News
Highways Minister reveals priority development of 15 roads in Gampaha District to reduce traffic congestion
Chief Government Whip and Highways Minister Johnston Fernando says that a national programme is underway covering the entire country to develop the road network under President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s Vistas of Prosperity and Splendour.
Plans had been completed under that national project to solve the traffic congestion problem in the Gampaha city and its suburbs and 15 roads in the district had been earmarked for the development, the minister said speaking to the media after a progress review meeting held at his ministry yesterday.
Among the 15 roads identified to be upgraded and developed immediately in order to address the traffic congestion in the Gampaha and its suburbs was Gampaha-Miriswatta road which would be developed to a four lane highway, the minister said.
The Gampaha-Yakkala road and Veyangoda-Nittambuwa road would also be widened to have four lanes. Pasyala junction too would be widened under the same project. Other roads to be developed were as follows: Ekala –Kotadeniyawa road, Weyangoda-Kal Eliya road, Kalagedihena-Veyangoda road, Nittambuwa- Urapola road, Negombo-Aluthapola road, Pasyala to Giriulla via Mirigama, Minuwangoda-Divulapitiya Road in Ja-Ela, Negombo- Giriulla road and Urapola-Hanwella road. In the Negombo-Giriulla road the stretch up to Y Junction would be widened to be a four-lane road. In addition alternative routes in and around Warakapola would be developed, the minister said.
Minister Fernando said that the first phase of the Central Expressway from Mirigama to Kadawatha would go through Gampaha city. “There is an urgent need to address the traffic congestion problem in the Gampaha City before the sections of the Central Expressway are inter-linked”, he said.
The Minister said that he had instructed Secretary to the Ministry, R.W.R. Pemasiri to expedite the process of development of the 15 roads that had been identified as main places causing traffic congestion in the Gampaha city and its suburbs.
News
Lanka discovers largest groundwater source
The National Water Supply and Drainage Board (NWSDB) on Friday said the largest groundwater source discovered in Sri Lanka so far had been identified during tube-well drilling near the Pitabeddara Police Station.
Indrajith Gamage, geologist in charge of the Southern Province, said the source recorded a continuous flow of about 10,000 litres (10 cubic metres) per minute, marking the first instance in the country where a groundwater source of that magnitude had been found.
He noted that the previous largest groundwater source was discovered in the Madhu area, which recorded a flow of about 7,000 litres per minute.
According to the NWSDB, the tube well was drilled following geological studies of rock layers and the identification of underground water through fractures in rock strata using specialised technical instruments.
The Board said steps would be taken to distribute water from the newly discovered source to residents facing shortages in Pitabeddara, Morawaka and surrounding areas.
News
Lanka’s commercial legacy preserved in National Archives
The Ceylon Chamber of Commerce has formally handed over its historical records to the National Archives Department, entrusting over a century of the nation’s commercial history to the country’s official custodians of heritage.
The archive, spanning from the CCC’s founding in 1839 to 1973, includes correspondence, meeting minutes, reports, ledgers, and publications that chronicle the development of trade, enterprise, and industry in Sri Lanka. Together, the records provide a rare and detailed account of the island’s economic evolution and the role of its business community in shaping national progress.
News
Bodies of 84 Iranian sailors flown home
The Ministry of Defence said on Friday (13) that arrangements had been made to repatriate to Iran the bodies of 84 sailors who died aboard the IRIS Dena, which sank in the southern seas off Sri Lanka.
A special aircraft carrying the bodies departed from Mattala Rajapaksa International Airport on Friday, the Ministry said, adding that the repatriation was carried out in coordination with the Embassy of Iran in Sri Lanka.
The remains had been kept in two mobile cold-storage units at the Galle National Hospital before being transported to Mattala by lorry following a court order. Forty-five bodies were moved in the morning, while the remaining 39 were transported later in the day.
Earlier this month, the Iranian naval vessel suffered an incident about 40 nautical miles off Port of Galle while carrying around 180 personnel. Thirty-five rescued sailors were admitted to the Karapitiya Teaching Hospital, while 84 bodies were subsequently recovered.
Following the incident, Pete Hegseth confirmed that the Iranian vessel had been sunk in international waters by a torpedo fired from a submarine of the United States Navy.
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