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US and Sri Lanka advance emergency preparedness with regional partners
The US Embassy in Colombo, in collaboration with Sri Lanka’s Disaster Management Centre, hosted a three-day regional workshop, from 3-5 December to improve readiness for Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear (CBRN) emergencies. The event brought together 40 participants from Sri Lanka, the Maldives, Bangladesh, India, and the United States to focus on saving lives, protecting the environment, and reducing harm during emergency situations.
The Sub-Regional CBRN Response & Assistance Workshop, “SR2 Sri Lanka,” emphasized cooperation and coordination during emergencies. Experts from security, defence, health, environmental protection, disaster management, and international affairs sectors shared experiences and participated in a practical tabletop exercise simulating a regional CBRN emergency response.
Roy Baran, from the US Department of State’s Bureau of International Security and Nonproliferation, stated, “In times of major crisis, regional collaboration and timely sharing of information is critical to an effective and rapid response. We must prepare ourselves for every scenario, which includes ensuring that we can respond to any CBRN incident in the region – to save the lives of our people, maintain our economies, and protect our way of life.”
Major General H.M.U. Herath (Rtd), the Director General of Sri Lanka’s Disaster Management Centre, highlighted both the relevance of the CBRN risk and Sri Lanka’s commitment to preparedness, stating, “In Sri Lanka a variety of chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear and explosive (CBRNE) agents are used in various manufacturing industries and medical institutions and related incidents can be not only terrorist acts, but technological accidents triggered by natural hazards. The Disaster Management Centre has initiated an integrated programme for CBRNE disaster risk reduction with the approval of the Ministry of Defense, and has established a national level platform with relevant stakeholder agencies and analytical techniques to identify available strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats.”
The workshop highlighted the need to invest in CBRN preparedness, the importance of continued exercises to practice responding to a major crisis, and the value of working together with regional partners. Participants were also encouraged to explore potential areas for future regional cooperation based on the response capabilities and gaps of the participating nations.
The workshop is part of a series of events led by the Office of Weapons of Mass Destruction Terrorism in the Bureau of International Security and Nonproliferation at the U.S. Department of State and is designed to enhance international cooperation to deter and defend against the increasing use of CBRN weapons globally.
To learn more about the United States’ international security and nonproliferation work in Sri Lanka, visit: https://lk.usembassy.gov/ and follow @USEmbassySL and @StateISN on social media.
News
Opposition blames govt. inaction for severity of disaster impact
The government’s failure to act on expert warnings, including advance forecasts on Cyclone Ditwah, had led to the worsening of disaster impact, Udaya Gammanpila, leader of the Pivithuru Hela Urumaya, said at a press conference in Colombo yesterday.
Gammanpila accused the NPP government of ignoring 14 key preventive measures, despite alerts from the Meteorology Department, foreign experts, and the media.
Gammanpila said the government had failed to lower the water levels in reservoirs, dredge estuaries, and deploy the armed forces for canal maintenance. Local government bodies were reportedly sidelined, and that led to a delay in cleaning of drains. He said the government had also failed to evacuate people in a timely manner from seven districts identified by the National Building Research Organisation as landslide-prone. It had delayed declaring emergencies or curfews and the deployment of tri-forces to evacuate people in such areas.
Gammanpila said an experienced public official should have been appointed as Secretary to the President to mobilise the state machinery swiftly during the disaster. He said the government had not convened the National Disaster Council.
“These failures worsened the disaster, causing immense hardship, disruption, and loss of life and property to the people,” Gammanpila said.
The government has denied the Opposition’s claims.
News
National Archives seeks freezing capacity to ward off mould from vital water-damaged documents
The Department of National Archives Friday made an urgent appeal for freezing capacity to protect from mould vital water damaged documents, particularly irreplaceable public records of legal value saying this would be be time buying exercise before mould destroys them permanently.
Dr. Nadeera Rupesinghe, Director General of National Archives, said in the appeal that “freezing water-damaged documents stops mould growth and stabilizes materials until proper conservation treatment is possible. It buys time.
Without freezing capacity, we will lose vital records, land registries, court documents, historical records, and the evidence millions of citizens need to rebuild their lives.
“These public institutions urgently need access to freezer facilities and mobile freezers across the country. Public records as bound volumes, and bundled records have to be frozen in large quantities. We understand this is an extraordinary request during an already difficult time. We are asking you to provide space in existing freezer facilities on a temporary basis (weeks to months).”
She said if anybody able to provide such facilities without cost, in return, the National Archives can support full documentation of your contribution for CSR reporting and national recognition as a partner in preserving Sri Lanka’s evidentiary landscape.
“These are not abstract historical records. These are the records our citizens need to prove who they are, what they own, and what they are owed. What we stand to lose –
Court records and legal evidence spanning decades
Personnel files affecting pensions and benefits
Financial records required for audits and accountability
Public records essential for maintaining administrative history
Historical documents that tell our national story”
Noting that the business community has always been a partner in Sri Lanka’s development, the National Archives Department asked it to be partners in preserving the documentary foundation on which business, law, and civil society depend.
“Every land transaction, every contract, every court case relies on records. Help us save them,” Rupesinghe said.
If your organisation has freezing capacity you can make available, please immediately contact Mr Anuradha Adikaram, Senior Archivist on 077 6815551 (Available 24 hours) .
The department will coordinate connecting those who can assist with organisations that are searching for freezer facilities.
“Time is the enemy. Every hour without freezing capacity means more records lost to mould. Every day of delay means more families without proof of their homes, their citizenship, their rights. We are asking for freezers, but we are really asking you to help preserve the documentary infrastructure of our nation,” Rupesinghe said.
News
Met Dept. issues fresh weather warning
The Department of Meteorology has warned that rainfall is expected to increase across the country in the coming days as the southwest monsoon becomes more active. From Tuesday, monsoon conditions are expected to persist, with stronger winds likely.
Rainfall is predicted to intensify on Dec. 10, 11, and 12, potentially affecting the Northern, North-Central, Northwestern, Eastern, and Uva provinces, with thunderstorms and rainfall between 75 and 100 mm, Director General of Meteorology Athula Karunanayake said.
Karunanayake added that other areas, including the southeastern region, could also see rain during the day or night, as a disturbance in the Bay of Bengal may further influence the monsoon.
He cautioned that heavy rain would be accompanied by strong winds, creating rough sea conditions. Fishermen and maritime communities are urged to exercise caution and follow official advisories during this period.
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