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Mrs. A.M.S. Malkanthi, appointed Director General of the Department of Treasury Operations
The Cabinet of Ministers approved the resolution furnished by the President in his capacity as the Minister of Finance, Planning and Economic Development to appoint Mrs. A.M.S. Malkanthi, a special grade officer in Sri Lanka Accountants’ Service currently serving in a post of Additional Director General at the Department of Public Finance to the post of Director General of the Department of Treasury Operations with immediate effect.
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Sameer Rizvi arrives in the IPL to guide Delhi Capitals home in low-scoring chase
An unbeaten 70 from Sameer Rizvi proved decisive in a low-scoring contest in Lucknow, where Delhi Capitals (DC) became the first away team to win a match in IPL 2026. Coming in as Impact Player, Rizvi joined forces with Tristan Stubbs to haul DC out of trouble, after Lucknow Super Giants (LSG) had reduced them to 26 for 4 in a chase of 142.
That target proved far too small in the end, but for a while, it looked imposing as LSG’s fast bowlers swung the ball for an unusually extended length of time for a T20 contest. A red-soil surface, which seemed to quicken up in the second innings, offered seam movement too. Mohammed Shami, Prince Yadav and Mohsin Khan kept tying DC’s batters in knots.
But the seamers couldn’t keep bowling forever, and the introduction of spin turned the match decisively. LSG bowled only 2.1 overs of spin, but they went for 35 runs, with Rizvi hitting four fours and two sixes in them. That included the winning hit off the first ball of the 18th over.
DC’s other heroes on the night were their bowlers, who kept LSG to a sub-par total on a surface that played differently in the two halves of the match. If it was quick and skiddy during the second innings, it was two-paced and grippy in the first. DC’s bowlers made excellent, collective use of it. The highlight of their performance was a dipping slower ball from Lungi Ngidi,, which comprehensively bowled the dangerous Nicholas Pooran: that moment alone may have been shaved 20 or 30 runs off the target DC eventually chased.
Mitchell Marsh and Aiden Markram were one of the best opening partnerships of IPL 2025, but LSG decided to mix things up to start the new season, with their captain Rishabh Pant walking out alongside Marsh.
Their association was short-lived, with a deflection off Mukesh Kumar’s hand turning what could have been the caught-and-bowled dismissal of Marsh into the run-out dismissal of Pant at the non-striker’s end in the third over.
That moment came in the middle of a skillful display from Mukesh, who moved the ball around, tied Marsh down by denying him width or anything short, and conceded just 17 runs in three powerplay overs.
Axar Patel came on right after Pant’s dismissal and bowled two powerplay overs himself; this surely wouldn’t have happened if LSG had sent in Pooran to replace the left-handed Pant. Instead, they sent in Markram, and Axar bowled him in his second over, beating an attempted cut with his skid and angle.
LSG lost a third wicket soon after the powerplay, with Ayush Badoni – who walked in ahead of Pooran at No. 4 – nicking off to T Natarajan. LSG were 49 for 3.
After Ngidi sneaked his slower ball through Pooran, Marsh continued to struggle for fluency. He got into the 30s with a slog-swept six off Kuldeep Yadav in the 10th over, but he was beaten in flight while attempting another big hit later in the over, and holed out for 35 off 28.
From there, LSG’s innings was a slow slide to an early finish, with the constant loss of wickets forcing them into a tactical compromise. Shahbaz Ahmed, the left-arm-spin-bowling allrounder, walked in as their Impact Player, and put on the longest partnership of the innings – 26 balls, producing 33 runs – with top-scorer Abdul Samad. While it helped extend the LSG innings, it meant there would be no role in the match for mystery spinner Digvesh Rathi.
LSG were bowled out with eight balls unused, with Ngidi finishing the innings with back-to-back slower-ball wickets in the 19th over.
One of the biggest factors behind LSG’s disappointing 2025 season was a spate of injuries to their fast bowlers. This time around, they began with all their quicks fit, and their resources stretched far enough for them to leave out Mayank Yadav.
The three Indian fast bowlers who played ahead of him all got the new ball to move prodigiously. Shami sent back KL Rahul first ball, caught at deep backward point off a wide outswinger, Mohsin produced seam movement and bounce to have Nitish Rana jabbing to slip, and Prince ripped out Pathum Nissanka and Axar Patel off back-to-back legal deliveries.
Those two wicket balls came in an over that also included three wides, and that was another measure of how much the ball was swinging, in its fifth over. It continued to swing right through the first 10 overs of DC’s chase.
The bowling and conditions put Rizvi – preferred as Impact Player over Karun Nair and Ashutosh Sharma – through the wringer initially. He took 10 balls to get off strike, and was on 5 off 13 when he played his first stroke of any confidence, a ramped six off an Anrich Nortje bouncer.
The smallness of DC’s target allowed Rizvi and Stubbs to just keep batting without needing to take risks. And they knew LSG would have to bowl spin at some point – and that they didn’t have their first-choice spinner, Rathi.
Shahbaz came on in the 10th over, and Rizvi took full control, helped by some poor bowling. Shahbaz strayed down the leg side twice and bowled one long-hop, and Rizvi hit all three balls for four. With 16 coming off that over, DC only needed 65 off the last 10.
Runs continued to come slowly off the fast bowlers – Mohsin, at one stage, had figures of 3-1-6-1 – but DC knew there would be more overs of spin to come. With 49 needed off the last seven overs, LSG brought on Markram, and again Rizvi took charge, launching him for a six down the ground before back-cutting him for four.
With only one possible way back into the game, LSG’s quicks became desperate for wickets. In response, Rizvi and Stubbs put away a series of short balls from Mohsin and Nortje in the 16th and 17th overs to all but seal the game. When Samad came on to bowl the 18th, DC only needed three runs.
Brief scores:
Delhi Capitals 145 for 4 in 17.1 overs (Nitish Rana 15, Sameer Rizvi 70*, Tristan Stubbs 39*; Mohammed Shami 1-28, Prince Yadav 2-20, Mohsin Khan 1-19) beat Lucknow Super Giants 141 in 18.4 overs (Abdul Samad 36, Mitchell Marsh 35, Aiden Markram 11, Mukul Choudhary 14, Shabnaz Ahmed 15*; Lungi Ngidi 3-27, Axar Patel 1-17, Thangarasu Natarajan 3-29, Kuldeep Yadav 2-31) by six wickets
[Cricinfo]
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Trump to give primetime address on Iran war as questions swirl over his next move
Across the world on Wednesday night, millions of people will tune in to watch Donald Trump deliver a primetime update on the war in Iran. Many will hope for some insight on how the war ends and what might come after.
The Trump administration has signalled there may be no big announcement, but many are wondering if his hastily arranged remarks will mark the beginning of the end of the conflict or a potentially bloody escalation.
This ambiguity is, at least partly, by design. Trump often changes course or leaves his thinking a mystery to all but a small inner circle of supporters, which he has acknowledged leaves friend and foe alike wondering about his next move.
He also knows the address comes at a critical time in his presidency and amid mounting domestic pressure to find a way out of the conflict.
Poll after poll has shown that Americans have little appetite for a protracted conflict in Iran, particularly if it involves the prospect of US soldiers on Iranian soil.
A Reuters poll released this week, for example, found that two-thirds of Americans believe the US should work to swiftly wrap up its involvement in the war, even if the administration’s stated military objectives are not fully accomplished.
Closer to home, many Americans are increasingly wary of higher prices at the petrol pump, which this week crossed the average of $4 a gallon for the first time in years.
Imran Bayoumi, a geostrategy expert with the Atlantic Council in Washington DC and former policy adviser to the defence department, told the BBC that the “deep domestic unpopularity” of the war, along with the economic fall-out, “both pose a problem ahead of midterm elections” if the conflict were to drag on.
The US president will also likely present his view on how the conflict – or at least US involvement in it – will come to a close.
This has shifted repeatedly, from initial calls for an “unconditional” Iranian surrender to a potential negotiated agreement. Just yesterday, he abruptly shifted course, saying that the war could end in “two to three” weeks, even without any deal.
Until then, Trump promised, the US will be “blasting Iran into oblivion, or as they say, back to the Stone Ages”.
According to a White House official, the speech will mostly focus on military successes of the operation, such as degrading Iran’s navy, missile capabilities and nuclear programme.
Trump is expected to reiterate that he believes the operation will be over in two or three weeks.
It is unclear, however, what any US exit from the conflict will look like.
According to Bayoumi, what constitutes victory for Trump is “loosely defined”, which provides the president with some flexibility.
“Not having clearly defined goals going into the conflict allows Trump to declare victory at any time,” he said. “[He] has mentioned that he’s halted the nuclear threat from Iran, but it’s not clear he actually has.”
While on a tactical level the US-Israeli operation has been successful in severely degrading Iran’s military, Trump’s assertion that the war is winding down soon leaves a very narrow window for more complex military options, such as seizing control of Iran’s highly enriched uranium or opening the Strait.
On the latter point, we are likely to hear the president dismiss the Nato alliance as one that he believes has proven itself unwilling to help advance US interests.
What he says tonight will be carefully scrutinised by US allies and adversaries, some of whom will wonder whether it constitutes a ruse.
In Tehran, the country’s remaining leadership will remember that Trump had publicly endorsed negotiations he said were ongoing and positive nearly until the moment US bombers struck Iranian nuclear facilities during Operation Midnight Hammer.
(BBC)
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Heat Index at Caution Level in the Western, Sabaragamuwa, Southern, Eastern, North-western, Northern and North-central provinces and in Monaragala district
Warm Weather Advisory
Issued by the Natural Hazards Early Warning Centre
Issued at 3.30 p.m. on 01 April 2026, valid for 02 April 2026.
The Heat index, the temperature felt on human body is likely to increase up to ‘Caution level’ at some places in the Western, Sabaragamuwa, Southern, Eastern, North-western, Northern and North-central provinces and in Monaragala district.
The Heat Index Forecast is calculated by using relative humidity and maximum temperature and this is the condition that is felt on your body. This is not the forecast of maximum temperature. It is generated by the Department of Meteorology for the next day period and prepared by using global numerical weather prediction model data.

Effect of the heat index on human body is mentioned in the above table and it is prepared on the advice of the Ministry of Health and Indigenous Medical Services.
ACTION REQUIRED
Job sites: Stay hydrated and takes breaks in the shade as often as possible.
Indoors: Check up on the elderly and the sick.
Vehicles: Never leave children unattended.
Outdoors: Limit strenuous outdoor activities, find shade and stay hydrated.
Dress: Wear lightweight and white or light-colored clothing.
Note:
In addition, please refer to advisories issued by the Disaster Preparedness & Response Division, Ministry of Health in this regard as well. For further clarifications please contact 011-7446491.
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