G.L. Peiris to build a broad opposition force with SJB

Member of Parliament Prof. G.L. Peiris states that they will build a broad opposition force together with Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) in the future.

Furthermore, the former Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) Chairman pointed out that he intends to safeguard the people against the implementation of ‘extremely dangerous’ economic policies.

The Parliamentarian made these comments while speaking to reporters in Kandy after visiting the Chief Prelate of the Getambe Rajopanaramaya, Ven. Keppitiyagoda Sirivimala Thero.

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Indian company’s withdrawal of renewable energy project in Jaffna sparks controversy

An Indian company is now at the centre of a controversy in Sri Lanka over the government’s decision to award the contract for the construction of hybrid recycled power plants on three islets in the northern Jaffna district even after their withdrawal of the bid from the relevant tender.

The cabinet meeting on Monday decided to award the contract to U Solar Clean Energy Solutions (Pvt) Ltd to build hybrid recycled power plants in Delft, Nainathivu, and Analathivu, cabinet spokesman minister Bandula Gunawardena disclosed.

The decision came after a competitive bidding process that was limited to Indian suppliers only and was initiated after India provided a US$11 million grant for the project, a cabinet memorandum said.

According to the cabinet paper, the contract was awarded to India’s U Solar Clean Energy Solutions after a thorough evaluation by the cabinet-appointed procurement committee.

The government of India had given its consent to provide the Sri Lanka government a sector grant of $11 million for supplying electricity to residents of Delft, Nainathivu and Analathivu islets of the Jaffna peninsula.

Accordingly, bids have only been called from Indian contractors to implement that project as per the conditions of the memorandum of understanding entered into.

The Cabinet of Ministers approved the proposal submitted by the Minister of Electricity and Power to grant the contract to U – Solar Clean Energy Solutions (Pvt.) Ltd. based on recommendations furnished by the standing procurement committee appointed by the Cabinet of Ministers after the evaluation of the proposal.

Creating confusion on the renewable energy project deal, CEO and Director of U – Solar Clean Energy, K.R Harinarayan in a letter dated 17-11-2023 informed the Director General Procurement Committee Department of the Sri Lanka Sustainable Energy Development Authority that his company has formally withdrawn their bid submitted on 27-10-2023 from the project tender.

He further noted that they have taken this decision after careful consideration and reassessment of their current commitments and resources (dollar rates) and they are unable to proceed with the bidding process

Interestingly the cabinet of ministers has taken a decision to award the contract to this Indian company which has already withdrawn from the bidding process creating confusion among the public.

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SLPP breakaway group breaks up

The Freedom People’s Congress (FPC), a breakaway group of the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP), is on the verge of a breakup.

A section wants to leave and join the Samagi Jana Balavegaya (SJB) led by Opposition Leader Sajith Premadasa. They are not happy about the long-drawn dialogue the Congress has been holding with the SJB leadership. As revealed in these columns last week, Congress leaders are seeking a change in SJB’s economic policies, an electoral arrangement, and a possible accommodation of their representative in the leadership structure.

Issues came to the fore on Friday at a stormy FSC Political Bureau meeting chaired by the group’s leader Dulles Allahapperuma. All 13 parliamentarians, who walked away from the SLPP, are members of this Bureau. The meeting began with an appeal by G.L. Peiris, a former Cabinet minister in successive governments, wanting to suspend all items for discussion and take up the subject of talks so far to join the SJB. He wanted Allahapperuma to first make a statement on talks held days earlier.

The SJB team for the talks was led by its leader Sajith Premadasa, and included General Secretary Ranjith Madduma Bandara. The FPC was led by Dullas Allahapperuma and included G.L. Peiris and Channa Jayasumana. They met in the Parliament complex where the budget debate was then under way.

Allahapperuma told the meeting that the talks were not productive and there was no successful outcome. He said the FPC would not go into alliance with any political party or group until there was a clear-cut arrangement. His views were supported by parliamentarians Charitha Herath and Gunapala Ratnasekera.

Four other members – G.L. Peiris, Channa Jayasumana, Nalaka Godahewa and Dilan Perera – said they should join the SJB without any pre-conditions. They said they would consult their respective electorate leadership regarding their proposal. The meeting that began at 5 p.m. continued till 9 p.m. After the four-hour session had ended, the four MPs adjourned to the Narahenpita residence of Dr Peiris to continue discussions. Two more FPC members joined in. They were K.P.S. Kumarasiri and Wasantha Yapa. Discussions about joining the SJB, even by forming another political group, were the subject. However, the question remains whether the SJB leader Premadasa will accept such a grouping.

A source familiar with the latest developments said that Premadasa had to contend with pressure from his own SJB members when it came to heeding demands from those wanting to form alliances. The position he has taken is for those wanting to back the SJB to join it as members. “That helps him maintain a balance,” says the source. Just this week, Premadasa deftly avoided a direct question about G.L. Peiris and his group joining in. When asked by a party member, he replied, “A total of 65 MPs are keen on joining us. We are still talking.” There is no confirmation from other quarters about the figure. Arguably with such a number adding to the existing SJB strength, they could have defeated a vote against the government in Parliament.

SLPP MPs Dullas Alahapperuma, G.L. Peiris, Dilan Perera, Dr. Nalaka Godahewa, Prof. Charitha Herath, Prof. Channa Jayasumana, K.P.S. Kumarasiri, Dr. Gunapala Rathnasekara, Udayana Kirindigoda, Dr. Upul Galappatti, Dr. Thilak Rajapaksa, Wasantha Yapa, and Lalith Ellawala are the members of the Freedom People’s Congress. If six depart to join the SJB, either as a group or individually, it will only leave seven with leader Allahapperuma.

Another group that broke away from the SLPP has formed the Supreme Lanka Coalition. A few others are backing the New Alliance formed by Puttalam District parliamentarian Nimal Lanza. Nevertheless, Basil Rajapaksa, the founder and ideologue of the SLPP, is busy strengthening the SLPP for both the presidential and parliamentary elections next year. The SLPP had its second annual convention at the Sugathadasa Indoor Stadium on Friday afternoon. An estimated 5,000 members from different parts of the country took part in the event.

Former President Mahinda Rajapaksa was re-appointed as the SLPP leader after the name was proposed by Gamini Lokuge and seconded by Johnston Fernando. The name was endorsed by the gathering.

Ahead of the event, flags bearing the Photottuwa symbol were put up in main towns, but rival groups had hung up bundles of grass with notices placed around that it was for the “cows’ heading for the convention.

The live telecast via a YouTube channel appeared to be closely followed by the supporters of the JVP with regular comments coming up in favour of the JVP.

Besides party leaders, Present were Prime Minister Dinesh Gunawardena, Douglas Devananda, Sivanesathurai Chandrakanthan, and Dhammika Perera who is set to enter the political field.

In a notable feature, only former President Mahinda Rajapaksa and former Minister Basil Rajapaksa addressed the gathering besides the welcome address by party Secretary Sagara Kariyawasam. The convention event was packed with more music, dancing events and a documentary of the achievements of the former Rajapaksa government.

Former President Mahinda Rajapaksa vowed that the SLPP was set to make a comeback and face any election in the future. He said, “The SLPP will start a new journey according to the country’s needs. We call on the Sinhala, Tamil, Muslim, and Burger people to join with us to create a new country. With the strength of everyone, we will win any election. We will show that we can win any election.”

“We can do this, let’s get together and embark on that journey together. There are many parties awaiting our invitation to embark on that journey. Many will join us.

“Some of our party members were assaulted under the guise of the ‘Aragalaya’. Some were assaulted and others had their houses burned down. Still, there has not been justice served. One of the MPs was killed at the roadside, I believe that a commission should be appointed, and an investigation should be done into that. That is my personal belief, even the police did not catch the ones who were behind that. Real culprits roam free. The masks of those people have already been removed.

“We will settle these issues in a just manner at a future date. We would create a genuine political culture instead of false politics. Let’s work until the work and the effort we take are written in history. The SLPP invites everyone to join it to fulfill the hopes of this country. We are ready to start again from the place we missed to take this country forward to the world as a proud country.

“Some have already prepared suits to obtain power. However, they were not ready to take charge when the people faced hardship. They did not put on the suit as there were more loans to be paid. Some said they could not stay for long if they took power now. They had many excuses. Such leaders are seeking power. Are you ready to hand over this country to them? We are not ready to give away the county to such leaders.

“Whatever forces are there, the SLPP is the party that would create the strongest force. Our camp would be the strongest in the upcoming election. We call on all the people and political parties to keep aside caste, ethnicity, and religion and join the SLPP to develop the country. Today, the people also try to link corruption with the Rajapaksa name, we know some who are slinging mud at us. We do not touch that mud. We do not even linger in places where mud is thrown at us.

“During the near-30-year war, any leader has not been able to fight it with Prabakaran face to face. Some leaders even gave weapons to Prabhakaran, in a bid to stop the war. I will not say who did it. Prabhakaran shot our war heroes with the same weapons. They killed our soldiers and innocent people, and we never left the war to be completed by another leader. The youth don’t remember the fear of death that their parents felt. We are also forgetting that. We cannot blame the youth, yet some groups are misleading the youth to fulfill their political goals. They are the ones who disregard the war heroes who ended the war. They have been coughing to local and foreign pressure groups and damaging our own country.

“The ‘Kaiyyanayakas,’ (persons who are good in talking) don’t know this information; they only know to circulate lies; they can’t do work. However, they also have some capabilities, one such ability is to burn down houses, but they cannot douse fires. They are like kittens who can climb trees but don’t climb down. Due to foreign investments, we were able to create factories, develop roads and carry out agricultural development. With that development, the country was getting benefits. During such a time, some wanted change, and that change cost us our economic development as the change brought the economic development rate of minus 0.2. The largest amount of loans was obtained during the 2015 to 2019 period. People have now forgotten this, but decisions taken without considering the future have led the country to a difficult period.

“We believed that we could take on and improve the economically collapsed country, COVID-19 came unexpectedly. We only had the option of making decisions. We stopped people from dying during the war and saved lives during the pandemic, even though we triumphed over COVID, we exerted tremendous effort to come out of the economic withdrawal faced during previous years. It was during such a time that the movements started to anger people.”

Basil Rajapaksa said, “The first political party was created in 1935, that was 88 years ago. Our party was only seven years old by last November. The SLPP faced three elections after being established. We won all three. In the future, we will also win any election regardless of the time that the election is held. We need to strengthen the SLPP. Our leader Mahinda Rajapaksa taught us not to be revengeful, and we will be peaceful as our leader says but we are not scared. We are ready to face any situation. He was the only leader who put an end to post-election violence. Whenever he won an election, he never allowed violence afterwards. We should practise his teaching in the future.

“We would focus our attention on the ministers, members and supporters who did not obtain compensation for property damage caused when their houses were burned and damaged. We thank Prime Minister Dinesh Gunawardena for providing relief to some of the MPs and other members. We will win any election if it is held. That is what would happen next. We would work towards the victory of the SLPP.”

Amidst these developments, Namal Rajapaksa MP told a news conference that the SLPP would have to re-think its role in the government. He said he would continue to oppose the introduction of an increased VAT. He said, “It is very clear that the VAT is too high. I believe that the taxing system should be simplified and the tax policy should be that the people should be able to bear the taxes. There is no purpose in increasing taxes without increasing the tax network. However much the taxes are increased in terms of the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) requirements, the people will not gain benefits.

On the other hand, Gotabaya Rajapaksa and Mahinda Rajapaksa who reduced taxes are being pushed to a situation where they will lose their civic rights. The most regrettable situation is that those who signed petitions calling to take away civic rights of President Mahinda Rajapaksa for reducing taxes are now saying the VAT is too high. However, taxes should not be used for political gains, and we should have a national policy on taxes. The taxes should be reasonable for the people.

As Sri Lanka enters an election year in 2024, how the SLPP positions itself would be significant. Delegates coming from different parts of the country saw hay being foisted on sticks. The SLPPers accused an opposition party of placing them in different places. The message was to say that only those who eat hay would attend the SLPP annual sessions. No doubt, the mood is being set.

Tamils demand land acquired for president’s house in Jaffna

Tamils are demanding their land back from forced acquisition for a president’s house in Jaffna that started construction during the presidency of Mahinda Rajapaksa.

Stiff opposition awaited survey department officers who went there on the orders of the divisional secretary of Thelippalai yesterday (15) to survey the property.

Two months ago, media reported this president’s house would be leased to the SLIIT as per a decision taken at a meeting chaired by presidential advisor Sagala Ratnayake.

The 29-acre property has a building complex built on a state-owned plot of 12 acres.

Tamils say the remaining 17 acres that belong to them were acquired by the Navy after they fled their homes due to the war in 1990.

They fear that the land is going to be handed over to the Urban Development Authority.

Failing to answer their questions, surveyors left with a letter given by the people that they were against the transfer of their land to the Survey Department or their leasing.

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Sri Lanka among South Asia’s top wealth inequality hotspots – UN Report

A United Nations Development Programme Regional Human Development report has pointed out that the countries exhibiting the highest wealth inequality in South Asia, as measured by the wealth share of the top 10 percent, include Sri Lanka.

The United Nations Development Programme Regional Human Development report, using data tracked by the World Inequality Database showed that Asia and the Pacific have some of the biggest gaps between the rich and the poor in the world.

The UNDP report highlighted that inequality remains deeply entrenched – the richest 10 percent consistently command over half of total income, and in South Asia in particular, income inequality has been worsening.

There are persistent inequalities in the distribution of wealth, especially in South-East Asia and South Asia, with the highest wealth inequality observed in China, India, Myanmar, Sri Lanka and Thailand.

It added, “human development progress overall has been very uneven.”

The report highlighted that “inequality is further exacerbated by corruption, and weak tax policy and
administration, as well as by the lack of effective social
safety nets.”

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Sri Lanka’s Rajapaksa desperately reminds war triumph in party revival attempt

Sri Lanka’s former president Mahinda Rajapaksa in a desperate move reminded his achievements during the war and economic development claims under his leadership in at the first convention of the party since 2022 public protests ousted most of his party members from the power.

Rajapaksa-led Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) has its own president and more than two-third majority in the parliament after 2020 general election.

However, an unprecedented economic crisis and sovereign debt default triggered mass public protest ousted the SLPP government after then president Gotabaya Rajapaksa fled the island under threat to his life.

The SLPP, an ultra nationalist party, still has the control in the parliament, but had been silent from active politics due to fear after the houses and properties of most of its legislators were burnt following the party supporters attacked unarmed protesters in Colombo on May 9 last year.

“In 2005, people asked us to protect the country from division. No leader was able to end the war,” he told the party supporters in Colombo at the convention.

“Some leaders have arms to LTTE,” he said referring to Tamil Tiger rebels, popularly known as Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).

“The LTTE used the same arms to kill our military and innocent people. We did not allow such a war to continue for another leader.”

“There current youth were kids when the war was ended in 2009. They even don’t know that both parents of them did not go together in bus for jobs and lived in death fears.”

“There is a group which tries to hoodwink these youth.”

“We sustained a 6 percent economic growth from 2006 to 2009 when we were fighting a war. We tripled the country’s per capital income.”

Thousands of party supporters joined the convention despite being ridiculed in social media.
Many social media posts ridiculed SLPP supporters comparing them to cattle.

In some area of the country, the rivals of SLPP kept grass below the party flags as feed is ready for cattle.
The convention comes at a time when the SLPP is facing an imminent split with some have opted to be independent in the parliament while some have indirectly started to back President Ranil Wickremesinghe’s policies.

it was also held a month after Sri Lanka’s Supreme Court issued a symbolic ruling that the powerful Rajapaksa brothers – including ex-presidents Mahinda and Gotabaya – were guilty of triggering the island’s worst financial crisis by mishandling the economy.

Sources from SLPP said the convention was to test the water on the public support to the party and responses from the public.

Gopal Baglay relinquishes charge as Indian High Commissioner to Sri Lanka

High Commissioner Gopal Baglay on December 15 has relinquished charge as Indian government’s Head of Mission to Sri Lanka and has been named as the next High Commissioner of India to Australia.

Baglay assumed duties in Sri Lanka in May 2020 and his term as India’s top diplomat in the country witnessed several unmatched milestones in the bilateral partnership, the Indian High Commission in Colombo said in a statement.

“He was instrumental in realizing several crowning achievements in India-Sri Lanka ties.

“Among the key highlights of his term was the multi-pronged assistance worth USD 4 billion, in response to the economic challenges in Sri Lanka in 2022. Signing of Modalities Agreement for the possession, development and use of Trincomalee Tank Farms and Joint Venture between CPC & LIOC in January 2022 also deserve a special mention.”

Under his watch, India supplied more than 25 tons of medicines, Made-in-India COVID vaccine, Rapid Antigen Test kits, Liquid Medical Oxygen, to Sri Lanka to tide over COVID-19 pandemic. Further, Indian Naval and Air Force assets were deployed specially for expediting humanitarian supplies to Sri Lanka during this period.

Further, the economic and commercial engagement between the two countries got a major boost during his tenure. There have been multiple bilateral MoUs including for cooperation in renewable energy, for intergrid connection, for development of Trincomalee, for UPI-application acceptance & digital payments, utilization of INR-denominated trade settlements.

India has also emerged as the largest trading partner of Sri Lanka. While development partnership featured landmark projects such as the Sri Lanka Unique Digital Identity Project, generational linkages in Buddhism were reinforced through numerous noble initiatives such as the USD 15 million grant assistance for the promotion Buddhist ties, inaugural international flight from Sri Lanka to the sacred city of Kushinagar in October 2021, with almost 100 monks on board. Various dimensions of connectivity also deepened such as the resumption of Chennai-Jaffna flights and recommencement of ferry services.

Meanwhile, senior Indian diplomat Santosh Jha will be assuming duties as the next High Commissioner of India. He is currently serving as India’s Ambassador to Belgium, Luxembourg and the European Union. In a career spanning more than 30 years, Jha has served in diverse capacities in several countries and New Delhi including as Counsellor in High Commission of India, Colombo during 2007-2010.

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SLPP’s swan song? -The Island Editorial

The SLPP held its second national convention yesterday in Colombo. It spared no expense in putting on a grand show by bussing people from all parts of the country to the Sugathadasa Indoor Stadium, the way all political parties do. Speakers thundered, spewing out streams of rhetoric, and held out hope for the party’s rank and file, whose morale is extremely low, but it is doubtful whether anyone took them or their claims seriously.

The reappointment of former President Mahinda Rajapaksa as the SLPP leader came as no surprise. It has become clear once again that the SLPP is Mahinda and Mahinda the SLPP.

Mahinda keeps telling the media that the SLPP should have a young leader, but the party, without any strong second level leadership, seems convinced otherwise. Mahinda is apparently holding the party leadership in the hope that circumstances will be favourable one day for his eldest son, Namal, to take it over. It is highly unlikely that the SLPP’s lot will improve significantly in the foreseeable future. Mahinda seems to be hoping against hope.

Time was when the so-called Mahinda magic worked for the SLPP, which won the local government, presidential and parliamentary elections in a row (in 2018, 2019 and 2020 respectively) with huge majorities, and the SLPP seems to be labouring under the mistaken belief that it will work in the coming election year as well. The Rajapaksas have squandered their electoral fortunes.

Their accountability for the country’s worst-ever economic crisis and a recent Supreme Court judgement confirming that fact have ruined the SLPP’s chances of winning elections in years to come. They bankrupted the economy and caused untold hardships to the public, and then ran away, amidst a popular uprising, unable to find solutions to the problems of their own making. Their failure was so pathetic that they had to bring in Ranil Wickremesinghe as the Prime Minister and then the President to clean up the mess they created. Could there be anything more humiliating, if not demeaning, for the leaders of a political party than having to hitch their wagon to a defeated politician to come out of a crisis?

Meanwhile, luck has been running out for lesser SLPP politicians as well; they acted as if they had been above the law in the heyday of their party. On the eve of the SLPP’s second national convention, the Kurunegala High Court sentenced former Kurunegala Mayor Thushara Sanjeewa Vitharana and four others to three years of rigorous imprisonment for having bulldozed a historical building believed to be King Buwanekabahu’s assembly hall.

The incident took place in 2020, when the SLPP politicians thought they were above the law. The former Mayor and others were also ordered to pay Rs. 13.6 million as compensation and fined. When part of the ancient building was torn down, some SLPP politicians, intoxicated with power, defended Vitharana to the hilt, declaring that they would not allow even ‘a body hair of his’ to be harmed! Prominent among them was the then Minister Johnston Fernando, a close ally of Mahinda. Kurunegala is the district from which Mahinda was elected to Parliament in 2015 and 2020.

Was yesterday’s national convention the SLPP’s swan song? The general consensus is that the SLPP is doomed, and will not be able to make a comeback ever again, but we will have to wait until the next national election to see if it has enough popular support as well as luck to prevent its slide into what looks like a bottomless political abyss.

Glass of hot water costs Rs.100 in Jaffna

The National Consumer Front today claimed that a glass of hot water had been sold at Rs. 100 before imposing the new VAT.

Its president, Asela Sampath told the Daily Mirror that a similar incident was reported from a vegetarian family restaurant in Jaffna.

He claimed that a glass of hot water was sold to customers at a price of Rs. 100.

He said a bill issued by the restaurant shows a customer who visited the food centre on December 2 had paid Rs. 1,200 for water for 12 persons.

“If a glass of hot water was sold at Rs. 100 before imposing the VAT, it is possible to sell a glass of normal water in restraints at Rs. 50,” Sampath said.

Landmark US resolution calls for removal of Sri Lankan war criminals

A landmark resolution has been brought by a group of US senators and representatives from across both parties this week, urging Sri Lanka to demilitarise the North-East, repeal the Prevention of Terrorism Act, halt land grabs and remove war criminals from positions of authority.

The resolution lays out a range of concerns and recognises that successive Sri Lankan governments have failed to live up to commitments made on “meaningful justice and accountability” for atrocities committed throughout decades of armed conflict. During the final phase in 2009, tens of thousands of Tamils were massacres amidst the widespread shelling of civilians, in what is becoming increasingly recognised as a genocide.

“Whereas the majority of the LTTE leadership were killed or disappeared during the civil war and therefore cannot stand trial for their crimes, and despite evidence implicating Sri Lankan government officials and security forces in atrocity crimes committed against Sri Lankan civilians during the war, no such officials or forces have faced justice for their crimes,” the resolution noted.

“The resolution recognizes that the people of Sri Lanka have faced a political, economic, and humanitarian crisis which has had devastating human impact,” said a press release from the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. “Many of those responsible for this crisis are also implicated in human rights abuses against Sinhalese, Tamils, and Muslims across Sri Lanka dating back to the civil war.”

The move was introduced by US Senators Ben Cardin and Jim Risch – who is also Chair and Ranking Member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee – along with Representatives Raja Krishnamoorthi and Bill Johnson.

Amongst the many points, the resolution “calls for an immediate moratorium on the appropriation of land facilitated by the Government of Sri Lanka in the North and East”, “urges the Government of Sri Lanka to immediately repeal or amend the Prevention of Terrorism Act”, “urges the Government and security forces of Sri Lanka to respect the rights of all Sri Lankans, including the right to protest peacefully, associate freely, and commemorate their dead”, and “ensure those credibly implicated in human rights abuses are removed from positions of authority”.

It also “urges the Government of Sri Lanka to fully implement the Constitution of Sri Lanka, including the 13th Amendment’s commitments to devolve specified powers over land, the police, education, health, agriculture, housing, and finances to the provinces”.

“The people of Sri Lanka deserve peace, prosperity, and justice,” said Chair Cardin. “Sri Lanka’s ongoing economic, governance, and humanitarian crises – which have had crippling impacts on the Sri Lankan people – are exacerbated by the Sri Lankan government’s unwillingness to meaningfully address the devastating legacy and impacts of its civil war and provide justice to those who suffered serious human rights abuses. This resolution makes clear that the United States stands with the people of Sri Lanka in their effort to form a more inclusive, just, democratic, and economically sustainable future.”

“Strengthening Sri Lanka’s democracy supports a more secure and prosperous Indo-Pacific. This resolution urges the government of Sri Lanka to hold free and fair local elections as soon as possible and to strengthen good governance, rule of law, corruption, justice, accountability, and human rights measures,” said Ranking Member Risch.

“The people of Sri Lanka have experienced decades of war, economic crisis, and political suppression that have led to this moment of inflection in the nation’s history,” said Congressman Krishnamoorthi. “As a result of our resolution, the U.S. House of Representatives will express its strong support for the Sri Lankan citizenry and their ongoing efforts to bring about a peaceful, democratic society that will ensure prosperity for the nation and accountability for the tragic actions of the past.”

“It would further reinforce the principle that Sri Lanka’s leaders must safeguard the political, economic, and social rights of the populace, including and especially the ethnic and religious communities who have been deliberately suppressed and targeted by previous governments.”

“As a co-chair of the Congressional Caucus on Ethnic and Religious Freedom in Sri Lanka, I have long advocated for increasing civil and human rights for all ethnicities and religions in Sri Lanka who are being excluded from society, the economy, and political life through discrimination, harassment, and persecution,” said Congressman Johnson.

“I am hopeful that it encourages the Sri Lankan government to take positive, visible, and concrete actions to provide greater transparency, increased human rights, and accountability for past alleged war crimes and violations of human and civil rights.”

“As the resolution recognizes, more must be done to ensure accountability for human rights abuses and to address the root causes of the conflict and current political and economic crises in Sri Lanka,” said People for Equality and Relief in Lanka (PEARL).

“Bilateral engagement between the United States and Sri Lanka must embrace solutions that meaningfully address the Tamil people’s longstanding demands for justice, demilitarization, land returns, and a durable political solution to ensure stability and sustainable peace.”

“It is clear that justice, accountability and a permanent political solution is the only way forward for the Eelam Tamil people in the North-East of Sri Lanka.”