Tamil Affairs

Tamil News

Latest news from and about the homeland

Côte-des-Neiges-Notre-Dame-de-Grâce, a borough in Montreal, has passed a motion recognising May 18 as Tamil Genocide Remembrance Day.  The motion comes as the Tamil nation marks 16 years since the genocide at Mullivaikkal, where an estimated 169,796 people were killed by the Sri Lankan army in the final days of the armed conflict.  Tamil activist Subitha Tharmakulasagaram said the…

Where will India's aid go?

A 65 acre industrial estate in Atchuvely is to be developed bilaterally through a partnership between the Sri Lankan government and the Indian government, the Daily Mirror reported .

This is part of a range of activities Delhi is initiating to develop the war-shattered Tamil areas of the island.

Nationalization by stealth

The current Sri Lankan government made it clear from the start that it was opposed to the privatization of government owned enterprises. “The policy of the government was to retain ownership and management of ‘strategic’ enterprises such as state banks, electricity and utilities and make them profitable”, reported the Sunday Times, commenting on the government stance.

That making public enterprises profitable has been a difficult – if not impossible – task in the past has not stopped the government trying. As the Sunday Times report noted, “losses in public enterprises reached a record level last year and this year’s losses are likely to be larger”. But now the government has extended the policy further, moving from holding on to state enterprises to actively acquiring (privatizing) other ‘strategic’ enterprises to ‘manage them in the national interest’.

Shell quits Sri Lanka gas business amid state price control

Sri Lanka’s government is buying back Royal Dutch Shell's stake in the part privatized gas company, Shell Gas Lanka. Shell’s decision to sell follows long running quarrels with the Government over the price at which the company could sell gas in the country. The $63 million sale returns the LP gas business in Sri Lanka to 100% state ownership.

President Mahinda Rajapakse’s populist government had been at loggerheads with the oil and gas giant over the price at which gas is sold: the government has been insisting gas be sold at less than international market prices.

Corrupt or not?

Transparency International (TI) has released its report for 2010. With a score of 3.2 points Sri Lanka is ranked 91 out of 178 countries, up from 97th position last year. Of interest is how the news was reported.

Profiting from Northeast disinvestment

The Sri Lankan mobile operator Dialog Axiata made a net profit of 1.69 billion rupees in the September 2010 quarter compared with a loss of 439 million rupees a year ago, Lanka Business Online reported.  While this was partially due to cost cutting, the main driver was a huge increase in sales (16.2% or 10.56 billion rupees) and the main area in which sales have increased is mobile – both phones and broadband, according to the report.

PR and development

Sri Lanka’s fees for UK public relations firm Bell Pottinger (£3m) is greater than the amount pledged for development in Jaffna (£2.85m), the Sri Lanka Guardian reported today. The amount pledged for Jaffna, moreover, is uncertain to be followed through.

Stocks: foreign investors sell, state buys

Whilst Sri Lanka makes much of Colombo’s soaring stock market, trading figures show foreign investors are systematically exiting the island's market. Foreign investors have so far this year sold a net 23 billion rupees' ($200m) worth of shares, Reuters reported Monday.

Moreover, the main stock index (CSE) is being pushed up by state-owned funds.

Watts passes to Indian group

An Indian conglomerate has  completed the acquisition of Watts Lanka PvT, a solid industrial tyres manufacturing company in Sri Lanka owned by European partners, trade press reported. Sun Tyre & Wheel Systems, part of the $6 billion TVS Group of India bought Watts Lanka (which will be renamed shortly), which was a joint venture between Watts Tyres Limited of Britain and KVK Invest JSC of Bulgaria.

Sri Lanka's military budget is 100 times that of resettlement

A year and a half since declaring victory over the Liberation Tigers, Sri Lanka’s proposed military expenditure for next year (almost $2bn) is an increase of 20% over 2009's and will dwarf the proposed budget for resettlement ($16m).

Meanwhile, the development budget is $680m, according to figures reported in the state media.