News
Sri Lanka sees decline in road accidents, fatalities
Engineer advocates for increased funding to meet safety goals
By Rathindra Kuruwita
The number of deaths in road accidents in Sri Lanka has been decreasing since 2020, Kamala Gunawardena, a highway consultant with over 20 years of experience and consultant to the World Bank on road safety, says.
Sri Lankan police categorised accidents into four groups; fatal, grievous, non-grievous, and damage only, she said.According to the annual summary of road accidents, compiled by the National Council for Road Safety there were 3,003 deaths due to road accidents in 2016, 3,101 in 2017, 3,097 in 2018, 3,097 in 2019, 2,829 in 2020, 2,513 in 2021, 2,515 in 2022 and 2,280 in 2023.
Road accidents that fall under the ‘fatal accidents’ category, too, had dropped, Gunawardena, who is an engineer by profession, said. There were 2,824 accidents classified as fatal in 2016. There were 2,924 such accidents in 2017, 2,949 in 2018, 2,641 in 2019, 2,242 in 2020, 2,414 in 2021, 2,395 in 2022, and 2,171 in 2023.
“Even in the ‘damage only’ category, there were 13,675 such road accidents in 2016, in 2020 there were only 5,807 and in 2023 there were 5,903 such accidents,” she added.
Gunawardena said motor cyclists and pedestrians were most likely to be killed in road accidents. In 2019, 776 pedestrians died from road accidents. The number was 671 in 2020, 612 in 2021, 792 in 2022 and 702 in 2023 according to the statistics from the National Council for Road Safety. 1,162 motor cyclists were killed from road accidents in 2019, she said. The numbers were 1,021 in 2020, 1,124 in 2021, 820 in 2022 and 702 in 2023.
“When it comes to drivers, 282 were killed in 2019, 200 in 2020, 298 in 2021, 189 in 2022 and 168 in 2023. Meanwhile 405 passengers were killed due to road accidents in 2019, 279 in 2020, 264 in 2021, 314 in 2022 and 249 in 2023.”
Gunawardena said even Sri Lanka had an average of 38,000 crashes annually and there were around 3,000 fatalities and about 8,000 serious injuries.
She added that Sri Lanka needed an additional investment of about two billion US dollars to achieve the Sustainable Development Goal 3.6 target of a 50 percent reduction in national road crash fatalities.
Gunawardena said Sri Lanka had many ‘black spots’ on its roads, i.e., a location with a high concentration of accidents compared with other similar sections on the road system.
“If we go into more detail, these are stretches of about 500 metres in length, on which either five or 10 fatal road accidents have taken place in the last three years,” she said.
Latest News
Fuel prices increased
The Ceylon Petroleum Corporation (CEYPETCO) has announced a revision of fuel prices, effective from midnight on Saturday (May 30).
Accordingly,
the price of Auto Diesel has been increased by Rs. 15 to Rs.407 per liter,
the price of Super Diesel has been increased by Rs. 20 to Rs. 478 per liter.
the price of Petrol 92 Octane has been increased by Rs. 24 to Rs. 434 per liter
the price of Petrol 95 Octane up by Rs. 25 to Rs. 495 per liter
the price of kerosene by Rs. 20 to Rs. 285 per liter.

News
Sangha reform drives stymied from within: CBK
Former President Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga has called for a comprehensive reform programme within Sri Lanka’s Buddhist clergy, warning that repeated efforts to strengthen the Sasana have in the past been derailed by opposition from within sections of the Sangha itself.
In a statement addressed to the Mahanayake Theras of the three Buddhist chapters, Kumaratunga stressed that the long-term preservation of Buddhism depends on safeguarding both the Dhamma and Vinaya, or disciplinary code, and urged urgent internal reform to address what she described as deep-rooted structural weaknesses.
She noted that Buddhist history has consistently demonstrated that periods of institutional crisis were addressed through reform processes, citing precedents from the First Buddhist Council to reforms during the Kandyan era under Welivita Sri Saranankara Thera.
Referring to post-independence efforts, Kumaratunga said initiatives taken during the 1956 Bandaranaike administration to strengthen Buddhism were left incomplete following the assassination of former Prime Minister S.W.R.D. Bandaranaike.
She further stated that during her own presidency, plans to convene a Buddhist Council under the guidance of the late Madihe Pannasiha Mahanayake Thera had received government backing but were ultimately abandoned due to resistance from certain sections within the clergy.
The former President alleged that, on both occasions, vested interests benefiting from existing weaknesses within the Buddhist establishment had worked to obstruct meaningful reform efforts.
Warning that Buddhism in Sri Lanka is currently facing serious challenges, she called for a broad internal dialogue within the Sangha to identify root causes and implement both short- and long-term corrective measures.
Kumaratunga urged the Mahanayake Theras to take the lead in convening a Dharma Sanghayana, or Buddhist Council, and said she was prepared to work with senior lay Buddhist leaders to support such an initiative.
News
Court orders arrest of Basil
The Colombo Fort Magistrate’s Court on Friday ordered the arrest of former Minister Basil Rajapaksa, Tourism Promotion Bureau Chairman Bhashwara Gunaratne, Managing Director Rumi Jauffer and several others over the alleged misuse of Rs. 7.8 million belonging to the Tourism Promotion Authority during the 2014 Uva Provincial Council election campaign.
Magistrate Pasan Amarasena directed the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) to arrest and produce the suspects before court, after it was informed that they would be named under the Public Property Act on the advice of the Attorney General.
The CID told court that attempts to take the suspects into custody from their residences had been unsuccessful as they were not present.
The Magistrate also imposed an overseas travel ban on the suspects and ordered that the Controller of Immigration and Emigration be notified.
Investigations have reportedly revealed that the funds were used to print 12,000 T-shirts bearing an image of former President Mahinda Rajapaksa on one side and the name of a political party on the other.
According to the CID, the T-shirts were later distributed at a political event held in the Monaragala District.
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