Cinnamon Air Terminal at Katunayake and Internal Air Travel Facilities

Courtesy of Sunday Island, 28 October 2013

Cinnamon Air Terminal at BIAarticle_image

President Mahinda Rajapaksa will today open the first domestic  air terminal at the Bandaranaike International Airport at Katunayake following  the inauguration of the new Katunayake Expressway. This new terminal has been developed by Cinnamon Air, the USD 10  million domestic airline jointly owned by JKH (40%), Mercantile Merchant Bank  (31%) and Phoenix Ventures, the holding company of Brandix holding the balance  29%. The airline has been in operation since July with daily scheduled flights  to tourist destinations within the island. Continue reading

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A Canadian’s pinpoint gripe hits nail on the head

The Canadian Revenue Agency returned the Tax Return to a man in Canada after he apparently answered one of the questions incorrectly.

In response to the question, … “Do you have anyone dependent on you ?”

The man wrote: … “2.1 million illegal immigrants, 1.1 million crackheads,4.4 million unemployable scroungers, 80,000 criminals in over 85 prisons plus 650 idiots in Parliament and the entire group that call themselves Politiciansparliament of baboons 33 PARLIAMENT OF BABOONS“.

The CRA stated that the response he gave was unacceptable.

The man’s response back to the CRA was, … Who did I leave out ?”

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Footprints In The Sands … of Sri Lanka

A Poem coined by a famous Peradeniya honker turned Catholic priest

Politics in Lanka is a dirty game

Sans sense of honesty, honour or shame.

On election-campaigns that squander millions,

When in power, make illicit billions.

Full of corruption, nepotism, crime,

They leave no footprints in the sands of time,

Self-seeking, self-serving, power-drunk quacks,

Cover up their crab-like, crooked tracks. Continue reading

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Nira Wickramasinghe, historian and Professor at Leiden; her interests and output

nira wickramasinghe 1 Nira Wickramasinghe nee Samarasinghe was educated in France, and Oxford University and taught at the Dept of History, Colombo University before she snared the prestigious post of Professor of Modern South Asian Studies at the Leiden University Institute for Area Studies — a new position facilitated in part by the Leiden University Fund (LUF) and designed to provide a contribution to this field for a period of five years in the form of the LUF Chair.

For her profile NIRA says : “My primary interests are identity politics, everyday life under colonialism and the relationship between state and society in modern South Asia. I have pursued these interests through investigation into such diverse themes as politics of dress, civil society, citizens and migrants, and objects of consumption. Trained as a historian, I have written on late colonial and modern Sri Lanka, using a variety of archives. In the last few years, my work has moved from a focus on national history albeit from a non-state perspective to an approach that contests the nation as a frame and attempts to capture other dimensions of belonging which might be best encapsulated in the term ‘‘post-national’’. I am currently working on a book on ordinary peoples’ encounter with the ‘‘modern’’ using as a lens machines such as the sewing machine, gramophone, tram and bicycle. In addition to my research and teaching I intervene regularly in public debates and contribute essays and op.eds to Opendemocracy and the Wall Street Journal.” Continue reading

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Bernardo Brown registers with IIAS

BERNARDOHis biographical note: “I am an anthropologist of South Asia specialized in the culture and history of Catholic Sri Lanka. The project I am currently working on is a multi-sited ethnography of Catholic clergy who travel between Sri Lanka and Italy. In particular, my research is interested in the forms of religiosity that emerge in transnational contexts and the encounter of different world Christian traditions.

DSC_0690 Pic By Mangala

South Asian priests – who are appointed to serve the needs of Catholics working in Europe – are presented with a number of theological and cultural questions that challenge the traditional roles and expectations of clergy in Sri Lanka. Furthermore, problems that arise when Christian traditions from different geographic origins intersect, cease to be the exclusive concern of theologically oriented debates and become an issue of everyday interest to Catholic laity. With transnational migration, Catholics from diverse national, ethnic and racial origins, are required share religious rituals, festivities and places of worship with people who otherwise they would not engage with in such intimate interactions. Continue reading

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Straight Talking: confrontational advice for the Rajapaksas and the TNA

Muttukrishna Sarvananthan

Northern People Humble the People’s Dynasty”: I salute the people of the Northern Province for showing the door to the self-proclaimed “People’s Dynasty”; the only province in the country to do so, which is a glimmer of hope for re-establishment of democracy in the country. Although I am not a fan of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA), I wholeheartedly welcome its landslide win in the Northern Provincial Council (NPC) elections as a symbolic defeat of corruption, crime, cronyism, militarism, and nepotism of the Rajapaksa regime. Continue reading

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Michael Clarke packed into Packer’s Crown Sri Lanka Project

Courtesy of the Island, 21 October 2013

CROWN CASINOIt is intended that the integrated resort, to be branded “Crown Sri Lanka”, will be a “must-see” landmark tourist resort located by the side of the Beira Lake in the heart of the Colombo resort district. Crown Sri Lanka is intended to be contemporary and iconic in design and will provide a luxury resort experience that the Crown brand is renowned for throughout Asia. The proposed Crown Sri Lanka Resort will be a facility with approximately 450 rooms and suites, signature dining experiences and entertainment offerings, conferencing and event spaces, gaming areas, retail outlets and a specially designed water feature attraction on the Beira Lake. Continue reading

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Major human smuggling money and data haul in East?

from Ceylon Today, http://www.ceylontoday.lk/16-45296-news-detail-rs-400-m-found-in-suspect-human-smugglers-accounts.html

Rs 400 M found in suspect human smuggler’s accounts

Police investigations have traced Rs 400 million deposited in the bank accounts of a key suspect, believed to be the mastermind behind the spree of boat people setting sail to Australia. The suspect, a prominent businessman of Trincomalee, was earlier arrested in the East and is currently being held under detention orders.

The suspect is alleged to be the mastermind of a multi-million rupee human smuggling racket and is believed to have sent several boat loads of people to Australia. According to the police, illegal migrants were asked to pay Rs 200,000 as down payment and another Rs 800,000 when they board the boat to Australia.

Thirty one suspects have been arrested by the CID. The Department has obtained detention orders against 27 suspects and has filed applications in the Court, seeking detention orders against four other suspects. The CID has also sought the permission of the Court to investigate the bank accounts of suspects.

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Ian Botham beefed down for charity & reconciliation walk across Lanka — north to south

Ian Botham interview in the Daily Mirror, UK … courtesy of the Daily News, 18 October 2019

I tipped 5-0 at home and 5-0 away, and we only just missed out on part one — so why should I change my prediction now? My toughest winter yet is almost upon me. But by the time I’ve finished another epic walk, this time in Sri Lanka, I will be able to smile in the knowledge that the Aussies will still have their own toughest test to face — and I’d rather be in my shoes. It is in those shoes that I will be pounding around one of the most beautiful islands in the world in 30 degrees-plus heat, in humidity that hovers around 98 per cent, all for a brilliant cause. Continue reading

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A Visit to Mannar: Bi-lingual Speeches and the Desire for a Bi-lingual National Anthem

Jehan Perera,  The Island, 15 October 2013, where the title is Desire to engage by those who cannot sing national anthem”

There is an invigoration of civil society in the North after the holding of the Northern Provincial Council elections.  For the first time ever since the end of the colonial period there is the sense of having a government that is their own.  There are doubts expressed by some sections in the rest of the country that this political empowerment could lead to the strengthening of separatist sentiment.  Sections within the government itself have expressed their concerns.  However, when I visited Mannar in the North last week, the impression I received was of a people who celebrate being part of the larger national polity. Continue reading

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