Delaying elections sets a bad precedent – PAFFREL

The People’s Action for Free and Fair Elections said that it is disappointing to note that Sri Lankan authorities have not taken action to call for the Local Government Elections which have been delayed for over eight months, with no justifiable reason.

They had expressed their concerns over the matter in a letter to Prime Minister Dinesh Gunawardena.

The People’s Action for Free and Fair Elections notes that of the Rs. 10 Billion that was requested by the Election Commission to conduct the Local Government Election, a sum of Rs. 1 Billion had already been spent for the preliminary efforts of the said election.

It added that if the election for which nominations were also called is not held for whatever reason, it can be considered a waste of Rs. 1 Billion in public funds.

In the letter to the Prime Minister, PAFFREL questions whether it is justifiable to waste public funds in such a manner, at a time when the country is going through a very serious economic crisis.

PAFFREL pointed out that it is disappointing that the priority given to welfare and development activities is not given to elections so that the mandate guaranteed by the constitution can be executed.

Pointing out that only 3.7% of the money allocated in the budget will be spent on conducting a fair and free election, PAFFREL noted that indefinitely delaying the opportunity given to the people to exercise their franchise, sets a negative precedent.

Therefore, they request that the Prime Minister to take the necessary measures to release money to the Election Commission and hold the local government polls as planned, in order to secure the people’s franchise.

Japan extends Rs. 238 Mn to demining projects

Japanese Ambassador to Sri Lanka Mizukoshi Hideaki signed the grant contracts of two demining projects under the scheme of “Grant Assistance for Grassroots Human Security Projects.”

The agreements were signed with Mines Advisory Group and HALO Trust.

The Government of Japan has provided a total sum of US$ 729,925 (approx. Rs. 238 million) for these two projects with MAG and the HALO Trust to extend its support for humanitarian demining activities in the Northern and Eastern provinces of Sri Lanka.

Japan has been a major donor in demining activities in Sri Lanka since 2002, and the total amount of assistance exceeds US$ 44 million.

It is expected that these projects by MAG and HALO will together contribute to resettlement and livelihood support for a total of 10,977 IDPs (internally displaced people) in the Northern and Eastern provinces.

The development of the conflict-affected areas is one of the priority areas of Japan’s official development assistance policy to Sri Lanka.

Ambassador Mizukoshi strongly reiterated that the Government of Japan has been committing its role as a leading donor in demining activities and will continue to provide the necessary support to achieve “Mine-Impact-Free Sri Lanka”

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Sri Lanka’s AKD crosses 50-percent in voting intent poll, but remains unpopular

Sri Lanka leftist leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake has crossed a seemingly elusive 50-percent hurdle in a voting intent poll conducted among 567 interviewees for October, though his net favourability rating remained negative at minus 9 indicating continued unpopularity.

A Sri Lanka Opinion Tracker Survey (SLOTS) by the Institute for Health Policy (IHP) showed that Dissanayake, who leads the leftist National People’s Power (NPP) gained support to half of likely voters (51 percent) in October, followed by opposition leader Sajith Premadasa with a third (30 percent), and President Ranil Wickremesinghe on 13%.

A “generic” candidate for the ruling Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) was on 6 percent with little change from September.

IHP executive director and SLOTS project director Ravi Rannan-Eliya said in a statement: “Although polling is a hazardous exercise and our MRP estimates are subject to quite a lot of uncertainties, it does appear that Dissanayake would have likely won a Presidential Election in October even against a joint SJB-UNP ticket. I suspect this is less voters buying the NPP/JVP policy platform and more most voters rejecting the political establishment and business as usual. Establishment parties wanting to compete with the NPP probably need to be doing some serious soul-searching,” he said.

In October, Premadasa’s net favourability rating dropped 13 points to a new low of -66 and President Ranil Wickremesinghe’s dropped 8 points to -65 while leftist leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake’s rating improved by 10 points to -9, a poll showed.

A net favourability rating of less than zero means that the individual or institution is unpopular. Only positive scores where net favourability is more than zero mean that the individual or institution is popular on average.

According to the IHP, SLOTS combines interviews from a national sample of adults (ages 18 and over) reached by random digit dialling of mobile numbers, and others coming from a national panel of respondents who were previously recruited through random selection. IHP estimates voting intent using an adaptation of Multilevel Regression and Post-Stratification (MRP), with multiple imputation to account for uncertainties in its modelling, exploiting data from all SLOTS interviews to estimate voting in a particular month.

The October 2023 MRP estimates are based on 567 interviews conducted in October 2023, and 13,935 interviews conducted overall from 1 October 2021–12 November 2023, with a margin of error assessed as 3–4% for Dissanayake, Premadasa and 1–2% for Wickremesinghe and the other potential candidate. All estimates are adjusted to ensure the sample matches the national population with respect to age, sex, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, education, geographical location, and voting in the 2019 Presidential and 2020 General Elections, the IHP said.

IHP is an independent, non-partisan research centre based in Colombo, Sri Lanka.

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Ready to hold Provincial Council elections if Opposition agrees on electoral system: PM

The Government is prepared to hold the delayed Provincial Council elections if the Opposition agrees on the electoral system, Prime Minister Dinsesh Gunawardene told Parliament today.

“Opposition MPs are making a different proposal on the system under which the Provincial Council elections are to be held. We can hold the elections if they agree on the system under which the Provincial Council elections are to be held,” the Prime Minister said.

“Some Opposition members say the Provincial Council elections should be held under the old system and others under the new system. A constituency system is also important. No party has come to an agreement at the select committee on the Provincial Council elections,” he said.

“Those who call for the holding of Provincial Council elections are the ones who approved the amendment to the Provincial Council Elections Ordinance which pushed the holding of election into a deadlock,” he added.

Chief Opposition Whip Lakshman Kiriella and Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) MP J.C. Alawathuwela said their party is for holding the Provincial Council elections under the old system.

“We will support it if an amendment is introduced to hold the Provincial Council elections under the old system,” Kiriella said.

October sees 20% decline in apparel exports

The apparel exports from Sri Lanka continued their downward trend, with October exports declining 20 percent year-on-year (YoY) to US $ 330.95 million, the data compiled by industry body Joint Apparel Association Forum (JAAF) showed.

Since September 2022, apparel export earnings have been on a downward trend on a YoY basis, primarily due to the economic slowdown in major Western markets.

According to the JAAF data, exports to all major markets fell during October, amid the slowdown in orders. Exports to Sri Lanka’s biggest apparel market, the United States, fell 16.81 percent YoY to US $ 128.22 million while exports to the EU, excluding the UK, declined 24.79 percent YoY to US $ 110 million.

Exports to the UK experienced a YoY decline of 14.56 percent, amounting to US $ 43.66 million, whereas exports to other markets saw a more significant decrease of 21.69 percent, totalling US $ 49.07 million. The cumulative exports for the January-October 2023 period fell 20.5 percent YoY to US $ 3,748.72 million.

Apparel is Sri Lanka’s largest industrial export and earned US $ 5.95 billion in 2022. The country’s apparel sector has about 300,000 employees, most of whom are women.

The JAAF anticipates a decrease of approximately one billion dollars in this year’s apparel and textile export earnings compared to last year.

Amid the rising inflation and interest rates, consumer demand in Sri Lanka’s key apparel export markets has faltered. In addition, Sri Lanka has become expensive for apparel sourcing, due to the higher production cost, stemming from the sharp rise in electricity tariffs and other input costs.

Sri Lanka’s apparel industry has called for government support to expand the country’s apparel export markets, through bilateral and other types of trade agreements.

Particularly, the apparel manufacturers have called to fast-track the efforts to improve the market access to India,

specifically by increasing the duty-free quota on garments. Negotiations in this regard are currently underway, under the India-Sri Lanka Free Trade Agreement. .

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Sri Lanka optimistic over China’s Myanmar Corridor proposal – govt official

Sri Lanka is optimistic over China’s proposal on Myanmar Corridor which will boost the trade between the two countries as well as the trade between Beijing and African nations, a top Sri Lankan official said.

Sri Lanka is looking for all the opportunities to exploit the advantage of its strategic location to earn more foreign revenue and come out of an unprecedented economic crisis. It defaulted sovereign debts last year after declaring bankruptcy and is yet to resume repayments for foreign debts it borrowed earlier.

Chinese President Xi Jinping’s special envoy and State Councilor Shen Yiqin last week at a meeting with President Ranil Wickremesinghe stated that China was prioritizing the extension of the China-Myanmar Economic Corridor to Sri Lanka.

“We are positive about this. The Myanmar Corridor will be a new shipping route, and this is not related to the Asia Pacific region. This will boost Sri Lanka’s trade with China,” a top government source who is aware of Sri Lanka’s response to the Myanmar corridor, told EconomyNext.

The Myanmar Corridor Economic Corridor is an infrastructure development plan for building road and rail transportation from China’s Yunnan province through parts of Myanmar.

The transportation route follows gas and oil pipelines built in 2013 and 2017. At the end of the route, a port and Special Economic Zone is planned at Khaukphyu, a major town in Rakhine State, in western Myanmar.

The largest construction project along the route is the 431 km railway, the project estimated to cost US$9 billion. The new railway would connect to the Chinese railway network in Yunnan.

“The Myanmar Corridor will connect Sri Lanka’s Hambantota port to China’s Chongqing province,” the source said.

“The new corridor will speed up goods transportation between the two countries. It will also speed up good transportation from China to Africa as well,” he said.

China already has a port in Sri Lanka’s Hambantota and is in the process of establishing a 15,000-acre Special Economic Zone surrounding the port.

The island nation’s cabinet also on Monday approved China’s Sinopec’s bid to build a massive oil refinery in Hambantota, mainly for export purposes.

Both countries have already agreed to expedite the implementation of the China-Sri Lanka Free Trade Agreement.

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Tamils in Jaffna commemorate Maaveerar Naal

Commemorations have been taking place across Jaffna as the Tamil nation marks the 36th Maaveerar Naal.

Former Northern Provincial Council member N Shivajilingham and mother of Captain Pandithar lit a flame at the native home of Lt Shankar, the first LTTE cadre to sacrifice their life in the liberation struggle.

Shivajilingham also lit a flame outside Koppay Thuyilum Illam, an LTTE cemetery, which is currently occupied by the Sri Lankan Army’s 51 Division.

In 1995, Koppay Thuyilum Illam was destroyed by the Sri Lankan army but was later rebuilt by the LTTE during the 2002 ceasefire. Koppay Thuyilum Illam, where at least 2,000 LTTE cadres are reported to have been buried, was bulldozed over by the Sri Lankan state in 2010. Now, the Sri Lankan military’s 51 Division base now stands on top of it.

Captain Pandithar’s mother also lit a flame at Revady beach, Valvettithurai, in honour of the Sea Tigers, the LTTE’s naval wing.

Lt Col Thileepan, a political wing leader of the LTTE, was honoured at his memorial in Nallur, Jaffna. In September 1987, Thileepan fasted to death in a protest appealing to the Indian government to honour pledges made to the Tamil people.

Tamils gathered outside Kodikamam Thuyilum Illam, where the Sri Lankan military’s 522nd Brigade headquarters is now based.

University of Jaffna students erected an arch outside their campus to mark the day.

A lamp was lit outside Nelliyadi Central College in memory of Captain Miller, or Vallipuram Vasanthan, the first Black Tiger to sacrifice their life.

As well as a banner marking the day, posters were displayed at the roundabout in front of Jaffna Hindu College.

The posters read: “The legacy of our heroes’ sacrifice should not be wasted. So wake up young generation .. wake up from drugs and violence, and use the weapon of knowledge.”

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Has ex-minister Nasir Ahmed taken 20 crore government vehicles home?

Naseer Ahmed, who lost his position as a Member of Parliament due to a court decision,

Some social media have reported that he used two luxury jeeps used during his tenure as the Minister of Environment and used them for his personal use without returning them.

According to the media reports, these two vehicles worth nearly 20 crore rupees are two official vehicles issued to the minister by the government.

Some media reports also state that the Ministry of Environment has complained to the Mirihana Special Crime Investigation Unit regarding the non-handover of these two vehicles.

He replied that the two vehicles have been handed over to the Presidential Secretariat. But it is also mentioned in the media reports that the vehicles have not been handed over to the Presidential Secretariat till now.

True – no!

In this regard, when we asked a senior officer of the President’s Office, he said that he has arranged to hand over the two cars bearing numbers CAU-4118, CAS-9010 assigned to the duties of former Environment Minister Nasir Ahmed to the President’s Office on 08.11.2023. .

Accordingly, the officer said that the jeeps numbered CAU-4118 and CAS-9010 handed over to the President’s Office have been used for the essential duties of the President’s Office.

A letter sent by Buddhika Jayatissa, Senior Assistant Secretary (Transport) to the President informing the Secretary of the Ministry of Environment in this regard states:

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Source:The Leader.LK

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Yasmin Sooka protests government bid to block Tamil war dead remembrance

International human rights lawyer and Executive Director of the International Truth and Justice Project (ITJP) Yasmin Sooka has expressed her resentment regarding the refusal of the Sri Lankan government to allow remembering the war dead in Sri Lanka Police has made several unsuccessful attempts to persuade courts to ban Tamil preparations to commemorate their loved ones on November 27.

In her open letter in the Jaffna based Tamil Newspaper ‘Uthayan’, Sooka has expressed her anguish and deep concern over the failure to rectify and bring about true justice for the families of the disappeared and for those tortured and displaced during the brutal civil war which came to a bloody end in May 2009.

The English translation of her article is found below:

Impunity in Sri Lanka has deepened, given the Government of Sri Lanka’s failure to ensure any kind of accountability for those responsible for war crimes and crimes against humanity committed at the end of the civil war in May 2009.

While the war may have ended, the persecution of Tamils in Sri Lanka and abroad continues. The violence that continues to be inflicted by the security forces impacts not only on individuals and their families, but also destroys the social fabric on which coexistence, tradition and trust are built.

The Government of Sri Lanka continues to violate the legitimate rights of Tamil families to mourn on 27 November and remember those who lost their lives in the Tamil struggle for liberation.

Year after year, since 2014, my organisation has documented the testimony of torture survivors who flee abroad.

The Sri Lankan intelligence agencies photograph them after they attend remembrance events in the north east, visiting them later and threatening them

One man we interviewed, who made a speech on 27 November 2022 at a cemetery in the north said he thought it was safe to do so, as the new President had allowed the events to go ahead.

Days later, and in violation of his right to freedom of expression and freedom of movement, he was picked up and tortured; he fled, leaving behind his new-born baby and thriving business.

In interrogations the security forces ask ‘who funds these commemorations’ which misses the point.

Organising and attending commemorations are not just acts of resistance but also expressions of a very deep personal grief felt by all survivors of this terrible war. Families of victims of state sponsored violence are also themselves victims; in addition to the suffering caused by the disappearance, torture or death of their loved ones, they face the overwhelming barrier of impunity, and guilt for having survived.

In their struggle for truth and justice, the survivors consider it their moral and social responsibility to continue to remember the dead and the disappeared. It’s not just those who mourn their family and friends on 27 November but the whole community that remembers the sacrifice and the collective suffering.

Over the years we’ve seen groups of Tamil survivors abroad reclaim their right to remember the dead in private and in public spaces.

In the process they struggle with what it means to survive, and to bear witness.

They find new ways to articulate not only their individual suffering but also that of their communities in order to keep the memory alive for future generations.

No amount of repression is going to stamp out the human need to mourn, especially if it’s for your child or parent. A torture survivor described that even while detained in Boosa after the war, he and his cellmates rose early to light a candle on 27 November, knowing full well the guards would exact revenge.

Nevertheless it was the last scrap of dignity they had left and for them it was worth the cost.

President Ranil Wickremesinghe, speaks of establishing a Truth Commission; in a context where survivors of the war are unable to exercise their right to mourn and deal with their pain when they attend commemoration events, it is unlikely that survivors will participate and provide testimony to such a body.

If a Truth Commission is to be successful and credible, the President will need to guarantee state-sponsored violence will end, and that there will be no further surveillance of events by the security forces on 27 November and there will be no reprisals against those who organise or take part in them.

The diplomatic community should not remain silent in the face of this repression and should send international observers to ensure that officers in plain clothes are not taking photos.

Cardinal expresses dismay over the Online Safety Bill

The proposed Online Safety Act by the Sri Lanka Government will limit the people’s right to expression, and search for the truth, said His Eminence Malcolm Cardinal Ranjith, the Archbishop of Colombo.

He called for such efforts that would carry the country towards a dictatorship to be defeated.

“What this country needs is a change in vision. This country needs a legal transformation where all religions and communities will be treated equally,” he said while speaking at an event in Colombo.

His Eminence Malcolm Cardinal Ranjith called for the creation of a new country where all of Sri Lanka’s resources will be protected while breaking from any foreign allegiances, thus making the country self-sufficient with an economy that will provide benefits to all the people.

“The time is now to reject the traditional way of politics that had governed this country thus far,” he said, noting that nepotism must be eliminated from the country.

His Eminence Malcolm Cardinal Ranjith also stressed that the time is now to do away with the oppressive political leadership, and install a leadership that loves the country.

“There are some newspapers, television stations, and radio stations, that are somewhat connected or loyal to certain political groups, and have worked to mislead the masses,” he added.

The Archbishop of Colombo went on to note that given the situation, the people mainly use social media to express their views, and the government, citing social media regulation, is trying to limit the people’s right to expression, and their right to search for the truth.