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Lynching of Priyantha Kumara: Pakistan Court pronounces death sentence to 6, life imprisonment to 7

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According to Pakistani media, a Pakistani anti-terrorism court sentenced six people to death and seven others to life in jail for their roles in the lynching of a Sri Lankan national for alleged blasphemy.

In the murder case, 89 men have been charged, nine of whom are juveniles.

Seven of them have been sentenced to life in prison, while the remaining 76 have been sentenced to two years in prison. 

Judge Natasha Nasim, who conducted the trial in secret within the high-security Kot Lakhpat Jail in Lahore on a daily basis, declared the verdict in front of the suspects.

The judge did not announce the verdicts of nine minor defendants whose trials are still ongoing. 

Last year, a religiously fanatic mob lynched and burned Priyantha Kumara, a 49-year-old Sri Lankan citizen and manufacturing manager in Pakistan’s Punjab city of Sialkot.

At the time, Imran Khan, Pakistan’s prime minister, condemned the vigilante violence and promised to prosecute the offenders.

The trial of the case in Kot Lakhpat Jail was completed by an anti-terrorism court.

In the case that was heard on a daily basis, both the prosecution and the defence had finished their arguments.

The investigative officers’ and eyewitnesses’ statements had also been recorded.

WION

CEYPETCO too revises fuel prices

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The Ceylon Petroleum Corporation (CEYPETCO) has increased fuel prices effective from midnight today (18), days after the Lanka Indian Oil Company (LOIC) announced theirs.

Petrol Octane 92 – Rs. 338 per litre
Petrol Octane 95 – Rs. 373 per litre
Auto Diesel – Rs. 289 per litre
Super Diesel – Rs. 329 per litre

Three more including Diana Gamage sworn in as state ministers

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Three more Ruling Party members have been sworn in as state ministers.

Diana Gamage – State Minister of Transport
Seetha Arambepola – State Minister of Education and Technology
Vijitha Berugoda – State Minister of Ports and Naval Affairs

Accordingly, the number of state ministers sworn in before President Rajapaksa today (18) has increased to 24.

MIAP

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Cardinal disapproves of new Cabinet, says merely a deception (VIDEO)

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Archbishop of Colombo His Eminence Malcolm Cardinal Ranjith speaking to a briefing held in Colombo today (18) disapproved of the new Cabinet appointed by President Rajapaksa today by calling it a mere deception and to be serving no people’s hopes.

The Cardinal also disclosed that there were information on thugs and armed forces plotting to dissolve the protesters which would be an unacceptable and immoral response. Instead of engaging in such stupidity, the sovereignty of the people should be respected and the law should move towards a new system that is above political authority, he emphasised.

The Cardinal further noted that the rulers who deceive the public by not acting in a manner that assures the sovereignty of the people should be stepping down.

MIAP

New State Ministers sworn in

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The swearing in of new state ministers has commenced at the President’s House.

These state ministries are being appointed in relevance to the Cabinet of Ministers appointed this (18) morning.

Nevertheless, the public protest demanding the President, the Prime Minister and the government to step down are continuing for the 10th consecutive day.

Sri Lanka’s international bondholders brace for a haircut

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BANGKOK — Debt-ridden Sri Lanka has stepped into uncharted waters. Negotiations begin this week in Washington between government officials and the International Monetary Fund for a relief program, against the backdrop of protests at home and the decision to stop paying its overseas debts.

It is the 17th time the Indian Ocean nation has sought a financial lifeline from the fund, the second-highest frequency in Asia, after Pakistan. The planned default, however, is a first, leaving holders of its hard currency-denominated bonds expecting a debt restructuring in which they will take a haircut on what they are owed.

Nandalal Weerasinghe, a veteran central banker and economist brought out of retirement this month to be governor of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka, has his sights on calming creditors.

He told reporters after raising interest rates by a record 700 basis points in one of his first acts, “[This] will give a strong message to the international investors, to our creditors and to the markets that we are going to get out of this crisis as soon as possible.”

His stance has set him apart from his politically tainted predecessor, Nivard Cabraal, whose views mirrored the ultranationalist vision of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and who eschewed engagement with the IMF in favor of homegrown solutions like cutting imports and making bilateral currency swap deals with the likes of China to build foreign exchange reserves.

For the markets, the lead-up to Sri Lanka’s historic failure to make an interest payment due April 18 is a chronicle of a default foretold.

An international sovereign bond (ISB) maturing in July had been trading at 54 cents to the dollar even before the default plan was announced, reflecting the risk of a significant haircut. A $1.25 billion bond maturing in 2023 was trading at 47 cents to the dollar.

“Existing market prices were significantly down, and bondholders knew a default was on the cards,” said Murtaza Jafferjee, managing director of JB Securities, a financial consultancy in Colombo.

Sri Lanka’s foray into the international capital markets began in 2007, while the country was at the end of a nearly three-decade civil war and under the presidency of Mahinda Rajapaksa, Gotabaya’s popular elder brother. International investors clamored for that first $500 million bond for its high yield, an 8.25% coupon rate.

“It was oversubscribed, a real success story, but it led to a borrowing binge,” said a veteran commercial banker in Colombo, recalling a wave of further issues with coupons averaging 6%. “We were partying without thinking when to repay.”

Sri Lanka has been grappling with its history of “twin deficits” — trade and budget deficits — and its cycle of borrowing to settle older loans was possible only as long as rating agencies gave the country a good grade for an emerging market. After all three main agencies had downgraded Sri Lanka’s sovereign ratings to junk by early 2020, the door to the capital markets slammed shut.

Nearly 70% of the government’s revenue was going toward debt interest payments by 2020 after it slashed taxes, worsening the budget deficit to over 10% of GDP for 2021 and 2022. COVID-19 caused receipts from tourism to plummet, robbing the country of a key source of foreign earnings to build currency reserves. Likewise, the pandemic disrupted the foreign exchange that came from remittances of migrant workers employed abroad.

By the end of last month, the $81 billion economy’s usable foreign reserves had slumped to just $200 million, from $7.6 billion in December 2019. Official reserves stood at $1.7 billion, but that included a $1.5 billion swap with the People’s Bank of China that has conditions attached, according to bankers in Colombo.

Food, fuel and pharmaceutical shortages in the import-dependent country and a spike in inflation — including food inflation at over 30% by March — turned public anger against the ruling Rajapaksas, the country’s most influential political clan. The idea of paying foreign debt while people went hungry became untenable.

Amid calls for the president to step down, Gotabaya’s entire cabinet resigned, and he has appointed a four-member rump to replace them, including a confidant, Ali Sabry, as finance minister. On April 12, a five-page document released by the Ministry of Finance said the Sri Lankan government will “suspend normal debt servicing of all affected debts for an interim period.”

The move has raised the stakes in the talks with the IMF, which will begin at the fund’s spring meeting on Monday.

The fund has already offered Sri Lanka economic benchmarks that need to be met to restore macroeconomic stability and debt sustainability. The country needs to raise income tax and value-added tax (VAT), fund staff members have said. It must implement a tighter monetary policy to contain rising headline inflation, now at 18.8 %, the highest in Asia. It must have a flexible exchange rate to rebuild international reserves and phase out the central bank’s direct financing of budget deficits, the IMF said in a report released in March.

But it will be bitter medicine for a Sri Lankan public already battered by economic hardship. “Raising interest rates will bankrupt small businesses, the backbone of the economy, and increasing VAT at a time of a crisis will affect more people,” said Ahilan Kadirgamar, a political economist at the University of Jaffna in northern Sri Lanka. “This is going to be a long, painful process.”

Bondholders will also be key stakeholders. By the end of 2020, a year into Gotabaya’s term, the country’s foreign debt was $38.6 billion, accounting for 47.6% of the central government’s total debt, according to the IMF. International sovereign bonds made up the largest share, at $14 billion, followed by $8.8 billion in loans from multilateral lenders and $6.2 billion in bilateral debts. The top 20 ISB holders included BlackRock, Allianz, UBS, HSBC, JPMorgan Chase and Prudential, according to Advocata Institute, a Colombo-based think tank.

Weerasinghe said he is seeking to appoint international legal and financial advisers as the country readies for intense negotiations. Bond market analysts are building models to judge how much investors will have to write off and what kind of payment schedule they can expect on the restructured bonds.

The political pressure building up against the government has not been lost on markets. “We believe investors are worried that the IMF talks and restructuring negotiations may be disrupted in the absence of a unified government that can ratify the economic adjustments and commit to the implementation of reforms,” Avanti Save, credit strategy research director at Barclays, wrote in a note to clients.

Investors reached by Nikkei Asia echoed those sentiments. “The bondholders will be looking to the IMF talks to assess the deal and whether the government is capable of implementing the reforms,” said one Hong Kong-based fund manager who has invested in Sri Lanka’s international bonds. “They will use that to figure out what kind of haircut lies ahead — a reasonable one, or something worse.”

NIKKEI ASIA

President urges new ministers to commit themselves for honest and clean administration

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New ministers of the Cabinet were appointed without regard to seniority and every minister should be working without seeking any additional privileges, said President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, addressing the occasion of swearing in new Cabinet of Ministers today (18).

The President urged every minister to commit themselves to honest, efficient and clean administration.

The President also urged the new Cabinet to turn the public institutes under them into bodies without corruption and committed to public service.

No changes were made in the Premiership, Finance Ministry and the Foreign Affairs Ministry.

MIAP

Court denies request to impose travel ban on Basil and Attygalle

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The Court today (18) denied a request to impose a travel ban on former Finance Minister Basil Rajapaksa and former Finance Secretary S.R. Attygalle.

Keerthi Thennakoon, a provincial governor of the previous government, had made this request to the Court and Maithri Gunaratne, another former provincial governor of the previous government, appeared in Court on his behalf.

A vacation court is functioning today and only one of the five Colombo Magistrate Courts operates. Colombo Additional Magistrate Harshana Kekunawala, who served as its Judge, denied the above request.

MIAP

Did President agree to abolish 20A and reenact 19A?

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President Gotabaya Rajapaksa has reportedly agreed to abolish the 20th Amendment to the Constitution and reenact the 19th Amendment to the Constitution.

Accordingly, his decision will be announced tomorrow (19) or the day after (20), sources claimed.

The 19th Amendment to the Constitution is of provisions which slash many powers vested in the Executive Presidency.

MIAP

Allegations against me baseless and malicious: Former CBSL Chief

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Former Governor of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka Ajith Nivard Cabraal in a statement today (18) reiterated that the allegations levelled against him are baseless and/or malicious and that he has no intention of travelling overseas.

He added that these allegations have been presented to Court by suppressing important material facts and that all steps will be taken legally to refute them and present the correct facts to Court.

Statement by Ajith Nivard Cabraal on 18th April 2022

In accordance with the Summons issued to me in Case No: 68647/4 by the Registrar of the Colombo Magistrate Court, I was ordered to tender appearance through my Registered Attorney and to move to file answer in Court on 18th April 2022. The said Summons was issued to me in terms of the Civil Procedure Code and I had also been informed that if I am not represented by a registered Attorney, I should furnish a communication to Court, specifying an address to which all legal notices should be addressed in the future.

Mr. Jeevantha Jayatilake, Senior Attorney at Law appearing on my behalf in Court explained the nature of the Summons that I have received, and further informed Court that my personal appearance has been dispensed with, in terms of the Summons. I have also been advised by my lawyers that, in terms of Section 144 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, the Honourable Magistrate has the discretion and the power to dispense with the personal appearance of a party summoned to Court. Further, my Senior Attorney at Law informed Court that I have no intention to travel overseas at this stage, and therefore, I did not require any application to be made to vacate the overseas travel ban. Nevertheless, my Lawyers stated that they reserve the right to make an application pertaining to the travel ban at the appropriate stage, if a need arises for me to travel abroad. Accordingly, the Honourable Magistrate had re-fixed the Case for 2nd May 2022.

With regard to the several allegations made against me in the above Plaint, I wish to state that the said complaints are baseless and/or malicious and presented to Court by suppressing important material facts and all steps will be taken legally to refute them and present the correct facts to Court.