid-February at the Army hospital in Colombo though some legislators including opposition leader Sajith Premadasa, Minister Aluthgamage, and SJB MP Mujibur Rahuman vowed not to take the jab until vulnerable groups had first been vaccinated.

Both Premadasa and Rahuman tested positive in May. Premadasa on Tuesday (03) said “under the strict instructions of doctors who treated” him for COVID-19, he got the Pfizer-BioNTech jab. This was after doctors had warned him that failure to vaccinate may result in a fatal recurrence of COVID-19.

“Now we have become a country gradually succumbing to COVID-19,” Rahuman told parliament on Friday.

COVID infection among Sri Lankan legislators made international headlines when the island nation’s health minister Pavithra Wanniarachchi tested positive in January after promoting a local syrup manufactured by a shaman who claimed it was a life-long inoculation against the virus that would forgo the need for vaccination.

The health minister publicly consumed and endorsed the syrup while the shaman was allowed to enter the parliament premises and handover his syrup to the parliament speaker. The shaman had said the recipe for the syrup, which contained honey and nutmeg, was given to him in a visionary dream.

The health minister’s promotion, which was given huge publicity in the local media, led thousands of people queueing in front of the shaman’s house in the central Sri Lankan district of Kegalle.

“Some government ministers said we don’t need vaccines. But ultimately the government was forced to bring down vaccines because there was no alternative,” Rahuman told parliament on Friday.

Cabinet Minister Vasudeva Nanayakkara, State Ministers Dayasiri Jayasekara, Piyal Nishantha, and Arundika Fernando, ruling SLPP legislators Kader Masthan, Kapila Athukorala, M Rameshwaran, and Wasantha Yapa Bandara as well as opposition MPs Rauf Hakeem, Nalin Bandara, and Abdul Haleem were the other parliamentarians who have got infected by the virus.

All of them have recovered and are back in the parliament.

Meanwhile, Energy Minister Udaya Gammanpila and Industries Minister Wimal Weerawansa are in self quarantine after their close contacts recently tested positive for the virus.

SL’s police are increasingly abusing people under cover of pandemic measures, HRW alleges

Sri Lanka’s police are increasingly killing and abusing people under cover of the Covid-19 pandemic measures and an anti-drug campaign, Human Rights Watch (HRW) alleged today (06).

HRW notes that recent police abuses reported in the media include alleged extrajudicial killings, torture, and arbitrary detention. In this backdrop, it urges for the government to restore independent oversight of the police and meaningfully investigate and prosecute alleged police abuses.

Until there is progress on accountability and reform, the HRW has also stated that international partners, such as the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime and the United Kingdom’s Police Scotland, should suspend assistance programs.

“Sri Lanka’s police seem intent on building on their past record of serious abuses, instead of cleaning up their act,” said Meenakshi Ganguly, South Asia director at Human Rights Watch. “The UN, UK, and others working with Sri Lankan law enforcement should recognize that without the political will to reform on Sri Lanka’s part, their engagement risks appearing to endorse abusive agencies.”

HRW highlighted that since May 2021, the police have been implicated in several unlawful deaths, including some linked to disproportionate and abusive enforcement of Covid-19 quarantines.

The UN high commissioner for human rights, Michelle Bachelet, in her report to the UN Human Rights Council in January, wrote that she was “concerned by a recent series of deaths in police custody and in the context of police encounters with alleged criminal gangs” amid a “militarized approach to law and order and drug control.” She highlighted five possible extrajudicial killings involving the Sri Lankan police between June and October 2020.

Further, it was expressed that the current police abuses come in a context of “shrinking civil and political space” under the Rajapaksa administration. The Bar Association of Sri Lanka has condemned the police’s use of the Covid-19 pandemic to curtail freedom of expression, including detaining peaceful protesters at a quarantine facility in July.

HRW has also urged for UN agencies to ensure that any engagement with Sri Lankan security forces complies with the “human rights due diligence policy on United Nations support to non-United Nations security forces” and the UN common position on drug policy.

“The Rajapaksa government needs to demonstrate that alleged police abuses will be properly investigated and prosecuted, and the law should promote accountability, not weaken it,” Ganguly said. “Until that happens, international partners should be under no illusions about human rights in Sri Lanka, and they should withhold assistance to abusive law enforcement agencies.

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Coronavirus update: 2,794 new COVID-19 cases identified Friday, total rises to 324,223

According to Epidemiology Unit of the Health Ministry, 2,794 new COVID-19 cases were reported so far on Friday.

Among the cases confirmed today, 2,792 are from the New Year cluster and 02 are foreign arrivals currently in quarantine.

According to the Epidemiology Unit report at 11 pm Friday, a total of 324,223 COVID-19 cases have been reported and 31,095 infected patients are being treated at hospitals, while 288,307 patients have fully recovered and been discharged from hospitals.

Sri Lanka reported 98 deaths Friday raising the total to 4,919.

According to the Epidemiology Unit report, so far total of 10,777,259 people have received a first dose of COVID-19 vaccine and 2,679,076 have received the second dose.

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Islandwide lockdown will not be enforced

The Government has decided not to enforce an islandwide lockdown anytime soon.

A crucial meeting took place today (Friday) chaired by President Gotabaya Rajapaksa to discuss the current developments related to the coronavirus in the country.

The meeting took importance as the number of people infected by the coronavirus saw a rapid increase and daily deaths reached record levels.

There have been persistent calls for a nationwide lockdown to contain the rapid spread of the virus and the matter was noted at the meeting today.

However, at the meeting it was decided not to enforce a nationwide lockdown.

The government has so far been keen not to enforce a lockdown as that could have further impact on the economy.

Hospitals have been flooded with Covid patients, especially after travel restrictions enforced around the island were relaxed early last month.

Some hospitals how now declared an emergency situation as they run out of beds and oxygen.

India keen on investing in Sri Lanka’s renewable energy sector – HC Baglay

High Commissioner of India to Sri Lanka Gopal Baglay called on Foreign Minister Dinesh Gunawardena on Tuesday (August 03), says the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

Minister Gunawardena has thanked the government and the people of India for extending assistance to Sri Lanka in combating the COVID-19 pandemic and appraised the opening of the country for economic activities.

The High Commissioner Baglay also appreciated Sri Lanka for lifting entry restrictions imposed on fully-vaccinated Indians as lifting of such restrictions would provide immense benefits for Sri Lanka’s tourism industry and the economy as a whole.

During the discussion, a joint commemoration of the 75th Anniversary of Independence of India and Sri Lanka was proposed in view of celebrating the centuries old cultural values shared between the two countries.

Commemorating this milestone which consists of cultural and religious events such as Buddhist pilgrims’ programmes and more importantly bringing down sacred Buddhist relics from India to Sri Lanka, would allow the bilateral relations to flourish further.

Minister Gunawardena has underscored the government’s priority in the field of renewable energy and he invited Indian private sector investments in the sustainable energy sector in Sri Lanka. Endorsing the government’s move, High Commissioner Baglay stated that Indian investors are keen to invest in the renewable energy sector, especially in solar energy.

A wide range of areas of mutual interest such as the joint commission on renewable energy, air connectivity, mutual trade and investment ventures, technical cooperation for digitalizing Sri Lankan movies and regional cooperation in the BIMSTEC were also discussed in length.

Restrictions for Weddings, Funerals revised; State festivals postponed to 01st Sept

Sri Lanka has decided to revise certain restrictions due to the present COVID-19 situation in the country.

According to Army Commander General Shavendra Silva, if a Wedding Hall has a seating capacity of more than 500 seats, a maximum of 150 people are allowed to attend the wedding.

If Wedding Halls are with a seating capacity of less than 500, only a maximum of 100 people are allowed to attend the wedding, he said.

A maximum of 25 people are allowed to attend a funeral at a time, said the Army Commander.

Heads of State Institutions can decide on the number of people who are expected to report to work during this period, he added.

All state festivities are postponed until September 1st, the Army Commander went on to note.

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Bomb threat in leading 5 star hotels and several places in Colombo are false

Posts claiming that there is a bomb threat in two leading five-star hotels in Colombo and in places in Bambalapitiya, Wellawatta, Mirihana, Nugegoda, Mount Lavinia and Dehiwala are completely false and people have been urged not to panic, the Police told Daily Mirror a short while ago.

Army Commander General Shavendra Silva also confirmed that these reports were false and the panic had spread as a result of a post, which had circulated on social media, soon after the Easter attacks in 2019, being re-edited and circulated once again.

Police said an investigation had already been launched into the incident