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Over 200 endangered tortoises labelled as ‘seafood’ seized

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Live tortoises, stuffed inside cloth sacks and packed in six boxes labelled as “dried seafood”, were being smuggled out to Kuala Lumpur

Customs officers have seized 206 live star tortoises listed as an endangered species while they were being smuggled to Malaysia in boxes labelled as ‘dried seafood’.

The Biodiversity, Cultural and National Heritage Protection Division of Sri Lanka customs seized the live tortoises at the Air Cargo Exports Terminal of the Colombo international airport (BIA) on Saturday, Customs sources said.According to the Customs officials, it was the largest seizure, since mid-2015, when a bid to smuggle 124 tortoises was foiled.

Lankan star tortoises were the same species (Geochelone elegans) as those found in India and Pakistan but have a specific geographic identity, customs officials said.

“It is one of the most beautiful tortoise species found in the world and due to the same reason they have been highly sought after in the illegal pet trade, especially in the South East Asian countries,” they said.

“As a result, the species has become threatened with extinction and included in the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List of species and also in Appendix I of the Convention of International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES),” the officials added.

They said that according to the Fauna and Flora Protection Ordinance (section 40), any attempt to export any mammal, bird, reptile, amphibian, fish, coral or invertebrate, eggs, among others, without the permission of the Director General of the Wildlife Conservation Department is an offence and also simultaneously violates the Customs Ordinance.



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IMF urges Lanka not to meddle with exchange rate

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International Monetary Fund (IMF) Mission Chief for Sri Lanka, Evan Papageorgiou, yesterday said Sri Lanka’s current monetary policy stance remains “broadly appropriate,” despite the Central Bank of Sri Lanka’s (CBSL) recent 100-basis point policy rate hike.

Addressing the media, virtually, from Washington, he said the country’s macroeconomic recovery remained on track, supported by stabilising prices, improving foreign reserves, and continued economic momentum.

He expressed confidence that Sri Lanka still has strong potential to achieve the IMF’s 3% growth projection.

“We think that there are good, very strong factors in the economy that continue to push economic growth forward,” Papageorgiou said.

His remarks came a day after the IMF approved the combined Fifth and Sixth Reviews under Sri Lanka’s four-year Extended Fund Facility (EFF) programme, unlocking around $ 700 million in financing and marking another key milestone in the country’s post-crisis recovery programme.

Despite the policy tightening move, Papageorgiou said the IMF still expected inflation to remain broadly aligned with the CBSL’s 5% target, both this year and over the medium term.

“Now, with prices stabilised and foreign reserves continuing to grow as we have in the projection, we do not see any evidence of destabilising monetary expansion,” he added.

Papageorgiou highlighted the significant progress achieved under Sri Lanka’s IMF-supported reform programme, noting that inflation, which surged to nearly 60%-70% during the peak of the 2022 economic crisis, had now fallen to low single-digit levels, despite a temporary increase last month, linked to external shocks stemming from the Middle East conflict.

He stressed that one of the key reforms, under the IMF programme, had been ending monetary financing of the fiscal deficit by the CBSL.

According to Papageorgiou, the CBSL is no longer printing money to finance Government expenditure, while policy interest rates are being maintained in line with the inflation-targeting framework designed to preserve price stability.

He also defended Sri Lanka’s more flexible exchange rate regime, describing the rupee as an important “shock absorber” against external disruptions.

“In practical terms, allowing the exchange rate to adjust to global developments helps absorb part of the economic pressure from events such as rising global oil prices and geopolitical instability, rather than forcing the burden entirely onto foreign reserves or abrupt policy interventions,” he explained.

Papageorgiou insisted on the importance of maintaining a prudent and rules-based approach to both monetary policy and exchange rate management.

He noted that Sri Lanka’s foreign reserve position continued to improve, although the pace of reserve accumulation had moderated recently as the CBSL intervened selectively to smooth excessive currency volatility linked to the Middle East crisis.

Even so, he said the broader policy direction remained fully consistent with the reform path agreed between Sri Lanka and the IMF. “We do not see any evidence of destabilising monetary expansion,” Papageorgiou reiterated.

He also pointed out that the rupee should serve as the first line of defence against external shocks, particularly when the economy is hit by real sector disruptions, such as higher global energy prices.

“In such cases, some adjustment has to happen through the real sector and the currency, rather than trying to hold the exchange rate fixed and risking bigger problems later,” he said.

 

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Court orders arrest of Basil in Rs. 7.8m poll funds case

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The Colombo Fort Magistrate’s Court yesterday ordered the arrest of former Minister Basil Rajapaksa, Tourism Promotion Bureau Chairman Bhashwara Gunaratne, Managing Director Rumi Jauffer and several others in connection with the alleged misuse of Rs. 7.8 million belonging to the Tourism Promotion Authority during the 2014 Uva Provincial Council election campaign.

Magistrate Pasan Amarasena directed the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) to arrest and produce the suspects before court, after it was submitted that they would be named under the Public Property Act on the advice of the Attorney General.

The CID informed court that attempts to take the suspects into custody from their residences had been unsuccessful as they were not present.

The Magistrate also imposed an overseas travel ban on the suspects and ordered that the Controller of Immigration and Emigration be notified.

Investigations have reportedly revealed that the funds in question were used to print 12,000 T-shirts, bearing an image of former President Mahinda Rajapaksa on one side and the name of a political party on the other.

According to the CID, the T-shirts were later distributed at a political event held in the Monaragala District.

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State of emergency extended

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An Extraordinary Gazette Notification has been issued extending the state of emergency in Sri Lanka, official sources said.

The notification was issued under the powers vested in President Anura Kumara Dissanayake in terms of the Public Security Ordinance and came into effect from May 28.

The extension allows the continuation of emergency regulations, currently in force across the country, enabling authorities to take measures relating to public security, public order and the maintenance of essential services.

However, details regarding the duration of the extension and specific provisions have not yet been officially announced.

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