News
Govt. defends Ravi and Shani
Rejects report by “politically motivated committee led by a judge once dismissed for irregularities”
By Rathindra Kuruwita
The government would not remove Secretary to the Ministry of Public Security, retired Senior Deputy Inspector General (SDIG) Ravi Seneviratne or retired Senior Superintendent of Police (SSP) Shani Abeysekara from the investigations into the Easter Sunday attacks because of a report prepared by a politically motivated committee led by a judge who was once dismissed for irregularities, Cabinet spokesperson Vijitha Herath yesterday (22) told the post-Cabinet press briefing.
Leader of the Pivithuru Hela Urumaya (PHU), Udaya Gammanpila, and those aligned with him, were calling for the removal of Seneviratne and Abeysekara from the Easter Sunday investigations because they feared the truth about the attacks would come out, Herath said.
“One of the first actions Gotabaya Rajapaksa took after becoming President was to remove Abeysekara from the investigation into the Easter attacks. It is clear why Gammanpila, a former Minister in Gotabaya’s government, who remained silent about the attacks for five years, is now demanding the removal of Seneviratne and Abeysekara,” Herath remarked.
Minister Herath said then-President Maithripala Sirisena had appointed two commissions to investigate the Easter Sunday attacks: a special three-member committee headed by Supreme Court (SC) Justice Vijith Malalgoda, and a five-member commission chaired by Supreme Court Justice Janak de Silva. Neither of those comprehensive commissions found Seneviratne or Abeysekara guilty of any negligence, he noted.
“In addition, in 2023, a seven-judge bench of the Supreme Court considered several fundamental rights applications and ordered former President Maithripala Sirisena, former IGP Pujith Jayasundera, and the head of the State Intelligence Service (SIS), Nilantha Jayawardena, among others, to pay compensation to the victims of the Easter Sunday attacks. Shani Abeysekara’s name was not even mentioned in the proceedings. While Ravi Seneviratne’s name was mentioned, the court found no fault with him. Therefore, two presidential commissions and a seven-judge bench of the Supreme Court did not find the two officers guilty,” Minister Herath said.
Minister Herath pointed out that former President Ranil Wickremesinghe had appointed a committee, led by High Court Judge Adambarage Nilanthi Jayaki de Alwis, on 12 June 2024, just three days after Seneviratne and Abeysekara pledged their support for the National People’s Power (NPP).
“On 9 June 2024, we established an association of retired police officers in support of the presidential election, with Seneviratne and Abeysekara as members. Following this, National Security Advisor to President Wickremesinghe, Sagala Ratnayaka, approached Seneviratne and asked him to leave the NPP and join Wickremesinghe’s team. When Seneviratne refused, Wickremesinghe appointed a committee, chaired by retired High Court Judge Alwis, to investigate whether the police and the SIS had failed to prevent the Easter Sunday attacks,” Herath said.
The Cabinet spokesperson also said Wickremesinghe had established another committee, chaired by retired Supreme Court Justice S. I. Imam, to investigate allegations made in a Channel 4 documentary regarding military intelligence. These committees were expected to submit their reports by September 2024, and Herath claimed the Wickremesinghe administration intended to use these reports for political gain ahead of the presidential election. However, the Alwis report was handed over to Wickremesinghe at his Flower Road residence on 17 September, and to the Presidential Secretariat on 18 September, during the moratorium on campaigning prior to polling on September 21, Herath said.
“Let’s take a look at the Alwis committee report that Gammanpila is promoting. We are now conducting a fresh investigation into the Easter Sunday attacks, and we will review both the Alwis and Imam reports to determine if there is anything useful in them. However, this doesn’t change the fact that these committees were appointed for political reasons,” he commented.
Herath said former Kegalle High Court Judge Alwis, who retired in September 2023, had previously requested an appointment to the Court of Appeal.
“The Judicial Services Commission (JSC) provided a report on her request, revealing that Alwis joined the service on 1 July 1998 but was terminated by the JSC on 27 April 2000 due to irregularities during her probation period. On the same day, Alwis appealed, and the JSC allowed her to resign on 4 June 2000. Despite this, she was taken into the judicial service six years later without any claim to seniority from her previous tenure. This is the person who led the committee investigating Seneviratne and Abeysekara,” Herath said.
The Cabinet spokesperson also noted that the Alwis report mentioned former IGP Deshabandu Tennakoon, though Gammanpila had failed to reference this. “We will not accept a commission report that was politically motivated and led by a judge with a dubious record. I hadn’t planned to disclose this information about Alwis, but she should have expected these facts to come to light when she took on this project to discredit two honest police officers. Shani was removed by Gotabaya the moment he assumed power. Gammanpila’s demand for the removal of Shani and Ravi from the new investigation are clearly politically motivated, and we will not give in to pressure from those who want to hide the truth,” Herath said.
Herath also pointed out that Alwis had been appointed to the Securities and Exchange Commission of Sri Lanka (SEC) in November 2023 by the Wickremesinghe administration.
News
New Digitalization Policy draft reviewed
A meeting between representatives of UNICEF and Prime Minister Dr. Harini Amarasuriya was held on the 10th of December at the Prime Minister’s Office.
During the discussion, an initial review of the new digitalization policy draft was conducted, and it was emphasized that the new digital policy must be formulated to align with the ongoing education reforms.
The Prime Minister highlighted that the digital policy should be developed in a way that supports all five core pillars of the current education reforms, including curriculum reform, infrastructure development, and administrative restructuring.
It was further noted that the current draft is primarily focused on curriculum-related matters, and the digital policy should be structured to influence the overall education reform process.
Extensive discussions were also held on the importance of digital literacy, NEMIS, the provision of digital infrastructure, and minimizing the existing digital divide.
Attention was also drawn to the gaps in the current teacher training mechanisms , and the Prime Minister stressed the need to reduce paper usage.
The meeting was attended by the UNICEF representatives Dr. Emma Brigham and Deborah Wyburn, Secretary to the Prime Minister Pradeep Saputhanthri, Additional Secretary A.B.M. Ashraff, and several other officials.
[Prime Minister’s Media Division]
Business
The government is taking steps to streamline trade facilitation, customs processes, investment approvals, and improving export facilities – Prime Minister
Prime Minister Dr. Harini Amarasuriya stated that the government is taking steps to strengthen local exporters by making trade facilitation, customs procedures, and investment approvals more efficient, and by improving export services.
The Prime Minister made these remarks while addressing the 27th Presidential Export Awards 2024/25 ceremony organized by the Ministry of Industries and Industrial Development together with the Export Development Board.
At this ceremony, which was held to recognize the best exporters of Sri Lanka for the financial year 2024/2025, a total of 107 awards including 15 overall awards and 92 sectoral awards for products and services were presented. Merit awards were also presented to eligible sectors based on applicants’ performance and their contribution to national economic development. Awardees were selected on several criteria such as export market diversification, job creation, growth in export revenue, repatriation of export income, environmental sustainability, institutional social responsibility, and value addition.
Institutions that demonstrated outstanding performance in the export sector were presented with the prestigious Presidential Export Awards for the year under the patronage of Prime Minister Dr. Harini Amarasuriya and Minister of Industries and Industrial Development, Mr. Sunil Hadunnetti.
Further expressing her views, the Prime Minister stated:
“The Presidential Awards Ceremony for exporters reminds us that Sri Lanka’s progress depends not merely on policies or administration, but on the ability to produce, to create value, and to compete internationally.
Over the past year, we faced numerous challenges. As a result, global markets and supply chains were disrupted. Economic uncertainty prevailed. We faced natural disasters. Despite this, many exporters had to adjust to these changes, reorganize production processes, diversify customers, and adopt digital technologies in order to remain competitive in the market.
The impact of the Ditwah cyclone also affected several industries within the export sector. Production facilities, storage facilities, and transportation routes in affected areas were damaged. Production chains and delivery schedules were disrupted.
Under such a difficult situation, some exporters experienced significant setbacks while trying to meet international export demands.
The government is taking steps to support exporters by assessing the damages they suffered due to the emergency situation, restoring their operations, and helping them recover. The government is also working to strengthen resilience against future natural disasters and to rebuild affected areas in a way that minimizes the risk of similar situations arising again.
Sri Lanka is currently undergoing a new economic transformation. For many years, instability, policy inconsistencies, and administrative inefficiencies hindered the progress of the country. This weakened investor confidence and made it difficult for businesses to plan ahead.
However, the present government is committed to governance based on stability, transparency, and accountability. This is not a short-term approach. It is a long-term process to ensure that the country does not fall back into uncertainty.
For this purpose, the government is implementing strong fiscal management, predictable policies, clear and simplified regulations, anti-corruption measures, major institutional reforms, measures that allow businesses to plan ahead, instill investor confidence, minimize unnecessary barriers, and support the development of the private sector.
For a long time, we relied heavily on international loans to sustain national expenditures. However, this is not leading a path toward a stable future. Our progress depends on our ability to earn through trade, innovation, and global engagement.
Your ability to take Sri Lankan expertise and creativity to the world is a strength for the entire nation. The government is ready to extend the necessary support to achieve this.
We understand that issues such as policy inconsistencies, delays that increase operational costs, limited access to competitive financing, gaps in infrastructure and technology, weaknesses in trade facilitation, and slow progress in expanding market access have impacted you. I would like to assure you that the government is directly addressing these challenges.
The focus of the government has drawn to build efficient, transparent, and predictable systems, streamlining trade facilitation, customs processes, and investment approvals, improving export facilities, and minimizing the gap between local businesses and global markets.”
This event was attended by Ministers Kumara Jayakody, Ramalingam Chandrasekaran, Sunil Kumara Gamage; Deputy Ministers Chathuranga Abesingha, Eranga Weerarathna, Arun Hemachandra, Nishantha Jayaweera, Muditha Hansaka Wijayamuni; Governor of the Central Bank Nandalal Weerasinghe; Secretary to the Ministry of Industries and Industrial Development Tilaka Jayasundara; Chairman of the Export Development Board Mangala Wijesinghe, along with ambassadors, foreign delegates, exporters, and a large gathering.
[Prime Minister’s Media Division]
News
Big fossil fuel companies are responsible for climate crisis but poor countries like Sri Lanka are battered by it – Greenpeace South Asia
Greenpeace South Asia yesterday sounded a renewed alarm after a rapid analysis by World Weather Attribution (WWA) confirmed that human-induced climate change significantly intensified the extreme rainfall that battered Sri Lanka during Cyclone Ditwah and fuelled severe flooding across the Malacca Strait.
Greenpeace South Asia said that according to the study, the five-day rainfall extremes, like those unleashed by Ditwah, are now 28% to 160% more intense due to the 1.3°C of global warming already driven by greenhouse-gas emissions. Warmer sea surface temperatures in the North Indian Ocean — 0.2°C above the 1991–2020 average — supplied the additional energy that powered the cyclone’s rapid strengthening and heavy downpours.
WWA researchers stressed that Sri Lanka’s existing vulnerabilities magnified the disaster’s impact. Steep highlands funnelled water into densely populated floodplains, while unplanned urbanisation in flood-prone areas heightened exposure. Breakdowns in ICT systems meant early warnings failed to reach many, leaving low-income and marginalised communities to absorb the worst of the cascading disruptions to transport, electricity and essential services.
Avinash Chanchal, Deputy Director of Greenpeace South Asia, said the human toll was worsened by forces far beyond the island’s control.”During Cyclone Ditwah, we saw people coming together — neighbours rescuing neighbours, volunteers working through the night,” he said. “But while ordinary Sri Lankans showed up for each other, the real culprits were nowhere to be seen. The WWA study confirms what we already knew: this disaster was intensified by the carbon pollution of the world’s biggest fossil fuel companies. They caused the crisis, yet it’s the frontline communities who pay the price.”
Greenpeace warned that events like Ditwah signal a dangerous new normal for the region.”With increasing incidents, like Cyclone Ditwah, it is clear that extreme weather events are no longer isolated,” said Kumar. “Communities in South Asia will continue to struggle to cope with such conditions.”
The organisation urged countries most responsible for historic emissions to respond decisively. “This is high time that developed-country governments stop pretending this is normal,” Greenpeace said. “They must immediately cut emissions, phase out fossil fuels, and deliver real finance for loss and damage. Anything less is a betrayal of the people already living on the frontlines of climate breakdown.”
-
Features3 days agoFinally, Mahinda Yapa sets the record straight
-
News5 days agoOver 35,000 drug offenders nabbed in 36 days
-
News4 days agoCyclone Ditwah leaves Sri Lanka’s biodiversity in ruins: Top scientist warns of unseen ecological disaster
-
Features6 days agoThe Catastrophic Impact of Tropical Cyclone Ditwah on Sri Lanka:
-
News5 days agoRising water level in Malwathu Oya triggers alert in Thanthirimale
-
Features3 days agoHandunnetti and Colonial Shackles of English in Sri Lanka
-
Business2 days agoCabinet approves establishment of two 50 MW wind power stations in Mullikulum, Mannar region
-
Business5 days agoSri Lanka betting its tourism future on cold, hard numbers
