The Colombo Commercial High Court today (03) lifted the enjoining order issued against Qingdao Seawin Biotech Group Co. Ltd, the company owning the fertiliser ship recently brought to light, its local agent and the People’s Bank, following a motion submitted by the parties involved to settle the case.
Accordingly, High Court Judge Pradeep Hettiarachchi settled the case and also quashed the order restraining the payments.
The plaintiff company has agreed to pay US $6.7 million for the supply of quality fertiliser in compliance with the terms of the settlement. Lawyers appearing for the Chinese company stated that they would agree to confiscate the Chinese company’s deposit if it did not provide quality fertiliser.
The plaintiff has the right to reject if quality fertiliser is not provided, according to the terms of the settlement.
The Kuwait Airways has decided to cease its flights to Sri Lanka, due to reasons undisclosed to media.
Flights belonging to the Kuwait Airways had arrived in Sri Lanka twice a week.
It is speculated that the Company has decided to cease air flights to Sri Lanka due to the passengers’ decline in accessing the service over its relatively higher charges in the region.
However, the Civil Aviation Authority of Sri Lanka went on claiming that the Kuwait Airways has ceased its flights to Sri Lanka due to a problem with the company. Neither the dollar deficit, nor any other problem facing Sri Lanka has contributed to the problem, said Rehan Wanniappa, Director of the Civil Aviation Authority.
The ceasing of flight operations is but temporary, he added.
The publication of comments or statements defaming the President on Social Media or any other media is strictly prohibited, said Police Spokesman SSP Nihal Thalduwa.
The Police Spokesman added that sharing such statements made by other people on Social Media is also a punishable offense.
He added that anyone sharing or making such defamatory comments against the President will be subjugated to legal actions.
A woman was recently taken to the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) for questioning for allegedly posting defamatory remarks about the President on Social Media. The woman, however, responded that the Police had obtained a statement from her regarding the sharing of a post posted to Facebook by someone else.
The holding of the Provincial Council Election may not be possible until a new bill is tabled and passed in Parliament, said Chairman of the Parliamentary Special Committee for Electoral Law Reforms Minister Dinesh Gunawardena.
The Provincial Council Election cannot be held under the existing bill, he noted, suggesting that the bill must be revoked completely.
The existing bill was passed by the endorsement of the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) and the Tamil National Alliance (TNA), Gunawardena went on, adding that their voice against the bill as the then Opposition only went unheard.
A new struggle for the release of Ranjan Ramanayake, a humanitarian who had consistently fought against corruption, repression and injustice but is spending a prison sentence, will be launched by the Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB), said Leader of the Opposition Sajith Premadasa, speaking to reporters following his visit to the Welikada Prison to see the former MP today (03).
The Opposition Leader added that this movement will fight not only for Mr. Ramanayake’s freedom, but also for his independence and all democratic rights.
Premadasa promised that the SJB will be fully committed to this new movement in the New Year and added that it will be launched with the contribution of the young MPs of the Party.
The SJB Leader also revealed that he had repeatedly urged the President for Ramanayake’s release, to which positive verbal responses were received on many occasions.
Nevertheless, it was unfortunate that such an action had not been implemented in practice to date, he added.
Ramanayake was sentenced a period of rigorous imprisonment over Contempt of Court.
Chairman of Laugfs Gas W.K.H. Wegapitiya speaking to media today (03) emphasised that his company can solve the ongoing gas crisis in a matter of two weeks, had the government solved the dollar deficit in the country.
Revealing that Laugfs’ infrastructure is capable of supplying gas cylinders meeting the national demand, Wegapitiya requested the government to solve the dollar deficit enabling the opening of letters of credit (LC).
The main reason for the ongoing gas crisis is the commercial banks’ unwillingness to open letters of credit due to the dollar deficit, he said.
Although 40,000 – 50,000 gas cylinders were issued on a daily basis earlier, there is a drop in the figure in the implementation of the recommendations of the Judiciary, the Standards Institution (SLSI) and the Consumer Affairs Authority (CAA), leading to a daily distribution of about 10,000 – 15,000 gas cylinders, he added.
Wegapitiya went on saying that they had warned the authorities from the beginning that the people could be facing difficulties in purchasing gas and that their request to increase the price of gas in compliance with the global market under a price formula had been denied by the CAA.
The price hike has taken about a year and a half and therefore, the cost to the companies would have gone up drastically, he added.
15 people were killed in traffic collisions yesterday (02) revealed Police Spokesman Senior Police Superintendent Nihal Thalduwa.
Among the victims were 12 who had died on the accidents and three more whose deaths were pronounced upon treatment for injuries.
Meanwhile, on January 01, 2022, the dawn of the New Year, 18 lives were lost due to traffic collisions, making a total of 33 victims of road accidents.
The number of people killed in traffic collisions from December 25 is 86. Many of the deaths had occurred due to the negligence of the drivers, the Police Spokesman added.
Deaths caused by traffic collisions show a significant rise in Sri Lanka, only days after the decline of the number of Covid-related deaths.
Half a million people have sunk into poverty since the pandemic struck, with rising costs forcing many to cut back on food
Sri Lanka is facing a deepening financial and humanitarian crisis with fears it could go bankrupt in 2022 as inflation rises to record levels, food prices rocket and its coffers run dry.
The meltdown faced by the government, led by the strongman president Gotabaya Rajapaksa, is in part caused by the immediate impact of the Covid crisis and the loss of tourism but is compounded by high government spending and tax cuts eroding state revenues, vast debt repayments to China and foreign exchange reserves at their lowest levels in a decade. Inflation has meanwhile been spurred by the government printing money to pay off domestic loans and foreign bonds.
The World Bank estimates 500,000 people have fallen below the poverty line since the beginning of the pandemic, the equivalent of five years’ progress in fighting poverty.
Inflation hit a record high of 11.1% in November and escalating prices have left those who were previously well off struggling to feed their families, while basic goods are now unaffordable for many. After Rajapaksa declared Sri Lanka to be in an economic emergency, the military was given power to ensure essential items, including rice and sugar, were sold at set government prices – but it has done little to ease people’s woes.
A rice wholesaler plies his trade in Pettah, a commercial hub in Colombo, Sri Lanka. The military has been given power to control prices of food essentials, such as rice. Photograph: Chamila Karunarathne/EPA
Anurudda Paranagama, a chauffeur in the capital, Colombo, took on a second job to pay for rising food costs and cover the loan on his car but it was not enough. “It is very difficult for me to repay the loan. When I have to pay electricity and water bills and spend on food, there is no money left,” he said, adding that his family now eats two meals a day instead of three.
He described how his village grocer was opening 1kg packets of milk powder and dividing it into packs of 100g because his customers could not afford the whole packet. “We now buy 100g of beans when we used to buy 1kg for the week,” said Paranagama.
The loss of jobs and vital foreign revenue from tourism, which usually contributes more than 10% of GDP, has been substantial, with more than 200,000 people losing their livelihoods in the travel and tourism sectors, according to the World Travel and Tourism Council.
The situation has got so bad that long queues have formed at the passport office as one in four Sri Lankans, mostly the young and educated, say they want to leave the country. For older citizens, it is reminiscent of the early 1970s when import controls and low production at home caused severe shortages of basic commodities and caused long queues for bread, milk and rice.
A man pays for vegetables at a market in Colombo. Escalating prices have left those who were previously well off struggling to feed their families. Photograph: Allison Joyce/Getty Images
The former central bank deputy governor WA Wijewardena warned the struggles of ordinary people would exacerbate the financial crisis, which would in turn make life harder for them. “When the economic crisis deepens beyond redemption, it is inevitable that the country will have a financial crisis too,” he said. “Both will reduce food security by lowering production and failing to import due to foreign exchange scarcities. At that point, it will be a humanitarian crisis.”
One of the most pressing problems for Sri Lanka is its huge foreign debt burden, in particular to China. It owes China more than $5bn in debt and last year took an additional $1bn loan from Beijing to help with its acute financial crisis, which is being paid in instalments.
In the next 12 months, in the government and private sector, Sri Lanka will be required to repay an estimated $7.3bn in domestic and foreign loans, including a $500m international sovereign bond repayment in January. However, as of November, available foreign currency reserves were just $1.6bn.
In an usual approach, government minister Ramesh Pathirana said they hoped to settle their past oil debts with Iran by paying them with tea, sending them $5m worth of tea every month in order to save “ much needed currency”.
The opposition MP and economist Harsha de Silva recently told parliament that foreign currency reserves would be -$437m by January next year, while the total foreign debt to service would be $4.8bn from February to October 2022. “The nation will be totally bankrupt,” he said.
One of the most pressing problems for Sri Lanka is its huge foreign debt burden. Photograph: Vimukthi Embuldeniya/Pacific Press/Rex/Shutterstock
Central Bank Governor Ajith Nivard Cabraal made public assurances that Sri Lanka could pay off its debts “seamlessly” but Wijewardena said the country was at substantial risk of defaulting on its repayments, which would have catastrophic economic consequences.
Meanwhile, Rajapaksa’s sudden decision in May to ban all fertiliser and pesticides and force farmers to go organic without warning has brought a formerly prosperous agricultural community to its knees as many farmers, who had become used to using – and often overusing – fertiliser and pesticides, were suddenly left without ways to produce healthy crops or combat weeds and insects. Many fearing a loss decided not to cultivate crops at all, adding to the food shortages in Sri Lanka.
The government made a dramatic U-turn in late October and farmers are now struggling to cover the high costs of imported fertiliser without help.
“The costs of cultivating paddy [wheat] have gone up astronomically … The government has no money for fertiliser subsidies. Many of us farmers are reluctant to invest money because we don’t know if we will make any profit,” said one farmer, Ranjit Hulugalle.
A government decision in May to ban all fertiliser and pesticides has forced farmers to go organic without warning. Photograph: Eranga Jayawardena/AP
In an attempt temporarily to ease the problems and stave off difficult and most likely unpopular policies, the government has resorted to temporary relief measures, such as credit lines to import foods, medicines and fuel from its neighbouring ally India, as well as currency swaps from India, China and Bangladesh and loans to purchase petroleum from Oman. However, these loans provide only short-term relief and have to be paid back quickly at high interest rates, adding to Sri Lanka’s debt load.
Anushka Shanuka, a personal trainer, was among those who used to have a comfortable life but now is struggling to get by. “We can’t live the way we used to before the pandemic,” he said, saying the prices of vegetables had gone up by more than 50%.
“The government promised to help us but nothing came, so we are just managing the best we can. I don’t know how much longer we can go on like this.”
The food inflation of Sri Lanka has climbed up to 22.1 per cent in December, 2021, a figure that stood in 17.5 per cent in the month before, revealed the Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL).
Accordingly, the food inflation of Sri Lanka has climbed by 04.6 per cent in a matter of one month.
Non-food inflation has risen up to 7.5 per cent for December, a figure that stood in 6.4 per cent. Headline inflation has risen to 12.1 per cent from 9.9 per cent during the same period, according to the CBSL.
Meanwhile, Sri Lanka has ranked 04th place in Asia in terms of food inflation, standing below Lebanon, Iran and Syria. All countries in the South Asian region report a figure below that of Sri Lanka.
Sri Lanka has ranked 12th place in the World, standing below countries like Venezuela, Zimbabwe, Syria, Ethiopia and Lebanon, which are suffering from long-term crises.