Business
Morison launches its exclusive CSR platform ‘Suwa Deya’, reaffirming its purpose of ‘Making Premium Healthcare Affordable’
Morison Ltd., a pioneer in pharma manufacturing with a solid footprint of over 60 years industry expertise, and a subsidiary of the Hemas Group, recently unveiled its exclusive CSR platform Suwa Deya, going one step beyond its purpose of ‘Making Premium Healthcare Affordable’.
Being an exemplary corporate citizen in the industry, Morison firmly believes in taking the high road through uncompromised integrity across its value chain. Within this framework, Morison engages its stakeholders through a novel approach in its pharma brand building journey. With this emerged Suwa Deya the exclusive CSR platform of Morison, extending a series of meaningful and differentiated industry related activities to give back to society. Through Suwa Deya, Morison aspires to touch the lives of many by launching a spectrum of unique initiatives dedicated towards patients, employees, general public and healthcare professionals, being its key stakeholders.
Patient centricity being its core footing, Suwa Deya commenced by acknowledging an unseen need of patients visiting Government Hospital diabetic clinics.
Realising that the patients visiting the clinics arrive early without a proper morning meal, the first initiative of Suwa Deya attempted to address this by providing healthy breakfast snacks and beverages for such patients. Sensitive to the inconveniences patients undergo, particularly during the prevailing economic challenges, Morison has conducted 15 such programs at multiple diabetic clinics, including Kalubowila Teaching Hospital, Balangoda Base Hospital, Rathnapura Teaching Hospital and Negombo District General Hospital.
Taking it another step further, the ‘Ape Suwa Deya’ initiative was launched as a distinctive extension of Suwa Deya, to serve the Morison team and their closest family members. Ape Suwa Deya offers EmpaMor (Empagliflozin 10mg & 25mg), MinMor (Metformin 500mg) and Ros-10 (Rosuvastatin 10mg), three of Morison’s latest branded pharmaceuticals to treat Diabetes and Cardiovascular diseases, the two most prevalent non communicable diseases in the country. Morison employees and their loved ones who have been prescribed such products, are entitled to receive these completely free of charge on a monthly basis throughout their employment period, ensuring they do not shoulder the economic burden of chronic disease.
Dinesh Athapaththu, Managing Director, Morison Limited commenting on the programme said, “In making our purpose a reality, our own team who enables it on the ground by moving on to uncomfortable territories and getting the ball rolling during the toughest of times, comes first. Therefore, in Suwa Deya, all of us at Morison undoubtedly deserve a special place. With that emerged “Ape Suwa Deya”, to serve our very own team and their loved ones with our own medicine manufactured at our own premises, completely free of charge.”
Morison aims to further develop Suwa Deya into a comprehensive CSR platform to foster hope for all its key stakeholders with more differentiated interventions in the future, while driving the local pharmaceutical industry to the heights it deserves.
In the recent past, Morison has come forward to progressively change the trajectory of the pharma manufacturing industry in Sri Lanka. The recent inauguration of its second pharma manufacturing facility at Homagama, a state-of-the-art worldclass facility built as per EU GMP specifications, was one major milestone towards embarking on its new journey.
Being a truly Sri Lankan company, Morison takes pride in nurturing an exclusive homegrown pharmaceutical brand which is built upon a value blend that is uniquely unparalleled. The new branded pharma range of Morison stays true to its purpose of “Making Premium Healthcare Affordable”, extending the best worlds of quality and price, assuredly a rare combination in the market.
Business
Handunnetti unveils state-led mineral strategy to unlock hidden wealth
The government’s decision to ban the export of mineral resources in raw form and place all future mineral exploration under state control has triggered fresh debate over how Sri Lanka should develop its untapped mineral wealth and attract foreign investment.
Announcing the new National Mineral Policy, Industry and Entrepreneurship Development Minister Sunil Handunnetti said the country had long failed to capture the full value of its mineral resources by exporting them with minimal processing.
“We will no longer allow mineral resources to leave the country in raw form,” the minister said, arguing that Sri Lanka must move towards value-added industries that generate greater economic returns.
A key feature of the new policy is the transfer of all mineral exploration activities to the state-run Geological Survey and Mines Bureau (GSMB). Under the new system, the GSMB will carry out exploration, publish geological data and subsequently invite investors to participate in commercially viable projects.
Handunnetti defended the move by citing what he described as the failure of the previous licensing regime. According to government figures, 471 exploration licences had been issued since 1993, but only 28 advanced to mining operations, with just 12 remaining active today. The minister alleged that some companies had used exploration licences to boost corporate valuations rather than develop actual mining projects.
He also stressed that mineral deposits located beneath privately owned land belong to the state and should be developed in the national interest.
However, the reforms are likely to attract close scrutiny from foreign investors seeking opportunities in Sri Lanka’s mineral sector.
An independent industry analyst said the policy’s emphasis on value addition is consistent with global trends, as countries increasingly seek to process critical minerals domestically rather than export raw materials.
“The more difficult question is whether a state-controlled exploration model can generate the confidence required by international investors,” the analyst said. “Investors will want access to reliable geological data, transparent licensing procedures and predictable regulations before committing significant capital.”
The analyst noted that the government’s plan to publish exploration data before inviting investment proposals could help improve transparency, but its success would depend on how scientifically the process is implemented.
Sri Lanka possesses commercially valuable deposits of graphite, mineral sands, ilmenite, rutile, garnet, silica and phosphate. As global demand for industrial and strategic minerals continues to grow, the new policy represents a significant test of whether stronger state involvement can translate geological potential into investment, industrial development and export earnings.
“The success of the strategy may ultimately depend on whether the government can balance tighter control over mineral resources with the policy certainty and commercial incentives that international investors typically seek,” the analyst said.
By Sanath Nanayakkare
Business
CA Sri Lanka felicitates first woman Auditor General
The Institute of Chartered Accountants of Sri Lanka (CA Sri Lanka) felicitated Ms. Samudika Jayaratna, the 42nd Auditor General of the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka, at a special ceremony held on Thursday at the Institute.
The event was organised in recognition of her landmark appointment as the first woman to hold this distinguished constitutional office, as well as her decades of dedicated service to the nation’s public financial governance.
The ceremony reflected the accounting profession’s pride in one of its most accomplished members, who has attained the highest constitutional office in public audit. Ms. Jayaratna was warmly received by the President of CA Sri Lanka, Tishan Subasinghe, Vice President Ms. Anoji de Silva, members of the Council, and Chief Executive Officer Ms. Lakmali Priyangika.
A Fellow Member of CA Sri Lanka, Ms. Jayaratna’s appointment stands as a powerful testament to her exemplary professional journey spanning over 25 years. Her career has been defined by an unwavering commitment to excellence, integrity, and the highest standards of public accountability.
The felicitation ceremony drew a large and distinguished gathering, including Chartered Accountants and officials from the National Audit Office.
Business
ComBank pioneers state-of-the-art 3DS authentication for UnionPay cardholders
Commercial Bank of Ceylon, in its commitment to provide secure and world-class technologies to its customers, has further strengthened the security and convenience of online payments for its UnionPay cardholders by becoming the pioneering financial institution in Sri Lanka and the wider South Asian region to introduce advanced 3-D Secure (3DS 2.x) authentication for UnionPay e-commerce transactions.
This milestone makes the UnionPay card a fully empowered e-commerce instrument, enabling cardholders to shop securely at millions of merchants worldwide. The latest addition to the Bank’s robust 3DS-enabled card portfolio ensures that UnionPay users benefit from the same high-level authentication and fraud protection extended across Commercial Bank’s international card offerings.
The enhancement follows the successful integration of UnionPay cards into the Bank’s ComBank Access Control Server (ACS) platform, enabling secure authentication for online payments through UnionPay’s latest 3-D secure protocol.
Kapila Liyanage, AGM Personal Banking and Retail Products at Commercial Bank described this latest development as a reflection of the Bank’s commitment to continuously expand Sri Lanka’s digital payment ecosystem. “The benefits of technology must encompass the widest possible customer base to ensure seamless and secure service anywhere in the world,” he said. “By extending 3D secure authentication to UnionPay cards, we are providing another important segment of our customers with access to global-standard payment solutions.”
Crispin Wijesekera, Country Manager – Sri Lanka & Maldives at UnionPay International, said: “The introduction of 3D secure authentication for UnionPay cardholders by Commercial Bank of Ceylon marks an important milestone in strengthening the security and trust of digital payments in Sri Lanka. As e-commerce continues to grow, enhanced authentication technologies such as 3DS provide cardholders with an additional layer of protection while enabling a smooth and convenient online payment experience.”
“UnionPay remains committed to working closely with our banking partners to continuously enhance payment security standards and expand digital acceptance, ensuring that UnionPay cardholders can transact with confidence both locally and globally,” he added.
The new capability introduces UnionPay-specific Risk-Based Authentication (RBA) on the ACS platform. When a customer makes an online purchase at a participating merchant, the system intelligently evaluates the transaction in real time. Where additional verification is required, the system initiates a step-up authentication process by generating a One-Time Password (OTP), which is securely delivered to the cardholder’s registered mobile number and email through the Bank’s established SMS and email gateways. The cardholder then enters the OTP on the secure ACS interface to authorise the transaction.
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