News
Auditor General recommends blacklisting of supplier company
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asking the Commercial High Court to instruct the People’s Bank to suspend payments to the Chinese company, were withdrawn on the condition that fertilisers be resupplied with the desired composition and quality, in keeping with the settlement agreement.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.
News
GMOA warns of trade union action unless govt. urgently resolves critical issues in health sector
Influx of substandard drugs is of particular concern
The Government Medical Officers’ Association (GMOA) has warned of renewed and intensified trade union action if the government fails to fulfil its promise to resolve the ongoing crisis in the health sector within the next few days.
GMOA Executive Committee member Dr. Prasad Colombage said his association was hopeful that commitments made by the government, including those formally stated by the Minister of Health in Parliament and recorded in the Hansard, would be implemented.
He called for urgent remedial action in view of the influx of substandard medicines into the country, patient deaths linked to such drugs, difficulties faced by doctors in prescribing medicines, and disruptions to patient care services caused by the continued migration of medical professionals. These factors, he warned, had placed patients’ lives at serious risk.
Dr. Colombage said discussions had already been held with all relevant authorities, including the President and the Minister of Health. He expressed hope that swift solutions would be forthcoming based on agreements reached at discussions. However, he cautioned that the GMOA would not hesitate to resort to strong trade union action if tangible progress was not seen in the coming days.
Meanwhile, the Federation of Medical and Civil Rights Professional Associations yesterday (01) handed over a special memorandum to President Anura Kumara Dissanayake, calling for immediate action to resolve the deepening crisis in the health sector.
Federation President, Consultant Dr. Chamal Sanjeewa, said Sri Lanka’s health system was currently facing a severe crisis and had sought an opportunity to hold discussions with the President on the matter.
The memorandum calls for the President’s direct and immediate intervention on several key issues, including the Indo–Sri Lanka health agreement, shortages of essential medicines including cancer drugs, continued allegations surrounding the administration of the Ministry of Health, reported irregularities at the National Hospital, Colombo, and the absence of an internationally accredited quality control laboratory for the National Medicines Regulatory Authority to test medicines. The Federation has also requested a meeting with the President to discuss these concerns in detail.
By Sujeewa Thathsara ✍️
News
Elephant census urged as death toll nears 400
Sri Lanka’s latest elephant census must result in immediate policy action, not remain a paper exercise, Centre for Environmental Justice (CEJ) Managing Director Dilena Pathragoda warned, as nearly 400 wild elephants have already died in 2025 alone amid escalating human–elephant conflict.
With the national elephant population estimated at around 5,879, Pathragoda said the figures would be meaningless unless they shape land-use planning, habitat protection and enforcement.
“As of mid-December, close to 397 elephants have died in 2025, mostly due to shootings, electrocution, train collisions and other human-related causes,” he told The Island. “When deaths continue at this scale, census numbers alone offer little reassurance.”
Official data show that 388 elephants died in 2024, while 2023 recorded a staggering 488 deaths, one of the highest annual tolls on record. Conservationists warn that the trend reflects systemic failure to secure habitats and elephant corridors, despite repeated warnings.
“An elephant census should not end with a headline figure,” Pathragoda said. “If these statistics do not influence development approvals, infrastructure planning and land-use decisions, they fail both elephants and rural communities.”
Elephant populations remain unevenly distributed, with higher densities in the Mahaweli, Eastern and North Western regions, while other areas face sharp declines driven by habitat fragmentation and unplanned development.
Pathragoda said recurring fatalities from gunshots, illegal electric fences, improvised explosive devices along with poisonings and rail collisions expose the limits of short-term mitigation measures, including ad hoc fencing projects.
“The crisis is not a lack of data, but a lack of political will,” he said, calling for binding conservation policy, transparent environmental assessments and accountability at the highest level.
He urged authorities to treat elephant conservation as a national governance issue, warning that failure to act would only see future censuses record further decline of these majestic animals.
“Elephants are part of Sri Lanka’s natural heritage and economy,” Pathragoda said. “Ignoring these warning signs will come at an irreversible cost.”
By Ifham Nizam ✍️
News
CTU raises questions about education reforms
The Ministry of Education has yet to clarify whether school hours will be extended by 30 minutes from next Monday (05) under the proposed new education reforms, Ceylon Teachers’ Union (CTU) General Secretary Joseph Stalin has said.
Stalin told The Island that the Ministry should reconsider the planned reforms, warning that decisions taken without adequate study and consultation could have serious repercussions for nearly four million schoolchildren.
He said the Education Ministry had announced that education reforms would be implemented in Grades from 1 to Grade 6, but it had not said anything about the Grades above 6. This lack of clarity, he said, had created confusion among teachers, parents and students.
Stalin also noted that although learning modules had been issued, students are required to obtain photocopies based on the codes introduced in these modules. However, the Ministry had not revealed who would bear the additional financial burden arising from those costs, raising further concerns over the practical implementation of the reforms.
by Chaminda Silva ✍️
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