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

Friday, April 15, 2016

India threatens to revoke passport of embattled tycoon Vijay Mallya

Vijay Mallya speaks with the media in New Delhi March 20, 2012. REUTERS/Parivartan Sharma/Files

Fri Apr 15, 2016
India on Friday said it had suspended the diplomatic passport of embattled tycoon and lawmaker Vijay Mallya, who left the country last month amid pressure from lenders to repay about $1.4 billion in debt owed by his defunct Kingfisher Airlines.

Mallya's case takes centre stage at a time when India's government and central bank have begun to crack down on bank loan defaulters, in a drive to clean up ailing state-run banks.

Just days after Prime Minister Narendra Modi said no one "looting" money from banks would be spared, India's foreign ministry gave Mallya a week to answer why his passport should not be impounded or revoked.

"If he fails to respond within the stipulated time, it will be assumed that he has no response to offer and the foreign ministry will go ahead with the revocation," ministry spokesman Vikas Swarup said in a statement on Twitter.

The suspension is effective for four weeks, Swarup said, adding that the ministry acted on a request from the Enforcement Directorate, a government agency investigating financial crime.

It was not immediately clear what the suspension means for Mallya, whose lawyer, C.S. Vaidyanathan, said he was not aware of the government notice and could not comment.

A spokesman for Mallya's UB Group did not immediately respond to calls seeking comment.

Mallya, a member of the upper house of India's parliament who co-owns Britain-based motor racing team Force India, has not revealed his whereabouts since his departure on March 2, but has said he was not an absconder.

The creditor banks this month rejected an offer of partial repayment by Mallya, who had given a personal guarantee for the Kingfisher loan, and have demanded that the former billionaire attend a hearing in India's Supreme Court.

Once known as the "King of Good Times" for his extravagant lifestyle, Mallya has said he would comply with the law. Media reports traced him to the Hertfordshire village of Tewin, north of London, where he owns a house.

(Reporting by Devidutta Tripathy, Rajesh Kumar Singh, Suchitra Mohanty and Alan Baldwin; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)

The biggest US companies have stashed more money offshore than Mexico’s entire GDP


Ashley Rodriguez-April 14, 2016

It’s almost Tax Day (Apr. 18) in the US and many Americans are preparing to write checks to Uncle Sam. But many would argue not everyone pays their fair share, especially some of the nation’s wealthiest businesses, which hold profits offshore to avoid being taxed.
 
At the end of 2014, the 50 largest US companies held a combined total of nearly $1.4 trillion dollars offshore, which is more than the entire gross-domestic product of Mexico, shows a report released today by Oxfam.
 
Those offshore holdings helped lower the combined effective global-tax rate for those companies from 35%—the rate US corporations are required to pay on their profits—to 27%, according to the report.
 
The biggest offshore hoarders were consumer-technology giants like Apple, Microsoft, IBM, and Google, as well as General Electric and pharmaceutical conglomerates such as Pfizer, the data showed.
 
All of those companies do substantial business overseas, and it’s more cost-effective for them to leave the funds abroad.

US corporations pay a 35% tax on all profits from around the world, but only after the money is repatriated to the US. But they can still leverage assets held offshore in the US by borrowing domestically against them. And there are other ways of lowering taxes, like exploiting loopholes and reincorporating in low-tax regions, through what’s known as tax inversions.

Just six of the largest 50 US companies—ConocoPhillips, Chevron, Exxon Mobil, CVS Health, UnitedHealth Group, and Home Depot—had an effective tax rate of 35% or more from 2008 to 2014. (Walt Disney and Comcast came close to reaching that threshold.) Meanwhile, companies including General Electric and Morgan Stanley had effective tax rates in the single digits.

Sperm bank sued as case of mentally ill donor's history unfolds

Three families file lawsuit in Canada alleging that the donor’s sperm was used for as many as 36 children in Canada, the United States and Britain
The plaintiffs want sperm banks to better screen donors, including carrying out medical and criminal background checks. Photograph: BSIP/UIG via Getty Images

 in Toronto-Thursday 14 April 2016

He was touted as the best of the best: Donor 9623 had an IQ of 160 and was an internationally acclaimed drummer who was working towards a PhD in neuroscience engineering.

A lawsuit, filed on Wednesday by three families in Canada, alleges the donor was instead a convicted felon with multiple mental illness diagnoses, including schizophrenia.

Filed against Georgia-based Xytex Corp and Outreach Health in Canada, the lawsuit alleges that the donor’s sperm was used for as many as 36 children in Canada, the United States and Britain.

“If proven, this takes the case from shocking to truly outrageous,” the families’ lawyer, James Fireman, told the Toronto Star.

Xytex denied any wrongdoing through its lawyer, Ted Lavender. “Xytex is an industry leader and complies with all industry standards in how they safely and carefully help provide the gift of children to families who are otherwise unable to have them without this assistance,” Lavender said in an email to the Guardian. Outreach Health did not respond to a request for comment.

The lawsuit seeks C$15.4m ($12m) in damages and relates to three children, ranging in age from four to eight years old, created from the donor’s sperm.

 Xytex has denied any wrongdoing through its lawyer. Photograph: David Goldman/AP
None of the allegations in the claim, which include wrongful birth, failure to investigate and fraud, have been proven in court.

The alleged discrepancy between the donor’s online profile and his identity first came to light in 2014, after the donor’s email was accidentally sent to recipient families. A quick Google search revealed a number of red flags.

Angie Collins, one of the parents behind the lawsuit, said panic began to set in as she frantically searched online for something that was more consistent with the donor whose profile boasted of speaking five languages and four or five books a month. “It just kept getting worse and worse,” she said. “It was like a dream turned nightmare in an instant.”

The claims filed in court alleged the donor has been diagnosed with schizophrenia, narcissistic personality disorder and grandiose delusions. They also allege the 39-year-old from Georgia spent eight months in jail after a residential burglary in 2005 and graduated with a bachelor’s degree just last year, 20 years after enrolling.

He applied to be a donor in 2000, according to the lawsuit, and was not required to prove his identity. He reportedly continued to sell sperm until 2014, raising questions about the ethics of paying for sperm donations.

Collins, a 45-year-old teacher based in Toronto, said her eight-year-old son had not shown any signs of mental illness to date. But she was wary that his life “could just turn on a dime in puberty”.

She held little blame for the donor and instead directed her anger at the company. “He should not have done what he did, but the big problem is not with him,” she told the Star. “It’s with [the] companies that allowed him to donate and sold his sperm.”

She and her partner spent about four months researching sperm donors before settling on Xytex in 2006, reassured by reports of its high-quality donors and rigorous screening. “You can rest easy knowing right up front – Every Xytex donor ranks in the top 1% of the population in health and wellness,” reads Xytex’swebsite.

Collins wants sperm banks to better screen donors, including carrying out medical and criminal background checks. She also hopes to push Xytex to create a medical fund for children affected by Donor 9623, to be used for intervention and treatment should any of them show signs of mental illness at a later date.

Nancy Hersh, a lawyer based in San Francisco, said she was planning to file additional lawsuits on behalf of American and British families affected by the donor in the United States in the coming months.
Wednesday’s lawsuit marks the second time Collins has tried to sue Xytex. Last year a court in Georgia dismissed the lawsuit after considering it a claim for wrongful birth, which is not recognised under the state’s law. An appeal filed in that case was later dismissed over procedural issues.

Lavender, the lawyer for Xytex, pointed to the previous lawsuit in defending the company. “Xytex looks forward to successfully defending itself from the new lawsuits with the same results as the original case,” he said in his email. “Pursuing claims in a court of law requires actual evidence and proof. Making unfounded allegations in the court of public opinion requires no actual proof at all, but merely the word of the very lawyers and litigants who already failed in a court of law.”

Thursday, April 14, 2016

Arbitrary detentions, torture, rape by Sri Lankan security forces continued in 2015 - US



14 April 2016
Human rights violations by Sri Lanka's security forces reported in 2015 include harassment, arbitrary detention, torture and rape, according to the US Department of State Country Report on Human Rights Practices.

The report, released by Secretary of State John Kerry on Wednesday, details several reported violations from the Tamil-dominated North-East of the island and said widespread impunity for the crimes committed during the armed conflict and other crimes committed following the end of the conflict, particularly for cases of torture, sexual violence, corruption, and human rights abuses, continued.

"The major human rights problems reported during the year included harassment of civil society activists, journalists, and persons viewed as sympathizers of the banned terrorist group the LTTE as well as arbitrary arrest and detention, torture, rape, and other forms of sexual and gender-based violence committed by police and security forces," the report says.

The report notes surveillance of Tamil civilians and seizure of private land. It also said there was "evidence of government-aided settlement of Sinhalese families from the south in traditionally Tamil areas".

See the full report here.

Speaking at the release of the report, Secretary Kerry said challenges that need to be overcome remain in Sri Lanka, despite "important democratic gains".

"[We] have seen important democratic gains in such countries as Tunisia, Nigeria, Sri Lanka and Burma, though in each there are challenges that still need to be overcome. But we are working closely with each of those countries in efforts to help meet those challenges," he said.

Assistant Secretary of State for the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor, Tom Malinowski said the US would encourage reconciliation and justice in Sri Lanka, in line with the resolution it co-sponsored at the UN Human Rights Council.

"In Sri Lanka, we’ll be encouraging reconciliation and justice in keeping with the joint resolution its government co-sponsored with us at the UN Human Rights Council," he noted.

Civil Society Must Take Over Local Governments


By Laksiri Fernando –April 14, 2016
Dr. Laksiri Fernando
Dr. Laksiri Fernando
So far in human history, the State controlled the society. The task is for the society to control the State.’ – Karl Marx
Colombo TelegraphAs an exemplary gesture in 2006, a former Senior Additional Solicitor General, Srinath Perera, contested a local government council (Boralesgamuwa Urban Council) believing that ‘the lack of committed, decent and capable people coming forward’ was one of the factors for the deterioration of the local government system. Giving an interview on his extraordinary decision to the ‘Sunday Island’ (26 March 2006) he said:
“I believe that the overall system [i.e. free education] has allowed me to achieve what I have achieved and I felt a need to give back something in return before I die. I am also aware that there are very few educated people who are willing to enter the fray and for very good reasons too. On the other hand a lot can be done if committed, decent and capable people come forward, especially in local authorities.”
JVP UNPHis example was an isolated incident which was not emulated or continued thereafter. Instead we have seen rapists, killers, thugs and extortionists getting hold of the power in many local councils with the support of major political parties or party leaders in order to keep their power bases at local and grassroots levels intact. This is a vicious link that needs to be broken.
Importance
The importance of the local government system doesn’t need to be overemphasized. It is self- evident. The importance is not only for the democratic pyramid, with 336 local councils at the bottom, but also for economic development and social welfare. The system has ancient inspirational roots in the ‘Gam-Sabha’ system, modernized and/or substituted during the British period. It is less recognized that the people in the country first learnt about the value of the franchise or the representative democracy through the local government system, however limited, well before the universal franchise was introduced for the State Council in 1931.
Local governments are the public/state institutions closest to the people and their day to day as well as development needs from garbage collection to building approvals through health, sanitation, local roads and environmental protection. When the local government system was reformed in 1987, ‘community development’ was introduced as a major function also allowing the local councils to get involved in ‘enterprises’ in partnership with the private sector (PPP).

Will Sri Lanka overcome its economic woes?


Author: Smruti S Pattanaik, IDSA-14 April 2016
Last year, soon after taking power as president of Sri Lanka, Maithripala Sirisena requested a US$4 billion loan from the IMF to restructure its debt repayments. The bailout package was rejected by the IMF. It warned the government instead to rationalise the tax system and arrest growing inflation.
Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena addresses the nation outside the Temple of the Tooth in Kandy, Sri Lanka, 11 January 2015. (Photo: AAP).
Yet, despite the bleak economic situation, the government decided to increase salaries and pensions for public servants, cut taxes for farmers and increase subsidies. It is therefore unsurprising that the government faced an imminent balance of payments crisis. The IMF finally decided to provide a bailout package of US$1.5 billion — considerably less than the US$4 billion initially requested by Sri Lanka — to boost Sri Lanka’s falling foreign exchange reserves in March 2016.
Following the end of the Sri Lankan civil war in 2009, the country experienced persistent high growth of 8 per cent and a comfortable foreign exchange reserve. But these all changed in late 2014. So what went wrong?
Sri Lanka’s positive postwar economic growth was based on two factors. First, in the postwar period Sri Lanka received massive investment in infrastructure and other reconstruction activities. The second factor is the sudden spurt in workers’ remittances, which contributed to foreign exchange reserves. Peace also boosted investor confidence.
Unfortunately, the government’s populist posture prevented it from implementing any structural reforms to expand the tax base or end its generous subsidy regime, resulting in a massive debt burden. Debt servicing for projects that are not earning returns have further added to Sri Lanka’s financial woes.
The country’s outstanding debt rose 12 per cent to 8.27 trillion rupees (about US$57 billion) in the first nine months of 2015 and foreign debt increased by around 5 per cent to 3.27 trillion rupees (US$22 billion). As the trade balance suffered, Sri Lanka’s macroeconomic indicators faltered. The fluctuating rupee undermined investor confidence contributing to capital flight, while foreign exchange reserves fell to US$6.3 billion in January this year. The GDP growth rate reduced to 4.5 per cent in 2014 from a high of 9.1 per cent in 2012. Massive money printing, which was intended to alleviate the budget deficit, only exacerbated Sri Lanka’s economic woes and the budget deficit climbed to 7.2 per cent in 2015.
A decrease in the growth of remittances from 9.5 per cent in 2014 to just 0.8 per cent in November 2015 only made matters worse. This was due to the crash in oil prices and political turmoil in the Middle East, where most overseas Sri Lankan workers are employed. The Sri Lankan rupee also depreciated 8.8 per cent to the US dollar making imports costly. By October 2015 the trade deficit had increased by 2.5 per cent to US$6.9 billion, mostly due to an increase in non-oil imports.
The government tried several measures to overcome the impending crisis. For example, Sri Lanka issued 10-year sovereign bonds worth US$2.15 billion — US$1.7 billion from development bonds and US$1.5 billion from currency swaps with India. Sri Lanka’s central bank also increased the statutory reserve ratio — that is, the proportion of customer deposits that commercial banks must hold in reserve — to help combat inflation. And it issued short-term bonds to overcome the revenue deficit. This policy came under severe criticism by the opposition. For its part, the government accused the previous Rajapaksa regime of being responsible for the country’s 9.5 trillion rupee (US$65 billion) debt.
The government’s problems have been compounded as it faces a resurgent Mahinda Rajapaksa, who is preparing for a comeback and still enjoys considerable popularity. To survive, it has to keep both the people and the party leaders happy. To this end, the government increased the perks for the 225 members of parliament, creating anadditional financial burden to the tune of 39.4 million rupees per month (US$270,000) and 472.8 million rupees (US$3.2 million) a year.
In July last year the Central Bank of Sri Lanka entered into an agreement with the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) for a currency swap agreement. As a result, Sri Lanka’s central bank was allowed to withdraw up to US$1.1 billion for a maximum period of six months. The deal is in addition to the existing RBI currency swap provision that is available for all the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) countries under the 2012 ‘Framework on Currency Swap Arrangement for SAARC Member Countries’. Currency swaps under the SAARC agreement have a maximum ceiling of US$2 billion. To help Sri Lanka meet the imminent balance of payment crisis, the Indian government also approved an interim currency swap amounting to US$700 million.
India’s participation was partly motivated by a desire to strengthen ties with Sri Lanka to counter possible Chinese influence. When advocating the currency swaps to the Sri Lankan government, the RBI argued that the deal would help to mitigate ‘possible currency volatility in the spirit of strengthening India’s bilateral relations and economic ties with Sri Lanka.’
But Sri Lanka needs to go beyond just currency swaps to revitalise its flagging economy. In the recent past, Sri Lanka has taken steps to increase taxes to raise revenue. The value-added tax, for example, was increased by 15 per cent and the government removed tax concessions on telecommunication services, private education and health services. But it is yet to expand the tax base and reduce subsidies.
It appears that Sri Lanka is in for some tough negotiations with the IMF. It has to address the structural issues, bring in financial reform to expand the tax base, reduce unnecessary expenditure and address the budget deficit. And it must do all these in a difficult political climate. It will be difficult for the government to avoid giving in to its populist impulses, especially when the opposition is waiting in the wings.
Dr Smruti S Pattanaik is a research fellow at the Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses, New Delhi.

Politics Of Promise: Between Sirisena & Rajapaksa


Colombo TelegraphBy Asanga Abeyagoonasekera –April 14, 2016
Asanga Abeygoonasekera
Asanga Abeygoonasekera
Those that are most slow in making a promise are the most faithful in the performance of it.” ~ Jean-Jacques Rousseau
On Easter Day, a day of rejoicing and celebration for Christians, shrapnel and ball bearings pierced through innocent civilians in a children’s park in Lahore, where a majority of the victims were children. This disgraceful suicide attack, which killed 69 and injured nearly 400, was a sad day for Pakistan and the region. Days before, another terrorist attack, in Brussels, targeted innocent civilians. The world has become unstable due to terrorism across the globe and the highest priority on the global agenda should be towards combatting it. Without a safe environment, it is difficult to talk economic prosperity, a lesson Sri Lanka learned from its brutal three-decade war. The physical and mental scars that terrorism causes are deep. They are not easy to forget as victims.
Mahinda MaithriFor this, consensus at the highest political level is important. The daunting task of bring the two different political parties with different values – United National Party (UNP) and the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) – together, was established a year ago in Sri Lanka. The recent developments within the political party of President Sirisena have not been so positive, with some members being questioned for supporting the former President Rajapaksa at a rally organised in Colombo’s Hyde Park. With the recurring electricity failures, the advantage has moved to the former President, with the creation of the slogan, “Rajapaksa is the President of the street and Sirisena President of the country… give it to me if you can’t.” Sri Lankan civilian engagement with social media on this has been negative, especially given the billions of losses incurred by Sri Lankan Airlines being exposed by a Government Minister. The sentiment is, ‘we have given you the power, so fix it’.

Norochcholai failure to befall Gamapaha water supply project too?

Norochcholai failure to befall Gamapaha water supply project too?Apr 14, 2016
The key slogan in the battle to down the Rajapaksa regime on 08 January 2015 was once against the denial of democracy and against corruption. In corruption, the most infamous of them all was Rajapaksas’ Chinese dealings.

There have been many revelations about the failure as well as the underhand commissions in the major projects with China. However, the present ‘Yahapaalana’ government too, has resorted to seeking the assistance of China and the corrupt deals then have now been given legitimacy, for their resumption.
It was in 2012 that a proposal for a joint water supply project for Gampaha, Attanagalle and Minuwangoda was presented to the cabinet. When the then water supply and drainage minister Dinesh Gunawardena submitted a fresh cabinet paper in 2013, the estimated cost has gone up considerably. The cabinet comprising Rajapaksa puppets approved the project to be completed by a Chinese company at a cost of 229.5 million US dollars to be obtained on credit from China. Compared to other white elephant projects at the time, this particular water supply project was commendable, as it was to fulfill a real public need. Included in the project to be tipped the biggest water supply scheme, was the construction of the Basnagoda reservoir. Although the project was a worthy one, the question was its very high cost and its handover to China Machinary Engineering Corporation (CMEC) without following the proper tender procedure.
With regard to the cost, Mangala Samaraweera has revealed that the project could have been completed at around 150 million USD had the contract been awarded in a competitive environment. The higher estimation of nearly 75 million USD makes it clear a big cut had changed hands among the Rajapaksas and other top authority.
When following the tender procedures, a company’s previous experience is given consideration. If a previous project is a failure, the company in question is blacklisted and no more contracts are given. CMEC has had no previous experience in water supply or reservoir construction projects. Furthermore, it was the same company that had constructed the failed Norochcholai power plant. Due to its construction being substandard, the plant breaks down on a regular basis, creating serious issues in the electricity sector. It is highly suspicious that the Gampaha water supply project is handed over to a company with such a dismal record.
Also, the previous estimate of 280 million USD had risen to 455 million USD. It appears that the history repeats itself with regard to substandard constructions and mysterious increases in cost estimates. The local agent of CMEC, a company by the name Shermans Logistics and its chairman Eshana de Silva, have both been accused of wrongdoing. He had acted as the middleman in an exchange of 25 million USD commission in the Norochcholai project, Anti Corruption Front’s Wasantha Samarasinghe has alleged. However, none of these were matters of concern for the Rajapaksa regime, and it is going to be the same for the ‘Yahapaalana’ government too.
The government will have, in the future too, to get substandard constructions made by failed companies in the face of direct intimidation by the Chinese government in major projects in Sri Lanka. It is because Rajapaksas know how tight is the noose tightened by them that they are ridiculing the government and the people by asking as to whether the Chinese have become good now. What is tragic is that the people and the future generation will have to pay for all these sins.

COPE to decide on BOC Seychelles branch


2016-04-13
The Committee on Public Enterprises ( COPE) is to issue a directive on the continence of Bank of Ceylon Seychelles branch shortly, Parliamentary sources said yesterday.

 An MP who is a prominent member of COPE told Daily Mirror that the committee had called for a report on the performance of this branch from the authorities of the Bank. He said the decision on the bank will be made by COPE after its study of the banks’ performance. 

However, sources said there was only three customers who had been transacting with the branch in Seychelles. 
The branch opened on January 20, 2014, was the first ever Bank of Ceylon branch in an African country. (Yohan Perera) 

Sri Lanka's public holidays: A boon for workers but not the economy?

Sri Lankan Buddhist devotees light incense during Poya, a full moon religious festival, at the Kelaniya Temple in Colombo on March 22, 2016.
Sri Lankan Buddhist devotees light incense during Poya, a full moon religious festival, at the Kelaniya Temple in Colombo on March 22, 2016.Sri Lankan Catholics re-enact the crucifixion of Jesus Christ on Good Friday at St. Peter's Church in Negombo on March 25, 2016.
Sri Lankan Catholics re-enact the crucifixion of Jesus Christ on Good Friday at St. Peter's Church in Negombo on March 25, 2016.

Apr 14, 2016
After years of civil conflict, Sri Lanka takes the needs of its multiethnic population very seriously, with a very pleasant side-effect: 25 national public holidays a year.

It's one of the highest national public holiday counts in Asia, far outstripping Singapore's 13 days, Japan's 17 days and even Indonesia and Thailand's relatively generous 19 and 20 days respectively. For Americans, who survive on a measly nine mandated days off a year, as well as Australians on just 10, 25 would be a dream.

Sri Lankans can thank their country's many recognized religions for the days-off bonanza.

Up to 70 percent of Sri Lankans are Buddhists, while the rest of the population identify as Hindu, Muslim, Catholic, Christian or "other," according to an official census in 2012. As a result, most public holidays are for Buddhist holiday days, but there are also holidays for important Hindu, Christian and Muslim religious events.

The full moon day of every lunar month is known in Sri Lanka as Poya day, a Buddhist day of observance. There are 12 Poya public holidays alone in 2016, which generally sees residents wind down and the sale of alcoholic beverages, meats and fish banned. 

Lolitha Abesinghe, managing director of investment advisory firm Opportunity Sri Lanka, told CNBC that the high number of religious public holidays was a way to "extend the same level of respect to a cosmopolitan mix of population...to maintain the peace, harmony and coexistence in the country."

Sri Lankan Catholics re-enact the crucifixion of Jesus Christ on Good Friday at St. Peter's Church in Negombo on March 25, 2016.

Sri Lanka has only emerged in 2009 from a long and bloody civil war, mostly between the Sinhalese government and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, a terror group that represented the Tamil minority.

The war ate up more than $200 billion in government spending over the years, according to an estimate by the Asia Economic Institute, as well as damaging economic development - an effect from which Sri Lanka is still recovering..

And while the high number of national holidays are a sign of religious equality, some businesses complain that they're unfavorable for the economy.

People working on a public holiday are entitled to double the normal rate of wages, according to Sri Lanka's Shop and Office Employees Act.

"Business entities in Sri Lanka have worked around the higher number of holidays to continue generating a good level of productivity," Abesinghe said.

He added that the public holidays helped boost the revenue potential of hotels, shopping malls and other entertainment-related industries.

But Lahiru Pathmalal, chief executive of Takas, a Sri Lanka-based internet e-commerce startup, is less positive.

"Public holidays may lead to better off-time but in terms of productivity and consumer behaviours there's an impact," he said.

"I dread seeing public holidays turn into long weekends," said Pathmalal, adding that this often led to a fall in revenue for his company.

Pathmalal told CNBC that he believed Sri Lanka needed to cut down on its generous public holiday calendar, because the holidays, which were originally meant for religious purposes, were no long observed as such by most people.

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Port City Is Detrimental To Sri Lanka: People’s Movement Against Port City


Colombo Telegraph
April 14, 2016
The People’s Movement Against the Port City has criticized Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe for his change in policy against the controversial port city project funded by China, while also warning the mega project might become the centre for money laundering and illegal commercial activities.
Ranil“It is very unfortunate that Mr. Wickremasinghe, now as the Prime Minister of the Government of ‘Good Governance’, is not only acting against his own words but also against the promise that he made to millions of people who voted him to power trusting his pledge,” the movement said in a statement.
The movement also alleged that although the project is planned as an offshore financial market, so far there are no regulations in place to control its commercial enterprises. “There is a danger that it might become a center for money laundering and illegal commercial activities, the statement said.
Following Wickeremesinghe’s statement at a media conference on the 10th April 2016 where he announced that the the port city project will continue, along with a decision taken by Sri Lanka to provide 1000 acres of land in Hambantota and Mattala to locate Chinese industries, the movement accused the government for violating the very basic principle on which it stands. “Can the Prime Minister make decisions on this matter ignoring the two pending cases in the Court? One might wonder where is the rule of Law?,” the statement questioned.
According to the organization, moving ahead with the project without taking into account the concerns of the people affected, the fishing community, the people who responded adequately to the EIA report and the concerns of the civil society which has not only highlighted their grave concerns but vehemently opposed the project due to its adverse effect on our ecosystem is a violation of their basic right for participation in good governance and decision making. “We wish to ask where is the space for People’s Participation, which is a hallmark of democracy and good governance?,” the statement said.
“It has to be stated that this type of senseless development is tantamount to transferring the wealth and the physical resources such as sand, rock materials, land, Colombo harbor, Mattala Airport and Hambantota harbor of the country to China making Sri Lanka poorer,” the movement said.
“Can mere mortgaging this land to China or any other big power be called development, Fr. Sarath Iddamalgoda the joint coordinator of the People’s Movement Against Port City asked. Fr. Iddamalgoda also raised the question as to whether the Prime minister has assured the integrity and safety of our natural resources and the rights of the people with regard to the environment.
“Prime Minister has no reason to celebrate USD 1.5 billion Chinese project when the project is going to dump sand and rock material worth over USD 4 billion to fill the ocean with no equity equivalent ” said Mr. Hemantha Withanage.
“Port City is not a standalone project of China. Therefore, this is feasible for China, however there is no study to prove that it is feasible for Sri Lanka” said Chinthaka Rajapakshe, Joint Coordinator of the People’s Movement Against Port City.
Weapons Stolen From Laggala Police Station
Weapons+Stolen+From+Laggala+Police+Station
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THURSDAY, 14 APRIL 2016


A T-56 weapon and five revolvers have been stolen from the Laggala Police station in Matale in the early hours today (Thursday 14th), police said.

Police spokesman ASP Ruwan Gunasekara said that an unidentified man had entered the Police station and taken away these weapons at around 1 am today.

Meanwhile, acting IGP S.M. Wickremesinghe has ordered the Central Province, Senior DIG to conduct an immediate inquiry into the incident.


FCID to be annulled!

FCID to be annulled!

Apr 14, 2016
The Financial Crime Investigation Department (FCID), formed by the ‘Yahapaalana’ government to investigate corruption in the previous Rajapaksa regime, is to be annulled soon, say FCID sources.

The decision follows a request made to the president by SLFP seniors led by minister Nimal Siripala de Silva, and the prime minister has given his consent to the decision, reports say.
Once the FCID is annulled, the government has decided to establish it under a new name through a parliamentary act.To be called the Financial & Economic Investigation Agency, its head will be incumbent chief of the FCID, senior DIG Ravindra Vidyalankara.

 FBI paid professional hackers one-time fee to crack San Bernardino iPhone

The FBI has found a way into San Bernardino Syed Farook's iPhone, and is now dropping bids to force Apple to help them crack into the phone. See all the latest developments in the case, and why the case isn't over yet. (Jhaan Elker/The Washington Post)

By Ellen Nakashima-April 12

The FBI cracked a San Bernardino terrorist’s phone with the help of professional hackers who discovered and brought to the bureau at least one previously unknown software flaw, according to people familiar with the matter.

The new information was then used to create a piece of hardware that helped the FBI to crack the iPhone’s four-digit personal identification number without triggering a security feature that would have erased all the data, the individuals said.

The researchers, who typically keep a low profile, specialize in hunting for vulnerabilities in software and then in some cases selling them to the U.S. government. They were paid a one-time flat fee for the solution.

Cracking the four-digit PIN, which the FBI had estimated would take 26 minutes, was not the hard part for the bureau. The challenge from the beginning was disabling a feature on the phone that wipes data stored on the device after 10 incorrect tries at guessing the code. A second feature also steadily increases the time allowed between attempts.

The bureau in this case did not need the services of the Israeli firm Cellebrite, as some earlier reports had suggested, people familiar with the matter said.

The U.S. government now has to weigh whether to disclose the flaws to Apple, a decision that probably will be made by a White House-led group.

The people who helped the U.S. government come from the sometimes shadowy world of hackers and security researchers who profit from finding flaws in companies’ software or systems.

Some hackers, known as “white hats,” disclose the vulnerabilities to the firms responsible for the software or to the public so they can be fixed and are generally regarded as ethical. Others, called “black hats,” use the information to hack networks and steal people’s personal information.

At least one of the people who helped the FBI in the San Bernardino case falls into a third category, often considered ethically murky: researchers who sell flaws — for instance, to governments or to companies that make surveillance tools.

This last group, dubbed “gray hats,” can be controversial. Critics say they might be helping governments spy on their own citizens. Their tools, however, might also be used to track terrorists or hack an adversary spying on the United States. These researchers do not disclose the flaws to the companies responsible for the software, as the exploits’ value depends on the software remaining vulnerable.

In the case of the San Bernardino iPhone, the solution brought to the bureau has limited shelf life.

Tashfeen Malik, left, and Syed Farook died on Dec. 2, 2015, in a gun battle with authorities several hours after their assault on a gathering of Farook's colleagues in San Bernardino, Calif., that left 14 people dead. (AP/AP)


FBI Director James B. Comey hassaid that the solution works only on iPhone 5Cs running the iOS 9 operating system — what he calls a “narrow slice” of phones.

Apple said last week that it would not sue the government to gain access to the solution.
Still, many security and privacy experts have been calling on the government to disclose the vulnerability data to Apple so that the firm can patch it.

If the government shares data on the flaws with Apple, “they’re going to fix it and then we’re back where we started from,” Comey said last week in a discussion at Ohio’s Kenyon College. Nonetheless, he said Monday in Miami, “we’re considering whether to make that disclosure or not.”

The White House has established a process in which federal officials weigh whether to disclose any security vulnerabilities they find. It could be weeks before the FBI’s case is reviewed, officials said. The policy calls for a flaw to be submitted to the process for consideration if it is “newly discovered and not publicly known.”

“When we discover these vulnerabilities, there’s a very strong bias towards disclosure,” White House cybersecurity coordinator Michael Daniel said in an October 2014 interview, speaking generally and not about the Apple case. “That’s for a good reason. If you had to pick the economy and the government that is most dependent on a digital infrastructure, that would be the United States.”

But, he added, “we do have an intelligence and national security mission that we have to carry out. That is a factor that we weigh in making our decisions.”

The decision-makers, which include senior officials from the Justice Department, FBI, National Security Agency, CIA, State Department and Department of Homeland Security, consider how widely used the software in question is. They also look at the utility of the flaw that has been discovered. Can it be used to track members of a terrorist group, to prevent a cyberattack, to identify a nuclear weapons proliferator? Is there another way to obtain the information?

In the case of the phone used by the San Bernardino terrorist, “you could make the justification on both national security and on law enforcement grounds because of the potential use by terrorists and other national security concerns,” said a senior administration official, speaking on the condition of anonymity because of the matter’s sensitivity.

A decision also can be made to disclose the flaw — just not right away. An agency might say it needs the vulnerability for only a few months.

“A decision to withhold a vulnerability is not a forever decision,” Daniel said in the earlier interview. “We require periodic reviews. So if the conditions change, if what was originally a true [undiscovered flaw] suddenly becomes identified, we can make the decision to disclose it at that point.”

Adam Goldman contributed to this report.