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School student transport services are being regulated

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A discussion on regulating school student transport services was held on the 09th of February at the Prime Minister’s Office under the patronage of Prime Minister Dr. Harini Amarasuriya, with the participation of officials from the National Transport Commission and the Ministry of Education.

The authority for regulating school student transport has been vested with the National Transport Commission, and as the relevant draft of regulations have already been prepared, discussions were held on the provisions contained in these drafts as well as on new proposals that should be incorporated.

During the discussion, the attention was focused on meeting the emerging needs of transportation arising from the schools, minimizing issues encountered in the transportation of school students by establishing an organized transport mechanism, and deploying the “Sisu Sariya” school transport service in a more efficient and effective manner followed by the new educational reforms process.

Discussions were also held on introducing laws and regulations to systematize the transportation of schoolchildren, prioritizing child protection by preventing reported incidents of abuse and harassment during student transport, and enhancing professionalism among school transport service providers to ensure a responsible and accountable service.

The focus was also emphasized on the need for coordinated action among the Ministry of Transport, Highways and Urban Development, the National Transport Commission, the Ministry of Education, Higher Education and Vocational Education, and the National Child Protection Authority.

The discussion was attended by the Minister of Transport, Highways and Urban Development Bimal Rathnayake, Chairman of the National Transport Commission P. A. Chandrapala, officials of the National Transport Commission, and the officials from the Ministry of Education, Higher Education and Vocational Education.

[Prime Minister’s Media Division]



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Sri Lanka evacuates crew of second Iranian vessel after US sunk IRIS Dena

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Rescued Iranian sailors from the IRIS Dena warship arrive to the Judicial Medical Officer at Karapitiya Hospital in Galle, Sri Lanka on March 5, 2026 [Aljazeera]

Sri Lanka has evacuated more than 200 crew members from a second Iranian naval vessel off its coast, a day after a US submarine sank an Iranian frigate in the same waters, leaving 87 sailors dead.

President Anura Kumara Dissanayake announced on Thursday that his navy would take custody of the second ship and move it to the northeastern port of Trincomalee for safekeeping, amid fears it could be targeted. He said his government held discussions with Iranian officials and the captain of the ship.

Sri Lankan officials say 87 bodies were recovered and 32 people rescued from the roughly 180 people believed to have been on board IRIS Dena sunk on Wednesday.

US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on Wednesday confirmed that a US submarine sank the vessel amid US-Israeli attacks on Iran.

Cabinet spokesperson Nalinda Jayatissa told parliament the vessel was positioned near Colombo, inside Sri Lanka’s exclusive economic zone but beyond its territorial waters, adding that authorities were doing “their utmost to safeguard lives”.

The developments came as Washington confirmed it had torpedoed the IRIS Dena, an Iranian frigate returning from a peacetime naval exercise hosted by India, marking the first time a US submarine has sunk an enemy warship by torpedo since the second world war.

Sri Lankan coastguards received a distress call from the IRIS Dena at 5:08am on Wednesday (23:28 GMT on Tuesday), with surviving crew describing an explosion. Rescue vessels arrived to find the frigate already gone, navy spokesperson Buddhika Sampath said, with only an oil slick and floating life rafts remaining at the scene.

Thirty-two survivors, all seriously injured, were taken to Galle National Hospital. Eighty-seven bodies were recovered from the sea, Sri Lanka’s Foreign Minister Vijitha Herath said. More than 10 sailors remain missing.

The frigate, which was carrying about 180 crew, had been sailing home after participating in a major multinational naval exercise in the Bay of Bengal involving ships from 74 countries when it was struck roughly 44 nautical miles (81km) off Sri Lanka’s southern coast.

US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth confirmed the strike at a Pentagon briefing, releasing black-and-white footage of a Mark 48 torpedo hitting the frigate’s stern. “An American submarine sank an Iranian warship that thought it was safe in international waters,” he said. “Quiet death.”

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi called it “an atrocity at sea, 2,000 miles [3,219km] from Iran’s shores,” noting the ship had been a guest of India’s navy when struck without warning.

“The US will come to bitterly regret the precedent it has set,” he wrote on social media. He later fired back at Trump’s claim that the operation was running ahead of schedule, “Plan A for a clean rapid military victory failed, Mr President.”

The IRIS Dena was one of more than 20 Iranian navy vessels destroyed since the United States and Israel launched coordinated strikes on Iran on February 28, targeting the country’s leadership, missile arsenals and nuclear infrastructure in an operation aimed at dislodging the current government.

Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed on the second day of the attacks, triggering protests in the country and beyond.

As of Tuesday, not a single Iranian warship remained under way in the the Gulf, the Strait of Hormuz or the Gulf of Oman, US Central Command chief Admiral Brad Cooper said.

Questions have also been raised about the legality of the attack in international waters.

The Israeli-US attacks have killed more than 1,000 people in Iran and displaced more than 100,000 from Tehran, according to the UN.

In a striking illustration of how far Washington’s war aims have stretched, Trump told Reuters on Thursday that the US intended to play a role in choosing Iran’s next supreme leader.

“We want to be involved in the process of choosing the person who is going to lead Iran into the future,” he said.

Sri Lanka, which has declared neutrality and called for “restraint and immediate de-escalation,” now finds itself hosting the human wreckage from a war being fought on its doorstep.

[Aljazeera]
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University of Wolverhampton confirms Ranil was officially invited

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University of Wolverhampton has confirmed that it invited Ranil Wickremesinghe in his capacity as President to attend the awarding of Honourary Professorship to First Lady Maithree Wickremesinghe and join graduation lunch on 22 September, 2023.

The invitation dated 01 Sept., 2023 was extended by Prof. John Raftery, Vice Chancellor, University of Wolverhampton to the then President through the Sri Lankan High Commission in London.

Civil society activist Oshala Herath has received the confirmation from Sophie Esson, Information Rights Manager.  Herath told The Island that he had sought information from the University in terms of the Freedom of Information Act 2000 as there was continuing controversy over whether Wickremesinghe attended the event in his private capacity.

Herath who was on the staff of former President Maithripala Sirisena and contested the Colombo District on the UNP ticket at the 2020 parliamentary election said that the NPP government had sent a police team to the UK to establish the circumstances President Wickremesinghe attended the event.

Wickremesinhe had been arrested and granted bail pending further investigations into the case. The UNP leader who visited the UK thrice in 2023 is under investigation for spending Rs 16.2 mn for his September visit.

Alleging that the government spent quite a lot of money to send a police team to the UK, Herath said that the status of the invitation received by the Wickremesinghe’s could have been verified without wasting taxpayers’ money.

By Shamindra Ferdinando

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Female lawyer given 12 years RI for preparing forged deeds for Borella land

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A female attorney-at-law convicted of preparing forged deeds relating to a land in Borella was yesterday sentenced to 12 years rigorous imprisonment by the Colombo High Court.Delivering the verdict after a lengthy trial, High Court Judge Lanka Jayaratne ordered that the sentences imposed on the two counts run concurrently, effectively reducing the term of imprisonment to six years.

The Attorney General’s Department had filed indictments against the accused on two charges, including preparing forged deeds in respect of the land in Borella.

In her judgement, the High Court Judge held that the prosecution had proved both charges against the accused beyond reasonable doubt.

Accordingly, the judge imposed six years’ rigorous imprisonment on each charge, amounting to a total of 12 years. Evidence led during the trial also revealed that the convicted attorney is a 61-year-old mother of two.

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