Business
Jetwing and MMBL Pathfinder in a Premier Houseboat Joint venture
Cruising the placid waters of the Bentara River, Yathra Houseboat by Jetwing is a pioneering hospitality venture by one of the country’s best known hospitality brands – Jetwing Hotels and MMBL-Pathfinder which teamed with Jetwing on a Jaffna star-class hotel.
Inspired by the Kettuvallam, the wooden-hulled, thatched houseboats ferrying tourists along the rivers of Kerala, Yathra shares its concept with “padda” boats used in olden Sri Lanka to transport goods along the country’s river system, a news released on the joint venture said.
“Designed by renowned environmental architect Sunela Jayewardene and building on Jetwing’s commitment to eco-luxury, the Houseboat provides elegant accommodation and modern amenities in its two cabins, replete with a rustic teak, bamboo and timber ambiance and en-suite bathrooms complete with a rain shower and bathtub,” the release said.
“Aboard Yathra Houseboat by Jetwing, you will find spacious air-conditioned living quarters and an open-air lounge, which invites you to let your hair down and watch the serene, tranquil environment of the Bentara River and its stunning aquatic birdlife. The deck, comfortably seats six to eight guests, also serves as your picturesque dining space to enjoy a starlit dinner, with meals prepared using the finest ingredients including freshly caught prawns and crabs, or afternoon tea under a glorious sunset.
“Adding to the appeal of the Houseboat, it is located just three kilometres away from the beaches of the Bentota Tourist Resort, while Lunuganga – Geoffrey Bawa’s iconic riverside home – is just around the corner. Once the planned relocation of Yathra Housboat to Horawala is realized, tours will take nature lovers all the way up to Avittewa and beyond, a journey that covers approximately 18 km from Bentota,” it added.
The release said that despite the setbacks brought on by the global pandemic, Jetwing and MMBL-Pathfinder remain optimistic about the future of tourism in the island and the enchanting allure of this riverine hospitality experience, which is currently popular with domestic travellers, particularly honeymooners.
With the easing of travel restrictions and the pick-up of global travel, the associates aboard this unique home of true Sri Lankan hospitality look forward to welcoming travellers from across the world to the serene backwaters of the Bentara River, the JV partners said.
“Family owned and in the tourism industry for the past 48 years, Jetwing Hotels has surpassed expectation at every aspect. Building on their foundation of being passionate, as well as the experience of true, traditional Sri Lankan hospitality, constantly pioneering discoveries captures the essence of the brand. Such a strong statement and direction have enabled Jetwing Hotels to imagine, create and manage marvels and masterpieces, where distinctive design and elegant comfort complement each other and the environment,” the release said.
“In line with the Jetwing Hotels Sustainable Strategy, across all properties sustainable and responsible practices are given precedence with resource efficiency, community upliftment and education, and awareness being some of our key focus areas.”
MMBL-Pathfinder is a privately held investment group with an investment portfolio that spans a broad range of sectors. It has a wide international network, which facilitates forming strategic alliances with global brands and leading local companies, the release said.
Business
Plant-based tourism could be Sri Lanka’s overlooked growth opportunity: Andrea Diaz
As Sri Lanka searches for new sources of foreign exchange and sustainable economic reform, an unexpected opportunity may lie in something as simple as the food on its plate. According to Andrea Diaz, Executive Director of Dharma Voices for Animals (DVA), Sri Lanka could strengthen tourism revenue, improve public health and advance environmental resilience by positioning itself as a vegetarian- and vegan-friendly destination rooted in its Buddhist heritage.
“Compassion is not only a moral value,” Diaz says. “It can also be an economic strategy.”
Sri Lanka occupies a unique place in the global Buddhist world, having preserved the Theravada tradition for more than two millennia. Diaz believes this heritage gives the island a distinctive moral authority to demonstrate how Buddhist principles such as non-harming and compassion can shape modern policy and everyday life. Dharma Voices for Animals promotes plant-based food systems that protect animals, safeguard the environment and support human health. In Sri Lanka, the organisation frames its work as an effort to reconnect contemporary lifestyles with longstanding cultural values.
Historically, many Sri Lankan communities relied heavily on plant-based diets before colonial influences altered food systems. Even today, much of the island’s traditional cuisine – dhal curry, mallung, jackfruit dishes and coconut-based preparations – remains naturally vegetarian or easily adaptable. Diaz argues that this culinary foundation gives Sri Lanka an advantage that many countries struggle to build.
Rather than reinventing its food culture, she says, Sri Lanka could highlight its existing culinary traditions and present them to the world as part of a compassionate and sustainable national identity.
DVA’s work on the ground focuses on translating these ideas into practical change. A network of volunteer regional coordinators conducts educational programmes at temples, Sunday schools, community centres, women’s groups, medical clinics and even army facilities, encouraging people to reflect on how daily food choices align with Buddhist ethics. According to Diaz, the organisation’s outreach in 2025 alone reached more than 146,000 individuals through lectures, discussions and community events.
Education is paired with practical tools aimed at making plant-based eating accessible. The organisation has published Sri Lanka’s first vegan cookbook using locally available ingredients, while cooking classes broadcast on cable television and community cooking competitions demonstrate that plant-based meals can be affordable, nutritious and culturally familiar.
By highlighting that many rice-and-curry combinations already meet nutritional needs, advocates hope to dispel the perception that dietary change requires dramatic lifestyle adjustments.
The economic implications extend beyond cuisine. Diaz notes that global tourism trends are shifting toward values-driven travel. Visitors from Europe, North America and Australia increasingly seek destinations where vegetarian and vegan food is readily available and clearly labelled. Countries that accommodate this demand often benefit from longer stays and strong word-of-mouth promotion among conscious travel communities.
Sri Lanka, she suggests, could tap into this market with relatively modest policy steps – clearer menu labelling, plant-based certifications for hotels and targeted marketing highlighting the island’s naturally vegetarian culinary traditions.
Positioning Sri Lanka as a compassionate culinary destination could also strengthen its broader tourism brand. Modern travellers increasingly consider sustainability, ethics and wellness when choosing destinations. A national identity linking Buddhist values with environmentally responsible food culture could help differentiate Sri Lanka from competing tropical tourism destinations while supporting farmers who produce rice, lentils, vegetables, spices and coconuts.
Beyond tourism, Diaz believes dietary shifts could contribute to climate resilience and food security. Animal agriculture requires significant land, water and grain while producing comparatively high greenhouse gas emissions. Redirecting more crops directly to human consumption improves efficiency and allows more people to be fed from the same land base.
For a country already rich in plant-based staples, strengthening these agricultural systems could reduce reliance on imported animal feed while supporting smallholder farmers and protecting natural resources.
Public health represents another potential benefit. Many of the world’s most costly diseases including cardiovascular disease, diabetes and hypertension are strongly linked to diet. Diets rich in legumes, vegetables, fruits and whole grains are associated with lower rates of these conditions. Encouraging plant-forward diets, Diaz argues, could help governments reduce long-term healthcare costs while improving workforce productivity.
Dietary change, she emphasises, does not require universal adoption to produce meaningful social impact. Research on social movements suggests that when roughly 3.5 percent of a population actively supports a cause, broader cultural and political change can begin. In Sri Lanka’s case, that would mean about 800,000 people visibly committing to compassionate food choices and discussing the values behind them.
Yet while discussions about compassion and sustainability are gaining attention, Sri Lanka’s legal framework for animal protection remains outdated. The country still operates under a law dating back to 1907, a colonial-era statute widely viewed as inadequate for modern welfare standards. A proposed Animal Welfare Bill – developed through years of consultation and legal drafting – has twice received Cabinet approval but has never been presented to Parliament.
If enacted, the legislation would replace the colonial-era statute with modern welfare standards, establishing clearer definitions of cruelty and neglect, stronger penalties and improved investigative powers. It would also formalise internationally recognised welfare principles such as adequate food, shelter, medical care and humane handling of animals.
Advocates also emphasise that the growth of plant-based industries need not threaten farmers currently involved in livestock production. Instead, they see opportunities for gradual diversification. With appropriate training and policy support, farmers could transition toward crops central to plant-based diets or participate in value-added food production, strengthening rural livelihoods while reducing environmental strain.
For Sri Lanka, the broader message is that compassion, sustainability and economic development need not be competing priorities. A food system that emphasises plant-based traditions already embedded in local culture could simultaneously strengthen tourism, improve public health, enhance climate resilience and support rural agriculture.
Seen through that lens, the humble rice-and-curry meal may represent more than a culinary tradition. In a world searching for more sustainable ways to live and travel, Sri Lanka’s oldest food traditions may yet become one of its most modern economic opportunities.
by Sanath Nanayakkare
Business
City of Dreams partners with FitsAir for direct Ahmedabad-Colombo flights
City of Dreams Sri Lanka has partnered with FitsAir and Cinnamon Hotels & Resorts to launch direct scheduled passenger flights connecting Ahmedabad and Colombo, enhancing connectivity for Indian travellers to South Asia’s first integrated resort.
Sri Lanka’s first private international airline, FitsAir, will operate the service three times weekly from May 15, catering to Gujarat’s growing outbound travel market. The route positions Colombo as an attractive luxury getaway for Indian travellers while strengthening ties between the regions.
Guests can stay at Cinnamon Life at City of Dreams or explore other Cinnamon properties in Colombo, with curated holiday packages combining the resort experience with multi-destination itineraries across the island, including cultural experiences in Kandy and beach stays.
Kamal Munasinghe, Senior Vice President at Cinnamon Hotels & Resorts, noted India remains one of their most important markets, with Gujarat showing strong interest in Colombo as a leisure destination.
FitsAir Director Ammar Kassim added that the overnight departure from Colombo arrives early morning in Ahmedabad, giving travellers a full day ahead and opening smooth onward connections through Colombo across their growing international network.
Packages start from INR 55,555, including return airfare, two nights’ accommodation with breakfast at Cinnamon Life, and private airport transfers.
Business
Browns EV launches fast-charging BAW E7 Pro at Rs. 5.8 million
Browns EV officially launched the fast-charging BAW E7 Pro electric vehicle to the Sri Lankan market recently at the Monarch Imperial, strengthening its affordable EV portfolio.
Priced at Rs. 5.8 million, the E7 Pro offers a driving range of up to 260 kilometres on a single charge, powered by a 22.29 kWh lithium iron phosphate (LFP) battery known for durability and safety. Its fast-charging capability enables charging from 30 percent to 80 percent in approximately 35 minutes.
Executive Director Vijitha Bandara announced that Browns EV has sold over 1,500 BAW E7 vehicles to date. The company plans to establish 100 charging stations islandwide in partnership with TELD by June 2026, alongside offering a 10-year battery warranty and 3-year vehicle warranty.
Manufactured by Beijing Automobile Works Co. Ltd. (BAW), one of China’s oldest automakers established in 1951, the E7 Pro arrives as Sri Lanka accelerates its transition toward sustainable transportation, backed by the 150-year legacy of the Browns Group.
-
News7 days agoRepatriation of Iranian naval personnel Sri Lanka’s call: Washington
-
News6 days agoProf. Dunusinghe warns Lanka at serious risk due to ME war
-
News4 days agoHistoric address by BASL President at the Supreme Court of India
-
Sports5 days agoRoyal start favourites in historic Battle of the Blues
-
Sports4 days agoThe 147th Royal–Thomian and 175 Years of the School by the Sea
-
Business5 days agoBOI launches ‘Invest in Sri Lanka’ forum
-
News5 days agoCEBEU warns of operational disruptions amid uncertainty over CEB restructuring
-
Features7 days agoPay attention or pay the price: Sri Lanka’s maritime imperative in a fractured ocean

