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PM sends condolence message to President of Indonesia 

Following the devastating tsunami that has reportedly killed over 400 people in Indonesia Prime Minister Ranil Wickramasinghe has written to Indonesian President Joko Widodo to express his condolences. 

Wickramasinghe said he was sorrowed by the news of the tsunami that led to the loss of life and infrastructure in the country while expressing his solidarity with Indonesia and extending his condolences to the families of the victims.

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Tangalle reels in shock over Christmas Day shooting

A brazen shooting on Christmas Day morning at the Tangalle Kudawella Fisheries harbour has shocked the locality. The shooting has left four individuals dead and another five injured Police said. 

The incident had occurred around 7.15 am today when two unidentified gunmen arriving in a motorcycle had opened fire a group gathered in the harbour. Police say a T56 weapon was used in the shooting. Preliminary investigations have revealed a possible personal dispute between two fisher groups in the area had led to the killings. The groups had clashed on several occasions previously the Police said.

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Benefits of oil price reduction must be passed to the public

The government has urged transport regulatory institutions to take necessary action immediately in order to pass the benefits of the recent oil price reduction to the people. 

This request was made by Finance Minister Mangala Samaraweera when he addressed parliament last week.

As a result of the price formula introduced by the Government, the price of petrol and diesel has been reduced by Rs.30 and Rs.20 per litre respectively when compared with the last price increase on 10th of October 2018.

Therefore, the Government noted that the bus fares and the charges in the transport sectors such as, three wheelers and school vehicles should be reduced proportionately in order to pass the benefits of the global fuel price reduction to the people. 

The Private Bus Owners Association had agreed to reduce bus fair by 4.2 percent but many observers noted that this was not a fair reduction as the government had decreased the fuel prices substantially over the last month and a half.

Accordingly, the Government expects the regulatory institutions which are responsible for the transport sector would take necessary action to ensure that the benefits of the fuel price reduction are passed on to the passengers.
 
At the same time, fisheries and other transport sectors should also pass on the benefit of fuel price reduction to the people as the production and transport costs of such sectors have declined following the decrease of diesel price. This would create a tendency of reducing the prices of goods and services thereby helping to cut the cost of living effectively.

The global prices of crude oil were continuously on the rise in the recent past and consequently the fuel prices in Sri Lanka too increased until October 10th. The fuel price in Sri Lanka was increased for the last time on October 10th and at the that time the global price of a barrel of crude oil was reported as US$85.

However, global price of crude oil was continuously reduced from the month of November 2018 and the average global price of crude oil is currently reported as US$58 per barrel.

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Mangala reveals reason for October 26 political coup

Minister of Finance and Mass Media Mangala Samaraweera says the October 26 black Friday coup was engineered by opponents due to fears regarding the successful ‘Gamperaliya’ development program launched by the yahapalana government. The Minister made these comments addressing a gathering in Matara recently. 

According to the Minister, De facto Finance Minister of the conspiracy government, Mahinda Rajapaksa had put forward a cabinet paper to cancel the development project.

Samaraweera says the government’s opponents were troubled by the massive development program aimed at uplifting the rural economy.

He says Rajapaksa knew he would be defeated in an election if the Gamperaliya program is allowed to continue for over a year and had made comments to that effect adding that therefore Rajapaksa had said the government must be toppled to disrupt it. 

The Minister has vowed to present Rs. 300 million each to all electoral seats under the Gamperaliya program and stressed the program will not be stalled due to any reason.

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Judicial intervention needed to resolve dispute over opposition leader

The National Peace Council noted that as president Maithripala Sirisena has taken over 3 ministries and has actively participated in governance by vetoing ministerial appointments, appointing commissions of inquiry, and directing the Grama Shakthi development programme, among others,  and therefore in this context, he should not appoint former president Mahinda Rajapaksa, who belongs to his party, as opposition leader.

Full Text of Statement:

"Speaker Karu Jayasuriya has made an initial announcement in parliament that the new Leader of the Opposition would be former president Mahinda Rajapaksa of the SLFP/UPFA.  However, this has been challenged by the TNA whose leader R Sampanthan previously held the position and who has not been removed from this position.  This has led to a situation where there are currently two Leaders of the Opposition similar to the situation of Sri Lanka having two Prime Ministers in the recent past!  

The National Peace Council believes that the position of opposition leader cannot be ignored by those who are concerned with political morality and adherence to traditions, conventions and the rule of law.
 
We note that President Sirisena holds three important cabinet ministries for himself, these being Defence, Mahaweli Development and Environment.  In addition, he has taken a fourth to himself, which is the former Ministry of Law and Order dealing with police and amalgamated it with the Defence Ministry.  By taking these ministries to himself President Sirisena has entrenched himself and SLFP/UPFA policies within the government. 
 
It can also be seen that President Sirisena is actively participating in governance by vetoing ministerial appointments, appointing commissions of inquiry, and directing the Grama Shakthi development programme, among others.  The appointment of former president Rajapaksa who belongs to his party as opposition leader in this context is a contradiction in terms.  In these circumstances a legal question arises whether the SLFP/UPFA can, or ought to, be given the Leader of the Opposition’s position.
 
It appears that the idea of governance of many in the polity is to find loopholes in the law and use political power to get their way. This can be seen in the denial of Mr Rajapaksa and other SLFP/UPFA parliamentarians that they obtained membership of the SLPP.  They were publicly televised accepting such membership shortly after President Sirisena’s abortive dissolution of parliament on November 9 which was ruled as unconstitutional by the Supreme Court.  In legal terms, verbal statements are taken as evidence of contract between parties and thus leaders ought to be bound by their statements for which they can be legally sued or made responsible.
 
The National Peace Council believes that the judiciary needs to be called on to look into the legal aspects of the conflict and ways of ending it. It is essential that politicians in general and leaders in politics in particular should be held accountable for the actions and assertions they make if the people are to have confidence in governance.  The judiciary seems to be the only institutional vehicle in the polity at the present time that can ensure this level of democratic accountability. Failure to do so will be tantamount to a denial of the aspirations of all Sri Lankans who wish to have a stable government at the dawn of another New Year."

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Vote on Account passed in parliament

The Vote on Account to cover expenditures of the first four months of 2019 was passed in Parliament with by a majority of 96 votes today.

102 members voted in favour while 06 members, all from the JVP, voted against. Although the UPFA abstained from voting, its general secretary Mahinda Amaraweera said that the party will not object the vote on account. 

Finance Minister Mangala Samaraweera presenting the vote on account said that the expenditure for the four-month period would be LKR 1745 billion with LKR 970 billion allocated for debt servicing.

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Gazetting of Ministry subjects further delayed as President holidays abroad! 

The subjects and government agencies of the new Ministries have not been gazetted yet causing difficulties for the Ministries to function it is reported. The delay has been caused as President Maithripala Sirisena left the country on a private holiday with his family without signing the Gazette. 

Government sources say the President appears to be hampering the functioning of Ministries by allowing them to be stalled as it was following the October 26 political coup. Political insiders say the President’s intention is to embarrass the new UNF government by purposely failing to carry out his duties.

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Ranil questions media on 'fake' minister list

Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe severely criticized media in parliament today over the circulation a 'fake' list of nominations for Cabinet portfolios allegedly sent to president Maithripala Sirisena. 

The premier alleged that the media was reporting that this fake list was rejected by president Sirisena.He also stated that some media had claimed that SLFP parliamentarian Wijith Vijayamuni Zoysa was included in the list of MPs nominated for ministerial portfolios but pointed out that he was never included in the list.

PM Wickremesinghe slammed media for attempting to mislead the public and called for a parliamentary debate next month on false and inaccurate reporting. He insisted that action must be taken against media outlets that have purposely mislead the general public. 

The fake list of proposed ministers is found below:
fake list 1

fake list 2

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US Government charges Rajapaksa cousin and ex-envoy Jaliya

The United States Government has charged Jaliya Chitran Wickramasuriya with two counts of wire fraud, two counts of money laundering and one count of immigration fraud.

This is in connection with the embezzlement of US$ 320,000 funds of the Sri Lankan government intended for the purchase of a new embassy building there.

Wickramasuriya was appointed as Sri Lanka’s Ambassador to the United States and Mexico in August 2008 by former President Mahinda Rajapaksa, who is his first cousin.

“From around late 2012 to November 2014, the defendant Jaliya Wickramasuriya devised and intended to devise a scheme to defraud the government of Sri Lanka during the purchase of the embassy, and to obtain money by means of materially false and fraudulent pretenses, representations and promises,” according to the indictment unsealed last week by the US District Court for the District of Columbia.

The embezzlement of state funds was reported by the US government to Sri Lankan authorities in 2014, which led to a request by the US that Wickramasuriya be recalled from diplomatic service in that country. While President Rajapaksa did recall Wickramasuriya, no criminal charges were filed against him by Sri Lankan authorities, nor did the Rajapaksa regime waive the diplomatic immunity that complicated efforts to charge the former ambassador in the United States.

The thirteen-page indictment filed by US prosecutors subsequent to an investigation conducted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) unit sets out the alleged criminal scheme in detail.

“Between 2008 and 2014, defendant Jaliya Chitran Wickramasuriya served as Ambassador from the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka to the United States. While serving as Ambassador, the defendant also owned an operated company in Sri Lanka named Ceylon Royal Tea and Supplies, and a company in the state of Georgia named Ceylon Royal Tea and Supplies, collectively ‘Ceylon Royal Tea.”

“In 2012, the defendant was involved in selecting 3024 Whitehaven St NW, Washington D.C. as the location for the new embassy. In 2013, the defendant caused official funds from Sri Lanka to be wired to a HSBC bank account in Washington D.C., which were used to purchase the new embassy.”

“On or about January 12, 2013, the defendant prepared a memorandum in which he instructed the Title Company and Closing Attorney to disburse the unaccounted for $332,027.35 in funds to two third parties, both of which had no role in the real estate transaction. The defendant signed this memorandum.”

According to Wickramasuriya’s instructions, US$ 82,000 was to be disbursed by wire or cheque to a US based consultant company, which is not named in the indictment, but is identified in FCID B Reports as Paper Crown LLC, owned by a close Wickramasuriya associate, Vinod Basnayake. $250,000 was to be disbursed to a Sri Lankan company, described as “Sri Lankan Company C” in the indictment, which was in fact PPP International Pvt Ltd, owned by a Brendan Sosa. “On or about January 15, 2013, the defendant, using a non-embassy e-mail account, emailed this memorandum, containing the disbursement instructions for the excess funds, to the Closing Attorney.”

The disbursements to these two private companies “were not authorised by the government of Sri Lanka,” according to the indictment. On or about January 17, 2013, the Title Company successfully wired $82,027.35 from the Title Company Bank Account” to Paper Crown LLC, which was nominated by Wickramasuriya. On the same day, “the Title Company attempted to wire $250,000” to PPP International in Sri Lanka. “However, the wire was unsuccessful because an intermediary bank rejected it.”

Wickramasuriya was notified of the failed wire transfer. Thereafter, “on or about January 20, 2013, the defendant, using his personal email account, sent an email to Closing Attorney that instructed Closing Attorney to mail a cheque to Sri Lanka for $250,000” payable to PPP International.

A cheque was instead made out for $250,000 payable to Wickramasuriya directly, and mailed to the address of Ceylon Royal Tea, Wickramasuriya’s company in Sri Lanka. “Initially, the defendant’s efforts to have the cheque cashed in Sri Lanka were not successful,” the indictment reads. On or about March 19, 2013, a co-conspirator of Wickramasuriya directed the closing attorney to prepare documentation indicating that PPP International was involved in the real estate transaction so that the funds could be released to their bank account in Sri Lanka. However, this company “was not involved in the real estate transaction” according to the indictment.

Then, on or about March 19, 2013, Wickramasuriya “using his personal email account, told Closing Attorney not to send any emails regarding” PPP International to his official Sri Lankan government email account. The next day, according to the indictment, the funds were successfully received in Sri Lanka.

According to a report filed with the Colombo Fort Magistrates Court by the FCID in a connected investigation, at least Rs 18 million of the money embezzled from the embassy and laundered through PPP International was later deposited in the Sri Lankan bank account of Ceylon Royal Tea, the company owned by Wickramasuriya.

The indictment further charges that when Sri Lankan embassy officials began investigating the suspicious transfers,Wickramasuriya took steps to cover up his misdeeds. He gave embassy officials a document labeled “Addendum to the Settlement Statement,” the indictment says. “The Addendum was undated, not written on official letterhead, and unsigned by the buyer or seller of the embassy property. The Addendum detailed payments made as ‘Commission to Agents’ totaling $332,027.35. The Addendum stated that this purported commission was split evenly into two payments of $166,013.68 each to the respective real estate company’s of the buyer and seller. “In fact, no such commission payments totaling $332,027.35 were made” to either company, according to the indictment. The indictment further details how the former ambassador replaced the embezzled funds after his scheme had been unearthed by embassy officials.

“In or around October 2013, the defendant approached the Embassy Realtor with a request for the Embassy Realtor to receive a money transfer of approximately $332,000. Based on prior communication with the defendant, the Embassy Realtor hoped that this transfer was payment for a proposed renovation to the embassy, which needed to be changed from a residence to office space.”

After the conversation with Wickramasuriya, the indictment says, the realtor received five payments totaling $332,000. Of this sum $40,000 came from a Sri Lankan company with a note stating “Loan to Jaliya Wickramasuriya”, $125,000 came from an ‘acquaintance’ of Wickramasuriya, $32,000 from the former ambassador himself and sums of $73,265 and $61,735 respectively from two US-based companies employed by Wickramasuriya as consultants to the embassy. A cashier’s cheque was drawn out for this total sum of $ 332,027.35 issued to ‘the Embassy of Sri Lanka,” the indictment reveals.

“The defendant personally collected the cashier’s cheque from the Embassy Realtor. The defendant subsequently deposited the cashier’s cheque into the Sri Lankan government bank account. The defendant subsequently provided the Sri Lankan authorities with a letter from the Embassy Realtor and addressed to the defendant, which stated that a cashier’s cheque in the amount of $332,027.35 was being issued to the Sri Lankan embassy as a ‘final reimbursement’. This letter was purportedly signed by the Embassy Realtor. In fact, however, the Embassy Realtor did not write or sign this letter,” the indictment exposes.

The charges in the United States are restricted to wire fraud, money laundering and immigration fraud.Wickramasuriya also faces prosecution in Sri Lankan jurisdiction in connection with the same events, for charges of criminal breach of trust and forgery, among other offenses.

Source : CDN

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Australia orders the deportation of Sri Lankan family

A Tamil refugee family who made a home for themselves in the small Queensland town of Biloela have lost their appeal to stay in Australia.
Nadesalingam and Priya came to Australia separately by boat in 2012 and 2013 following Sri Lanka's civil war. 

They settled in Biloela, where they became ingrained in the local community.The Federal Court on Friday dismissed Nadesalingam, Priya and their two daughters' bid to remain in the country.

But Justice John Middleton ordered they not be deported back to Sri Lanka until after 4pm on February 1, given the time of year and so they had an opportunity to consider their options.

Australian Border Force officials removed the family from their home in March, one day after Priya's bridging visa expired.

They have been detained in a Melbourne immigration centre for the past nine months.

family 1Sri Lankan Tamils Priya and Nadesalingam and their two Australian-born children, from Biloela in Queensland, who lost a bid to stop their deportation.Credit:AAP

The family were issued with a deportation notice in June after the federal government ruled they couldn't stay.

But their removal from Australia was put on hold after they made an 11th-hour appeal to the Federal Court in August.

Friend Brad Coath, who was in court when Friday's decision was handed down, said the family would be devastated.

"Nadas and Priya are keeping an incredibly brave face but it's tough as you can imagine," he said.

Mr Coath said their Australian-born daughters, aged one and three, were particularly doing it tough, having developed nutritional deficiencies and developmental issues as a result of being in detention.

family 2Family friend Brad Coath (left) is seen outside the Federal Court in MelbourneCredit:AAP/Daniel Pockett.

Friend and Biloela resident Angela Fredericks described the family's ordeal as "pure psychological torture".

"Each time they're getting more and more exhausted. It's just the psychological drain of not knowing and the constant fear (of returning to Sri Lanka)," she said.

Ms Fredericks said she was disappointed with the court ruling but grateful the family wouldn't be deported until February.

She said it gave them time to consider their options, including if they wanted to take the case to the High Court.

"It gives us time to keep the pressure on Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton to step in," she said.

More than 140,000 people have signed a petition urging Mr Dutton to return the family to Biloela.

Ms Fredericks said the small town community would now put more pressure on the government to intervene.

"We will be back fighting with phone calls daily, sending letters and emails, basically inundating them," she said.

Nadesalingam and Priya came to Australia separately by boat in 2012 and 2013 following Sri Lanka's civil war.

They settled in Biloela, where they became ingrained in the local community. (AAP)

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Christmas is a time to bring amity among all Sri Lankans - PM 

Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe says Christmas is an opportune time to get rid of divisiveness and bring amity among all Sri Lankans regardless of differences and it is a time to remember the past with hopes for the future.
 
Following is the full text of Prime Minister's message:
 
The life of Jesus Christ brought hope and reconciliation to a fragmented world. Christmas is the season of great joy. It's a time for remembering the past, with hope for the future. It is an opportune time to rid ourselves of divisiveness and bring about a sense of brotherhood and amity among all Sri Lankans, going beyond the barriers of caste, creed and language.
 
Let me wish each of you the Joy and Peace that the Christ Child brings.
 
Have a Blessed and joyful Christmas!

(Colombo Page)

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UN Secretary General welcomes resolution of crisis

The Secretary-General of the United Nations Antonio Guterres has welcomed the resolution of the political crisis in Sri Lanka and called on all the political actors to resolve all outstanding differences in the interest of people of the country. 

“The Secretary-General welcomes the resolution of the political crisis in Sri Lanka through peaceful, constitutional means, and applauds the resilience of the country’s democratic institutions,” Guterres’ spokesman Stephane Dujarric told reporters at a press briefing on Thursday. 

The Secretary-General also called on all political actors to seize the opportunity of the appointment of the new cabinet to resolve outstanding political differences in the same spirit of respect for democracy and in the interest of the people of Sri Lanka.

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