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The price of a loaf of bread will be increased by 30 rupees

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The All Ceylon Bakery Owners’ Association states that the price of a 450 gram loaf of bread will be increased by 30 rupees with effect from midnight today (11).

Its chairman NK Jayawardena said prices of other bakery products would also increase by as much as 10 rupees.

India agrees to provide a loan of US $ 500 million to temporary solve the fuel crisis in SL

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India has reached a final agreement to provide a loan of US $ 500 million to resolve the dollar crisis facing Sri Lanka. It is reported that the loan has been approved by the Reserve Bank of India.

The value of this loan will be able to get fuel from India and accordingly will receive fuel from India from April.

This will provide a temporary solution to the massive fuel crisis currently facing Sri Lanka from April.

Sri Lanka needs more than US $ 300 million a month to meet its fuel demand and the monthly cost is likely to rise further as crude oil prices rise in the world market. Accordingly, the $ 500 million loan from India will not even be enough to meet the two-month fuel requirement.

Air ticket prices hike up by 27%

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The price of air tickets has been increased. It has been decided to increase those prices by 27%.

It is reported that this price revision will be effective from today.

Opposition MP tables private MP bill to ban Conversion Therapy!

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For the first time in Sri Lanka, a private MP bill has been tabled in Parliament to ban Conversion Therapy, an alternative psychiatric practice perceived among believers of pseudoscience to be ‘correcting’ a person’s sexual orientation or gender identity, following the dialogue raised on the harmful practice due to a controversial police seminar held in Kandy Police Auditorium last year.

The private MP bill has been tabled by Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) MP Rohini Kaviratne demanding that this most unscientific and harmful practice against the LGBTIQ community in Sri Lanka be outlawed.

The bill, which seeks to protect the mental health rights of all, including the LGBTIQ community in Sri Lanka, also outlines legal action to be taken against individuals who malpractice psychology.

The social dialogue on Conversion Therapy came to light with a police seminar held last year at the Kandy Police Auditorium where a self-crowned psychological counsellor delivered very malicious and misleading facts about homosexuality. In a prompt response, the Sri Lanka College of Psychiatrists (SLCP) the highest government-led body on psychiatry issued a press statement debunking her claims.

Court proceedings are also being carried out against the person who conducted this seminar.

MP Kaviratne has been an active voice against conversion therapy and for the rights of the LGBTIQ community in Sri Lanka. Her private MP bill is due to be taken up in Parliament at 1 – 2 pm today (11).

Editor (LGBTIQ)

Basil speaks about the float of the rupee to the media for the first time

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Basil Rajapaksa, Minister of Finance has stated that despite international issues such as the covid epidemic, rising fuel prices and the Ukraine-Russia war, every effort is being made to provide relief to the people of the country.

Q. Minister, tell us when these reliefs will be given to the people?

“Relief is still being given. The 5000 rupee allowance is being provided already, we will continue that ”

Q: Fuel prices increase yesterday?

“IOC increased the prices. Others may increase so too.”

Q. But it’s very difficult for people. Is there any quick solution to this for you?

” We are making every effort to provide relief ”

Q. People are quite confident in you that you will provide them relief?

“With that belief, we will soon try to get all our ministers, the Prime Minister and the President to do it.”

Q. What do you do about the price of the dollar? What do you think about this float of the rupee?

“This is not something done by us. We tried our best to manage this. But it became so intense that it could not be stopped ”

Q: Will the dollar’s inflows increase soon?

“Yes, That is what some people say. The Opposition said so, so we should listen to it too ”

Q. Are you listening to the Opposition now?

“No, so a lot of economists commented on it.”

Q. How long will it take to solve this?

That’s the problem, the epidemic came, then the price of fuel went up, then came the Ukraine-Russia war. These are all external factors. None of these are happening in our country. We do not have much power internationally. But the local ones will definitely be resolved ”

Q: Isn’t it a problem to repay the debt in this dollar crisis?

“It is a problem. But it will be done somehow ”

Basil Rajapaksa said this while answering several questions raised by journalists in Gampaha today (11).

Shashi Weerawansa’s passport case verdict postponed

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The Colombo Magistrate’s Court today (11) announced that the verdict in the case filed against MP Wimal Weerawansa’s wife Ranasinghe Randunu Mudiyansela’s Sirsha Udayanthi alias Shashi Weerawansa for obtaining an illegal diplomatic passport by submitting false information will be announced on May 06.

The verdict in the case was due to be announced today.

Shashi Weerawansa’s ordinary passport stated that her date of birth was 1967, but the CID has filed a case against her for obtaining a diplomatic passport by submitting forged documents stating that her date of birth was 1971.

It was revealed at the trial that she had prepared two national identity cards and a fake birth certificate for both the birthdays and that the then Minister Wimal Weerawansa had telephoned the then Controller of Immigration and Emigration to press for the immediate issuance of this diplomatic passport.

The price of wheat flour increased

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Serendib has increased the price of wheat flour by Rs. 35 per kilogram with effect from today (11).

Meanwhile, Prima has increased the price to Rs. 40.

Accordingly, the prices of wheat flour based products will also increase in the future.

IOC fuel prices have also gone up since last night, with the price of a liter of petrol rising from Rs 204 to Rs 254 and the price of a liter of diesel from Rs 139 to Rs 214.

The Stalinisation of Russia

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When vladimir putin ordered the invasion of Ukraine, he dreamed of restoring the glory of the Russian empire. He has ended up restoring the terror of Josef Stalin. That is not only because he has unleashed the most violent act of unprovoked aggression in Europe since 1939, but also because, as a result, he is turning himself into a dictator at home—a 21st-century Stalin, resorting as never before to lies, violence and paranoia.

To understand the scale of Mr Putin’s lies, consider how the war was planned. Russia’s president thought Ukraine would rapidly collapse, so he did not prepare his people for the invasion or his soldiers for their mission—indeed, he assured the elites that it would not happen. After two terrible weeks on the battlefield, he is still denying that he is waging what may become Europe’s biggest war since 1945. To sustain this all-encompassing lie, he has shut down almost the entire independent media, threatened journalists with up to 15 years in jail if they do not parrot official falsehoods, and had anti-war protesters arrested in their thousands. By insisting that his military “operation” is de-Nazifying Ukraine, state television is re-Stalinising Russia.

To grasp Mr Putin’s appetite for violence, look at how the war is being fought. Having failed to win a quick victory, Russia is trying to sow panic by starving Ukrainian cities and pounding them blindly. On March 9th it hit a maternity hospital in Mariupol. If Mr Putin is committing war crimes against the fellow Slavs he eulogised in his writings, he is ready to inflict slaughter at home.

And to gauge Mr Putin’s paranoia, imagine how the war ends. Russia has more firepower than Ukraine. It is still making progress, especially in the south. It may yet capture the capital, Kyiv. And yet, even if the war drags on for months, it is hard to see Mr Putin as the victor.

Suppose that Russia manages to impose a new government. Ukrainians are now united against the invader. Mr Putin’s puppet could not rule without an occupation, but Russia does not have the money or the troops to garrison even half of Ukraine. American army doctrine says that to face down an insurgency—in this case, one backed by nato—occupiers need 20 to 25 soldiers per 1,000 people; Russia has a little over four.

If, as the Kremlin may have started to signal, Mr Putin will not impose a puppet government—because he cannot—then he will have to compromise with Ukraine in peace talks. Yet he will struggle to enforce any such agreement. After all, what will he do if post-war Ukraine resumes its Westward drift: invade?

The truth is sinking in that, by attacking Ukraine, Mr Putin has committed a catastrophic error. He has wrecked the reputation of Russia’s supposedly formidable armed forces, which have proved tactically inept against a smaller, worse-armed but motivated opponent. Russia has lost mountains of equipment and endured thousands of casualties, almost as many in two weeks as America has suffered in Iraq since it invaded in 2003.

Mr Putin has brought ruinous sanctions on his country. The central bank does not have access to the hard currency it needs to support the banking system and stabilise the rouble. Brands that stand for openness, including ikea and Coca-Cola, have closed their doors. Some goods are being rationed. Western exporters are withholding vital components, leading to factory stoppages. Sanctions on energy—for now, limited—threaten to crimp the foreign exchange Russia needs to pay for its imports.

And, as Stalin did, Mr Putin is destroying the bourgeoisie, the great motor of Russia’s modernisation. Instead of being sent to the gulag, they are fleeing to cities like Istanbul, in Turkey, and Yerevan, in Armenia. Those who choose to stay are being muzzled by restrictions on free speech and free association. They will be battered by high inflation and economic dislocation. In just two weeks, they have lost their country.

Stalin presided over a growing economy. However murderously, he drew on a real ideology. Even as he committed outrages, he consolidated the Soviet empire. After being attacked by Nazi Germany, he was saved by the unbelievable sacrifice of his country, which did more than any other to win the war.

Mr Putin has none of those advantages. Not only is he failing to win a war of choice while impoverishing his people: his regime lacks an ideological core. “Putinism”, such as it is, blends nationalism and orthodox religion for a television audience. Russia’s regions, stretched across 11 time zones, are already muttering about this being Moscow’s war.

As the scale of Mr Putin’s failure becomes clear, Russia will enter the most dangerous moment in this conflict. Factions in the regime will turn on each other in a spiral of blame. Mr Putin, fearful of a coup, will trust nobody and may have to fight for power. He may also try to change the course of the war by terrifying his Ukrainian foes and driving off their Western backers with chemical weapons, or even a nuclear strike.

As the world looks on, it should set out to limit the danger ahead. It must puncture Mr Putin’s lies by fostering the truth. Western tech firms are wrong to shut their operations in Russia, because they are handing the regime total control over the flow of information. Governments welcoming Ukrainian refugees should welcome Russian émigrés, too.

nato can help temper Mr Putin’s violence—in Ukraine, at least—by continuing to arm the government of Volodymyr Zelensky and supporting him if he decides that the time has come to enter serious negotiations. It can also increase pressure on Mr Putin by pushing ahead faster and deeper with energy sanctions, though at a cost to the world economy.

And the West can try to contain Mr Putin’s paranoia. nato should state that it will not shoot at Russian forces, so long as they do not attack first. It must not give Mr Putin a reason to draw Russia into a wider war by a declaring no-fly zone that would need enforcing militarily. However much the West would like a new regime in Moscow, it must state that it will not directly engineer one. Liberation is a task for the Russian people.

As Russia sinks, the contrast with the president next door is glaring. Mr Putin is isolated and morally dead; Mr Zelensky is a brave Everyman who has rallied his people and the world. He is Mr Putin’s antithesis—and perhaps his nemesis. Think what Russia might become once freed from its 21st-century Stalin. 

THE ECONOMIST

If a diesel subsidy is not provided, a 60% increase in bus fares will be required! (VIDEO)

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Anjana Priyanjith, General Secretary of the Lanka Private Bus Owners’ Association said that with the fuel price of IOC Fuel rising again to Rs. 93 per liter last night, the Private Bus Owners’ Association is requesting the government to provide a diesel subsidy through the depot of the Ceylon Transport Board as soon as possible to protect the private bus industry.

He was speaking to the media today (11).

He said that if the diesel subsidy is not provided, a 60% increase in bus fares will be required.

Priyanjith stated that if such a revision is made, the minimum bus fare would increase to between Rs. 30 and Rs. 35.

However, allowing IOC to increase fuel prices indicates that Ceypetco’s fuel prices are set to rise, and he stressed that the diesel subsidy should be given before then.

Milk powder prices to be increased by Rs. 300…?

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It is reported that the Milk Powder Importers Association is planning to increase the price of a kilogram of imported milk powder by Rs. 300.

Accordingly, the price of a 400-gram packet of milk powder will be increased by Rs. 120.

The Milk Powder Importers’ Association says that they have no choice but to increase the price of milk powder in Sri Lanka against the backdrop of the price of a metric ton of milk powder in the world market rising to US $ 5500.

The control price for milk powder was removed some time ago and companies have the ability to set the price as they wish.