Connect with us

News

GL questions President’s stand on Oversight Committees

Published

on

By Shamindra Ferdinando

Pointing out the way the President’s Office offhandedly rejected a report issued by the Sectoral Oversight Committee (SOC) on National Security against the privatization of Sri Lanka Telecom, top SLPP rebel spokesman Prof. G. L. Peiris yesterday (19) questioned the very basis of the role of the Oversight Committees if they were treated that way.

SOC, headed by retired Rear Admiral Sarath Weerasekera, tabled its report in Parliament on 09 June.

Addressing the media at the SLPP office at Nawala, the former External Affairs Minister pointed out how President Ranil Wickremesinghe had disregarded the conclusions made by the vital committee while extolling the importance of the SOC system and the youth participation in them.

Prof. Peiris said that it would be a grave mistake for the Wickremesinghe-Rajapaksa government to think privatisation would be the panacea for the current economic crisis.

Prof. Peiris warned of further deterioration of the ground situation, once the restructuring of domestic debt got underway later this month, in line with an agreement with the IMF.

Prof. Peiris alleged that the proposed Anti-Corruption laws and the Broadcasting Regulatory Commission bill were intended to suppress dissent. Declaring that certain provisions in the Anti-Corruption bill were meant to discourage whistle-blowers, the National List MP claimed that the government seemed to be preparing the ground for robber barons.

Commenting on the Geneva-based United Nations Human Rights Commission sessions scheduled to begin on Monday (19), Prof. Peiris said that the UN body would definitely look into the recent happenings in Sri Lanka. According to him, the Geneva body would react to suppression of media freedom and other obstacles placed by the government as part of its overall defence against public protests.

“Once domestic restructuring gets underway, countrywide public protests will erupt,” Prof. Peiris predicted, asserting that the Opposition would seek the intervention of the Supreme Court to thwart enactment of a Bill, titled Broadcasting Regulatory Commission.

Citing the Supreme Court ruling, dated 05 May, 1997, given during Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga’s tenure as the President in respect of a Bill very much similar to the ones proposed by the incumbent government, Prof. Peiris explained why they were confident the current SC would block the relevant Bill.

The bottom line is that the Parliament couldn’t enact a law contrary to the Constitution, the former Minister said, recalling the Supreme Court objecting to one-third of the Bill, titled Central Bank of Sri Lanka.

Prof. Peiris said that the Bill, examined by the Supreme Court in 1997 and the one expected to be tabled in Parliament soon, were similar the ruling that the earlier Bill couldn’t be implemented even with a 2/3 majority and should be subjected to a referendum applied in the current context, too, the MP said.

Prof. Peiris especially referred to the large number parate executions carried out by banks to recover bad loans to highlight the plight of small scale businessmen. Declaring that the print media carried an unusual number of parate execution notices in the recent past, Prof. Peiris urged the government to review the situation and take appropriate measures to consolidate the economy or face the consequences.



News

Shani appointed to committee studying PCoI report on Easter Sunday terror attacks

Published

on

Shani

Retired SSP Shani Abeysekera, serving the Police Department again, has been appointed to the committee headed by Senior DIG Asanka Karawita, tasked with studying the Presidential Commission of Inquiry (PCoI) report on the 2019 Easter Sunday carnage.

The other members of the team are DIG, CID, Director, CID and Director Terrorism Investigation Division (TID)

Pivithuru Hela Urumaya (PHU) leader Udaya Gammanpila yesterday said that Abeysekera had been one of the law enforcement officers whose conduct raised eyebrows over the years as regards the failure on the part of the CID to thwart the Easter Sunday attacks.

The National Police Commission approved the reappointment of SSP Abeysekera on contractual basis for one year, with effect from 10 Oct., 2024.

Abeysekera backed Anura Kumara Dissanayake’s presidential election campaign as a member of the retired police collective.

Continue Reading

News

Pope Francis’ mortal remains carried to St. Peter’s Basilica

Published

on

The Rite of Translation of the body of Pope Francis took place in the Vatican on Wednesday (23) morning, led by the College of Cardinals gathered in Rome following his death.

Vatican News reported: “Cardinal Kevin Farrell, Camerlengo of the Holy Roman Church, began the liturgical rite in the Chapel of the Casa Santa Marta with a brief prayer for the soul of Pope Francis.

In the opening prayer, Cardinal Farrell thanked God for the 12-year ministry of the late Pope.

“As we now leave this home, let us thank the Lord for the countless gifts He bestowed on the Christian people through His servant, Pope Francis,” he prayed. “Let us ask Him, in His mercy and kindness, to grant to the late Pope an eternal home in the kingdom of heaven, and to comfort with the celestial hope the papal family, the Church in Rome, and the faithful throughout the world.”

The College of Cardinals then led the procession of the coffin through the Vatican’s Santa Marta Square, under the Arch of the Bells, and into St. Peter’s Square.

Over 20,000 people had gathered in the square to pay their respects to the late Pope, erupting into subdued but sustained applause as his coffin was carried up the steps and into St. Peter’s Basilica.

The late Pope’s coffin was placed in front of the Altar of the Confession, and the choir chanted the Litany of the Saints in Latin for the repose of his soul.

Cardinal Farrell then led a brief Liturgy of the Word, which included a reading from the Gospel of John (17:24-26) of Jesus’ priestly prayer proclaiming the love of God for Him and for His disciples.

The rite concluded with the chanting of the Salve Regina, a Marian hynm that begins “Hail, Holy Queen, Mother of Mercy.”

Members of the College of Cardinals then paid their respects to the late Pope Francis, followed by the faithful gathered in St. Peter’s Basilica.

 

Continue Reading

News

Sri Lanka’s Ambassador to Sweden and Estonia presents credentials

Published

on

Ambassador Fonseka inspecting a guard of honour

Sri Lanka’s Ambassador in Stockholm Kapila Fonseka concurrently accredited to Estonia presented credentials to Estonian President Alar Karis at a ceremony held in Tallinn, Estonia recently.

Sri Lanka and Estonia enjoy cordial bilateral relations for 29 years since the establishment of diplomatic relations in 1996. The two countries held the first round of bilateral consultations in Colombo in 2024.

Continue Reading

Trending