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RW seeks ‘final solution’ to poaching in SL’s northern waters

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Sagala Ratnayake

Sagala to lead expert delegation to India

President Ranil Wickremesinghe has instructed to find a once and for all solution for the problem of Indian fishers poaching in Lankan waters.The President has stated that this problem has been rising intermittently causing embarrassment to the governments of both countries. Therefore attempts to find a final solution should be made, sources close to the President’s office said.

He said that the Indian government too has expressed its willingness to strive for a permanent solution for this problem. He has appointed the Chief of Staff of the President’s Office, Sagala Ratnayake, to lead a Lankan delegation of experts to discuss the matter with the Indian government.

Indian fishermen poaching in Lankan waters using bottom-trawling methods have been a serious concern among Lankan fishermen in recent decades. During the war when northern fishermen were not permitted to go out to sea, Indian fishermen had carte blanch in Lankan waters.

The Sri Lanka Navy arrests the Indian fishers in Lankan waters and there are around 170 Indian fishermen in Lankan prisons for the offence of poaching. Some of them were convicted by Lankan courts recently and some fishermen groups in India have commenced an agitation against it in their country, sources said.

Trawler owners in Tamil Nadu wield considerable influence on the state government which in turn pressures New Delhi.



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Former Minister Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe’s son arrested by CIABOC

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It has been reported that Attorney at Law Rakitha Rajapakshe, the son of former Minister of Justice Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe, has been arrested by the Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption (CIABOC) over alleged links with the underworld.

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Proposed EPF-ETF merger harmful to private sector workers – FSP

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Nagamuwa

… alleges NPP trying to implement UPFA, UNP plan

Front-line Socialist Party (FSP) yesterday (24) alleged that the NPP government’s move to amalgamate the Employees’ Trust Fund (ETF) and the Employees’ Provident Fund (EPF), under a unified, tripartite governance framework, would be detrimental to the private sector workers.

Addressing the media at Melder Place, Nugegoda, FSP spokesman Duminda Nagamuwa said that the Cabinet of Ministers approved this proposal on 15 June.

Nagamuwa claimed that the NPP was trying to implement what President Mahinda Rajapaksa had sought to do, in 2011, causing the police to open fire on a group of the Export Processing Zone workers, protesting against the move to create a private pension scheme. A worker, identified as Roshen Chanaka, was shot by police on May 30, 2011, and he succumbed to his injuries.

Pointing out that the EPF and the ETF had been established for the benefit of private sector workers but with different objectives, Nagamuwa warned that amalgamation of the two funds could cause unnecessary complications.

The FSP spokesman said that Ravi Karunanayake, in his capacity as the Finance Minister of the Yahapalana government, in late November 2015 had declared their intention to amalgamate the ETF with the EPF.

FSP’s Pubudu Jayagoda told The Island that they expected all political parties, other than the NPP, to disclose their stand on the vital issue. Jayagoda urged the Opposition to take a stand on the vital issue .

By Shamindra Ferdinando

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Opposition argues that National Environment Amendment Bill is unconstitutional

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Premadasa

The Opposition yesterday argued in Parliament that the National Environment Amendment Bill was unconstitutional. The Opposition said that it violated the 13th Amendment.

SJB and Opposition Leader Sajith Premadasa argued that the approval of the Provincial Councils was required for the Bill to go ahead, as it was a subject in the Concurrent List of powers as per the 13th Amendment to the Constitution.

The MP also said that the clause which enables the Central Government to file legal actions against Local Government bodies was unconditional as well, since local bodies are included in the Provincial Councils list.

“How can you go ahead at a time when the Provincial Councils do not function properly,” Premadasa questioned.

ITAK MP P. Sathyalingam also raised the issue, but Speaker Jagath Wickramaratne, who responded, said the MPs could raise the relevant matters during the debate.

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