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Expert tells govt. to ditch vanity projects and look into teachers’ welfare

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There were enough vanity projects that could be scrapped to provide for teachers’ allowances, teacher-accommodation close to school, and other welfare measures Dr. Sujata N. Gamage, Senior Research Fellow, LIRNEasia and Co-Coordinator, Education Forum Sri Lanka told The Island yesterday.

“A contented teacher cadre will facilitate high quality education. Such an education suited for the 21st Century will propel Sri Lanka from a low-income country to one with high-income. The return on investment in teachers and education grows exponentially,” she said.

The government should acknowledge mistakes and invite teachers to go back to work, whilst speeding up vaccinations to facilitate school re-opening when the pandemic wanes, to ease the current deadlock between them and teachers, she said.

The expert suggested that the Treasury should work out an interim-allowance for all teachers as compensation for using their own resources since schools closed and the government should give a realistic road-map on how teachers’ grievances would be addressed.

“These should be done with honesty and sincerity. The Teacher-Principal promotional scheme that the Ministry of Education is supposedly developing should be finalised soon. The new scheme should include greater accountability and responsibility by teachers. The centre of gravity should move to schools and teachers, not bureaucrats. Those ideas should be discussed with teacher unions before finalising,” Dr. Gamage said.

She said that for about two decades, on average, all teachers had been paid a basic or starting salary of less than Rs 35,000 per month. The education sector, on which future generations and socio-economic advancement of the country rested, depended almost exclusively on the contentment of 241,000 teachers.

Dr. Gamage said that a fruitful teacher-student interaction was the answer to educational advancement at least in part.

She said that an ad-hoc salary increases for teachers might lead to similar demands by other sectors and the government should appoint a team of officials who were knowledgeable on the topic, to create comparable salary structures for all similar professionals.

“This Team should give their recommendations in 6-8 weeks. This can easily be done since there are many experienced personnel available and willing to do it. Meanwhile teachers should have been given a respectable interim allowance a few months ago, for the yeoman service they have done in delivering various forms of distance education using their own resources, since schools closed 16 months ago,” she said.

“Give teachers due recognition, and empower and equip them to become knowledge-creators & change-makers in this 21st Century. Government should deal with their issues with integrity and transparency. Predict and address teacher-issues before they surface. Appoint a non-political, non-bureaucratic Ombudsman to advise them appropriately. Salary anomaly rectification is just one major issue out of many, which need answers fast,” Dr. Gamage added.



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Showers will occur at times in the Western, Sabaragamuwa, Central, North-western and Northern provinces and in Anuradhapura, Galle and Matara districts

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WEATHER FORECAST FOR 16 MAY 2026
Issued at 05.30 a.m. on 16 May 2026 by the Department of Meteorology

According to the today’s latest weather analysis, the low-pressure area located northeast of  Sri Lanka, still persists. The Department of Meteorology is continuously monitoring the behavior, development and path of the system.

Due to the influence of the above system, Showers or thundershowers will occur at times and cloudy skies are expected in the Western, Sabaragamuwa, Central, North-western and Northern provinces and in Anuradhapura, Galle and Matara districts. Fairly heavy showers about 75 mm are likely at some places in these areas. Showers or thundershowers may occur at a few places in the Uva and Eastern provinces after 1.00 pm.

The general public is kindly requested to take adequate precautions to minimize damage caused by temporary localized strong winds and lightning during thundershowers.

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Lanka’s eligibility to draw next IMF tranche of USD 700 mn hinges on ‘restoration of cost-recovery pricing for electricity and fuel’

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The International Monetary Fund (IMF) said on Thursday that the completion of Sri Lanka’s combined Fifth and Sixth Reviews, under the Extended Fund Facility (EFF), remains subject to approval by its Executive Board, which is expected to meet in the coming weeks.

Addressing a media briefing, IMF Communications Department Director, Julie Kozack, said IMF staff and Sri Lankan authorities had reached a staff-level agreement on 09 April.

She noted that several prior actions must be completed before the programme can be submitted to the Executive Board, including the restoration of cost-recovery pricing for electricity and fuel, measures to protect vulnerable groups, and the completion of financing assurances.

Upon Board approval, Sri Lanka would gain access to approximately US$700 million in financing, Kozack said.

Responding to a question on whether the government’s fuel subsidy scheme — including the Rs. 100 per litre diesel subsidy — was consistent with the IMF’s pricing framework, Kozack declined to comment directly on the measure. However, she reiterated that the programme requires both cost-recovery pricing reforms and safeguards for vulnerable communities.

Kozack also observed that Sri Lanka had recently faced “two very large shocks”, referring to Cyclone Ditwah and the wider external impact of the Middle East conflict, which, she said, had affected both the economy and the public.

Despite these challenges, she said Sri Lanka’s reform programme was yielding positive results, citing strong fiscal performance in 2025, progress in debt restructuring, 5 percent economic growth, and inflation returning to positive territory following a period of deflation.

She reaffirmed the IMF’s commitment to supporting Sri Lanka’s reform agenda, stressing that the institution continues to work closely with the authorities to sustain economic stability and recovery.

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Sanath Nishantha’s brother sentenced to jail over assault case

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Former Arachchikattuwa Pradeshiya Sabha Chairman, Jagath Samantha, was yesterday sentenced to five-and-a-half years’ rigorous imprisonment by the Chilaw High Court after being found guilty of assaulting the Arachchikattuwa Divisional Secretary.

The court also ordered Samantha to pay Rs. 1 million as compensation to the victim, failing which he will serve an additional 24 months in prison.

The case had originally been filed against former State Minister Sanath Nishantha and his brother Jagath Samantha over the assault incident.

However, following the death of Sanath Nishantha, in a road accident on the Katunayake Expressway, on 25 January, 2024, only Samantha appeared before court for the proceedings.

The verdict was delivered after the High Court considered the evidence and submissions presented during the trial.

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