Connect with us

News

Postal voting on Apr 22, 23 and 24

Published

on

The Election Commission yesterday announced that postal voting for the LG Polls will be held on April 22, 23 and 24 at all District Secretariats and election offices. Those unable to cast postal votes on the aforementioned days would be able to do so on April 28 and 29, it said.



Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

News

Remembering Upali Wijewardene, founder of Upali Group of Companies

Published

on

The Upali Group of Companies, its employees and sales agents countrywide, have made arrangements to invoke blessings on its founder, Upali Wijewardene, who disappeared in his Lear jet 43 years ago. Bodhi Pooja, Pahan Pooja and an alms-giving will be held, in his memory, on 13 Feb.

A special Bodhi Pooja will be held at the Kelaniya Raja Maha Viharaya at 6 p.m. on 13 Feb., with the blessings of Prof. Ven. Kollupitiye Mahinda Sangarakkhitha Thera, the Chief Incumbent of the Kelaniya Raja Maha Viharaya.

Arrangements have been made to offer alms to the Maha Sangha at the Kelaniya Raja Maha Viharaya and scholarships to 10 needy children from the Helena Wijewardene Maha Vidyalaya, Kelaniya.

Alms-giving to the inmates of the Home for the Elders at Mulgampola, Kandy, Bodhi Pooja Pinkama and Kavi Bana Pinkama, from 4.30 p.m. onwards, at the Ceylon Chocolates factory premises. Bodhi Pooja, Pahan Pooja and Kavibana deshana will be held at Vidya Niketha Piriven Viharaya, Sapugoda Kamburupitiya.

Bodhi Pooja, Pahan Pooja and Kavibana deshana will be held at Maha Saman Devalaya at Ratnapura.

The employees of Upali Consumer Products have arranged an alms-giving lunch at the ‘Children’s Home’ at Ja-Ela.

Founder’s Day Programme on February 13, 2026.

9.00 a.m. – Holy Mass at Mattakkuliya Church.

10.00 a.m. – Offering of Buddhapooja at the `Dhathumandiriya .

10.30 a.m. – Scholarships to 10 needy children from Helena Wijewardene Maha Vidyalaya, Kelaniya.

11.30 a.m. – Alms-giving for the Maha Sangha at Kelaniya Raja Maha Viharaya.

12 noon – Providing lunch for the Children’s Home, Ja-Ela, organised by the employees of Upali Trading Co. Ltd.

6.00 p.m. – Bodhi Pooja and Pahan Pooja at Kelaniya Raja Maha Viharaya.

All these pinkamas (meritorious acts) are organized by Upali Group employees and newspaper, Kandos/Delta and soap agents.

Continue Reading

News

Lankan legal professionals explore data protection and digital transformation at ICT Conference

Published

on

The ICT Lawyers Guild of Sri Lanka convened a landmark conference at the OPA Auditorium last week bringing together judges, legal scholars, and technology experts to discuss the evolving landscape of data protection, cybersecurity, and intellectual property in the digital era.

Dr. Sunil Abeysinghe, President of the ICT Lawyers Guild, highlighted developments in personal data protection in Sri Lanka, focusing on the Personal Data Protection Act No. 9 of 2022. He detailed the law’s provisions, their effectiveness, and how they align with the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), which emphasizes principles such as lawfulness, fairness, transparency, purpose limitation, data minimization, accuracy, storage limitation, integrity, confidentiality, and accountability. Dr. Abeysinghe also referenced the Colombo Declaration, adopted at the LawAsia AI and Data Conference in 2022, to underscore Sri Lanka’s commitment to harmonizing data privacy standards with global best practices.

The conference emphasized that the legal profession is undergoing profound digital transformation. Courts and law firms increasingly rely on electronic filing systems, virtual hearings, cloud-based document management, AI-assisted legal research, and digital evidence repositories. While these innovations improve efficiency and access to justice, they also expose legal institutions to cyber threats including data breaches, ransomware attacks, IoT vulnerabilities, and AI manipulation. Speakers stressed that lawyers must adopt comprehensive frameworks for cyber resilience that integrate technological, ethical, behavioural, and global considerations.

Supreme Court Justice A.H.M.D. Nawaz highlighted the importance of digital content in civil and criminal matters and discussed the admissibility of electronic evidence in dispute resolution. Justice Pradeep Hettiarachchi addressed new developments in intellectual property rights in cyberspace, while Justice Yasantha Kodagoda, Indian AI expert Prabhakaran Ramachandran, and Prof. Sampath Punchihewa, Dean of the Faculty of Law at the University of Colombo, explored the emerging era of intellectual property cases.

The event also featured remarks from legal luminaries including Prashantha Lal De Alwis PC, Principal of Sri Lanka Law College, retired Supreme Court Justice Shirani Thilakawardene, Prof. Sanath Sameera, Dr. Thusith Abeysekera, Heshan Karunaratne, President of the Computer Society of Sri Lanka, Dr. Ruwan Fernando, Retired Appeal Court Judge, Pradeepa Ganehiarachchi AAL, Senior DIG Ajith Rohana, Priyani Ratnayake, Anupama Muhandiram AAL, and Dr. Aparajitha Ariyadasa.

Organized by the ICT Lawyers Guild of Sri Lanka, the conference underscored the urgent need for legal professionals to adapt to emerging digital threats while upholding professional ethics, client confidentiality, and judicial integrity in an increasingly technology-driven environment.

Continue Reading

News

Animal welfare groups call for humane collaboration at Royal Colombo Golf Club

Published

on

A coalition of animal welfare organizations and individual advocates has called on The Royal Colombo Golf Club to collaborate on humane solutions for managing community dogs, amid concerns over proposed internal regulations scheduled for discussion on February10, 2026.

In a joint letter addressed to the Club’s President, Captain, and Committee, the groups urge management not to proceed with clauses 8A.5.1–8A.5.3 in their current form, arguing that blanket prohibitions on feeding or caring for community animals may lead to unintended and harmful consequences.

Instead, the coalition has offered to work with the Club and like-minded members to implement sterilization, vaccination, identification, and controlled feeding in a designated peripheral area away from the golf course itself. They say this approach aligns with internationally recognized best practice and Sri Lanka’s public health objectives.

The groups have also raised serious concerns about past actions allegedly taken in 2025, during which, they claim, community dogs were captured and removed from the premises and dumped elsewhere without due process. They argue that such actions, if verified, would be inconsistent with Sri Lankan law and established animal welfare standards.

Under the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Ordinance No. 13 of 1907 causing unnecessary suffering to animals—including through improper transport, abandonment, or displacement—is an offence. Animal welfare advocates note that forcibly relocating community dogs often results in injury, starvation, territorial conflict, and increased rabies risk, and is widely discouraged by veterinary authorities.

“Removal is not a solution—it creates a vacuum,” said one campaigner. “Sterilized and vaccinated dogs stabilize an area. Dumping them elsewhere only transfers suffering and risk.”

The coalition stresses that their appeal is not confrontational but collaborative. They point out that humane dog management programmes have been successfully implemented in other high-profile and sensitive locations in Sri Lanka, with the cooperation of management and staff.

“This is an opportunity for the Royal Colombo Golf Club to demonstrate leadership,” the letter states, “by adopting a humane, lawful, and socially responsible approach consistent with its heritage and standing.”

As public awareness grows, animal welfare groups say they hope the Club will engage openly and choose dialogue over division.

Continue Reading

Trending