News
Banned sea cucumber harvest channelled through Sri Lanka
Army seizes 2,500 baby cucumbers, 800 sea turtles …
By Dinasena Ratugamage
The Army on Thursday (04) took into custody two persons who were illegally transporting 2,500 baby sea cucumbers, 800 baby turtles, and a number of cirripedes in a lorry to Colombo from Mannar. Mannar-based fisheries officials said the value of the sea creatures was about 25 million rupees.
Fisheries officials said that in recent times, sea cucumbers, illegally harvested by Indian fishers and processed sea cucumbers from South India, were transferred to Sri Lankan fishing boats.
These sea cucumbers are then transported to Colombo for export. In 2001, India prohibited the harvesting of all sea cucumber varieties and granted them protected status under the Indian Wildlife (Protection) Act of 1972. Sri Lanka follows a different approach, where sea cucumber harvesting is allowed under a licensing system.
News
Cabinet approves import of Maize to meet shortfall
The Cabinet of Ministers has approved the resolution furnished by the Minister of Agriculture, Livestock, Land, and Irrigation to determine the price of the maize by a committee appointed by the Secretary to the Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock, Land, and Irrigation in the future and to import only the quantity of maize that could not be supplied locally for the production of animal feed, under the supervision of the Department of Animal Production and Health.
Business
Cabinet nod for the removal of Cess tax imposed on imported good
The Cabinet of Ministers has approved the joint resolution furnished by the President in his capacity as the Minister of Finance, Planning, and Economic Development and the Minister of Industries and Entrepreneurship Development to phase the removal of Cess tax imposed on imported goods under 2,634 combined classification codes identified over 4 years [from 2026 to 2029\.
Latest News
Around 140 people missing after Iranian navy ship sinks off coast of Sri Lanka
Around 140 people are missing after an Iranian navy ship sank off the coast of Sri Lanka.
The Sri Lankan navy says around 180 people were on board, with 32 rescued. A spokesman tells the BBC the cause of the sinking is not known
Sri Lanka’s navy has confirmed that it’s rescued 32 people after it received a distress call from Iranian navy ship ‘IRIS Dena’ early this morning.
Budhika Sampath, the spokesman of Sri Lanka’s navy says: “Though it was beyond our waters, it was within our search and rescue region. So we were obliged to respond as per international obligations.”
He adds: “We found people floating on the water, rescued them, and later when we inquired we found that those people are from an Iranian ship.”
He also says that according to the documentation of the ship 180 people are believed to have been on board, although the exact number of missing is unknown.
The spokesman says at the time of launching the rescue operations they did not see the vessel but saw oil patches on the water and floating life rafts.
He also tells the BBC that he rejects the reports of a submarine attack causing the sinking, and that the cause is unknown.
Earlier the secretary of the country’s defence ministry Air Vice Marshal Sampath Thuiyakontha told BBC Sinhala that around 140 people are thought to be missing.
So far, Sri Lanka’s military has not been able to confirm what might have caused the ship to sink.
[BBC]
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