Youth protestors who were arrested near the parliament, released on bail

13 youth protestors who were arrested for allegedly violating the parliamentary privileges of MPs during a protest near the parliament on Wednesday (4) were released on personal bail by the Kaduwela Magistrate’s Court.

Sri Lanka Police arrested a group of youth who were protesting near the Parliament premises on Wednesday (4) afternoon.

Police Spokesperson SSP Attorney-at-Law Nihal Thalduwa speaking to News 1st said 10 men and two women were arrested.

Another man was arrested at a separate entrance to parliament, when he was protesting alone.

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SL Bankruptcy: DMK to contribute Rs 1 crore; Stalin appeals to people for help

Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M.K. Stalin has appealed to the people to contribute to the state government to buy food materials, and ship them to Sri Lanka to help the people of the island nation currently reeling under an economic crisis.

Stalin also announced that his party — DMK — would contribute Rs 1 crore to the Chief Minister’s public relief fund to support the people of Sri Lanka.

Stalin said that the Tamil Nadu government would be sending 40,000 tonnes of rice, milk powder of around 500 tonnes, and life-saving drugs to the island nation.

He called upon the people of Tamil Nadu to contribute well to supporting the people of the neighbouring country who are staring at an acute financial crisis.

The Chief Minister in his appeal called upon the people to visit https://ereceipt.tn.gov.in.cmprf/cmprf.html for sending contributions.

Sri Lanka has been under acute financial crisis for the past couple of months and people are in the streets against the policies of the government there.

India has already supported the neighbouring nation with money, oil, and other essentials.

(IANS)

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Authorities should not disregard requests of Mahanayake Theros – Cardinal

The Archbishop of Colombo, His Eminence Malcolm Cardinal Ranjith says he fully endorses the decision taken by the Mahanayaka Thero of the Malwatta Chapter of Siam Nikaya to not allow any politicians to meet with him.

Earlier this week, Mahanayaka Thero of the Malwatta Chapter of Siam Nikaya, Most Venerable Thibbatuwawe Sri Siddhartha Sumangala Thero announced his decision, citing that no responsible persons had responded to the proposals by the chief prelates of the three Buddhist Chapters, on resolving the current issues of the country.

Issuing a four-point joint statement, the chief prelates had also warned that a “Sangha Convention” would be declared if the political leadership fails to do so.

Speaking to the media upon returning to the island following a visit to the Vatican, Cardinal Ranjith stressed that the government should not disregard the requests made by the chief incumbents.

On April 22, a delegation of family members of the victims of brutal carnage on 2019 Easter Sunday led by Cardinal Ranjith left for Vatican to meet with His Holiness Pope Francis. The visit took place on a special invitation extended by His Holiness during a previous visit made by Cardinal Ranjith.

Speaking about the Vatican visit, Cardinal Ranjith said Pope Francis has clearly stated that justice yet to be delivered victims of the bombings.

When asked if he thinks the Rajapaksas are behind the attack, the Cardinal responded that he cannot point fingers at anyone directly. A fair investigation should be conducted to reveal the perpetrators who were behind the attacks, he added.

With the cost of living as deadly as war, Tamils in the North flee to India

The majority of Tamils in the North are fleeing to India, like during the country’s civil war, because of food inflation running at 25 per cent, overall inflation at approximately 18 per cent, fuel prices rising by 138 per cent due to the Russia-Ukraine war, and “dangerous shortages” that threaten starvation for the island nation’s population of 22 million.

On 25 April, 15 refugees from the North reached Dhanushkodi, Tamil Nadu, using a fishing boat and were later directed to the Mandapam Refugee Camp. In previous weeks, approximately 75 Sri Lankans reached Indian shores, the majority of them returnees from India, who had fled to India because of the civil war that broke out in the 1980s.

At present, over 100,000 Sri Lankan refugees are living in temporary camps and rented homes in Tamil Nadu, although 13 years have passed since the end of the separatist war.

According to the 2020 Progress Report and 2021 development programmes issued by the State Ministry of Rural Housing and Construction and Building Materials Industries Promotion, 9,327 refugees (3,656 families) returned to Sri Lanka during the period from 2011 to 30 September 2020. The majority of them settled down in the North, their former homeland.

Yet, many of those who returned in the past few years are contemplating going back to India due to the shortage and skyrocketing prices of essential goods, like food and fuels, as well as rolling power blackouts that have turned their lives into an “existential struggle” in the past few months.

A few days ago, two people from Gurunagar, in Jaffna, reached Thondi Fisheries Harbour in Tamil Nadu, only to be arrested and detained at Puzhal Prison.

Tamil Nadu security forces have increased patrols to arrest people fleeing to the State, although many are getting through despite high security alerts.

The Sri Lanka Navy has also stepped up its patrolling activity in northern waters in the past several weeks to prevent people from fleeing to Tamil Nadu on fishing boats.

Last Friday night, at around 11.30 pm, Sri Lanka Navy vessels intercepted a fishing boat four nautical miles from Kankesanthurai, in the North, with 13 refugees on board who were fleeing to India. The group, which included five men, three women and five girls, were handed over to Sri Lanka Police for further investigations and legal action.

The majority of those fleeing Sri Lanka are from well-to-do families in Jaffna, although there are some from impoverished areas outside the peninsula.

Recently, seven refugees from the East, three adults and four children, were apprehended. The three adults were released on Rs. 50,000 bail each; however, the magistrate refused to go along with charges against the four children.

Some Jaffna residents who tried to flee to India two or three times told AsiaNews that they had to pay a huge sum as a “brokerage fee” to smugglers, although they failed to reached India.

Meanwhile, in the East, especially in Trincomalee, more people are attempting to flee to India, especially from the most impoverished areas like Kumburupitty and Thiriyai.

For them to escape to India, they would have to go around Kankesanthurai where there is a high probability that they will be detected by the Sri Lanka Navy. Hence, they prefer to travel by land to Mannar from where they can arrange a sea crossing to Tamil Nadu.

To this end, they have to stay in some house until the boat is ready. But sometimes, due to tip-offs, they are detected and sent home. Recently, some refugees were caught by the Navy after three attempts and returned to their villages.

AN (Source)

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Australian documentary contends corrupt transactions in Hambantota hospital project

Australia Broadcasting Corporation’s leading investigative journalism and current affairs programme, Four Corners recently released a documentary revealing a major corruption case pertaining to the multi-million dollar hospital project in Hambantota. The documentary reveals how Aspen Medical, a little-known private healthcare firm won billion dollar contracts to procure personal protective equipment at the height of the pandemic, its links to Sri Lanka, million dollar financial transactions to companies owned by Sri Lankans and their ties to the ruling family of Sri Lanka.

Aspen Medical: From little firm to a mega contractor

The video reveals how Aspen Medical profited from the pandemic and got itself embroiled in an international criminal investigation into corruption and money laundering. At the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Australian Federal Government had outsourced the procurement of Personal Protective Equipment (PPE), selecting companies without any public tender. This is how Aspen Medical, a Canberra-based health service provider, specialised in recruiting medical staff emerged as the winner, winning contracts worth more than USD 1.1 billion to supply PPEs on a national scale.

Former employees, who have held executive positions, say that the company had never done such procurements before. Aspen Medical’s contracts were worth USD 500 million more than any other providers.
Andrew Walker, co-founder and former chairman of Aspen Medicals, said that it has never procured face masks before.
The latter part of the video reveals Aspen medical’s involvement in setting up the District General Hospital in Hambantota, a multi- million dollar hospital project that was initiated in 2012.

The video reveals that Aspen Medical was sub-contracted by a Dutch company called E. N Projects – backed by an Australian Government guarantee on the basis it would supply equipment and medical design for the hospital. When questioned, Andrew Walker is certain that they have never deployed staff in Sri Lanka.
“But when I wanted to open an account my own bank sent some questions which they wanted me to answer because of my own association with Aspen Medical. I was told that Aspen has been mentioned in a corruption case in Sri Lanka. I was taken aback when I heard this,” Walker said in the interview.

Aspen’s role was purely as a financial intermediary further showing proof of Aspen receiving funds and paying those funds back out to contractors in return to a 4% handling fee.
The spreadsheet reveals the first and largest of Aspen Medical’s payments were made to a mysterious company called Sabre Vision Holdings domiciled in the notorious tax haven in the British Virgin Islands. The payments totalled 1.4 million Euros which is about 2 million Australian dollars. The company was owned by Nimal Perera, whose name has been allegedly linked to many corruption scandals.

The video reveals that the money wasn’t received by the hospital, but instead was used to purchase a property at an affluent suburb in Colombo. Journalist Linton Besser speaks to the camera in front of No. 7, Gower Street and claims that the property purchased by Perera was combined with this property that housed the private offices of Namal Rajapaksa. The video also includes statements from former Health Minister Rajitha Senaratne, Eran Wickremeratne and Wasantha Samarasinghe who were shocked by the revelations made by
Four Corners.

Perera walks off

Besser visits Perera at his house and the interview is as follows:

Journalist: Tell me about your career. I want to know what sectors of the economy that you have worked for. You specialise in capital markets and economy.
Perera: Yes, that’s what I do
Journalist: You don’t work in the health sector?
Perera: No, never in the health sector, but I was into leisure, manufacturing, finance and capital markets
Journalist: You have never been a supplier of medical equipments?
Perera: Never in my career
Journalist: Why did Aspen Medical pay you two payments of 687,000 Euros?
Perera: To me? No, Aspen hasn’t paid me.
Journalist: Nothing at all?
Perera: No
Journalist: It sent the money to your British Virgin Islands company, Sabre Vision Holdings.
Perera: Wrong, no, that is my previous employer.
Journalist: At the time of those transactions according to business documents from the British Virgin Islands there was only one beneficiary of Sabre Vision Holdings and that was Mr. Nimal Perera
Perera: No that is by default. Since I became the managing director of that company I became a beneficiary also.
Journalist: When you were questioned about that property purchase and where the money came from, you told the police that it came from an Italian businessman. That was wrong wasn’t it?
Perera: No it’s not wrong
Journalist: You told that Sabre Vision Holdings was associated to this Italian businessman.
Perera: No I don’t know, I can’t remember
Journalist: That was a lie, wasn’t it?
Perera: No, I can’t remember
Journalist: Why did you try to hide the payments?
Perera: Why do you want to know all this?
Journalist: Try my question, why did you want to hide the payments?
Perera: What payments?
Journalist: The payments Aspen Medicals put into Sabre Vision Holdings?
Perera: No I don’t want to answer, so you can go.

Allegations refuted

However, responding to allegations Aspen Medical has said that it had not received any requests from any government agency or court of law anywhere in the world regarding the hospital project, but would support any such inquiries. It added that the Airbus scandal only became public in 2019, years after its payments to Sabre Vision Holdings.

In a Tweet, Perera explains that Sabre Vision Holdings was a subsidiary of a diversified business entity founded in 1918 in Sri Lanka and that it was not owned by him. “But I was named a beneficiary when the company I was employed acquired the company in question and appointed me as the managing director. The Italian businessman mentioned in the article was introduced to me when I was looking to furnish my house. He owned an interior design company in Italy and had provided his services to many who could afford him.”

He further says that he denies everything in the article. It’s a journalistic travesty trying to stay relevant by sensationalising an invented controversy. If there actually was any factual basis for the article’s claims they should have been able to prove that with facts.”

(Additional reporting by Kamanthi Wickramasinghe)

“No connection between me and the transactions” – Namal Rajapaksa

Speaking to the , former Minister of Youth Affairs and Sports Namal Rajapaksa said that there is no connection between his arrest and this documentary. “The last government has filed many cases against us and some of them have been investigated and some are still pending in courts. With regards to this particular allegation according to the documentary it had happened in 2009 and I wasn’t even in Parliament at the time. There is no connection between me and the transactions. It’s also surprising that they haven’t interviewed the health minister at the time these transactions had taken place,” said Rajapaksa.

When asked about his relationship with Perera, Rajapaksa said that they are known to each other, but there haven’t been any commercial transactions between them.
Responding to a query on his private offices down No. 7 Gower Street, Rajapaksa said that he did rent out that space. “When you rent a house you don’t check the kind of transactions that have taken place when obtaining it. I subsequently moved out in 2017 due to security reasons,” the Tweet further read.

See full video at : https://www.abc.net.au/4corners/profiting-from-the-pandemic:-how-aspen-medical/13863582

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USA-wide protests in solidarity with Sri Lankan protestors

For the first time in history, Sri Lankan living in the United States of America organized a USA-wide protest on the 1st of May 2022, in solidarity with the protests taking place in Sri Lanka against the present President, Prime Minister, and Government.

Thousands of Sri Lankans living in the United States stood in solidarity with their fellow Sri Lankans in a protest series organized by the Sri Lankan Student Collective in the USA.

The protests took place across 50 locations in 43 States in the US.

The Sri Lankans in America also signed a series of letters requesting that the wealth and income of Rajapaksa’s who hold US citizenship, be investigated and to save Sri Lanka from the Rajapaksas.

The letters are to be submitted to the Senate and the US Congress.

Sri Lanka ruling party claims dissident MPs agree to national govt; opposition adamnt

Sri Lanka President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and key members of the ruling Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) held discussions on Monday (02) with dissident government MPs on a proposed interim “national consensus” government to see the island nation through its ongoing economic crisis.

Conceptual agreement was reached on the formation of such an administration, SLPP general secretary Sagara Kariyawasam told reporters after the meeting. However, it is unclear at present whether the rebel MPs who now function independently in parliament fully agreed to a government under President Rajapaksa.

Notable attendees at the meeting were former ministers Wimal Weerawansa and Udaya Gammanpila whose departure from the government over their very public disagreements with former Finance Minister Basil Rajapaksa made headlines. Basil Rajapaksa was also present at the meeting.

Parliamentarian Nimal Siripala de Silva had represented the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP), which quit the SLPP-led coalition last month over its handling of Sri Lanka’s worsening economic crisis which has led to a full blown political crisis.

SLPP general secretary Kariyawasam told reporters that conceptual agreement had been reached to form an interim, all-party government for a limited period of time.

However, the main opposition Samagi Jana Balavegaya (SJB) and the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP)-led opposition National People’s Power (NPP) have both vowed not to be party to an interim government under President Rajapaksa.

SJB general secretary Ranjith Madduma Bandara told reporters on Monday that the interim government being proposed is no different from the old one. The people’s demand, he said, is for President Rajapaksa to “go home”. The party has no desire to be part of an interim government as long as Rajapaksa remains president.

JVP and NPP leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake also expressed similar views at a May Day rally in Colombo on Sunday (01).

Meanwhile, the SJB plans to go ahead with a proposed no confidence motion (NCM) against the government. Bandara said the party said it aims to present it to parliament next week.

Asked to comment on the SLFP’s decision on the no confidence motion, MP de Silva said a decision on whether to support the NCM or not can only be taken at the time of the vote.

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Stalin thanks Jaishankar for accepting Tamil Nadu’s request to help Sri Lanka

Following the assurance given by Indian External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar, Tamil Nadu Chief Minister MK Stalin today thanked him for accepting the request of Tamil Nadu to help the people of Sri Lanka.

“A personal thanks to Jaishankar for accepting TN’s request to help people of Sri Lanka. Am sure that this humane gesture will be greatly welcomed by all and help to improve the warmth and cordiality between nationals. Let the goodwill grow in all the spheres”, said Stalin, in a tweet.

The personal note from Stalin came after Jaishankar, on Sunday, wrote a letter to the Chief Minister saying that the relief material will be shared with the government of Sri Lanka to be distributed appropriately in the current circumstances. Jaishnkar also asked the Chief Secretary V Irai Anbu to coordinate with the Union government for supply and distribution of relief materials.

As soon as the crisis started in Sri Lanka and Tamils from the island nation started reaching Tamil Nadu through the porous borders, Stalin wrote a letter to Jaishankar saying that the State government is ready to ship relief materials to Tamils in Sri Lanka and even stressed the same demand when he met Prime Minister Narendra Modi in Sri Lanka.

Despite the letter and the meeting, there was no communication from the union government following which the state government passed a resolution unanimously in the state Assembly and sent the resolution along with a DO letter to the Prime Minister urging him to give permission for Tamil Nadu to send relief materials worth Rs 123 crore to the neighbouring nation.

(DT Next)

Riot Police withdrawn from Galle Face after protesters object

The riot police which was deployed to Galle Face today, was later withdrawn following objections raised by the protesters.

A large number of officers were deployed near the Presidential Secretariat where the protest against President Gotabaya Rajapaksa is continuing.

However, some of the protesters gathered at the site confronted the Police.

The Police eventually withdrew from the location.

The riot Police had been deployed after protesters began to erect a stage near the main entrance of the Presidential Secretariat.

Senior Police officers spoke to some of the protesters and requested them to remove the stage. But the protesters refused to do so.

The riot squad was later deployed to the area but they withdrew after the protesters confronted them.

China reiterates fullest support for Sri Lanka in securing IMF assistance

The Chinese Ambassador to Sri Lanka, Qi Zhenhong today (May 02) reiterated China’s fullest support for Sri Lanka in securing the assistance of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to overcome the ongoing financial crisis.

Mr. Zhenhong made these remarks during a meeting with Minister of Finance Ali Sabry.

As a major shareholder of the IMF, China is willing to play an active role in encouraging the IMF to positively consider Sri Lanka’s difficulties and reach proper agreement as soon as possible, Mr. Zhenhong added.