Connect with us

News

Auditor General recommends blacklisting of supplier company

Published

on

Contaminated Chinese organic fertiliser:

A special audit report issued by the Auditor General Department has recommended that the supplier company in Sri Lanka, responsible for the procurement of 96,000MT of organic fertiliser from a Chinese company, be blacklisted.The report has said the letter of credit and the performance bond pertaining to the organic fertiliser imported from a Chinese company in 2021 expired in March 2022 and, therefore, the entire amount paid for fertilisers will amount to a loss to the state coffers.The report has revealed the Cabinet of Ministers decided to sort out the issue between Sri Lanka and the Chinese company through mediation.

“It has been given approval to pay an advance payment of USD 6.9 million for 75 percent of the cost of the fertiliser stock, contained in the ship, which is equal to Rs. 1,382 million. Accordingly, it has been paid by the Treasury Operations Department, on 07 January 2022, and has been reported for accounting to the State Ministry of Agriculture, on 09 May 2022,” the reporthas said.

Two cases filed by state owned fertiliser companies, asking the Commercial High Court to instruct the People’s Bank to suspend payments to the Chinese company, were withdrawn on the condition that fertilisers be resupplied with the desired composition and quality, in keeping with the settlement agreement.

“Nonetheless, the expected standard of stock of fertiliser has not been obtained until now. Although the period of the letter of credit and the performance bond should be extended and kept valid as per the settlement terms, those documents expired on 12 March 2022 and on 24 March 2022 respectively. As a result, the ability to recover the money paid on settlement has been lost if the supplier will not provide standardized fertilizers. Resulting in all of the above, the entire amount paid for fertilizers will become a loss to the government,” the report has said.

The Auditor General Department recommended the government to take action against the officials responsible for this transaction. It has also asked the government to recover the losses due to failure to encashment of the relevant securities before their expiry or extend the tenure of the securities and release of funds without any security in case of advance payment.

The Department also said legal action should be taken against the supplier and obtain compensation for attempting to entry a stock of unsterilized fertilizer in to country containing the destructive bacteria i.e. Erwinia and Bacillus, which causes diseases called mild rot and blight for economically valuable crops in Sri Lanka. Such shipments cannot be imported into Sri Lanka in accordance with the terms of the agreement and the Plant Protection Act No. 35 of 1999, and there is no recommended agrochemical for control, the report said.

“And also for the making a loss by not providing fertilizer required for paddy cultivation in the 2020/2021 season as per the agreement, obtaining an amount of Sri Lanka Rupees 1,382,720,494 equivalent to 6.9 million US dollars for an unsupplied fertilizer stock and non-compliance to the motion, and take actions to blacklist the relevant supplier company in Sri Lanka which has not performed in accordance with the laws and agreements of Sri Lanka,” the report said.



Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

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

News

Prasanna Perera appointed Director General of the President’s Media Division (PMD)

Published

on

By

Prasanna Perera has been appointed as the Director General of the President’s Media Division (PMD).

The  letter of appointment was handed over by Secretary to the President Dr. Nandika Sanath Kumanayake at the Presidential Secretariat on Monday (24)

Continue Reading

News

Navy seize 05 Indian fishing boats poaching in Sri Lankan waters

Published

on

By

The Sri Lanka Navy seized FIVE [05] Indian fishing boats and apprehended 32 Indian fishermen while they were poaching in Sri Lankan waters, during a special operation conducted in the sea area north of Mannar on 22nd night and early morning on 23 Feb 25.

The Indian fishing boats, together with fishermen aboard, were brought to the Talaimannar Pier and they were to be handed over to the Fisheries Inspector of Mannar for legal action.

Including the recent operation, the Navy has held 18 Indian fishing boats and apprehended 131 Indian fishermen for poaching in Sri Lankan waters, thus far in 2025.

Continue Reading

News

Govt. under fire over extrajudicial killings

Published

on

by Shamindra Ferdinando

Spokesman for the Frontline Socialist Party (FSP) Pubudu Jagoda yesterday said that the government owed an explanation regarding the circumstances the courtroom killing took place on 19 February and two suspects who died in police shooting two days later.

Jagoda pointed out that Ganemulle Sanjeewa had been produced in court without a specific court directive and those in authority were yet to explain as to why he was brought in regardless of intelligence warning issued the previous week regarding a possible attempt on the suspect’s life.

Justice and National Integration Minister Harshana Nanayakkara yesterday (23) said that the NPP government hadn’t considered re-implementation of judicial executions under any circumstances.

Attorney-at-Law Nanayakkara said so when The Island asked him whether the government would examine that option as part of its overall response to tackle the underworld, in the wake of the assassination of Sanjeewa Kumara Samararatne, aka Ganemulla Sanjeewa, in court room 05 of the Aluthkade court complex on 19 February.

Barely 24 hours before thecourtroom killing an unidentified gunman killed Aruna Vidanagamage aka Meegas-are Kajja, 39, and his six-year-old-daughter and nine-year-old son. The triple-murder took place in the Middeniya police area.

Minister Nanayakkara said that President Anura Kumara Dissanayake, who also holds the defence portfolio, has been quite clear that resumption of judicial executions wouldn’t be an option. What you mentioned never came up for discussions held following the courtroom killing, the minister said.

Sri Lanka suspended implementation of capital punishment in 1976 though the court continued to pass death sentences. Sri Lanka has reached an understanding with the European Union that judicial executions wouldn’t be resumed.

“We are taking tangible measures to address issues at hand. Discussions are taking place at the highest level to map out strategy,” lawmaker Nanayakkara said.

President Dissanayake assured the Ministerial Consultative Committee on Defence on February 20, the day after the courtroom killing that the underworld would be wiped out. Acknowledging that the underworld had infiltrated institutions responsible for public security, President Dissanayake said that the eradication of criminal gangs would take some time. Justice Minister Nanayakkara explained the measures taken to enhance security at courts and subject of all entering court rooms, including lawyers.

The Island also raised the recent killing of a gunman and his accomplice apprehended by the Grandpass police soon after they killed a person at Galpoththa Junction in Kotahena. The police identified the victim as 38-year-old Shashi Kumar. Justice Minister Nanayakkara said that the government would take appropriate measures in this regard. The death of persons who had been taken into custody were the first since the last presidential election held in Sept 2024.

The minister emphasized that they were concerned about the development and would take appropriate measures.

President Dissanayake during his parliamentary career repeatedly attacked successive governments over deaths in government custody.

The Bar Association of Sri Lanka (BASL) constantly called for a halt to deaths in custody, especially during Saliya Peiris, PC, tenure as the President of the body.

In April 2023, the Supreme Court summoned the then IGP Chandana Wickremaratne to seek an explanation why police failed to comply with an order made by the SC to formulate guidelines to police officers to prevent deaths in police custody.

In a judgment dated 3 February, 2023, the Supreme directed the IGP to formulate, issue and implement, guidelines to the police, elaborating the steps that should be taken by each officer to avoid such deaths.

Continue Reading

Trending