Share Tweet Tuesday 14th July, 2026 Paddy farmers have refused to sell their produce to the Paddy Marketing Board (PMD) at the prices offered by the government. They are demanding better prices in view of increasing production costs, and their protests are gathering momentum. Th…
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Tuesday 14th July, 2026
Paddy farmers have refused to sell their produce to the Paddy Marketing Board (PMD) at the prices offered by the government. They are demanding better prices in view of increasing production costs, and their protests are gathering momentum. Their consternation is understandable. They backed the JVP-led NPP to the hilt, enabling it to win elections, expecting it to liberate them from the clutches of unscrupulous millers. Today, big-time rice millers are buying Rolls-Royces and helicopters while farmers are mortgaging their houses and tractors, unable to recover production costs. Protesting farmers have claimed that although the government has offered to buy paddy, most of its warehouses still have stocks of paddy purchased during the Maha season. Even if storage facilities are available, the government can buy only 2% of the national paddy production, according to the PMD officials. So, how can the government make an effective market intervention to safeguard the interests of paddy farmers and consumers? It apparently does not explore other ways and means of preventing wealthy millers from exploiting paddy farmers and consumers. Powerful rice millers, who bankroll election campaigns of main political parties, leverage their political connections to protect their interests. Reams have been written about how they manipulate governments to facilitate exploitation. They create rice shortages a few weeks before the commencement of every paddy harvesting period, prompting governments to import rice. Thereafter, they release some of their stocks into the market, bringing the prices of rice down so that they can buy paddy from farmers at very low prices. When their rice enters the market, imported rice in government warehouses rot and end up in breweries or animal feed factories. Governments, capitalist or socialist, are wary of antagonising the powerful millers for obvious reasons. Curiously, President Anura Kumara Dissanayake has recently argued that Sri Lanka should diversify the uses of locally produced rice by manufacturing more value-added products. He has said rice can be used for producing beer and animal feed among other things. The government has cancelled a gazette notification that prohibited the use of rice as a raw material for beer and animal feed. Rice-based food products are common in this country, and the use of rice for manufacturing them does not adversely affect the public. However, the lifting of the aforesaid ban could lead to unforeseen problems. The question is whether it is advisable to allow a water-intensive crop, raised with subsidised fertiliser, etc., to be used for manufacturing beer or animal feed when alternative raw materials are available. Is the government capable of regulating the paddy and rice markets to prevent a situation where the manufacturers of beer and animal feed will act in a way that may lead to a shortage of rice? It is hoped that the government will be able to build sufficient buffer stocks of paddy, particularly in view of the current El Niño phenomenon, which is expected to adversely impact rainfall here. El Niño drastically changes predictable weather patterns and poses challenges for agriculture and water resources, experts have warned. If the government is planning to divert a part of the local rice production to breweries and animal feed factories due to storage issues, as claimed in some quarters, it should seriously consider abandoning its plan and expanding its warehouse network by rebuilding the PMD storehouses, most of which went to wrack and ruin under UNP governments, following the 1977 regime change or were destroyed by the JVP during its second uprising in the late 1980s. Minister Bimal Rathnayake has gone on record as saying that unlike in the past, today there are ‘tons and tons of money’ in the state coffers. If so, there is no reason why the government should not utilise a fraction of those funds to help the hapless farmers struggling to keep their heads above water and develop the PMD so that it will be able to regulate the paddy and rice markets and safeguard the interests of rice growers and consumers.
Editorial Beyond Negombo, Bogambara, and Mahamodara
Published 1 day agoon 2026/07/13
Monday 13th July, 2026 The government has come under heavy criticism over its decision to abandon a plan to convert the former Bogambara Prison, Kandy, into a modern hotel complex, restore the status quo ante and repurpose the Mahamodara Hospital, Galle, as a prison. Desperate times are said to call for desperate measures. Recent riots in the overcrowded Negombo Prison have jolted the government into addressing the issue of overcrowding. Prison congestion did not arise after the 2024 regime change. Successive governments have let the grass grow under their feet, and the current dispensation has had to grasp the nettle; its difficulties need to be appreciated. The Opposition and other opponents of the aforesaid government move to set up new prisons in an ad hoc manner ought to stop protesting and propose alternative ways and means of managing the issue. Overcrowding is one of the root causes of prison unrest and violence. Sri Lanka’s prisons are said to accommodate as many as 41,000 inmates or about 400% more than they are equipped to hold. It has been reported that the anti-drug campaigns and the resultant arrests have led to a huge increase in the number of prison inmates. Media reports, quoting the Department of Prisons, have placed the increase between 2021 and 2024 at a staggering 65%. Why no action was taken to address this problem earlier is the question. The Negombo Prison, where riots snuffed out 28 lives including those of eight officers recently, was holding as many as 2,400 inmates at the time of the incidents whereas it has space and facilities only for 650 prisoners. Inmates become aggressive when they have no space for sleeping, and basic medical and hygienic facilities are scarce. So, it is high time the problem of prison overcrowding is tackled as a national priority. There could be a wave of copycat prison disturbances. There are also other causative factors that need to be addressed urgently. The prison system is under immense strain owing to the ever-increasing remand prisoner population and prolonged custody due to judicial delays. Many suspects spend months, if not years, in prisons. Researchers have proposed solutions to the issues affecting prisons, but successive governments have ignored them. Action is called for to expedite trials and ensure that bail is granted wherever possible and adopt modern methods, such as using electronic ankle monitors where low-risk suspects are concerned. The state ought to get rid of its overreliance on imprisonment for minor offences. Instead, it should consider rehabilitation, community-based supervision, as options, experts have suggested over the years. Sadly, the police and the Attorney General’s Department apparently do everything in their power to have the opponents of governments in power held on remand for extended periods to please their political masters. It has also become blatantly clear from the recent bout of prison riots that efforts so far made to curb drug trafficking in prisons have not yielded the desired results due to various factors, particularly corruption among prison officers. A solution to this issue will continue to elude the prison system unless intelligence gathering and surveillance are strengthened with modern technology being used to prevent organised crime suspects and convicts in prison from communicating with their associates outside. Violence erupts in prisons also due to lack of proper classification of prisoners and action to hold them separately, as was the case in the Negombo Prison. Hardcore criminals must be separated from other inmates, and the so-called officer-to-inmate ratio has to be increased urgently. Worryingly, it has not been possible to recruit the required number of prison officers due to declining attractiveness of prison service and bureaucratic delays, Minister of Justice and National Integration Harshana Nanayakkara has recently told Parliament, explaining why the government has not been able to fill 1,300 vacancies in prison service. The recent murder of prison officers in Negombo is bound to make the government’s efforts even more difficult. Ensuring the safety of prison officers, enhancing their salaries and perks and providing them with better training may help make prison service attractive to the youth. Prison reform initiatives have not brought about the intended results during the past several decades due to deficiencies therein. The need has arisen for a comprehensive, multi-pronged national prison reform strategy integrating judicial reform, sentencing policy, rehabilitation, staffing and infrastructural development, prisoner welfare and independent oversight. This is what the government and the Opposition should discuss in Parliament and at other fora, instead of locking horns and trading insults. Prime land in urban centres, such as Colombo, Kandy and Galle, should be utilised for high-income-generating activities, and the prisons situated there should be relocated for security, economic and aesthetic reasons. One can only hope that the prisons to be set up at Bogambara and Mahamodara to ease overcrowding will serve as only stopgap measures until modern correctional facilities are built in appropriate locations.
Editorial Much ado about crime: Fish or cut bait
Published 2 days agoon 2026/07/12
Sri Lankan legislators never miss an opportunity to affirm their commitment to the principle of natural justice, the presumption of innocence, etc., but they unflinchingly use their parliamentary privileges to insult others, and even treat suspects in custody as guilty and carry out vilification campaigns. One wonders whether they are trying to run a parallel judiciary, as it were. Ruling party members predict arrests and the incarceration of their political rivals. This deplorable practice, however, is not of recent origin. Opposition Leader Sajith Premadasa and Deputy Minister of Media Dr. Kaushalya Ariyarathne had a heated argument in Parliament on Thursday over crime and criminals in politics. Ariyarathne claimed that the JVP-NPP government had prevented a person who even obtained protection money (kappan) from underworld figures from securing the post of deputy leader in the SJB. She mentioned the name of Charith Abeysinghe currently in remand custody. Premadasa retorted that a party that had committed heinous crimes was now levelling baseless allegations against his party. His reference was obviously to the JVP and its past crimes. During the past several decades, lawmakers have abused their parliamentary privileges by treating some suspects as guilty solely because of their arrests, without leaving the determination of guilt or innocence of the suspects to the judiciary in the interests of fairness and the separation of powers. Suspects and others who are at the receiving end of such malicious attacks carried out by legislators during their parliamentary speeches have no means of defending themselves. If sovereignty resides in the people and Parliament only exercises their legislative power vested in it, they should be able to seek redress when legislators blatantly violate their rights, taking cover behind parliamentary privileges. One may recall that Parliament was turned into a kangaroo court during the second term of President Mahinda Rajapaksa, and the then Chief Justice Dr. Shirani Bandaranayake was subjected to vilification by a parliamentary Select Committee, which was packed with Rajapaksa supporters. Obviously, due process was not followed in ‘impeaching’ her. That being the experience of a Chief Justice, the helplessness of ordinary people who become targets of malicious attacks by legislators goes without saying. Strangely, the MPs who conduct what may be described as legislative trials and trade allegations of criminal offences baulk at having high-profile crimes probed. The incumbent government made a hue and cry about the Batalanda torture chambers, where hundreds, if not thousands, of suspects were ‘put to the question’ before being killed. It alleged former President Ranil Wickremesinghe’s involvement in them. Most of the victims were JVP members or sympathisers. So, it was widely thought that the JVP-NPP government would get to the bottom of it. But what has become of the much-publicised probe is anybody’s guess. Has the government got cold feet as the probe is very likely to open a can of worms for it, given the numerous crimes the JVP committed during its second uprising in the late 1980s? The JVP leaders should explain to the public why they opted for a political honeymoon with the UNP under Ranil Wickremesinghe’s leadership from 2015 to 2019. President Anura Kamara Dissanayake has declared that his government will not allow serious crimes to be buried in the sands of time. So, he should have all crimes committed under successive governments probed. Prosecution for serious crimes is not time-barred, and he ought to appoint a special presidential commission to probe all political killings since 1977. Why the JVP-led government has not ordered an investigation into the extrajudicial execution of JVP founder Rohana Wijeweera in 1989 is the question. Some of the perpetrators of that crime are said to be still alive, and they must be brought to justice. The SJB should make a pledge in its next election manifesto to have the crimes which its leader Premadasa says the JVP committed in the 1987-89 period, investigated thoroughly. It should also explain why its leaders did not call for a probe into those crimes while they were in power from 2015 to 2019 as members of the UNP-led Yahapalana government. They had no qualms about enlisting the JVP’s support to retain their hold on power following the SLFP’s pullout from their government. The JVP even had representation in the National Executive Council of the Yahapalana government. When the members of the current Parliament clash, accusing one another of criminal activities, it is a case of the pot calling the kettle black. They ought to stop trading accusations and have those crimes probed while in power. They should fish or cut bait.
Editorial What’s the world coming to?
Published 3 days agoon 2026/07/11
Saturday 11th July, 2026 The Bar Association of Sri Lanka (BASL) has been urging President Anura Kumara Dissanayake to take action to fill four vacancies each in the Supreme Court (SC) and the Court of Appeal (SC), but in vain. It has renewed its call, in a letter to the President, who however remains impervious to public opinion and fervent calls for filling the judicial vacancies. The BASL has warned that the prolonged delay in filling them could undermine the administration of justice and public confidence in the Judiciary. The BASL has further noted that it is still awaiting a response to its previous letter to President Dissanayake, objecting to a government proposal to amend the Constitution to increase the retirement ages of the SC and CA judges and warning that such a move could have implications for judicial independence. Is it that the President’s Office has chosen to remain silent on the BASL letter? The first of the SC vacancies arose following the retirement of Justice Gamini Amarasekera on 20 June 2025, according to the BASL. The other vacancies occurred due to the retirement of Justices S. Thurairaja, Kumudini Wickramasinghe and Priyantha Fernando. There are no signs of President Dissanayake initiating action to fill the vacancies in the SC and the CA any time soon. Neither he nor his government has been able to offer any plausible explanation either, and it is only natural that an ulterior motive is suspected. The BASL has rightly reminded President Dissanayake of his constitutional responsibility in this regard. Quoting Article 107 (1) of the Constitution, it has said the President is duty bound to appoint the judges of the SC and the CA, and warned that the continuation of judicial vacancies at issue over a long time is inconsistent with the effective discharge of that vital constitutional function. It is being asked in some quarters whether the President’s failure to fulfil this constitutional responsibility amounts to a violation of the Constitution. The SC and CA vacancies have impeded the career progression of members of the judiciary, the BASL has argued cogently, insisting that they have placed an additional heavy burden on the two courts, as both of them now have to function with 25% fewer judges than their constitutionally stipulated complements. This situation has severely impacted the administration of justice and the efficient disposal of matters coming before the SC and the CA, according to the BASL. This is a very serious situation, and it defies comprehension why President Dissanayake has chosen to remain silent. What’s the world coming to when the Head of State of a country keeps 25% of positions each in the superior courts vacant and refuses to heed serious concerns and counsel of professional organisations of lawyers and individual legal experts? There is no way President Dissanayake can justify his decision to keep judicial vacancies under discussion unfilled. His failure to fill them could give rise to the perception that he is doing so pending the eligibility of certain individuals, as the BASL and other professional organisations have argued. Such perceptions do matter as much as reality in this country, given the manner in which successive governments have interfered with the judiciary to further their political interests. If President Dissanayake thinks he can wear down his critics and have his own way, where judicial vacancies and the questionable government move to raise the retirement ages of the SC and CA judges are concerned, he will be mistaken. Such obduracy stemming from the arrogance of power is counterproductive, for it compels the critics of the government to harden their position on the issue and erodes public confidence in both the government and the judiciary.

