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Planting a tree should not merely be a symbolic act, instead it must be properly nurtured and protected – PM

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The Prime Minister stated that planting a tree should not be regarded as only a symbolic act, but it is also a responsibility of the present generation to protect them for the future generation.

Prime Minister Dr. Harini Amarasuriya made these remarks while addressing the inauguration event of the “Soba Sipwadula” Project.

The inauguration ceremony of the “Soba Sipwadula” project, carried out under the Clean Sri Lanka initiative by the Sri Lanka Hadabima (Heartland) Authority with the aim of creating a sensitive and caring generation towards the environment, was held on October 02 at Colombo Hindu College, Ratmalana.

Representing the Western Province, the Prime Minister planted a Jackfruit sapling within the school premises, while simultaneously 100 saplings were planted by the schoolchildren.

This program, launched with the objective of developing green zones in 50 selected schools, was simultaneously initiated in the remaining eight provinces under the leadership of the respective Governors.

The Prime Minister further stated:

“Today I was able to begin the day by planting a sapling in a school. It gave me a good beginning to a remarkable day.

When we formed this government, we agreed that we would come together and transform this country. If we are to transform it, citizens must collectively join hands in this transformative journey with the initiative of Clean Sri Lanka.

The Clean Sri Lanka initiative has three goals. Its objectives contribute to nurturing the values and qualities needed to build a society suitable for us to live in.

The program we are carrying out together today includes all these values. We engaged school children in this tree-planting program because of the values we build together with society. We have a responsibility to protect the environment we live in and to live in harmony with nature.

This also helps to instill values in children. We have a responsibility to protect the Earth we live on. We must ensure that we pass down a better environment to the next generation.

In environmental discourse, there is a concept known as a sustainable environment. Our development must be sustainable. The essence of sustainability is that whatever we do today, we must also think about the future generations. It is our duty to create a world that can be handed over to them.

To move toward a sustainable future and a sustainable journey, citizens of all ages must take part in such programs.

What we must do is not simply plant trees and look up at the sky, but protect and nurture them so that they grow into trees that provide shade for future students of this school and for the next generation. I trust that all of you will take good care of them.

We are fortunate to live in Sri Lanka. We live in a country with rich biodiversity. Our country is very beautiful. The main reason for that is our environment, and we must protect it. We must be sensitive to what we add to the soil and water. We must think about how we dispose of plastic bottles and shopping bags when we travel. All these are linked to the environment. It is through such practices that we pollute it. It is humans who destroy the environment, but it is also humans who can protect it and prevent destruction. Let us develop a society that protects our environment. The goal of Clean Sri Lanka is to build this country into a developed nation.

Through human intervention, we must always strive to move this country forward. I believe that all of you will join together for achieving this purpose”.

Members of Parliament Lakshman Nipunarachchi and Samanmalee Gunasinghe, Secretary to the Ministry of Education  Nalaka Kaluwewa, Additional Secretary to the President’s Office G.M.R.D. Aponsu, Chairman of the Sri Lanka Heartland Authority  R.D. Siripala, Chief Operating Officer at Capital Maharaja Group  S.V. Weerasekara, Principal of Colombo Hindu College, Ratmalana along with the staff and students attended the ceemony.

[Prime Minister’s Media Division]



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Healy plunders 158 off 98 balls in final ODI as Australia secure huge win

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Alyssa Healy celebrates her eighth ODI century [Cricinfo]

Alyssa Healey  produced a fairytale farewell to ODI cricket with a stunning 158 from 98 balls in her final innings while Beth Mooney made an unbeaten century as Australia thumped 409 for 7 to trounce India in Hobart and ensure they can’t be beaten in the multi-format series with just the Perth Test to play.

Healy, who battled a calf issue during her innings that she put down to “getting old”, produced a vintage performance the equal of any of her best innings across a glittering career. She smashed 27 fours and two sixes in a staggering display to become just the sixth woman, and second Australian, to post two 150-plus scores in ODIs and the second fastest 150 off 95 balls. It was also the highest score in a women’s ODI in Australia, the highest anywhere against India, and she joined Johmari Logtenberg as the only other woman to score a century in their final ODI.

Mooney played the silent partner in a 145-run stand with Healy but then picked up the slack to reach her sixth ODI century in the final over off just 82 balls and finished with 106 from 84. Australia had lost 4 for 37 at the start of the last 10 but Nicola Carey smashed 34 not out off 15 to help Australia race past 400.

India’s chase never got going as regular wickets meant the required run-rate got out of control. Jemimah Rodrigues made 42 off 29 but India gave up on the chase after she fell. Alana King ripped through the middle-order to take 4 for 33. Sneh Rana top-scored at No.9 with 44 as they were bowled out for 224, 185 short of the target.

The game turned into such a procession that when India were 164 for 7, needing 246 from 18 overs to win, Healy indulged herself by bowling the first two overs of her international career.

The win completed a 3-0 ODI series sweep against the reigning world champions who knocked Australia out in the semi-final last year. It also meant Australia took an 8-4 points lead in the multi-format series with India only able to draw the series given just four points are on offer for the win in the lone Test that starts on Friday in Perth.

Healy was earlier supported well by Georgia Voll who made 62 from 52 in a 104-run stand. India’s bowlers had a difficult day with Shree Charani becoming only the third woman to concede 100-plus runs in an ODI innings. She was one of three bowlers to concede more than 80 runs in the innings, doubling the number of India bowlers to have ever conceded that many.

Extraordinarily, Healy’s innings began by facing a maiden from Renuka Singh after she had walked through a guard of honour from India having been sent into bat. A trademark pull shot off Kashvee Gautam got her innings going. She added two more boundaries before receiving a slice of luck off Renuka when an lbw shout was given not out but DRS revealed it was umpire’s call on hitting leg stump.

The close call sharpened her focus. She played with great control to reach 50 off 49 balls.

Voll outpaced her skipper, continuing the crisp ball-striking she showed during her century in the second ODI on the same surface on Friday.

After some early edges found the rope she cruised to 48 before chipping Gautam to cover where Harmanpreet Kaur dropped a straightforward chance diving forward after misjudging the flight.

Voll reached 50 off 42 three balls later and thumped two more boundaries off Charani. But the return of Rana forced an error. First ball Voll jumped down to whip over midwicket and miscued wastefully to long-on with Harleen Deol holding on.

Healy felt her calf cramp not long after and started unfurling a full array of pulls, sweeps, glides and lofted drives over cover and mid-on. She had another slice of luck when Rana missed a difficult chance at short fine that went untouched to the fence.

Healy reached her eighth ODI century, the equal second-most for an Australian woman, off just 79 balls. Her assault on Charani immediately after was vicious. She took 23 off an over including four strikes over the off-side ring and a slog sweep over long-on. She followed that with another slog sweep off Deepti Sharma that landed in the dugout.

She needed just 16 balls to go from 100 to 150. A double century looked on, but her calf was clearly a problem. After a dazzling display of conventional strokeplay she attempted a bizarre premeditated reverse paddle sweep to a rank full toss from Rana and was bowled behind her back with 13.3 overs left in the innings.

Mooney’s innings mirrored Healy’s in many ways. She was 2 off 12 and before accelerating to reach 50 off 53. But her second fifty took just 29 balls as she showcased her incredible 360-degree skills.

She only struck 10 boundaries and one six but no two boundaries went in the same zone as she faced just two dot balls in her last 40 to finish off the innings alongside Carey, who thumped 22 from Charani’s last over including a stunning reverse sweep for six over point.

India’s chase started brightly with Pratika Rawal and Rodrigues racing to 62 inside eight overs after the early loss of Smriti Mandhana. Australia’s 19-year-old debutant Lucy Hamilton was driven repeatedly by Pratika and lapped relentlessly by Rodrigues. But Pratika was adjudged lbw to Annabel Sutherland, with ball tracking showing it was only just clipping leg. Rodrigues then fell to Ash Gardner, top edging a sweep to Hamilton at short fine.

India completely stalled thereafter with Deol run out after a mix-up and Harmanpreet trapped plumb lbw to King. It was the first of three lbw’s for Australia’s legspinner. She also clean bowled Richa Ghosh to continue her love affair with Bellerive Oval.

Brief scores:
Australia Women 409 for 7 in 50 overs (Alyssa Healy 158, Beth Mooney 106*, Georgia Voll 62; Shree Charani 2-106, Sneh Rana 2-66) beat India Women 224 in 45.1 overs (Sneh Rana 44, Jemmimah Rodrigues 42; Alana  King 4-33, Georgia Wareham 2-03) by 185 runs

[Cricinfo]

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Zimbabwe elect to bat

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Aiden Markram and Sikandar Raza at the toss [Cricinfo]

Zimbavwe won the toss and elected to bat first in the Super 8 game against South Africa.

South Africa: Aiden Markram (capt), Quinton de Kock (wk), Ryan Rickelton, Dewald Brevis, David Miller,  Tristan Stubbs,  Kwena Maphaka, Corbin Bosch,  George Linde, Lungi Ngidi,  Anrich Nortje

Zimbabwe: Brian Bennett,  Tadiwanashe Marumani (wk),  Dion Myers,  Ryan Burl,  Sikandar Raza (capt),  Tony Munyonga,  Clive Madande,  Brad Evans,  Wellington Masakadza, Graeme Cremer,  Blessing Muzarabani

 

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Iran begins 40-day mourning after Khamenei killed in US-Israeli attack

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People mourn at the Enghelab Square in Tehran [Aljazeera]

Iran has begun 40 days of mourning after Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed in ongoing attacks by the United States and Israel, according to Iranian state media.

Top security officials were also killed in Saturday’s strikes, along with Khamenei’s daughter, son-in-law and grandson. The killings mark one of the most significant blows to Iran’s leadership since the 1979 Islamic revolution.

President Masoud Pezeshkian condemned the killing as “a great crime”, according to a statement from his office. He also declared seven days of public holidays in addition to the 40-day mourning period.

Reporting from Tehran, Al Jazeera’s Tohid Asadi said people were pouring into the streets of the capital following the news of Khamenei’s killing.

“There will be expected ceremonies,” he said, noting they would likely take place amid continuing bombardment across the country.

Protests denouncing Khamenei’s killing were also reported elsewhere, including Shiraz, Yasuj and Lorestan.

Footage aired by Iranian state media showed supporters mourning at the shrine of Imam Reza in Mashhad, with several people seen crying and collapsing in grief.

The killing also led to protests in neighbouring Iraq, which declared three days of public mourning. In Baghdad, protesters confronted security forces in the heavily fortified Green Zone, which houses Iraqi government buildings and foreign embassies.

Videos verified by Al Jazeera showed demonstrators waving flags and shouting slogans, with witnesses saying some were attempting to mobilise towards the US Embassy. Footage also showed protesters blocking vehicles at a roundabout near one of the entrances to the area.

Supporters of Iraqi Shi'ite armed groups gather after the killing of Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in Baghdad
Protesters demonstrate near the entrance of the Green Zone after the killing of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in Baghdad, Iraq, March 1, 2026 [Aljazeera]

There was also a protest in the Pakistani city of Karachi, where footage, verified by Al Jazeera, showed people setting fire to and smashing the windows of the US consulate.

However, there have also been reports of celebrations in Iran, with the Reuters news agency quoting witnesses as saying some people had taken to the streets in Tehran, the nearby city of Karaj and the central city of Isfahan.

Meanwhile, the official IRNA news agency reported that a three-person council, consisting of the country’s president, the chief of the judiciary, and one of the jurists of the Guardian Council, will temporarily assume all leadership duties in the country. The body will temporarily oversee the country until a new supreme leader is elected.

Khamenei assumed leadership of Iran in 1989 following the death of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, who had led the Islamic revolution a decade earlier.

While Khomeini was regarded as the ideological force behind the revolution that ended the Pahlavi monarchy, Khamenei went on to shape Iran’s military and paramilitary apparatus,  strengthening both its domestic control and its regional influence.

Meanwhile, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) pledged revenge and said it had launched strikes on 27 bases hosting US troops in the region, as well as Israeli military facilities in Tel Aviv.

[Aljazeera]

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