News
Myanmar white rice controversy: House probe on, Trade Ministry claims agreement rescinded
By Shamindra Ferdinando
Chairman of the Committee of Public Finance (COPF) Anura Priyadarshana Yapa, MP yesterday (27) said that for want of proper Finance Ministry supervision, cash-strapped Sri Lanka suffered staggering losses in both local and foreign transactions. Rebel SLPP MP Yapa said that an agreement with Myanmar for the importation of rice this year to meet the shortfall in the supply attracted their attention as Sri Lanka was reported to have paid USD 450 per metric tonne of rice without even bothering to check the quality whereas other countries bought the same variety for USD 350 per tonne. If not for the Myanmar media revelation the matter might have escaped their attention, the former SLFP Minister said.
Lawmaker Yapa said that the issue at hand should be examined against the backdrop of the deepening forex crisis. Responding to another query, lawmaker Yapa said that COPF recently raised the issue with the Finance Ministry. Unfortunately, the Finance Ministry representative, who had appeared at the COPF meeting, responded that the Trade Ministry handled the transaction though they provided the required funds. Lawmaker Yapa said that COPF expected the Finance Ministry to inquire into this matter without delay.
The then Trade Minister Bandula Gunawardena in early Feb this year announced plans to import 100,00 metric tons of white rice through Sri Lanka State Trading (General) Corporation. Lawmaker Yapa said that the Trade Ministry would have to be summoned before the COPF to inquire into the Myanmar deal. However, the Trade Ministry claimed that though the government entered into an agreement with Myanmar for the import of 100,000 metric tonnes of rice, it was rescinded. The ministry official said that they, too, inquired into Myanmar media reports regarding Sri Lanka paying USD 100 more than for a tonne of white rice. According to him, the trade ministry had sought an explanation from the Myanmar diplomatic mission here as regards the discrepancy in prices offered to Sri Lanka and other countries. Asked to explain how the country bridged the shortfall in the local supply of rice, the ministry official said that rice stocks were only imported from India. The official acknowledged that the Finance Ministry might have been unaware of the cancellation of the agreement with Myanmar.
COPF Chairman Yapa emphasized that the country was in such a desperate situation whoever wielded political power now as well as those in authority years before should be held accountable. Responding to another query, lawmaker Yapa said that proceedings of parliamentary watchdog committees showed a bleak picture. Waste, corruption, mismanagement and irregularities seemed to be the order of the day, lawmaker Yapa said, calling for remedial measures without further delay.
The former minister said that the current political crisis could make matters worse. The MP pointed out how the forex issue quickly developed into an unprecedented political crisis now threatening the country. Meanwhile, Secretary to the Trade Ministry Badrani Jayawardena has been replaced by Neil Bandara Hapuwinna. President Gotabaya Rajapaksa has made the new appointment in the wake of Shehan Semasinghe succeeding the trade minister Bandula Gunawardena. Bandula Gunawardena’s tenure as the trade minister was marred by the exposure of the garlic racket.
News
CEB seeking tariff hike while making huge profits, says opposition trade union leader
Convenor of the Samagi Joint Trade Union Alliance affiliated with the Samagi Jana Balawegaya, Ananda Palitha, yesterday (16) said that the Ceylon Electricity Board was seeking to raise electricity tariffs by 13.56% percent although it had earned a profit of more than Rs 22,000 mn.
The CEB recently submitted its proposal to the Public Utilities Commission of Sri Lanka (PUCSL) for an electricity tariff revision for the second quarter of this year – the period effective from April 1 to June 30.
Palitha alleged that the PUCSL, in spite of knowing the massive profit earned by the CEB, at the expense of the hapless public, had chosen to allow the state enterprise to propose an additional burden.
The economic, technical and safety regulator of the electricity industry, and the designated regulator for petroleum and water services industries, should exercise its powers in terms of the PUCSL Act No. 35 of 2002 and the Sri Lanka Electricity Act No. 20 of 2009 to provide relief, the veteran trade unionist said.
Palitha emphasised that the PUCSL had the right to intervene on behalf of electricity consumers but, unfortunately, chose to facilitate the CEB’s despicable strategy. “The proposal to increase tariffs by 13.56% was meant to divert attention. The real issue at hand is the percentage of electricity tariff reduction,” Palitha said. The former UNPer found fault with the Opposition for failing to expose the CEB.
Taking into consideration the Rs 22,000 millionplus profit, the PUCSL could order the CEB to grant relief to consumers, Palitha said, adding that the CEB and PUCSL, together, deprived electricity consumers tariff reduction in the first quarter of this year, too.
In January this year, the CEB asked for a 11.59% tariff increase though it was enjoying Rs 22,000 mn profit at that time, the trade unionist said.
Palitha said that as the PUCSL received all data available to the CEB it was fully aware of the finances of the state enterprise.
In January, 2025, regardless of the NPP government floating the idea regarding as much as a 37% tariff increase, the PUCSL granted a 20% tariff reduction (25% of Rs 22,000 mn profit), Palitha said.
According to him, as a result of relief granted to the consumers, the profits had been reduced to Rs 16,000 mn but by June 2025 profits had increased to Rs 18,000 mn and there was a need to grant tariff reduction. But, the NPP, having always lashed out at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in the run up to the presidential election, held in September 2024, started playing a different tune.
Responding to The Island queries, Palitha said that contrary to claims that the CEB proposed a 13.56% tariff increase to cover up losses caused by the importation of low-quality coal for the Norochcholai Lakvijaya coal-fired power plant, the current strategy seemed to have been adopted at the behest of the IMF.
Instead of granting tariff reduction for the third quarter in 2025, the PUCSL ordered an 18% increase, Palitha said. The trade unionist claimed that the Finance Ministry, at the behest of the IMF, directed both the CEB and the PUCSL to increase electricity tariffs by 20% in violation of the relevant Acts, he said.
Then in Oct, 2025, the CEB proposed a 6.8 % tariff increase at a time its profits were around Rs 22,000 mn. The CEB and PUCSL staged a drama over that proposal and finally, on the false pretext of the CEB’s failure to furnish its proposal on time, the revision was dropped, Palitha said. The SJB activist pointed out that the Opposition failed to highlight that consumers had been deprived of downward revision in spite of massive profits earned by the Board. “In fact, when Energy Minister Kumara Jayakody met trade unions, he very clearly declared that they were considering electricity power reduction, perhaps by 10%, 12% or 15%. But in the end nothing happened.”
Now the same drama is being enacted by the government, the CEB and the PUCSL, Palitha said.
By Shamindra Ferdinando
News
BASL protest march
Members of the BASL yesterday (16) staged a protest march over the murder of a lawyer and his wife in Akuregoda, Thalangama, last week. The BASL staged a protest march from the Supreme Court Complex to the BASL Head Office.
News
IMF MD here
Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) Kristalina Georgieva arrived in Colombo yesterday (16) for top level discussions with the government. She is scheduled to leave tomorrow (18) after meeting government authorities and key stakeholders, observing firsthand the impact of Cyclone Ditwah, and discussing ways in which the IMF could support recovery efforts and contribute to building a more resilient future for all Sri Lankans, sources said.
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