Editorial
The plantation daily wage
Despite the trumpeting from the housetops, no doubt with a weather eye on the plantation bloc vote, most estate workers are still not getting the Rs. 1,700 daily wage imposed on the plantation industry by government fiat. The Planters Association (PA) is adamant that the wage increase will drive the industry bankrupt. A number of plantation companies led by Agrapatana Plantations Ltd., both listed and unlisted, have obtained an interim injunction from a three-judge bench of the Supreme Court challenging the legality of the wage hike that has been gazetted. Minister Jeevan Thondaman, a direct descendant of Ceylon Workers Congress leader, the late S. Thondaman, the plantation union thalaivar has said the injunction was issued due to a “minor legal error.”
However that be, the tantalizing question in the air is whether this matter can be satisfactorily resolved before the presidential election slated for later this year. It was obviously no accident that President Ranil Wickremesinghe announced the wage hike from the CWC’s May Day platform in Kotagala. The plantation unions have long commanded a bloc vote on the estates which he hopes the two Thondamans now serving his government – Estate Infrastructure and Water Supply Minister Jeevan Thondaman and his cousin, Eastern Province Governor Senthil Thondman – will deliver to his ticket. The case is next due to be heard at the end of August and hearings will continue until its conclusion. Whether this would be before or after the presidential election we do not know.
It is generally accepted that while Ceylon Tea continues to hold the reputation it earned during the colonial era for being the world’s finest, it is less well known that the productivity levels of our plantation workers is perhaps the world’s lowest and wages, not counting the most recent increase which has not yet been widely implemented, are among the highest. The cost of production of our competitors are substantially lower than ours. Employers freely concede that the wage hike is well intentioned, but argues that it threatens to cripple the tea industry. They urge a productivity based pay system as a more viable alternative and seeks what Mr. Roshan Rajadurai, the Managing Director of two Regional Plantation companies under the Hayleys group, called “balancing fair compensation for workers with economic realities of the industry.” This, he says will safeguard worker welfare and the industry’s future.
There has been considerable fist waving in the face of employers on the part of the government, including the threat of canceling the leases under which the Regional Plantation Companies (RPCs) are currently managing state-owned estates, unless the mandated wage increase is granted. This is being strongly resisted by the employers. The 1972 land reforms placing a 50-acre limit on land holding followed the JVP insurrection the previous year which was perceived as partly due to land hunger. However there was no effort to alienate plantation land coming into the hands of the state to the landless peasantry. These were largely vested in the already existing State Plantations Corporation (SPC) and the newly created Janatha Estates Development Board (JEDB). Some coconut estates belonging to local owners went into the hands of existing state ventures like the National Livestock Development Board and the Coconut Cultivation Board.
Both the JEDB and the SPC mounted enormous losses running into billions of rupees which eventually landed on the laps of the taxpayer. The RPCs were created by President Premadasa to lease mainly JEDB and SPC estates for private sector management to counter the impact of their losses on the state exchequer. Premadasa’s ‘people-ization’ policies, as he imaginatively called the scheme, resulted in 20 percent free employee shares most of which were subsequently sold in the Colombo stock market giving some windfall profits to workers in such undertakings. The government has now announced the appointment of a committee of officials to go into the books of individual RPCs to determine which of them can afford to bear the mandated daily wage and which of them cannot.
The majority of the RPCs are quoted on the Colombo Stock Exchange. Their share prices are not deeply depressed nor did they plunge when the wage increase was announced. Some of them have been paying reasonable dividends to shareholders. Whether the RPCs will agree to the mandated daily wage in the event their ongoing court action fails remains an open question. If the threatened cancellation of leases is implemented, whether new players can be found to run the estates will also be problematic. Also, it will hurt ongoing efforts to attract foreign investment and may affect the IMF program. Forcing a very large wage increase down the throats of the RPCs as well as smallholders who today produce 70 percent of the country’s tea is likely to have wide-ranging repercussions. While very small holdings may be operated with family labour, workers are hired in 50-acre proprietary estates and smaller properties.
As it is, most plantations are short of labour. Many members of estate worker families have migrated for work outside. While the line room kind of accommodation on estates remain, there has been forward movement for the better in recent years with workers getting cottage-type housing. Some estates have experimented with revenue sharing models which the PA claims has enabled workers to earn more than the mandated daily wage. With elections approaching, the question now is whether the government will be willing to take a hemin hemin (slowly, slowly) approach or will it want to deliver before polling day?
Editorial
Bleeding Treasury
Corruption scandals and blunders of successive governments have bled the state coffers for decades. The Treasury has lost USD 2.5 million again owing to a compromised payment process, and its bigwigs and their political masters are all out to muddy the water. The Opposition is out for their scalps. It never rains but it pours. Scandals have been cropping up in quick succession under the current dispensation.
The JVP-NPP government is in the same predicament as a cantankerous, all-knowing backseat driver suddenly thrust behind the wheel on a treacherous road. Having talked the talk, it now has to walk the walk. Less than two years into office, it has many problems to contend with. The last few weeks have been particularly bad. It must be a fate worse than death for the JVP/NPP leaders, who came to power, condemning previous governments and promising good governance, to be accused of corruption by their political opponents who are known to be utterly corrupt.
The government was reeling from a coal procurement scam that led to the resignation of Energy Minister Kumara Jayakody and Energy Ministry Secretary Udayanga Hemapala, when an NPP propaganda stunt, aimed at boosting the images of the President and the Prime Minister as simple leaders, backfired, with a minister’s palatial house and unexplained assets coming to light. It has now been revealed that the JVP leaders who claimed that their lot was no better than that of the ordinary people are politicians of substantial means. Then, HSBC CEO Georges Elhedery dropped a bombshell. He revealed that Sri Lanka had paid the highest premium for oil in the world, recently. The government had to admit that it purchased diesel at USD 286 a barrel, to replenish stocks, thereby admitting, albeit unwittingly, that the substandard coal imports had led to a shortfall in electricity generation at Norochcholai, and diesel had to be imported at exorbitant prices to keep oil-fired power plants running to prevent power cuts. Now, it is under fire over the transfer of USD 2.5 million from the Treasury to a fake account.
The government has attributed the misdirected Treasury payment to a hacking scheme. But cyber security experts have dismissed this claim as a tall tale. The diversion at issue could not be a simple “hack” and it was rather a case of a compromised payment process, where weak verification layers, email-based instructions, and insufficient system segregation left room for fraud, a fintech expert has told The Island. The government has a penchant for obfuscating issues, but in doing so it only makes matters worse for itself. There is no way it can justify the inordinate delay in reporting the Treasury fraud to the police.
Treasury Chief Dr. Harshana Suriyapperuma has claimed that the government kept the payment scandal under wraps lest the hackers should cover their tracks. The government seems to have a very low opinion of the intelligence of the public. Cyber criminals wipe out all traces of their illegal operations immediately after committing an offence, as is public knowledge. The government should have called in the CID immediately after realising that a misdirected payment had been made and maintained transparency in investigations. Instead, it ordered an internal inquiry. It is only natural that pressure is mounting on the Treasury Chief to step down. Fund transfers go through a layered authorisation process at the Treasury, and a few junior officials must not be scapegoated for the loss at issue. All senior officials who authorised the misdirected payment must be brought to book.
President Anura Kumara Dissanayake, who is also the Minister of Finance, claims to have information about all illegal transactions carried out by his predecessors, but he could not prevent a fraud in the Treasury under him.
It is doubtful that the government has taken cyber security seriously. It seems to think the task of preventing cybercrimes is as easy as carrying out social media attacks on its political opponents. The Opposition claims that the Treasury has suffered a huge loss because the officials who handled the fund transfers are not experienced and competent enough to perform such tasks. This allegation must not go uninvestigated. It is imperative that Parliament conduct a special probe into the Treasury fraud, and open it to the media. The public has a right to know what happened to their money, how the fraud happened, who is actually responsible, and what action will be taken to ensure the safety of state funds. It is hoped that President Anura Kumara Dissanayake will not appoint a presidential commission to investigate all misdirected payments by state institutions since Independence.
Editorial
Cyber thefts and political battles
Saturday 25th April, 2026
Another scandal has come to light and made international headlines. The illegal diversion of Treasury funds amounting to USD 2.5 million, meant for bilateral debt repayment to Australia, to a third party, could not have come at a worse time. It has happened close on the heels of the launch of the National QR Payment Adoption Programme to transform Sri Lanka into a cash-lite economy. Although the two payment systems are vastly different, and risks are much lower where the QR-based payment is concerned, the fraudulent diversion of Treasury funds is likely to erode public confidence in online fund transfers, if posts being shared via social media are any indication. The digital payment scheme is the way forward for the country, and it behoves the government to take action to clear doubts being created in the minds of the public. A misinformation campaign is already underway, and it needs to be countered.
Opposition Leader Sajith Premadasa has accused government politicians of making contradictory statements about the theft of Treasury funds. As he has rightly pointed out, it is clear from their claims that the government is still at sea, and instead of getting to the bottom of the fraud, it is trying to manage the political fallout from the incident. Some of them have even gone to the extent of bashing the Opposition. They ought to study the issue properly and speak with one voice. One need not be surprised even if the government propagandists concoct a conspiracy theory that the political rivals of the JVP/NPP masterminded the diversion of Treasury funds.
What one gathers from the government politicians’ different claims is that cyber criminals gained unauthorised access to the computer system of the External Resources Department (ERD) within the Finance Ministry through emails. They altered payment instructions, redirecting the funds to unauthorised accounts. There has been no system level hacking, according to cyber security experts. It defies comprehension why the ERD officials have not been trained to handle situations of this nature, which are not uncommon in the digital space. Even ordinary people double-check account details before transferring funds. A telephone call to the Australian creditor that was to receive funds from the Sri Lanka Treasury would have helped save USD 2.5 million.
The Opposition politicians are no better. They are also making various claims that are contradictory, and some of them have betrayed their ignorance of the issue. Most of them do not seem to know the difference between the functions of the Treasury and those of the Central Bank. They are only making the public even more confused by expressing opinions and making allegations to gain political mileage. Among them are lawmakers. They ought to be educated on the duties and functions of the Finance Ministry/Treasury and the Central Bank. What they will come out with in case of a parliamentary debate being held on the Treasury payment scam is anyone’s guess.
What needs to be done now is to ensure that the illegal fund diversion is probed thoroughly and the stolen money recovered forthwith while action is taken to prevent the repetition of such incidents. Political battles will not serve the country’s interests.
Editorial
Legislature’s meek submission to overbearing Executive
Friday 24th April, 2026
The Opposition is intensely resentful that the government has thwarted its attempt to have President Anura Kumara Dissanayake, who is also Minister of Finance, summoned before the Parliamentary Select Committee (PSC) probing the green-channelling of 323 red-flagged freight containers in the Colombo Port in January 2025. When the Opposition members of the PSC proposed that President Dissanayake be summoned, their government counterparts put the proposal to a vote and defeated it.
The Opposition’s abortive bid was not devoid of politics, but Sri Lanka Customs, which released the aforementioned containers without mandatory inspections, is under the Finance Ministry. Therefore, the Finance Minister is accountable to Parliament and must answer questions from the container PSC, as it were.
The dispute between the government and the Opposition over the container scandal has more to it than a mere political argy-bargy. It reflects a deeper constitutional issue. The Constitution requires the President to attend Parliament, but frequent politically strategic interventions by him or her dilutes the spirit of the separation of powers and strengthens the Executive’s dominance over the legislature. This practice is bad for the wellbeing of democracy. The President has used, if not misused, Articles 32 and 33 of the Constitution to dominate Parliament in this manner over the years.
The JVP, on a campaign for abolishing the Executive Presidency, played a pivotal role in introducing the 17th, 19th and 21st Amendments to the Constitution to reduce the executive powers of the President, but ensconced in power, it is now silent on its pledge to restore a parliamentary system of government.
The Opposition has claimed that President Maithripala Sirisena testified before the PSC which probed the Easter Sunday terror attacks in 2019, and therefore President Dissanayake ought to do likewise. What it has left unsaid is that President Sirisena made a statement at the 20th meeting of that PSC, held at the Presidential Secretariat, on 20 September 2019. The PSC report has referred to the event as a ‘discussion’. Sirisena, who secured the executive presidency, promising to reduce the powers vested therein, should have refrained from undermining the legislature and visited the Parliament complex to testify before the PSC, as the Minister of Defence.
The least President Dissanayake can do to avoid the public perception that he, too, is undermining the legislature is to follow the precedent created by President Sirisena. Ideally, he ought to appear before the PSC in the parliamentary complex in keeping with his government’s much-touted commitment to upholding accountability and the separation of powers. After all, when the question of summoning President Sirisena before the PSC on the Easter Sunday attacks came up, the then JVP MP Dr. Nalinda Jayatissa, who was also a PSC member, defended the rights of Parliament. He declared that the PSC had the authority to summon anyone for questioning.
Now that the government members of the container PSC have gone out of their way to defend President Dissanayake, the question is whether they can be expected to allow an impartial investigation to be conducted and help uncover anything detrimental to the interests of the President and the ruling coalition.
By scuttling the Opposition PSC members’ effort to have President Dissanayake testify before the container PSC, and undermining the legislature in the process, the JVP-NPP government has unwittingly reminded the public of its unfulfilled election pledge to introduce a new Constitution, inter alia, “abolishing the executive presidency and appointing a president without executive powers by the parliament” (A Thriving Nation: A Beautiful Life, NPP Election Manifesto, p. 109).
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