Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Saturday, April 27, 2013


Govt. borrowings from local banks exceed Rs.1 trillion – ICEU

SATURDAY, 27 APRIL 2013 logo
The President of Inter Company Employees' Union (ICEU) Wasanthe Samarasinghe claims that the government borrowed Rs 410 billion from Bank of Ceylon and People's Bank to pay salaries of the public sector employees and various other pending bills. He said the loans were taken at an interest rate of 17% in December 2012 when the Treasury offers 10% to 11% on Treasury Bills.
Mr. Samarasinghe said taking such big amounts as loans from State banks would be a severe blow to the economy as the annual interest payable for Rs 410 billion alone would be Rs 70 billion. He said according to reports the government has obtained Rs 1 trillion from the local banks.

200 kidney patients awaiting surgery have died

logoSATURDAY, 27 APRIL 2013
About 200 kidney patients who had been registered for surgery have died due to not carrying out surgeries at National Kidney Transplant Unit at Maligawatta despite having all the facilities including specialist doctors, equipment and nursing staff say reports.
More than 600 patients had been registered for surgery at this unit and after the death of 200 of them without getting the surgeries they needed due to improper and inefficient management of the unit, 400 more patients are in stand-by list for surgery. The main obstacle for the surgeries at the unit is said to be setting apart for nurses 6 air-conditioned rooms intended for the use of doctor.
The rooms are necessary for doctors to stay after surgery so that they could reach, within a few seconds, patients who have been operated or in intensive care. The doctors say surgeries cannot be carried out without a place for them to rest and stay after surgery. There have been instances when doctors had to wait in the cars parked outside so that they could reach patients in time.
The issue has escalated as authorities have not taken any decision regarding rooms and not properly allocating rooms for doctors and nurses.
The number of kidney patients registered at the unit is 2000 and about 40 patients are treated at each clinic. It is said that about 20 surgeries a week could be carried out in the unit. There is a staff of 6 specialist doctors, 28 Medical Officers and 5 nurses in the hospital.
However, only clinical activities are carried out at the unit at present.

An Old Man Sits Under A Tree

117 arrested in Jaffna & KKS in 'special operation'
 26 April 2013
Sri Lankan police have arrested 117 people in the Jaffna and Kankesanthurai regions over the past week, reports the Jaffna based newspaper, the Uthayan.
The Sri Lankan Superintendent in Jaffna, Mohammed Jiffry said the arrests were part of a 'special operation'.
On Saturday, speaking at a media briefing, Jiffry drew attention to the recent armed attack of the Uthayan office and claimed that as weapons were only possessed by the state's security forces, the attack proves that "armed groups operating in Jaffna".
"We can only arrest if we get information on where they are located," he added

175 dengue patients in Colombo within 24 days

logoSATURDAY, 27 APRIL 2013 
Two dengue patients died and 175 patients were reported during the first 24 days of this month from Colombo Municipal area says Chief Medical Officer at Colombo Municipal Council  Pradeep kariyawasam.
Many patients have been recorded from Borella, Colombo Central, Modara and Matakkuliya areas.
The number of dengue patients reported from Colombo Municipal area during the 117 days of this year is 903

Sri Lanka B&B owner held for molesting French tourists

COLOMBO - A foreign guesthouse operator was arrested in Sri Lanka Friday after two French tourists complained they had been sexually molested at his guest house, police said.
The 44-year-old Olivier Sage, who manages the "French Villa" beach property at Unawatuna, 120 kilometres (75 miles) south of Colombo, would be taken before a magistrate later Friday, said senior superintendent Jayantha Wickremasinghe.
"The two French tourists complained that the guest house owner used criminal force on them two days ago," Wickremasinghe said. "We have sufficient grounds to make the arrest."
The guest house website described him as a "Swiss-French" ex-restaurateur managing a "cosy Sri Lankan style villa", which also offers ayurvedic treatments, yoga and meditation.
It was not immediately clear if he had dual Swiss and French citizenship. The guesthouse could not be reached for comment.
Wickremasinghe said the man carried a French passport at the time of his arrest and had first arrived in Sri Lanka nearly three years ago and later started managing the guest house.
He was arrested under a penal code offence that, on conviction, carries a jail term of five years. Sri Lanka tightened laws in 2006 to protect women and children from sexual harassment.
Wickremasinghe said one of the victims had been subjected to medical tests and a forensic report was being prepared.
The latest complaint came as police earlier this month said there had been an increase in attacks against foreign tourists visiting the Indian Ocean island emerging from nearly four decades of ethnic war.


Political Monks: Some Thoughts On The Kelaniya Declaration Of Independence 1947

By Sajeeva Samaranayake -April 28, 2013 
Sajeeva Samaranayake
Colombo TelegraphOn the eve of the grant of dominion status to Ceylon by its colonial rulers, the British a group of Buddhist Monks took a dim view of the ‘freedom’ that was being negotiated. They decided to craft instead a unilateral declaration as members of the Sangha to set the record straight on the aspirations of this island for full freedom and the true and authentic sources of that freedom.
It is a matter of contention whether the monks who took this step were representative of the entire Sangha of the country. The biographers of JR Jayawardene – KM De Silva and Howard Wriggins take the view that they were neither representative of the Sangha nor authorized by the Sangha to make this declaration. This is probably the reason for this act being termed a ‘revolt in the temple’ an expression that was used as the title of DC Vijayawardena’s book of the same name that came out in 1953.
Among these rebels were Ven. Walpola Rahula, Ven Bambarende Siri Seevali, Ven Kotahene Pannakitti and Ananda Sagara (who later disrobed and was MP for Horana from 1956-9 as Sagara Palansuriya.
What makes this political act significant is the readiness of these monks to speak for the rights of all the people of this country without fear or favour. There are still Buddhist Monks in Sri Lanka who speak this same language. We do not know how many, but we can only hope that more and more will come to own this declaration of high principles as a guide post and reference point in our continuing search for political adulthood. Buddhists in the island (conservatives and radicals) were divided over this Declaration in 1947, and there are no short cuts today either.
The Full Text 
THE KELANIYA DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE – JANUARY 6, 1947
Hail
The declaration of the Sangha of Sri lanka
Twenty five centuries ago, our forefathers established in Sri Lanka a state of Society, Free, Independent and Sovereign, in order to ensure to the people security of Life and Liberty on the one hand, and on the other the right as well as opportunity to seek and obtain happiness. A few centuries later the Sangha, the Treasurers of the eternal values proclaimed by the Buddha, became the Guardians of the Life and Liberty as well as the sponsors of the Well – being and Happiness of that Society.
Nations and civilisations are not eternal. They rise, flourish, decay and die. Nothing in this world can be regarded as eternal. There are values higher than cities and nations, and our country has always stood for these values. Mere material possessions are not the sine qua non of happiness. No measures or quantities of these can give that essential quality of happiness which constitutes the real dignity of mankind.
Four and a half centuries ago, ‘disturbers of the peace of mankind’ from the West not only challenged the right of the people of this Island to their way of life and liberty, but also attempted to introduce into it ideals other than those for which this country had always stood for. It is our glory that this country never had any dearth of men inspired with the spirit of Sri Lanka. These outstanding leaders of the nation accepted the challenge, and fierce struggles by the people against the foreigners ensued during three whole centuries.
Thereafter a section of the community, arrogating to themselves an authority that had not the sanction of the will of the nation, ceded the country to the last of the alien aggressors, who have since dominated over it to the loss of liberty and happiness of its people. Posterity, however cannot be deprived of the inherent rights which peoples acquire when they form themselves into a state of civilized society, by the act or acts, or Compact, or Convention entered into by any group of men in the near or remoter past. And the people who for 131 years have been denied their inherent rights are not content, today, to be fettered any longer or to remain under an alien yoke.
We, therefore, the Sangha of Sri Lanka, the Guardians of the Life and Liberty and Sponsors of the Well – being and Happiness of the people of this island, assembled on this hallowed spot sanctified by the feet of the Master, do hereby declare and publish, on behalf of the people, that Sri Lanka claims its right to be a Free and Independent Sovereign State, that it has resolved to absolve itself from all allegiance to any other Power, State or Crown, and that all political connection between it and any other State is hereby dissolved; and that as a Free and Independent Sovereign State it has full right to safeguard its Freedom and Independence, to contract alliances and do all other acts and things which Independent States may of right do.
For due recognition of the rectitude of our action and for support of the claim made under this declaration , we, the Sangha of Sri Lanka, hereby appeal to the conscience and sense of justice of all right thinking peoples of the world. And in hereby calling upon the good people of Sri Lanka, on whose behalf we make this declaration, unitedly and in courage and strong endeavour to see to it that its purpose is achieved in the fullest possible measure, we, the Sangha of Sri Lanka, on our part, pledge ourselves to associate with them in spirit as well as in action in that great and high resolve.
Declared on this auspicious anniversary of the Buddha’s first visit to Sri Lanka, Monday the Full Moon of Durutu, in the Year 2490 of the Buddhist Era in the new Gandhakuti (Fragrant Chamber) of the Sri Kalyani Raja Maha Vihara
[The declaration is extracted from Revolt in the Temple authored by DC Vijayawardhana.]
Commentary 
In voicing the collective aspiration of the nation for true independence and in asserting values that are ‘higher than cities and nations’ this declaration is clearly ahead of its time. It is more so today when the cancer of division has eaten into the Sangha itself. In so far as freedom contains a spiritual core, the Sangha, and indeed all men and women in robes in search of the truth are united with the people of this country in their quest for true peace and happiness.
The Buddha taught that liberation is the essential criterion of spiritual authenticity, not tradition or convention. The Sangha that gathered at Kelaniya on January 6, 1947 re-affirmed this. In doing so they transcended the traditional role of the Sangha as guardians and representatives of the majority – Sinhala Buddhists and spoke for a single nation – perhaps yet unborn but one which will surely materialize upon the same foundation of values asserted by them.
This was an act of creative disintegration – as opposed to blind conformity. For 133 years the stranglehold of the British Empire on virtually every aspect of life inCeylonhad been total. The educated English speaking Ceylonese were faithful British subjects for whom the constitutional, political and legal order established by Imperial Britain represented a self evident truth. Democracy, Rule of Law andIndependenceof the Judiciary represented modernity and the clear way forward. No reasonable man would quarrel with these forms even though they were fashioned in the West. For the venerable monks who gathered at Kelaniya the point of departure was more fundamental. They referred to
“… the inherent rights which peoples acquire when they form themselves into a state of civilized society, by the act or acts, or Compact, or Convention entered into by any group of men in the near or remoter past.”
In their view this Ancient Compact (also expressed by the term Maha Sammata or Great Consensus) made by our ancestors was inalienable. It follows that the transactions carried out between the Kandyan Chiefs of 1815 and the English Educated Elite of 1948 with the British had done nothing to disturb the continuity of this principle of freedom. These transactions were a mere interruption in the long march of history that the people of this island had undertaken.
Great pressures are exerted on individuals as well as whole societies today to conform to a particular model of politics, economics, culture and life. These pressures can be gross as well as subtle, naked as well as disguised. To make a stand against ‘the way things are done’ to dare to think differently and act differently is to revolt. The key to such strength of moral character lies in compassion or karuna, which transcends a passion for some with a passion for all. As Krishnamurti said in his book Why are you being educated?
That’s what you are being taught: to imitate, to conform, to fit into the pattern. And is that the end of life? Then you ask: ‘What shall we do? Is there something else? To find something totally different from all this, you have to have a great deal of intelligence. Intelligence is not knowledge. Knowledge gives you capacity, position, status, but knowledge is not love, knowledge is not compassion. It is only where there is love and compassion that there is intelligence, and that intelligence has nothing whatsoever to do with the cunning intelligence of thought.
Post independence Sri Lanka has seen at least 4 significant revolts. These were the revolution of 1956 and the revolution of 1977 both of which were state driven and the anti-state revolutions of JVP and LTTE. Enough has been written about these upheavals.
Yet very little has been written on the peaceful revolt staged in Kelaniya in 1947. It followed the tradition of the Buddha who was himself a gentle revolutionary who reacted and responded to the structural injustices of his day with precision and intelligence. The Kelaniya Declaration was an endeavour in this direction.
Inspiring, guiding, directing and supporting lay society towards freedom and happiness is quintessentially the role of the true Sangha. It only remains to add in the same breath that a Sangha which remains fettered by ties of race, religion or caste would only struggle to perform this noble task.

9 year old Casino den enjoying State patronage raided : SSP who conducted raid receives death threats

(Lanka-e-News-27.April.2013, 5.30PM) A senior Police officer who conducted a raid on a casino den which had been run for 9 long years unlawfully with absolute impunity openly in the center of Ratnapura Town with the patronage of the Rajapakses is receiving death threats , according to reports reaching Lanka e news. 
The raid conducted on the Casino den and the sordid details of the political bigwigs supporting it had not been highlighted by the traitorous media which calls itself national media. Following the raid conducted on this unlawful Casino den called ‘Royal Palace’ which was housed in a three storey building , Rs. 110 million cash and 8 suspects who were running it had been taken into custody.


When the arrests were made and the cash taken into custody, immense pressure had been applied by the top political bigwigs to release them. In any case the suspects and the cash were produced before the court on the 23 rd , and the suspects had been remanded. 


Subsequent to these actions , the senior police officer who was responsible for successfully conducted this raid and bringing the culprits before the law , had received death threats. The owner of this illegal Royal Palace casino is Jinadasa , a businessman who is now dead. Presently its owner is his wife who after enlisting Chandana, the murderer who is incriminated in the murder of her father ,is now running this casino business with the patronage of the murderous corrupt Rajapakses . Recently when Mahinda Rajapakse and Namal Rajapakse visited the Saman devale , they had meals at this Royal Palace (Lady’s) owner’s house. It was widely questioned whether the father and son ( mind you , the President the highest in the hierarchy of the country and his son , a synthetic lawyer who ought to know laws better ) are so morally degenerate to associate so closely with illegal casino den owners.


This is a casino den so well protected because of the political patronage it enjoyed , that a police officer could not enter it officially let alone gaze in that direction . It is with such power stemming from Rajapakse patronage that these accused were carrying on this unlawful casino business with full freedom for 9 long years.


Prishantha Jayakody SSP who took up duties in that district newly, along with his police officers conducted the raid on this unauthorized casino den on the 22 nd night. Those hooligans supposed to be the security personnel there had obstructed the police officers from entering. However , since the SSP himself was personally present on the scene , the police officers were emboldened . Therefore they had fearlessly entered the den and arrested the Manager who is already tainted with murder charges, 8 others and taken into custody Rs. 110 million , and produced them before the courts on the 23 rd. The suspects were remanded until the 29th on the court directive.

The law abiding citizens should admire the courage and integrity of Prishantha Jayakody SSP who took bold steps to carry out his duties duly despite the pressures brought to bear on him from the highest places of the Rajapakse regime notorious for all the sordid , traitorous and unscrupulous activities in the country.


Naturally in a country when lawlessness and corruption hold sway under a regime that stokes and thrives in lawlessness , it is difficult for honest, loyal and dedicated officers like Prishantha Jayakody to survive – as expected , the SSP who led the raid had received a phone call from Galle holding out death threats to him. ‘ You did not heed us , despite our telling you so many times . Okay , now prepare the coffins for you, your wife and children, ’ the caller had warned. It can be imagined the amount of power this caller wields , going by the fact that he did not make this threat covertly. He had told he is calling from Galle. Later it was confirmed that the call indeed originated from Galle.


The Police are now conducting investigations into this and the IGP is focusing special attention on this and STF soldiers had been detailed for SSP’s security .


A government spawned and supported underworld should not be allowed to exist. It is the duty of law abiding officers and citizens to ensure that it ceases to exist.

Duminda goes to Temple Trees to show his gratitude


SATURDAY, 27 APRIL 2013 logo
The main suspect of the Bharatha Lakshman Premachandra murder case Duminda Silva left Navaloka Hospital and visited Temple Trees to thank President Mahinda Rajapaksa say reports.
Duminda Silva was released on bail this week in the Bharatha Lakshman Premachandra murder case. Four others were also granted bail by the Colombo High Court in relation to the case.
Duminda Silva returned to the island last month from Singapore where he stayed since the shooting incident in 2011 alleging that he was receiving treatment for the injuries he suffered during shooting. Presidential adviser Bharatha Lakshman Premachandra was killed in the shooting in which Duminda Silva was the main suspect.
Media had reported that Duminda Silva went to Temple Trees to get President's blessings for his future political affairs.

The Electricity Tariffs, Populism And Smarter Consumption: Some Reflections

By Pradeep Jeganathan -April 27, 2013-
Dr. Pradeep Jeganathan
Colombo TelegraphIn midst of the noise of populist political posturing on the electricity tariff increase, there has also been, as always, a considerable amount substantial discussion on the issue. While a number of OpEds have been edifying, and of our legislators, Harsha de Silva‘s lone, yet richly informed analytical voice has been most stimulating, I do feel there is an aspect of the matter that has still not drawn attention. In the paragraphs below, I will attempt to delineate this.
I will not go over all the numbers here, yet suffice to say that simply throwing out percentages of the increase does not paint a worthwhile picture. For example telling us that a 30 unit consumer’s bill will rise, 52% is a great, factually correct but misleading headline – that may allow the reader to miss, the fact that for nearly half the electrified households in Sri Lanka (0-30), this increase will amount to Rs. 75/=. Consider at this point that a loaf of bread is 60/=, a packet of milk powder 400/=, and the cost of mobile telecommunication perhaps 400/=, to say nothing of other utilities. Tub thumping about a 75/= increase of one utility is neither here nor there. On the other hand, electricity subsidies, unlike many others are beautiful and elegant since they are not easily transferable to an affluent consumer. Comparing this to the old style ration books, which were, and the new style car permits that are, would clinch the case. In any event this small increase comes in at some thing like Rs. 575 million, which again given the CEB short fall of nearly 60 Billion, is neither here nor there.
The brunt of the increase in rupee terms is borne by the lower-middle band 90-180 consumers. A 150 unit household will see its bill rise, from 2850/= to 4515/=. That’s not just 58%, its also Rs. 1,670/= or so. A 180 unit household will see its bill go up to 5130/= an increase of only 33% and rupee addition of 1275/= ( Yes, the rate of increase decreases with consumption. All figures have been rounded off, and are rough).
That’s a lot.  For a family of four, in the urban service sector, living on some thing like 40,000/= a month, spending some thing like 12% of its income on one utility is a heavy burden, given others like cooking gas, water and telecommunications. Transportation while not a household utility is another thicken slice of the families budget.
So what should be done? Indeed one can agitate for a reduction; but unless this cost is recovered, those very households will see price inflation in other segments of their monthly basket of goods.
Promoting energy efficiency is the other way to go. Indeed if we are to accept and live with the form capitalism we have, it seems rather contrary to suggest as some do that the answer is to discourage consumption. That may be one model of using resources, but its silly to impose it in electricity consumption and promote it in other areas.
For example are we to have a sliding scale of pricing for personal miles flown each year? In this model, if you’ve flown 10,000 miles this year your next ticket would be twice the price of your old one. On the contrary, airlines encourage frequent fliers, by giving them perks. At the bottom of this system of capitalism – which is flawed but still viable – is the idea that flying becomes more energy efficient each year. So its not that you fly less. You fly more, at lower energy cost.
Returning to the lower-middle band of 90-180 customers of the CEB, we can make the same kind of argument, which a false, child like populism is masking. What does that mean? Well, we only speak of light blubs when we speak of energy efficiency. Since lighting is so basic, it seems safely populist to speak of moving from incandescent lighting to CFL or LED lighting. Yet is it unclear, if these well known new technologies are supported by duty waivers.
But once we leave lighting behind we will find that a household in the 90-120 band has both a refrigerator and a television. 40% of Sri Lankan households have a fridge, 80% a TV. But in the lower-middle band I speak of ownership of these appliances has to be pretty universal. It stands to reason; or else where would the units go? What is the average energy efficiency of these appliances as used in the lower middle band? I am not sure any one knows – but we can guess estimate that the turnover cycle among this consumer is long – unlike with the affluent who may turn over their appliances every 3-5 years. Older appliances are far more inefficient than new ones.
Let us look at some numbers. Switching from a 17” CRT TV to a 15” LCD TV (which has the equivalent viewing area), will save 13+ units a month, if daily viewing is set at an avarage 8 hours a day. With a refrigerator, switching from a 8 CF model that’s 20-10 years old to a fresh model, will save more than 50 units a month.
Lets say a savings of 59 units a month. Our 150 unit household is down to 91, and their bill is back down to, 2,225/= or from 4,500/=. A reduction of huge proportions. Our 180 unit household is down to 121 in this simple calculation (the reductions could be higher if the TV and/or fridge was bigger); and their bill is now 3,500 down from 5130. (If 60 units were used as the savings, the drop would even larger, but perhaps misleading, because of the quantum jump at the pricing bands).
No doubt its not that simple; new appliances do have a considerable capital cost. Yet, there is little doubt that home appliance chains sell new low end TVs and fridges by the truck load; the question is how does a consumer learn about her choices?
Shouldn’t we be rating household appliances on an efficiency scale? Shouldn’t such rating be regulated, just as the ingredient listing on a can of fish or packet of sausages is regulated? Shouldn’t there be huge duty concessions for the highest energy band? Shouldn’t consumers be told at the point of purchase, this model will cost you so much a month to run, the other one more?
We don’t seem to doing any of this. At the very top end of things, several retailers advertize energy efficient air conditions. But even they do not actually tell us what the power consumption of the model is. If you walk into one of the large home appliances chains in Sri Lanka  – there are three big ones – and ask casually or other wise (I’ve tried both) – what the power consumption of the reverent appliance is, you will find that the sales staff are clueless. In fact, when recently at the service center to pick up an appliance, I asked the technician in front of me, at the testing table, what was the power consumption of a LCD TV he was testing. He looked blank. I rephrased the question a number of ways; he looked about the back of the TV and said, ’220.’ Yes he did. He was pointing to a white sticker that said, the appliance was rated for 220-240 A/C. For the uninitiated, the rated voltage of an appliance has nothing to do with its power consumption; if a trained repairmen is as clueless as a sales person on these matters, I am very much afraid the consumer may be quite lost. We really need to do better.
My numbers are rough, and I am skeptical, to say the least, about the great project of consumer capitalism. But that’s where we are. Populist protests mask this because consumer capitalism seems dirty, and unworthy of street protests. I think we need to grow up, and for the time being at least, simply consume  smarter.

UNP lights up cheaper electricity!


April 27, 2013
The main Opposition UNP yesterday came up with a new pricing plan that promises to make electricity affordable to the poor while blaming mounting CEB losses on bad governance.





Proposing an alternative electricity pricing formula that would not burden low end consumers, the UNP also claimed poor internal auditing systems at the Ceylon Electricity Board and flawed private power purchasing agreements entered into by the State-owned electricity provider were driving power generation costs up and increasing tariffs for the poor.
As the Opposition continued its agitation against a Government decision to hike electricity rates, UNP National List Parliamentarian and Economist Dr. Harsha De Silva said the UNP pricing plan would not increase electricity tariffs for consumers using 90 units and less but remain at pre 20 April level.
“According to the UNP’s structure, prices only really start to climb after a consumer reaches 180 units – and even then the increase is not suddenly exponential,” the UNP MP told a press briefing yesterday.
He explained that the exponential tariff increase proposed in the Government’s new plan for high-end users would also ultimately drive CEB revenue down because at such high rates, consumers would simply curb usage.
De Silva said the Government was abdicating its responsibility as set out in its Energy Policy gazetted in 2008, to provide power to the country’s ‘electricity poor’ – or those consumers using less than 48 electricity units per month according to a recent study carried out by the University of Colombo.
“The Government has a duty to ensure these low end consumers have access to a decent quality of life, by providing their minimum electricity need as per its gazetted Energy Policy,” he said.
According to De Silva consumers using less than 30 units a month use an average of 18 units. “These consumers face a 53% increase in their tariffs. If they are using only 18 units, it’s because they just can’t afford to pay for any more – that’s how poor they are,” he charged, adding that while the amount seemed negligible, it was a large percentage increase in relative terms for low end consumers to bear.
He said 1.3 million CEB customers use less than 60 units per month, with those consumers slated to face a 47% increase in electricity tariffs under the Government’s new pricing structure.
According to the UNP Legislator, the UNP pricing plan would reduce CEB revenue by a mere Rs. 3 billion to Rs. 82 billion from the currently projected Rs. 85 billion from domestic users but provide relief to the country’s poorest electricity consumers.
Acknowledging that the massive losses incurred by the CEB and the Ceylon Petroleum Corporation had to be covered  because it affected the country’s macro-economic stability, De Silva said questions remained as to whether the CEB had sufficiently reduced costs and wastage before increasing tariffs and taxing the poor.
De Silva said that the Auditor General had informed the Committee on Public Enterprises (COPE), a parliamentary oversight committee, that the CEB employed 18,000 workers but only six internal auditors. “So there are some merits to the claim that the CEB has internal audit deficiencies, as the Auditor General has informed COPE,” De Silva said.
Charging that the Government was on a secret privatisation drive in the energy sector despite commitments to the contrary enshrined in the Mahinda Chinthana policy manifesto, De Silva said that since 2005 the CEB had lost a 40% stake in Heladhanavi, while it had conceded its entire 63% stake in LTL Projects, both companies owned by LTL Holdings Pvt. Ltd., which sells thermally generated power to the CEB and in which CEB still maintains a 63% stake.
De Silva said the Auditor General had queried the CEB’s long term Independent power purchase agreements, saying the state supplier had undertaken to pay the economic service charge; customs duty, VAT and debit tax on behalf of the IPPs whereas the private companies should have borne that cost.
He charged that a Central Bank annual report had found the CEB lost an estimated Rs. 6 billion because of flawed and irregular power purchase agreements.

Moronic New Electricity Tariffs

By Kumar David -April 28, 2013 |
Prof Kumar David
Colombo TelegraphThe new tariff structure, introduced with effect from 20 April I believe, has been designed by a bunch of morons. CEB engineers, when asked why the university need embarrass itself by awarding degrees to morons, just pass the buck and say the government and the IMF forced them to introduce the MTS (Moronic Tariff Scheme). Well, I won’t put it past the government to make a monumental ass of itself, but even the IMF! I am surprised. Unless the Fund wishes to change its middle name from Monetary to Moron, its Colombo office had better issue a statement denying responsibility for the MTS structure. I am referring to the structural design of the tariff scheme per se, not the separate issue of raising electricity prices; the two are entirely separable.
First let me note that block wise tariffs, of non-moronic design, are common all over the world and in Lanka from as long ago as I can remember. First consumption is divided into slabs. Pay Rs A per unit (kWh) for the first slab (for example 30 units per month); consume more, then pay Rs B for each additional unit. Usually B is more pricy than A; that is higher usage is charged as at a higher rate. Say this is up to 60 units per month. Consume even more, say up to 90 units, and pay at an even higher rate Rs C; and so on. For example if A=5 and B=10, consumption of 30 units in a month incurs a charge of 150, and 140 (=130+10) if consumption is 31. Whatever the utility’s revenue requirement, suitable slabs and slab prices can be designed (an infinite variety of combinations is possible).
Let us now suffer an attack of distemper that deranges our minds. Say we discard the previous scheme and replace it by a Moronic Scheme like the CEB (or PUC, or GoSL, or IMF, or whoever escaped from the asylum) has just implemented. Let us say if you consume up to 30 units per month you pay Rs 5 per unit as before, but dare you consume 31 units, you will be compelled to pay Rs 10 per unit for your entire consumption. Hence if you consume 30 units you pay Rs 150 as before, but if you consume 31 units you pay Rs 310 – that is Rs 10 per unit for all 31 units. Hence the 31-st unit, in effect, appears to cost you Rs 160, not Rs 10. To use a bit of jargon, the marginal cost of the 31-st unit is Rs 160. Generically, this is the structure of the Moronic scheme CEB-PUC-GoSL-IMF inflicted on the dazed citizens of Lanka at midnight 19-20 April.
Moronic marginal tariffs
You don’t believe me? You think I’ve been drinking, again, with my neighbour? OK, let me prove it. The PUC put out a “Consultation Document on Proposed Electricity Tariff Revision for 2013” about two months ago. Table 11 contains the new domestic tariff scheme; it is headed by the moronic declaration “(T)ariffs . . will be based on progressive blocks; where monthly consumption falls within a certain range (block), the relevant tariffs for that range will be applicable for the entire monthly consumption”.  There it is in plain black and white!
I have worked through the nitty-gritty of the scheme and can share the following horror stories with you. Another fraud called the Fuel Adjustment Charge which has been slipped in has also been included in the calculations. I have also added the monthly fixed charge. Hence the numbers below refer to any household’s total monthly domestic electricity bill.
Consume 30 units, the bill is Rs 217.50, but consume 31 and it is Rs 311.10; the effective price of the 31-st unit is Rs 93.60.
Consume 60 units, the bill is Rs 546, but consume 61 and it is Rs 815.90; the effective price of the 61-st unit is Rs 296.90.
Consume 90 units, the bill is Rs 1161, but consume 91 and it is Rs 2226; the effective price of the 91-st unit is Rs 1065. (You want to go get a glass of water before continuing?)
Consume 120 units, the bill is Rs 2835, but consume 121 and it is Rs 3703; the effective price of the 121-st unit is Rs 868.
Consume 180 units the bill is Rs 5355 but consume 181 and it is Rs 6396.60; the effective price of the 121-st unit is Rs 1041.60.
Consume 210 units, the bill is Rs 7371, but consume 211 and it is Rs 7995.40; the effective price of the 211-th unit is Rs 624.40.
Consume 300 units, the bill is Rs 11235, but consume 301 and it is Rs 13799.80; the effective price of the 301-st unit – hold on to something – is Rs 2564.80 for just that one extra kWh! Jesus, Mary and Joseph have mercy on you if you accidentally leave that lamp in the shrine room on overnight and consumption creeps up from 300 to 301!
There is time to roll back this lunacy; the first bills may not have gone out to consumers yet. Only massive public protests can reverse it.
Other subterfuges of the PUC
Other aspects of the PUC document are also decidedly dicey.
Fraudulent use of FAC: A Fuel Adjustment Charge is used in some countries to compensate for global fuel price fluctuations. If gas, coal or oil prices rise above a benchmark, FAC kicks-in and the charge rises a few percent. If fuel price is below this norm, there is no adjustment; and if it falls below a floor level consumers get a rebate. The fraud that the PUC has perpetrated is nothing like this. PUC simply multiplies your bill (other than the fixed charge) by 1.4 – that’s it, QED! It is nothing but slight of hand, a fraudulent scheme to raise your Moron Tariff by a further 40% (25% and 35% if you consume below 30 units and 60 units, respectively). This is a morally indefensible. The Government and the IMF (and I daresay the PUC and the CEB) want to hide that they are raising tariffs by a large amount. Hence they first set a bogus tariff, and then they add another 40%, pretending that it is like the non-fraudulent practice used elsewhere to link to global fuel prices.
To move on, a consultation document should be clear, easy to understand and transparent; the PUC’s document is opaque, perhaps deliberately so. For example it uses three terms, ‘total generation cost’, ‘adjusted generation energy cost’ and ‘total energy cost’ without defining the differences as though these are universally known and accepted terms; sheer sloppiness, there are no such universal norms. Clear and precise definitions are essential.
To move on again. The “Adjusted total generation cost” (Rs 186 billion in line 1 of table 9) for 2013 has been pulled out of a hat. The “total energy cost” for the first-half of 2013 is Rs 85 billion (second table 4, third last line), and the “adjusted generation capacity payments” for the first-half can be found by adding the numbers for the six months at the bottom of the first table 4 (the presentation is so sloppy that there are two table 4s!) and it is nearly Rs 18 billion. The “total generation cost” for the second-half of 2013 is estimated at Rs 101 billion (table 6).
Now 85+18+101 is Rs 203 billion. I have no idea, and no explanation is given, where the 186 figure came from! Presumably there is an explanation, but my point is this. Why is all this not transparent in a so-called public consultation document? Let alone the poor public, not even power systems specialists can decipher it. Presumably soothsayers in Tirupathi Kovil and the International Moron Fund mandarins can.
Another entry that gets no explanation is in table 4 (first table 4) where there is an “adjusted capacity payment” of Rs 617 million for Mahaveli, Rs 210 million for Laxapana and Rs 202 million for “Other Hydro”. Mahaveli and Laxapana have long ago been paid-off, and in any case they were mostly gifts and grants, so where are these “capacity payments” (about Rs 13 billion annually) going? Some reserve fund? Fine, but let the public know. Or are these monies needed to pay-off capacity charges of private generators?
Waste, mismanagement and corruption
There is a public outcry against waste and mismanagement at the CEB. My personal view is that there is some, but the outcry is exaggerated. Most waste is probably contained within the Rs 29.7 billion allocated to distribution, which sector covers the running of numerous CEB area offices. Now, Rs 29.7 billion to distribute 10.95 billion kWh (Rs2.71 or 2 US cents per kWh) is not low, but it is not excessive either.
Another Rs 30 to 40 billion (hard to be precise since the PUC document is opaque) is set aside for capacity costs (that is, interest and servicing payments on past capital expenditure). This seems high to me, but since as mentioned previously, it includes about Rs 13 billion allocated to hydro plant, and hopefully deposited in a reserve fund, it is not too bad.
Big time corruption, that is massive kick-backs to political leaders and CEB big-shots in the past, is concealed under the rubric of capacity charges, that is, capital servicing costs. Past loot is sealed in with overpriced capital stock, and future generations saddled with the consequent interest payment and loan repayment.
This Moronic Tariff will promote rampant corrupt collusion between meter readers and householders. Shift one or two units from this month to next month, if a slab boundary has been crossed, and thousands of rupees can be saved and shared. Another, perfectly legal method is to partition and reregister properties (annexes, upstairs and downstairs, a partitioned space) as two separate metered premises. The two bills, added together, will be thousands of rupees lower than a joint single premise bill, even at moderate consumption levels.
Social equity
The increases in costs falls very unequally on different sectors; CEB forecast 2013 revenue from the domestic sector has gone up 68%, the general purpose sector 8% and industrial sector 11% – using the sector revenue that the previous tariff would garner as the base in calculating percentages. The best-off is the religious sector (what I call opium-of-the-masses push points). There has been no increase in the revenue collected from this sector, and the charge at which electricity is supplied to it is less than one-third the cost of supply. The cost of this subsidy is Rs 955 million per annum according to the PUC. Time to get ordained I think; but will any sacred order accept me?