News
Damning report on SLC: State audit stands by its findings
By Shamindra Ferdinando
Auditor General W.P.C Wickramaratne yesterday (26) said that the National Audit Office (NAO) firmly stood by its draft report on Sri Lanka’s tour of Australia for the T20 World Cup (Oct. 09-Nov. 13), in 2022.
The National Audit Service Commission (NASC) appointed in April this year consists of retired justice Nihal Sunil Rajapaksa, Nandaseeli Godakanda, Gnananantharajah Thevagnanan and A. M. Dharmajith Nayanakaantha.
Wickramaratne said so in response to Sri Lanka Cricket President Shammi Silva’s declaration that SLC hadn’t spent its own funds on outsiders including actresses. The former Nalanda cricketer was referring to growing accusations that over two dozen outsiders, including model-turned-actress Shalani Tharaka, joined the group at the SLC’s expense.
Ex-officio Chairman of the NASC Wickramaratne said that there couldn’t be any issue with regard to the draft report prepared on the basis of official documents received from relevant parties.
Having failed to qualify for the quarter finals, the disappointed national team returned to Colombo on 07 Nov.
Addressing the media at the SLC headquarters, Silva said that if the accusations were proved his administration would quit forthwith. However, he admitted that SLC had helped outsiders obtain Australian visas by issuing letters. Vice President in charge of International Cricket Jayantha Dharmadasa, who has been accused of recommending a visa for Shalani Tharaka and another person identified as A. S. Edirisinhe denied having taken them to Australia.
The Island raised the issues at hand with Wickramaratne after SJB MP Hesha Vithanage lodged a complaint with the CID against the SLC. He has told the media that his complaint was based on the auditors’ draft report.
Wickramaratne said that the draft report in the public domain was not the final written report on Sri Lanka’s tour of Australia. The AG said that his officers had personally handed over the draft report, dated June 14, to Sports Secretary K. Maheeshan requesting their response, in writing, within 14 days.
However, the Auditor General’s Department has granted additional time for the Sports Ministry to respond. Wickramaratne said yesterday morning that he hadn’t received the response yet.
Wickramaratne insisted that NAO had not released the report to the media. “We’ll post it on the AG’s Department website once the final report is submitted to Parliament after having taken into consideration the response provided by the Sports Ministry.
Dismissing assertions that SLC could be left out of government audit, Wickramaratne said that the Secretary to the Ministry, as the Chief Accounting Officer of the Ministry, was responsible for all financial matters. Therefore, in terms of Section 13 of the National Audit Act No 19 of 2018, the AG enjoyed the power to seek explanation from those bodies coming under his purview. SLC is no exception, Wickramaratne said, emphasizing the pivotal importance of state audit.
Wickramaratne said that the draft report in question shouldn’t be misconstrued as an effort to target any individual, a group of individuals or an institution. The report dealt with a range of issues and once tabled in Parliament after having examined the SLC response a wider discussion could take place.
According to a copy of the draft report seen by The Island, the SLC has spent a total of Rs 67,693,679 on 14 members of the Executive Committee including seven Office Bearers. The expenditure covered air tickets, visa fees, insurance, allowances and tickets for matches. Three of them, however, had paid back Rs 2,596,759.
In addition to them, Rs 18,079,741 was spent on four other SLC employees who joined the team during this period. Of them, two have paid back Rs. 3,321,850.
The Executive Committee, at a meeting held on July 07, 2022, decided to provide funds for all committee members for a maximum period of 10 days and business class travel for Office Bearers.
Altogether the number of players and staff of assistants comprised 36 persons. Of them, five players and one coach had been sent after several players in the original squad suffered injuries.
The SLC has sought approval from the Sports Ministry to take altogether 52 persons on this tour. Of them 17 were outsiders. However, the draft report subsequently stated that 35 persons not connected with the SLC had been issued letters to secure Australian visas. That group included 21 relatives and friends of SLC Chief Shammi Silva.
Of those who obtained a visa, a person identified as Sports Instructor at the Colombo Municipal Council Sanjeewa Nishantha Perera had disappeared in Australia.
Sports Ministry Advisor Sudath Chandrasekera hadn’t joined the tour though George Stuart Travels was paid Rs 60,650 as visa fees. Altogether Rs 1,228,450 had been paid as visa fees for players, officials and Executive Committee members.
In spite of the Executive Committee deciding to procure air tickets on July 7, finally SLC resorted to emergency purchase of air tickets and that, too, bought separately thereby depriving SLC of an opportunity to get a discount.
The state audit has also questioned the process followed in purchasing air tickets. It has been pointed out that of the five agents selected two received special treatment. The state audit also questioned why two officers bought the tickets for two groups.
The AG also pointed out various other discrepancies relating to air travel on the basis of information obtained from the Immigration and Emigration. According to the draft report, SLC Executive Committee members have been subjected to scrutiny and an explanation has been sought from the Sports Ministry.
News
MullenLowe Sri Lanka integrates Synapse VII Advanced Analytics to elevate data-driven advertising
MullenLowe Sri Lanka, has announced the integration of Synapse VII’s advanced data analytics capabilities into its digital services ecosystem. The partnership signals an important shift in the local advertising landscape, bringing together high-impact creative storytelling with rigorous data diagnostics.
As Sri Lankan brands navigate an increasingly complex digital economy, the collaboration aims to address a growing challenge within the industry, which is the disconnect between daily digital content activity and long-term brand equity. Synapse VII focuses on the discipline of digital effectiveness, an approach that looks beyond short-term engagement metrics commonly associated with social media marketing to identify media patterns that genuinely influence business performance in both the short and long term.
“The industry has spent years chasing immediate engagement, often at the expense of sustainable growth,” said Thayalan Bartlett, Executive Chairman of MullenLowe Group Sri Lanka. “By integrating Synapse VII’s analytical engine, we move beyond traditional reporting and give our clients the ability to understand where their brand is heading, not simply where it has been.”
Kevin Kulatilake, Managing Director of Synapse VII, brings extensive international experience to the partnership. His career includes leading the digital division for Unilever at Mindshare, part of GroupM in Sri Lanka, and serving as the former Head of LoweDigital at MullenLowe Sri Lanka before relocating to the United Kingdom.
During his time in the UK he operated within a highly competitive marketing environment, holding senior performance leadership roles across global brands. As Performance Director for organisations such as Haleon at Publicis, Eurostar at Wavemaker, and the Volkswagen Group at Omnicom, he was responsible for managing multi-million-pound digital performance budgets. Within these environments, where data-driven accountability is a business necessity, advanced predictive analytics form the foundation of marketing decision-making.
“Synapse VII was built on the principle that data should steer the brand rather than simply describe it,” Kulatilake said. “Having implemented these frameworks in the UK, where the scale of data and the weight of media investment demand absolute precision, I am excited to bring that same level of analytical discipline back to Sri Lanka.”
News
‘Show us the science, not slogans’: Prof. Anura Wijepala challenges Sri Lanka’s renewable energy push
A former Chairman of the Ceylon Electricity Board, Prof. Eng. Anura Wijepala has called for urgent, evidence-based clarity on Sri Lanka’s renewable energy (RE) ambitions, warning that politically driven targets risk destabilising the country’s already fragile power sector.
Speaking on the ongoing debate over Sri Lanka’s transition to renewable energy, Wijepala said he has yet to receive satisfactory answers to critical technical and economic questions—despite these targets being widely promoted in policy circles and election platforms.
“I never got answers for these questions in that programme or up to this day,” he said, expressing concern that ambitious targets such as 70% or 80% renewable energy penetration have been adopted without rigorous, transparent studies.
Wijepala stressed that he is not opposed to renewable energy—in fact, he would support even a 100% transition—provided it is grounded in credible analysis led by key state institutions, including the Central Bank of Sri Lanka, the Finance Ministry, and the restructured power utility, now operating as Generation Lanka.
“I am for even 100% RE if the Central Bank, Finance Ministry and CEB—now Generation Lanka—can do a study and convince us on the best way forward,” he said.
However, Wijepala warned that in the absence of such due diligence, arbitrary targets risk doing more harm than good. He alleged that these figures may have been quietly inserted into election manifestos by individuals with vested interests, rather than emerging from a transparent, technocratic process.
“How I understand these 70% or 80% figures are numbers that crept into election manifestoes of unsuspecting presidential candidates by very crafty people who join such policy-making committees and work on their vested interests,” he charged.
The consequences, he cautioned, could be severe.
“The end result is the destruction of the electricity sector and hardship for the people of this country,” Wijepala said, urging policymakers to prioritise system stability, affordability, and long-term sustainability over headline-driven targets.
Sri Lanka’s energy sector has faced repeated crises in recent years, from fuel shortages to tariff hikes and generation shortfalls.
Analysts warn that while renewable energy offers a pathway to energy security and reduced import dependency, its integration must be carefully managed—particularly in a grid that still relies heavily on thermal and hydroelectric balancing.
Wijepala’s remarks add to growing calls within the engineering and energy community for a comprehensive national study on the feasibility, cost implications, grid stability, and storage requirements of high renewable penetration.
By Ifham Nizam
News
Pathfinder Foundation and JAIN University jointly organised the International Roundtable on Migration in Bangalore
A one-day international roundtable on “The Geopolitics of Climate Change and the Securitisation of Climate-Induced Migration” was held in Bangalore, an event jointly organised by Deemed-to-be University (JAIN) and the Pathfinder Foundation.
The discussion brought together experts from India and Sri Lanka to examine how climate change is increasingly shaping global geopolitics, security priorities, and economic vulnerabilities. In his opening statement, Dr Dayaratna Silva, Executive Director of Pathfinder Foundation, stated that countries in our region are highly vulnerable to extreme weather events, resource scarcity, ecosystem disruption, and intensifying geopolitical tensions, not only environmentally but also economically and socially. He cited Cyclone Ditwah in November 2025 as a stark example, which affected all 25 districts in Sri Lanka. Therefore, addressing these climate-related challenges requires stronger regional cooperation and institutional resilience.
Prof Sandeep Shastri, Vice President of Bangalore Campus, in his opening remarks emphasised that climate change and SDGs are closely interconnected; therefore, the progress made towards mitigating climate change impacts will significantly ease the path to achieving many SDGs.
Prof Ranjith Bandara, Chairman of Kirula Foundation, and Subhashini Abeysinghe, Research Director at Verité Research, contributed to the Climate Risks, Maritime Vulnerabilities, and Supply-Chain Disruptions session. Anuradhi Navaratnam, Attorney-at-Law and Migration Consultant, contributed to the session on Securitisation of Climate-Induced Migration and Displacement. The roundtable emphasised the importance of adopting climate justice-oriented approaches, strengthening supply chain resilience, and enhancing India–Sri Lanka collaboration, while also laying the groundwork for a future international conference and joint policy outputs.
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