China donates 5 int’l-standard dragon boats to Sri Lanka

In a gesture of sports diplomacy and cultural exchange, the Chinese Embassy in Sri Lanka has donated five 12-person international-standard dragon boats to Sri Lanka’s Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports.

The donation was formally made on Saturday at the 2025 Dragon Boat Festival China-Sri Lanka Friendship Cup Dragon Boat Championship.

The championship, held at the Diyawanna Oya Amateur Rowing Association of Sri Lanka (ARASL) Rowing Center in Kotte, a suburb of Colombo, featured a diverse field, including school and university teams, the Sri Lankan Armed Forces, and five teams from Jaffna comprising 75 young athletes, a significant representation for northern regional participation. Altogether 22 teams from Sri Lanka, featuring over 310 athletes, and two from China took part.

Speaking to Xinhua, Minister of Youth Affairs and Sports, S.K. Gamage, expressed gratitude for China’s support.

Gamage emphasized that events like the Dragon Boat Festival are crucial for deepening the longstanding friendship between Sri Lanka and China. “We have a long history of friendship with China. We want to improve and continue it,” he said.

Addressing the gathering, Gamage added, “This is not merely a sports event, it is a powerful symbol of friendship, culture, and cooperation between our two nations.”

Chinese Ambassador to Sri Lanka Qi Zhenhong spoke of the global significance of the Dragon Boat Festival and the values it embodies.

“Dragon boat racing is one of the oldest and most culturally significant traditions of the festival. It symbolizes teamwork, perseverance, and the collective pursuit of universal values such as peace, development, and justice,” he said.

Qi described this championship as “a new starting point to further deepen sports and cultural exchanges between China and Sri Lanka and to enhance mutual understanding and friendship between our peoples.”

Rear Admiral HNS Perera, president of the National Association for Canoeing and Kayaking in Sri Lanka, described the event as a bridge between tradition and modernity.

“This is more than a sporting event; it is a celebration of culture, heritage, and most importantly, friendship,” he said, adding that the boats donated by China would greatly assist the development of water sports in Sri Lanka, particularly for youth in under-resourced regions like Jaffna.

People take part in the 2025 Dragon Boat Festival China-Sri Lanka Friendship Cup Dragon Boat Championship in Kotte, Sri Lanka, on May 31, 2025. In a gesture of sports diplomacy and cultural exchange, the Chinese Embassy in Sri Lanka has donated five 12-person international-standard dragon boats to Sri Lanka’s Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports.

The donation was formally made on Saturday at the 2025 Dragon Boat Festival China-Sri Lanka Friendship Cup Dragon Boat Championship

People take part in the 2025 Dragon Boat Festival China-Sri Lanka Friendship Cup Dragon Boat Championship in Kotte, Sri Lanka, on May 31, 2025. In a gesture of sports diplomacy and cultural exchange, the Chinese Embassy in Sri Lanka has donated five 12-person international-standard dragon boats to Sri Lanka’s Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports.

The donation was formally made on Saturday at the 2025 Dragon Boat Festival China-Sri Lanka Friendship Cup Dragon Boat Championship.

Sri Lanka’s tea estate workers seek ‘basic rights’ as citizens

Hundreds of people from Sri Lanka’s historically oppressed Malaiyaha (hill country) community held demonstrations to emphasize their basic rights as citizens of the country.

“We demand that Malaiyaha Tamil people be accepted as free and equal Sri Lankan citizens,” said Shalini Manori, a 54-year-old tea estate worker, who participated in the June 1 demonstration in Hatton town in the Nuwara Eliya District of Central Province.

The majority of the community’s 1.5 million people work in tea and rubber estates, contributing to the country’s crucial foreign exchange earnings as Sri Lanka accounts for close to 20 percent of global tea exports.

But its tea workers are landless and the poorest, and live under a constant threat of forced displacement as they lack land and housing rights, their leaders say. Most worker-families live on the estates in 400-square-foot rooms in abject poverty.

The demonstrators carried banners and raised slogans with the beating of drums to seek “assured rights” to housing and land, a living wage, protection of the law, and equal compensation for male and female workers.

More than 50 percent of tea plantation workers in the country are women from the Malaiyaha Tamil community.

“Women are overworked and underpaid,” Manori told UCA News, adding that the low salaries in the tea estates force them to take on extra work on weekends in farms, brick-kilns and other such informal sectors.

She said that women workers are often assigned backbreaking and low-valued tasks, such as tea leaf plucking and bush pruning, while they are already overburdened at home with child rearing and domestic chores.

The Malaiyaha Tamils are descendants of Indian indentured laborers who were brought in by the British to work on coffee, tea, and rubber plantations. Their socio-economic exclusion, marked by a prolonged period of statelessness and disenfranchisement, has led to poor human development indicators for the community.

The community has the worst figures for poverty in the country, with widespread child malnourishment, high rates of anemia among women, alcoholism among men, and low educational attainment.

In 2023, the Malaiyaha community undertook a nearly 300-kilometer journey, calling for recognition as free and equal citizens in the country.

Menaka Kandasamy of the Ceylon Workers Red Flag Union said the government has approved an increase in the daily wage of workers from 1,000 rupees to 1,700 rupees (US$5.66).

“But most of the estate companies do not pay even that to their workers,” she told UCA News.

Kandy-based activist Nilushi Synthiya said the average daily wage paid is around 1,350 rupees, but a family of four spends more than that due to the high cost of living in Sri Lanka.

Synthiya criticized the tea estate companies “for citing financial losses during wage negotiations, though they continue to record enormous profits.”

She also emphasized the urgent need to grant land and housing rights to the hill people and to accord them equal linguistic status to their Tamil language.

Global rights organizations, including Amnesty International, the World Alliance for Citizen Participation, the Asian Forum for Human Rights and Development, and Front Line Defenders, have expressed concern for the Malaiyaha community.

Commercial activity begins at China funded Port City Special Economic Zone

Port City Colombo last Friday commemorated the formal handover of office space to key anchor tenants with a special ceremony.

The event was graced by the presence of China Communications Construction Group (CCCC) Deputy General Manager Chen Zhong, Colombo Port City Economic Commission (CPCEC) Chairman Harsha Amarasekera, China Harbour Engineering Company (CHEC) Chairman Bai Yinzhan, Finance, Economic Stabilisation and National Policies Ministry Director General – Corporate Affairs Dr. Sulakshana Jayawardena, and CHEC Port City Colombo Ltd. Managing Director Xiong Hongfeng.

The occasion was attended by an esteemed gathering of CCCC and CHEC dignitaries, and tenants who have leased out space at the Business Centre.

The Business Centre at Port City Colombo, which officially broke ground in March 2024, is a premier IT and business park that empowers businesses to operate, exchange knowledge, and drive new advancements in their respective fields. The development encompasses nine low-rise office buildings, with a dedicated IT hub and a commercial hub. 80% of the office space at the Business Centre has been officially leased out to Authorised Persons, who have been registered and approved by the CPCEC to conduct business within the Colombo Port City Special Economic Zone (SEZ).

The Business Centre represents a $ 5 million Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) by CHEC, the subsidiary of CCCC. Being a Fortune 500 company employing over 120,000 people across 145 countries and regions, CCCC has contributed significantly towards instrumental construction and development projects through CHEC since 1998 in Sri Lanka, with Port City Colombo being one of the Group’s most strategic ventures.

CCCC aims to support the further evolution of Port City Colombo into a thriving regional ecosystem that will attract FDI, foster knowledge exchange and innovation, and contribute to increased job creation potential in Sri Lanka. CHEC, the primary project developer, has invested approximately $ 1.4 billion in Port City Colombo – the project is Sri Lanka’s largest FDI and Public-Private Partnership (PPP) to date.

The handover of office space at the Business Centre embodies the commencement of operationalised commercial activity within the Colombo Port City SEZ. Promoting strengthened investor confidence in the Asian region, this movement showcases the progressive regulatory framework of the Colombo Port City SEZ in action.

On-boarded tenants, who will be setting up operations at the Business Centre as registered Authorised Persons, would benefit from the SEZ’s fiscal and non-fiscal incentives, whilst they contribute to Port City Colombo’s growing business ecosystem. This epitomises the landmark opportunity for further economic growth and development in Sri Lanka, with Port City Colombo being its key strategic driver.

With the Business Centre soon to commence operations, Port City Colombo takes one additional step towards becoming a sought-after destination for business, investments, and leisure in the heart of South Asia.

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China funded Mattala airport operation to open up for private investments

Despite its previous stand regarding privatization of state assets, the government, led by the National People’s Power (NPP), is seeking to call for Expression of Interest (EoI) to open up the Mattala International Airport (MIA) for private investors for operation of its services in different categories, an official said.

The MIA, funded by China EXIM Bank, has stoked controversy since its opening in 2013 due to a low number of flights and persistent financial losses. The successive governments tried to privatize the airport. The previous government tried to hand over the airport to Shaurya Aeronautics (Pvt) Ltd. of India and Airports of Regions Management Company of Russia for 30 years.

However, the move was rescinded later since, under the Civil Aviation Authority Act, certain services cannot be transferred out. Instead, they should be held under the purview of the Civil Aviation Authority of Sri Lanka (CAASL) which is a government entity.

The current NPP government is now trying to seek private sector investments for running airport activities such as passenger management, maintenance and repair and cargo handling.

Asked for a comment, Deputy Minister of Ports and Civil Aviation Janitha Kodituwakku confirmed that a Cabinet paper would be submitted soon seeking approval for EoI to be called for private sector investments in the operation of the airport in different categories. He said even the India – Russia joint venture that was chosen in the past could respond once EoI was called for.

He said the airport is currently used mainly for chartered flights carrying tourists.

“There are no scheduled flights as such. We handle around 150,000 passengers annually,” he said.

Chairman of Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) Sagara Kotakadeniya said that the management of an airport could be opened to the private sector with the consent of the subject minister, but not alienation. He said areas such as security and air traffic control should be with the state entity, and, in this case, the CAASL.

Russian Envoy says: Sri Lanka ‘must act’ on BRICS bid

Russian Ambassador to Sri Lanka, Levan S. Jagaryan, has called on Sri Lanka to demonstrate genuine interest and take tangible steps if it wishes to join the BRICS alliance, noting that mere expressions of intent are not sufficient.

Speaking at an event organised by the Bandaranaike International Centre for International Studies in Colombo, the Ambassador reflected on the ongoing conversations around Sri Lanka’s potential engagement with BRICS—a bloc comprising Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa, and other new members. Responding to a journalist’s question on the subject, Jagaryan revealed that this was not the first time he had been asked about Sri Lanka’s possible entry into the group. He noted that Russia and China have consistently shown support for Sri Lanka on the global stage, but from his perspective, there has been limited reciprocal interest or initiative from Colombo regarding BRICS.

Recalling a key moment in diplomatic engagement, the Ambassador said, “On 1 October last year, I met with President Anura Kumara Dissanayake and handed him an official invitation from Russian President Vladimir Putin to attend the BRICS summit. I spoke through an interpreter, and while I’m unsure about the accuracy of the translation, the President explained he would be unable to visit Russia due to the upcoming General Elections.”

He emphasised that BRICS is a multilateral platform and any new membership requires the consensus of all current member states. It is not a process driven by a single country, and Sri Lanka would need to undergo a series of formal steps to be considered.

“I haven’t seen concrete moves from Sri Lanka yet,” Jagaryan added, urging the Government to show clear intent through action if it is serious about pursuing BRICS membership.

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6 months on, trade deals still in limbo

Six months on from the 2024 General Elections, the new regime is yet to make a policy decision regarding the suspended negotiations with Sri Lanka’s bilateral trade partners on proposed trade agreements.

Speaking to The Sunday Morning Business, Deputy Minister of Trade, Commerce, and Food Security R.M. Jayawardana revealed that no discussions had yet taken place at the ministerial level with regard to recommencing the suspended trade talks with Sri Lanka’s bilateral trade partners.

“I will have to check whether any discussion has taken place at the Cabinet level. That topic was not part of what we have discussed in the Cabinet so far,” he stated.

He further confirmed that no Cabinet paper had been prepared seeking approval to recommence these suspended trade talks.

“We will have discussions about this in the future, regarding what we agree on and what they agree on,” he said.

Jayawardana further claimed that none of the suspended trade talks had progressed to a stage where the parties were close to signing agreements.

Similarly, speaking to The Sunday Morning Business, Department of Commerce Director General of Commerce Ameena Shafi Mohin confirmed that the suspended trade talks with Sri Lanka’s bilateral trade partners had yet to recommence, adding that they were still awaiting a policy direction from the Government on the matter.

“The Government wanted to review the existing agreements,” she stated.

She further confirmed that no steps had been taken to appoint a chief negotiator yet.

Commenting on the fate of the now-defunct International Trade Office (ITO), which had led the trade talks under the previous regime, she stated that the officers of the Department of Commerce were more than competent to lead the trade negotiations once the Government gave the greenlight to commence.

“The officers of the Department of Commerce contributed to various working groups under the ITO, such as on trade and energy and proof of origin, etc. Also, the former team (trade delegation) involved our officers and the former Director General of Commerce. All our officers contributed to these working groups and chaired or co-chaired them.

“Therefore, the Department of Commerce has the expertise and the necessary professionals, because our officers are trained for this. If the Government gives the greenlight, the department will start the negotiations,” she asserted.

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China commerce minister urges Sri Lanka to wrap up free trade deal

China’s Commerce Minister Wang Wentao who co-chaired a joint committee on Economic and Trade Co-operation in Sri Lanka expressed hopes that a free trade agreement between the two countries would be concluded.

“It is hoped that the two sides continue to work toward the conclusion of a comprehensive free trade agreement in one package, in line with the principles of equality, mutual benefit,” Minister Wang told a forum in Colombo where around 100 Chinese businesses also participated.

When President Anura Dissanayake visited China in January and met President Xi Jinping, an “important consensus in the trade and economic context,” was reached, he said without elaborating.

“The Ministry of Commerce of China is ready to work together with Sri Lanka to implement that important consensus and join hands on the way towards shared development and rejuvenation.”

Among other matters, expediting a refinery to be built by China’s Sinopec, which require tax breaks, land and water was discussed.

The mechanism of the joint committee should be used to strengthen economic ties he said.

“We need to use the Joint Committee to enhance exchanges at all levels and in all areas, tap into cooperation potential, and enrich the essence of our cooperation,” he said.

“At the joint committee meeting yesterday, our two sides reached an important agreement are launching a joint research to boost Sri Lankan exports to China.”

He also invited ‘willing and able’ Chinese companies to expand investments in Sri Lanka.

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Local Government Institutions Begin Term Tomorrow

Minister of Public Administration, Provincial Councils and Local Government, Professor Chandana Aberathne, said that only 150 local government institutions will have the opportunity to form power tomorrow.

The official term of local government institutions is set to begin tomorrow.

Extraordinary Gazette Notifications listing the members elected to local government institutions across all administrative districts were issued yesterday.

The Minister further stated that parties which have secured a majority will be able to form power.

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Govt issues Freezes Assets of banned groups and Individuals

An Extraordinary Gazette notification has been issued by the Ministry of Defence, announcing the freezing of all funds, financial assets, and economic resources belonging to designated individuals, groups, and entities in accordance with the United Nations Regulations No. 1 of 2012.

The gazette extraordinary has been issued by the Defence Secretary, Air Vice Marshal (Retd) Sampath Thuyacontha, the Competent Authority appointed under the said regulations, in terms of the powers vested in him by Regulation 5 of the United Nations Regulations No. 1 of 2012, which were originally published in Gazette Extraordinary No. 1758/19 dated May 15, 2012.

As per the order, all funds and assets belonging to any natural or legal person, group, or entity listed under Regulation 4 of the above-mentioned regulations—first published in Gazette Extraordinary No. 1854/41 of March 21, 2014, and amended from time to time, most recently by Gazette Extraordinary No. 2438/47 of May 30, 2025—are to be frozen with immediate effect.

Furthermore, the orders previously issued under Regulation 5 and published in Gazette Extraordinary No. 2335/31 of June 10, 2023, No. 2387/03 of June 3, 2024, and No. 2424/52 of February 20, 2025, have been revoked. However, this revocation does not affect any actions taken under those orders.

In addition, the list of designated persons, groups, and entities under Regulation 4(7) has been updated.

The schedules attached to Gazette Extraordinary No. 1854/41 of March 21, 2014—as last amended by Gazette Extraordinary No. 2424/51 of February 20, 2025—have been repealed and replaced with new schedules containing the updated designations.

AKD’s Task: (A)ccountability, (K)nowledge & (D)eliverables By Vishwamithra

AKD and the NPP were given the switch to power by the people on three basic premises: 1) eradication of corruption (accountability), 2) a more competent management of a failed economy with clear knowledge and 3) transparency of government thought and action (deliverables).

AKD was elected President on September 21, 2024. The new Cabinet of the National People’s Power (NPP) government was sworn in on November 18 before President Anura Kumara Dissanayake at the Presidential Secretariat. The Cabinet comprised of 21 Ministers, Dr. Harini Amarasuriya as Prime Minister and President Dissanayake assuming responsibility for the portfolios of Defense, Finance, Planning and Digital Economy.

So far so good, it sounds. One hundred and ninety four (194) days, more than six full moons have risen and set since the new government has taken charge of a failed economy, a corrupt sociopolitical culture and a wailing nation whose little children in the rural areas, which is more than seventy percent (70%) of the country, are still going to sleep with a half-empty stomach; and the parents’ grief-stricken sighs are showering down their frail and sunken cheeks as drops of tears.

Yet when one visits Colombo, the capital city, dotted with high-rise towers with coruscant lights and houseful restaurants in which price for each dish exceeds an average wage earner’s monthly income, one wonders whether this is the same country that was declared bankrupt a couple of years ago. Acutely willed men and women in our administration are trying to navigate this nasty topography. Where is the disconnect? What can we do to shrink this ever-widening gulf between the haves and have-nots?

Nevertheless, one does not see the government politicians wining and dining with their henchmen’s money at these restaurants. That alone is somewhat a cause for psychological relief for the Appuhamys and Natarajahs. But that is hardly sufficient for a people, from the parched up-North to the Deep South, whose hopes and expectations were sky-high. At the same time, one questions: can the issues and problems that have been eating into our sociopolitical fabric be resolved in a period of mere six months? A more pertinent question should be, are we heading towards a better tomorrow in the context of our social and economical journey? Is the direction clear or still too blurry and foggy? Do we have sufficiently qualified and more committed men and women in the bureaucracy to navigate the ship of state when the seas get rougher?

AKD and the government have not advanced any answers to these questions, at least not as yet. Six months is more than enough for such a grueling exercise of power and pure administration. No half-baked answers and unclear explanations would suffice. Patience always has a limit’ sometimes too short and sometimes too long ultimately leading to apathy and forgetfulness.

The country, its economy; its sociocultural composition, its social fabric and its political ambitions as a collective psychological element are all integral part and parcel of the nation we most patriotically be screaming about from atop the platforms. In the same vain, all those elements that make up the notion of ‘nation’ are one and the same with those who comprise the ‘nation’. One cannot separate one from the other. There is no nation without the people and leaders who constitute the nation.

For all narrow political purposes, leaders, more often than not, attempt to differentiate one from the other., nation from the people and their leaders. The people at large would not realize the difference or lack thereof between society and themselves. It is real and at the same time, nuanced and more profound. Yet they would not wait for their leaders to define such deep social nuances and deceive them at the polls. Their main, and sometimes, only concern, constitutes in food on the table, children’s schooling, monthly saving for a rainy day and their elders’ health conditions and the availability of medicines at affordable prices. In others words, their economy, their day-to-day existence without exceedingly exotic entertainment constituents. AKD and his government must be totally and exclusively focused on making the majority feel relief; they must be singularly dedicated to the uplift of the economic premise of the poor.

Eradication of corruption, its aggressive spread amongst the most vulnerable segments of society, its alluring appeal to those who are charged with the allocation, management and monitoring of national assets, must be addressed and resolved with utter ruthlessness. But it must be executed within the existing laws and constitutional confines. But swiftness with which that exercise is undertaken and desired results delivered is as significant as its very substance.

Rhetorical explanations are aplenty; debate and arguments and counters are many; a populist appeal is still holding, yet the deliverable results are nowhere to be seen. Playing with the public’s patience is a gamble and many governments before the current one have paid a very steep price for such hypocrisy, futile political vacillation and double-standards. Now the people are openly asking whether the NPP administration is as accountable and transparent as their predecessors were not.

The current status is much more complex than one would admit. Its very birth and its evolution within a period of six short months which have been awaited by hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of our population is already in the past. Is the current government up to it? It certainly is qualified, but Is it competent and versatile in their administrative and management skills to steer on such angry and raging political waters to achieve their desired goals?

Political discourses cannot get you there. Many celebrated orators have dominated our political landscape but in terms of deliverable results they all have failed miserably. SWRD Bandaranaike is one glaring example. R Premadasa too had a gifted gab which protected some of his cruel deeds. Oratory alone would not get one to the designated goal. At the same time, history shows us that some eminent men and women whose leadership skills resided not in their respective speechifying talents but in the actual attainment of tangible societal aims and goals.

People respond to leaders in tangible fashion and palpable styles. Their aims and goals are very mundane and immediate. Making ends meet is no big purpose for each voter/citizen, but it is a must if he has to sustain his faith in the same leader. AKD’s chief challenge is that. If he has to change his Cabinet of Ministers, if the only way in which he could advance the national agenda to suit the national ambition, he has to do the reshuffling of the portfolios; maybe ha has to bring in fresh faces and fresher ideas and ideals. He is the Executive President. He may be subjected to the whims and fancies of the JVP’s ultra-left tendencies. But if he wants to implement fresh programs and fresh strategies in order to advance and accelerate the process of the transformation of governance, he can do it. The people are waiting for that.

AKD, we never told you that it was going to be easy and effortless. On the contrary, we may have realized the difficulty long before you came to that conclusion. We’re ready to wait a longer than we already have; but we must see the proverbial light at the end of the tunnel. Up to the present time, that light seems to be receding before our very eyes.

Accountability, knowledge of the situation and the will and the skill to bring forth the deliverables. AKD, your very initials are the basic representation of your fundamental pledge to the country. Each day you wake to go to work for the service our men and women and children, remember your initials by which your followers so fondly refer to you as. A vast expanse of rural landscape parched most of the time by a heartless sun and drenched in others by torrential rain, the flat plains that await the diverted waters of the mammoth Mahaweli and other tertiary canals, the breathtaking hills in the central land and picturesque valleys that have become cushion-like beds for various cash crops, and the seemingly unending shores beyond which are shoals of fish ready to be baited by a fisherman’s unfriendly hook are all in the midst of our resources. Harness them to the service of man. If you succeed even fifty percent (50%) in your efforts, the men and women who voted will be happy and contended. Their natural and easy slumber shall bring your busy and tiring day to the same comfort of slumber from which you wake the following morning for another unforgiving day’s efforts.

*The writer can be reached at vishwamithra1984@gmail.com