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

Wednesday, April 25, 2018

SriLankan Commission to get cracking

Thursday, April 26, 2018
The Presidential Commission investigating alleged fraud, corruption and misdeeds in SriLankan Airlines will begin recording evidence and other information within the next two weeks, President Maithripala Sirisena said.
The President said SriLankan Airlines should be maintained as a quality airline by preserving its international image.
The President said this during a discussion held with a delegation of the Alliance of Trade Unions attached to SriLankan Airlines held at the Presidential Secretariat yesterday morning.
Delegates from five of the six trade unions attached to SriLankan Airlines attended.
The delegates expressed their views and suggestions regarding the future maintenance of the Airline after resolving current issues after a detached account about its present status.
The President emphasised the need to improve the service and other standards in the airline to ensure a happy and contented journey for the passengers.
The trade union delegates expressed their appreciation to the President for appointing a commission to probe the Airlines’ alleged past misdeeds and creating the background for the company to conduct its functions in an orderly and transparent manner, a press release by the President’s Media Division said.
The President said the Commission appointed by him will consider information provided by all parties including trade unions and take immediate measures to submit recommendations to the government without delay.
Ministers Nimal Siripala de Silva, Lakshman Kirella and Mangala Samaraweera, Secretary to the President Austion Fernando, Finance Ministry Secretary Dr. R.H.S.Samaratunge, Ministry Secretaries, National Economic Council Chairman Prof.Lalith Samarakoon and Sri Lankan Airlines Chairman Ranjith Fernando and Directors were present.

Prez powerless to prevent some appointments - Minister

Disagreement on OMP


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Minister Mahinda Samarasinghe addressing media yesterday

By Shamindra Ferdinando- 

Ports and Shipping Minister Mahinda Samarasinghe yesterday revealed that President Maithripala Sirisena had been powerless to prevent the appointment of certain members to the Office of Missing Persons (OMP), though he had reservations about them.

The Former Presidential envoy on human rights Samarasinghe said so, addressing the media at the SLFP party office at T. B. Jayah Mawatha, Colombo.

The SLFPer declined to name those who hadn’t been able to win President Sirisena’s confidence.

Samarasinghe said President Sirisena had been left with no alternative but to endorse the names, recommended by the 10-member Constitutional Council, established in accordance with the 19th Amendment to the Constitution, enacted in April 2015.President Counsel Saliya Saliya Pieris functions as the Chairman of the OMP. Other members are Ms Jayatheepa Punniyamoorthy, Major General (Rtd.) Mohanti Antonette Peiris, Dr. Sriyani Nimalka Fernando, Mirak Raheem, Somasiri K Liyanage and Kanapathipillai Venthan.

They have been appointed for a three-year period.

Samarasinghe said that President Sirisena had delayed granting approval for OMP members’ appointment for two weeks before endorsing Constitutional Council’s recommendation.

The OMP is one of the four mechanisms, proposed by Geneva-based United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) in terms of Resolution 30/1.

Samarasinghe admitted that the 19th Amendment had certainly diluted powers of the executive president to such an extent President Sirisena couldn’t thwart those appointments though he felt they weren’t in Sri Lanka’s interest. Samarasinghe recalled only retired Navy Chief of Staff Rear Admiral Sarath Weerasekera had voted against the 19 Amendment.

When The Island sought an explanation from Samarasinghe as to the role played by presidential nominee (Minister Patali Champika Ranawaka) in the Constitutional Council and whether President Sirisena had expressed his concerns to the body through his representative, Samarasinghe claimed that the minutes weren’t available to him. Samarasinghe asserted that the Constitutional Council decision must have been adopted with the majority agreeing.

Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, Speaker Karu Jayasuriya and Opposition Leader R. Sampanthan are ex-officio members of the Constitutional Council. Of the remaining seven, five were appointed by President on the joint recommendation of the PM and the Opposition Leader, presidential nominee and the power to appoint the 10th member rests with the political parties and groups represented in Parliament other than the two parties represented by the PM and the Leader of the Opposition.

Other members of are Vijitha Herath, John Seneviratne. A.T. Aritaratne, Radhika Coomaraswamy and Shibly Aziz.

UNP MP Wijeyadasa Rajapaksa quit the Constitutional Council in the wake of the UNP depriving him of justice ministry portfolio last August.

Samarasinghe said that Geneva Resolution weren’t not binding. The Island pointed out that though the government had repeatedly claimed that Geneva Resolution wasn’t binding, but it was in the process of implementing its recommendations. Samarasinghe said that Sri Lanka would implement what was acceptable to the current dispensation.

Samarasinghe claimed that President had ruled out the involvement of foreign judges in local judicial mechanism under any circumstances though such a proposal was made to Geneva. Samarasinghe explained measures taken by President Sirisena to ensure foreign judges wouldn’t have any role here as long as he remained the President. Samarasinghe recalled his role as wartime President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s human rights envoy when The Island pointed out that Lord Naseby during a meeting with President Sirisena in London last week had referred to Sri Lanka’s failure to present its case in Geneva and to European countries.

The consequences of building Port City 


PMAPC Right of Reply to CHEC P.C. Colombo (Pvt) Ltd statement, published on March 20, 2018.


We make reference to the statement above to clarify some issues muddled by the CHEC Port City Colombo (Pvt) Ltd in response to the joint seminar held on February 28, 2018 by the Creation Care Desk of the Methodist Church and the PMAPC.   
EIA 2011 Coast Conservation Act 


2018-04-26

This sorry saga begins with a slim so-called EIA in 2011, which fulfilled less than 20% of the legal requirements of EIA studies stipulated in Section 42 of the Coast Conservation Act No 57 of 1981.

 The development permit with its 72 conditions allegedly monitored by 26 Government agencies are a matter of private record and are not available to the public. Monitoring reports are deemed by the participating public institutions, the property of the CHEC Company and confidential. If the checks and balances are being made why has not one monitoring report been made public?

Urban population 

The Urban population of Colombo stands to lose their health for generations to come as they suffer the consequences of high impact construction and the blocking of the flow of fresh air from the moment construction begins in the Colombo Port City. It is a proven fact that construction activities contribute massively to air pollution. This is exacerbated by land filling and vehicle emissions. All construction sites generate high levels of dust (typically from concrete, cement, stone, silica) which can carry for large distances over a long period of time. 

Air pollution 

Currently toxic PM10 Fine Particles in the City of Colombo are at levels three times higher than what is safe for humans. With the proposed high-rise building constructions in the Port City over an estimated period of 12 to 15 years the PM 10 levels may increase 25-30 times more than what is considered safe for humans. 

Such an increase in PM 10 toxic particles will definitely increase the risk of getting respiratory and cardio vascular diseases, including lung cancer as detailed in WHO reports. 

Clearly this project is an unacceptable health hazard to the citizens of Colombo, the capital city of Sri Lanka.

Unjust Deal 

The alleged benefits to the urban population are pie in the sky, but the benefit to the developer is assured for generations to come: Beginning with the landfill the rosy deal they have cut is a guaranteed 100% return within 3 years. The public however will suffer a net loss of not less than $11 billion. CHEC Company have invested $500 million and have obtained a loan of $1 billion. They will make a profit of not less  than $1.5 billion from the landfill. Sri Lanka supplies 65 million tons of sand at $2001- is $13 billion. 3.45 million cbm of granite rock @ $380/cbm$1.2 billion. ( December 2015, SEIA). 

State lands ordinance 

The State Lands Ordinance does not authorize the President to delegate his capacity under Section 60 (3) to reclaim any part of the foreshore of the bed of the sea. As the President has not authorized any lease as stipulated under section 61 of the State Land Ordinance, we assume that this is because this section says that the President must be sure “that such a lease will not substantially prejudice the rights of the public” thereto. 

No Provision for Supplementary EIAs in Coast Conservation Act

It is a matter of national importance and historical record that one project has needed much more than two EIAs repeatedly and allegedly addressing different aspects of the project in isolation and without an integrated examination of all inter-related impacts. The law does not identify
compartmentalization of the EIA process in a single project. Further the word Supplementary EIA is not known in the Coastal
Conservation Act. 
Hidden agenda 

There is no hidden agenda, but there exists an open public agenda to protect the well-being of generations living and yet to come. 

Prof. Karunaratna’s talk 

Prof. G P Karunaratna PhD, PE, FASCE has a PhD in Soil Mechanics from the Victoria University of Manchester was Adjunct Associate Professor at the NUS in Singapore. His response by email to the quarrels about his analysis in part says 

“ ... There have been many references to the Port City Reclamation Projects. The effect of this reclamation on the ground water table of the adjacent land, when coupled with intense rainfall in the same area has been discussed with respect to the effect on some of the old buildings and other infrastructure in the said adjacent land. 

 It was elucidated last December to an audience comprising practicing engineers that, if proper drainage is not constructed and maintained certain despair would occur in those buildings and infrastructure ...” This is not scaremongering, but scientific research in Sri Lanka by a world-renowned expert on marine reclamation. 

Fisher folk livelihood support 

The right of the fisher folk to engage in a lawful occupation is violated with impunity with an allocation of Rs. 500 million for so-called fisher folk livelihood support and the use of those funds to split the fisher community in Negombo. This sum is an ad hoc allocation without study and with no basis in reality.

Constitutional infringments 

Our legal team have identified the following infringements under the Constitution:

Article 14: Freedom to engage in a lawful occupation: the Fundamental rights of the fishers are violated. This violation also extends to the Fundamental Rights of
generations unborn. 

Article 27(14) which requires the state to protect, preserve and improve the  environment for the benefit of
the community. 



Article 28 (f) each and every person is duty bound to protect nature and conserve its riches. 
Trust doctrine 

All rulers and members of the executive hold the natural resources as a trust to be managed and utilized for generation unborn. They are not the owners. Natural resources are loaned from the future. See Bulankulama vs Secretary, Ministry of Industrial Development (2000) 3 SLR 243. 

Other Statutory Violations 

Coast Conservation Act 57 of 1981 Sections 4, 14, 15, 15 (b), 16 
 Ports Authority Act 51 of 1971: Sections 6, 7 & 74 
Change of extent requires a new comprehensive EIA 
Change of quantity from 65 million tons of sand to 70 million tons of sand needs new EIA 
National Environmental Act, Sand extraction illegal has to be authorized by GMSB. 
 Mines and Minerals Act 33 of 1992 Sections 26, 28,29,30,34 & 35

The question that arises is the huge damage that has been done to our coastline due to both dredging and filling to alter the shore transport currents. There needs to be a thorough investigation on the legality and accountability of the parties to the filling. 

But the reality is that we have an illegal filled area on the front of Colombo City. The damage that will be done to Colombo if high rise constructions are allowed is now obvious. If the Central Environmental Authority does not step in even at this last moment to protect our air quality, it will be a damning statement on their partiality. 

If high rises and high impact constructions will not be allowed, then what with
the landfill?

The alternate to high impact construction will be the establishment of building very high value, low rise, IT enabled, modern, health giving, Green City, the spectacular entry to Asia and the crown jewel of Colombo. We also encourage all Sri Lankans to send in suggestions as to what kind of city-we would like to have? Perhaps a national competition for what we would like to see on that land might be more    democratic than the current cabal of the Businessman-Bureaucrat-Politician. 

F. Mansoor   
On behalf of 
Fr. Sarath Iddamalgoda 
Carmel Corea 
Ravindranath Dabare 
Dr. Ranil Senanayake 
Feisal Mansoor   

Central Bank to drive compliance of property developers


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  • Errant property developers need further regulation 
  • Construction industry can make SL brand $ 100 b

Wednesday, 25 April 2018 

Way back in 2009, the country’s economy was just $ 30 billion dollars and as at today, Sri Lanka is almost at three times the value touching $ 85 billion, which tells the pace of development that has happened in the last nine years. 

According to trading economics, the GDP from the construction industry in Sri Lanka where quarterly the value had increased from Rs. 142,133 million in 2016 to Rs. 157,734 million gives us an indication of the quarterly growth we see in this sector which can be annualised to better understand the opportunity. By the way the construction sector remains the number one growth industry of Sri Lanka post 2009.
 

The problem

Whilst the skyline of Colombo is changing drastically with luxury apartments, hotels and retail outlets, sadly what we see is that legislation and policy guidelines have not evolved to cater to the development agenda of the private sector. 

This has led to issues of sustainability and corruption creeping into the system, just like any other country that is coming out of a war. Finally the loser is the customer who has invested in an apartment, retail outlet or a boutique hotel which does not bode well for a country aiming to be a $ 100 economy by 2020.
 

CBSL compliance

In this background, I was happy to see the announcement that the Central Bank would step in to regulate the real estate sector. The introduction of the Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU) to combat financing of terrorism with condominium companies having to submit a compliance document monthly commonly called a ‘blue form’ is a welcome move, given that I used to champion the construction cluster development agenda under the National Council For Economic Development (NCED) under former Treasury Secretary Dr. P.B. Jayasundera.

The stipulation of the Central Bank for property building companies to appoint a ‘compliance officer’ could be only the introduction to regulate and bring in governance so that the industry just like the tea industry, apparel or the tourism sector, will set the stage to take a high ground globally.

What is important to note is that under Section 33 of the Financial Transaction Reporting Act (FTRA) No. 6 of 2006, the real estate business is categorised as a Designated Non-Financial Business (DNFB). Hence, customer identification becomes mandatory when buying or selling immovable property. 

Separately, the compliance is more important given the legal and reputation risk owing to non-detection of bank accounts and other banking products, leading to laundering of money. The focus of this regulation must be on SME and family entity driven property developers is my view given the internal eco system that comes to play.
 

Customer protection

Post the above becoming systemic, from the media reports we see on the increasing customer complaints on the construction projects in the city, the next phase of the industry development is the stronger compliance of different approvals such as the preliminary approvals, building plan approvals and delivery of the features to the customers as per the content of the brochure and finally the deed being handed over.

The leadership for such must come from the local Municipal Council, UDA and other statutory organisations such the Department of Valuation and Inland Revenue Department. Once again the focus must be on the SME and family-oriented property development segments as the complaints we see is highest in this segment.

Given that I have worked across the export and tourism industries which are high SME and family entity driven, the overall objective is not to police the industry but to bring in conformity and credibility to the industry that will further develop the industry so that a typical organisation can enter the regional and global market.
 

Introduction of REITs

A new trend seen globally is where property investors are getting on to Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs). Media reports stated that Sri Lanka followed the same and launched REITs to the country’s real estate landscape, which is interesting.

With this, serious property investors will get attracted due to the lower risk and the ability to monetise real estate assets. At a recent MBA program, a point highlighted by students was that REIT trend is making serious upsides in India where property buyers are making use of structures which reduce risk and enable debt to be structured more effectively. 

The most important factor of REITs is that real estate transactions become more transparent, the logic being that most of the world’s REITs are floated on public stock exchanges that bring out the good governance criteria. Maybe Sri Lanka must fast-track this agenda.
 

Industry lessons – Apparel and tea 

The reason why such compliance must come into the property development industry is because this was the same ‘best practice’ that made Ceylon Tea and the apparel industry become big in Sri Lanka.
If I go back to my experience of being the Chairman and subsequently Board Director for Sri Lanka Export Development Board (EDB) for almost six years and on the Sri Lanka Tea Board – Marketing Committee for almost six years, let me track on how these two industries have become cutting edge in Sri Lanka and globally.

The apparel industry which began operations in the early ’80s and at that time was termed mere contract manufacturers and some even used to refer to the industry as ‘tailors’ but, thereafter with strategic thinking by the industry with the support of the Government, it gave leadership to the world by making Sri Lanka the world’s fashion apparel hub for ethically manufactured clothing. 

This has given teeth to the industry in competing with price-savvy merchandise coming in from Cambodia, China and Bangladesh. Today, this noble industry has crossed five billion in 2017 and is targeting $ 10 billion plus by 2025 in export revenue by making Sri Lanka an apparel hub in Asia for R&D and technology sharing for fast fashion. 

If we take the tea industry, Sri Lanka with strong leadership is slowly but surely taking the same route with the award for being the first ozone-friendly certified tea producing nation of the world. Starting from the times when the plantation industry was nationalised in the 1970s, when it came under Government control, it went on in the 1980s to make a bold decision to make the Colombo Auction control the global demand chain by breaking away from the great London auction system, which has held ground for many years. The Colombo Tea Auction commands the highest values for tea globally. 

Thereafter in the 1990s the supply chain was privatised to management companies, which gave the opportunity for new thinking to be introduced to the industry with strong R&D power and capital infusion that resulted in Sri Lanka demonstrating the best performing country globally for value addition tea at a commanding 43%, a strong move by the industry.

Today, we see that Ceylon Tea has taken the high ground with some focused decisions by the private and Government sector on conforming to global standards on MRL levels and has gone further by developing a new standard for tea that has resulted in Ceylon Tea being the first certified ozone friendly tea globally, a certification that no other tea producer has received.

All these initiatives would not have happened unless regulation and compliance came into the system. What the country requires now is strengthen the demand chain by launching of the Ceylon Tea marketing campaign under the ethically-manufactured proposition, whilst the ozone friendly badge supporting this claim will further differentiate the mother brand.

This once again shows Sri Lanka giving leadership to the world on the ethically manufactured route just like the apparel industry of Sri Lanka.

Maybe the theme activities like Rain Forest alliances must be pursued given that Ceylon Tea must cut away from the price-savvy multi-origin teas that are creating many challenges in key markets like Russia which are under entrenched competition.
 

Will the Market grow?

Going back to the property development sector, Sri Lanka has good medium term prospects for the product ‘apartments’ despite questions over current demand. Beach properties have seen a tenfold growth. 

Way back in time Sri Lanka sold only 200 apartments annually and today there are almost 2,000 being sold, which tells us the opportunity in the market. Whilst there is speculation as to whether this trend will continue, research insight reveals that there is no reason why it will not continue unless Sri Lanka gets into a serious political crisis, which is unlikely.

The logic is that the Sri Lankan market is relatively small in relation to the global market. However the NPL increasing in the last three months is worrying. The prices of land outside Colombo continue to increase due to tourism prospects but it must be noted that the hospitality industry is seriously affected on the profitability of the industry given the rising costs and the increased room stock.
 

Lamudi estimate

As per the estimate of the specialist in this area, Lamudi, the forecast of the commercial market, an outright commercial property purchase price ranges from Rs. 20 million/$ 148,150 to Rs. 30 million/$ 222,000 for mid-range commercial spaces. Land prices range from a perch (272 square feet) of land in Colombo 1, 2 and 3 ranges from Rs. 5.5 million/$40,741 to Rs. 12.5 million/$86,207, while in other areas in Colombo, prices range between Rs. 700,000/$5,185 and Rs. 10 million/$74,075. 

The Lamudi report further states that in residential areas in Colombo the demand is in Dehiwala-Mount Lavinia, Battaramulla, Ratmalana, Kaduwela, Rajagiriya and Kolonnawa. High-end apartments in these neighbourhoods range from Rs. 30 million/$222,000 to Rs. 550 million/$4,074,075. High-end houses range from Rs. 40 million/$296,300 to over Rs. 1.2 billion. Mid-range homes, with two to three bedrooms in one of these areas range from Rs. 10 million/$74,075 to Rs. 30 million/$222,222 on average (according to Lamudi data), which tells us the opportunity in the market. 
 

Who ruins the industry?

A recent study by a premier MBA programme revealed that property companies which are below the radar tend to create the negative image for the total industry which is actually not reflective of the total industry. Let me share the specifics with the examples mentioned.

1) Preliminary approval
A project of a 20-floor apartment in Bambalapitiya along Marine Drive, where almost 80% of the apartments sold out during the last three years, but yet the construction is at basement level as outside water is seeping in. Apparently the project is not as per the Government regulation from the coast line and the said approval has not been granted.
The project ideally should not have been launched as it will lead to eroding the confidence level of the industry and also adding pressure to financial irregularity to be administered for approval. But the reality is that selling continues even though the customers are querying why it’s not taking off on construction from the basement level. Such errant property developers must be identified and action taken so that it does not impact negatively on the industry.
2) Re-routing of funds
This is a common practice among industry players. A case in point presented by the MBA graduates was where a specific property developer had redirected almost Rs. 200 million to a project in Maldives, which was funded by other construction projects in the company (sourced by banks and customers). 
In the case in point, the Maldivian property development partner had revoked the project due to slow progress. Apparently the agreement also being weak had in resulted the inability for legal action by the Sri Lankan property developer. This has dented the cash flow of the company leading to debt being taken to service debt. If this data goes to the global market it can upset the total imagery of brand Sri Lanka and the industry, which ideally should be picked up by regulatory authorities. 
3) Brochure vs. delivery differ 
An interesting revelation by the MBA graduate team was a project highlighted in Mattakuliya. Given that the project has been launched prior to proper approval from Government authorities, the promise to customers as stated in the project brochure varies from the delivery.
To be specific the ‘balcony’ as advertised with an apartment had to be deleted post statutory approval, as there was a roadway beside the project. In fact the size of the apartment has also changed which means that for the 40% odd customers who have already purchased apartments, the agreement had to be redrafted. This in fact is a dishonest business practices which brings disrespect to the industry and the bank that is funding the project.
The said property developer who has done a similar project in Wellawatte has completed a project and handed it over to the customers but is yet to hand over the deed (after almost one year), as the electricity and water supply is not as per stipulations. Apparently the square footage on certain apartments is lesser than the contracted area and one apartment owner had sued the property developer. Organisations like the UDA need to step in and bring in legislation to protect such dishonest practices and protect the helpless customers.
4) Financial fraud 
An interesting revelation. A particular property cited once again by the MBA graduates was that a said developer had applied for a financial partnership on a project for almost Rs. 700 million. The property developer that has been existence for almost nine years has never made profits on ‘paper’ as per the P&Ls submitted. 
The question from the bank was simple: “How can an organisation that continues to make losses continue to aggressively drive business growth?” The answer is clear. It is financial fraud, said the MBA team that did the research analysis. I guess organisations like the Inland Revenue need to also bring in legislation where documents submitted to financial institutions must be copied to regulatory authorities for checking.
Apparently, the said company has sent an official communique that whilst the accounts state the window dressed account, in reality there have been profits of Rs. 30-80 million being made per project in the last nine years. These kind of malpractices must not be allowed to continue if Sri Lanka is serious about good governance and attracting global investors.
5) Kickbacks 
Another case in point shared by the MBA team was where a particular property developer had invested in two land banks in Dambulla and Aluth Maratha where the respective Government authorities have been bought over to do that the valuation so that the stamp duty can be reduced by almost 75% of the real costs. Given the poor regulations in such instances, these violations go as industry-related practices. 
The MBA team cited a similarity to the Australian cricket team that was recently cited for tampering the ball in the South African tour which had been a practice that was common. The graduated view was that industry players need to contribute to enhancing the industry standards. Such organisations need to punished for correction and if need be sent behind bars, for depriving the State of legitimate earnings.
6) HR cowboys 
Another interesting insight. A particular property developer who had a project in Gampaha had not paid the statutory payments due to its project manager such as EPF, ETF and taxes. The said PM had left the organisation citing this to the management. When a deep dive was done there were many employees without even letters of appointment whilst there was no salary increment given to the staff for the last three years, which is against standard HR practices not only in the industry but any organisation. 
Apparently the CEO of the company had not been paid EPF or ETF and a salary slip not been given for nine months and once he had reported this to the external lawyer of the company, it had been adhered to. I guess the banking partner will have to examine such basic governance factors before becoming a banking partner to such errant property developers, was the MBA graduates’ view. 
These are violations of basic company procedures as per the Companies Act, which is a punishable offence resulting in a prison sentence.
7) Resale
Some of the other violations of such under-the-radar property companies are reselling apartments without the approval of the customer on the assumption that stipulated payments as per the agreement had not been done. But the fact is that the property developer has not been in line to the construction milestone that has been contracted and the customer not making the stipulated payments. 
But, given that property prices escalate post the launch of a project, the developer makes supernatural profits with the asset of the already-invested customer. The MBA graduates’ recommendation was that a new Government authority must be brought to being to regulate these errant short-term-oriented property developers. 
8) Dummy sales agreement 
A very common occurrence. A property developer that is launching a new project in Colpetty had submitted dummy sales agreements to demonstrate the 20% pre sales so that the bank has to release the loan instalment as per the contract. Financial institutions will have to do a due diligence of such entities before executing such agreements, was the view of the MBA graduates, and if there is a violation to cancel the loan totally.
 9) Money laundering 
A startling revelation made by the MBA team was in the case of a particular property developer, where almost 200 million was claimed to have been invested in a project in an overseas country (Maldives) but the company has not got approval from the Central Bank or for that matter proper procedures have not been followed to transfer these monies. This in fact falls under money laundering, which is a jailable offence.
 

Next steps 

Whilst the above issues highlighted are sporadic in nature, we see that a majority of construction companies in Sri Lanka are strongly governed whilst changing the landscape of the country. The industry must now take the high ground and emulate the development agenda of the apparel and tea industries, so that it can also add to contributing the brand value of Sri Lanka.
As at now Sri Lanka as a nation brand is valued at $ 83 billion. We must make Sri Lanka a $ 100 billion brand this year. The construction industry will become a key pivot with iconic projects such as Shangri-La, Water Front, and Port City, to just name a few. But compliance is a must. 
 
(The writer was the Head of Portfolio Development for United Nations (UNOPS) when Sri Lanka won the ‘Best Global Construction Project’. He went on to become the Chairman of Sri Lanka Tourism and Sri Lanka Export Development Board and is currently the Country Director for a US investment company whilst being on many private and public sector boards.)

Sri Lankan among victims in Toronto terror attack



A Sri Lankan woman is among the ten victims killed in Monday's deadly van attack in Toronto. 
Renuka Amarasinghe, 48 years old from Horana, had been living in Toronto for over a decade as a single mother to her seven-year-old son when a white van plowed into pedestrians on Toronto’s Yonge Street, a main commercial thoroughfare. Among Amarasinghe and nine others who were killed, 14 people remain in the hospital with injuries, some critical. 
Amarasinghe had been regularly involved with the Toronto Mahavihara Buddhist Centre for the past 15 years, said its Chief Priest Ven. Ahangama Rathanasiri Thero. The Thero said the bodies of the deceased have yet to be released, as not all have been identified yet, but that Amarasinghe's final rites will be held in Canada where she is a citizen and where her son still resides. He added that the temple will do all it can for Amarasinghe’s child and his future. 
The suspect in the attack, Alek Minassian, was charged on Tuesday with ten counts of first-degree murder and 13 counts of attempted murder. Minassian joined Canada’s armed forces last year but was released after just sixteen days on his own request. According to those who know him, Minassian was a “socially awkward” student; but online, he had a propensity to rage in social media posts about women who rejected his romantic advances. 

Killer of Palestinian teen praised as “excellent” by Israeli judge

Nadim Siam Nuwara, 17, was shot dead by an Israeli soldier on 15 May 2014. (via Facebook)
Ali Abunimah-25 April 2018

A soldier who killed a Palestinian teen has been praised as “excellent” and “conscientious” by an Israeli judge, who sentenced him to a mere nine months in prison.
This conclusion to the trial of Ben Dery for the cold-blooded killing of 17-year-old Nadim Siam Nuwara is another all too predictable episode of how Israel’s military investigation system whitewashes crimes against Palestinians.
“Despite clear and overwhelming video, spatial and sound forensic analysis showing Ben Dery intentionally killed Nuwara, he was charged with a lesser crime and a wilful killing was whitewashed into an accident,” Brad Parker, international advocacy officer for Defense for Children International Palestine, told The Electronic Intifada on Wednesday.
“The lenient sentence announced today is not surprising and illustrates how pervasive and entrenched denial perpetuates impunity even where video evidence shows Israeli forces intentionally killing children.”




Despite clear video, spatial, and audio forensic analysis by @DCIPalestine and @ForensicArchi showing Israeli border police officer intentionally killed 17-year-old Nadeem Nawara, Ben Deri receives light sentence for "accidentally" causing Nadeem's death http://bit.ly/2qUy05o 
Dery, a combatant in Israel’s paramilitary Border Police, was initially charged with manslaughter – already a lesser charge – in the slaying of Nuwara on 15 May 2014 – Nakba Day, when Palestinians commemorate their 1948 expulsion from much of their homeland.
But that charge was reduced even further under a plea agreement to “negligence and causing severe bodily harm.”

“Excellent officer”

Israeli occupation authorities at first denied the use of live ammunition and tried to claim the video evidence was fabricated.
Michael Oren, who had been Israel’s ambassador in Washington and is now a member of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government, even went on CNN to claim that Nuwara and another boy shot dead that day might not really be dead.
But Israeli authorities later indicted Dery with replacing the bullets in a magazine that was intended for rubber-coated bullets and blanks with live ammunition and then using his M-16 rifle to shoot Nuwara in the chest.
In imposing a sentence at the lower end of the guidelines on Wednesday, the Israeli judge described Dery as “an excellent police officer who was conscientious about orders.”
While the slaying of Palestinian children by Israeli occupation forces is a horrifyingly frequent occurrence – Israel has already killed 10 children this year – Nuwara’s case was notable for the amount of evidence available.
This video shows his slaying as captured by security cameras in the occupied West Bank village of Beitunia.
It shows that the boy was shot dead in cold blood, when he presented no possible danger to anyone.
View image on Twitter View image on Twitter Defense for Children @DCIPalestine Despite clear video, spatial, and audio forensic analysis by @DCIPalestine and @ForensicArchi showing Israeli border police officer intentionally killed 17-year-old Nadeem Nawara, Ben Deri receives light sentence for "accidentally" causing Nadeem's death http://bit.ly/2qUy05o 6:51 AM - Apr 25, 2018 11 34 people are talking about this
The video also shows the slaying the same day at almost exactly the same spot and in similar circumstances of another boy, 16-year-old Muhammad Abu al-Thahir. He was fatally shot in the back, but no one was ever charged.
Following the killings, the multidisciplinary research group Forensic Architecture conducted a sophisticated analysis of video and other evidence and pinpointed the Israeli soldier who shot and killed Nuwara.

VIDEO: Watch full story on the Nakba Day Killings from @DCIPalestine and @ForensicArchi forensic video, sound, and spatial analysis https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W_EkHos_LJE 

“Israeli justice”

“We are not surprised by the ridiculous sentence. As soon as the plea agreement was signed we knew that this was the direction,” Siam Nuwara, Nadim’s father, told the Israeli newspaper Haaretz.
Nuwara contrasted the light sentence received by his son’s killer to the 12-year sentence handed to Ahmad Manasra, who was accused at the age of 13 of attempted murder for allegedly helping his 15-year-old cousin attack a teenager and a man in an Israeli settlement in occupied East Jerusalem in October 2015.
“Meanwhile, Ben Dery who murders – and I am convinced that he intentionally committed murder – gets nine months and in the height of chutzpah I hear that they are considering appealing the severity of the sentence,” Siam Nuwara added.
Nuwara might also have contrasted the nine months received by Dery for taking the life of his child, with the only slightly shorter eight-month sentence meted out to child prisoner Ahed Tamimi for slapping and shoving heavily armed occupation soldiers invading her village.
Ahmad Tibi, a Palestinian lawmaker in Israel’s parliament, compared the nine months received by Dery for killing a child with the two-year sentence a Palestinian citizen of Israel recently received for setting fire to a pile of garbage near his home because the local authority had consistently failed to pick it up.






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מימין : שנתיים לערבי שהצית אשפה ומשמאל : 9 חודשים לקצין יהודי שהרג נער פלסטיני.צדק ישראלי 2018.
“Israeli justice in 2018,” Tibi commented.
In September 2016, the Palestinian human rights group Al-Haq stated that “Since 1987, no Israeli soldier or commander has been convicted of willfully causing the death of a Palestinian in the [occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip].”
Since then there have been two convictions – both in high-profile cases where the slaying was captured on video.
Last year, Israeli army medic Elor Azarya received 18 months for the point blank execution in 2016 of injured, incapacitated Palestinian Abd al-Fattah Yusri al-Sharif in Hebron.
That sentence was later reduced by a third.
And now there is the mere nine-month sentence for the killer of Nadim Nuwara.
“My boy was murdered in cold blood and we did the autopsy which was for us as though he was murdered a second time, and all this did not convince the court,” Siam Nuwara told Haaretz. “That’s because in the final analysis we are dealing with an entire system that discriminates on the basis of race and arrives at decisions that are far from just.”