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Wyatt, Sciver-Brunt bat England to 1-0 lead

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Wyatt sored a match-winning 75 off just 47 balls (pic BCCI)

Danielle Wyatt served a timely reminder of her destructive abilities ahead of the second WPL auction, coming up over the weekend, with a match-winning 75 off just 47 balls to set up a 38 run victory for England at the Wankhede on Wednesday (December 6). Put in to bat, the visitors recovered remarkably well after twin strikes in the opening over through a 138-run stand between Wyatt and Nat Sciver-Brunt (77 off 53 balls) to post an imposing total of 197/6. Shafali Verma’s valiant fifty, amidst regular strikes, could only take India to 159/6 in reply.

India couldn’t have asked for a better start with the ball and they had their leader of the pace-attack to thank for it. Renuka Thakur struck twice in her first over on international comeback from back injury. Sophia Dunkley chopped one on early, and the pacer then sent the destructive Alice Capsey’s off-stump cartwheeling off the very next delivery to reduce England to 2/2 inside five balls. That, however, would be the only brief moment of dominance the home team experienced for the next 14 overs.

Wyatt, Sciver-Brunt to the rescue

The pair first consolidated and then accelerated, helping England claw back and take the strike-rate upto nearly 9.5 for the remainder of their innings. Of course it helped that India were sloppy in their fielding as well as their catching. Sciver-Brunt, no fresher to such precarious situations, led the way as she took on both her Mumbai Indians’ teammates Saika Ishaque and Pooja Vastrakar to take England past the 50 mark in the seventh over.

Wyatt, playing her landmark 150th T20I, didn’t spare the debutant spinner either, getting a move on with back-to-back fours to welcome her back into the attack after PowerPlay. The off-spinners were shown no mercy either, with Deepti Sharma leaking 20 in her first two and Shreyanka Patil only marginally better at 19. Wyatt raised the 100 for the partnership and her 13th T20I fifty with a six straight down the ground in the 12th over, while Sciver-Brunt caught on in the next, getting to the milestone in just 36 balls.

Put under pressure right away, Ishaque redeemed herself with the crucial breakthrough India had grown desperate for. A tossed up delivery tempted Wyatt into stepping way out of her crease, only to be beaten by flight and Richa Ghosh was quick to whip the bails off. The England captain was in and out in a jiffy, with the other Indian debutant uprooting the offstump of her RCB teammate for a maiden international wicket. But Sciver-Brunt frustrated Vastrakar, and India, bit more with a hat-trick of boundaries to move into her 70s. A last-minute change of plans from India saw them bring back their most economical bowler for the penultimate over, and Thakur bagged her third when she got Sciver-Brunt to nick one off to the keeper. Amy Jones’ nine-ball cameo of 23 however ensured England finished with an expensive 16-run final over.

Returning with the ball in hand, Sciver-Brunt continued to hurt India when she pegged back Smriti Mandhana’s stumps off just her second delivery to curtail the home team’s brisk start. Freya Kemp did one better, striking on her very first ball to get Jemimah Rodrigues nicking behind. If India managed to finish their PowerPlay with a fifty on the board already, it was courtesy Verma and her half a dozen boundaries by then as she took on the English speedster Mahika Gaur as well as their experienced vice-captain.

Kemp may have started well but leaked 30 in her next 11 deliveries and Harmanpreet Kaur hammered 23 of those, three boundaries and a six included. However, England threw the ball to Sophie Eccelstone who ended the Indian captain’s cameo prematurely. Harmanpreet ended up dragging an inside edge onto the sticks, failing to capitalise and falling for 26. Barring a few flashes of genius here and there, India never looked in the chase. Ghosh too promised to inject some impetus with a six and a four inside the first-four balls she faced but was eventually outfoxed by a slower one from Sarah Glenn, holing out to long-on on 21. That pushed India’s asking rate up to 14.8 for the final five overs, and half-centurion Verma became Ecclestone’s second scalp soon after, in her attempt to go big. The wicket doused whatever slim hopes India harboured as England marched to a fairly comfortable 1-0 lead in the three-match series.

Brief scores:
England women 197/6 in 20 overs (Nat Sciver-Brunt 77, Danni Wyatt 75; Renuka Thakur 3-27) beat India women 159/6 in 20 overs (Shafali Verma 52; Sophie Ecclestone 3-15) by 38 runs



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CEBEU warns of operational disruptions amid uncertainty over CEB restructuring

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The Ceylon Electricity Board Engineers’ Union (CEBEU) yesterday warned that uncertainty surrounding the ongoing restructuring of the Ceylon Electricity Board (CEB) had forced many employees to refrain from performing their regular duties, raising concerns about potential disruptions to electricity sector operations.

The engineers’ union said the current situation had arisen due to what it described as either deliberate actions or extreme negligence in implementing the restructuring process, which has created significant confusion among staff who previously served under the CEB.

According to the union, although the state power utility has been formally restructured and new companies established, a large majority of former CEB employees have yet to receive official appointment letters, confirming their positions in the newly formed entities.

“The reality is that the institution, previously known as the Ceylon Electricity Board, no longer exists in its earlier form, yet most employees, who served under it, have not been issued proper appointment letters, or related documentation, assigning them to the newly established companies,” the CEBEU said.

The union said that while some workers had been issued “assignation letters”, those documents merely indicate the institution to which an employee has been attached and do not clearly define employment conditions, responsibilities, authority, or reporting structures.

“As a result, employees currently lack the necessary legal framework confirming their employment status, their duties, the authority under which they operate, and who they are accountable to within the new institutions,” the CEBEU said.

The engineers’ union emphasised that the current crisis was not created by employees but was the direct result of, what it called, shortsighted and questionable actions taken by those responsible for implementing the reforms.

It also expressed concern that the relevant Minister, appointed through the National List, had failed to hold meaningful discussions with employees, despite having previously advocated strongly for workers’ rights.

The union said trade union action had been launched only after months of unsuccessful attempts to resolve the issues through verbal requests and written communication with the authorities.

“Despite repeated appeals made over several months, there has been no satisfactory response. Decisions appear to have been taken under the assumption that a government with a strong mandate can proceed without proper consultation,” the union said.

However, the CEBEU stressed that employees engaged in essential operations—including power generation, transmission, and distribution—continue to work in order to ensure electricity supply to the public.

“These staff members are continuing their duties under considerable risk to prevent major disruptions to the electricity supply,” the union noted.

Nevertheless, the union warned that the prevailing uncertainty could affect certain operational activities, and restoration work following breakdowns may take longer than usual.

The CEBEU appealed to the public to understand the situation and expressed regret for any inconvenience that may arise.

“We request the public to understand the situation and cooperate with us during this difficult period. We sincerely regret any inconvenience that may be caused,” the union added.

By Ifham Nizam

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Remittances up compared to last year before outbreak of war, but the economic picture is not rosy

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Sri Lanka Bureau of Foreign Employment (SLBFE) yesterday said that foreign remittances, during January and February this year, had been 32% higher than the corresponding period in the previous year.

According to a press release issued by the SLBFE, Sri Lanka received Rs 1,480.1 mn during January and February this year, whereas in 2025 the country received Rs1,121 mn during the corresponding period. During the first two months of this year, 47,819 Sri Lankans had left the country for employment abroad.

However, Prof. Priyanga Dunusinghe has warned that Sri Lanka could face a catastrophic situation due to a rapid and sharp drop in revenue caused by the escalating Gulf war. Fighting erupted on February 28 following a joint US-Israel attacks on Iran.

Appearing on Derana ‘Big Focus’ on Monday, the Professor in Economics in the Department of Economics, and Head – Department of Information Technology, University of Colombo, Dunusinghe said that that the drop in remittances from the Middle East, as well as exports, should be examined against the backdrop of runaway oil prices.

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The Netherlands alleges Russian Embassy interfering in World Press Photo Exhibition

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The Netherlands Embassy in Colombo has accused the Russian Embassy of trying to limit freedom of expression and right to know in Sri Lanka. The Embassy yesterday issued the following statement: “The Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands’ attention has been drawn to the attempts by the Russian Embassy in Colombo to deny the people of Sri Lanka’s right to information and freedom of expression by demanding photos related to “Russia’s war of aggression” on Ukraine be removed from the World Press Photo exhibition, currently on display in Sri Lanka.

The 2025 edition of the World Press Photo Exhibition was officially opened by Dr Kaushalya Ariyaratne, Deputy Minister of Mass Media, and Wiebe de Boer, Ambassador of the Kingdom of the Netherlands on February 27, 2026, at One Galle Face. The same exhibition will be held in Kandy from 13 to 17 March 2026 at Sahas Uyana.

The Ambassador of the Russian Federation to Sri Lanka visited the exhibition during the weekend of March 7 and 8 and demanded the photographs, related to “Russia’s war of aggression on Ukraine,” be removed from the exhibition, and threatened to stage a protest if the organisers failed to do so.

The exhibition is jointly organised by the Netherlands Embassy, along with the Sri Lanka Press Institute, and the World Press Photo Foundation in the Netherlands.

Continuing the same demand, the Russian Embassy has now approached the Sri Lankan Ministry of Foreign Affairs to remove the said photos from the exhibition in Kandy. The same exhibition is currently underway in the USA and Germany and is showing all around the world in dozens of countries with freedom of expression.

The photos, including the photos that the Russian Embassy in Colombo wanted to hide from the Sri Lankan citizens, are also available online on the World Press Photo website for free for anyone to access them.

The Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands deplores the attempts by any party to compromise people’s right to know and right to freedom of expression. It also amounts to a violation of the host country’s sovereignty if an Embassy attempts to decide what and which content its citizens should see and not. While we, as the Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, assure the Sri Lankan public that as our commitment to protect press freedom and respect for editorial integrity, we will continue the exhibition in Kandy with its full content without censoring any photos of the exhibition.

The exhibition is open to the public, free of charge, from 10.30am on Friday, March 13, till March 17, at Sahas Uyana in Kandy.”

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