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Monday, December 28, 2015

Over a million migrants and refugees have reached Europe this year, says IOM

Over a million migrants and refugees have reached Europe this year, says IOM
International Organisation for Migration announces latest figures, with Greek island of Lesbos now the main refugee gateway
Tuesday 22 December 2015 12.43 GMT Last modified on Wednesday 23 December 2015 00.50


Syrian refugee throws wife and baby on to train tracks in protest to migrant camps in Hungery


More than a million people have now reached Europe through irregular means in 2015, the International Organisation for Migration has announced, in what constitutes the continent’s biggest wave of mass migration since the aftermath of the second world war.

Out of a total of 1,005,504 arrivals by 21 December, the vast majority – 816,752 – arrived by sea in Greece, the IOM said. A further 150,317 arrived by sea in Italy, with much smaller figures for Spain, Malta and Cyprus. A total of 34,215 crossed by land routes, such as over the Turkish-Bulgarian border.

The overall figure is a four-fold increase from 2014’s figures, and has largely been driven by Syrians fleeing their country’s civil war. Afghans, Iraqis and Eritreans fleeing conflict and repression are the other significant national groups.

The European migration flow is nevertheless far more manageable than in the Middle East, where roughly 2.2 million Syrian refugees live in Turkey alone. In Lebanon, 1.1 million Syrians form about one-fifth of the country’s total population, while Jordan’s 633,000 registered Syrian refugees make up around a tenth of the total.

The denial of basic rights to refugees in those countries, where almost all Syrians do not have the right to work, is one of the causes of Europe’s migration crisis. Refugees who have lived for several years in legal limbo are now coming to Europe to claim the rights bestowed on them by the 1951 UN refugee convention.

Other refugees are fleeing directly from the war zones themselves. Aruba al-Rifai, a 44-year-old civil servant from the outskirts of Damascus, arrived on Lesbos this week having come straight from Syria. “The bombs are getting worse, and it’s just the beginning,” said Rifai. “I come to Europe to feel like a human being.”

Among rights workers, Tuesday’s news prompted renewed calls for Europe to set up safe and legal access to refugees. Save the Children, which says that over a quarter of refugee arrivals to Europe this year have been minors, said the absence of a more humanitarian response meant that the values of the continent were now at risk.

“Despite many European countries and people generously helping one million refugees, Europe is doing too little to protect and help vulnerable refugee children and stop families drowning on our shores,” said Kirsty McNeill, the charity’s campaigns director.

“This is the test of our European ideal. When children are dying on our doorstep we need to take bolder action. There can be no bigger priority.”

Among other demands, McNeill also called for better provision for refugees once they arrive in Europe. “Some reception facilities, especially at borders, aren’t adequately providing for basic needs like food, water or healthcare,” McNeill said in a statement. “The situation is expected to worsen with the onset of winter – especially for children -who are also more vulnerable to abuse, exploitation, violence and trafficking. We urge European states to focus on immediate humanitarian needs on the ground, especially for children.”

The record movement of people into Europe is a symptom of a record level of disruption around the globe, with numbers of refugees and internally displaced people far surpassing 60 million, UNHCR said last week.

“I don’t understand why people are insisting that this is a European problem. This is a global issue,” Michael Moller, director of the UN office in Geneva, told a news conference on Tuesday.

The UN refugee chief Antonio Guterres called on Friday for a “massive resettlement” of Syrian and other refugees within Europe, to distribute many hundreds of thousands of people before the continent’s asylum system crumbles.

He called for European countries to recognise the positive contributions made by refugees and migrants and to honour what he said were “core European values: protecting lives, upholding human rights and promoting tolerance and diversity.”

Lesbos is now the main refugee gateway to Europe, with just under half of those entering the continent in 2015 doing so by using the island as a staging post between the Greek mainland and the nearby shores of Turkey. Despite the worsening weather, and despite a so-called crackdown on Turkey’s people-smugglers, the numbers arriving in December are still higher than in June and July. Over 15 boats arrived on Lesbos on Monday. Across the Greek islands, the average number of refugees arriving each day in December is 3,338, lower than the October peak of 6,828, but far higher than July’s 1,771.

The IOM data is the latest in a slew of different and sometimes contradictory figures being used to quantify the European migration crisis. Other sources include the UN refugee agency, which is not publicly monitoring land arrivals; Frontex, the EU border agency, which sometimes double-counts people; and Eurostat, the EU’s statistics agency, whose data conflates numbers from the refugee crisis with those that refer to internal European migration.

Between 12 and 14 million Europeans are estimated to have been displaced in the aftermath of the second world war.


IMF bail-out package for SL seen as unavoidable



IMF bail-out package for SL seen as unavoidable
December 25, 2015, 9:52 am

By Hiran H.Senewiratne
The rise in global interest rates in the wake of the US Federal Reserve interest rate hike, makes unavoidable for Sri Lanka a bail-out package from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), top economist Professor Razeen Salley said.
"IMF doesn’t have confidence in the Lankan government, in particularly its ministry handling the country’s finances, as the maiden budget of the national unity government has ignored fiscal consolidation — one of the top conditions imposed by the lender when  extending support, Professor Salley said at a recent seminar organized by the Ceylon Chamber of Commerce.

In 2009, Sri Lanka was bailed-out by the IMF from a balance of payment (BOP) crisis—which was triggered by excessive money printing to support subsidies—through a US $ 2.6 billion Stand-By-Arrangement (SBA).

He said ISIS rebels creating greater instability in the Middle East could also hurt Sri Lanka’s economy.  However, the message sent out by Budget 2016 could make the dialogue with the IMF for a potential SBA facility problematic, as the budget seriously lacked fiscal consolidation.

Professor Salley, Visiting Associate Professor at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, National University of Singapore, pointed out that Sri Lanka has a culture of acting irresponsibly over its finances and then expecting to be bailed out by the IMF. He stressed that continuing this vicious circle of resorting to the IMF is very damaging.

"It prevents a sinner from repenting and it’s another excuse to continue sinning, said Professor Salley. He noted that the last SBA facility was clearly political and was given under very easy conditions.

"The last government pretended it was reforming and the IMF pretended the government was reforming but it kicked the can down the road, he remarked.

"Sri Lanka cannot expect the IMF to come and sort out all its problems as most of the reforms must be carried out internally, he added.

Deputy Director, Institute of Policy Studies of Sri Lanka Dr Dushni Weerakoon said at a seminar that since the country’s foreign exchange reserve is dropping fast due to a high import bill, Sri Lanka will require a bail-out package from the IMF or any other institution.

"A bailout package to salvage the economy is inevitable next year because of foreign reserve deterioration, she added.

Next year would be a tough year for Sri Lanka because world commodity prices, especially those for tea, will also experience a slump due to manifold reasons, such as, a global financial crisis and insecurity in the international arena, due to terrorism and economic crises, she said.

விடுதலைப் புலிகளின் தர்மேந்திராக் கலையகத்தின் இன்றைய நிலை

பாழடையுமோ புலிகளின் பாசறை,
நாளடையுமோ புதிய தலைமுறை?
தோள் சுமக்குமோ புதிய தேசத்தை,
வேர் அறுக்குமோ அந்நிய பாசத்தை!
========================== ENB=========================== 


விடுதலைப் புலிகளின் 
தர்மேந்திராக் கலையகத்தின் இன்றைய நிலை
[ வெள்ளிக்கிழமை, 25 டிசெம்பர் 2015, 12:18.15 PM GMT ]

தர்மேந்திரா என்னும் ஒரு போராளிக் கலைஞனின் வீரமரணத்தை தொடர்ந்து விடுதலைப் புலிகளின் தலைவர் பிரபாகரனின் சிந்தனையில் உருவாக்கப்பட்டது தர்மேந்திரா கலையகம்.

தர்மேந்திரா கலையகம்
இக்கலையகம் பல்வேறு மூத்தகலைஞர்கள் மென்மேலும் வளர்ச்சியடைய ஒரு களமாக இருந்ததுடன், இலைமறைகாயாக இருந்ந பல தமிழீழக் கலைஞர்களை வெளிக்கொண்டு வந்துள்ளது.

இந்தக்கலையகத்தில் பல்வேறுபட்ட விடுதலை எழுச்சிப்பாடல்கள், தத்துவப்பாடல்கள், பக்திப்பாடல்கள் மற்றும் திரைப்படங்கள், குறும்படங்கள், தொடர் நாடகங்கள் என அனைத்திற்கும் பின்னணி இசையையும் வழங்கியிருந்தது.
தர்மேந்திரா கலையகம்
அந்தவகையில் 2004ம் ஆண்டு ஏற்பட்ட ஆழிப்பேரலையினால் மக்கள் மீளாத்துயரடைந்து இருந்தபொழுது, அவர்களை ஆற்றும் நோக்கில் சுனாமிப் பாடல்களையும் வெளியீடு செய்திருந்தது.

2009ம் ஆண்டு ஜனவரி மாதம் கிளிநொச்சி நகர் இலங்கை இராணுவத்திடம் வீழ்ச்சியடைந்த போது, கிளிநொச்சி திருநகரில் அமைந்திருந்த இந்தக்கலையகம் இராணுவ ஆக்கிரமிப்புக்குள் சிக்கிக் கொண்டது.

தர்மேந்திரா கலையகம்
2015ம் ஆண்டு இன்று வரை குறித்த கலையகம் இராணுவ ஆக்கிரமிப்பிற்குள் சிக்கி சிதைவடைந்து காணப்படுகின்றது.

இந்தக் கலையகக் கலைஞர்கள் தற்பெழுது நிர்க்கதியான நிலையில் தமது கலைத்திறனை வெளிக்கொண்டு வரமுடியாமல் தவிக்கும் நிலை காணப்படுகின்றது.

தர்மேந்திரா கலையகம்
இன்று எமது செய்தியாளர் மேற்படி கலையகத்திற்கு நேரடியாக சென்று உடைந்திருந்த அந்த கலையகத்திற்குள் நின்று ஒளிப்பதிவு செய்துள்ளார்.
நன்றி செய்தி: ஊடகங்கள்

Opposition questions US interest on Sri Lanka

Opposition questions US interest on Sri Lanka

December 16, 2015 15:52

Dullas AlahapperumaThe opposition today questioned the keen interest the United States is having on Sri Lanka with several top US officials already having visited the country this year.

Opposition Parliamentarian Dullas Alahaperuma said that while the Government says it is following a middle line in Sri Lanka’s foreign policy, the reality does not seem to be the case.

Alahaperuma said that over the past four months top US officials including Nisha Biswal, Samantha Power and Thomas Shannon visited Sri Lanka and had talks with the Government.

“I the last four months there were six US officials who visited Sri Lanka. In the past six months so many US officials have not gone to any other country. Are they coming with a good intention,” he asked.

Alahaperuma noted that even after the August 17 Parliament elections, before the cabinet took oaths, three Ministers took oaths so they could have talks with US Assistant Secretary of State Nisha Biswal who was visiting the country at the time.

US Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs (Designate) Thomas Shannon is the latest US official to visit Sri Lanka.

Speaking at an event today Shannon said Sri Lanka is an example of the power of citizens to reinvigorate their democracy, to retake control – through the ballot box – of their country’s trajectory, and to set a course to a brighter future.

He said the US now looks to Sri Lanka to also provide inspiration to others around the world, to show them how justice and compassion can overcome a difficult past and help create a stable and prosperous future, and strengthen a nation’s security, prosperity, and prestige. (Colombo Gazette)

Sunday, December 20, 2015

Paris Accord Considers Climate Change as a Factor in Mass Migration

EUROPE
Paris Accord Considers Climate Change as a Factor in Mass Migration
By SEWELL CHANDEC. 12, 2015


LE BOURGET, France — The two-week United Nations climate conference outside Paris that drew to an end on Saturday focused on many of the physical dangers associated with climate change: extreme weather, severe drought, the warming of oceans, rain forest destruction and disruptions to the food supply.

But global warming has already had another effect — the large-scale displacement of people — that has been an ominous, politically sensitive undercurrent in the talks and side events here.


Scientists have said that climate change can indirectly lead to migration by setting off violent conflicts. Scholars have made this connection since at least 2007, when they cited climate change as a reason for the war in Darfur, Sudan.

A drought that lasted from 2006 to 2011 in much of Syria has been cited as a factor in the long-running civil war there, fueling a mass migration to Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan, but also to Europe, Canada and, in small measure, the United States.


Global leaders celebrated a landmark accord on climate change on Saturday after nearly 200 nations agreed to the deal.Nations Approve Landmark Climate Accord in ParisDEC. 12, 2015
A demonstration near the Arc de Triomphe in Paris on Saturday to show support for actions against climate change.Protesters Are in Agreement as Well: Pact Is Too WeakDEC. 12, 2015
Ban Ki-moon, left, the secretary general of the United Nations, with Laurent Fabius, the foreign minister of France, at the talks.Draft of Climate Pact Is Ready, U.N. Officials SayDEC. 11, 2015
Europe, in particular, is experiencing the largest influx of migrants since World War II — Germany alone has already taken in nearly a million this year. Jean-Claude Juncker, the president of the European Commission, told world leaders on Nov. 30 that climate change could “destabilize entire regions and start massive forced migrations and conflicts over natural resources.”



From 2008 to 2014, an average of 26.4 million people were displaced each year by floods, storms, earthquakes and other natural disasters, according to a report released in July by the Internal Displacement Monitoring Center, part of the Norwegian Refugee Council. Most moved within their countries.

The United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification — like the climate talks, it grew out of the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro in 1992 — and the British Defense Ministry recently cited a 2009 report estimating that 135 million people are at risk of displacement because desertification, the drying out of once-fertile land, will reduce drinking-water supplies and lower coral yields. The problem is most pronounced across a band of Africa, from the Sahel in the west to the Horn of Africa in the east.



By 2020, some 60 million people could move from the desertified areas of sub-Saharan Africa toward North Africa and Europe, the report found; by 2050, about 200 million people may be permanently displaced.

The report was prepared by a research and advocacy organization led by Kofi Annan, the former United Nations secretary general, that shut down in 2010; some of the report’s findings have been disputed. Indeed, the numbers are so staggering that Jan Egeland, the head of the Norwegian Refugee Council, who with Mr. Swing and others spoke at a panel discussion here, took pains to point out that the vast majority of migration worldwide takes place in the developing world.



As early as 1990, a report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change warned, “The greatest single impact of climate change could be on human migration.”

It was not until 20 years later, at the 2010 United Nations climate conference in Cancun, Mexico, that countries formally agreed that “climate change-induced migration, displacement and relocation” were among the challenges the world faced in adapting to a warmer planet.

In 2012, the Norwegian and Swiss governments established a research entity, the Nansen Initiative, which found that “a serious legal gap exists with regard to cross-border movements in the context of disasters and the effects of climate change.” The initiative has held consultations in four particularly vulnerable regions — Central America, the Horn of Africa, Southeast Asia and the islands of the South Pacific — and plans to recommend a “protection agenda” that may include standards of treatment.


People forced to leave their homes because of climate change are not easily classified under existing human rights, refugee or asylum law. In July, a New Zealand court dismissed a landmark case brought by a man from Kiribati, Ioane Teitiota, who had sought to have his family classified as “climate change refugees.” They were deported in September.


Somini Sengupta contributed reporting from the United Nations.

A version of this article appears in print on December 13, 2015, on page A16 of the New York edition with the headline: Global Warming’s Role in Mass Migration Is Addressed . Order Reprints| Today's Paper|Subscribe

Saturday, December 19, 2015

Post-war relations: UK seeks closer ties with SL military

Post-war relations: UK seeks closer ties with SL military
December 19, 2015, 9:04 am by Shamindra Ferdinando

Vice Admiral Wijegunaratne and Captain Borland exchange mementos.
Close on the heels of British Prime Minister David Cameron’s assurance to President Maithripala Sirisena that UK would provide expertise and financial backing for military reforms here, a senior British officer visited Colombo.

PM Cameron gave that assurance on the sidelines of the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Malta late last month.

British Naval and Air Adviser in India Captain Stuart Borland met Navy Chief Vice Admiral Ravindra Wijegunaratne at navy headquarters on Dec. 15. A senior SLN official told The Island that the talks were aimed at enhancing the relations with the focus on training opportunities in the UK. "They discussed matters of mutual interest and bilateral importance."

A British High Commission spokes person told The Island that the UK’s non-resident Defence Advisor designated to Sri Lanka had been in Colombo for a series of introductory meetings.

UK withdrew its Colombo-based defence adviser in 2009. Another British HC official said that the move was made following a review of distribution of defence advisers.

During the war Sri Lanka couldn’t secure armaments of British origin due to a ban on weapons exports prompted by Indian objections and vociferous protests by UK based Sri Lankans, defence sources told The Island. Sources said with the conclusion of the war the UK was in a position to renew military ties. Responding to a question, sources said that over the years, Sri Lanka had completely ceased the use of British weapons.

Some UK based Diaspora activists have sought a clarification from the British government through a Labour Party MP as regards the new relationship between the UK and Sri Lanka.

Expressway to Jaffna through Polonnaruwa and Trincomalee

Expressway to Jaffna through Polonnaruwa and Trincomalee

Three mega road projects to be launched next year, trip to Kandy in 75 minutes
By Damith Wickremasekara

Three mega expressway projects, including one to the north through Polonnaruwa and Trincomalee, will be launched next year, officials said yesterday.

Funding for the projects estimated to cost US$ 13.4 billion (Rs. 1,900 billion) will come from multiple sources including China, the Asian Development Bank and local avenues, Road Development Authority Director General M.P.K.L Gunaratne told the Sunday Times.

He said the expressway to the Central Province will be the first to be started in March next year, followed by the expressway between Kahathuduwa and Pelmadulla and then the northern project.The northern expressway would start from Dambulla and cut across Polonnaruwa, Kantale, Trincomalee and Mullaitivu to reach Jaffna. It is estimated to cost US$ 5.5 billion.

He said that earlier the plan was for the northern expressway to be built through Vavuniya and Kilinochchi.

RDA Chairman Nihal R. Sooriyaarachchi said the change was made to cater to the needs of the Trincomalee harbour and the thriving tourism industry there. He said acquiring lands for the new expressway would also be easier as it would pass through largely uninhabited areas.

He said that currently the RDA believed the A9 road to Jaffna through Vavuniya and Kilinochchi was sufficiently developed.

Central Expressway Project Director L.V.S. Weerakoon said this expressway would be built in four stages with construction taking place simultaneously and more than 20 km of the road would be on elevated structures.

The first stage of 37 km from Kadawatha to Mirigama would be funded by China. The second stage of 49 km from Mirigama to Kurunegala and the Ambepussa link road would be funded by the ADB while the third stage of 32.5 km from Pothuhera to Galagedara would be built with local funding. For the stage four of 60 km from Kurunegala to Dambulla, the funding source is yet to be determined, as is the final part from Galagedara to Katugastota.

He said the 48 km Ruwanpura project from Kahathuduwa to Ratnapura would cost US$ 1.5 billion and the 23 km from Ratnapura to Pelmadulla would cost US$ 2.2 billion. Highways Minister Lakshman Kiriella told the Sunday Times that once the central expressway project was completed the travel time between Colombo and Kandy would be about one hour and 15 minutes compared to the four and half hours now.

Mr. Kiriella said they hoped to complete the Kandy expressway in three years. There would be service stations and fuel stations in Mirigama with extra safety features where the expressway passes through hills and difficult terrain.

Sri Lanka plantations firms warn of higher losses if wage hike


Sri Lanka plantations firms warn of higher losses, if (from) wage hike
Dec 17, 2015 13:56 PM GMT+0530

ECONOMYNEXT –
Sri Lankan plantations companies have warned that a wage hike demanded by labour unions would increase losses at a time when commodity prices remain low, with workers themselves losing if the industry collapses.

With wage talks deadlocked, the Planters’ Association of Ceylon, which represents listed regional plantations companies, said unions would have to accept either the PA’s proposal for productivity linked wages or a revenue sharing model.

PA Chairman Roshan Rajadurai said the 1,000 rupee wage hike demanded by unions “is plainly impossible and completely unaffordable.”

He said in a statement the RPCs understand the demand of the workers for a higher wage and have continuously provided significant wage increases – in some years even exceeding 35% – whenever they were able to.

The PA said that if the wage hike was granted, the cost of production of the RPCs, which is in the region of 450 rupees per kilo, would exceed 610 rupees.

Since the total sale average of tea at the Colombo tea auction in the last week of November 2015 only amounted to 409 rupees, the loss from a single kilo of tea produced by RPCs would increase from around 50 - 70 rupees at present to over 200 rupees.

This would make their operations “completely financially and economically unviable and impossible.”

Rajadurai said that for the unions to adamantly stick to “impractical demands which cannot be fulfilled is a short-sighted policy akin to ‘killing the goose that lays the egg.’ 

“An adverse impact on the Regional Plantation Companies and its eventual collapse would be totally detrimental to the workers themselves and the nearly one million resident population living in RPC estates, who enjoy many facilities provided by the RPCs despite not being part of our workforce,” he added.

The PA said that since the privatisation of the estates in 1992, the labour wages have increased 13 fold, although the tea prices have increased only by 6 fold in the same period.  

Many of the RPCs are listed companies which are answerable to shareholders.

“We cannot simply agree to draconian terms which will inevitably put the companies further in financial jeopardy and to its eventual collapse,” the statement said.

The RPCs have provided viable alternatives; productivity based wages and revenue sharing – which will be a win-win, workable method, enabling workers to earn their desired income by increasing output, which unfortunately the unions have failed to agree with.”  

(Colombo/December 17, 2015)

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மலையகத்தில் மின்னொழுக்கு, தொழிலாளர் லயன்கள் தீக்கிரை
16-12-2015 04:20 PM
-சிவாணி ஸ்ரீ

இரத்தினபுரி, அபுகஸ்தன்ன மூக்குவத்தை தோட்டத்தில் இன்று புதன்கிழமை (16) அதிகாலை ஏற்பட்ட மின்னொழுக்கு காரணமாக 06 லயன் குடியிருப்புக்கள் தீப்பற்றி எரிந்துள்ளன.

மேற்படி ஆறு குடியிருப்புக்களில் தங்கியிருந்தவர்களுக்கு உயிராபத்துக்கள் எதுவும் ஏற்படவில்லை. எனினும், பெறுமதியான பொருட்கள் பல முற்றாக எரிந்து நாசமாகியுள்ளன.

தோட்ட மக்களின் முயற்சியினால் தீ கட்டுப்பாட்டுக்குள் கொண்டு வரப்பட்டுள்ளது.

மேற்படி குடியிருப்பைச் சேர்ந்த 30க்கும் மேற்பட்ட மக்கள்,  அப்பிரதேசத்தில் உள்ள ஆலயத்தில் தஞ்சமடைந்துள்ளனர்.

All nationalities can be resettled in NP

ENB File Photo: Palihakkara and Moon
All nationalities can be resettled in NP – Palihakkara
Governor of the Northern Province H.M.G.S. Palihakkara told Ceylon Today that the Northern Provincial Council has come to an agreement with the government, opening the way for the settlement of families from all nationalities in the Northern Province.

This includes Tamils, Sinhalese and Muslims who had lived in the North prior to the commencement of the war.

By Niranjala Ariyawansha

Governor of the Northern Province H.M.G.S. Palihakkara told Ceylon Today that the Northern Provincial Council has come to an agreement with the government, opening the way for the settlement of families from all nationalities in the Northern  Province.

This includes Tamils, Sinhalese and Muslims who had lived in the North prior to the commencement of the war.

Palihakkara said steps will be taken to restore several acres of land which the Army had been using in Valikamam West, in the Northern Province, to their rightful owners who lived there prior to being displaced by the war.

Meanwhile, another 41,000 IDPs, who were displaced by the war, still live in eight camps and with friends and relatives.

Land belonging to civilians had been acquired by the Army during the war on the basis of a policy decision of the government.

He added Grama Niladharies in the Northern Province at Grama Niladhari Divisional Level are gathering information on all residents who had lived in the above mentioned properties prior to the war.

"In 2009 at the time that the war ended, the Army had possession of 12,000 acres of land in the Northern Province alone. The previous government from time to time returned some of this land to the original residents or owners. Another 1000 acres in Sampur were returned to the original owners by the new government. Only 5000 acres of land belonging to civilians are occupied by the Army" Palihakkara said.

Lanka declared eligible for assistance under the Millennium Challenge Account

Lanka declared eligible for assistance under the Millennium Challenge Account
 17 December 2015

Sri Lanka was selected as an eligible country for assistance from fiscal year 2016 at a meeting of the Board of Directors of the U.S. Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) held in Washington DC on  December16, Sri Lankan embassy in Washington said.

This decision of the Board was conveyed by telephone on the same evening, 16 December, to Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, by the Chief Executive Officer of the MCC, Dana J. Hyde.

"Created by the U.S. Congress in 2004 with strong bipartisan support, the MCC is an innovative U.S. foreign assistance agency that operates on the principle of delivering assistance on the basis of a long-term consultative partnership with individual

countries. The criteria for consideration in entering a partnership include a country’s commitment to good governance, economic freedom and investment in citizens." a statement from the embassy said.

Country ownership and country-led solutions for reducing poverty through sustainable economic growth is an important underlying principle based on which MCC grants are provided. Grants are designed to complement other U.S. and international development programmes, and create an enabling environment for private sector investment.

"The MCC’s Board of Directors is chaired by the US Secretary of State John Kerry and includes as members the Secretary to the Treasury, the U.S. Trade Representative, the USAID Administrator, CEO of MCC and four private sector representatives, appointed by the President of the United States with the advice and consent of the U.S. Senate. "

In keeping with the Government’s vision for good governance, strengthening the rule of law, and achieving reconciliation, development, durable peace and prosperity for all, the government of Sri Lanka will work to foster an enduring engagement and partnership with the MCC with the objective of reaping benefits for all the people in the country.

The selection of Sri Lanka as an eligible country for long-term partnership with the MCC is a demonstration of recognition of the progress made by Sri Lanka since January 2015 under the leadership of President Maithripala Sirisena and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe.

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