News
India fight back but Australia ahead in summit clash

A 109-run opening session, headlined by a century stand between Ajinkya Rahane and Shardul Thakur, was followed by a slow-moving session as India tried to wrest control. However, the status quo did not change with Australia still retaining their dominant position at the end of Day 3 of the WTC final at The Oval on Friday (June 9).
Having bowled India out for 296, Australia ended the day at 123/4, scoring 100 of those runs in the final session to stretch their lead to 296.
The Australian pacers began the day with probing lengths, making the most of their height to generate bounce and trouble the Indian batters. After KS Bharat was bowled by Scott Boland off the second ball of the day, Thakur was struck on his forearm multiple times by Pat Cummins while Rahane too was struck on his fingers. Nevertheless, the seventh wicket pair battled it out with some positive batting to lead the fightback against Australia.
The Australian pacers created multiple opportunities but catches went down in the slip cordon, Thakur being the major recipient. Rahane was also saved by the umpire’s call for a leg-before decision that Australia reviewed in Green’s over and while Thakur had a lucky break when Cummins rapped him on the pads but replays revealed that he had overstepped.
There were testing deliveries time and again but there were some loose ones too as the seventh wicket pair helped India past the 250 mark and raised a century stand at a strike rate of over 83, with India scoring at close to five an over before the Lunch break.
However, only 59 runs came in the second session as Australia wrapped up the innings quickly before getting to 23/1 at Tea.
Australia made quick inroads into the Indian batting with Cummins being the wrecker-in-chief. He found the outside edge of Rahane’s bat and saw Cameron Green take a stunning one-handed catch at gully to end a fine innings. Thakur registered his third successive fifty at The Oval but Australia kept chipping away and picked up a 173-run lead.
The Indian pace duo of Mohammed Siraj and Mohammed Shami then steamed in and put the Australian batters under pressure with the new ball, with the bounce troubling them too.
Siraj got the better of David Warner who tried to drive away from his body while Marnus Labuschagne and Usman Khawaja were kept on their toes, with plays and misses, and indecisive runnning between the wickets. Labuschagne lost his bat a couple of times in a trying period for the batters but the second wicket pair came out unscathed.
Khawaja, however, fell early in the third session trying to get a move on after a slew of dot balls. Steve Smith and Labuschagne however, eased the pressure with regular boundaries to extend the lead. Umesh Yadav, who finally picked up a wicket in the match, was guilty of leaking fours, as was Shami.
As the ball got older and the field spread, singles, twos and even threes came easily as Smith and Labuschagne built a steady partnership. The stand eventually extended past 50, Australia’s lead crossed 250 and the Indian bowlers appeared deflated. But against the run of play Smith charged down the track to a Jadeja delivery and ended up skying a leading edge.
With Travis Head at the crease, India operated with Siraj and Jadeja in tandem – the pacer resorting to short-ball tactics and the spinner trying to make the most of the rough outside the batter’s off stump. A couple of streaky sixes, one off a dropped catch, followed, but Jadeja held on to a catch off his own bowling to end Head’s stay. Labuschagne and Green saw through the remainder of the day without any damage.
Australia 469 all-out (Travis Head 163, Steve Smith 121, Alex Carey 48; Mohammed Siraj 4-108, Shardul Thakur 2-83) & 123/4 (Marnus Labuschagne 41*, Steven Smith 34; Ravindra Jadeja 2-25) lead India 296 all-out (Ajinkya Rahane 89, Shardul Thakur 51; Pat Cummins 3-83) by 296 runs
News
Cop who accepted Rs 3000 bribe nabbed by CIABOC

A police officer attached to the Raddolugama police station who accepted a bribe of Rs 3000/- from a motorist has been nabbed by officers attached to the Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption (CIABOC) on Monday (14) evening.
It is alleged that the police officer demanded Rs 3000/- from the motorist to return his driving licence without prosecuting him for a traffic offence.
News
GMOA swings into action on Vithana’s disclosure of MPs’ salaries, etc.

The Government Medical Officers’ Association (GMOA) has sought an explanation from Parliament regarding how PAYE (Pay As You Earn) is applied to parliamentarians.
GMOA Secretary Dr. Prabath Sugathadasa has written to the Secretary General of Parliament, Kushani Rohanadeera, in terms of the Right to Information (RTI) Act.
Information was sought on 09 July, 2025, in the wake of Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) Kalutara district parliamentarian Jagath Vithana posting his pay sheets from January to May this year on his Facebook.
In addition to information on PAYE, the GMOA has posed a number of other questions to the Secretary General regarding the parliamentarians’ salary as well as pensions.
Parliament passed the RTI Act on 24 June, 2016, and it came into effect on 03 February, 2017. This act, introduced through the 19th Amendment to the Constitution, in 2015, is meant to promote transparency and accountability in government.
New controversy has erupted in the wake of Nawa Janatha Peramuna lodging a complaint with the CIABOC seeking an investigation into Speaker Dr. Jagath Wickremaratne abusing public property, a claim denied by the Secretary General of Parliament.
According to Vithana’s May pay sheet, his monthly allowance is Rs. 54,285, entertainment allowance Rs 1,000, telephone allowance Rs 50,000, sitting allowance Rs 5,000, office allowance Rs 100,000, fuel allowance Rs 97,428.92 and transport allowance Rs. 15,000. His take home pay is Rs 317, 760.92 after the deduction of Rs 1,200 for catering, stamp duty Rs. 25 and Advance Personal Income Tax (APIT).
Asked whether he regretted the releasing of pay sheets, lawmaker Vithana told The Island that in the run-up to the last parliamentary elections, held in November 2024, he had promised the Kalutara electorate he wouldn’t draw his salary. The MP said that however, he later felt the salary should be accepted and used in support of public welfare projects undertaken by him. “Therefore, the money was used appropriately,” he said, adding that both the government and Opposition MPs reacted with resentment. “I feel sort of isolated in Parliament. Hardly anyone talks to me,” MP Vithana said.
Dr. Sugathadasa said that having perused the pay sheets posted online, the GMOA had felt the urgent need to seek a clarification from Parliament as the lawmakers appeared to have received special status. The top GMOA official emphasised they wanted to establish the truth and used the RTI law to obtain information regarding the MPs’ salaries, pensions and other related information. “The GMOA made the request on 09 July, 2025. We are confident the Parliament will answer our queries,” Dr. Sugathadasa said.
Parliament meets only eight days a month. Attendance is not compulsory and there is no fixed time for lawmakers to attend sittings. Over the years, sittings have been suspended for lack of quorum.
The Island asked the GMOA official whether they would seek the intervention of the RTI Commission in case the Parliament declined to reveal the information sought by them. Dr. Sugathadasa said that the Executive Committee of the GMOA would decide the course of action if Parliament withheld information.
A few years ago Chamara Sampath, of Wijeya Newspapers, successfully moved the Court of Appeal against the Parliament after the latter refused to disclose names of Members of Parliament (MPs) who had handed over their respective declarations of assets and liabilities in 2018 and list of names of MPs who have handed over their Declarations from 2010 to the time he made the request (21 June, 2018).
The Court on 28 February, 2023, reaffirmed the RTI Commission’s stand that Declarations of Assets and Liabilities Law of 1975 (DALL) didn’t prevail over the Right to Information Act no. 12 of 2016 (RTI Act).
According to the Parliament website, an MP is paid Rs. 54,285, entertainment allowance Rs 1,000, driver’s allowance Rs 3,500 (only if driver is not provided by government). Fuel allowances are paid based on the distance from Parliament to the electoral district which each MP was elected and the approved market price of one litre of diesel on the first day of every month, telephone allowance Rs 50,000, transport allowance for personal staff Rs 10,000, and stamps worth Rs 350,000 issued to each MP annually.
By Shamindra Ferdinando
News
Udaya alleges Prez hasn’t given up efforts to bring in outsider as AG

Pivithuru Hela Urumaya (PHU) leader and former Minister Udaya Gammanpila says President Anura Kumara Dissanayake has delayed making a permanent appointment to the post of Auditor General in a bid to bring in an outsider early next year.
Addressing the media yesterday (14), Attorney-at-Law Gammanpila said that three civil society members of the Constitutional Council, who opposed the President’s move, would be completing their term in early January next year. Instead of appointing Dharmapala Gammanpila as the Auditor General, the President had given him only an extension in service so as to get rid of him at the first available opportunity and bring in his crony from the Kelaniya University.
The former lawmaker said that the success of the President’s plan depended on the appointment of pliant civil society members to the CC, ready to help advance the NPP’s agenda.
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