Pakistan Navy Frigate SHAHJAHAN in Colombo

The Pakistan Naval Ship (PNS) ‘SHAHJAHAN’ arrived at the Port of Colombo on a formal visit.

The visiting ship was welcomed by the Sri Lanka Navy in compliance with naval traditions.

PNS ‘SHAHJAHAN’ is a 134.1 m long Frigate which is manned by a crew of 169. She is commanded by Captain Adnan Laghari TI.

During the ship’s stay, the crew will take part in several programmes organized by the Sri Lanka Navy, with a view to promoting cooperation and goodwill between two navies. They are also expected to visit some of the tourist attraction in the country.

Concluding her official visit, ‘SHAHJAHAN’ will depart the island on 04th June and she is expected to engage in a Passage Exercise (PASSEX) with a Sri Lanka Navy ship off Colombo.

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Sri Lanka to tap in to food tourism

Sri Lanka is planning to tap into food tourism as the crisis-hit island nation tries to diversify its tourism market and increase its foreign earnings, an official said.

Recognizing the potential in promoting the country as a tropical nation with a diverse culinary style, Sri Lanka’s tourism promoters who targets 2 million tourists in 2023, hope to include this in their promotional campaign.

“This tourism segment has worldwide demand, and we have great potential due to the diverse food culture in our country,” Priantha Fernando, Chairman of Sri Lanka Tourism Development Authority told Economy Next.

“This segment will resonate well with foreigners and is a way to promote provincial or regional tourism by creating an identity through food.”

Sri Lanka has a rich and diverse culinary history that has been influenced by various cultures and civilizations, including Indian, Arab, Malay, Portuguese, Dutch, and British culinary traditions.

The country also has a tea culture deeply rooted in its history and is renowned for its high-quality tea production, particularly black tea, known as Ceylon tea, both locally and internationally.

“To be honest, we haven’t given much focus to food tourism, but it is an area that we need to develop as it holds tremendous potential,” Rohan Fernandopulle, President of Bocuse d’Or Sri Lanka, a culinary professionals’ association said.

According to the Chairman of SLTDA, the country witnessed 83,000 tourist arrivals in the month of May, and for the whole year, the number stood at 525,000 tourist arrivals.

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General Shavendra Silva sends LOD to Wimal Weerawansa

The Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) General Shavendra Silva through his lawyers has forwarded a letter of demand over Wimal Weerawansa’s MP outright lies and baseless allegations of complicit in an alleged conspiracy to overthrow the government during the speech made at the book launch of ‘Nine: The Hidden Story’ at Sri Lanka Foundation Institute on the evening of April 25 and the book itself.

It is also alleged that the MP made similar statements on a TV Programme ‘Salakuna’ aired by Hiru TV and in many other occasions.

General Shavendra Silva in his letter of demand has further claimed the statements made by the MP on him and Sri Lanka Army were absolutely false and baseless. It is said that they have been fabricated and published with the mala fide and ulterior motive to bring defame General Shavendra Silva and tarnish his hard-earned good name and reputation both locally and overseas over his unblemished service to the nation for nearly 40 years. Also, the MP has purely targeted his political acquisitions through such indecent acts.

Twelve Sri Lanka state enterprises under President

Sri Lanka’s President Ranil Wickremesinghe has brought 12 state owned enterprises under his Ministry of Finance, Economic Stabilization and National Policies.

The following agencies have been brough under the President.

Sri Lanka Telecom and its subsidiaries
North Sea Ltd
Sri Lanka Thriposha Company Ltd
Galoya Plantations (Pvt) Company
National Salt Limited
Sri Lanka Cement Corporation
Paranthan Chemical Ltd
BCC (Pvt) Ltd
State Engineering Corporation
Mahinda Rajapaksa National Tele Cinema Park
Lanka General Trading Ltd

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Sri Lanka, China successfully conclude 12th round of diplomatic consultations

Sri Lanka and China, on 30 May 2023, successfully concluded the 12th round of Diplomatic Consultations between the two countries.

The consultations were co-chaired by Secretary to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Sri Lanka, Aruni Wijewardane and the Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs of the People’s Republic of China, Sun Weidong, at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Colombo.

The discussions focused on bilateral cooperation, economic and trade cooperation, the current economic recovery process, livelihood assistance and financial support, people-to-people exchanges and multilateral cooperation between the two countries.

Elaborating on the high levels of development in China leading to a new development paradigm, China’s path to modernization and successfully elevating millions of Chinese citizens out of poverty in the past four decades, the visiting Vice Minister of China, Sun Weidong stated that there is an opportunity for result-oriented cooperation with Sri Lanka.

Foreign Secretary Aruni Wijewardane appreciated China’s assistance to Sri Lanka during the challenging period and sought China’s support in expanding Sri Lanka’s exports to China, particularly the export of Ceylon cinnamon, seafood, fruits & vegetables and gemstones.

Further, she explained Sri Lanka’s economic recovery and welcomed the increasing trend of Chinese tourist arrivals.

During the consultations Sri Lanka and China pledged to further consolidate bilateral ties for the mutual benefit of the peoples of the two countries.

During the visit, the Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs called on President Ranil Wickremesinghe and Prime Minister Dinesh Gunawardena.

The visiting Chinese delegation also held constructive engagement with the members of the Sri Lanka-China Parliamentary Friendship Association and is expected to visit the Sri Lanka-China Friendship Village in Dewanagala. The Vice Minister will also pay homage to the temple of the Tooth Relic in Kandy and call on the Mahanayake Thero of the Malwatte Chapter.

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When will this racism end?: Ven. Gnanasara asks

“We have been talking about this racial and religious differences since the time we understood it. So when will this come to an end? Bodu Bala Sena (BBS) General Secretary Ven. Galagoda Aththe Gnanasara Thera questioned.

Addressing the media yesterday, he said that “we, as a country are in a critical juncture today. Not only have there been many discussions over these religious issues, but the internet moderators have snowballed this issue purely for to make money”.

“In all these cases, our name is also attached to those incidents. We saw this issue being discussed in Parliament. Some people who were or weren’t in the parliament served as ministers have continually issued statements saying that Gnanasara Thera should be sent to the gallows,” the prelate said.

“Our country has a constitution. According to the first article of that constitution, it is clearly stated that it is the responsibility of the state to protect and nurture Buddhism. And other religions should be given the right and the believers to practice as per their own thoughts and wishes within this constitution,” he said.

Then what is the religious issue that is being spoken about? Currently, there are about 20 to 30 monks in the form of priests. This is more dangerous.

Ministers who just speak do not understand this. They have not read anything about this issue. They don’t even know what it means. They used to talk anything as they get the chance to grab the microphones, he charged.

Remembering the burning of Jaffna public library – 42 years on

On midnight 31st May 1981, the Jaffna Public Library, famous for being the crucible of Tamil literature and heritage, was set ablaze by Sri Lankan security forces and state-sponsored mobs. The burning has since been marked by Eelam Tamils as an act of genocide.

This was one of the most heinous ethnic-based book burnings of the twentieth century. The library was one of the largest in Asia at the time of its destruction.

Over 95,000 unique and irreplaceable Tamil palm leaves (ola), manuscripts, parchments, books, magazines and newspapers, housed within an impressive building inspired by ancient Dravidian architecture, were destroyed during the burning. Some texts that were kept in the library, such as the Yalpanam Vaipavama (a history of Jaffna), were literally irreplaceable, being the only copies in existence. It was one of the largest libraries in Asia.

According to many eyewitnesses, police and government-sponsored paramilitaries set fire to the Jaffna public library and destroyed it completely. Over 97,000 volumes of books along with numerous culturally important and irreplaceable manuscripts were destroyed. Among the destroyed items were scrolls of historical value and the works and manuscripts of philosopher, artist and author Ananda Coomaraswamy and prominent intellectual Prof. Dr. Isaac Thambiah. The destroyed articles included memoirs and works of writers and dramatists who made a significant contribution toward the sustenance of Tamil culture, and those of locally reputed physicians and politicians.

In the aftermath, the Jaffna Public Library was set ablaze and the burning continued unchecked for two nights. But it didn’t halt there: fire and violence spread to many homes and shops across Jaffna, including the TULF headquarters and the office of the Ealanadu newspaper. Tamil cultural and religious figures were defaced and destroyed.

The Jaffna Library rose to prominence, as it was loved by international and domestic intellectuals, but most importantly it served as a cultural hub for the Tamil community. The library housed documents of invaluable worth, such as the only existing copy of the Yalpanam Vaipavama, a history of Jaffna written by Tamil poet Mayilvagana Pulavar in 1736. The library held miniature editions of the Hindu Ramayana epic, yellowing collections of extinct Tamil-language newspapers, microfilms of important documents, and records of the Morning Star, a journal published by Christian missionaries during the colonial rule of the island. Moreover, it housed close to 100,000 Tamil books and rare, old manuscripts and documents. Some of the precious documents were written on dried palm leaves and stored in fragrant sandalwood boxes. Documents in the library included historical scrolls on herbal medicine and the manuscripts of prominent intellectuals, writers, and dramatists – and they wound up in ashes.

For Tamils, the devastated library became a symbol of “physical and imaginative violence”. The attack was seen as an assault on their aspirations, the value of learning and traditions of academic achievement. The attack also became the rallying point for Tamil rebels to promote the idea to the Tamil populace that their race was targeted for annihilation.[

Nancy Murray wrote in a journal article in 1984 that several high-ranking security officers and two cabinet ministers were present in the town of Jaffna, when uniformed security men and plainclothes mob carried out organized acts of destruction. After 20 years the government-owned Daily News newspaper, in an editorial in 2001, termed the 1981 event an act by “goon squads let loose by the then government”.

Sinhala librarian and bibliographer H.A.I Goonetileke wrote in an emotional private letter, “The gutted building is a grim testimonial to savage and bestial tendencies of communal hate.”, he also expressed that the, “Complete destruction by an act of calculated and cold-blooded vandalism of the Jaffna Public Library is the most wounding to the sensibility of our brethren in the North and must outrage the humane feelings of every person in the land, whatever his political, racial or religious persuasion,”.

The attack on the Jaffna Public Library was never properly investigated and the perpetrators were never held to account, adding another episode of impunity in the country.

The Jaffna Public Library was the intellectual reservoir of a Tamil nation that had not been born, but was yearning to be. Targeting knowledge, history, and memory is a key feature in ethnic cleansing, as the attack on the Oriental Institute in 1992 in Sarajevo by Serbian nationalists evidenced.

Thus the burning of the Jaffna Public Library was not a simple arson attack. It was a ferocious harbinger of the coming devastating war, which started in 1983 with the so-called Black July and ended in May 2009, resulting in approximately 200,000 deaths and what is still the second highest number of enforced disappearances in the world. But above that, the burning had another message: that those who hold power will and can erase identity whenever they want.

The library burning was an attempt to rob the Tamil community of pride and dignity. It aimed at wiping out their heritage.

The scholar and community leader, Reverend Father David reportedly died from shock days after the incineration of his beloved institution. While his statue in the library courtyard is surrounded now by the spirit-soothing greens of local flora, his demise epitomises the loss suffered by every member of the Tamil nation alive on that day, and each generation born afterwards: the irrevocable loss of memories, of the lives and deaths of our predecessors, of the beauty they created as well as of the destruction they may have wreaked.

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Lankan economists call for revival of road, rail bridge across Palk Strait

Two Sri Lankan economists, Gayasha Samarakoon and Muttukrishna Sarvananthan say that a road and rail bridge across the Palk Strait will bring down the transport cost in India-Sri Lanka trade by 50%.

Making a strong pitch for the revival of a 2002 Indo-Sri Lankan plan to build a road and rail bridge across the Palk Strait, the economists say that it will boost trade, investment and economic development in both countries.

n their paper entitled: “Economic rationale for the proposed bridge between India and Sri Lanka: An analytical perspective” published by Routledge Taylor and Francis, the economists say that a bridge linking Talaimannar in North Sri Lanka with Dhanushkodi in Tamil Nadu will shorten distance and travel time compared to the sea route.

The proposed 23km bridge is an alternative to the Sethusamudram Project (SSP). The latter, which envisages cutting a canal across the Palk Strait, is controversial because it could cause environmental damage. The SSP idea has been rekindled by the Tamil Nadu State Assembly through a resolution in January 2023 which said that the canal will boost economic activity in Southern Tamil Nadu which is currently backward.

But Samarakoon and Sarvananthan argue that a road and rail bridge linking India and Sri Lanka across the Palk Strait will achieve the same goal at less cost and without damaging the environment.

Cost of Sea Transport

The bulk of the trade between Sri Lanka and India takes place via sea, between the Colombo and Chennai Kolkata, Mumbai, and Tuticorin ports. Tuticorin, in Tamil Nadu, is the closest and the most important port for trade with Sri Lanka. Low-value high volumes of goods such as textiles and foods (the most prominent import items from India) are transported in ‘country crafts’ from Tuticorin to Colombo.

According to traders, if the proposed bridge becomes a reality, the transport cost could be halved. Ocean freight transport is also time-consuming. The sea travel time between Tuticorin and Colombo is between 12–18 hours (from other Indian ports it is even longer). Moreover, there is a waiting time outside Colombo port to unload the cargo.

Importers/traders estimate that 25–30% of the freight cost could be saved if cargo is transported via road/s. In addition, another 50% could be saved in transaction costs in terms of time saved. Hence, overall, 75% savings could be made in transportation costs if a bridge is built across the Palk Strait.

Freight Cost

The authors quote a shipping company to say that, in 2019, the freight charge plus terminal handling charges (at both ends) for a 20 feet general purpose container was US$625 and for a 40 feet high cube container was US$1,050 from Tuticorin to Colombo. A container would take 18–28 tonnes of goods depending on the type of goods. Thus, to transport a ton of goods from Tuticorin to Colombo by sea would cost between US$27 (general purpose container) and US$46 (high cube container). In addition, demurrage charges may be incurred due to the delay in the verification of the ‘rules of origin’ certificates under the FTA.

Customs clearance (particularly under the FTA that may require verification of the ‘rules of origin’ clause) may cause further delay resulting in demurrage charges.

It is pointed out that the total transaction cost involved in ocean freight transport could be more than 5% of the FOB (Free- On-Board)/CIF (Cost, Insurance and Freight) value.

Time Factor

The turnaround time at the Colombo port (i.e. time taken between entry and exit) was about 96.4 hours on average for non-container ships and 20.6 hours for container ships in 2019. Moreover, at least 6 hours should be added for loading at the Tuticorin port. Hence, the total time taken to transport goods from Tuticorin to Colombo is between 116 and 122 hours (i.e. around five days) for non-container ships, and between 40 and 46 hours (i.e., nearly two days) for container ships.

Thus, it takes between two and five days to transport goods from Tuticorin to Colombo. This is “excessive” the economists say. Halving of transport costs would result in an uptick in trade volumes as well as values, they add.

Prices will Come Down

Lower transport costs would also depress the prices of goods and services, which in turn would lower the cost of living in both countries; a lower cost of living has the potential to lower poverty levels in both countries. An uptick in the two-way trade via the proposed bridge is expected to create thousands of direct and indirect jobs that would result in the reduction of poverty in both territories.

The 23km bridge could be traversed in less than an hour. And from the arrival point in Talaimannar, it would take another 7–8 hours to reach Colombo by road (roughly 367km). Hence, the total of 9 hours of travel time by road would be a tiny fraction of the 40–122 hours’ time taken by ocean currently, the economists point out.

They further say that the waiting time for customs clearance and other formalities could also be significantly reduced because the land route will involve only exports/imports to/from India whereas the Colombo Harbour handles trade to and from all over the world.

Need to Improve Road Network

To reap the maximum benefit of the proposed bridge between India and Sri Lanka, domestic road networks have to be improved, the economists say.

Here are their observations on this aspect: “At present, the Talaimannar- Colombo stretch is almost 370 km by road, because vehicles have to travel via Anuradhapura. There is a direct route from Talaimannar to Colombo along the coast (through the Wilpattu wildlife sanctuary), which is currently not in use. This direct route is about 80 km shorter than the route via Anuradhapura.”

“Jaffna would be another major market for the proposed Indo-Lanka Bridge, next only to Colombo. At present, Jaffna is about 250 km from Talaimannar via Vavuniya. However, there is a shorter coastal route to Jaffna from Talaimannar via Uyilankulam (in the Mannar District), Pooneryn (Kilinochchi District), and Sangupitty bridge (A32). This route is about 50 km shorter than via Vavuniya. In other words, it will save at least one hour of travel time to Jaffna from Talaimannar.”

“A highway from Talaimannar to Katunayake along the north-western/western coast could be built to join the Katunayake-Colombo Expressway. This could cut down travel time considerably. Besides, a highway linking Talaimannar and Trincomalee (via Vavuniya and Horowpathana) would provide speedier and easier access to Sri Lanka’s Eastern Province.”

Boost for Backward Regions

The road link with India would also contribute to the economic development of backward provinces like the Northern Province (encompassing the Jaffna, Kilinochchi, Mannar, Mullaitivu, and Vavuniya districts) and the North Central Province (encompassing the Anuradhapura and Polonnaruwa districts).

“They are the lowest contributors to the national economy for a very long period. The poverty and unemployment rates of these provinces are the highest in the country and the human development index of these provinces is the lowest in the country,’’ the economists point out.

“The business communities in the Northern and North Central Provinces have long complained about their inability to directly engage in international trade. Presently, the businesspersons in the Northern and North Central Provinces can engage in export/ import trade only through exporters/importers in Colombo.”

“The proposed bridge is expected to boost direct international trade between the northern, north-central, and eastern regions of Sri Lanka and India (particularly Southern India), which would considerably reduce the transportation and transaction costs involved in such direct trade.”

Fillip to Tourism

Currently, only a small fraction of Indian tourists visits the Northern, North Central, and Eastern Provinces of Sri Lanka due to the long distance from Colombo, where the main international airport is located. The proposed bridge would boost tourist traffic to the marginalized Northern, North Central, and Eastern Provinces of Sri Lanka.

China’s Vice Foreign Minister promises support to Sri Lanka President

China’s Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs Sun Weidong has met Sri Lanka President Ranil Wickremesinghe had expressed “steadfast support” for the South Asian island, a statement said.

“During the discussions, Vice Minister Sun Weidong reiterated China’s steadfast support for Sri Lanka in its ongoing economic recovery,” a statement from President’s media office said.

“The President expressed his sincere appreciation for the unwavering assistance provided by China during this critical period.

“Vice Minister Sun Weidong announced China is keen interest in exploring opportunities to strengthen the bilateral relations between the two countries.”

Sri Lanka is in talks with bilateral creditors including China to restructure the island’s defaulted debt.

China’s Sinopec has been given 150 filling stations from state-run Ceylon Petroleum Corporation to distribute fuel.

Sinopec is also bidding for land to build a refinery in Hambantota in the island’s South, where CM Ports group is operating port.