Business
Exhibition by renowned Street Photographer Tavepong Pratoomwong
The Royal Thai embassy in Colombo, in collaboration with the Streets of Colombo (SOC) photography collective, is delighted to host an exhibition by world-renowned street photographer Tavepong Pratoomwong. Titled GOOD DAY BAD DAY BUT EVERYDAY, the exhibition will run from October 20th to the 27th at Siam Nivasa, the Royal Thai Embassy’s multifunctional cultural and exhibition centre in Colombo. This captivating exhibition celebrates the beauty, complexity, and spontaneity of everyday life through the lens of one of the most acclaimed street photographers of our time.
The Royal Thai embassy continues to play a key role in promoting the arts in Sri Lanka while fostering mutual understanding and friendship between Thailand and Sri Lanka. Reflecting on the exhibition’s significance, the embassy stated: “Art is a universal language, and Tavepong’s work is an honest, humorous reflection of life on the streets which speaks directly to the heart. We are immensely pleased to co-host this event with the Streets of Colombo and are confident that Tavepong’s visit to Sri Lanka will create a wonderful opportunity for local photographers to gain a share of his vast knowledge and experience.”
Johann Latiff, the founder of Streets of Colombo (SOC), expressed his sentiments about the collaboration, saying, “We are thrilled to be the cohosts of this event and to meet Tavepong, whose work we have long admired. Through this exhibition, we hope to inspire more photographers in Sri Lanka to take up street photography and raise awareness of this particular genre of photography.”
GOOD DAY BAD DAY BUT EVERYDAY is a collection of Tavepong Pratoomwong’s most outstanding street photographs, taken during his daily walks since 2014. His work captures the extraordinary within the ordinary, highlighting the unpredictable and often surreal moments that occur in the stream of everyday life. A limited quantity of the hardcover photo book which carries the same title is also available for sale at the exhibition and includes a series of award-winning photographs, offering visitors a chance to further immerse themselves in Tavepong’s work.
The Streets of Colombo (SOC) is a collective of photographers founded in 2018 by Johann Latiff, dedicated to nurturing and promoting the art of street photography in Sri Lanka.
The group provides a platform for photographers to share their work, exchange ideas, and foster a sense of community. Across Sri Lanka SOC members have been instrumental in elevating street photography, encouraging both seasoned and aspiring photographers to explore the streets and capture the essence of urban life. For more information on the SOC follow their social media pages instagram.com/streets.of.colombo and facebook.com/streets.of.colombo For further information about the exhibition call 0778854121.
Business
Beyond the Fashion Value Chain: MAS Leads Global Biodiversity Restoration
Sri Lanka is one of the world’s richest biodiversity hotspots, with nature deeply intertwined with community life. Reflecting this connection, across the island, small-scale conservation efforts have always thrived in pockets. For MAS Holdings, the urgency of the environmental crisis made it clear that scattered initiatives were not enough- it was time to bring them together into an impactful, long-term approach. Employees have also welcomed the chance to be part of projects that protect nature, finding meaning in contributing to something that benefits both their communities and the environment.
Recognising this, apparel-tech conglomerate MAS Holdings has made biodiversity restoration central to its sustainability roadmap, the MAS Plan for Change 2030. Building on its commitments for 2025, the company has pledged to reforest and restore biodiversity across an area 100 times larger than its global operational footprint.
For an organization that spans 15 countries- across North America, Europe, Asia and Africa, this amounts to more than 31,700 acres of land. According to Nemanthie Kooragamage, Director – Group Sustainable Business at MAS Holdings, achieving reforestation on such an ambitious scale demands bold and innovative approaches.
“Well-planned restoration can do far more than replace lost trees,” she explains. “It can reconnect fragmented landscapes, stabilise soils, improve freshwater quality, rebuild coastal and mangrove nurseries, and create wildlife corridors- benefits that safeguard nature and the long-term resilience of apparel supply chains and communities.”
Building a Scalable Goal
The roots of MAS’ biodiversity goal trace back to 2017, when it pledged to restore 250 acres of land, equivalent to its operational footprint at the time. By the end of the initiative, the company had doubled its target and restored 500 acres of land.
Even then, MAS recognised that planting trees alone was not enough. As it pursued this goal, it became clear that landscapes face different pressures, from invasive species to degraded soils, and therefore require tailored interventions. And so, MAS developed its six-model framework for restoration: Conservation, Reforestation, Invasive Removal, Afforestation, Analog Forests, and Forest Gardens.
This framework later underpinned the biodiversity target set under Plan for Change 2025, which scaled up the 2017 pledge to restore 100 times MAS’ operational footprint at the time, a total of 25,000 acres.
Applying the Six-Model Approach
Over the last five years, the six-model framework has been put into practice, with projects demonstrating how different contexts required different interventions.
Conservation was at the heart of the Panama In-Situ Turtle Conservation Project, launched in partnership with two corporates and the Wildlife and Ocean Resources Conservation Society. Protecting a three to ten-kilometre stretch of coastline, the project has safeguarded 272 nests and released over 17,000 hatchlings since October 2023, directly supporting the survival of endangered sea turtle species.
Reforestation included the restoration of 10 acres of mangroves in Trincomalee, where MAS achieved an 81% sapling survival rate. Meanwhile, the Ittapana Mangrove Forest Reforestation Project, undertaken with the University of Sri Jayawardenepura and local communities, planted 500 saplings with a 94% survival rate. Beyond ecological restoration, it enhanced local fisheries, improved water quality, and engaged students and residents, ensuring long-term community impact.
To restore large, inaccessible degraded terrains, MAS partnered with the Sri Lanka Air Force to disperse seed bombs. This aerial reforestation method restored 275 acres and achieved a 45% survival rate, demonstrating an efficient solution for landscapes that could not be rehabilitated through conventional means.
Invasive Alien Species (IAS) removal was another critical strand, with programmes carried out in national parks in partnership with the Department of Wildlife Conservation. At Horton Plains, MAS removed Ulex europaeus from 82% of the affected areas and restored 244 acres of sensitive ecosystem. At Udawalawe and Lunugamwehera, the manual removal of Lantana camara supported the regeneration of grasslands vital for elephants, leopards, and sloth bears.
“We tested different approaches in Sri Lanka, from coastal conservation to seed bombing and invasive species removal, and they proved effective in their own contexts. With the scale of our biodiversity goals and our global operational footprint, the next step was to take these learnings beyond Sri Lanka and apply them internationally,” said Uvini Athukorala, Manager – Environmental Sustainability.
Expanding Globally
As part of its Plan for Change 2025 biodiversity conservation efforts, MAS extended projects beyond Sri Lanka to countries where it also has manufacturing operations. This ensured that the company’s restoration work addressed the landscapes and communities directly connected to its business footprint.
In Central Java, Indonesia, the Blora Ngawi Biodiversity Restoration Project has restored over 12,601 acres since 2023. The initiative planted more than half a million trees and established a multi-stakeholder forest management model that combines forest protection, land rehabilitation, and habitat enrichment.
In Kenya, MAS launched its largest conservation project to date, protecting 8,275 acres within the Nairobi National Park, in partnership with The Wildlife Foundation. The project secured wildlife corridors critical for elephants, lions, and cheetahs, reduced human-wildlife conflict, and created conservation-linked livelihoods for more than 600 people, with women and youth playing a central role.
These global projects demonstrated that the lessons learned in Sri Lanka, experimenting with diverse approaches and working hand in hand with local partners, could be successfully scaled in other contexts, while directly benefiting the communities where MAS operates.
Lessons for the Future
As the Plan for Change 2025 concludes, MAS has restored 25,058 acres toward its biodiversity conservation goal. The experience highlights two key lessons. First, that restoration must be context-specific. From mangrove reforestation in Trincomalee to invasive species removal in Horton Plains, or aerial reforestation of degraded terrain, each ecosystem required a different model to deliver meaningful results. Second, that collaboration is essential. Partnerships with government agencies, non-profits, universities, and local communities in Sri Lanka, Indonesia, and Kenya ensured both technical expertise and local ownership, making projects sustainable beyond their initial interventions.
Business
People’s Bank’s Commitment to Rebuilding the MSME Sector through Government-Backed Financing
How is People’s Bank ready to support the rebuilding of the MSME sector in Sri Lanka, not only in the post-crisis context but in general?
Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs) are the backbone of the Sri Lankan economy, playing a vital role in employment generation, regional development, and income distribution. At People’s Bank, supporting MSMEs is a long-term strategic priority aligned with our mandate as the country’s premier state-owned commercial bank.
Our approach extends beyond post-crisis recovery to support the full MSME life cycle, from start-ups and micro entrepreneurs to growing and established businesses, through tailored financing, advisory support, and sector-specific solutions. With our island-wide branch network and strong understanding of local economies, People’s Bank is well positioned to serve entrepreneurs across urban, rural, and underserved communities.
What government-funded facilities are currently available through People’s Bank?
People’s Bank actively participates in several government-funded and concessionary loan schemes, offering lower interest rates compared to market rates, medium to long-term tenures, loan amounts based on project viability and eligibility criteria defined by sector, purpose, and enterprise size.
Government funded loan products are made available at People’s Bank branches for the sectors in line with government policy directives in MSME sector, as shown in the Table 1.
Can you briefly summarize the MSME loan products offered by People’s Bank?
People’s Bank offers a wide range of bank-funded MSME loan products, including working capital loans to support day-to-day business operations, term loans for machinery, equipment, expansion, and modernization, trade finance facilities including import, export, and local trade support, overdrafts and revolving credit to manage cash flow fluctuations and sector-specific loans tailored for agriculture, manufacturing, tourism, construction, logistics, and services.
Loan amounts, interest rates, and tenures vary depending on the business profile, purpose of the loan, and credit evaluation, with repayment periods extending up to several years for long-term investments whereas the MSME definition introduced by Ministry of Industries for categorization of concerned businesses.
People’s Bank offers a range of bank-funded loan schemes in MSME sector as follows and the interest rates are varies from 7.0% p.a to 12.0% p.a.
The Small and Medium Enterprises Development (SMED) Scheme
The Business Power Loan Scheme
The Solar Power Generation Loan Scheme
The Green Power Loan
The People’s SPARK Loan Scheme
The NCGIL Loan Scheme
People’s Power Loan Scheme
Vanitha Saviya Loan Scheme
Aswenna Loan Scheme
Pledge Loan Scheme (Bank-Funded Variant)
How should customers approach People’s Bank to access these facilities?
Customers are encouraged to visit their nearest People’s Bank branch, which serves as the primary access point for MSME financing. Branch Managers and Credit Officers will assess customer needs, recommend suitable bank-funded or government-funded facilities, and provide guidance on eligibility and documentation, ensuring personalized support throughout the process.
This branch-based approach ensures transparency, sound advisory support, and efficient decision-making. People’s Bank remains committed to empowering Sri Lanka’s MSME sector as a long-term national responsibility, delivering inclusive and sustainable financial solutions through both its own resources and government-backed initiatives.
(This article is based on an interview with People’s Bank Deputy General Manager (SME, Development & Micro Finance), Wickrama Narayana)
Business
Shangri-La Group extends humanitarian support for Cyclone Ditwah relief efforts
In response to the humanitarian needs arising from Cyclone Ditwah, Shangri-La Group has extended financial assistance to support national relief efforts through the Sri Lanka Red Cross Society, under the leadership of Secretary General Dr. Mahesh Gunasekara.
The contribution will be directed towards critical, life-sustaining interventions in some of the most affected communities across the country. According to the Sri Lanka Red Cross, medical services in 25 major hospitals have been severely disrupted by the cyclone. Part of the assistance will therefore support the deployment of mobile medical camps, ensuring timely and accessible healthcare for vulnerable populations.
Recognising the urgent need for safe drinking water in flood-affected areas, the initiative will also focus on restoring natural water sources, including wells and springs, helping communities regain access to clean and reliable water. In addition, a portion of the funds will be allocated to psychosocial support programmes for children residing in temporary camps, offering care, comfort, and emotional reassurance during a deeply unsettling time.
“At Shangri-La, our commitment goes beyond the walls of our hotels. In moments like these, it is about standing alongside communities with empathy, responsibility and care. We hope this support brings not only practical relief, but also comfort and reassurance to families – especially children – who are navigating an incredibly difficult time,” said Shangri-La Sri Lanka Director of Human Resources, Madusha Pihilladeniya. “Our hearts are with every community affected, and we remain united in the belief that compassion, when shared, can help restore hope.”
This initiative reflects Shangri-La’s ethos of Heartfelt Hospitality – a philosophy rooted in empathy, responsibility, and solidarity. It stands as a quiet yet powerful reminder that, beyond hospitality, Shangri-La remains committed to standing with communities when care is needed most and hopes this brings comfort, together with practical assistance to communities affected during this challenging time.
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