TPA wants PTA out

Parliamentarian Mano Ganesan on Friday said, his party, the Tamil Progressive Alliance (TPA), is of the view that instead of bringing amendments, the government should promptly take measures to repeal the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA).

He said the current government had been forced to introduce amendments to the PTA as they had failed to do away with it effectively to date.

The MP added that the time provided to the Government to remove the PTA altogether has now lapsed, and he alleged that they are now attempting to amend it as they have no other alternative. However, he stated that failure to dispense with the PTA totally should not be placed entirely at the feet of the SLPP, and mentioned that previous regimes should also be held accountable for it.

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India wanted to develop Trinco oil tanks for security reasons

Energy minister Udaya Gammanpila claims India wanted to develop the Trincomalee oil tank farm for security, not commercial, reasons.

Speaking to the Indian news channel Wion, he revealed as to why it took more than two decades for India and Sri Lanka to finalise the deal.

“Well, India wanted to have all 99 tanks in their control and then sublease to Sri Lankan entities who want to use these tanks. So when I became the minister, I realised that India’s interest is not commercial but it’s a security concern.”

“This oil tank farm has 100 tanks with a capacity of 10,000 metric tons each, 8 million barrels of oil can be stored in this oil tank farm. If an enemy of India takes control of these tanks, the enemy can attack India without any uninterrupted break because of the unlimited fuel supply on their ships, planes and submarines.”

“So, this is India’s worry that they don’t want to develop this,” he said.

“This is my own assessment — If they (India) could bomb and destroy this, their problem is over. I realised this and I agreed with them that we will not allow a third party to involve in the development of these tanks without the Indian consent. That’s what they exactly wanted,” he said.

Gammanpila said that they had to change the proposals to include India’s concerns.

“So, I changed the frame, and our counter-proposal was accepted by India. It was a tough negotiation. We had 22 rounds of negotiations during the period of 16 months.”

“There were heated exchanges and somehow, in the end, we have reached a consensus and the entire oil tank farm will now be used for the first time since the Second World War,” the minister said.

No strings attached to Sino-Lanka ties – Lankan envoy in China

Sri Lanka’s Ambassador to China Dr. Palitha Kohona in an interview with the Sunday Observer explains where the ‘strong and warm’ bi-lateral relations between Sri Lanka and China are heading in the future, on the eve of 65th anniversary of establishing Sino-Lanka diplomatic relations.

Dr. Kohona said Sri Lanka’s territorial integrity has not been a bargaining chip on the table for Chinese development assistance.

Q: This year marks 65 years of diplomatic relations between Sri Lanka and China and the 70th anniversary of signing the China – Ceylon Rubber-Rice Pact. What is unique and important about our relations with China?

A: I would not use the expression unique, when describing the relationship with China. I would say the relationship is extremely strong. And it has been built upon a solid foundation.

Sri Lanka’s relationship with China goes back 2000 years. In the distant past many traders voyagers, bhikkhus came to Sri Lanka from China, and Sri Lankan bhikkhus, bhikkunis, princesses and traders voyaged to China by sea. Famous voyager Admiral Zheng He visited Sri Lanka thrice. He left a stone pillar in Galle, commemorating his visit. The Chinese bhikkhu Fa-hsien came to Sri Lanka much earlier and lived in Anuradhapura for two years. The copious notes of his experiences in Sri Lanka, help us to gain an understanding of the society at the time.

Sri Lanka was one of the first countries to recognise the new People’s Republic in 1950. Diplomatic relations between the two countries were established in February 1957. In 1952, we breached an embargo imposed on China, by Western countries and agreed to sell rubber to China in exchange for rice. We were not a member of the United Nations at the time, like China.

When we were struggling desperately against a terrorist group, China came to our aid in a big way. It could be even said that Sri Lanka may not have been able to defeat the terrorist threat in 2009 if not for the assistance provided by China. The assistance was mainly in the form of military hardware.

Later when we were desperately trying to fast-track our post-war economic development, our traditional friends were not ready to offer the kind of help we needed. The Chinese funding assisted us to complete many major infrastructure projects including highways, airports and sea ports.

More recently when the pandemic affected us and was threatening to spin out of control, China provided us with 27 million doses of Sinopharm vaccine. Three million were given as a gift. It is not an exaggeration to say that Sri Lanka has managed to control the pandemic to this extent largely because of the Chinese vaccine. Over 72 percent of the Sri Lankans are now vaccinated.

We have to remember that China is the second biggest economy in the world after the US. It›s estimated by the World Bank that China will become the biggest economy by 2028. It is also the biggest source of Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) in the world today. Close to US $ 150 billion flows out of China by way of FDI every year. Similarly, China is also the biggest magnet for FDI in the world, having surpassed the US last year.

China was also the biggest source of tourists prior to the pandemic. Over 169 million Chinese travel to other countries every year. In a political sense and an economic sense, China is going to be a very important player in our region and the Government of Sri Lanka recognises this. The leaders of the two countries have been in communication with each other on the phone recently. We have had the visits of Defence Minister Wei Fenghe last year and Foreign Minister Wang Yi early this month.

Q: Where do Sri Lanka, a relatively small nation, stand in China’s trajectory of diplomacy – are we as important for them as they are for us?

A: The challenge for our diplomacy is to make Sri Lanka important for China. It is a huge country. It is now a modern country with enormous resources. We need to make every opportunity to highlight Sri Lanka in the Chinese media. That is the reason why over the past few months the Sri Lanka’s mission in China had been conducting a vigorous campaign to raise awareness on Sri Lanka. We encouraged film producers to feature Sri Lanka. I have been on television promoting our country. I have visited 14 provinces meeting the Governors, Deputy Governors and Mayors to make Sri Lanka more prominent.

Q: Is Sri Lanka a favoured destination for Chinese tourists?

A: I discovered after coming to China that awareness on Sri Lanka among Chinese citizens is very limited. While Thailand has received 26 million Chinese tourists in 2019, Singapore 4.5 million and Australia 2.5 million, Sri Lanka received 265,000 tourists in 2018.

Q: What are the bi-lateral investment and tourism sector projections for 2022?

A: We have been talking to many Chinese companies on investment prospects of the Colombo Port City and the industrial processing zone near Hambantota harbour on manufacturing, assembling and even transshipment projects. There is a degree of interest. Our location in the Indian ocean is the main attraction, but we need to work at it more.

Awareness is being made on higher education levels of our people, favourable tax structures, welcoming investment climate and the Government which is committed to bringing in many foreign direct investments.

As a result of our vigorous campaigning, enthusiasm to visit Sri Lanka has risen. The Chinese, at the moment, are suffering from a pent up urge to travel, after two years of pandemic restrictions. Our goal is to make Sri Lank high on their agenda, as a destination for travelling. We have requested the Chinese government that Sri Lanka be designated as a preferred destination once the travel restrictions are relaxed.

We have spoken to some top Chinese travel groups such as Caissa, China International Travel Services and Shanghai Travel Bureau. These have a client base running into millions. They have promised us that they are capable of sending more than a million tourists per year to Sri Lanka.

Q: Is that our target?

A: Our target is much more. If Thailand can get much more, we should too. But this will be the immediate aim. We need to train more Chinese language proficient guides. The average Chinese does not care about English. We need guides who are familiar with historical sites. The Chinese are different from European tourists who like to relax on a beach. The Chinese want to learn about the places they travel to. We need to cater to that. The hospitality trade must focus more on Chinese tourists.

Q: The observers say Sri Lanka had been impressive in their balancing act between India and China, in addressing post pandemic economic challenges?

A: I would not call it a balancing act. India is an old friend which had been with us for thousands of years. Our ancestors arrived from India. Our religion and our culture came largely from India. Working effectively with India is essential. We need to be sensitive about India’s needs, and concerns. It has come to our aid when we needed assistance.

As I explained earlier, we have a very long relationship with China. We turned to them during the battle against terrorism and later for post war development and now when facing a deadly pandemic. China has readily come to our assistance. I don’t think this should be characterised as a balancing act. Friendships have their own rewards; bi-lateral relations should not be based on self interest alone.

Q: Any new major development projects envisaged jointly with China?

A: A number of highrise building projects in Colombo, mainly for residential purposes, is in the offing. They are not development projects. The investors are ready to begin the projects within the next two years. But approvals from Colombo are yet to be finalised. A major Chinese steel company is also keen on starting a plant in Hambantota.

A number of Chinese private companies has expressed desire to get involved in renewable energy programs of the Government. If these projects were implemented earlier, we would not have power cuts today. The whole is heading towards renewable energy at a breakneck pace, and I think we should take a cue from them. By 2030, 70 percent of our energy needs will come from renewable energy. By 2060 we will be carbon neutral. Sri Lanka has made that commitment. We need to head that direction.

Q: There is talk of a 100 acre Port City being planned in Galle. Is this funded by the Chinese?

A: The details of this project are not known yet. It is still at the planning stage. It is not a port city per se. It is a port to house cruise liners. I haven’t seen the name of any Chinese company associated with it at this stage.

Q: China has been a lifeline for the Government which is trying to overcome a US $ crisis triggered by the Covid-19 pandemic. But critics say the Chinese loans will be of no use since we can use the credit to buy only Chinese products. Your comments?

A: No country offers credit in a manner to boost the economy of a third party. This is the reality of the current world. It applies across the board. This is almost a naive comment.

Q: China is an emerging ‘world super power’, embroiled in a battle for supremacy with other super powers. Thus, aren’t we unnecessarily putting our country in jeopardy by getting too close to China?

A: China is the second biggest economy in the world. It is the largest source of foreign direct investment in the world. It is the biggest consumer market in the world. Every country, including the developed countries in the West, wants to access the Chinese market.

The biggest destination of Chinese FDI is the US and the Europe. Has anyone criticised the US for accepting Chinese FDI? No. Similarly China is the biggest recipient of foreign FDIs. China is the biggest market for German, French and Italian goods. And also 51 percent of agricultural imports to China are from the USA. This is the reality. The First World countries are falling over each other to access the Chinese market.

these critics don›t have the best interest of the country in mind. They also criticise the Belt and Road initiative. The money invested under this initiative has dramatically revived economies of many countries in the region. Many African Countries and South East Asian countries such as Vietnam and Laos have started to progress as a result of Chinese FDI .

Of course, we need to be conscious that our independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity are not on the table as bargaining chips during our negotiations with the Chinese or any other Government. Over 21,000 young men and women sacrificed lives to protect our territorial integrity in the face of a terrorist threat. A larger number was maimed for life.

Q: What is being done to minimise the trade imbalance between Sri Lanka and China?

A: There is a very big trade imbalance between China and Sri Lanka. China exports something like US $ 4 billion worth of goods to Sri Lanka. We have just managed to export US $ 232 million worth of goods to China. The Mission is encouraging the Export Development Board (EDB) to take a more proactive role in exploiting the Chinese market: the biggest consumer market in the world.

We can export almost anything to China – vegetables, coconut products, tea, gem and jewellery and handicrafts. Chinese love Sri Lankan gemstones. Two weeks ago our Mission hosted a major exhibition of Sri Lankan sapphires. Sadly all those sapphires belonged to a Chinese company.

Sarath Fonseka doubts country will develop even if they form a govt

Field Marshal Sarath Fonseka says he does not believe that the country will develop just because the ‘Samagi Jana Balawegaya’ comes to power.

“This country will not develop because we form a government. On the other side there are economic experts. We also have great people,” he said addressing an event.

Referring to the ruling party and the main opposition, the SJB parliamentarian said there are experts on both sides, however this country is not developing.

“Why is it not developing? Because of corruption and misuse. There is no accountability, no responsibility.”

He said that therefore no matter what economic expert comes they will only balance things out. “If the country has no production, the country will not go up on one side. On the other side its corruption.”

He said that if their party is to truly be different to the others, they have to understand this fact and work on that line. “If the party leader was here, I would give this message in the same way.”

“I told him (party leader) in Badulla that you should never even mention the name of Ranasinghe Premadasa ever again. Because there is no point in that now,” he emphasized.

“We definitely need to make our journey. Our leaders need to become better.”

Govt.-people trust deficit widens; SLPP’s coalition partners prepare papers to offer solution to crisis

When a country reels from a severe crisis, its people rely on their Government to come together, present a unified front and lay out clear strategies on how it intends to overcome it. Most of all, the people expect their Government to be honest with them regarding the seriousness of the crisis.

In Sri Lanka, where the country has been beset by a multitude of crises, none of these things is happening. The Government has been plagued by disunity and open confrontation between various coalition partners. Its leaders express views that are completely opposite of each other and consequently, the people are none the wiser as to what’s going on.

The fact that a majority of the people have lost trust in the Government has been plain for some months and Government leaders have only themselves to blame. Their messaging has often been convoluted at the best of times. There have also been occasions where some Ministers and MPs have peddled complete falsehoods.

The results are reflected in the way that the people have been reluctant to accept the Government’s claims over various issues in recent months. Motorists have rushed to filling stations to fill up their tanks over rumours of fuel shortages, ignoring numerous assurances from the Government that there is no such shortage. Many people continue to be wary about using LP gas cylinders despite claims that the cylinders now being issued to the market are safe. Even the widespread hesitancy among the public to obtain a third COVID vaccine dose as a “booster” can partly be blamed on the trust deficit between the Government and the people. The Government has been unable to counter a wide array of misinformation being peddled on social media by various anti-vaxxer elements because most of the people are prepared to believe online falsehoods and rumours spread by word-of-mouth than statements made by Government politicians and officials.

One need not look further than the previous Yahapalana Government regarding how much self-inflicted damage can be caused by different people expressing differing viewpoints. During the Yahapalana years, one Minister would make a statement only for the then Co-Cabinet Spokesperson Rajitha Senaratne to say something that completely contradicted it. The then minister Senaratne also had a penchant for going off script during post-Cabinet media briefings, leaving journalists confused as to whether he was expressing Government policy or his personal opinion.

The Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP)-led Government has fared little better. The stormy relationship between the SLPP and its coalition partners has only worsened as the country’s economic crisis went from bad to worse. Some, on the other hand, do argue that it is a good thing that there are internal breaks on a Government that is being run by a family.

Coalition partners have been frustrated at the way the SLPP has given them the cold shoulder since the Government came to power. A meeting of the alliance — comprising the SLPP and its coalition partners and officially known as the Sri Lanka Nidahas Podujana Sandanaya (SLNPS) — has not been convened since the 2020 Parliamentary elections. The Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP), in particular, has publicly accused the SLPP of reneging on the agreement the party signed with it in the run up to the Parliamentary elections. Opposition from coalition partners was one of the primary reasons that the Government was forced to backtrack on the tripartite agreement with India and Japan to develop the East Container Terminal (ECT) of Colombo Port. The same parties have also strongly come out against the proposed agreement on selling Government owned shares of the Yugadanavi power plant to US based New Fortress Energy.

Immediate solutions

Many of these same coalition parties are now planning to present a document containing a set of proposals detailing “immediate solutions” to the various pressing issues currently faced by the country. Some of these parties met last week for initial discussions on the issue. Leaders of these parties are due to meet again next week to finalise the document, at which point the parties will make it public by holding a news conference. Those involved in the discussions include Ministers Wimal Weerawansa, Vasudewa Nanayakkara and Udaya Gammanpila and MPs Athuraliye Rathana Thera, Weerasumana Weerasinghe and Gevindu Kumaratunga.

Though the crisis has reached critical levels, neither the Government nor the Opposition is discussing the situation in-depth, claimed DEW Gunasekara, the Communist Party’s former General Secretary, who, along with current General Secretary Dr. G. Weerasinghe, is also involved in the formulation of the document. “This crisis came about due to the Government’s wrong economic strategy and the COVID-19 pandemic. The Government claims it is only due to the COVID pandemic that the economy has crashed while the Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) and the United National Party (UNP) insist that it is due to Government’s inefficiency. The Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) cites corruption as the main issue. Yet, we have observed that no one is doing an in-depth analysis of the country’s debt crisis,” the veteran politician told the Sunday Times.

The matter has not been seriously discussed in Parliament while the President’s recent speech during his Statement of Government Policy also did not address the issue, Mr Gunasekara remarked. “This is wrong. The people have to be kept informed. Otherwise, they don’t know.”

The former Government Minister wondered why the Central Bank did not raise the alarm earlier over the way the country’s foreign reserves plunged from USD 7.1 billion when Gotabaya Rajapaksa took over as President to just USD 1.5 billion late last year.

In recent weeks, some prominent members of the Government have increasingly spoken out in favour of seeking a bailout from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to prevent Sri Lanka from plunging into bankruptcy. Parties such as those of Mr Gunasekara, however, have staunchly opposed the neo-liberal policies of the pro-West IMF for many years and they are not about to back down now: “You can go to the IMF, but will that solve the crisis?”

As pressure mounts on the Government to explain to the people how it is going to solve the multiple crises and how soon, a beleaguered President was seen taking part in a religious programme organised by Sri Lanka Army on Thursday

The current situation all over the world was a “crisis of neoliberalism” and it was up to all parties to engage in a serious discussion on the best way to come out of it, he opined.

The Government continues to flood the market with rupees in desperation but has not been able to find dollars. The economy is sinking at an alarming rate. With around 70% of the country’s workforce informally employed, the concern is that if the situation continues to deteriorate, those depending on the informal economy will no longer be able to earn enough to support themselves and their families. This could drive people to revolt. No political leadership has been given to address the crisis, according to Mr Gunasekara. “You need to be honest with the people. When the country was facing an economic crisis, Dudley Senanayake admitted to the extent of the crisis and people tightened their belts. Parliament is the main forum where we can educate the public about the situation. When I was young, we would go there and listen to the speeches of the MPs to educate ourselves on matters such as the economy. Where are those speeches now?” the Communist Party stalwart asked.

Indeed, today’s Parliament has been reduced to little more than MPs hurling crude insults at each other. Many rarely stick to the topic that they are supposed to talk about. Some don’t say a word about the subject of the debate they are supposed to be speaking of. They clearly make no effort to learn about the subjects either, a fact reflected in the numbers of books borrowed by MPs last year. A House of 225 MPs borrowed just 330 books from Parliament’s extensive library reserved exclusively for MPs. Of these, 122 were fiction books while only 11 books on economics were borrowed — perhaps this is a reflection of what Mr Gunasekara says. Most MPs don’t really analyse the economic situation in-depth because they do not understand the extent of the crisis. Parliament has not been able to provide the educational qualifications of MPs even when asked. Little wonder then that the people constantly complain how they are sick of all 225 of their representatives in the House.

Mr Gunasekara claims he warned President Gotabaya Rajapaksa during the height of the COVID pandemic that he needed to do more to educate both the MPs and in turn the public about the country’s economic crisis. “He (the President) convened a meeting of Government party leaders to discuss the pandemic at which point, I told him that our health sector was more than capable of controlling the pandemic but appealed to him to organise a workshop to educate the MPs on the economic situation and also to keep the people informed. I told him then that if he did that, at least half the people who voted for him would stand by him. He merely smiled.”

SLFP’s proposals

While other coalition partners are trying to finalise a list of immediate solutions to the prevailing crisis, the SLFP is formulating its own set of proposals with the aid of a group of university lecturers and professionals that are working with the party. The document will include the party’s solutions to the major crises affecting the country, SLFP MP and Environment Minister Mahinda Amaraweera said. “The other coalition partners have not approached us so far over formulating such a document but we are also open to it. If they wish, we can all work from the document we are currently formulating on the matter.”

Formulating such proposals is one thing. Whether any of them are practical is another matter altogether. Moreover, it remains to be seen whether the SLPP will accept them.

For all the tensions between the SLPP and the SLFP, the latter remains a member of the Government. The question of whether the SLFP will leave the Government has hung in the air over the past several weeks due to the war of words that has been taking place between the two parties. The party has faced pressure from frustrated supporters to quit the Government and go its own way. Yet, when the SLFP’s Central Committee met last week, the subject of leaving the Government did not even come up for discussion.

While MPs of the two parties continue to take shots at each other, the SLFP seems to have resolved that leaving the Government at this juncture will be of no advantage to them. Instead, the party is moving ahead with discussions with smaller political parties with the aim of forming a broader alliance to contest elections separately from the SLPP. Opposition parties have always insisted that the SLFP was never serious about leaving the Government and it was simply a media circus designed to divert people’s attention from more pressing issues.

The Government coalition parties aren’t the only ones attempting to come up with “solutions” to the country’s problems. The SJB yesterday (29) unveiled its Samagi Govijana Prakashanaya (Farmers’ Proclamation) at a ceremony held in the vicinity of the historic Parakrama Samudraya in Polonnaruwa. The proclamation will detail the solutions the party proposes to help farmers recover from the tragedy that has befallen them due to the Government’s self-inflicted fertiliser crisis, said Kurunegala District MP Nalin Bandara, who is also National Organiser of the Samagi Govijana Balawegaya.

The proclamation will contain 17 main points. This includes a demand made by farmers and farmers’ organisations that the Government provide compensation up to Rs. 100,000 per acre for agricultural lands that suffered damage owing to the fertiliser crisis. The Cabinet this week approved a proposal to allocate Rs. 40 billion to provide compensation for farmers who have suffered losses to their crops owing to the fertiliser issue. In essence, taxpayers have been forced to pay for the Government’s ill-conceived overnight ban on agrochemicals, but as farmers point out, even Rs. 40 billion in taxpayer funds will not be enough to compensate them. Yet, the Government officially refuses to acknowledge its failure on the issue, preferring to blame officials, Opposition parties, the media and farmers themselves for the catastrophe.

Darker days are ahead

As farmers brace for street protests demanding more compensation for their losses, the country’s energy sector is also facing a herculean task due to the foreign exchange crisis. The Government is struggling to find foreign exchange needed for fuel imports. The country’s power grid has been hit by shortages over the past several weeks owing to lack of diesel and furnace oil for thermal power plants, which now supply the bulk of electricity, especially during peak demand times.

The Ceylon Electricity Board (CEB) has been mulling power cuts lasting up to 90 minutes due to the energy shortfall and has been seeking approval from power sector regulator Public Utilities Commission of Sri Lanka (PUCSL). After reviewing the situation on Thursday (27), the PUCSL ruled that power cuts were unnecessary till January 31. The regulator is due to review the situation tomorrow.

Even those within the Government advocate 90-minute power cuts now to stave off what they say will be cuts lasting up to three hours or more in a few weeks if the fuel situation does not improve. Energy Minister Udaya Gammanpila is the most notable among them. Addressing a media briefing on Thursday, he offered “advice” to the CEB to go for 90-minute power cuts now, warning that the Board might be compelled to impose three-hour power cuts in a few weeks if the situation could not be managed. The minister has been at odds with his Cabinet colleague, Power Minister Gamini Lokuge over the power crisis ever since the Ceylon Petroleum Corporation (CPC) under Mr. Gammanpila refused to provide fuel to the CEB under Mr. Lokuge until the latter paid for fuel supplies in dollars.

The Energy Minister’s comments are in line with the Ceylon Electricity Board Engineers’ Union (CEBEU), which has warned that the situation has reached a tipping point. Trade union action by the powerful union helped trigger changes to the topmost posts of the CEB this week, with Dr. D.C.R. Abeysekera appointed as the CEB’s new General Manager, putting an end to what the CEBEU has called the “illegal” appointment of Dr. Susantha Perera as Acting GM. CEB Chairman M.M.C. Ferdinando, who the union had called on earlier to resign due to his decision to appoint Dr Perera as Acting GM, also submitted his letter of resignation to President Gotabaya Rajapaksa this week. The chairman is to step down effective from February 1.

Yet, changes in personnel will not help alleviate the country’s power crisis, CEBEU President Saumya Kumarawadu said. “It is up to the Government to offer solutions to the crisis. There is no doubt, however, that we will be forced to go for extended power cuts if hydropower generation continues to fall,” he added.

With rain being so scarce in the catchment areas, the situation is not expected to improve anytime soon. Kumarawadu blamed the Yahapalana Government for the current mess, citing former President Maithripala Sirisena’s abrupt decision to cancel the 500 MegaWatt Sampur coal power plant. “That plant was due to be commissioned in 2020. Another 250 MegaWatt power plant was due to be commissioned at Kerawalapitiya last year but that wasn’t built either. The failure by the previous Government to build more power plants has led us to this situation.”

The CEBEU has also been criticised by some Government politicians, including Power Minister Lokuge. It has been noted that it is the CEBEU that has been announcing power cut schedules over the past few weeks instead of the Board itself — a highly questionable practice where a trade union seems to be making decisions independent of the CEB’s administration. The union is also facing accusations that it is part of the “mafia” that exists in the energy sector, with its members actively trying to sabotage renewable energy projects in favour of coal.

The CEBEU President, however, brushed these allegations aside. He claimed the union was compelled to make its own announcements regarding power cut schedules after the previous administration refused to publish power cut schedules that engineers had drafted. “Wouldn’t it be better to carry out power cuts to designated areas according to a pre-announced schedule rather than impose unscheduled power cuts to certain areas to try and balance the system? That’s why we announced the schedules when the administration refused.”

As things stand now, the Rajapaksa Government has set a target of increasing the country’s renewable energy mix to 70% by 2030. Mr. Kumarawadu would not be drawn into the practicality of the plans. “Our job as engineers is to come up with a Least Cost Long Term Power Generation Plan in line with Government policy. We are doing that. It is up to the Government to find the resources and the funds to implement that policy.”

Meanwhile, some Opposition politicians, energy experts and even some CEB officials are claiming that if the situation does not improve by March and the rains do not come, it could lead to a situation where the CEB would be forced to announce power supply times to the public. Accordingly, power might only be available for limited hours of the day. This nightmare scenario, if it does happen, will result in further retardation of an economy already in recession.

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Catholic organizations claim foreign groups are seeking Easter attacks justice

Emphasising that they will never allow the Easter Sunday terror attacks of 21 April 2019 to be faded in the sands of time, the Coalition of Catholic Lay Organisations (CCLO) stated that multiple local and foreign groups are currently gathering to seek justice for the victims of the said terror attacks.

Speaking at a media briefing, Attorney-at-Law Amila Egodamahawatte of the CCLO said that there were daily and weekly discussions ongoing both locally and internationally on the steps to be taken to bring justice to the victims of the terror attacks on Easter Sunday.

“Perhaps the rulers may think that this massacre will be lost in the sands of time, but we will not allow that to happen. Archbishop of Colombo His Eminence Malcolm Cardinal Ranjith is actively working on this. In addition, many groups including those from foreign countries are having frequent discussions on the steps to be taken.” he said.

He said that more than 1,000 days had passed since the terror attacks, but said that it was a serious matter whether a fair investigation was underway. Egodamahawatte noted that in the past, there has been a lot of talk in Parliament and in civil society about the shortcomings of the investigations into the said terror attacks.

“The report of the Parliamentary Select Committee (PSC) which investigated the Easter Sunday terror attacks was released. In addition, the report of the Presidential Commission of Inquiry (PCoI) was also released, but now those who are clearly accused in those reports are holding high positions,” he claimed.

Speaking further, he said that although the authorities had stated that they had filed lawsuits against the suspects involved in the terror attacks, justice could not be done by filing lawsuits alone. Just because a lawsuit has been filed against someone does not mean that they are guilty. All the lawsuits should be filed with sufficient evidence and by identifying the suspects properly, he stressed. However, according to the information that is being revealed at present, it is questionable whether the relevant lawsuits have been filed in that manner, he alleged.

On 21 April 2019, Easter Sunday, three churches (St. Sebastian’s Church in Katuwapitiya, St. Anthony’s Church in Kochchikade, and Zion Church in Batticaloa) and three luxury hotels in Colombo (Cinnamon Grand Colombo, The Kingsbury Colombo, and Shangri-La Colombo) were targeted in a series of co-ordinated suicide bombings. Later that day, another two bomb explosions took place at a house in Dematagoda and the Tropical Inn Lodge in Dehiwala. A total of 269 people excluding the bombers were killed in the bombings, including about 45 foreign nationals, while at least 500 were injured.

Later, the PCoI was appointed to investigate the said terror attacks and the PCoI, in its final report, has made several recommendations including the filing of criminal charges against former President and incumbent Government Parliamentarian Maithripala Sirisena, former Defence Ministry Secretary Hemasiri Fernando, former Inspector General of Police Pujith Jayasundara, former State Intelligence Service Director Nilantha Jayawardena, former Chief of National Intelligence Sisira Mendis, and several others. However, most of the recommendations made by the said PCoI have not yet been implemented. As a result, several parties including the Catholic Church have been insisting on the need to implement the PCoI’s recommendations.

Meanwhile, claiming that all attempts made by the Catholic church to get justice for the Easter Sunday terror attacks of 21 April 2019 within the country have failed, Cardinal Ranjith last week said that they were currently exploring the possibilities to reach out to the international community, including the UN, to seek justice for the said terror attacks.

Speaking during a virtual forum on 23 January, he said: “We have tried our best to get justice from our people within our own context, but all these attempts have failed. Therefore, it does not leave us much room but to explore the possibilities of going international. That means that we will also be going to the UN.”

Noting that they, as the Catholic church, have links all over the world, the Archbishop said that they would also try to influence some pertinent and powerful countries that are in contact with the church. In addition, he said that in case they would be reaching out to the international community, such efforts would also be supported by his fellow cardinals around the world.

“Not only going to the UN, but we will try to influence some of the more pertinent and powerful countries that have a relationship with us, because, as the Catholic church, we are an international organisation and we have our links all over the world. Also, at my level as a Cardinal, I have my fellow brothers who are cardinals in different and important cities and countries with whom we will be able to do that.” Archbishop Ranjith said.

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Sri Lanka to use $ 200 mn credit line from Pakistan to import rice, cement, medicines

Trade Minister Bandula Gunawardena has said that Sri Lanka is negotiating a 200 million US dollar credit line from Pakistan and the facility will be utilized to import rice, cement and medicinal drugs.

He said the proposals on the credit line had been discussed during his recent official visit to Pakistan last week.

According to the minister importation of goods under the credit line will be carried out by the State Trading Corporation. The Trade Ministry is to submit the draft agreement soon to the Finance Ministry.

Cement, Basmathi Rice and medicines manufactured in Pakistan would be imported this year under the credit line, the Minister added.

Minister Gunawardena also noted that Sri Lanka had been able to export 500 million US dollars’ worth of goods to Pakistan under the Pakistan-Sri Lanka Free Trade Agreement.

The Minister said he held talks with Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan on optimal use of the Pakistan-Sri Lanka Free Trade Agreement to increase bilateral trade aiming at increasing the amount of exports to Pakistan under the FTA to 2 billion US dollars.

Tamils brave more Sri Lankan police intimidation to mark 35th anniversary of Prawn Farm massacre

Tamils brave more Sri Lankan police intimidation to mark 35th anniversary of Prawn Farm massacre

Despite Sri Lankan police officers attempting to halt commemorations in Batticaloa earlier today, the 35th anniversary of the Kokkadichcholai massacre was marked in the district, paying tribute to the 87 people killed by Sri Lankan security forces.

Batticaloa MP and TELO Secretary General Govindan Karunakaram attempted to pay tribute at the recently rebuilt memorial earlier today, when he was stopped by Sri Lankan police officers.

Even as the officers pulled out their mobile phones and started recording, the Tamils paid tribute to those killed. In recent years, the Sri Lankan security forces have intensified efforts to crack down on Tamil commemorative events.

The memorial in Batticaloa was rebuilt and opened May 2018, after the original monument was destroyed by Sri Lankan troops.

‘They killed everybody’

The massacre, which took place January 27 1987, saw Special Task Force (STF) and army officers raid a prawn factory in the village, shooting dead the workers, which including seven boys aged between 12 to 14. The killings have since been dubbed the ‘Prawn Farm Massacre’.

According to relatives of the victims, the night before the massacre, government helicopters were seen circling the area. On the morning of the killings, helicopters were seen dropping troops off, as they went on to slaughter dozens of Tamils.

Some of the workers were then taken to nearby road and shot dead. Forty people, who had been hiding in a nearby farm, were also killed.

The bodies of those killed were burnt on old tyres, the relatives of the victims said.

British involvement

A book released in 2020 examined how a British company – Keenie Meenie Services (KMS) – had been involved with training STF troops at the time, and had been reported to fly Sri Lankan military helicopters during security operations.

Phil Miller, the author of ‘Keenie Meenie: The British Mercenaries Who Got Away with War Crimes’, wrote on the massacre, stating that “It is not known whether Tim Smith (KMS mercenary) was personally involved in the operation, although the company’s aviators were flying over the Eastern Province that month”.

After STF troops disembarked from the helicopters, they went on to massacre dozens.

The massacre took place during the then UNP government. No one, including KMS mercenaries, has been brought to justice for the crime.

Also see a trailer for Miler’s new documentary, “Keenie Meenie: Britain’s Private Army” below.

“Publicly Ban Sri Lankan War Criminals” Tamils diaspora organisations request countries

Global Tamil diaspora organizations, representing over one million Tamil people who fled the island due to the atrocious crimes committed by Sri Lanka against the Tamil people, request their respective governments to publicly place a ban on the Sri Lankan war criminals against whom credible evidence has been recorded by UNHRC.

See the full statement which was released on the 26th of January below:

Request to Publicly Ban Sri Lankan War Criminals

A campaign against the perpetrators of atrocity crimes in Sri Lanka

The undersigned global Tamil diaspora organizations, representing over one million Tamil people who fled the island due to the atrocity crimes committed by Sri Lanka against the Tamil people, request our respective governments to publicly place a ban on the Sri Lankan war criminals against whom credible evidence has been recorded by UNHRC.

The Sri Lankan Government is now headed by President Gotabaya Rajapakse and his brother Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapakse, both of whom are credibly accused of genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity committed against the Tamil people on the island of Sri Lanka.

They were both elected to power based on their virulent anti-Tamil rhetoric and promise to protect the soldiers who committed atrocity crimes under their command responsibility from any investigation. This is the case with every Sri Lankan government which comes to power.

The current government, since assuming office, has been appointing former senior military personnel to top government positions and diplomatic postings abroad by taking advantage of the diplomatic immunity. Tamil People in the diaspora have lost their family members and friends due to these systematic acts of genocide under successive Sri Lankan governments.

Many of the victim’s relatives fled the island are now citizens of their host countries. They are working extremely hard to overcome the trauma caused by the systematic acts of genocide and seek remedial justice to the victims Some countries, including Brazil, Canada, United States of America (U.S.A), United Kingdom (UK) and in Europe have already rejected some identified Sri Lankan war criminals credibly accused of atrocity crimes from entering or expelling them from the respective countries.

Recently the State Department of the U.S.A publicly banned two Sri Lankan army officers and their family’s entry into the USA. Similarly, the Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in 2020 issued a statement designating Shavendra Silva, current Chief of Defense Staff and Commander of the Sri Lanka Army, ineligible for entry into the USA, due to his involvement in the extrajudicial killings and gross violations of human rights citing serious and credible evidence.

We therefore strongly request our respective governments to publicly ban the persons in the list of perpetrators of mass atrocity crimes as credibly accused in the Report of the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights on Investigations on Sri Lanka (OISL). This list is presented below as per the doctrine of command responsibility of the perpetrators.

Mahinda Rajapaksa – Prime Minister, then President and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces
Gotabaya Rajapaksa – President, then Defense Secretary
General Sarath Fonseka
Lieutenant General Shavendra Silva
Major General Sathyapriya Liyanage
Major General Kamal Gunaratne
Major General Mahinda Hathurusinghe
Major General Nanda Mallawarachchi
Major General Jagath Dias
Major General Jagath Jayasuriya
Brigadier Prasanna Silva
Brigadier Nandana Udawatta
Brigadier Chagie Gallage
Colonel G.V. Ravipriya
Admiral Wasantha Kumar Jayadewa Karannagoda
Admiral Thisara S. G. Samarasinghe
Admiral Dissanayake Wijesinghe Arachchilage Somatilake Dissanayake
C.N.Wakishta

Further, making this list public would help the relevant authorities to place a targeted travel ban and asset freeze on these perpetrators and theirfamilies and allow any such persons already in the country to be tried under relevant and applicable judicial process including universal jurisdiction.

The Tamil victims of genocide in Sri Lanka deserve remedial justice and a resolution to the seven decades long unresolved Tamil national question. Shying away from the public ban of the Sri Lankan war criminals will allow Sri Lanka to continue its structural genocide of the Tamil people with impunity.

It is the moral responsibility of the respective governments to hold Sri Lanka accountable and guarantee non-recurrence as emphasized in the resolution 46/1 adopted at the 46th sessions of the UNHRC in March 2021.

For Contact details:

Australian Tamil Congress (ATC): +61300660629, mano_manics@hotmail.com

British Tamils Forum (BTF): +447814486087, info@britishtamilsforum.org

Irish Tamils Forum (ITF): 0035389959270, irishtamilsforum@gmail.com

Maison du Tamil Eelam (France): +33652725867, mte.france@gmail.com

National Council of Canadian Tamils (NCCT): +14168307703, info@ncctcanada.ca

Solidarity Group for Peace and Justice (SGPJ – South Africa): pregasenp@telkomsa.net

Swiss Tamil Action Group (STAG): +41764450642, swisstamilag@gmail.com

Tamil Movement Against Genocide (Mauritius): +230 5728 5505, tamilmagen0@gmail.com

United States Tamil Action Group (USTAG): +12025953123, info@theustag.or

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Journalists in Sri Lanka mark ‘Black January’ as impunity continues

A demonstration was staged in Fort today to draw attention to the killing of journalists in Sri Lanka.

Leaflets were distributed to the public calling for support to ensure justice for the journalists killed and attacked in Sri Lanka in the past.

Journalists have been calling on the Government to take meaningful action to investigate journalist killings and disappearances on the annual ‘Black January’ commemoration on January 28.

The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) and its Sri Lankan affiliate, the Free Media Movement have urged the Government in Sri Lanka to end a dark history of impunity for crimes against journalists in the country.

Between 2005 and 2015 dozens of journalists were reported killed, abducted and tortured and at least 60 fled the country out of fear with most still currently living in exile.