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High Commissioner Moragoda meets the Minister of Petroleum & Natural Gas and Housing & Urban Affairs of India

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High Commissioner of Sri Lanka to India Milinda Moragoda met with the Minister of Petroleum & Natural Gas and Housing and Urban Affairs of India Shri Hardeep Singh Puri, 10 March at the Ministry of Urban Affairs in New Delhi.

High Commissioner Moragoda thanked Minister Puri for the assistance that India has provided to Sri Lanka as envisaged under the four-pillars of cooperation, agreed during the visit of Sri Lankan Finance Minister Basil Rajapaksa to India in December last year, in particular the USD 500 million line of credit to purchase petroleum products. Additional assistance too has been provided by India to enhance Sri Lanka’s petroleum stocks.

High Commissioner Milinda Moragoda also briefed Minister Puri on the challenges that Sri Lanka is currently facing as regards to the supply and distribution of petroleum products and their impact on the country’s energy sector. The High Commissioner and the Minister discussed modalities through which India and Sri Lanka could further expand cooperation in the petroleum sector to help overcome the present crisis.

The discussion also focused on a range of issues pertaining to the energy sector, including ways and means through which Sri Lanka could establish long-term strategic ties in the petroleum, oil, gas and related logistics sectors.

Minister Hardeep Singh Puri was a distinguished career diplomat prior to joining politics. He had served at the High Commission of India in Colombo during the period 1984-1988.

Ordination of Rev. Suseela of Austria

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The ordination of first ever Austrian national was held in Austria on 6 March 2022 at the Dhamma-Zentrum Nyanaponika in Austria. Most Ven. Dr. Wijayarajapura Seelawansa Thero, the founder and the Chief Incumbent of the Dhamma-Zentrum Nyanaponika in Austria ordained Mr. Markus Pastollnigg, an Austrian national as Ven. Suseela Thero of Austria. The Maha Sanga from Italy, France and Sri Lanka conducted the ritual of ascetic traditions.

The Ambassador and the staff of the Embassy, family members of Mr. Pastollnigg, memebrs of the Sri Lankan community and Austrian devotees attended the ceremony.

While appreciating the valued contribution of the Most Venerable Dr. Wijayarajapura Seelawansa Thero to the advancement of Buddhism over the past 40 years, Ambassador Majintha Jayesinghe went on to state that conducting the first, age-old custom of ordination in Austria, would further strengthen traditionally close, friendly and special relations between the two countries.

Following the ceremony, heel dana was offered to the Maha Sangha.

Embassy and Permanent Mission of Sri Lanka
Vienna

Sri Lanka delegation attends the 49th Session of the Human Rights Council in Geneva

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The delegation from Sri Lanka that attended the 49th session of the Human Rights Council in Geneva was led by the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Prof. G.L. Peiris and comprised of Minister of Justice Ali Sabry, State Minister of Production Supply and Regulation of Pharmaceuticals Dr. Channa Jayasumana, Foreign Secretary Admiral Prof. Jayanath Colombage and Additional Solicitor General Nerin Pulle.

The 49th session of the Human Rights Council was held in the backdrop of a written update on Sri Lanka which was to be presented to the Council by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights in pursuance of resolution 46/1 which was adopted in March 2021, without the consent of Sri Lanka as the country concerned and with only 22 of the 47 Council members voting in favour of it.

Operative Paragraph 6 of this resolution set a very dangerous precedent by requiring the Office of the High Commissioner to take on the role of collecting criminal evidence with a view to future prosecution. Due to its fundamentally flawed nature, even countries that voted in favour of resolution 46/1, in their ‘explanation of the vote’ expressed reservations regarding this new task assigned to the Office of the High Commisisoner for Human Rights (OHCHR) which is not consistent with its founding document General Aseembly resolution 48/141.

The OHCHR has now established a “Sri Lanka Accountability Project” citing resolution 46/1, in a situation where the language of OP6 in resolution 46/1 only sought to “strengthen the capacity of the OHCHR to collect, consolidate, analyse and preserve…evidence.” Thus, what was supposed to be only an internal capacity building exercise within the OHCHR has arbitrarily been elevated to the level of a project and listed with other external mechanisms of the UNHRC.

Furthermore, all this adversarial action is taking place in Geneva at a time when the Government of Sri Lanka is vigorously engaged in initiating and implementing a series of national processes aimed at advancing reconciliation and human rights for all our people. In this context, it was important for Sri Lanka to explain to the stakeholders in Geneva, including to the Council, UN Member States and other relevant actors, Sri Lanka’s position on this matter and to present before them the significant progress that Sri Lanka has achieved in this regard amidst COVID-19 related challenges.

The Minister of Foreign Affairs addressed the High Level Segment of HRC49 on 1 March, 2022 highlighting Sri Lanka’s longstanding profile as an active participant in the multilateral framework, the national constitutional, legal and institutional frameworks that are in place to realize human rights, including the right to development and Sri Lanka’s achievements in this regard. The Minister also stressed the importance of the HRC being guided by the principles of impartiality, objectivity and non-selectivity, based on the principle of the sovereign equality of Member States and raised objections to punitive, politicized, divisive, unhelpful actions initiated due to extraneous reasons.

Foreign Minister Peiris also made a statement on behalf of Sri Lanka as the country concerned at the interactive dialogue that followed the introduction of the written update on Sri Lanka on 4 March, 2022, pointing out among other things, that resolution 46/1 on Sri Lanka was directly contrary to the founding principles of the HRC. He also pointed out to the Council, elements of the High Commissioner’s written update that were discriminatory and intrusive.

At the Interactive Dialogue on the High Commissioner’s written update, Sri Lanka received cross-regional support and solidarity from a large number of countries of the Global South, who appreciated the Government’s significant efforts towards reconciliation and reiterated the importance of objective and constructive cooperation as the fundamental basis for multilateral engagement. Of the 45 countries that delivered statements at the interactive dialogue, 31 spoke in support of Sri Lanka. These speakers represented a broad spectrum of states from South, South East and Central Asia, Latin America and the Africa.

The 31 countries that spoke in favour of Sri Lanka at the interactive dialogue were Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Philippines, Nepal, Kenya, Ethiopia, Maldives, China, Cuba, Japan, Syrian Arab Republic, Viet Nam, Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK), Venezuela, Nigeria, Pakistan, Cambodia, the Russian Federation, Lebanon, Uganda, Belarus, Zimbabwe, Eritrea, South Sudan, Lao PDR, Yemen, Iran, Niger, Kazakhstan, Bangladesh and Azerbaijan.

In addition, in its statement at the General Debate on Item 2 that followed the interactive dialogue on Sri Lanka, South Korea also recognized Sri Lanka’s efforts at reconciliation and at initiating legal reforms.

The interventions from the States of the Global South recognised Sri Lanka’s commitment to promoting reconciliation and human rights through national processes including through legislative reform and the progress achieved in this regard despite COVID-19 related challenges. They also underscored the importance of the Human Rights Council and the international community supporting voluntary national processes, as well as upholding the core principles of impartiality, non-selectivity and non-politicisation.

Among the matters stressed by the intervenient delegations were concerns over the micro-management of Sri Lanka’s internal, constitutional and governance matters and the imperative of strict adherence to the provisions of the UN Charter and relevant UNGA and HRC resolutions. It was also stressed that cooperation with international, human rights mechanisms should be without any external pressure from outside, with states having the power to determine their priorities and areas for international assistance and that only cooperative action will be truly effective and contribute to the real strengthening of human rights in a country.

Certain intervenient delegations also disagreed with the role being set for the OHCHR in collecting evidence, noting that the decision of the OHCHR to establish an “accountability project” is a breach of its mandate. The exorbitant cost of this mandate, in the region of US$ 3 million, was also commented on.

The delegation from Colombo held bi-lateral meetings with the following foreign delegations on the sidelines of HRC49 listed in the order in which they took place.

  • Minister of State for South and Central Asia, UN and the Commonwealth Lord Tariq Ahmed, accompanied by Ambassador/DPR of the UK Rita French.
  • Commonwealth Secretary General Baroness Patricia Scotland
  • Minister of Foreign Affairs and Cooperation of Timor-Leste Adaljiza Magno
  • Ambassador, Permanent Observer, Permanent Delegation of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation Nassima Baghli,
  • Director General, World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) Daren Tang
  • Permanent Representative of Saudi Arabia Abdulaziz M.O. Alwasil
  • Foreign Minister of Palestine Rizad Al Maliki and Permanent Representative of Palestine to the UN in Geneva Ibrahim Khraishi
  • Federal Minister for Human Rights of Pakistan Shireen M Mazari and the Permanent Representative of Pakistan in Geneva Khalil Hashmi
  • Minister of International Relations and Cooperation of South Africa, Dr Naledi Pandor
  • Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs for Human Rights and Humanitarian Affairs of Egypt Khaled El Bakry, and Permanent Representative of Egypt Ahmed Ihab Abdelahad Gamaleldin,
  • Permanent Representative of the USA in Geneva Bathsheba Nell Crocker
  • Permanent Representative of the UK Simon MANLEY and Permanent Representative of Australia Amanda GORELY
  • Deputy Head of the Judiciary of the Islamic Republic of Iran Dr Kazem Gharibabadi, and Permanent Representative of Iran Esmaeil Baghaei Hamane
  • Permanent Representative of Turkey Sadik Arslan
  • UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet
  • President of the Human Rights Council, Permanent Representative of Argentina Federico Villegas
  • Permanent Representative of Bangladesh Md. Mustafizur Rahman and Permanent Representative of Indonesia Febrian Ruddyard

In addition to the above, State Minister of Production Supply and Regulation of Pharmaceuticals Prof. Channa Jayasumana held the following bi-laterals meetings with:

  • Director General, World Health Organization, Dr Tedross Adhanom Ghebreyesus
  • Director of COVAX’s Country Engagement Team Santiago Cornejo

Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Colombo

SJB stages a massive protest in Colombo – PHOTOS

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The Samagi Jana Balaweagaya staged a protest in Colombo today (15) under the theme ‘Let’s save the country from destruction’.

The protest was started at 2.00 pm, and a group including the Samagi Sevaka Sangamaya, Samagi Vanitha Balawegaya, civil society organizations and university lecturers participated in the protest.

The leader of the Samagi Jana Balawega Sajith Premadasa had decided to go to the Presidential Secretariat with hundreds of thousands of people who are coming to protest in Colombo today under the leadership of the Samagi Jana Balawegaya.

Accordingly, the Samagi Jana Balawegaya has decided to gather the people coming to Colombo in two places and march towards the Presidential Secretariat from two directions.

One march will start from Maradana Technical Junction and the other will start near the Office of the Leader of the Opposition.

Photos: Ajith Seneviratne

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Are the rumors that the CBSL Governor is going to be removed true?

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The Governor of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) emphasized in response to a query made by LNW that there is no truth in the news published in an English newspaper that there are plans to remove him from the post.

Ajith Nivard Cabraal says that there is no truth in the news and the propaganda that there is a controversy between him and the Finance Minister is baseless.

He pointed out that the Central Bank of Sri Lanka is already providing guidelines for an effective program to boost economic growth.

Meanwhile, Secretary to the President, Gamini Senarath also confirmed to LNW that there is no truth in the rumors that there are plans to remove the CBSL Governor from office.

La Vivente strikes Gold at SLIM Brand Excellence 2021

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La Vivente, a leading brand in the online fashion industry, clinched their first Gold Award for “SME Local Brand of the Year” and Bronze Award for “Best New Entrant Brand” at the SLIM Brand Excellence Awards 2021 held on 9th February 2022 at the Grand Monarch Imperial.

La Vivente is the first women’s fashion brand in Sri Lanka to win two awards at the SLIM Brand Excellence Awards 2021.The ceremony, organised by the Sri Lanka Institute of Marketing (SLIM), celebrates the outstanding performances of corporates and brands, their dedication and commitment to consumer-driven initiatives and innovative market approaches.

Over the last 2 years since its launch, La Vivente, under Dilchand (Pvt) Ltd., has sported a range of comfortable and affordable high-quality clothing suited for various age groups of women. The brand has adopted new trends while catering to Sri Lankan women from all walks of life, with its innovative products and value additions, earning the love of women from across the island. La Vivente identified the gap in the market and timely strategies which pioneered in the industry, especially during the COVID 19 pandemic, have orchestrated remarkable wins for La Vivente. The prestigious SLIM awards reflect the brand’s resilience in troubled times and its reach despite distance and adversity.

Revolutionising Sri Lanka’s online fashion industry, La Vivente introduced a better shopping experience for women, ensuring that they promptly and safely receive their orders to their doorsteps. La Vivente prides itself for continuing to meet women’s requirements even during the beginning of the pandemic when a lockdown was in place.

Apart from the online experience, customers can also visit La Vivente’s three stores in Galle, Koswatte and Negombo where the staff is well trained to provide a friendly service to meet customer requirements.

Commenting on the accolade, La Vivente Co- Founder/Director, Dr. Dilesha Perera said, “We are honoured to be recognised at the SLIM Brand Excellence Awards especially in a year that required companies and brands to demonstrate strong resilience to survive and thrive. This award reflects our commitment to continuous innovation amidst adversity and validation of the tireless efforts of the entire La Vivente team which places the valued consumer at the heart of our work.

She further stated that “La Vivente is committed to keep to its meaning of ‘being alive,’ empowering our women for a happier and fulfilling life, ensuring a decent wage and a better working environment. Each creation purchased from La Vivente directly contributes towards empowering local women and their families, adding essence and meaning to our brand’s definition. We are truly grateful to our customers for making the La Vivente journey extraordinary.”

The government mechanism is collapsed and the country is in serious danger – Ranil

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UNP leader Ranil Wickremesinghe says that the people have no faith that politicians have a plan to save the country from the crisis faced.

Wickremasinghe points out that the hopes of the people that the present government would embark on a new journey after reading the Prosperity Vision and Policy Statement are being shattered day by day. He has said this while participating in a UNP reorganization program.

He states that by now the mechanism of the government has completely collapsed and there has never been such an incident in the history of the country. Wickremesinghe emphasizes that there are no reports of such a catastrophic collapse of the country, at least during World War II.

Sajith decides to march to the Presidential Secretariat with the protesters

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The leader of the Samagi Jana Balawega Sajith Premadasa has decided to go to the Presidential Secretariat with hundreds of thousands of people who are coming to protest in Colombo today under the leadership of the Samagi Jana Balawegaya. The decision was taken following a discussion between Premadasa and his group of parliamentarians this morning.

Accordingly, the Samagi Jana Balawegaya has decided to gather the people coming to Colombo in two places and march towards the Presidential Secretariat from two directions.

One march will start from Maradana Technical Junction and the other will start near the Office of the Leader of the Opposition.

1500 buses carrying SJB supporters have already arrived in Colombo

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The organizers of the Samagi Jana Balawega say that the people who are participating in the protest being held in Colombo today are now arriving in Colombo. It is reported that more than 1500 buses have already arrived in Colombo.

Earlier police had obstructed a protest that was organized by the members of Samgi Jana Balawegaya and buses carrying participants were stopped by police in many parts of the country. However, it is reported that there will be no obstruction from the police this time.

German travel vlogger in Sri Lanka mulls leaving as money printing creates blackouts

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A German vlogger, going by the name of Ken Abroad that captured the hearts of thousands of youtube users in Sri Lanka has said he may cut his visit short and leave the country as money printing created forex shortages and a power crisis.

“When you are travelling abroad, you have many challenging situations,” Ken said in his latest youtube video.

“But the challenges are getting worse so I am actually thinking about leaving Sri Lanka earlier than planned.”

“In Sri Lanka, we are having power cuts of 6 to 8 hours every day. It is not only me, many businesses are struggling.”

He said power cuts meant no lights, he could not charge his laptop and there was no wi-fi. In the evening it was worse.

“Many restaurants are closing because they cannot operate,” he explained. “I can sit on the beach so that is not a problem.”

However, he said he needs to use the laptop for his job. Ken works online as a social media expert, according to his website, and is on a journey around Asia where he also earns some money from his youtube channel.

Ken had captured the hearts of thousands of Sri Lankans both in the country and abroad, who usually give him advice and urge him on as he meets locals and goes off the beaten track.

The usually positive and bubbly Ken said he does not like to complain, and asked his Sri Lanka followers to tell him why it is happening.

“I am curious to know why we are having the power cuts in Sri Lanka at the moment.”

“Really sorry to see you leave you were one of the most humble and my favourite bloggers ever to visit Sri Lanka,” youtube viewer Vimukthi Mayadunne wrote in response.

“Thank you for sharing the beauty of my country with the world. So sorry for the current situation in this country this pathetic ignorant tone-deaf government is making dumb decisions one after another taking the country into further trouble. Goodbye and Travel safe.”

Sri Lanka is facing a severe currency crisis after the central bank printed money to keep interest rates down to create a ‘production economy’ after cutting taxes.

However, when money is printed – liquidity injections are made – forex shortages emerge in a pegged exchange rate regime, as dollar outflows exceed inflows with money and exchange policies working in opposite directions.

Sri Lanka’s pegged central bank created forex shortages within two years after it was created in 1950 and triggered forex shortages and currenccrises, every 4 to 5 years especially when the US prints money and tightens policy.

Using Mercantilist dogma, foreign shortages are then blamed on imports, the trade deficit and the current account deficit instead of money printing.

The central bank usually prints money to keep rates down as budget deficits go up, but in 2018 money was printed to keep rates down despite the budget deficit being brought down with new taxes.

Classical economists and analysts have called for the central bank to be abolished in favour of a currency board or let the country dollarize.

The International Monetary Fund has warned of monetary instability, echoing warnings of domestic economists and analysts.

Ken’s thoughts about leaving Sri Lanka came as the UK warned British travellers about the economic crisis.

“The economic situation is deteriorating in Sri Lanka with shortages of basic necessities including medicines, fuel and food because of a shortage of hard currency to pay for imports,” UK’s travel advice to citizens said.

“There may be long queues at grocery stores, gas stations, and pharmacies. Local authorities may impose the rationing of electricity, resulting in power outages.”

Sri Lanka has floated the currency but classical economists have said policy interest rates have to be raised.

“We need the support of you guys who doing a great service for the tourism of the country during this current difficult situation brother,” Dhananjaya wrote.

“You can move to colombo where there are only nighttime power cuts like for an hour or 2 hours only. We know you are a kind man from all the vlogs you posted so if you can stay for your full visa valid, it will be a great help & support to the locals brother! ”

Colombo is on a 220kV grid of state-run Ceylon Electricity Board where more generators are connected. But tourists areas in the South are connected to the Southern 132kV grid which needs Samanalawewa reservoir to keep it well-energized.

When the CEB asked for one or two-hour power cuts early in 2022 to save water, it was denied to them.

CEB this has week given the go-ahead to connect ACE Embilipitiya, an idle private plant to the grid to improve supply.

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