Bangladesh has shown courage against Chinese bullying but Sri Lanka still lacks it

Following the statement, read threat, by the Chinese ambassador to Bangladesh that Beijing-Dhaka ties would be substantially damaged if Bangladesh joins Quad, Dhaka has reacted appropriately. Bangladesh’s reply should be seen as reflective of the mood of countries in the region that are tormented by the coronavirus, which is likely to have originated in Wuhan. While expressions like “Beijing-Dhaka ties would be substantially damaged” are not veiled, they do seem like direct threats. Dhaka’s polite but firm reply that Bangladesh stands by its commitment to no-alignment and balanced foreign policy is a tight slap on the face of China. In sharp contrast to Dhaka, Colombo seems to be lacking the courage to balance its relations in the region.

The Sri Lankan parliament is all set to debate the controversial Colombo Port City Economic Commission Bill, which seeks to protect China’s interests, and is being criticised for ceding control over Colombo Port City. A delegation of senior Chinese military officials, led by Defence Minister Gen. Wei Fenghe, made a two-day visit to Sri Lanka in April to consolidate the defence partnership between the two countries. Sri Lanka’s Foreign Secretary Jayanath Colombage had earlier said: “We are observing the rise of Quad as an exclusive military alliance. That is the problem. If Quad is aiming at economic revival, there are no issues”. For the record, neither Bangladesh nor Sri Lanka has been invited to join the Quad.

The Beijing-Dhaka verbal duel highlights two important aspects that should be a matter of concern to India in particular and the Quad and countries in the Indo-Pacific region in general. One is the pace and flagrantly audacious manner in which China is making forays into the Indo-Pacific and other Asian capitals. The other aspect involves attempts by the Quad countries, overt and covert, to checkmate China.

Chinese ambitions

China’s discomfort and antagonism towards the emergence of Quad have never been a secret. Besides terming the Quad as a “military alliance aimed against China’s resurgence and its relationship with neighbouring countries”, Beijing views the Quad as the biggest stumbling block to its hegemonic objectives in the region. Not content with ridiculing Quad as “Asian NATO”, China has set in motion a series of tactics to inch closer to its strategy of stamping Asia and Indo-Pacific with its neo-colonial footprints.

When it comes to dealing with countries in Asia, Beijing does not seem to need a diplomatic veneer anymore. New Delhi experienced China’s aggressive forays in eastern Ladakh — turning the area into a new flashpoint at a time when India along with the rest of the world was grappling with the killer pandemic. A quick look at the events that unfolded during the initial phase of the coronavirus pandemic and the subsequent halt of the global economy due to lockdowns will reveal a pattern. It is not a mere coincidence that all the flashpoints where China is involved are dots that link countries in Asia and Indo-Pacific region and which Beijing wants to bring under its inextricable political and economic influence.

Even as the violent conflict in Galwan was at its peak, China was flexing its muscles in the South China Sea, making newer claims over territories and tightening its stranglehold over Hong Kong. This was followed by navy drills in the Taiwan Strait, clearly aimed at intimidating Taiwan and its supporters, and bullying Australia with economic boycott by putting on hold trade deals and cutting off supply chains.

Another aspect of Beijing’s aggressive forays in Asia concerns transforming economic engagements into political and military arrangements. China has bagged contracts worth $4.4 billion in Afghanistan for developing the Mes Aynak copper fields in Logar province, besides oil exploration in the Amu Darya basin in the northern region of the country and railway development. China has launched the Sino-Afghanistan Special Railway Transportation Project that is being developed as ‘Five Nations’ railway project and will connect China, Kyrgyzstan, Iran, Tajikistan, Afghanistan and Baluchistan, and terminate at the Gwadar Port. These economic engagements have brought Beijing and Kabul closer even as the US is scheduled to withdraw from Afghanistan.

Need a pan-Asian consolidation

Beijing’s aggressiveness in Asia, Indo-Pacific and India’s extended neighbourhood should have been dealt with by forging a rules-based regional order through a pan-Asian consolidation. This would have bolstered the morale of all those nations which were helplessly watching their economic sovereignty being pawned to a hegemonic power with insatiable appetite for global resources, least respect for global commons and nothing but contempt for human rights and democracy.

China’s ultimate objective of dominating the global market, supply chain systems, demand-supply mechanisms and trade institutions through its Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) — stretching from Pacific to the Indian Ocean, Australia to Africa and the Far East to Europe — is posing a challenge to the existing world order that has withstood all pressures and pulls since the fall of the Third Reich.

The 2+2 ministerial dialogue at the foreign and defence ministerial levels between India and Russia should be able to take the bilateral partnership to the next level, especially at a time when India’s role in the region, in general, and Afghanistan, in particular, has to be scaled up. (India has a similar arrangement with the US, Japan and Australia, all members of the Quad).

Twenty-one years after the first India-EU summit (held in 2000), both sides have agreed to establish a mechanism to promote a free, open, inclusive and rules-based Indo-pacific architecture and strengthen the Asia-Europe Meeting (ASEM) forum. New Delhi will have to assess whether these action plans will tame the dragon or provoke it to be more belligerent in future.

Source:The Print

Seshadri Chari is the former editor of ‘Organiser’. Views are personal.

(Edited by Anurag Chaubey)

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Port City Bill must be defeated-JVP

Leader of the JVP Anura Kumara Dissanayake says attempts by the government to pass the Colombo Port City Economic Commission Bill amidst the coronavirus pandemic, must be defeated.

MP Dissanayake said the decision by the government to debate the proposed Bill on the 19th and 20th of May in Parliament is anti-democratic.

MP Dissanayake said the Bill will be detrimental to Sri Lanka’s future as it is not being discussed in a public forum.

The JVP leader said the government will not listen to the voice of Parliament or the people and will do as they please to present and pass the Bill.

Therefore, MP Dissanayake said this is a violation of the government’s pledge to ensure the rights of citizens.

The Parliamentarian claimed at a time that COVID-19 deaths are on the rise, the government is moving forward with attempts to approve a destructive regulation.

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Port City Bill decisive over the land area-Lal

Senior attorney Lal Wijenayake says the Colombo Port City Economic Commission Bill, which has been proposed as a Constitutional Amendment, will be decisive pertaining to the land area of the country.

Speaking at a media briefing in Kandy Wijenayake said the Supreme Court has made a determination over the constitutionality of the Port City Bill.

He said the determination has not been tabled in Parliament.

Wijenayake noted if it is in violation of the Constitution, it will go through a public referendum after being passed in Parliament with a 2/3rds majority.

He added if unable to conduct a referendum, it could be passed with a 2/3rds majority.

Wijenayake stressed it is a special Bill as it will decide if part of the country remains to be retained by the government or owned by a foreign entity.

He called for a public referendum to take place over the much-debated topic.

Attorney Wijenayake while acknowledging that Sri Lanka must attract foreign investments, said such goals must be fulfilled while upholding the country’s sovereignty.

Wijenayake condemning the Bill said its passing need not be rushed. He said such a move goes against provisions within the Constitution and harms democracy.

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Several more areas in Kurunegala, Batticaloa and Trincomalee Districts will be isolated

General Shavendra Silva, Commander of the Army, Head of the National Operations Center for Prevention of Covid 19 outbreak, announced that 42 Grama Niladhari Divisions in in Kurunegala, Batticaloa and Trincomalee Districts have been designated as isolated areas.

The isolation will take effect from 4.00 am on Monday, May 17th due to travel restrictions imposed on th entire island, Army Commander General Shavendra Silva said.

Accordingly, following areas will be isolated

Batticaloa District

Kirankulam police Area
-150 C Grama Niladhari Division
• Weva Road Area towards Manchona
• Weavingmill Avenue area
• Velapodi Road area
• Kanakiamman Kovil Road heading seashore
150B Grama Niladhari Division
• Lake Mawatha heading to Vithanay
• Appuhamy Mawatha Coastal Area

Trincomalee District

Kinniya police Area
• Kinniya 226D Grama Niladhari Division
• Periya Kinniya 225 B Grama Niladhari Division
• Kuttikarachchi 226 E Grama Niladhari Division
• Ahutar town 22 AGrama Niladhari Division
• Periyathumunei 226 Grama Niladhari Division of
• Malinturaei 225 C Grama Niladhari Division
• Rahumaniya town 225 Grama Niladhari Division
• Sinna Kinniya 225 A Grama Niladhari Division
• Mancholei 225 D Grama Niladhari Division
• Katteyaru 225 B Grama Niladhari Division
• Kurinchakerni 225 G Grama Niladhari Division
• Munachchenei 226 I Grama Niladhari Division

Kurunegala District

Giriulla Police Area
• Hamangalla 1554 Grama Niladhari Division
• Narangoda North 1555 Grama Niladhari Division
• Narangoda South 1556 Grama Niladhari Division
• Batapothalla 1557 Grama Niladhari Division
• Malgamuwa 1565 Grama Niladhari Division
• Dodanpottha 1569 Grama Niladhari Division
• Narangamuwa 1576 Grama Niladhari Division
• Wattegedara 1559 Grama Niladhari Division
• Katugampola 1560 Grama Niladhari Division
• Kaudumunna 1561 Grama Niladhari Division
• Hamanagoda 1562 Grama Niladhari Division
• Wettewa 1563 Grama Niladhari Division
• Mummana 1564 Grama Niladhari Division
• Maharagama 1566 Grama Niladhari Division
• Pahala Meddepola 1567 Grama Niladhari Division
• Ihala Meddepola 1568 Grama Niladhari Division
• Konduruwawala 1571 Grama Niladhari Division
• Mahingamuwa 1558 Grama Niladhari Division
• Siyambalawana1570 Grama Niladhari Division
• Bopitiya 1572 Grama Niladhari Division
• Ihala Labala 1573 Grama Niladhari Division
• Pahala Labala 1574 Grama Niladhari Division
• Mattegama 1575 Grama Niladhari Division
• Wellawa 1577 Grama Niladhari Division

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Basil has no illness that requires medical treatment – Namal

Minister of Sports and Youth Affairs Namal Rajapaksa said that Basil Rajapaksa has no illness that warranted medical treatment.

“He didn’t have any illness that warranted treatment. Even when I met him yesterday and at the time of his departure, there was no illness as such,” Namal Rajapaksa told reporters yesterday (13).

Basil Rajapaksa, the Chair of the Presidential Task Force for Economic Revival and Poverty Eradication had left for the U.S. on Wednesday morning (12) for medical treatment.

When a journalist inquired about Basil Rajapaksa’s abrupt departure, especially at a time when the SLPP National Organiser and the President’s Special Envoy has been assigned the primary responsibility of coordinating the government’s fight against the pandemic, Minister Namal Rajapaksa said that Basil had left for the U.S. for personal reasons, adding that he will return to Sri Lanka within three weeks.

However, Minister Chamal Rajapaksa had intimated to the media that Basil Rajapaksa had left for the U.S. to receive treatment.

SLPP General Secretary Sagara Kariyawasam MP told the media for the first time that Basil Rajapaksa had left for the U.S. to receive treatment.

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COVID-19: World Bank provides USD 80 mn to Sri Lanka for vaccines

The World Bank on Thursday announced a USD 80.5 million credit for Sri Lanka to help it purchase vaccines for fighting the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Washington-based global financial institution said that the new financing will help purchase vaccines to cover approximately 4 million people.

In addition, it will cover the costs of deploying safe and effective vaccines to 20 per cent of Sri Lanka’s population to meet the target of vaccinating at least 60 per cent of its population, the World Bank said in a statement.

“Sri Lanka has demonstrated resilience in the implementation of its test, trace and treat pandemic management strategy, which has relied on its well-established public healthcare system,” said Faris Hadad-Zervos, World Bank Country Director for the Maldives, Nepal and Sri Lanka.

“To recover from the pandemic-induced impacts, Sri Lanka needs sustainable financing mechanisms to further strengthen and equip its healthcare system to protect its population through improved vaccination programmes and curative and preventive healthcare,” the official said.

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Sri Lanka reports 2269 Covid-19 cases Thursday, total rises to 135,796

Another 1,174 COVID-19 cases have been detected today in the country, raising the number of confirmed infections to 135,776.

Accordingly, 2,249 coronavirus cases have been detected in Sri Lanka today.

The Epidemiology Unit of the Ministry of Health said 26,106 persons are currently receiving treatment for coronavirus at several facilities across the country.

Earlier today, 1,145 persons who recovered from COVID-19 were discharged from hospitals, raising the number of recoveries in the country to 108,802.

1,473 suspected COVID-19 cases are also under medical observation at present.

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Bar Association of Sri Lankacondemns Extra-judicial killings

The Bar Association of Sri Lanka (BASL) has strongly condemned the recent killing of two suspects in police custody, namely Melon Mabula alias ‘Uru Juwa’ and Tharaka PereraWijesekera alias ‘Kosgoda Tharaka’ which has occurred on two consecutive days.

Issuing a statement, the BASL urges the President and the Government to take serious note of these incidents and to take action to prevent such occurrences.

The BASL also requests the authorities to conduct an independent and impartial investigation into these incidents.

This statement had been issued under the signatures of BASL President Saliya Pieris PC and its Secretary Rajiv Amarasuriya.

These deaths have all the hallmarks of extra-judicial killings and we call upon the State to ensure the safety and security of persons in their custody, the statement said.

The Executive Committee of the BASL expresses its grave and serious concern and condemns the failure of the Police including the IGP to protect persons in their custody, the BASL said.

It is an imperative requirement of criminal justice that persons accused of serious crimes including murder are tried by a Court of law and punished for their crimes and that the networks that aided and abetted such activities are prosecuted and dismantled. This requirement is defeated by the failure of police officers to control the unarmed suspect purportedly accompanied by them without the use of lethal force. It is incomprehensible how on several occasions the Police have been unable to protect unarmed suspects in their custody, the BASL statement further said.

Tamil war memorial in Mullivaikkal destroyed

A Tamil war memorial erected in Mullivaikkal to remember the victims of the final stages of the conflict, has been found destroyed.

The Sri Lankan army vandalised the Mullivaikkal memorial monument located in Mullivaikkal East earlier today, just hours after the security forces blocked Tamils from erecting a memorial stone at the site where tens of thousands were massacred 12 years ago.

A complaint has been lodged at the Mullaitivu police station today regarding the demolition of the Mullivaikkal memorial.

Members of the Mullivaikkal Memorial Public Building, clergy,TELO Leader Selvam Adikalanath MP,TNPF Selvarasa Gajendran MP, lawyers of the Tamil National People’s Front and the Kariduraipatru Pradeshiya Sabha chairperson TELO Vijinthan have lodged a complaint at the Mullaitivu police station.

After cordoning off the area and under the cover of darkness, soldiers caused damage to the structure that commemorates the Tamil Genocide Day.

Troops began cordoning off the area late yesterday evening, just hours after locals had begun preparations to mark Tamil Genocide Day on May 18th.

Journalists who attempted to access the area at approximately 10.30pm last night were prevented from entering by armed Sri Lanka troops. All four roads leading to the area had been blocked by soldiers, who refused to allow anyone through.

When they finally were allowed access in the early hours of the morning, the constructed site lay in ruins.

A memorial monument, which depicts a pair of outstretched hands, had been broken off and tossed into the nearby sand. In recent years the monument was the site of annual memorials, with survivors of the massacres lighting flames of remembrance on it.

Tamils also arrived to find that a memorial stone that had been specially constructed and engraved for the12th anniversary had disappeared entirely.

“The military must have used heavy machinery to move it somewhere, maybe one of their camps,” said a local journalist. Military boot prints were strewn across the sand, amidst the scattered debris of the memorial.

This morning however, the military refused to take responsibility for the destruction, telling reporters that they had nothing to do with vandalism or the disappearance of the memorial stone. “Look at how they are lying,” added the journalist.

The destruction comes just days before the 12th anniversary of the massacres will be marked on May 18th, and amidst a ramping up of military intimidation and surveillance across the Tamil homeland.

Parliament to convene for three days next week

It was decided today (13) at the Committee on Parliamentary Business chaired by the Speaker Mahinda Yapa Abeywardena to hold next week’s Parliament sittings on May 18th, 19th and 20th.

The Secretary General of Parliament Mr. Dhammika Dasanayake stated that it was decided to convene Parliament adhering by the Health Guidelines pertaining to COVID-19.

Furthermore, the Secretary General stated that the Colombo Port City Economic Commission Bill is scheduled to be taken up for debate on the 19th and 20th of May. Accordingly, the Bill will be taken up for debate on the 19th from 10.00 a.m. to 5.30 p.m. and will continue from 10.00 a.m. to 4.30 p.m. on the 20th.

Regulations under the Finance Act, No.11 of 2004, Order under the Finance Act, No. 35 of 2018, Order under the Finance Act, No. 11 of 2006, Order under the Ports and Airports Development Levy Act, Eight Orders under the Special Comodity Levy Act, Two Orders under the Strategic Development Projects Act and a Regulation under the Foreign Exchange Act have been scheduled to be taken up for debate on May 18th.

Questions for Oral Answers will be held from 10.00 a.m. to 11.00 a.m. on the same day said Dhammika Dasanayake.

Furthermore, Questions at the Adjournment Time will be from 4.30 p.m. to 4.50 p.m. and the Motion at the Adjournment Time will be taken up from 4.50 p.m. to 5.30 p.m. the Secretary General said.

Questions for Oral Answers scheduled for the 19th and 20th are deferred to another day as decided by the Committee on Parliamentary Business the Secretary General stated further.

Leader of the House and Foreign Minister Dinesh Gunawardena, Chief Government Whip and Minister of Highways Johnston Fernando, Leader of the Opposition Sajith Premadasa, Chief Opposition Whip Lakshman Kiriella, Cabinet Ministers Chamal Rajapaksa, Nimal Siripala de Silva and Prof. GL Peiris, Mahinda Amaraweera, Vasudeva Nanayakkara and M.U. M. Ali Sabry, MPs Dilan Perera, Anura Kumara Dissanayake, Gayantha Karunatilake, Rauff Hakeem, Mano Ganeshan, Ranjith Madduma Bandara and M.A Sumanthiran were present at the meeting.

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