No debt cliff in 2028 as SL outpaces IMF projections

Colombo-based think tank Arutha Research Director – Debt Research Umesh Moramudali yesterday dispelled ‘overstated’ fears that Sri Lanka faces a looming debt servicing cliff when it resumes capital repayments of restructured foreign loans in 2028.

In 2028, Sri Lanka begins capital repayments on bilateral debt to Japan, EXIM Bank China, and EXIM Bank India, while bullet payments and maturities for macro-linked bonds (MLBs) are also scheduled to begin that year. However, Moramudali says it amounts to an additional $ 1 billion compared to the $ 2 billion debt servicing requirements in 2026 and 2027 comprising interest payments and multilateral (ADB, World Bank) loan repayments.

Speaking at the ‘Debt and Tax Dialogue’ forum organised by Arutha Research, he said the country is on track to reduce its debt burden faster than International Monetary Fund (IMF) baseline projections, though questions remain over whether the new Public Debt Management Office has the capacity to manage complex borrowing once it takes over from the Central Bank and External Resources Department.

“The target given by the IMF in terms of the debt stock stability assessment is that Sri Lanka’s debt-to-GDP ratio has to come down below 95%,” Moramudali said. Current estimates place the ratio at 104.6% of GDP in 2024, with the IMF framework projecting a decline to 96.8% by 2030. Moramudali added that Sri Lanka could reach 85–87% of GDP by 2032, substantially better than the Fund’s forecast.

Slides presented at the forum showed progress across all four IMF benchmarks: public debt trending downwards, gross financing needs projected under 13% of GDP in 2027–2032, foreign currency debt service capped below 4.5% of GDP, and bridging of a $ 17.1 billion external financing gap in the same period.

Fiscal gains underpin this trajectory. Government revenue increased to 13.5% of GDP in 2024, from 8.4% in 2022, while a primary surplus of 2.2% of GDP was recorded in 2024. “We have pretty much overperformed in our capital targets,” Moramudali said.

On restructuring, he noted that “all creditors have to be treated fairly and equally.” Completed agreements cover Bondholders (December 2024), China Development Bank (December 2024), China EXIM Bank (September 2024), India (November 2024), Japan (March 2025), and the UK (August 2025).

Moramudali pointed to a popular misconception that Sri Lanka does not have to service its external debt until 2028, and that it would be a shock to the system then. “But this is an overstated fear,” he said.

Multilateral debt continues to be serviced in full, with interest payments on both commercial and bilateral debt ongoing. Sri Lanka’s total debt servicing obligation for 2026 is $ 2.12 billion and $ 2.09 billion in 2027.

Capital repayments on bilateral debt will commence in 2028, alongside bullet payments on MLBs. “The increase in repayments that year, estimated at about $ 1 billion, is manageable,” he said, countering claims of a repayment cliff.

Moramudali stressed the importance of institutional reform. Debt management responsibilities are being transitioned from the Central Bank and Department of External Resources to a new Public Debt Management Office, which will only be fully operational in 2026. “Debt management is not the Central Bank’s responsibility. It has to be handled by the Finance Ministry or a dedicated debt management office,” he cautioned, raising questions about the office’s technical capacity.

Since Sri Lanka’s default in 2022, almost all new financing has come from multilaterals such as the IMF, Asian Development Bank (ADB), and World Bank. No new bilateral loans have been issued. The restructuring of China EXIM Bank’s Central Expressway loan illustrates tighter conditions: an original $ 989 million loan (2019) was reduced to $ 500 million, shifted from dollars to RMB, and converted from a fixed 2.5% rate to a floating 2.5–3.5%. The Government will fund the remaining $ 438 million directly.

Moramudali also observed that Chinese engagement was shifting from debt to investment. Sinopec’s Hambantota refinery Memorandum of Understanding (MoU), valued at $ 3.7 billion, could become Sri Lanka’s largest foreign direct investment (FDI) if realised. Sinopec also secured the Sapugaskanda refinery contract through competitive bidding, while other Chinese State-owned enterprises (SOEs) are pursuing ADB-backed projects, such as Upper Elahara hydropower.

Moramudali said this reflects stricter IMF governance conditions and domestic political commitments to avoid corruption. But, without a stronger institutional capacity for debt management, he warned, Sri Lanka risks repeating past failures in handling external borrowing.

Govt. considers handing over Mahinda Rajapaksa’s official residence to CID

The government is considering handing over the official residence on Wijerama Road, Colombo, currently occupied by former President Mahinda Rajapaksa, to the Criminal Investigation Department (CID).

It is reported that the matter was discussed at a recent meeting attended by a group of senior government officials.

A Bill to repeal the Presidents’ Entitlements Act and abolish special privileges granted to former Presidents was presented to Parliament, following Cabinet approval on June 16, 2025, for the Legal Draftsman to prepare the necessary legislation.

The Government hopes to pass the Bill in the House in the near future.

Once enacted, all other facilities provided to former Presidents, including official residences, will be withdrawn, with only pension entitlements retained.

Meanwhile, the Supreme Court’s ruling on the constitutionality of the proposed Bill is expected to be submitted to the Speaker soon.

The official residence on Wijerama Mawatha, where Rajapaksa currently resides, was previously occupied by former President Maithripala Sirisena. Prior to that, it served as the official residence for several other senior Ministers.

Mahinda Rajapaksa said earlier that he will vacate his official residence on Wijerama Mawatha once the bill is passed.

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Accountability for Chemmani: Gaps in law enforcement will and capacity: HRCSL

The Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka (HRCSL), which conducted a fact-finding mission on the ongoing investigation into the mass grave site in Chemmani, Jaffna, has found that while specific institutional actors appear to be discharging their duties with commitment and care, there remains a gap in capacity and will among the law enforcement authorities to ensure accountability for the deaths of the persons found at the site.

The HRCSL visited the site of excavation and exhumation last month (3-4 August) – at a time when over 200 human remains were unearthed – and engaged with the stakeholders including the Office on Missing Persons (OMP) staff, certain attorneys and civil society actors representing the family members of disappeared persons.

They also engaged with Jaffna Magistrate Amalavalan Anandarajah, the Judicial Medical Officer Dr. Selliah Pranavan, and the officer in charge of the preliminary investigation conducted by the Criminal Investigation Department (CID), the Head of the Forensic Medicine Department (where the remains are stored) of the Jaffna University’s Medical Faculty, Dr. P.A. Dinesh Coonghe, and the site work supervising archaeological expert Prof. Raj Somadeva.

Following the same, the HRCSL made the following observations and findings: Over 90% of the human remains had no form of clothing; given the positioning of the skeletal remains, including that some remains were in extreme proximity to one another, and the shallow depth of the remains, there is a reasonable likelihood that the burials were unlawful and pursuant to extrajudicial killings.

HRCSL further observed: Major gaps in the expertise and technology available for the investigation including the lack of an adequate number of experts in forensic anthropology and forensic archaeology, the non-availability of technological facilities for more accurate methods of carbon dating, such as bomb-pulse 14Carbon carbon dating, and the lack of cost-effective and accessible technological facilities to analyse deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA); notable weaknesses in the timely provision of adequate funds for the investigation; disturbing accounts of certain CID officers intimidating persons involved in excavation and exhumation; and that the timing and the circumstances of the summoning of journalist Kumanan Kanapathippillai by the Counter Terrorism and Investigation Division (CTID) gave rise to serious concerns.

With regard to the said observations and findings, the HRCSL noted the following: That overseas expertise and technology would be required to effectively complete the investigation; that the continued involvement of regular Police officers in the investigation is likely to prejudice the outcome; and that certain acts by the law enforcement authorities are likely to have a chilling effect on media freedom.

In a report issued in this regard, the HRCSL presented recommendations to the relevant State authorities including the Justice Minister (Initiate a process through which a Standard Operating Procedure for conducting investigations into mass grave sites can be developed in close consultation with all the relevant experts, including attorneys and civil society representatives, and formally adopt the same, and issue regular official updates on the progress of the investigation; Appoint a focal point at the Justice Ministry to expeditiously process budget requests, allocations, and disbursements, and to work closely with the OMP and all State officials involved to ensure timely access to resources; Take immediate steps to provide resources for the use of ground-penetrating radar equipment from the Sri Jayewardenepura University to scan a wider area in the site and the surrounding area; Develop a pool of available archaeological experts to support excavations and exhumations at multiple mass grave sites; Seek and secure the relevant expertise and technological facilities, including from overseas, for analysing the DNA samples gathered from the human remains; Take steps to establish a ‘DNA bank’ in which DNA samples of family members of disappeared persons can be voluntarily obtained and securely stored; Seek and secure the relevant expertise and technological facilities from overseas for the dating of the human remains found, and specifically securing the use of the bomb-pulse 14C carbon dating method; and Take steps to establish a permanent independent ‘Office for the Investigation and Prosecution of Serious Crimes by State Officials’ with broad powers to investigate enforced disappearances and extra-judicial killings allegedly committed by members of the security forces or the law enforcement authorities, and to prosecute perpetrators), the Inspector General of Police (Issue directions to the CID to refrain from intimidating any State functionaries or family members of disappeared persons, including pursuing irrelevant and antagonistic lines of questioning; and Issue directions to the CTID to clearly inform a person of the reason for which they are summoned to give a statement, and refrain from misusing investigative powers to summon media personnel, except in clear instances where there is a reasonable suspicion of a specific offence), the Defence Minister and the Army Commander (Issue clear orders to the Army to refrain from any involvement in the ongoing investigations, including contacting any State official, civil society representative, or family member of a disappeared person), the Higher Education Minister (Take steps to review the training requirements pertaining to medical students gaining a speciality in forensic anthropology, and consider limiting the years required for related foreign training to one year, inclusive of State funding for the entire year; and Formulate a plan to incentivise and develop local expertise in forensic archaeology through the university system), and the Finance Minister (Direct the Inland Revenue Department to issue a Value Added Tax exemption notice to the Customs to enable the release of vital laboratory equipment donated to the Jaffna University to establish a Clinical Genetics Unit).

Sri Lanka seeks more time and space to address UNHRC concerns

Asserting that Sri Lanka will remain engaged with the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC), Foreign Minister Vijitha Herath reportedly said yesterday that the government needs ‘more time and space’ to address issues raised by the UN body regarding the reconciliation process and alleged wartime rights violations, Daily Mirror learns.

Ahead of the UNHRC session and President Anura Kumara Dissanayake’s visit to the UN in New York and Japan later this month, the Minister briefed the Colombo-based diplomatic community.

The UNHRC will begin its 60th session on September 8. The UK- led core group of countries working on Sri Lanka’s issue will move another resolution this time. Preliminary discussions have been conducted but the resolution has not yet been finalized, according to a source familiar with the process.

Minister Herath is reported to have said that Sri Lanka needs time and space to address the issues raised by the Office of High Commissioner for Human Rights. He, therefore, sought the support of the diplomatic community for Sri Lanka to present its case.

UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk who visited Sri Lanka earlier is expected to submit his report during the upcoming session.

The previous government rejected the UNHRC resolutions on Sri Lanka. The current government also rejected the resolution when it was taken up last year.

The Minister also briefed the diplomatic community about developments done by the government during its past 11 months in office.

Besides, Foreign Secretary Aruni Ranaraja who was present at the meeting said that the President would address the UN General Assembly on September 24. Afterwards, he will travel to Tokyo on an official visit.

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UNP Postpones 79th Anniversary Event

The United National Party (UNP) has decided to postpone its 79th anniversary celebration, which was scheduled to be held on Saturday (6), citing the health condition of former President Ranil Wickremesinghe.

UNP General Secretary Thalatha Atukorale announced that the decision was taken yesterday (2) at a meeting of the party’s Management Committee in Colombo. She further stated that the postponed anniversary celebration will be held later this month on a new date to be announced in due course.

According to Atukorale, the decision was reached following medical advice given to Wickremesinghe and requests made by members of the Management Committee.

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Deputy Foreign Minister of Italy to arrive in Sri Lanka today

The Deputy Minister for Foreign Affairs of Italy, Maria Tripodi, is scheduled to arrive in the island on an official visit today (03).

The Deputy Minister will remain in Sri Lanka until September 5, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Foreign Employment and Tourism said in a statement.

This visit is significant as it marks the highest-level incoming visit from Italy to Sri Lanka in almost a decade, the Foreign Ministry stated.

During her visit, Deputy Minister Tripodi will co-chair, along with Arun Hemachandra, the Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Employment, the inaugural session of the Sri Lanka–Italy Political Consultations.

A Memorandum of Understanding on the Establishment of a Political Consultations Mechanism is due to be signed during the visit, providing a structured framework for dialogue between the two countries.

Deputy Minister Tripodi is also scheduled to call on Prime Minister Dr. Harini Amarasuriya and hold discussions with the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Foreign Employment, and Tourism Vijitha Herath.

Diplomatic relations between the two countries were established in 1952, the statement added

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Mass graves: Tamils petitions for international intervention

A campaign has been launched to collect signatures for a petition demanding international justice for all mass graves found in Sri Lanka’s war-affected north and east.

Regional correspondents report that the campaign seeks international justice for the mass graves found in the north and east, including Sri Lanka’s second largest Chemmani mass grave which has been designated a crime scene by the court, as well as for the genocide committed against the Tamil people.

The petition launched a day before the International Day of the Victims of Enforced Disappearances – is targeting the 60th session of the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) in Geneva, Switzerland, to be held from 8 September to 3 October 2025.

The petition was jointly prepared by representatives of several parties and alliances including the Ilankai Tamil Arasu Katchi (ITAK), the Tamil National People’s Front (TNPF) and the Democratic Tamil National Alliance (DTNA), while civil society representatives extended their support to collect signatures in the five districts of the Northern Province.

On 29 August 2025 public gathered to sign the petition at the Mannar Bus Stand, Jaffna Bus Stand, Kilinochchi Public Market Complex, in front of the Maritimepattu Divisional Secretariat in Mullaitivu, and in the Vavuniya town.

During a recent interview with a private television channel, Justice Minister and attorney Harshana Nanayakkara revealed that 17 mass graves have been found in Sri Lanka so far.

For the first time, he listed these as the Mannar Sathosa mass grave, Mannar Thiruketheeswaram mass grave, Puthukkudiyiruppu mass grave, Suthanthirapuram mass grave, Mankulam mass grave, Oddusuddan mass grave, Kokkuthoduvai mass grave, Palaly mass grave, Palaly 2 mass grave, Palaly 3 mass grave, Muhamalai 4 mass grave, Kurukkalmadam mass grave, Matale mass grave, Sooriyakanda mass grave, Colombo Port mass grave, Sampur mass grave, and the Chemmani mass grave.

The Mannar Sathosa mass grave is the largest with 376 bodies discovered so far.

On 20 August 2025, Velanai Pradeshiya Sabha Independent Member Swaminathan Pirakalathan had revealed that there are mass graves in five locations in the islets of Jaffna yet to be excavated.

Regional correspondents reported that on 26 August 2025, the Tamil community in the islets paid tribute for the first time to their relatives who are believed to have been buried in Kayts, Araly Junction, near the Mankumban Pillaiyar Kovil, Allaipiddy and Mandaitivu, and who disappeared 35 years ago.

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President declares open the Immigration and Emigration Department’s Jaffna Regional Office

President Anura Kumara Dissanayake stated that efforts are underway to enable the public to carry out all payments and transactions with the government through online methods by next year.

The President stated that digitalisation, a key programme of the present government, enables the decentralisation of all administrative functions, which were previously confined to Colombo, to remote rural villages, thereby giving the people the opportunity to access government services much more conveniently.

President Anura Kumara Dissanayake made these remarks while attending the inauguration of the Jaffna Regional Office of the Department of Immigration and Emigration today (01).

This office, established within the premises of the Jaffna District Secretariat, is equipped with all facilities including modern technology.

As the number of foreign passport applications from the Northern Province is increasing, this regional office was opened to fulfill the need for a more easily accessible location.

The issuance of three passports by the President symbolised the commencement of providing Department of Immigration and Emigration services to the people of Jaffna.

Subsequently, at a meeting with Jaffna District public officials held at the auditorium of the Jaffna District Secretariat, the President stated that in order to meet the expectations of the people, political authorities and public officials must work together.

The President emphasised that while the government will do its utmost to protect public officials who use their authority for the welfare of the people, it will not hesitate to enforce the law against those who misuse that authority for monetary gain.

He further stated that, at present, all public servants in the country have the opportunity to fulfill their duty to the nation.

The President further pointed out that a strong public service is needed to build the country and behind the development of every developed country in the world, there is a strong public service.

UN calls for truth, justice and action on enforced disappearances in Sri Lanka

Marking the International Day of the Victims of Enforced Disappearances 2025, the United Nations Resident Coordinator in Sri Lanka, Marc-André Franche, has urged the government to confront its legacy of unresolved disappearances with transparency, courage, and justice.

Franche described the issue as a “national wound left open by silence, inaction, and impunity,” emphasising that the fate of thousands of forcibly disappeared Sri Lankans remains unknown across all communities on the island.

“The pain of being left without answers about a loved one is a trauma that time alone cannot heal. It is a suffering that endures, deepened by the absence of truth and justice,” he said.

This year’s observance comes amid renewed attention to mass grave sites, with ongoing excavations revealing human skeletal remains, including those believed to be children, as well as personal belongings.

He said the discoveries are a stark reminder of the scale of past human rights violations and the urgent need for credible, independent investigations.

He welcomed the Sri Lankan government’s recent decision to invite the public to help identify items recovered from mass graves, but stressed that “much more needs to be done.”

The UN official acknowledged Sri Lanka’s steps toward addressing this legacy, including ratifying the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance, and establishing the Office on Missing Persons (OMP) and the Office for Reparations.

However, he urged that these institutions be given adequate resources, independence, and forensic capacity to fulfil their mandates.

Franche also expressed concern over surveillance, intimidation, and reprisals reportedly faced by families of the disappeared and human rights defenders, particularly during memorial activities.

“All those engaged in exercising their rights must be protected, not punished,” he said.

He recalled the June visit of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, who met with families of the disappeared and reiterated the need to investigate mass graves as a matter of urgent priority.

Franche also added that the United Nations “stands in solidarity with every family searching for their loved ones” and remains committed to supporting independent investigations, truth-seeking, and reparations to ensure accountability and guarantees of non-recurrence.

ICRC says thousands of families of missing in Sri Lanka still waiting for answers

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) says thousands of families of missing persons from all communities across Sri Lanka are still waiting for answers while struggling to cope with multiple challenges at family, community and societal levels.

In a statement to mark the International Day of the Disappeared on 30th August, the ICRC said that not knowing the fate or whereabouts of their missing loved ones, they continue to endure suffering and anguish that transcend differences.

Every effort must be made to establish the fate of missing persons while their relatives must be able to live in dignity, the ICRC said.

For over a decade, the ICRC has implemented a comprehensive, island-wide support programme in Sri Lanka to address the multifaceted needs of families of missing persons, assisting over 10,000 families.

The ICRC will continue engaging with families of missing persons to strengthen their capacities to play an active role in processes aimed at providing them with answers, and to encourage collective action where possible. In parallel, the ICRC works with national authorities and relevant stakeholders to reinforce their ability to address effectively the needs of families of missing persons, including their fundamental right to know.

Drawing on its global experience, the ICRC stands ready to continue sharing its technical expertise with relevant stakeholders in Sri Lanka, in order to contribute to the process of clarifying the fate and whereabouts of missing persons, in accordance with its humanitarian mandate.

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