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Corruption watchdog TISL launches IMF governance reforms monitoring tool
The Transparency International Sri Lanka (TISL) has launched the first ever Government Action Plan (GAP) tracker, an independent online platform, to monitor the island nation government’s progress on key governance and anti-corruption reforms under the IMF-supported program.
A TISL media statement says: Two years after the Aragalaya – the mass people’s uprising that demanded an end to corruption, impunity, and unaccountable governance – the country continues to grapple with the fallout of decades of mismanagement and weak governance structures. The economic crisis that followed was not merely financial; it was a collapse rooted in institutional decay and systemic failures. In 2023, Sri Lanka entered into a four-year agreement with the IMF, anchored in a reform-based recovery program.
One of the key outcomes of this agreement was the IMF’s first-ever Governance Diagnostic Assessment in Asia, which exposed entrenched weaknesses in Sri Lanka’s public finance, tax policy, procurement systems, financial oversight, and anti-corruption landscape. In response, the government committed to a reform roadmap based on the IMF’s Priority Recommendations;A Government Action Plan. This plan forms a Structural Benchmark under the second review of Sri Lanka’s Extended Fund Facility, making it an important aspect of the country’s ongoing recovery efforts.
Despite the significance of these reforms, there has been no official monitoring mechanism to assess the government’s progress. Absence of an effective monitoring mechanism and public reporting has left citizens, civil society, the development partners and other stakeholders in the dark about whether meaningful change is truly underway.
The GAP Tracker was created to fill this gap. This independent tool is designed to publicly track the government’s implementation of its reform commitments under its Action Plan. The platform is interactive, periodically updated, and accessible.
Through the GAP Tracker, users can:
• Track individual reform commitments by theme, institution, and timeline.
• Monitor progress on real-time updates and identify delays, systemic and procedural issues concerning implementation, missed deadlines, and revised commitments.
• Evaluate transparency and accountability, public access to information, the inclusiveness of policy processes and public reporting.
• Flag concerns about backsliding, superficial compliance, or reform dilution.
Some of the reform commitments have already encountered delays and concerns surrounding the closed-door approach to implementation. The tracker not only reveals what has been done and what remains pending – it also examines the depth, quality, and legitimacy of the reform process. It asks: Are these changes being made transparently? Are citizens being consulted? Are we dismantling the structures that led to the collapse, or simply repackaging them?
Sri Lanka’s crisis was never just economic. It was a product of institutional failure, political patronage and weak checks and balances. The current reform agenda, driven in part by international lenders, presents a rare opportunity to rebuild state institutions, embed accountability, and restore public trust. But without independent public oversight, that opportunity risks being wasted. Commitments on paper mean little without implementation. And implementation without transparency opens the door to token compliance, policy manipulation and absence of accountability.
The GAP Tracker puts the power of oversight into the hands of the public. It empowers civil society, journalists, and everyday citizens to follow the reform and follow the truth – because meaningful change can only happen when power is held to account, the TISL statement said.
Latest News
70,297 persons still in safety centers
The Situation Report issued by the Disaster Management Center at 06:00AM on 16th December 2025 shows that 70,297 persons belonging to 22,338 house holds are still being housed at 731 safety centers established by the government.
The number of deaths due to the recent disastrous weather stands at 643 while 183 persons are missing.

News
MEPA to crack down on marine polluters
… Warns would-be polluters of criminal prosecution, hefty fines and even blacklisting
The Marine Environment Protection Authority (MEPA) has warned that ship owners, operators and local entities responsible for marine pollution will face criminal prosecution, heavy financial penalties and possible blacklisting, MEPA Chairman Samantha Gunasekera said yesterday.
Gunasekera told The Island that Sri Lanka would no longer tolerate negligence and regulatory breaches that threaten the country’s marine ecosystems, coastal livelihoods and national economy.
“Any party that pollutes our seas—whether foreign vessels or local operators—should be prepared to face the full force of the law,” Gunasekera said. “There will be no room for excuses, delays or backdoor negotiations when marine pollution is involved.”
He said MEPA has intensified surveillance of major shipping routes, ports and environmentally sensitive zones amid rising maritime traffic through Sri Lankan waters, which remain among the busiest in the Indian Ocean.
by Ifham Nizam
News
SC delegation, headed by CJ Surasena, observes Indian Supreme Court in action
A 10-member delegation from Sri Lanka’s Supreme Court, headed by Chief Justice P. Padman Surasena, departed to New Delhi on the 11th of December, 2025, for an official visit to the Supreme Court of India as part of the ongoing official visit by the delegation to India.
The group was accorded a ceremonial welcome in the Court’s main hall, led by the Chief Justice of India (CJI) Surya Kant. CJI Kant told the assembled Judges that “the Indian judiciary was honoured to host” their Sri Lankan counterparts, expressing hope that the visit would be “meaningful and very constructive” and underscoring the “close emotional bonds” between the two countries.
The focal point of the programme was a special sitting of the Supreme Court. Chief Justice Surasena joined CJI Kant and Justice Joymalya Bagchi on the bench, presiding over the Court as a guest Justice. He was accompanied by nine other Supreme Court justices from Sri Lanka, who took seats in the well of CJI Kant’s courtroom to observe the day’s proceedings.
Supreme Court Bar Association President Vikas Singh formally greeted the delegation and praised Justice Surasena’s reformist efforts. Singh recalled the Sri Lankan Chief Justice’s own maxim, “If you want something you have never had, then you have got to do something you have never done”, highlighting the bold changes Surasena had introduced to modernise Sri Lanka’s Court system. Singh noted that these initiatives, particularly court digitization, were aimed at eradicating “the persisting problems of law delays” and streamlining case backlogs.
The Sri Lankan Judges spent the morning observing live Supreme Court proceedings in CJI Kant’s courtroom. This first-hand exposure to Indian court operations formed a key part of the programme’s judicial engagement. During the hour-long session, the visiting justices witnessed a range of cases on the Supreme Court’s roster, with Justice Surasena and the delegation following arguments from the front. The experience was designed to be immersive and following the hearing the Sri Lankan Judges were briefed on India’s own initiatives towards a digitalised court system, e-filing and case management systems.
The official programme then shifted to capacity-building and information exchange. In the early afternoon, Indian Supreme Court officials gave the Sri Lankan delegation detailed briefings on India’s technological initiatives. Court registrars demonstrated the e-filing system and other e-initiatives implemented by the Supreme Court of India. Additional presentations outlined the Court’s new case management systems and administrative reforms. These sessions highlighted how digital tools and better case-listing procedures have been used in India to increase efficiency. The Sri Lankan judges asked questions about India’s experience with electronic court records and the integration of technology in daily judicial work, reflecting their own interest in similar reforms back home.
The visit underscored the growing collaboration between the Indian and Sri Lankan judiciaries. Throughout the proceedings, both sides emphasised their shared legal traditions and mutual respect. As Chief Justice Surasena noted during the sitting, India is Sri Lanka’s “closest neighbour,” and historic links, even dating back to ancient epics, form the backdrop for today’s judicial dialogue. CJI Kant remarked that having the chief justices of two vibrant democracies together on the bench was a “significant moment” for the rule of law.
The Sri Lankan delegation continued its programme in Delhi on 12 December with a visit to the Delhi High Court and its International Arbitration and Mediation Centres. The exchange visit is expected to deepen judicial cooperation and provide practical insights for both courts. Officials on both sides say the engagement aimed at sharing best practices in court administration, reinforce legal ties and support ongoing reforms aimed at reducing case backlogs and delays.
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