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SriLankan Airlines flies profitably in the month of December

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SriLankan Airlines has posted a company profit of US$ 9.25 million and a group profit of $ 10.66 million for December 2021, which is the first profitable month for the Airline since the onset of the Pandemic in early 2020, airline sources said. 

The revenues are up by almost 200 percent compared with the same period last year and have reached over 80 percent of the pre-pandemic level. 

Further, the Airline reports a profit of$ 11.43 million for December 2021 at Air Transportation level, which is the highest recorded profit from Air Transportation in over 20 years.

“The sacrifices made by all staff members have paved the way for a positive start for the New Year. 

During the past two years, the national carrier implemented multifaceted initiatives to reduce operational costs, for which each and every employee of the SriLankan family contributed, and the airline reaping the benefits of these efforts today. 

The future, however, remains extremely challenging with the spread of the new variant of the virus and we will continue to monitor the situation closely and take necessary action to ensure that the momentum achieved in December continues,” Ashok Pathirage, Chairman of SriLankan Airlines said.

SriLankan operated close to 800 flights during the month and carried a total of 228,203 passengers – in excess of 13 times the number of passengers carried in December 2020. Moreover, SriLankan uplifted a total of 7,877 metric tons of cargo, which is a 147 percent  increase from December 2020.

SriLankan Airlines has been fraught with challenges over the past three years starting with the Easter Sunday attacks in April 2019 that led to a decline in tourist arrivals in the immediate aftermath, followed by the onset of the pandemic in the first quarter of 2020, which is now entering into its third year.

However, as the national carrier, SriLankan Airlines rose to the occasion, by deploying resources to fly stranded Sri Lankans home from various parts of the world, including pilgrims from India and students stranded in various parts of the world including from COVID-19 stricken Wuhan in China.  

Since then, the Airline has not only engaged in ferrying Sri Lankans, but also stepped up to assist citizens of other countries return home. 

SriLankan also adapted its strategy with a renewed focus on cargo operations which was a boost for exports and air transportation of vital medical supplies, vaccinations and other commercial cargo across borders as global passenger air travel came to a virtual halt. 

Thus, the Airline managed to keep its fleet in operation while many other airlines grounded most of their aircraft.

Despite the difficulties of the pandemic, SriLankan has also maintained its commitment to support the national economy, bringing tourism, connecting business, carrying freight and earning foreign exchange. 

In the past year, SriLankan launched operations to several new destinations including to Seoul; Nairobi; Moscow; Paris; and Kathmandu as the pandemic showed signs of slowing and borders gradually opened.

The new destinations were promoted through marketing initiatives in the respective markets, including by participating in international tourism trade fairs such as IFTM Top Resa in Paris and OTDYKH LEISURE in Moscow.  

SriLankan also became the first airline to conduct Familiarization Tours (FAM) for travel trade journalists based in Russia, France and India last year. 

The country’s tourist arrivals remarkably topped 44,000 in November 2021 as a result of these initiatives.

As these positive numbers ring in the New Year for SriLankan, the Airline hopes to continue the momentum by pressing forward with a renewed energy and focus

SRI LANKA: Fake constitutions create irrational societies

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By Basil Fernando

A fake Constitution alters the rules of logic that are the basic foundations of a good constitution. The change of logic leads to irrationality. The spread of irrationality into public institutions creates rotten systems within such public institutions. Where the public institutions go rotten, every aspect of social life comes into severe problems.

Gradually, all systems break down. Then unmanageable crises develop within the society. These crises in turn create so much demoralisation within the people who become the sufferers and victims of these institutions that they withdraw their co-operation from these public institutions. With that, not only these public institutions but even the society becomes unable to function. The dysfunctionality of public institutions which are unable to create public co-operation leads to failed states. Such is the situation of Sri Lanka today.

It is quite relevant to discuss the impact of fake constitutions at the present moment because the discussions about adopting a Government-sponsored draft of a Constitution has provoked a debate within the society about the very purpose and the meaning of the making of a Constitution.

Can an already existing fake Constitution provide the basis within which a genuine and rational Constitution can be created? That is the core of the whole issue about Constitution-making in Sri Lanka.

The 1978 Constitution is a fake Constitution. It talks about the Constitution of a republic. However, it violates the most basic principle of a republic. Thomas Paine, the great American philosopher and writer whose writings played an enormously influential role during the time of the making of the American Constitution, summed up the basic idea of a republic: In England, the king is the law whereas in the US, the law is the king. What makes a republic is the supremacy given to the law above the ruler. If the ruler is not subjected to the law, then there cannot be a republic.

Thus, calling Sri Lanka a republic is a misnomer because in Sri Lanka, it is not the law that is the king but it is the Executive President that is the law. When the head of the state, whether it be an Executive President or a Prime Minister, dictates the law, then it cannot be a republic at all. When such a place is called a republic while basically operating on the principles on which a monarchy is based, it may provide some kind of a title to the head of the state which sounds modern. However, there is nothing modern about the Sri Lankan Constitution. It is based on a primitive principle of dictating the terms under which the society should live by a single person called the ruler.

The basis of irrationality that is inherent in the 1978 Constitution is based on this contradiction of calling itself a republic while operating on the principles which are opposed to a republic. This change in the major premise of a system of governance changes all the other premises and the conclusions to be like that. Thus, from a rational point of view, the whole of the public system within which Sri Lanka operates is within an illogical framework. Such an illogical framework creates all the consequences which are mentioned earlier in this article.

However, this logic lives not only as an abstraction. Real institutions begin to malfunction to an extent that the country’s system of the regulatory framework of finance breaks down. The nerve system of any economy is the system by which financial institutions are managed in a country. When the normal principles that govern such managements are abandoned in favour of irrational interferences, violative of the law, then, the very financial structure breaks down.

This exposes the narrowness of some who claim that Sri Lanka’s problems are only economic problems and that the questions of the Constitution are not relevant problems at the moment. That is an irrational understanding of how an economy works. An economy, like any other feat of human activity, operates on logical frameworks. When the basic premises of a logical framework are removed, then irrationality enters into the entire system. The consequences of that irrationality can now be seen in the country. The prediction is that in the coming months, these will become even worse and that life in the country may become a nightmare. The possibilities of even food shortages have been predicted. Already, the spread of malnutrition in a significant portion of the population is a fact.

Putting a Humpty Dumpty back together again is considered usually an impossible task. That is the way that people have begun to perceive the Sri Lankan situation. However, there is a way to put the Humpty Dumpty back together again and to get the public institutions of the nation to function. That is why it should be a return to reason. Returning to reason is a primary requirement of returning to a law based society that is a republic.

Today’s task is to recreate a republic. By following the 1978 Constitution, a republic which rejects the basic notion of a republic, it is not possible to return to a republic.

The first step needs to be the undoing of this fake Constitution and to replace it with a Constitution within the democratic framework which could operate under the principles of the rule of law.
However, it is impossible to think that the Parliament in its present form will want to or is capable of producing anything other than a Constitution that is based on the same principles as the fake Constitution of 1978.

That is the reason why there is a demand today for the Constitution making to be done by a constitutional convention that is a convention consisting of persons who are selected mainly for the purpose of the making of the constitution. The selectors are the people. What a constitutional convention would do is to bring back the people’s participation into constitution making so that the basic principles of a rational Government could be restored. That will pave the way to make a beginning in order to change the ground realities that exist in the country.

However, the next question is how to bring about that constitutional convention. This could be done by way of a referendum at which the people vote for the manner in which the Constitution should be made and who should constitute the constitutional convention. Naturally, people would want the constitutional convention to be represented by persons who will faithfully contribute to create a kind of law based system within which the people themselves are protected. By people, it means everyone in Sri Lanka belonging to various sectors of the society, the workers, peasants, entrepreneurs, professionals and all. They need to have a direct say in the making of a Constitution.


To continue with the fake Constitution that exists now, is to look for a future within which everything will be much worse than the way they exist even now. A constitutional convention brought about by a referendum is necessary for the survival of Sri Lanka as a law based and rational society.

Celebration of 159th Birth Anniversary of Swami Vivekananda in Sri Lanka

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Acting High Commissioner of India, Shri Vinod K. Jacob, together with the Chief Priest of Ramakrishna Mission in Colombo, Swami Aksharatmananda and other officials of the High Commission of India, paid floral tributes to Swami Vivekananda on his 159th Birth Anniversary, in a special event organized at the High Commission of India today (January 12, 2022). Earlier in the day, a special prayer ceremony was held at the Ramakrishna Mission which was attended by Dr. Rewant Vikram Singh, Director, Swami Vivekananda Cultural Centre (SVCC), the cultural arm of the High Commission of India. SVCC has also organized online film and documentary screenings to commemorate the Swami Vivekananda Jayanti.

2.      Swamiji’s teachings and philosophy have inspired people, particularly the youth, to contribute towards nation building and his birthday is, therefore, also celebrated as the ‘National Youth Day’ in India. To commemorate this day, the Ministry of Youth Affairs & Sports of India has organized the 25th National Youth Festival in a virtual mode from 12th-13th January 2022, which has been inaugurated by the Prime Minister of India.

3.       Swami Vivekananda was greatly influenced by the teachings of Lord Buddha. Soon after being initiated into Sannyas, Swami Vivekananda visited the holy city of Bodh Gaya to offer his prayers to the Bodhi tree, under which Lord Buddha had attained Enlightenment. Swami Vivekananda, along with Shrimad Anagarika Dharmapala, attended the World’s Parliament of Religions at Chicago in 1893, where both of them gave historic speeches.

4.       Sri Lanka had a special place in Swami Vivekananda’s heart. Swami Vivekananda visited Sri Lanka in January, 1897 and during his 11-day stay travelled to different parts of the country including Colombo, Kandy, Matale, Dambulla, Anuradhapura, Vavuniya, Chavakachcheri, Jaffna, and gave multiple spiritual discourses. This year, commemorating the 125th anniversary of Swami Vivekananda’s arrival in Sri Lanka, a number of events are being organized by the High Commission of India in collaboration with Ramakrishna Mission and other spiritual organizations and leaders.

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Colombo
12th January, 2022

Why afraid of polls if right? Sajith questions government

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The present government has transformed the country into a land full of darkness, said Leader of the Opposition Sajith Premadasa, addressing the occasion of providing medical equipment to the Point Pedro Hospital under the ‘Samagi Jana Balawegayen Husmak’ initiative undertaken by the Samagi Jana Balawegaya yesterday (11).

In the occurrence of poor governance and poor economic management, the era of queues has reemerged, the Opposition Leader pointed out.

“The government is afraid of reaching out to the people. The postponement of the local government election by one year proves it. If there is proper governance, the rulers should not be afraid of reaching out to the people. We as a country cannot move forward this way,” Premadasa noted.

He added: “Change should occur in a manner in which the country is served well, with people-oriented and people-friendly treatment. We the Samagi Jana Balawegaya promise to give a fresh solution to the burning issues of this country, to rebuild this country. We have set aside tradition and proven by action. We are ready to build, sharpen, develop and take responsibility for the country.”

A Dialysis Machine with Portable RO System worth Rs. 2,457,000.00 was donated to the Point Pedro Hospital under the 39th phase of the ‘Jana Suwaya’ project undertaken to build a healthy country as part of the Samagi Jana Balawegayen Husmak initiative.

The Jana Suwaya Project together with the Samagi Jana Balawegayen Husmak initiative is undertaken by the Parliamentary group of the SJB, party organisers, members and local and foreign branches of the SJB and funded by local and foreign donors.

Earlier, essential hospital equipment worth Rs. 110,339,500.00 were donated to the national hospital scheme in Sri Lanka at 38 phases.

Deltacron: Health specialists urge not to be afraid of new Covid variant

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There is no need to be unduly apprehensive about the newly identified ‘deltacron’ variant of Covid-19, said Dr. Jude Jayamaha, a medical specialist at the Borella Medical Research Institute.

He noted that many of the reports about the new Covid variant, which was first discovered in Cyprus, were unscientific and speculative, adding that there is no data to substantiate that the variant is a hybrid of delta and omicron.

Revealing that there is no risk of infection to proceed for a lockdown, Dr. Jayamaha added that it is not possible to make predictions at this stage as to whether the country will have to be locked down again.

MIAP

Welikada Prison Riot: Lamahewa sentenced to death, Rangajeewa acquitted

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Former Prisons Commissioner Emil Ranjan Lamahewa was convicted guilty and sentenced to death over the massacre in Welikada Prison in 2012.

The verdict was made by the Colombo Permanent High Court Trial-at-Bar.

Lamahewa was found guilty of one charge and released from four charges.

Former Inspector Neomal Rangajeewa who was also charged in the case was acquitted.

This was when the case was taken up before a Special Three-member Bench comprising Justices Gihan Kulatunga, Pradeep Hettiarachchi and Manjula Thilakarathna today.

SL will be able sell oil to Maldives, if oil tanks repaired (VIDEO)

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Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) Political Bureau member former MP Sunil Handunnetti speaking to the press conference held in the Party Head Office today (12) revealed that Sri Lanka will be able to sell oil to Maldives, were the claims made by engineers of the Ceylon Petroleum Corporation (CPC) on repairing oil tanks in Trincomalee in their reports true.

Such a repairing process costs about US$45 million, for which debts should be obtained, Handunnetti pointed out.

He added that Sri Lanka could be made into a lending country instead of a borrowing one, depending on the resources available, so that the people should not have to wait in oil and gas queues.

However, should the resources be sold via agreements, the citizens of Sri Lanka will have to wait in queues in 2072 as well, the former MP warned.

Reminding that fertiliser, electricity and gas are not available in the country due to the ongoing dollar deficit, Handunnetti alleged that the country has not fallen into such a situation but was driven into.

MIAP

Easter Sunday Massacre: Case against Naufer Moulavi dragged in till March

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The case filed against 25 suspects including Naufer Moulavi for allegedly aiding the Easter Sunday Genocide was taken up before the Colombo Three-member Special High Court today (12).

One of the suspects to the case had requested that his charge sheet be produced in Tamil, while another in English. However, the charge sheets were not produced today.

Accordingly, the Court concluded that the case be adjourned till March 03, 2022.

MIAP

Application of renewable energy for power generation in doldrums due to CEB engineers’ conduct (VIDEO)

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The failure of application of renewable energy on power supply was due to the actions of some electrical engineers in the Ceylon Electricity Board (CEB), divulged Engineer Noel Priyantha, Chairman of the Workers’ Union of the CEB, speaking to a briefing held today (12).

With the existing power crisis, the fact that the CEB can no longer depend of fossil fuels has become clear, Priyantha pointed out.

The President’s solution to the existing power crisis, which would be adaptation of renewable energy for the generation of power for 70 per cent of power supply by 2030, is the most ideal solution at this moment, he noted.

Priyantha added that the problem was not the lack of power plants in the country but the absence of dollars to import oil.

Hearing petitions against Yugadanavi Deal further dragged in

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The hearing of petitions against the controversial deal made on selling shares of the Yugadanavi Power Plant in Kerawalapitiya has been adjourned as per the order of the Supreme Court.

Accordingly, the Supreme Court today (12) declared that the petitions against the Yugadanavi Deal be heard on January 19, 20 and 21.

These petitions were taken up for hearing for the fourth day today, before a Five-member Bench comprising Justices Buwaneka Aluvihare, Priyantha Jayawardena, Vijith Malalgoda and L.T.B. Dehideniya led by Chief Justice Jayantha Jayasuriya.

The petitions have been filed by Venerable Elle Gunawansa Thero, Archbishop of Colombo His Eminence Malcolm Cardinal Ranjith, Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) Secretary General MP Ranjith Madduma Bandara, former MPs of Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) Sunil Handunnetti and Wasantha Samarasinghe and trade unions, saying that the Cabinet’s conclusion on selling 40 per cent of the government shares of the Plant to a US company is not just.

Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa, the Board of Ministers, West Coast Power Private Limited, the company owning the Yugadanavi Plant, New Fortress Energy the US Company and the Attorney General have been cited as respondents to the petitions.

Revealing that the handing over of the shares followed an irregular tender criterion, the petitioners alleged that the Cabinet failed to address issues such as the national economy and national security before making such a decision and that the gas monopoly of Sri Lanka has been handed over on a silver plate to the said US company, thereby violating the fundamental rights of the Sri Lankan citizens.

The petitioners also requested the Court to issue an order nullifying the decision taken by the Cabinet to hand over the government shares of the plant.

MIAP