News
USD 4.1 mn Japanese boost for plant quarantine facilities
Sri Lanka will receive JPY 500 mn (USD 4.1 mn) from Japan to expand agricultural production and exports and help import of safe agricultural products and organic fertilisers by enhancing the phytosanitary capacity of five Plant Quarantine Stations, including National Plant Quarantine Service (NPQS) and the facility at the Bandaranaike International Airport (BIA).
Japanese Ambassador Mizukoshi Hideaki and Finance Secretary S.R. Attygalle, Secretary signed the agreement in this regard yesterday (04).
Recently NPQS attracted international attention when a Chinese company filed a case against the facility over the rejection of a consignment of carbonic fertiliser from China.
The following is the text of a statement issued by the Japanese Embassy yesterday: “Sri Lanka has a long history of exporting quality agricultural products including tea, rubber, coconut, spices, flowers, fresh fruits and vegetables, etc. To accelerate the economic recovery from the pandemic, Japan decided to provide modern Japanese equipment to contribute to the rapid detection of pests in agricultural products and expedite import and export clearance. The series of equipment will enable Sri Lanka to meet phytosanitary requirements in high-end markets and increase the export of fresh fruits and vegetables such as mangoes, rambutan, papayas, pineapples, and curry leaves to Western countries, Japan, and other countries.
Japan believes that this assistance will contribute to improve farmers’ income and the acquisition of foreign currency with increased agricultural export earnings, and facilitate the Green Agriculture Policy in Sri Lanka through import of safe organic fertilizers, while contributing to enhancing food security.
The equipment to be provided includes plant x-ray scanner, DNA sequencing system, incubators, high end microscope, and real time PCR, which will be installed at the NPQS, a facility built in the 1990s by Japan’s grant assistance in Katunayake, and Plant Quarantine Stations at the BIA, Seaport in Colombo, Mahinda Rajapaksa International Airport, and Jaffna International Airport.
With the ongoing BIA terminal expansion project, Japan will further support Sri Lanka’s free and open economic development by promoting tourism and agricultural export.”
Latest News
Former Minister Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe’s son arrested by CIABOC
It has been reported that Attorney at Law Rakitha Rajapakshe, the son of former Minister of Justice Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe, has been arrested by the Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption (CIABOC) over alleged links with the underworld.
News
Proposed EPF-ETF merger harmful to private sector workers – FSP
… alleges NPP trying to implement UPFA, UNP plan
Front-line Socialist Party (FSP) yesterday (24) alleged that the NPP government’s move to amalgamate the Employees’ Trust Fund (ETF) and the Employees’ Provident Fund (EPF), under a unified, tripartite governance framework, would be detrimental to the private sector workers.
Addressing the media at Melder Place, Nugegoda, FSP spokesman Duminda Nagamuwa said that the Cabinet of Ministers approved this proposal on 15 June.
Nagamuwa claimed that the NPP was trying to implement what President Mahinda Rajapaksa had sought to do, in 2011, causing the police to open fire on a group of the Export Processing Zone workers, protesting against the move to create a private pension scheme. A worker, identified as Roshen Chanaka, was shot by police on May 30, 2011, and he succumbed to his injuries.
Pointing out that the EPF and the ETF had been established for the benefit of private sector workers but with different objectives, Nagamuwa warned that amalgamation of the two funds could cause unnecessary complications.
The FSP spokesman said that Ravi Karunanayake, in his capacity as the Finance Minister of the Yahapalana government, in late November 2015 had declared their intention to amalgamate the ETF with the EPF.
FSP’s Pubudu Jayagoda told The Island that they expected all political parties, other than the NPP, to disclose their stand on the vital issue. Jayagoda urged the Opposition to take a stand on the vital issue .
By Shamindra Ferdinando
News
Opposition argues that National Environment Amendment Bill is unconstitutional
The Opposition yesterday argued in Parliament that the National Environment Amendment Bill was unconstitutional. The Opposition said that it violated the 13th Amendment.
SJB and Opposition Leader Sajith Premadasa argued that the approval of the Provincial Councils was required for the Bill to go ahead, as it was a subject in the Concurrent List of powers as per the 13th Amendment to the Constitution.
The MP also said that the clause which enables the Central Government to file legal actions against Local Government bodies was unconditional as well, since local bodies are included in the Provincial Councils list.
“How can you go ahead at a time when the Provincial Councils do not function properly,” Premadasa questioned.
ITAK MP P. Sathyalingam also raised the issue, but Speaker Jagath Wickramaratne, who responded, said the MPs could raise the relevant matters during the debate.
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