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Tuesday, December 23, 2025

Global economists urge halt to Sri Lanka debt payments

Global economists urge halt to Sri Lanka debt payments

December 22, 2025- Business News LK









The appeal comes as disaster recovery costs rise sharply, placing additional strain on public finances already under pressure from high debt servicing obligations and constrained government revenue.

Economists Call for Immediate Relief

More than 120 prominent global economists have urged an immediate suspension of Sri Lanka’s external sovereign debt payments. They argue that the country cannot manage recovery costs while continuing heavy repayment obligations.

The group includes Nobel Prize winner Joseph Stiglitz, development economist Jayati Ghosh, inequality scholar Thomas Piketty, former Argentine economy minister Martín Guzmán, and author Kate Raworth.

Cyclone Damage Deepens Fiscal Stress

Cyclone Ditwah caused widespread destruction across the island. Over 600 people died, while hundreds of thousands of homes and key infrastructure were damaged.

Anura Kumara Dissanayake described the disaster as the most severe natural crisis in the country’s history. Economists warned that rebuilding costs could overwhelm existing fiscal buffers.

Debt Burden Remains Heavy

Sri Lanka restructured about US$9 billion in debt last year following its 2022 default. However, campaigners warned that the deal still left a heavy burden on taxpayers.

Before the cyclone, annual debt repayments were projected to absorb around 25% of government revenue. This level remains high by global standards.

IMF Programme Adds Pressure

The economists noted that Sri Lanka has already taken on additional borrowing from the International Monetary Fund. They warned that new loans to fund disaster recovery could further weaken debt sustainability. According to the group, the current restructuring does not reflect the scale of environmental damage now facing the economy.

Call for Fresh Restructuring

The economists called for a new debt restructuring to restore long-term sustainability. They urged creditors to recognise changed conditions following the disaster.

Research by Debt Justice showed that even after the 2024 deal, private creditors are set to earn significantly higher returns from Sri Lanka than from lending to advanced economies. The group warned that without debt relief, recovery efforts risk being delayed, increasing long-term economic and social costs.

IMF to release USD 350 million to Sri Lanka within two weeks

Sunday, December 21, 2025

காலநிலை அறிவிப்பு 21-12-2025 கலாநிதி நாகமுத்து பிரதீபராஜா

21.12.2025 ஞாயிற்றுக்கிழமை

இரவு 9.30 மணி

நீண்ட கால வானிலை முன்னறிவிப்பு

( ஜனவரி 2026 வரை )

வங்காள விரிகுடாவில் இலங்கைக்கு தென் கிழக்கு திசையில் உருவாகிய காற்றுச் சுழற்சி தற்போது மாலைதீவுகளுக்கு அருகாக நிலை கொண்டுள்ளது.
இதனால் கிழக்கு, ஊவா, சப்ரகமுவ, மத்திய, மற்றும் தென் மாகாணங்களுக்கு கிடைத்து வரும் மழை நாளை(22.12.2025) இரவு முதல் படிப்படியாக குறைவடையும் வாய்ப்புள்ளது.
⬛ எதிர்வரும் 28.12.2025 அன்று வங்காள விரிகுடாவில் இலங்கைக்கு தென் கிழக்கே புதிய காற்றுச் சுழற்சி ஒன்று உருவாகும் வாய்ப்புள்ளது.
இதன் காரணமாக மீண்டும் எதிர்வரும் 28.12.2025 முதல் வடக்கு மற்றும் கிழக்கு மாகாணங்களுக்கு மழை கிடைக்க தொடங்கும் என எதிர்பார்க்கப்படுகிறது. இந்த மழை எதிர்வரும் 07.01.2026 வரை தொடரும் வாய்ப்புள்ளது. ஆனால் இடையில் ஒரு சில நாட்கள் மழையற்ற நாட்களாக அமையும்.
அதேவேளை எதிர்வரும் 31.12.2025 முதல் மத்திய, ஊவா, வடமத்திய, தெற்கு, சப்ரகமுவ மாகாணங்களுக்கு மழை கிடைக்க தொடங்கும். இப்பிரதேசங்களுக்கும் மழை எதிர்வரும் 07.01.2026 வரை கிடைக்கும் என எதிர்பார்க்கப்படுகிறது.


மீண்டும் எதிர்வரும் 10.01.2026 முதல் 13.01.2026 வரை வடக்கு மற்றும் கிழக்கு மாகாணங்கள் உட்பட்ட நாட்டின் பல பகுதிகளுக்கும் பரவலாக மழை கிடைக்கும் வாய்ப்புள்ளது.
எதிர்வரும் 2026 ஜனவரி மாதத்தின் பெரும்பாலான நாட்கள் மழை நாட்களாக அமையும் என எதிர்பார்க்கப்படுகிறது.

தற்போது வடக்கு மற்றும் கிழக்கு மாகாணங்களில் நிலவும் குளிரான வானிலை எதிர்வரும் 26.12.2025 முதல் குறைவடையும் சாத்தியமுள்ளது.

விவசாயிகள் இந்த நாட்களைக் கருத்தில் கொண்டு தமது விவசாய நடவடிக்கைகளைத் திட்டமிடுவது சிறப்பானது.

இது ஒரு நீண்ட கால வானிலை முன்னறிவிப்பு என்பதனால் இதில் சில மாற்றங்கள் நிகழக்கூடும் என்பதை கருத்தில் கொள்ளவும்.
நாகமுத்து பிரதீபராஜா


2025.12.21 ඉරිදා රාත්රී 9.30
ශ්රී ලංකාවේ ගිනිකොන දෙසින් බෙංගාල බොක්කෙහි නිර්මාණය වී ඇති වායු සංසරණය දැනට මාලදිවයින අසල පිහිටා ඇත.
එහි ප්රතිඵලයක් ලෙස, නැගෙනහිර, ඌව, සබරගමුව, මධ්යම සහ දකුණු පළාත්වලට ලැබෙන වර්ෂාපතනය හෙට රාත්රියේ සිට ක්රමයෙන් අඩු වීමට ඉඩ ඇත.
2025.12.28 වන දින බෙංගාල බොක්කෙහි ශ්රී ලංකාවේ ගිනිකොන දෙසින් නව වායු සංසරණයක් ඇති වීමට ඉඩ ඇත.
මේ හේතුවෙන්, 2025.12.28 සිට උතුරු සහ නැගෙනහිර පළාත්වලට නැවත වැසි ලැබීම ආරම්භ වනු ඇතැයි අපේක්ෂා කෙරේ. මෙම වර්ෂාව 2026.01.07 දක්වා පවතිනු ඇත. නමුත් ඒ අතරතුර, වැසි රහිත දින කිහිපයක් පවතිනු ඇත.
මේ අතර, මධ්යම, ඌව, උතුරු-මැද, දකුණු සහ සබරගමුව පළාත්වලට 2025.12.31 සිට වැසි ලැබීම ආරම්භ වනු ඇත. මෙම ප්රදේශවලට 2026.01.07 දක්වා වැසි ලැබෙනු ඇතැයි අපේක්ෂා කෙරේ.
2026.01.10 සිට 2026.01.13 දක්වා උතුරු සහ නැගෙනහිර පළාත් ඇතුළුව දිවයිනේ බොහෝ ප්රදේශවල වැසි බහුලව ඇති වීමට ඉඩ ඇත.
උතුරු සහ නැගෙනහිර පළාත්වල දැනට පවතින සීතල කාලගුණය 2025.12.26 සිට අඩු වීමට ඉඩ ඇත.
ගොවීන් මෙම දින සලකා බලා තම කෘෂිකාර්මික කටයුතු සැලසුම් කිරීම සුදුසුය.
මෙය දිගුකාලීන කාලගුණ අනාවැකියක් වන අතර සමහර වෙනස්කම් සිදුවිය හැකි බව කරුණාවෙන් සලකන්න.
නාගමුතු ප්රතීපරාජා

Trump faces narrowing options on Venezuela action

Trump faces narrowing options on Venezuela action

The administration’s death toll from strikes on alleged drug boats crests 100 as it ratchets up a unilateral blockade of sanctioned Venezuelan oil tankers.

President Donald Trump stands to leave after a Cabinet meeting at the White House on Dec. 2. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

By Karen DeYoung  21-12-2025 The Washington Post

The day after President Donald Trump declared he had ended 94 percent of all seaborne drug trafficking to the United States and reduced illegal migrant border crossings to “zero,” he announced an entirely new rationale for his escalating campaign against Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.

Venezuela had stolen “Oil, Land and other Assets” from the United States to finance those criminal activities, Trump said Tuesday in a social media post, an apparent reference to decades-old expropriations and the breaking of contracts with U.S. oil companies when Caracas began nationalizing the industry.

Unless what he alleged was U.S. property was returned “IMMEDIATELY,” Trump said, the military juggernaut he has assembled in the Caribbean to blow up alleged traffickers and seize tankers transporting Venezuelan oil “will only get bigger, and the shock to them will be like nothing they have ever seen before.”

As Trump continues the boat strikes — now numbering 28, with at least 104 killed — and with the declaration of a “blockade” of all sanctioned vessels transporting Venezuelan oil, he has all but abandoned the public pretense that his goal is simply stopping migrants and drugs, rather than Maduro’s removal.

His “days are numbered,” Trump told Politico in an interview published Dec. 9. Asked Thursday whether he was leaving open the possibility of war with Venezuela, Trump told NBC: “I don’t rule it out, no.”

Maduro is the “indicted head of a cartel, now designated as a foreign terrorist organization,” said a person familiar with administration thinking, one of several individuals and former U.S. officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity to talk about internal deliberations. The administration named Maduro, already facing a 2020 U.S. indictment for drug trafficking, as the head of the designated Cartel de los Soles, a network of senior Venezuelan political and security officials it says is involved in human and drug trafficking to finance terrorist attacks in the United States.

“At the end of the day, that person is either going to stand trial or be given a chance to negotiate exile … in a third country,” the person said of the Venezuelan leader.


(AFP/Getty Images)

But with Maduro still sitting tight, Trump’s options seem to be narrowing rapidly.

In an emailed response to questions, White House deputy spokeswoman Anna Kelly said, “Nothing is ‘narrowing.’” Trump, she said, “has already taken decisive action to stop the illegal migrant invasion, deport violent criminals, and defend our homeland against evil narcoterrorists — which is saving countless lives across the country. President Trump retains all options to keep Americans safe.”

Airstrikes on land, which U.S. officials have said would probably target isolated encampments associated with cocaine trafficking or selected military assets and installations, are “going to start” happening, Trump said last week.

If that doesn’t work in persuading Maduro to flee, regional experts and former officials say, there are only two U.S. choices left — withdrawal or regime change by force.

The prospect of invasion and a military ground operation, with the possibility of American deaths, however, may be unpalatable to a president who has vowed “no more wars” and has thus far limited overseas military involvement to standoff strikes by air and sea.

“It’s conceivable to me that in a month, two months, the president … declares victory on grounds that maritime drug trafficking is way down,” Elliot Abrams, Trump’s first-term special envoy on Venezuela, said Tuesday on the “School of War” podcast. But “if Maduro survives and Trump walks away, it’s a defeat.”

While some in Congress have sharply opposed ongoing U.S. military action in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific without legislative approval, let alone a ground invasion of Venezuela, others have called on Trump to move more decisively.

“You cannot allow this man to remain standing after this show of force,” Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-South Carolina) said of Trump’s Caribbean deployment of 15,000 troops and dozens of warships and aircraft. Graham, a retired Air Force legal officer, spoke after a closed briefing Tuesday for Senators by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Secretary of State Marco Rubio on a controversial Sept. 2 airstrike that killed 11 people aboard an alleged trafficking boat — including two who initially survived and were hit again while flailing amid the wreckage.

“Is the goal to take him out?” Graham asked about Maduro, saying he hadn’t received answers from the administration. “If it’s not the goal … I think it’s a mistake.”


Tourists in Saint Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands, pose for a selfie Dec. 1 at the Charlotte Amalie overlook with the USS Gerald R. Ford aircraft carrier in the background. (Marco Bello/Reuters)

But as lawmakers continue to argue and the administration ups the ante, “the most interesting question is why is [Trump] doing all this at all,” Abrams said in an interview with The Washington Post.

Trump’s fixation on Venezuela melds a number of his own domestic political aims and the priorities of senior officials around him. The administration’s new National Security Strategy, which shifts U.S. focus to the Western Hemisphere, promises to reward countries that comply with “America First” policies and punish those that do not.

For Rubio — the son of Cuban immigrants who fled the island several years before the 1959 takeover by Fidel Castro and who made his political career in the anti-Castro cauldron of South Florida — the collapse of Cuba’s communist government has long been a prime goal.

Cuba’s economy has been propped up by Venezuela under Maduro and his predecessor, Hugo Chávez, through a steady supply of oil despite heavy U.S. sanctions. In addition to economic ties and ideological affinity, Maduro’s personal safety is said to be provided by elite Cuban security forces. Many think that the end of Venezuelan aid would be a death knell for the government in Havana.

“Rubio is the driving force behind the military buildup in Venezuela policy in the last several months, but he has not convinced the president yet to use military force,” said a second former official. Others, however, say it is Trump who wants to escalate.

For White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, the architect of Trump’s draconian anti-immigrant policy, the hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans who fled to the United States, during Trump’s first term and the Biden administration, provide an easy target. Miller has echoed Trump’s charges that most of the Venezuelans in the U.S. were sent by Maduro from prisons and mental institutions to terrorize and kill Americans.

Those sentiments contrast with Trump’s first term, when the flow of what eventually would be millions of fleeing Venezuelans spread across the hemisphere was viewed more sympathetically. Then-Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who traveled to the Venezuela-Colombia border to greet them in the spring of 2019, said they were escaping what he called the political and economic “horror” of Maduro’s corrupt and failing socialist economy and demanded they be allowed to leave.

At the time, Trump also said that “all options” were on the table to oust Maduro, charging that in addition to abusing his own people, he had stolen the 2018 election that gave him a second term in office and had formed U.S.-threatening alliances with Russia, China and Iran. Trump stepped up sanctions, sent U.S. warships to the Caribbean — although fewer than the current armada — and recognized legislative assembly leader Juan Guaidó as Venezuela’s legitimate president.

With Guaidó as his guest, Trump told Congress during his 2020 State of the Union address that Maduro was “a socialist dictator” and a “tyrant who brutalizes his people.” The amount of deadly fentanyl entering the country, primarily from China and Mexico, had begun to soar even before Trump took office, reaching its peak as the covid pandemic waned and beginning an ongoing decline, along with overdose deaths, in 2024, according to U.S. government figures.

During first-term debates in the Trump White House over what to do about Maduro, some advocated the use of military force to oust him, according to subsequent books by then-Defense Secretary Mark T. Esper, who opposed it, and national security adviser John Bolton, who supported it.

With his time in office winding down and Gen. Mark A. Milley, then chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and CIA Director Gina Haspel also advising against the use of force, according to Esper and others, Trump backed off.

The number of arriving Venezuelans, many crossing the border illegally, increased sharply under the Biden administration. Many were allowed to stay legally under a temporary protected status that recognized the economic and political hardships Trump himself had said was the reason for their flight.

Maduro, who reneged on agreements with the Biden administration to allow a fair election in 2024, was inaugurated for his third term in January, only 10 days before Trump was sworn in again. By then, Guaidó had long since faded from memory. A new opposition figure, María Corina Machado, came to the fore and — though barred by Maduro from running against him — led her party to a landslide win that was widely acknowledged to have been stolen.

Trump lost little time moving on his campaign promise to expel migrants and end opioid deaths, touting crime statistics he wildly inflated and blamed on former president Joe Biden. In one of his first second-term acts, he ordered the end of protected status for Venezuelans and other migrants, and began widespread deportations. Trump charged that Maduro controlled a Venezuelan gang, Tren de Aragua, and had sent it to the United States to wreak criminal havoc, allegations that were not supported by U.S. intelligence assessments.

Tren de Aragua and Cartel de los Soles are among roughly two dozen foreign organizations that the administration has designated, under a February Trump executive order, as “narcoterrorists.”

The Salvadoran megaprison, seen April 4, where alleged Tren de Aragua grand members were sent by the Trump administration. (Alex Peña/Getty Images)

By summer, despite some early attempts at negotiations with Maduro that included an offer to expand U.S. oil operations in Venezuela, Trump had opted for a military path. Though Venezuela is not a source of fentanyl and is a trafficker but not a producer of cocaine, according to U.S. law enforcement, pressure against Maduro was seen as a visible reminder to drug-producing countries such as Mexico and Colombia of the consequences of noncooperation.

Miller, current and former U.S. officials said, had first proposed striking Mexican cartels and traffickers as a way to stop drugs and migrants. But as the administration surged thousands of U.S. troops to the southern border and increased intelligence cooperation, Mexico began to curb cartel action. Miller and his team were left looking for another target.

The administration sent warships to the Caribbean, and on Sept. 2, Special Operations forces struck an alleged drug-smuggling boat carrying 11 men with missiles. It had come from Venezuela, Trump said without providing evidence, and was carrying “bags” of fentanyl and cocaine for Tren de Aragua. The United States, he told Congress that month, was in an “armed conflict” with terrorists.

On Dec. 10, U.S. forces in the Caribbean seized an oil tanker, the Skipper, that had just filled up in Venezuela and was headed to Asia. The ship, already under U.S. sanctions for carrying illegal Iranian oil, was to be hauled to a Texas port. Asked by reporters what would happen to the oil, Trump said, “Well, we keep it, I guess.”

On Saturday, the Department of Homeland Security said a second vessel carrying Venezuelan oil in the Caribbean had been “seized” in a joint operation by the Coast Guard and Defense Department. That ship, the Centuries, was not under U.S. sanctions and it was unclear whether it had merely been boarded by U.S. forces or taken under their control.

Ellen Nakashima contributed to this report.

Thursday, December 18, 2025

Washington now ‘largely aligns’ with Moscow’s vision, Kremlin says

Washington now ‘largely aligns’ with Moscow’s vision, Kremlin says

Tension between the United States and Ukraine, laid bare in the Oval Office meeting of Trump and Zelensky, is seen in Moscow as a “gift.”

March 2, 2025 


Nikolskaya Tower, the Historical Museum and the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour in Moscow. (Yuri Kochetkov/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock)

By Francesca Ebel

MOSCOW — The Trump administration’s rewrite of decades of U.S. foreign policy on Russia, laid bare in the Oval Office confrontation between President Donald Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, is bringing Washington into alignment with Moscow, the Kremlin said Sunday — a shift that could upend the geopolitics that have governed international relations since World War II.

“The new administration is rapidly changing all foreign policy configurations,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said, state television reported Sunday. “This largely aligns with our vision.”

Moscow’s vision, which has focused on a push to reclaim influence over much or all of the former Soviet Union and defeat liberal democracy, has made Russia a pariah to the West. The United States has given over a hundred billion dollars in arms and aid to Ukraine since Russia’s unprovoked invasion in 2022. Washington led allies in imposing new sanctions on Moscow; the International Criminal Court issued a warrant against Russian President Vladimir Putin on charges of war crimes.

But on Sunday, as European leaders rallied behind Zelensky in London, Peskov said the administration’s new approach could herald a new thaw between Washington and Moscow.

“There is a long way to go because a lot of damage has been done to the whole complex of bilateral relations,” he said. “But if the political will of the two leaders, President Putin and President Trump, is maintained, this path can be quite quick and successful.”

The Oval Office blowup last week, in which Vice President JD Vance accused Zelensky of insufficient gratitude for U.S. support and Trump warned that his refusal to compromise with Putin was “gambling with World War III,” has been seen here as a “gift” to the Kremlin.

President Donald Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky meet in the Oval Office at the White House on Friday. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)

Putin has long worked to drive wedges between the United States and its allies. On Friday, Trump echoed his accusations that Zelensky was obstructing peace efforts.

The performance stunned Russian leaders. Kirill Dmitriev, the chief of Russia’s sovereign wealth fund and a lead negotiator in preliminary U.S.-Russia talks, called it “historic.” Propagandist Margarita Simonyan, the editor of Russia Today, wrote that “the Oval Office has seen a lot, but never this.”

Others were gleeful. Former president Dmitry Medvedev gloated over the “proper slap down” of “the insolent pig” Zelensky, and Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova marveled at Trump and Vance’s “restraint” in not punching him in the face. Zelensky’s “outrageously boorish behavior,” she wrote, “confirmed that he is the most dangerous threat to the world community.”

The meeting fit Russia’s narrative perfectly, Konstantin Remchukov, the well-connected editor of Nezavisimaya Gazeta, told The Washington Post.

“We don’t even have to step in — we can just retransmit what the Americans are saying,” Remchukov said. He noted that Putin had “smartly” withheld comment on the meeting, and could afford to stay silent for now.

“The public will conclude that our leaders were correct in their assessment of Zelensky as a leader of Ukraine,” Remchukov said. “This is a huge gift for them.”

But amid the official euphoria lies a degree of caution. Many here are waiting to see results, and are tempering expectations.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio, second from left, meets with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, right, and other U.S., Russian and Saudi officials at Diriyah Palace in Riyadh on Feb. 18. (Evelyn Hockstein/AP)

The United States and Russia last month held their first talks since the Russian invasion of Ukraine. After the meetings in Saudi Arabia wrapped up, Secretary of State Marco Rubio extolled the “potentially historic economic partnerships” that Washington and Moscow could seize once the war was over. Trump has since spoken of “trying to do some economic development deals” with Moscow. Putin has signaled that Russia is open to economic cooperation, including in developing the Arctic and mining rare earth minerals.

A senior Kremlin official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive matters, told The Post that Moscow had been astonished by the “tremendous change” since Trump’s inauguration and welcomed his “pragmatic, rather than enemy-like approach.” But he warned that such deals were “potential possibilities rather than imminent plans.”

“Trump has said that America will be potentially ready to talk about lifting sanctions,” he said. “But only after the peace settlement.”

The head of state-owned banking giant Sberbank, a close associate of Putin, said he did not anticipate a swift end to Western sanctions.

“We’re working from a scenario in which no sanctions are lifted and, more likely, they are toughened,” German Gref told reporters Thursday. Trump last week extended U.S. sanctions against Russia for another year.

A Russian academic close to senior Russian diplomats told The Post that the Foreign Ministry is currently split between those who won’t ever trust the Americans and those who see “a historic opportunity to restore dialogue, quickly prepare a summit and get results.” The academic spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive matter.

Not everyone here is ready to celebrate the thaw.

“Trump apparently has decided to be friends with Putin no matter what, and this will not lead to anything good,” said Vlad, a 23-year-old human rights lawyer. Like many interviewed for this article, he spoke on the condition of anonymity out of concern for reprisals.

“Personally, I find this terrible,” he said. “It is more confirmation for Putin that he can do whatever he wants.”

Remchukov, the editor, said officials are conscious that the U.S. midterm elections next year could mean that the chance to end the war on terms favorable to Russia is fleeting.

“At the top [of government] I have not seen anyone who is too optimistic about ending the conflict,” he said. “Even though Trump’s position seems anti-Zelensky, nobody thinks he is pro-Russian entirely — or for good.”

The major reaction within the government that is not transmitted publicly, he said, is that Russia should be prepared to keep fighting.

“Things are continuing seriously, furiously, mercilessly,” he said. “The main task for the Russian authorities is to blow away the euphoria that may have overcome those in the trenches, and the hope that soon there will be peace after Trump’s promises — and tell them that they need to get ready for a hard job,” he said.

Russian military bloggers this weekend heralded the coming spring.

“It will soon get warmer, green shoots will begin to emerge, and it will become a little easier to fight,” one wrote on Telegram. “For the youth of Ukraine, I have bad news: You will soon be sent to the front … and we will tighten our belts and continue to fight.”

Supporters of the late opposition leader Alexei Navalny gathered over the weekend at his gravesite in the Moscow suburb of Marino to mark the first anniversary of his funeral. Navalny, regarded by many as Russia’s last democratic hope, died unexpectedly in an Arctic prison colony last year in what family and supporters have called a state-sponsored execution.

On Sunday, a handful of people wept, hung their heads in solemn silence and lit candles. Some expressed doubt about a meaningful change in U.S.-Russian relations or an imminent end to the conflict with Ukraine.

“Trump is so unpredictable,” said Svetlana, 59, who had come to the grave to lay some white carnations.

Others said Zelensky had carried himself “with dignity,” and that they were waiting to see what came of European security summits.

“I don’t see this war ending while Putin is still in power,” said Alexei, 29. “Putin wanted to take Kyiv in three days, and now Trump wants peace in a day. But look where we are, three years in. … Our losses are gigantic. I do not see a quick or easy way out of this.”

Catherine Belton in London contributed to this report.





















காலநிலை அறிவிப்பு 18-12-2025 கலாநிதி நா.பிரதீபராஜா

 18.12.2025 வியாழக்கிழமை இரவு 8.00 மணி.

விழிப்பூட்டும் முன்னெச்சரிக்கை!

வங்காள விரிகுடாவில் இலங்கைக்கு தென்கிழக்காக உருவாகிய காற்றுச் சுழற்சி மேற்கு வட மேற்கு திசை நோக்கி நகர்ந்து தற்போது இலங்கைக்கு தெற்கு தென்மேற்கு திசையில் நிலை கொண்டுள்ளது.

இதன் நகர்வு வேகம் எதிர்பார்த்ததை விட குறைவாகவே உள்ளது. இதன் நகர்வு வேகம் குறைவென்பதால் அது மழைவீழ்ச்சி நாட்களை நீடிக்கும் என எதிர்பார்க்கப்படுகிறது.
அதேபோல இலங்கையின் தென்பகுதியில் ஒரு வளிமண்டல உறுதியற்ற தன்மையும் நீடிக்கின்றது.
இதன் காரணமாக மட்டக்களப்பு, அம்பாறை, கண்டி, மாத்தளை, நுவரெலியா, பதுளை, பொலன்னறுவை, அனுராதபுரம், இரத்தினபுரி, கேகாலை, காலி, மாத்தறை, அம்பாந்தோட்டை மற்றும் மொனராகலை மாவட்டங்களுக்கு எதிர்வரும் 20ம் திகதி இரவு வரை கனமான மழை கிடைக்கும் வாய்ப்புள்ளது.
நாளை முதல் (19.12.2025) வடக்கு மாகாணத்திற்கு மழை படிப்படியாக குறைவடையும் என எதிர்பார்க்கப்படுகின்றது.
1. தொடர்ச்சியாக மழை கிடைத்து வருவதாலும்;
2. கனமான மழை கிடைத்து மண் முழு ஈரக் கொள்ளளவை எட்டியுள்ளதாலும்;
3. கொத்மலை, விக்டோரியா, ரந்தெனிகல, ரந்தெம்ப போன்ற நீர்த்தேக்கங்கள் வான் பாய்வதாலும்;
4. மகாவலி, மாதுறு ஓயா, கல்லோயா, போன்ற ஆறுகள் அவற்றின் முழுக்கொள்ளளவோடு பாய்வதாலும்;
5. காற்றுச்சுழற்சி இலங்கைக்கு தெற்கு தென்மேற்கு திசையில் நிலை கொண்டிருப்பதனாலும்;
6. இலங்கையின் தென்பகுதியில் நிலவும் வளிமண்டல உறுதியற்ற தன்மையினாலும், குறிப்பாக இரத்தினபுரிக்கும் மாத்தறைக்கும் இடையிலேயே இரண்டு மில்லிபார் அமுக்க வேறுபாடு உள்ளமையினாலும்;
நுவரெலியா, கண்டி, மாத்தளை, பதுளை மற்றும் கேகாலை மாவட்டங்களில் கனமழையோடு இணைந்த நிலச்சரிவு அனர்த்தங்களுக்கான வாய்ப்புக்கள் அதிகமாக உள்ளன.
எனவே அன்புக்குரிய மலையக உறவுகள் நிலச்சரிவு தொடர்பில் மிக மிக எச்சரிக்கையாகவும் அவதானமாகவும் இருப்பது அவசியமானதாகும்.
மழை எதிர்வரும் 20.12.2025 அன்று இரவு முதல் படிப்படியாக குறைவடைந்தாலும் நிலச்சரிவு அபாயம் எதிர்வரும் 23.12.2025 வரை நீடிக்கும் என்பதனை நினைவில் கொள்ளுங்கள்.
அதேவேளை

1. மகாவலி, மாதுறு ஓயா, கல்லோயா போன்றன அதிக நீரை கொண்டு வருவதாலும்;
2. ஏனைய சிறிய மற்றும் நடுத்தர ஆறுகளின் நீரேந்து பிரதேசங்களான பொலன்னறுவை, கண்டி, போன்ற பிரதேசங்களில் தொடர்ந்து மழை கிடைத்து வருவதாலும்;
3. கிழக்கு மாகாணத்தில் குறிப்பாக மட்டக்களப்பு மற்றும் அம்பாறை மாவட்டங்களின் பல பகுதிகளுக்கும் மழை தொடர்ந்து கிடைத்து வருவதாலும்;
4. கிழக்கு மாகாணத்திற்கு எதிர்வரும் 20ம் திகதி இரவு வரை மழை கிடைக்கும் என்பதனாலும்;
கிழக்கு மாகாணத்தின் தாழ்நிலப் பகுதிகளில் வெள்ள அனர்த்தத்தை உருவாக்கும் வாய்ப்புள்ளது. திருகோணமலை மாவட்டத்திற்கு மழை குறைவாக இருந்தாலும் மகாவலி கங்கையின் நீர் மட்டம் அதிகரித்துள்ளமை குறிப்பிடத்தக்கது.
ஆகவே கிழக்கு மாகாணத்தின் தாழ்நிலப் பகுதிகளில் உள்ள மக்களும், மகாவலி, கல்லோயா, மாதுறு ஓயா, முந்தெனியாறு, நவகிரி ஆறு போன்றவற்றின் கரையோரப்பகுதிளில் உள்ள மக்களும் வெள்ள அபாயம் தொடர்பாக அவதானமாக இருப்பது சிறந்தது.
அதேவேளை நாளை முதல் (19.12.2025- வடக்கின் சில பகுதிகளுக்கு இன்றிலிருந்து) குளிர் அதிகரிக்கும் என்பதோடு இந்த குளிரான வானிலை 27 ஆம் தேதி வரைக்கும் தொடரும் என எதிர்பார்க்கப்படுகின்றது.
  • நாகமுத்து பிரதீபராஜா

Can Maduro survive Trump's oil blockade?

Can Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro survive Donald Trump’s oil blockade?

US president is unlikely to oust long-ruling Caracas strongman without military muscle, experts say

 
Venezuela’s leader Nicolás Maduro faces his biggest challenge yet after US President Donald Trump announced a blockade of the South American nation’s sanctioned oil exports, but Washington will probably need military action to oust the long-ruling autocrat, experts said. 
 
Trump declared Maduro’s revolutionary socialist government a foreign terrorist organisation on Tuesday and vowed “a total and complete blockade” of oil tankers subject to US sanctions heading to or from Venezuela. 

To enforce it, he pointed to US warships in the Caribbean, calling the deployment the “largest armada ever assembled in the history of South America”. 
 
Trump’s latest move followed a dramatic raid by US forces last week to storm and seize a tanker off the Venezuelan coast carrying oil valued at about $100mn, part of which was for Maduro’s ally Cuba.  

“We’re not going to let anybody going through that shouldn’t be going through,” Trump said on Wednesday. In an apparent reference to the nationalisation of Venezuela’s oil industry by Maduro’s predecessor Hugo Chávez, Trump added: “They took all of our energy rights. They took all of our oil from not that long ago, and we want it back”. 
 
Other oil tankers heading for Venezuela have turned around mid-voyage, and vessels waiting to leave its waters have delayed their departure, ship-tracking companies reported. 


US forces seized a large oil tanker off the coast of Venezuela last week © US Attorney General Pam Bondi’s X account/AFP/Getty Images 

Roughly 11 per cent of American warships deployed globally were in the Caribbean as of December 15, according to a fleet tracker from the US Naval Institute. US forces have blown up more than 20 speedboats that Washington says are smuggling drugs, and have buzzed the Venezuelan coastline with bombers and fighters. 

Trump’s chief of staff Susie Wiles said in an interview with Vanity Fair published this week that the president “wants to keep on blowing boats up until Maduro cries ‘uncle’” — a comment widely interpreted to mean that regime change is the US president’s real objective. 

On Wednesday, the House of Representatives narrowly defeated two Democratic-led resolutions that would have required Congress to authorise Trump’s Caribbean campaign, one covering the boat strikes and the other “hostilities within or against Venezuela”. 
 
Edward Fishman, a former US official and author of Chokepoints, a book on economic sanctions, said Trump’s latest move marked a fundamental change of strategy. 

“Enforcing a naval blockade and interdicting most, if not all, of Venezuela’s oil cargos, that strikes me as an act of war,” he said. A blockade “is typically a prelude to war, this is not a tool of statecraft”. 

Venezuela’s bond prices have jumped as investors price in a higher chance that Maduro may fall. Daniel Lansberg-Rodríguez at Aurora Macro Strategies, an advisory firm, said the Trump administration had “got Maduro more off-balance” than ever. 

Still, he added: “Maduro’s sitting on a giant pile of damp gunpowder. You’re just making the pile that much bigger. But sooner or later you need something to ignite it. I don’t think this ignites it.” 

Maduro survived sanctions, including on Petróleos de Venezuela SA (PDVSA), Venezuela’s state oil company, imposed during the first Trump administration and still has a few lifelines. 

Some oil is still flowing. Chevron, which accounts for about a quarter of Venezuela’s 1mn barrels a day of oil production, still has a licence to pump and sell oil. The company said its operations in Venezuela “continue without disruption and in full compliance with laws and regulations applicable to its business, as well as the sanctions frameworks provided for by the US government”. 

Nor are all tankers carrying Venezuelan oil subject to US sanctions, though officials are working to add more to the list maintained by the US Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control. Samir Madani, chief executive of tracking website TankerTrackers.com, estimated that 60 per cent of the “dark fleet” operated with Russian and Iranian help was not yet on the list. 

 “A few tankers turned around in both the Indian and Atlantic Oceans but many more are still under way because it seems unlikely that the United States will go after any vessels that aren’t on the Ofac list,” Madani said. 

One question is how long Venezuela can continue oil production if exports are blocked. PDVSA said in a statement on Wednesday that crude exports “are continuing as normal” but a source in the company was less optimistic. 

“We have an onshore storage capacity of approximately five days and in the best-case scenario, with an additional seven days at sea, depending on the operability of our fleet,” said the person, who was not authorised to speak to the media. Guillermo Arcay, research fellow at the Harvard Growth Lab, said PDVSA would probably build up large inventories before having to halt production because of a lack of the imported petrochemicals needed to thin its heavy crude. 

A tanker carrying Russian naphtha, a diluent, turned around last week, according to trade intelligence company Kpler, although two vessels carrying the substance docked in Venezuela on December 13 and 14. 
 
Beyond oil, Maduro also has other sources of hard currency that do not appear in Venezuela’s official statistics. Illegal gold mining, drug smuggling on planes and contraband all generate dollars that help sustain the loyalty of the regime’s enforcers in the military and the security police. 

But the US has already warned airlines against operating in Venezuelan airspace because of heightened risks from military activity. 

In Caracas, Maduro’s regime is maintaining a defiant stance. 
But in the streets, the bolívar is devaluing faster than ever and dollars are scarce, while economists say inflation is heading for more than 500 per cent this year. And while Cuba has held out against US economic sanctions for more than 60 years, there are important differences.  

Venezuela’s population is nearly three times bigger and its regime-friendly elites have grown accustomed to a much higher standard of living than Cuba’s revolutionaries. 

Havana remains Maduro’s most important and reliable ally — supplying his personal bodyguard and counter-intelligence officers — but other international allies, Russia, Iran and China have not offered strong support. 

Trump’s oil blockade was “not only a game-changer for the Maduro administration, which now faces becoming completely bankrupt, but is also important for the enforcement of US sanctions”, said Christopher Sabatini, a Latin America expert at Chatham House. 

“I can’t see how Maduro makes up this huge gap in revenues with gold, drugs and money laundering.” 

But given that the “Bolivarian Revolution” started by Chávez has survived for a quarter of a century, few are willing to bet on the Venezuelan regime collapsing without US military pressure — something Trump may be reluctant to use. Recommended Francisco Rodríguez Trump needs an off-ramp in Venezuela A former US official said Trump wanted “maximum optics and minimum risk” with his Venezuela policy, but added: “The risk increases significantly if they do a regime change operation.” 

Fishman, the sanctions expert, said military pressure was the key to ousting Maduro. “Regime change is not a viable goal for sanctions,” he said. “There are very few examples in history where non-violent economic pressure led to regime change . . . But when the US has sought to use military force to change regimes, whether it’s Afghanistan or Iraq, they’ve done it. The harder part is: can you then control the aftermath?” 

Additional reporting by James Politi in Washington and Ana Rodríguez Brazón in Caracas

Wednesday, December 17, 2025

Winter storms worsen Gaza

Winter storms worsen Gaza humanitarian crisis as UN says aid still blocked

The roof of a war-damaged family home collapses during winter storm in Gaza City’s Shati refugee camp. 



Winter storms are worsening conditions for hundreds of thousands of displaced Palestinians in Gaza, as aid agencies warn that Israeli restrictions are preventing lifesaving shelter assistance from reaching people across the besieged enclave.

The United Nations has said it has tents, blankets and other essential supplies ready to enter Gaza, but that Israeli authorities continue to block or restrict access through border crossings.


In Gaza City’s Shati refugee camp, the roof of a war-damaged family home collapsed during the storm, rescue workers said on Wednesday. Six Palestinians, including two children, were pulled alive from the rubble.

It comes after Gaza’s Ministry of Health said a two-week-old Palestinian infant froze to death, highlighting the risks faced by young and elderly people living in inadequate shelters.

A spokesperson for UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said the storms had damaged or destroyed shelters and personal belongings across the territory.

“The disruption has affected approximately 30,000 children across Gaza. Urgent repairs are needed to ensure these activities can resume without delay,” Farhan Haq said.

The Palestinian Civil Defence in Gaza added in a statement that “what we are experiencing now in the Gaza Strip is a true humanitarian catastrophe”.


Ceasefire talks and aid access

The worsening humanitarian situation comes as Qatar’s Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman bin Jassim Al Thani held talks in Washington, DC, with United States Secretary of State Marco Rubio on efforts to stabilise the tenuous ceasefire in Gaza.

According to Qatari officials, the talks focused on Qatar’s role as a mediator, the urgent need for aid to enter Gaza, and moving negotiations towards the second stage of a US-backed plan to end Israel’s genocidal war against the Palestinian people in Gaza.

Al Jazeera’s Alan Fisher, reporting from Washington, said Sheikh Mohammed stressed that humanitarian assistance must be allowed into Gaza “unconditionally”.

“He said aid has to be taken into Gaza unconditionally, clearly making reference to the fact that a number of aid agencies have said that Israel is blocking the access to aid for millions of people in Gaza,” Fisher said.


The Qatari prime minister also discussed the possibility of an international stabilisation force to be deployed in Gaza after the war, saying such a force should act impartially.

“There has been a lot of talk in the US over the past couple of weeks about how this force would work towards the disarmament of Hamas,” Fisher said.

Sheikh Mohammed also called for swift progress towards the second phase of the ceasefire agreement.

“He said that stage two of the ceasefire deal has to be moved to pretty quickly,” Fisher said, adding that US officials were hoping to announce early in the new year which countries would contribute troops to a stabilisation force.


Israeli attacks continue

Meanwhile, violence continued in Gaza despite the ceasefire, with at least 11 Palestinians wounded in Israeli attacks in central Gaza City, according to medical sources.

The Israeli army said it is investigating after a mortar shell fired near Gaza’s so-called yellow line “missed its target”.

Al Jazeera journalists in Gaza reported Israeli artillery shelling east of the southern city of Khan Younis. Medical sources said Israeli gunfire also wounded two people in the Tuffah neighbourhood of eastern Gaza City.

In the occupied West Bank, where Israeli military and settler attacks have escalated in recent days, Palestinian news agency Wafa reported that Israeli troops shot and wounded a man in his 20s in the foot in Qalqilya. He was taken to hospital and is reported to be in stable condition.

Since October 2023, at least 70,668 Palestinians have been killed and 171,152 wounded in Israeli attacks on Gaza, according to Palestinian health authorities. In Israel, 1,139 people were killed during the Hamas-led October 7 attack, and more than 200 others were taken captive.

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 டிட்வா மலையக அனர்த்தம்- அம்பாறை மாவட்டத்தில் உதவி நிவாரணம். டிட்வா சூறாவளியால் பாதிக்கப்பட்ட மலையக மக்களுக்காக அம்பாறை மாவட்டத்திலிருந்து ந...