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“Sakwala” Pilot Project for Children launched by Opposition Leader

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“Sakwala”, a Modern Computer Screen and Computer Donation Pilot Project to empower a generation of talented children with modern technology, was launched by Leader of the Opposition Sajith Premadasa today (30).

As the Pilot Project of the Sakwala initiative, Digital Computer Screens and Equipment worth Rs. 876,150 were donated to the skillful classrooms of Thanamalwila Bodagama Maha Vidyalaya. The donations were handed over to School Principal W.P. Somaratne.

Reminding that late C.W.W. Kannangara had spoken for hours before the passage of the Free Education Bill that free education should be established to build the country decades ago, the Opposition Leader pointed out that even then there were certain parties who had opposed this great idea.

Premadasa added that “online education” and “computer technology” are becoming more and more important and that the Sakwala initiative was introduced in order to fill the void at his best. The Sakwala initiative would be the new freedom struggle in modern education, he noted.

MIAP

May any objection over Yugadanavi Deal be expressed by leaving Government: Namal

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Sports and Youth Affairs Minister Namal Rajapaksa speaking to NethFM today (30) said the best option for anyone who is against the collective decisions made by the government is to leave the government.

“If a deal was signed, the said 40 per cent of the Yugadanavi Plant must have been transferred, right? But no shares were transferred. This means that the final deal has clearly not yet been signed. But there are allegations.

So, what I believe is that if I am in the Cabinet, it would be my responsibility to talk about Cabinet affairs within the Cabinet. Even media colleagues were not pleased with me for not producing voice cuts after a Cabinet meeting. I do not, because there is a Cabinet Spokesman who is producing a voice cut after a Cabinet meeting. He should be the one to disclose the Cabinet affairs first. I even do not disclose of a Cabinet paper I table until the official Press Conference. That is my policy.

So, if we are to hold a collective responsibility, the fact whether someone is ‘removed’ is irrelevant. If that is the case, they should challenge it by leaving the Table. We challenged the Sri Lanka Freedom Party, we left it, did we not? Leaving it, we took the membership of the Pohottuwa. It was only then we started challenging. We did not challenge when we were in the Party. I think, if someone has criticism about the government, the best option is to express their criticism by leaving the government. But as a government, His Excellence the President, the Prime Minister and we the Cabinet have put a step back in every occasion in which such a criticism is levelled proving it to be unsuitable for the country,” Rajapaksa said.

MIAP

The Mirigama-Kurunegala Section of the Central Expressway to be vested in the Public on January 15

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The Second Phase of the Mirigama-Kurunegala Section will be vested in the public on January 15, 2022, Highway Minister Johnston Fernando said.

This section of the Central Expressway is 40.91 kilometres long and has been built at a cost of Rs. 137 billion.

The Section consists of four lanes and has five interchanges at Mirigama, Nakalagamuwa, Dambokka, Kurunegala and Yaggapitiya.

MIAP

Did Trade Minister lie about country being sufficient of rice?

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There are sufficient stocks of rice for the consumption of the country and there is no shortage of rice whatsoever, said Trade Minister Bandula Gunawardena, during his visit to the rice wholesale outlets in Pettah, Colombo yesterday (29). The Minister thus said that the government, therefore, will not allow any surge of the prices of rice.

However, the Essential Food Importers Association delivered rather a contradictory comment saying that rice importers do not currently have surplus stocks of rice upon distribution.

Meanwhile, the Union revealed that about 300 containers of imported rice have been stalled at the port and these stocks could not be released due to the non-issuance of dollars.

More than 10,000 metric tonnes of rice are stored in the said containers, according to reports. This begs the question whether the Trade Minister hinted about these stalled containers in his comment about rice sufficiency yesterday.

MIAP

China’s Foreign Minister to arrive in Sri Lanka on January 08

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China’s Foreign Affairs Minister Wang Yi is set to pay a two-day official visit in Sri Lanka, the Chinese Embassy in Colombo said in a statement.

Accordingly, Mr. Yi is set to arrive in Sri Lanka on January 08, in celebration of the 65th anniversary of Sino-Sri Lankan diplomatic ties.

MIAP

Chinese police parade suspected Covid rule-breakers through streets

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Four people are named and shamed – a banned practice – in city of Jingxi; WHO warns of ‘trade-off’ as countries cut back on isolation periods

Armed police in Jingxi, in southern China, have paraded four alleged violators of Covid rules through the streets, state media reported, a practice that was banned but which has resurfaced in the struggle to enforce a zero-Covid policy.

The four men were accused of smuggling people across China’s closed borders, and on Tuesday they were led through the streets wearing hazmat suits and bearing placards showing their name and photos. The state-run Guangxi daily reported the action was designed to deter “border-related crimes”.

A common practice during the Cultural Revolution, public shaming has long since been banned in China, and the Communist party-affiliated Beijing News said the Jingxi incident “seriously violates the spirit of the rule of law and cannot be allowed to happen again”.

The Global Times newspaper said that the courts and the Ministry of Public Security had issued various orders since the 1980s to ban the parading of criminal suspects, noting that officials themselves could now be punished. The most recent notice was issued by the ministry in February last year after a man in Hebei Province was tied to a tree for going out to buy cigarettes during lockdown.

Social media posts on the topic had received more than 350m views and more than 30,000 comments by Wednesday night, it reported.

China is taking strict measures, including sweeping lockdowns affecting millions of citizens, to deal with a rise in cases. The nation reported 203 new daily cases on Wednesday, and one of the world’s largest memory chip makers, Micron Technology, said that ongoing restrictions in the city of Xi’an could lead to delays in the global supply of its DRAM memory chips.

The World Health Organization (WHO), meanwhile, has cautioned against reducing Covid isolation times as a “tsunami” of cases driven by the Omicron variant threatens to overwhelm health systems around the world.

The highly transmissible variant propelled the US, France and Denmark to fresh records on Wednesday, with AFP’s tally of 6.55 million infections reported globally in the space of seven days through to Tuesday, demonstrating the unprecedented spread.

The figures were the highest since the WHO declared a pandemic in March 2020, underscoring the blistering pace of Omicron transmission, with tens of millions of people facing a second consecutive year of restrictions dampening New Year’s Eve celebrations.

“I am highly concerned that Omicron, being more transmissible, circulating at the same time as Delta, is leading to a tsunami of cases,” said WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus. “This is and will continue to put immense pressure on exhausted health workers, and health systems on the brink of collapse.”

The surge, currently worst in Europe, is forcing governments to walk a tightrope between imposing restrictions designed to stop hospitals from becoming overwhelmed and the need to keep economies and societies open two years after the virus first emerged in late 2019.

Spain said it would shorten the quarantine for positive cases from 10 to seven days, after US health authorities on Monday halved the recommended isolation time for people with asymptomatic infections from 10 to five days.

The WHO’s guidelines on quarantine are, for symptomatic patients, 10 days after symptom onset, plus at least three additional days without symptoms; and for asymptomatic cases, 10 days after a positive test.

“There is some data to suggest that the incubation period for Omicron may be shorter, but there will still be a very wide range,” WHO emergencies director Michael Ryan told a news conference. “It would be advisable at this point if we don’t see huge shifts, huge moves in reducing control measures for Covid-19 purely on the basis of initial or preliminary studies.

Ryan described “a trade-off between the science and being absolutely perfect in what you try to do, but then having the minimal disruption that you can possibly have to your economy and society – and governments are struggling to find that balance”.

The US, where Omicron is already overwhelming hospitals, recorded its highest-ever seven-day average of new cases at 265,427, according Johns Hopkins University.

Harvard epidemiologist and immunologist Michael Mina tweeted that the count was probably just the “tip of the iceberg” with the true number of cases likely far higher, because of a shortage of tests.

But the country also appears to be experiencing a decoupling between infections and severe outcomes compared to previous waves, officials noted, as evidence accumulates of milder cases under the new variant.

France registered a new daily record of more than 200,000 cases – more than double the number recorded on Christmas Day – and extended into January the closure of nightclubs.

French police said that wearing face masks outdoors will become compulsory again in Paris from Friday for everyone over age 11 except those inside vehicles, cyclists, users of two-wheeled transport such as scooters, and those participating in sports.

Denmark, which has the world’s highest rate of infection per person, recorded a fresh record of 23,228 new infections, which authorities attributed in part to the large number of tests carried out after Christmas celebrations.

Portugal also saw a record with nearly 27,000 cases reported in 24 hours, while Lebanon had 3,150 new infections – its highest daily tally since vaccines rolled out earlier this year.

The number of people in hospital with Covid in England topped 10,000, the highest total since March, as Britain hit a new record of 183,037 daily cases in the last 24 hours.

Studies suggest Omicron, now the dominant strain in some countries, carries a reduced risk of sending those infected to hospital, but the WHO still urged caution.

More than 5.4 million people around the world have died from Covid-19, but over the last week the number of deaths averaged 6,450 a day, an AFP tally found, the lowest since October 2020.

In Europe, where more than 3.5 million cases have been recorded in the last seven days, Greece banned music in bars and restaurants until 16 January, including on New Year’s Eve while Cyprus banned dancing in public venues.

Germany has put restrictions on sports competitions and shut nightclubs, limiting private gatherings to 10 vaccinated people.

Mexico City’s mayor cancelled the capital’s massive New Year’s Eve celebrations after a rise in cases.

In Ukraine, three people died after a candle lit by a hospital employee in memory of a patient who died of the virus started a fire in an intensive care unit in the western town of Kosiv.

The Guardian

Sapugaskanda Oil Refinery closed as crude oil stocks run out

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The Sapugaskanda Oil Refinery will be temporarily closed from January 03, 2022 due to the crude oil stocks being run out, said the Ceylon Petroleum Corporation in a statement.

The operations at the Sapugaskanda Oil Refinery will resume as soon as new crude oil stocks arrive, the Corporation noted, adding that the operations may hopefully be be continued at most before January 30 next year.

Despite the Refinery operations being driven into a standstill, there will be no shortage of fuel in the country, according to the Energy Ministry.

MIAP

Restaurant owners deny serving milk tea in objection to milk powder price surge

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The selling of milk tea to customers will be ceased from midnight today (30) in objection to the Rs. 60 price surge on milk powder, the All Ceylon Restaurant Owners Association told media.

Union Chief and Consumer Rights Activist Asela Sampath emphasised that the offering of milk tea will have to be stopped in the event that the price of a cup of milk tea will be soared up to Rs. 80 along with the milk powder price surge, a position unbearable to both the customer and the restaurant owner.

The situation has worsened in the event that plastic cups are used instead of glass cups at a cost of about Rs. 06 – 07 per cup, hence the salaries entitled to the workers, he noted, reminding that milk tea could no longer be served in restaurants as sales had fallen due to the soaring prices.

In any event had a customer asked for milk tea, the price will have to be quoted and milk tea be served, Sampath went on, revealing that milk tea will be served meeting the usual price surge only in restaurants maintained by the hospital scheme.

The Union Chief added that the companies have orchestrated a milk powder shortage in the market in a bid to soar the prices and that there is no point of increasing the prices in restaurants as well.

MIAP

No food scarcity will be allowed: Director General of Agriculture

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The public does not need to worry about the warnings made by certain political parties and experts that a food scarcity is on the rise, emphasised Director General of Agriculture Dr. Ajantha De Silva, making it clear before media that such a food scarcity will not be allowed whatsoever.

Suggesting that certain political groups are catering to false propaganda based on the crisis occurred on organic farming, Dr. Silva urged the public not to be deceived by such false alarms.

Expressing his utmost confidence, the Agriculture Director General noted that there will be no shortage of locally grown crops.

Dr. Silva acknowledged that there might be a shortage of food items imported due to the dollar deficit, adding however that the matter will be rectified in the future.

MIAP

UNP back on track – New plan for 2022!

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The United National Party (UNP) has initiated a program strengthening the party for the upcoming year. Accordingly, the program is set to be in motion from next week.

The program is being implemented throughout the island under four areas, i.e. youth organisations, women’s organisations, local government representatives and members of the grassroots, according to Party Secretary former MP Palitha Range Bandara.

He added that the Party’s policy making protocols have been completed by now on the directive of MP Ranil Wickremesinghe, the UNP Leader, and that full time political activities will commence from next week.

The initiative will also undertake the introduction of new organisers entitled to responsibilities from the Electorate level, he added.

MIAP