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World Bank extends interest-free $495 mn to SL as IDA-eligible nation

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Colombo (LNW): Sri Lanka has been granted budget support loans totaling US $495.6 million by the World Bank (WB), with an interest-free arrangement until September 2023.

This financial assistance comes after the country’s downgrade made it eligible for reduced-rate International Development Association (IDA) credits, reported Economy Next.

The WB has committed to providing development policy financing, disbursed in connection with policy reforms, on an interest-free basis, with a nominal commitment fee of 0.5 per cent.

The repayment terms include a generous 6-year grace period and a 12-year repayment period through the IDA window, a Finance Ministry report outlined.

Additionally, the WB has earmarked US $196.3 million for social protection initiatives, carrying an interest rate of 1.25 per cent, a service fee of 0.75 per cent, and a commitment fee of 0.5 per cent. The repayment schedule for this allocation spans 30 years, with a 5-year grace period.

In 2022, Sri Lanka faced economic challenges, with a sharp depreciation of its currency, leading to a significant portion of the population falling into poverty. The currency’s float, initially unsuccessful due to a surrender rule, saw subsequent corrective measures, including interest rate hikes and the removal of the surrender rule, resulting in the rupee appreciating to approximately 320-330 against the US dollar.

Sri Lanka, having attained middle-income status and market access for International Bank of Reconstruction and Development (IBRD) loans, experienced a shift in its economic landscape with aggressive macro-economic policies.

The country lost market access and defaulted on foreign loans, prompting the World Bank to extend IDA loans to Sri Lanka.

While loans from multilateral agencies such as the World Bank and Asian Development Bank are generally concessional, the expectation remains that these loans are serviced even in the event of default.

The WB adheres to a policy of providing favorable loan terms with extended repayment periods, ensuring a net positive flow of new loans compared to repayments, according to a senior official.

Sri Lanka’s default on foreign loans in 2022 resulted from a series of currency crises triggered by excessive money printing to target potential output through macro-economic policies.

Showery conditions expected to enhance; heavy showers about 75 mm to occur (Nov 27)

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By: Isuru Parakrama

Colombo (LNW): Showery weather condition is expected to enhance over most places of the island for the next few days starting from today (27), with showers or thundershowers being expected to occur at times in Eastern, Northern and North-central provinces, the Department of Meteorology said in its daily weather forecast today.

Showers or thundershowers may occur at several places in other provinces of the island after 02.00 p.m, and fairly heavy showers about 75mm are likely at some places in Eastern, Uva, Western and Sabaragamuwa provinces and in Galle and Matara districts, the statement added.

The general public is kindly requested to take adequate precautions to minimise damages caused by temporary localised strong winds and lightning during thundershowers.

Marine Weather:

Condition of Rain:
Showers or thundershowers will occur at times in the sea areas off the coast extending from Mannar to Pottuvil via Kankasanthurai and Trincomalee.  Showers or thundershowers may occur at several places in the other sea areas around the island particularly during the afternoon or night.
Winds:
Winds will be North-easterly. Wind speed will be (30-40) kmph in the sea areas off the coast extending from Chilaw to Trincomalee via Puttalam, Kankasanthurai and from Galle to Hambantota via Matara. Wind speed will be (20-30) kmph in the other sea areas around the island.
State of Sea:
The sea areas off the coast extending from Chilaw to Trincomalee via Puttalam, Kankasanthurai and from Galle to Hambantota via Matara will be moderate and slight in the other sea areas around the island. Temporarily strong gusty winds and very rough seas can be expected during thundershowers.

Sri Lanka Original Narrative Summary: 27/11

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  1. Election Commission Chairman R M A L Rathnayake confirms the next Presidential Election will take place on a day between 16th Sep’24 and 17th Oct’24: says the specific date for the election would be decided & officially announced in Jul”24 (as per the 2-month advance notice prior to the commencement of the stipulated election period).
  2. Differences between the Opposition hamper the appointment of the 10th member to the Constitutional Council: leads to the CC activities being hamstrung: current vacancy has existed for more than 1 year: it is reserved for a member of the 3rd-largest party in Parliament, not represented either by the PM or the Opposition Leader.
  3. Sri Lanka’s & Ghana’s international bonds take a major tumble on the news that Zambia’s USD 3bn bond re-work deal has collapsed: collapse raises doubts about the very framework designed to get bankrupt nations back on track.
  4. President’s Counsel Saliya Pieris refutes President Ranil Wickremesinghe’s comment that he (Pieris) had ambitions to become the Prime Minister prior to 9th May”22.
  5. Sugar prices in the retail market increases amidst shortages: some shops claim they had run out of stocks: some shops raise their prices to be between Rs.300 & Rs.350 per kg after the maximum retail price for sugar was removed this week.
  6. Minister of Agriculture Mahinda Amaraweera says the Cabinet has approved the provision of MOP fertiliser for the ‘Maha’ season at the subsidised rate of Rs.9,000 per bag as against the current price of Rs.19,000.
  7. Reports state that the Ceylon Petroleum Corporation has lost a staggering USD 17 mn solely in demurrage last year: CPC insiders say this is due to “mismanagement” by officials.
  8. Sectoral Oversight Committee on National Economic and Physical Plans chaired by MP Mahindananda Aluthgamage instructs the Department of Project Management & Monitoring to submit a progress report as it was disclosed that only 31 out of 179 foreign investment projects are “efficacious”.
  9. Apparel Exporters Association Chairman Indika Liyanahewage calls for strategic partnerships with Japan & India to boost & diversify markets to steer through challenges posed by economic downturns in traditional export destinations: notes that 30% of garments are shipped to Europe & 40% to US: laments these markets have seen a dip due to economic challenges.
  10. Discussions during a recent meeting of the State Revenue Unit with President Ranil Wickremesinghe focuses on possibility of providing Rs.5,000 of the proposed pay increase of Rs.10,000 from Jan’24, followed by the balance from Apr’24.

President unveils ‘Urumaya’ Freehold Deed Programme for agricultural empowerment

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Colombo (LNW): President Ranil Wickremesinghe has introduced the “Urumaya” Freehold Deed Programme during the initial phase of the public awareness campaign for the 2024 budget proposal.

Wickremesinghe outlined the programme’s goals, aiming to strengthen the export economy by transforming each village into an enterprise village. Plans include the establishment of agriculture modernisation service centres.

Speaking in Nochchiyagama, Anuradhapura, the President questioned the allocation of freehold land for the Shangri-La Hotel, emphasising the need for similar privileges for hardworking farmers. Rs. 2 billion have been allocated in the 2024 budget for “Urumaya” freehold deeds.

President Wickremesinghe proposed a unified freehold deed system, replacing existing categories like Jaya Bhoomi and Swarna Bhoomi in 2024. He urged unity beyond political differences and highlighted efforts to stabilise the country’s economic situation.

The President announced plans to resume stalled development projects, allocate Rs. 1.5 billion for cricket development in rural schools, and safeguard cultural and historical sites in Anuradhapura. Governor Maheepala Herath praised Wickremesinghe for economic recovery and empowering the agricultural community.

Minister of State for Finance Shehan Semasinghe highlighted the President’s proactive measures in addressing agricultural concerns and expressed satisfaction in resolving land ownership issues. MP Duminda Dissanayake commended Wickremesinghe’s leadership and praised the budget for addressing various societal needs.

MP S.M. Chandrasena applauded the significant financial allocation to Anuradhapura district and emphasised the President’s dedication to the agricultural community.

The event was attended by several dignitaries, including Chairman H. Nandasena, MP Uddika Premaratne, Former Chief Minister S. M. Ranjith, Former Minister P. Harrison, Attorney Kasthuri Anuradhanayake, and Land Commissioner General Bandula Jayasinghe.

Construction begins for Uva Wellassa University Medical Faculty’s Professorial Unit at Rs. 2.26 bn

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Colombo (LNW): The groundbreaking ceremony for the construction of a ten-storey building for the Professorial Unit of the Faculty of Medicine at Uva Wellassa University commenced on Sunday, November 26th, at the Badulla Teaching Hospital premises.

The construction, with a financial allocation of Rs. 2.26 billion, is overseen by the Central Engineering Consultancy Bureau (CECB) and is expected to be completed by December 2025.

Director General of Health Services (DGHS) Dr. Asela Gunawardena officially announced the conversion of Badulla Provincial General Hospital into a teaching hospital, affiliated with the Uva Wellassa University Medical Faculty. Additionally, the hospital’s new website was launched, and staff appreciation awards were presented during the event.

The Professorial Unit, comprising several units within a fully equipped teaching hospital, offers teaching, training, and clinical services in Clinical Surgery. The government plans to establish specialist units in physical medicine, surgery, pediatrics, obstetrics and gynecology, and psychiatry within the Professorial Unit, with assigned teachers and professors for medical courses.

The establishment of the eleventh Faculty of Medicine in Sri Lanka at Badulla Uva Wellassa University led to the decision to construct a Professorial Unit, as there was no existing unit for degree courses for medical students enrolled in this faculty. The inaugural enrollment of 50 medical students is set for February 2024.

Dr. Jayantha Balawardena has been appointed as the first chancellor of Uva University by President Ranil Wickremesinghe. The construction began under the patronage of Minister of Ports, Shipping, and Aviation, Nimal Siripala de Silva, and with the blessings of Minister of Health and Industries, Dr. Ramesh Pathirana.

Several dignitaries, including State Minister Chamara Sampath Dasanayake, Minister of State for Education A. Aravinda Kumara, Governor of Uva Province J. M. Muzammil, University Grants Commission Chairman Prof. Sampath Amaratunga, Health Ministry Deputy Director General (Supply) Dinipriya Herath, State Pharmaceuticals Corporation Chairman Ajith Mendis, Badulla Teaching Hospital Director Dr. Upul Karunaratne, and Uva University Chancellor consultant oncologist Dr. Jayantha Balawardena, participated in the event.

Sports Minister to make special statement in Parliament today (Nov 27)

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Colombo (LNW): Sports Minister Roshan Ranasinghe is set to deliver a special statement in Parliament this morning (27) addressing the prevailing controversies in the country’s cricket crisis.

Speaking to reporters, the Minister affirmed his commitment to unveiling the truth during his parliamentary statement today.

He emphasised that he intends to expose the individuals responsible for the current cricket crisis and elucidate their ultimate objectives in this matter.

Paul Lynch’s ‘soul-shattering’ Prophet Song wins 2023 Booker prize

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Irish author Paul Lynch has won the 2023 Booker prize for his fifth novel Prophet Song, set in an imagined Ireland that is descending into tyranny. It was described as a “soul-shattering and true” novel that “captures the social and political anxieties of our current moment” by the judging chair, Esi Edugyan.

Canadian novelist Edugyan, who has twice been shortlisted for the Booker prize herself, said the decision to award Lynch the £50,000 prize “wasn’t unanimous” and was settled on by discussion and multiple rounds of voting that lasted “about six hours” on Saturday.

Prophet Song takes place in an alternate Dublin. Members of the newly formed secret police, established by a government turning towards totalitarianism, turn up on the doorstep of microbiologist Eilish asking for her husband, a senior official in the Teachers’ Union of Ireland. Soon, he disappears – along with hundreds of other civilians – and Eilish is left to look after their four children and her elderly father, fighting to hold the family together amid civil war.

Lynch’s win comes days after violent protests broke out across central Dublin after a stabbing attack outside a primary school that left three children injured. Police said the disorder was caused by a “complete lunatic faction driven by far-right ideology”.

Asked whether recent events had influenced the judges’ decision, Edugyan said that “at some point in the discussions, maybe for a few minutes, this was introduced, this was discussed”. However, she said that timeliness “was not the reason that Prophet Song won the prize” – the judges simply felt it was a “truly a masterful work of fiction”.

This is the second year in a row that a novel about political conflict has won the prize. In 2022, Shehan Karunatilaka won with The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida, set during the Sri Lankan civil war.

“Lynch’s dystopian Ireland reflects the reality of war-torn countries, where refugees take to the sea to escape persecution on land,” wrote Aimée Walsh in an Observer review. “Prophet Song echoes the violence in Palestine, Ukraine and Syria, and the experience of all those who flee from war-torn countries.”

Melissa Harrison called the novel “as nightmarish a story as you’ll come across: powerful, claustrophobic and horribly real” in her Guardian review.

Lynch was born in 1977 in Limerick, grew up in Co Donegal and now lives in Dublin. His other novels are Beyond the Sea, Grace, The Black Snow and Red Sky in Morning. He is the fifth Irish author to win the prize, following in the footsteps of Iris Murdoch, John Banville, Roddy Doyle and Anne Enright. The Northern Irish writer Anna Burns won in 2018.

The keynote speech at the prize ceremony in London was given by Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, who was released from prison in Tehran, Iran, last year. She discussed the ways in which books helped her when she was in solitary confinement. “When the guard opened the door and handed over the books to me, I felt liberated; I could read books, they could take me to another world, and that could transform my life,” she said.

It was also noteworthy that Lynch was given the prize by Karunatilaka, winner of the Booker Prize in 2022, breaking a decades old tradition.

Source: The Guardian

Defective medical equipment worth Rs. 350 mn withdrawn

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Colombo (LNW): Medicines, surgical instruments, and laboratory equipment with an approximate value of Rs. 350 million were deemed defective and withdrawn from use in the year 2022, the Auditor General’s report disclosed.

The report highlights that defective items, including medicines, surgical equipment, and laboratory apparatus, amounting to Rs. 349 million, were discarded after being issued for use in government hospitals last year.

The report emphasises a lack of an existing mechanism within the Medical Supply Division (MSD) to assess the effectiveness of certain drugs before their issuance to hospitals.

Consequently, these defects are only identified later, after patients have already been administered the affected drugs.

Furthermore, the Auditor General’s Department disclosed that as of the end of 2022, numerous positions in the healthcare sector remained vacant, including 1,331 doctor positions, 77 dental surgeons, 2,034 nursing officers, 136 medical laboratory technicians, 68 occupational therapists, 126 pharmacists, and 270 auditors.

The report also outlined that nearly Rs. 36,192 million had been expended on overtime and holiday wages, constituting 72 per cent of the total wage expenditure by the end of 2022.

Minister announces further reduction in MOP fertiliser price

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Colombo (LNW): Agriculture Minister Mahinda Amaraweera has announced a reduction in the price of Muriate of Potash (MOP) fertiliser, commonly known as ‘Bandi Pohora,‘ to Rs. 9,000 for the ongoing ‘Maha’ harvest season.

The Minister made this revelation earlier this morning (26) in Embilipitiya, while disbursing compensation to farmers whose crops suffered due to arid weather conditions earlier this year.

The Minister revealed that the Cabinet has approved his proposal to lower the price of MOP fertiliser, previously sold at Rs. 19,000, to the new rate of Rs. 9,000.

The price slash applies to both state-owned fertiliser suppliers.

State and Public Service unions to launch protest campaign tomorrow (Nov 27)

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Colombo (LNW): Various state sector and provincial public service trade unions are set to initiate a nationwide protest campaign tomorrow (27), addressing several demands.

The protest is scheduled to start at noon on the specified date, based on several key demands including a Rs. 20,000 wage increase and enhanced allowances from January 2024, Coordinator of the trade union collective, Chandana Sooriyarachchi disclosed.

Additionally, they are advocating for the reinstatement of pension entitlements for those who entered the state sector in 2016 and later.

Sooriyarachchi cautioned that if the government does not respond favourably, a series of trade union actions will follow.