News
Road accidents claim 341 lives during past two months
Road accidents had left 341 people dead during the first two months of the current year, the police said yesterday.
About 651 others were severely injured and 1,355 sustained minor injuries, according to Police spokesman, DIG Nihal Thalduwa, who urged motorists to drive carefully. He said trishaws and motorcycles accounted for the most number of road mishaps.
“Whenever a pedestrian enters the zebra crossing, motorists need to give that person the right of way. A large number of accidents also take place because drivers ignore road rules and colour lights,” the DIG said.
There were 2,557 deaths in 2,200 fatal traffic accidents in Sri Lanka in 2023.
Police spokesman Nihal Thalduwa told the media last year that pedestrians accounted for the highest number of fatalities in road accidents, with 740 deaths, and 707 motorcyclists had lost their lives.
In 2022, there were 2,515 deaths from 2,395 fatal accidents, and in 2021, there were 2,513 deaths from 2,414 fatal accidents, according to the Police Spokesman.
News
Teachers asked to show cause for their absence at meeting chaired by PM
The Zonal Director of Education Tangalle, in a letter dated 24th March 2026, has asked all school Principals in the Tangalle educational zone to explain before 26 March, 2026, why teachers serving under them did not attend a meeting, chaired by Prime Minister, Dr Harini Amarasuriya, who is also the Minister of Education, Higher Education and Vocational Education, on 15 March.
Speaking at the meeting where many empty seats were visible, the Prime Minister said that the education system had faced serious challenges over the years, as the transfer of teachers, appointments of principals and education administrators, and the admission of children to schools were often influenced by political considerations.
by PRIYAN DE SILVA
News
New ILO data confirm women face higher workplace risks from AI than men
Colombo (ILO News) Generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) is reshaping the world of work, with the potential to boost productivity, support job creation and improve job quality, but its impacts are far from gender-neutral. A new research brief from the International Labour Organisation (ILO) warns that GenAI is set to affect women’s jobs more than men’s, with female-dominated occupations almost twice as likely to be exposed to the technology.
The brief, GenAI, occupational segregation and gender equality in the world of work, shows that women are disproportionately exposed to GenAI for three main reasons: they are overrepresented in jobs most susceptible to automation; they remain underrepresented in AI-related and science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) occupations; and AI systems themselves often reflect and reproduce the gender biases embedded in societies.
Across countries with available data, occupations dominated by women are almost twice as likely to be exposed to GenAI as male-dominated ones, the study finds. Around 29 percent of female-dominated occupations are exposed to GenAI, compared to just 16 percent of male-dominated occupations. The difference is even starker when looking at high automation risk: 16 percent of female-dominated occupations fall into the highest exposure categories, compared to only three percent of male-dominated ones.
These risks are closely linked to occupational segregation. Women are heavily concentrated in clerical, administrative and business support roles, such as secretaries, receptionists, payroll clerks and accounting assistants, where many tasks are routine and codifiable and, therefore, at higher risk of substitution by GenAI. By contrast, men are more represented in construction, manufacturing and manual trades, where tasks are less easily automated.
At the country level, women are more exposed to GenAI than men in 88 percent of countries analysed. In several economies, more than 40 percent of women’s employment is exposed to GenAI, including Switzerland, the United Kingdom and the Philippines, as well as small island developing States in the Caribbean and the Pacific. In high-income countries overall, 41 percent of jobs are exposed to GenAI, compared with just 11 percent in low-income countries, reflecting differences in occupational structures and digital readiness.
“Generative AI is not entering a neutral labour market,” said Anam Butt, co-author of the ILO research. “Discriminatory social norms, unequal care responsibilities and economic and labour market policies that do not fully address the needs of women and men to continue to shape who enters which occupations and on what terms. As a result, women are concentrated in occupations that are more likely to be exposed to automation and remain underrepresented in AI-related jobs, facing higher risks but fewer opportunities from this technological shift.”
While GenAI is expected to drive job growth in technology-intensive sectors, women remain largely excluded from these opportunities. Globally, women accounted for only about 30 percent of the AI workforce in 2022, only four percentage points higher than in 2016. They are also underrepresented in STEM jobs more broadly, particularly in high-demand fields such as engineering and software development.
This imbalance matters. When women are missing from AI-related jobs and decision-making roles, they are less likely to benefit from new employment opportunities and skills development. At the same time, enterprises lose out on talent, diversity and innovation.
News
Senior citizens above 70 years to receive March allowances on Thursday (26)
The Welfare Benefits Board has announced that the March allowance for senior citizens over 70 years of age will be credited to each beneficiaries account on Thursday (26th).
693,801 senior citizens over the age of 70 years are set to benifit under this welfare scheme
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