Covid Control In Sri Lanka – The Needs of the Hour Are Vaccinations , Compliance With Health Advice and Stopping The Super Spreader Uthgoshanas, If Necessary. Invoking Emergency Regulations.

August 10th, 2021

Dr. Chula Rajapakse FRACP/FRCP  MNZM

A podcast  today from a front line doctor involved in Covid Control in Sri Lanka ,ended with call to seeing and staying positive

I agree with this doctor that a most important requirement  for Covid contra in SL was staying positive.


Sadly, the biggest impediment  to this as I see it are the politicians, social media and rumor mill that exaggerates the negatives and ignores the many positives in Covid control in SL today

For example,   the unprecedentedly  successful vaccination program even acknowledge  by WHO, has not and I suspect never will be acknowledged by these sources. The reason is politics


With their ever negative narrative they undermine compliance with COVID health management recommendations, including proper mask wearing, social distancing, avoiding crowded door locations and now the ultimate requirement vaccination

First the narrative was no vaccines, governments fault, Next it was, inferior Chinese vaccination. Now it is it’s administration by the army not withstanding the fact that they are from the highly trained army mdical corp. The epitome of this hypocrisy was the former Prime Minister decrying the army’s involvement in Covid control, having himself received his vaccination from an Army vaccination centre. Even yesterday 9th August,, over 70% of the 90 odd mortality had  not been vaccinated despite
over 13.8million vaccinations having been administered in SL by then. Had they got them selves vaccinated there is a god chance hat a majority of them would not have suffered that sad fate.

Yes this is the worst SL has experienced but far better what other parts of the. This was expected, warned of, the population was warned , adequate vaccination supplies have been secured, what was wanting was compliance

Some body asked me how NZ has kept Covid at bay successfully so far. The answer  was compliance with the same advice as a team of  five million, following the calls led by it’s Prime Minister.  The same calls in SL led by the political and health leadership , was undermined with a negative narrative on anything the govt does or calls for  by the political opposition , media and social media hence not listened to and not complied with by the populace, Sad but true.


Sri Lanka’s  negative narrative makes  it sound as if the epidemic in SL is the worst in the world  which is far from the truth.
For 20 million population the worst mortality so far was around 100. At that rate of 100 deaths per day for a 21 million population , a population of 350 million in the US should have a maximum mortality of about 1750. In reality 12/2/21 they had mortality of 5463 per day, more than three times SL ‘s worst . The numbers were similar in Italy, France & UK.. This bad experience in these countries  was even without the Delta variant . One can only imagine what it would have been had there been a Delta variant then. These countries improved only when vaccinations reached 60% levels .

As of 10/8/21 SL has 13.8 mil with single dose, 2.78mil double dose ie 12.7% of total pop fully vaccinated. ( 10/8/21  , the fully vaccinated population was over 3 million, 15 % of population.)Now, vaccinating  at rate of 1million every 3 days ,in 10 to 15 days the required 70% full vaccination for herd immunity  should be reached. The consequent population herd immunity should breached   two weeks ithere after ie I the first 2 weeks of September. Another FACT not advertised  and known much  is that Kalum Life Sciences, a BOI project in Kundasale, is awaiting WHO clearance to bottle Synopharm vaccine. This clearance is expected in Aug/Sept. They are ready to go into immediate production  thereafter,  to ensure uninterrupted vaccine supply , upto 100 million by end 2021

This would be music for the ordinary people of SL but terrible news for the prophets of gloom, unless they can manufacture another schema to undermine it and an equally catchy negative narrative to go with it.The present hike in numbers after having gone down to around 1500 cases per day and well below 50 deaths per day, coincides well with the aftermath of a  spate of demonstration, Uthhoshana’s , first staged by JVP & SJB against oil price increase on the road to partliament and other parts of the country,  there after the JVP inspired   Pora Diyaw , Diyaw” Uthgoshanas and the latest the dreaded Joseph Stalin led School Teachers and Principal’s Uthgoshana , more vociferous more deadly than any thing ever seen  in the original Joseph Stalin’s Russia.  And, they are still not done with these and so also not done with their covid consequences.

The country is facing the worst emergency in it’s recent history. Surely ,isn’t  it time to invoke emergency regulations to stop these ongoing super spreader events 

What we are seeing now is on the one hand is the govt trying it’s best to contain Covid  and opposition politicians doing the best to undermine it and project the blame on govt.

This hypocrisy has to be exposed if SL is to reap the harvest excellent vaccination program . Sadly lacking is an attendant and effective  media program to keep on  the negative campaign at bay..

The Col South hospital pts being in lawn happened for one day , during a transition phase, got all the social media attention but not  it’s clearance in one day nor the addition of two more wards for COVID at Col South & Col North Ragama and six dedicated wards for National Hospital Colombo and many more wards all over the country. Also highlighted in social media  were patients on the floor. Floor patients  have been the order of the day in SL hospitals form time immemorial . I remember the days when as a junior doctor over fifty years ago  during the daily  ward round , the floor patients,  would come upto a bed  in turn for examination. Recent negative narrative has tried to make out that it never happened before! 

What SL needs is a relentless, relentless, relentless, media and social media, media and social media, campaigns to get Sri Lankans  to practice Covid health care practices ( hand sanitisation, proper use of masks, social distancing and avoid crowded indoor locations) and get vaccinated at the centres that are abundantly available now.

This is the message that should be orchestrated and orchestrated by the govt , drowning out the oppositions  negative narrative undermining it. 

Do so  & stay positive, for  there is definitely light and life at the end of the tunnel. 

Dr. Chula RajapakseMNZM
FRACP/FRCP
10/8/21

Colombo Security Conclave: Expectations of Bangladesh to ensure Regional Maritime cooperation

August 10th, 2021

Pathik hasan

Colombo Security Conclave is a greater regional initiative taken by Indi a, Sri Lanka and Maldives simultaneously to tackle the maritime threat in Indian ocean. Then Sri Lankan defence secretary (Now President) Gotabaya Rajapaksa took this significatory initiative. The head quarter is established in 2020 in Sri Lankan capital city Colombo. Maritime threats matter really in this today’s modern world. Now Indian ocean is a piece of interest amongst world players. The powers eye shifts towards India ocean.

Analyst says, Maritime security and countering terrorism and other crimes in the Indian Ocean has emerged as a focus area for India as part of its Indo-Pacific strategy and the doctrine of Security and Growth for All in the Region (Sagar).

However, it is known to all Indian ocean gets it strategic significance for various region. It was a great maritime route for both Asian, European and African stated for many years. The Indian ocean has been considered as a hub of maritime connectivity project. China’s string of Pearl project, India’s International North South Transport Project has been gone though this ocean. It is pertinent. Even the US government has transformed its strategy from Asia Pacific to Indo Pacific to include Indian ocean. Japan and India proposed cotton route is also a big issue in the consideration.

But there are some problems also. Trans national crime such as illegal narcotics, weapons and human trafficking issues, piracy, armed robbery, drug smuggling, illegal fishing, terrorism, environmental degradation issue is some concern issue. The Indian ocean has been used as a safe passage by some evil players. States on the Indian ocean face these serious challenges every day.

Illegal drug trafficking from India and Afghanistan, Iran through Indian Ocean route is known to all. According to some sources, the UNODC has estimated that 54% of the heroin in India is produced domestically, while 45% originates from Afghanistan. India is particularly vulnerable to the southern route due to its western border with Pakistan. Near this border, in the western Indian states of Punjab and Haryana, is where many of the heroin seizures occur. In 2012, 105kg of drugs were seized, which had been trafficked from Pakistan along rail routes. In 2013 alone, the Indian Narcotics Control Bureau reported seizures totalling 4,609kg Data collected through seizures by various authorities has confirmed India as a transit country for Southeast Asia, West Africa and North America.

Bangladesh also faces significant problems due to drug trade through the Indian Ocean and India. The country suffers from illicit drug use among its population, such as in Dhaka where there are an estimated 2.5 million people using drugs. India is a large provider of heroin to the Bangladeshi market, and it is trafficked over the western and eastern borders. However, it is unclear whether the heroin originates from Afghanistan or India, as this data has not been sufficiently collected. Both India and Bangladesh are becoming ever more dependent on maritime trade, with these states importing over US$ 52 million and US$ 447 million respectively. Therefore, to function effectively they require an absence of maritime crime in order for trade to be uninterrupted, and for their economies to thrive.

Bangladesh faces Piracy, illegal fishing, human trafficking in the Bay of Bengal. Although Bangladesh Navy and Coast Guard are very active in the region, but the perpetrators are very clever and cunning. Rohingya crisis accelerated to worsen the situation. Various gangs are involved in these human trafficking process. It matters increasingly. Bangladeshi people are trafficked to Malaysia, Thailand, North Africa to Greece and Italy (Europe) through the marine route via Mediterranean Sea.

Many fishermen from Myanmar, India is involved in Illegal fishing in the Jurisdictional area under Bangladesh. So Bangladesh faces economic loss to extract marine resources. Some armed groups kidnap Bangladeshi Fisherman for ransom. Basically, Fishing in the Sundarbans region becomes very dangerous.

Sri Lanka has also faced an increase in heroin use within the country, as well as becoming a transit country for trafficking destined for other places. Much of the heroin entering Sri Lanka arrives on fishing boats or by air, often coming through India or Pakistan. The numbers of seizures which Sri Lankan authorities have conducted remains relatively small, meaning that the data collected is not always reliable. Smugglers in Sri Lanka have come from a variety of countries, including Pakistan, India, Iran and the Maldives.

Environmental degradation in the sea is common now. Climate change, sea level rising are some issue. Trans transnational terrorist threat is seen as a serious threat.

Bangladesh is a rising South Asian Miracle. The country is developing under the leadership of its premier Sheikh Hasina. She focuses on Blue economy. Bangladesh  Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina inaugurated the third ministerial conference titled Promoting Sustainable Blue Economy — making the best use of opportunities from the Indian Ocean” of IORA at the InterContinental Dhaka in 2019.

Not only Bangladesh, Countries like India, Sri Lakka, Maldives including all states across Indian ocean face the same problem. IN the disaster period,  regional cooperation is much needed. In Past, regional countries helped each other through various operation during the disaster moment.

Now Bangladesh got a regional platform to address these problems. To ensure better maritime time security, all regional countries should work collaborately to tackle the problems.

Colombo Security Conclave is a platform. Bangladesh expect cooperation from other stake holders and would like to help others to face the challenge.

Bangladesh with Mauritius and Seychelles are going to become full member of regional maritime security bloc. Media reports, currently serving as the group’s observers, Bangladesh, Mauritius and Seychelles joined the first meeting of national security advisers (NSA) of the CSC, hosted virtually by Sri Lanka on August 4. 

So, there are some opportunities for Bangladesh also other partners to focus on countering terrorism and extremism, trans-national crimes such as narcotics, weapons and human trafficking, humanitarian assistance and disaster relief and protecting the maritime environment.

The need for a new patriotic Political Movement, to rescue this country, Sinhala Nation and the Buddha Sasana from the imminent disastrous end to which this Government is taking.

August 10th, 2021

Dr Sudath Gunasekara 

A Final call to all Patriots.

Looking at the way how our political parties in this country have ruined the country during the past 69 years that was the richest in South East Asia by 1948, and are continuing to do so alternatively even now. As for me, therefore I have no faith or trust in any of the existing political parties as none of them have a clear cut national policy, other than their own enrichment. They all are only parasitic bunches of self-centered power crazy set of men and women who have no concern for the country or the people.

 Political parties in Sri Lanka can be classified in to two broad categories, national and communal. SLFP and UNP are the two National parties worthy of mentioning, though the UNP had been anti- Sinhala and anti- Buddhist trough out. Although JVP is pretending to be one, in my opinion it will never emerge as a National party in the foreseeable future for three reasons. Firstly it does not have any jatikatvayak as it is based on an imported concept of class struggle based on hatred and jealousy.  Secondly it rejects the very foundation of the Sinhala Buddhist society. Thirdly it also rejects local values and its members live in a dream world of their own completely divorced from the native social milieu. The only common thing these three parties share is they are not communal.  One can easily forget LSSP, CP, NLSSP and Hela Urumaya as they are, though they are registered as Parties with the Election Commissioner; they are only three or two wheelers that have no chance of forming a government at any time. In fact they are already dead entities.

All the rest, whether they are in the North,  East,  in the hill country or in Colombo, are either Tamil or Muslim communal parties that do not accept the historical reality of this nation that it was born as a Sinhala Buddhist nation in the 6th century BC and had been so for the past 2600 years. They all agitate for separate States and separate identities either within a Federal or a Quasi- Federal system looking for a distant dream of acquiring the whole Island as either EELAM by Tamils or Khalisthan by Muslims. Today there are at least 15 Tamil and 5 Muslim Parties in this country. They are a bunch extremist separatist ultra- communal parties alternately joining the national party that agrees to give their maximum demands exploiting the weaknesses of the major parties. Tamils and Muslims unlike the foolish Sinhalese behave as diehard communal groups and they look after only their own community even if they work as Ministers in any Government. It was the folly of the constitution makers in 1948 and all subsequent Governments to have failed to prohibit these Communal parties that have put the country in this unfortunate predicament.

Read the full article

https://www.lankaweb.com/news/items/2018/05/18/the-need-for-a-new-patriotic-political-movement-to-rescue-this-country-sinhala-nation-and-the-buddha-sasana-from-the-imminent-disastrous-end-to-which-this-government-is-taking-a-final-call-to-all-2/

Immigration agency admits to mistreatment of Sri Lankan before her death

August 10th, 2021

Courtesy Japan Today

TOKYO

Japan’s immigration agency said Tuesday a probe has found that an immigration center in central Japan mistreated a detained Sri Lankan woman who died in March, and it has reprimanded the facility’s top officials and supervisors.

The Immigration Services Agency of Japan’s final report on developments leading to the death of Ratnayake Liyanage Wishma Sandamali, 33, said the Nagoya Regional Immigration Services Bureau in Aichi Prefecture failed to provide appropriate medical care for her, though the probe could not determine the cause of her death.

Justice Minister Yoko Kamikawa apologized for the Nagoya facility’s treatment of Wishma that resulted in her death and pledged to reform the country’s immigration services.

“It’s impossible to imagine how lonely, anxious and hopeless she must have felt as her health deteriorated,” Kamikawa told a press conference.

Shoko Sasaki, head of the Immigration Services Agency of Japan, told a separate press conference, “The Nagoya bureau at that time lacked awareness of its responsibility to ensure the safety of people and respectfully engage with them.”

The agency reprimanded the bureau’s director and then deputy director as well as two supervisors overseeing the monitoring of detainees.

“We will take the issues raised (in the report) seriously and do our best to prevent any recurrences,” the Nagoya bureau said in a statement.

The agency had set up an investigation team and heard from third-party experts including medical professionals in examining the case of Wishma, who came to Japan in 2017 on a student visa and was taken to the facility in Nagoya in August 2020 after overstaying her visa.

She died on March 6 while in custody after complaining of stomach pain and other symptoms from mid-January. She had applied for, but was refused, provisional release for hospital treatment.

Medical personnel were not available on Saturdays, the day that she died, and staff at the facility did not make an emergency call, according to the report.

The probe has also found Wishma’s pleas for medical treatment and an examination by an outside doctor were never reported to managing staff, violating the facility’s own rule.

It pointed out that omitting to report such detainee requests for medical treatment was commonplace at immigration facilities, a practice that needs to be rectified.

One immigration officer allegedly mocked Wishma after seeing liquid come out of her nose after she was unable to swallow a drink, while others thought her complaints were exaggerated in order to secure the approval of her temporary release request, according to the probe report.

Following the release of the report, Wishma’s younger sister Wayomi, 28, said in a Tokyo press conference that she cannot understand why the immigration authorities denied provisional release for hospital treatment despite Wishma’s deteriorating health.

She described the treatment of Wishma at the immigration center as “bullying” and criticized staff at the facility for their misconduct. The sister also expressed dissatisfaction with the report’s failure to clarify the cause of Wishma’s death.

As Wishma’s family, supporters and opposition lawmakers have been demanding the disclosure of the security camera footage of her final days, the immigration agency is set to release it to her family on Thursday, Shoichi Ibusuki, a lawyer for the family, said at the press conference.

Ibusuki said the agency will show only selected parts of the footage exclusively to the family. He added that he has requested the agency release the whole footage which covers nearly two weeks of her life at the immigration center, and to allow a lawyer to attend.

Whether to release the footage of Wishma in detention was a major focus of debate in parliament, the ordinary session of which ended in June, as it deliberated on a bill to revise rules on how to handle foreigners facing deportation, including allowing those who have applied for refugee status more than twice to be deported.

The government withdrew the bill in May following protests over the death of Wishma.© KYODO

Sri Lanka: Bridging The ‘Growing Trust-Deficit’ With The Indian Neighbor – Analysis

August 10th, 2021

By Observer Research Foundation Courtesy Eurasia Review

File photo of The Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi with the Prime Minister of the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka, Mr. Mahinda Rajapaksa. Photo Credit: PM India

File photo of India’s Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi with the Prime Minister of the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka, Mr. Mahinda Rajapaksa. Photo Credit: PM India

By N Sathiya Moorthy

The well-earned publicity that the ‘Integrated Country Strategy’ for Sri Lankan missions in India has received in the Indian media is a welcome for more reasons than one. In particular, it deserves to be praised for acknowledging the ‘trust-deficit’ that has re-emerged in the bilateral relations over the past year—after a relatively smooth sail in the five years before it.

With the acknowledgement also comes suggestions for setting right many, if not all the causes for the ‘trust-deficit’. The latter has more to do with the contemporary political and economic realities, as different from the centuries-old cultural underpinning, from which both nations have unfortunately moved away over the past decades.

When cleared by the government of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, the document could be the guiding, if not the governing principle for Sri Lankan missions in India, after the former Minister Milinda Moragoda takes over as the High Commissioner in Delhi later this month. Moragoda having authored the strategy paper along with his mission counterparts in Delhi, Chennai, and Mumbai, the authors are also the implementers – and thus, know the do’s and don’ts that lie ahead for them.

Age-old links 

Naturally, the strategy paper refers to Buddhist links between the two nations, which actually dates back prior to the commonly-known era of Emperor Ashoka. In contemporary terms, the paper has proposed for Sri Lanka to send a stone from ‘Sita Eliya temple’ in Nuwara Eliya district, linked to the Indian epic, Ramayan’, for the Ram temple construction at Ayodhya in north India.

Despite possible political fall-outs in India, especially in the future, the suggestion should be welcomed. It may slow down, if not set at naught, the recent efforts in Sri Lanka to establish Ravan, the antagonist in Ramayan, as a Sri Lankan sovereign independent of the Indian epic and also the earliest aviator in the world.

Transactional approach

It is, however, in the contemporary context that the paper’s acknowledgement of trust-deficit between the two South Asian/Indian Ocean neighbours assumes immediate relevance and significance. As the report candidly acknowledges, In recent years, the Indo-Sri Lanka bilateral relationship has been increasingly dominated by a transactional approach.”

There is truth in the assessment that the historic relations between the two nations have long since given place to self-centric claims, expectations and denials by both. Neither does India possess the elder brother/sister attitudeany more, nor is Sri Lanka willing to stop playing the recently-innovated ‘China card’ viz its northern neighbour.

The Team Milinda” paper, as it could be called, says that the ‘transactional approach’ is a ‘consequence of the changes in the geo-political equilibrium in the region that have resulted in a growing trust- deficit’. In diplomatic terms, this should be construed as a reference to China emerging as the bugbear in Sri Lanka’s India relations in recent years—but without naming the extra-regional power.

In real terms, China in this case is pitted more against the US than India, just as the latter pitted itself against the erstwhile Soviet Union in the Indian Ocean Region (IOR) during the Cold War era. But the end result is that the Chinese presence in and domination of the Sri Lanka scene, especially in economic and political fields—and not necessarily in that order—has nullified all efforts at improved ties between Colombo and New Delhi in the post-war era.

Investors unsure

It suffices to point out that in the aftermath of the aborted trilateral deal on the East Container Terminal (ECT), also involving Japan, after President Gotabaya took over, Indian investors, big and small, have become unsure about putting in big money in the island-neighbour. True or not, they have come to believe that a twitch of the lips in distant Beijing could push Colombo to throw them out halfway through.

The one exception is the West Container Terminal (WCT) construction concession offered to the India-based Adani group, as if in lieu of the cancelled ECT pact. The strategy paper suggests that the WCT proposal should be cleared without delay.  Other Indian investors would be closely watching developments on this front before deciding to put their money in Sri Lanka. In effect, this means that Colombo cannot hope to get all, or even much of the US $256-billion Indian FDI by 2022, as the Milinda paper recalls.

Increasing protectionism

Yet, there is truth in the strategy paper’s claims on wanting to realise US $675-million Sri Lankan exports to India, again by 2022. As the study points out, export prospects at present suffer from ‘increasing protectionism (in India), limited market access, a challenging and unpredictable regulatory environment as well as the ‘Make in India’ initiative, which prioritises local business and sourcing of local raw materials and products over imports”.

True, Prime Minister Narendra Modi revived the Nehruvian ‘self-reliance’ goal in the name of ‘Make in India’ after coming to power in 2014. But no specifics have been made available for India to exempt raw material imports from Sri Lanka, as indicated. For close to two decades now, Sri Lanka has deliberately missed all opportunities to discuss Indian protectionism and non-tariff barriers with the sincerity and seriousness that they deserve as a part of larger trade negotiations, especially after the bilateral Free Trade Agreement (FTA) in 1998 had proved its worth and usefulness for both.

Long before Modi came to power, bilateral trade had suffered and a trust-deficit made an appearance, instead, after the two nations initialled the forgotten Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on a Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) at Colombo in 2008. Sri Lanka pulled back from signing the formal pact in the aftermath of a later-day anti-ECT kind of protest.  The alternative ETCA negotiations for an ‘Economic and Technology Cooperation Agreement’, proposed by the successor Wickremesinghe regime too fell by the wayside, again, as designed by Colombo.

Trouble-spots

In an altruistic fashion, Team Milinda’s strategy paper has focussed on Sri Lankan missions in India improving relations with Indian states, directly, wherever possible. It will bear fruit especially in terms of investments and large-scale trade for the Sri Lankan Consul-General in Mumbai to take up.

The real and unmentioned crux, however, lies in southern Chennai, which used to harbour strong views on the Sri Lankan ethnic issue and also the fishers’ dispute. The former is still an emotive matter, and the latter a life-and-livelihood concern in Tamil Nadu.

The strategy paper does not mention the ‘ethnic issue’, on which not only the government and people of Tamil Nadu concerned about. Then Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi had signed the Indo-Sri Lanka Accord on the ethnic issue along with Sri Lankan President J R Jayawardene, in July 1987. Hence, the Government of India continues to have similar and at times stronger concern about the Colombo dispensation having to meet the ‘legitimate aspirations’ of the island’s Tamil population—which has not happened, as yet.

As for the fishers’ dispute, successive political dispensations in New Delhi have reaffirmed its commitment to the 1974-76 accords on International Maritime Boundary Line (IMBL), thus conceding Katchchativu islet in Sri Lankan territory. On the larger issue of Sri Lankan Tamil fishers from the North especially continuing to oppose destructive trawlers from southern Tamil Nadu in particular competing with them in the waters that New Delhi has acknowledged as theirs, the issue remains to be resolved completely.

The ‘Milinda Paper’ makes great sense in wanting the affected fisher communities in the two countries to sort it out through negotiations. The talks that commenced as a private initiative obtained governmental blessings from both sides, but got stuck in the ocean waters at Chennai, in the first half of the last decade.

However, the Jayalalithaa-led AIADMK government in the state still took up the long-pending Centre’s proposal for equipping and training Rameswaram fishers, caught in the middle in deep-sea fishing instead. The process is slow, and has also suffered owing to the rightful prioritisation of COVID pandemic management in the state.

In Sri Lanka, the Colombo government alone has all powers to negotiate on the fishers’ behalf, or facilitate such negotiations between fishing communities in the two countries. In India too, communication with foreign governments flow through New Delhi. It will, thus, be effective for the Sri Lankan government, the High Commission in Delhi, and the Deputy High Commission (DHC) in Chennai, amongst others, to continue communicating with the Tamil Nadu government and the state’s fishers through New Delhi—rather than directly.

Though unintended, Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M K Stalin seemed to remind Sri Lankan officialdom of the continuing Indian protocol in such matters, despite the political differences between Chennai and Delhi. Stalin wrote (only) to External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar—and not formally to any Sri Lankan authorities—on reports of Sri Lanka Navy (SLN) opening fire mid-sea, injuring a Tamil Nadu fisher, Kalaiselvan, in the head.

Yet, the Sri Lankan Deputy High Commission in Chennai could continue work with home office whenever Indian fishers are inconvenienced after Sri Lankan Navy (SLN) arrests them mid-sea, along with their boats. The free-wheeling facilitation by the DHC and early release of the Tamil Nadu fishers in the war years definitely created a feel-good factor in the state. In turn, it got reflected to some extent when the state’s fishers began negotiations with their brethren from across the Palk Strait—until personality-centric domestic politics derailed the process at the most recent round in Chennai, 2014.

Sri Lanka rejects lockdown to beat Covid-19 ‘bomb’

August 10th, 2021

Courtesy The Straits Times

Sri Lanka Army health workers administer Covid-19 vaccine shots at a vaccination centre in Colombo, on Aug 10, 2021.
Sri Lanka Army health workers administer Covid-19 vaccine shots at a vaccination centre in Colombo, on Aug 10, 2021.PHOTO: EPA-EFE

COLOMBO (AFP) – Sri Lanka’s government rejected on Tuesday (Aug 10) mounting calls for an immediate lockdown to contain a surge in Covid-19 cases and deaths that is severely stretching hospitals and crematoriums.

Government spokesman and Media Minister Keheliya Rambukwella said the country had not reached a critical stage even as the island nation suffers more than 100 deaths per day on average.

“Curfews or a lockdown is the last resort, but we are not there yet,” Mr Rambukwella told reporters. “Our target is to get everyone over the age of 18 vaccinated by September and thereafter it is in the hands of the gods.”

His comments came despite the Sri Lanka Medical Association (SLMA) issuing what it called a “final warning” to the government to restrict the movement of people immediately or risk a bigger catastrophe.

“We have given the final warning to the government to take urgent steps to lock down at least for two weeks,” said a spokesman for the SLMA, a professional body of medical experts.

A junior minister for health, Mr Channa Jayasumana, called the Delta variant of the virus “a powerful bomb which has exploded in Colombo and is spreading elsewhere”.

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On Friday, the government tightened some restrictions, banning state ceremonies and public gatherings until Sept 1.

But most activity is allowed, with shops, restaurants and offices open and public transport still operating.

The number of deaths hit a record 111 on Monday with the daily average in the past week crossing 100 – more than double the average of 40 in the previous week.

The number of infections also more than doubled to nearly 3,000 this week.

At one morgue in Colombo on Tuesday morning, workers tested 15 corpses for Covid-19 and then cremated them to clear the way for more bodies.

A Colombo magistrate ordered the immediate disposal of 40 corpses that remained unclaimed by the next of kin.

The Colombo Municipal Council began mass cremations Sunday to clear a backlog after hospital mortuaries ran out of refrigeration space for bodies.

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Sri Lanka holds mass cremations as Covid-19 cases surge

US sending 1.5 million Moderna Covid-19 vaccine doses to Sri Lanka

Just over 11.2 million people out of the population of 21 million have been given at least one vaccine jab, while 3.2 million had received both as of Monday.

Sri Lanka has recorded 5,222 deaths to date and almost 333,000 infections, according to official data.

No vaccine certificate needed for Sri Lankan expats flying to Dubai

August 10th, 2021

Courtesy The Daily Mirror

People travelling to Dubai from India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Uganda, and Nigeria do not need to produce a COVID-19 vaccination certificate on arrival, but need to register for pre-entry approval before arrival.

Emirates airline has announced that entry to foreign nationals is only limited to valid UAE visa holders, who must have a COVID-19 certificate issued at least 48 hours prior to their departing flight, the Times of Oman reported.

Only COVID‑19 PCR test reports from certified labs that issue a QR code linked to the original report will be accepted,” added the airline. Passengers must complete a COVID‑19 PCR rapid test 4 hours before the departure of their flight.”

Rapid antigen test reports will not be accepted. Another PCT test must be taken on arrival in Dubai.

UAE Nationals are exempted from the above requirements but subject to COVID‑19 PCR test on arrival in Dubai,” said Emirates guidelines. All other passengers who have been in India, Nepal, Nigeria, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Uganda in the past 14 days will not be permitted to enter Dubai.”

AG requests CJ to appoint Trial-at-Bar to hear cases against 25 suspects

August 10th, 2021

Courtesy The Daily Mirror

The Attorney General has sent indictments to the Chief Justice to constitute a Trial-at-Bar to hear the cases against 25 suspects indicted for conspiracy over the Easter Sunday attacks.

The AG has requested the Chief Justice to hear and determine 23,270 charges filed under the prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) including the charges of conspiracy, preparation,aiding and abetting, collection of explosives and weapons, murder and attempted murder.

The Attorney General’s Department today filed the principal indictments in the Colombo High Court against 25 accused including Naufer Mawlawi,Sajid Maulawi, Mohammed Milhan, Sadik Abdullah, Aadam Lebbe alias Gafoor Mama, Mohammed Sanasdeen and Mohammed Rizwan.

The indictments have been filed in relation to the eight attacks on St Anthony’s Church Kochchikade, St Sebastian’s Church, the Kingsbury Hotel, Shangri-La Colombo, Cinammon Grand Colombo, Zion Church and Tropical Inn (Dehiwala).

Inter Province travel restriction to be strictly monitored from today – Army Chief

August 10th, 2021

Courtesy The Daily Mirror

The inter province travel restriction will be strictly monitored from today and no one will be allowed to cross provinces other than essential and health workers, Army Commander General Shavendra Silva told Daily Mirror a short while ago.

He said following discussions, it had also been decided to limit the number of attendees to a wedding to 50 guests, from the 150 proposed earlier.

In addition, the Health Ministry will release a set of new health guidelines and restrictions today late afternoon.

The General said there had still been no decision on a lockdown or islandwide travel restrictions. (JAMILA HUSAIN)

Herd immunity ‘not a possibility’ with Delta variant, says vaccines expert

August 10th, 2021

Sophie Morris, political reporter Courtesy Skynews

Herd immunity is “not a possibility” because the Delta variant is still spreading fast and infecting fully vaccinated people, the head of the Oxford Vaccine Group has said.

a group of people standing in front of a crowd: Sir Andrew told MPs 'anyone still unvaccinated at some point will meet the virus'

© PA Sir Andrew told MPs ‘anyone still unvaccinated at some point will meet the virus’

Professor Sir Andrew Pollard told MPs in the All-Party Parliamentary Group on coronavirus that although 95% vaccination would stop transmission of measles, the same was not true for COVID.

He warned that this means “anyone still unvaccinated at some point will meet the virus”.

a man in a suit standing in front of a door: Sir Andrew said the vaccine might slow the spread of the Delta variant but won't contain it altogether

© PA Sir Andrew said the vaccine might slow the spread of the Delta variant but won’t contain it altogether

Herd immunity is when enough people become resistant to a disease – through vaccination or previous exposure – that it can no longer significantly spread among the rest of the population.

Sir Andrew said the vaccine might slow the spread of coronavirus, but as the Delta variant – first identified in India – is highly transmissible, jabs will not contain it altogether.

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More on coronavirus:

Download the Microsoft News app for full coverage of the crisis

The evolutionary journey that Covid could take (The Independent)

Why are experts holding off vaccinating under-16s in UK? (The Guardian)

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“We know very clearly with coronavirus that this current variant, the Delta variant, will still infect people who have been vaccinated and that does mean that anyone who’s still unvaccinated, at some point, will meet the virus,” he told MPs.

“I think we are in a situation here with this current variant where herd immunity is not a possibility because it still infects vaccinated individuals.”

Sir Andrew said the next thing might be “a variant which is even better at transmitting in vaccinated populations”, adding: “So, that’s even more of a reason not to be making a vaccine programme around herd immunity.”

a group of people walking down a street next to a sign: The UK recorded its highest daily COVID deaths since March on Tuesday

© PA The UK recorded its highest daily COVID deaths since March on Tuesday

However, the Oxford Vaccine Group director also said there was likely to be “increasing confidence” about the UK’s coronavirus situation.

He told the APPG: “I think this next six months is a really important consolidation phase and in that shift from the epidemic to the endemic, which is the living with COVID.

“That doesn’t mean that we live with it and put up with it – we still have to manage those cases of patients who become unwell with it.”

Sir Andrew’s comments come as the UK reported its highest daily COVID deaths since March.

There were 23,510 new cases and 146 more coronavirus-related deaths in the latest 24-hour period.

The figures compare with 25,161 infections and 37 fatalities reported on Monday, while last Tuesday 21,691 cases and 138 deaths were announced.

The number of deaths is the highest since 175 were reported on 12 March.

Since the pandemic began,130,503 people have died in the UK within 28 days of testing positive.

The government says three quarters of adults are now fully vaccinated

© PA The government says three quarters of adults are now fully vaccinated

The government also announced on Tuesday that more than three quarters of adults in the UK have now received both doses of a vaccine.

The Department of Health and Social Care said a total of 86,780,455 jabs had now been administered, with 89% of people having received a first dose and 75% two doses.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson described it as “a huge national achievement which we should all be proud of”, while Health Secretary Sajid Javid said the vaccine was “helping us to work our way out of this pandemic towards normal”.

Stay alert to stop coronavirus spreading – here is the latest government guidance. If you think you have the virus, don’t go to the GP or hospital, stay indoors and get advice online. Only call NHS 111 if you cannot cope with your symptoms at home; your condition gets worse; or your symptoms do not get better after seven days. In parts of Wales where 111 isn’t available, call NHS Direct on 0845 46 47. In Scotland anyone with symptoms is advised to self-isolate for seven days. In Northern Ireland, call your GP.

Sri Lanka’s daily COVID deaths top 100 for second consecutive day

August 10th, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

Daily COVID-19 fatalities confirmed in Sri Lanka swept past the grim milestone of 100 for the second consecutive day as 118 more victims of COVID-19 infection were confirmed by the Director-General of Health Services on Monday (August 09).

This reportedly the highest number of deaths the island has reported in a day.

The new development has pushed Sri Lanka’s death toll from the novel coronavirus to 5,340.

The Government Information Department stated that 101 of the latest victims are senior citizens aged above 60 years. The remaining 17 were aged between 30-59.

The victims include 79 males and 39 females, according to official data.

More than 2,900 fresh COVID cases confirmed within the day

August 10th, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

A total of 912 more people were tested positive for COVID-19 today (August 10), increasing the daily count of positive cases to 2,904.

According to the Government Information Department, the new cases reported today have been associated with the New Year cluster.

The latest infections and delayed reported cases for the last week have brought Sri Lanka’s confirmed coronavirus cases tally to 339,092, the Epidemiology Unit said.

Official data showed that as many as 298,162 patients who were infected with the virus have regained health so far. Meanwhile, the death toll now stands at 5,340.

More than 35,000 are currently under medical care at selected hospitals and treatment centres across the country.

All import taxes on milk powder to be removed

August 10th, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

The government has decided to remove all import taxes levied on milk powder, says the Cabinet Co-spokesperson, Minister Keheliya Rambukwella.

Addressing a media briefing at the Government Information Department this morning, the minister said the decision was taken during the meeting of the Cabinet of Ministers held on Monday (Aug. 09).

Speaking further, he also assured that country has stocks of sugar sufficient for the coming three months. There is no reason for a shortage of sugar to arise, because we imported a large amount of sugar after deceasing taxes.”

The minister added that people are panicking unnecessarily about a shortage of gas, because one company claimed they are going bankrupt. But the country has enough reserves.” 

In the meantime, Finance Minister Basil Rajapaksa has been vested with the powers to study the current shortage of milk powder in the market.

According to the Government Information Department, the attention of the Cabinet of Ministers fell on the shortage of milk powder in the country during its meeting on Monday.

Thereby, the finance minister will be taking necessary actions to ensure that sufficient stocks of milk powder are supplied to the local market by revising the existing tax rates or taking other appropriate measures to import milk powder without increasing the prices in the local market.

Govt allows import of organic fertilizer, minerals, plant nutrients for Maha Season

August 10th, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

The government has decided to allow imports of organic fertilizers, natural minerals, and plant nutrients for the Maha Season of 2021/22.

Fertilizers, minerals, and nutrients in short supply locally will be allowed to be imported in this manner.

The Cabinet of Ministers had approved the relevant proposal made by the Minister of Agriculture.

Advice to graduating students: Balancing Hard and Soft Skills.

August 9th, 2021

By Dr. Gamini Padmaperuma, PhD

Background

Graduating from a university or any higher educational institution marks a very important milestone in one’s life. It is a very significant event not only for the graduate but also for the family members and well-wishers who supported the student during the studies, morally, financially and otherwise. Studying for a degree is an endeavor involving heavy investment of time and money, great sacrifices and many opportunities gained and lost.

With such a great investment of time and money, and sacrifices, one is expected to be successful in the years after graduation by getting a rewarding employment, providing mental satisfaction and happiness to him and to all those who supported him. 

What sort of advice can the seniors with life time experiences provide to graduating students so that they could derive appropriate rewards for their years long strenuous efforts? We often hear, and some of us have actually experienced that how the non-availability of timely advice has hindered progress of many graduates.

Based on experiences of those who have gone through this process (through the mill) during their careers, many advices can be generated. It is difficult to address all the areas that a graduating student should pay attention to in preparation for the next phase of their career, employment, in a short article such as this. However, this article intends to cover a few important aspects relating to the skills that a graduate should possess and sharpen to lead a successful professional career.

Required Skills

It is recognized that for a graduate to secure a job and keep it, certain skills need to be acquired and maintained. These skills are known as Hard Skills and Soft Skills. It is also established that a good balance of the two types of skills is a prerequisite for a successful career. The actual balance between the two types of skills necessary to be successful could depend on the type of business you are in, the level of the corporate ladder you are placed at, etc. What are the hard skills and soft skills?

Hard Skills

These are the core skills that graduates primarily gain through their education and training at their academic institutions. These skills would vary from profession to profession or business to business. They can include skills such as engineering design, accounting strategies, computer programming, clinical diagnosis, criminal investigation, legal analysis, etc. These are the skills required to carry out the core business of an organization and to get the job done. Hard skills are teachable and measurable. In practice however, it is proven that the hard skills alone are not sufficient to run a business successfully or a graduate to be professionally successful. A set of soft skills is also needed.

Soft Skills

Soft Skills are also known as People Skills or Interpersonal Skills. They are not easily teachable as compared to hard skills. Soft skills are similar to emotions or insights that allow people to ‘read’ others. Most of the soft skills are learned through practice and experience. They are much harder to be measured and evaluated. What are the types of soft skills that graduates need to acquire and maintain?

Following is a list of some common soft skills that most of the young graduates need to acquire and practise:

  • Communication Skills
  • Flexibility
  • Dependability
  • Teamwork
  • Work Ethics
  • Positivity
  • Time Management
  • Problem Solving
  • Critical Thinking
  • Conflict Resolution
  • Project Planning

There are many more soft skills. The above is a representative list of soft skills that are more relevant to day-to-day work. It is important for the fresh graduates to be aware of the importance of these skills and learn them and practise. The graduates will start realizing that their services are better valued by peers and seniors as they begin to complement their hard skills with more and more soft skills. The important point is that most of these skills which one learns and sharpens during their employment can be transferred to any future jobs. The recruiters usually look for and value the transferable skills that a prospective employee could bring into a new job, from their prior experience.

Transferrable Skills

Transferable skills can be from both hard skills and soft skills. For example, a transferable hard skill could be a mastery of a particular software or a coding language that can be used in other business settings. However, soft skills are more easily transferable due to their generic nature and universal applicability. Some of the most common soft skills that are transferable, include: Leadership, Communication Skills, Teamwork, Time Management, Problem Solving, etc.

Balancing of Hard Skills and Soft Skills

While appreciating the importance of both hard skills and soft skills, graduates need to strike a balance between the two types. Further, they need to be aware that what weightage the recruiters or managers assign to these two types of skills. The preference may be skewed towards hard skills at the beginning of one’s career and may gradually shift to soft skills as one moves higher in the corporate ladder. Various surveys conducted in the USA and elsewhere indicate that recruiters tend to give equal or more weightage to soft skills than to hard skills. Graduates need to be aware of this and give necessary priority to acquiring and maintaining soft skills in addition to the hard skills they learned during their higher studies. It is generally believed that hard skills help you get a job and soft skills help you to keep it.

Skills Gap

Due to rapid technological changes taking place around us and also due somewhat outdated curricula followed by some academic institutions, there exists a Skills Gap. The Skills Gap is the divide between the skills employers expect employees to have and the skills employees and job seekers actually possess.

Advice to graduating students

Graduating students need to be aware of the importance of hard skills and soft skills needed to be successful in getting a job and maintaining it. Due prominence and emphasis to the skills possessed need to be given in their resumes when applying for jobs and attending job interviews. Both hard skills and soft skills need to be developed, kept up-to-date and sharpened all the time. The balance between the two types needs to be maintained depending on the job environment. Also, it is important to keep an eye on the Skills Gap and try to bridge this gap by one’s own additional efforts. The following quote puts the situation in context:

 There’s not one specific thing or skill people have to have to work for us. But I can tell you why we fire people: soft skills. We hire for hard skills. We fire for soft skills. …”

 Rick Stephens, Senior Vice President of HR, The Boeing Corporation

අග්‍රාමාත්‍යතුමාගේ පදවි ප්‍රාප්තියේ වර්ෂ පූර්ණය සිහිකර ඉන්දු – ශ්‍රී ලංකා ආශිර්වාද පූජාවක්

August 9th, 2021

අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය මාධ්‍ය අංශය

අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය ධුරයේ වර්ෂ පූර්ණය සහ කොවිඩ් වසංගතය හමුවේ පීඩාවට පත් ජනතාවට ආශිර්වාද පතා අද (09) උදෑසන ඉන්දියාවේ සාරානාත් මූලගන්ධි කුටි විහාරස්ථානයේ පැවති ශ්‍රී ලංකා – ඉන්දියා ආශිර්වාද පූජා” වැඩසටහනට ගරු අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය මහින්ද රාජපක්ෂ මහතා අරලියගහ මන්දිරයේ සිට සූම් තාක්ෂණය ඔස්සේ සම්බන්ධ විය.

ඉන්දියානු මහා බෝධි සංගමයේ ප්‍රධානත්වයෙන් ඉන්දු – ශ්‍රී ලංකා මිත්‍රත්වය සහ ශ්‍රී ලංකාවේ ඉන්දීය මහ කොමසාරිස් කාර්යාලය එක්ව මෙම විශේෂ ආශිර්වාද පූජා වැඩසටහන සංවිධානය කර තිබිණි.

ඉන්දියානු මහා බෝධි සංගමයේ මහ ලේකම් පැලවත්තේ සීවලී නාහිමියන්ගේ අවවාද අනුශාසනා පරිදි පැවති මෙම විශේෂ ශ්‍රී ලංකා – ඉන්දියා ආශිර්වාද පූජා” වැඩසටහනට ඉන්දියානු මහා බෝධි සංගමයේ සියලුම විහාරස්ථාන සම්බන්ධ විය.

ඒ අනුව ඉන්දියානු මහා බෝධි සංගමයේ සාරනාත්, ලුම්බිණි, කල්කටා ලක්නව් සහ බුද්ධගයා විහාරස්ථානවල සිට මහා සංඝරත්නය මෙම ආශිර්වාද පූජාවට එක්වූහ.

මෙම අවස්ථාවට ශ්‍රී ලංකාවේ ඉන්දියානු මහ කොමසාරිස් ගෝපාල් බාග්ලේ මහතා ඇතුළු දෙරටේ මහ කොමසාරිස් කාර්යාල ප්‍රධානීහු ද එක්ව සිටියහ.

බෞද්ධ ජනරජ ප්‍රවාදය – 30 වැනි කොටස- ‍ආයෝජන සමානාත්මතාව

August 9th, 2021

ආචාර්ය වරුණ චන්ද්‍රකීර්ති

බෞද්ධ දේශපාලන න්‍යාය තුළ සමානාත්මතාවට ප්‍රමුඛ තැනක් ලබා දී තිබේ. සෑම කෙනකු ම සමාන ලෙසින් සැළකිය යුතු බවක් මෙයින් අදහස් නො කෙරෙයි. දක්‍ෂ, හැකියාවෙන් පිරුණු අය සහ අදක්‍ෂ, කම්මැලි අය එක හා සමානව සැළැකිය හැකි නොවේ. බුදුදහම තුළ උට්ඨාන සම්පදාව අගය කෙරී ඇත්තේ සසර කෙළවර කරගැනීම වෙනුවෙන් කළ යුතු දෑ සම්බන්ධයෙන් පමණක් නොවේ. ලෞකික කාර්යය සාධනය වෙනුවෙන් ද එහි අගය පෙන්වා දී තිබේ.

අංගුත්තර නිකායේ ව්‍යග්ඝපජ්ජ සූත්‍රය තුළ එය විස්තර කෙරී ඇත්තේ මෙ ලෙසිනි. ව්‍යාඝ්‍ර‍පද්‍යය, උට්ඨාන සම්පත් යනු මෙයයි. ව්‍යාඝ්‍ර‍පද්‍යය, මෙම ලෝකයෙහි යම් කුල පුත්‍රයකු කෘෂිකර්මයෙන් වේවා, වානිජකර්මයෙන් වේවා, ගව පාලනයෙන් වේවා, දුනුවාකමින් වේවා, රාජපුරුෂභාවයෙන් වේවා, අන්‍යතර ශිල්පයෙකින් වේවා, එවන් කර්මාන්තයෙකින් ජීවිකාව කෙරෙයි නම්, හෙතෙම එහි දක්‍ෂවෙයි. අලස නොවෙයි. එහි උපාය විමසා කළමනාකරණය කරයි. අන්‍යයන්ගේ දායකත්වය ද ඒ සඳහා ලබාගනියි. ව්‍යාඝ්‍ර‍පද්‍යය, උට්ඨාන සම්පත යනු මෙයයි”.

එහෙයින්, හැකියාව සහ කැපැවීම ඇති අය හට සමාජයේ ඉහළට යෑමේ අවස්ථාව ලබාදීම බෞද්ධ ජනරජයේ යුතුකමක් වෙයි. මෙවැනි වාතාවරණයක් තුළ දිළිඳු අයට අත්වන ඉරණම කුමක් ද? එවැනි අය නො සළකා හැරෙන්නේ ද? නැත. ලෞකික කාර්යය සාධනය සඳහා ලබාදෙන සම අවස්ථා තුළින් එවැන්නන් හට සෙත සැළකිය හැකි ය. ඒ, සැම දෙනෙක් හට ම සම අවස්ථා සැළසීමෙනි.

බෞද්ධ ජනරජය තුළ සමානාත්මතාව ක්‍රියාත්මක කරනුයේ සෑම අයකු සඳහා ම සම අවස්ථා ලබාදීම තුළිනි. ලබාදෙන අවස්ථාවෙන් ප්‍රයෝජන ගෙන සාර්ථකත්වය අත්පත් කරගැනීම අනලස් දක්‍ෂයාගේ කාර්යයකි. කෙසේ වුව ද, මෙම කාර්යය තුළ දී අනෙක් අයට හිමි අවස්ථා ද සම අයුරින් ආරක්‍ෂා විය යුතු ය. මෙය සිදුකරන ආකාරය ආයෝජන සමානාත්මතාව” පිළිබඳ මෙම අදහස ඔස්සේ පැහැදිළි කර දිය හැකි ය.

මෙම ප්‍රවාදයෙන් යෝජනා කෙරෙන පාලන ක්‍රමය තුළ ගම් සභාවට (සහ නාගරික සභාවට) මූලික තැනක් හිමිවෙයි. ඒ ඒ ගම් සභාව විසින් ග්‍රාමීය අරමුදලක් පවත්වා ගෙන යා යුතු බවක් ද මෙයින් යෝජනා කෙරිණි. මෙකී ග්‍රාමීය අරමුදල තුළින්  ආයෝජන සමානාත්මතාව ක්‍රියාත්මක කළ හැකි ය.

යම් ගම් සභා බල ප්‍රදේශයක වසන සියලු දෙනා වෙනුවෙන් ග්‍රාමීය අරමුදල තුළ ගිණුම් විවෘතව පැවැතිය යුතු වේ. ඒ අනුව, මෙම ගිණුම් හරහා විවිධ ආර්ථික කටයුතුවල මුදල් ආයෝජනය කිරීමේ සම අවස්ථාවක් සැම කෙනකුට ම හිමිවෙයි. කෙසේ වුව ද, මෙම සෑම ගිණුමක ම මුදල් පවතින බවක් මෙයින් අදහස් නො කෙරෙයි. ධනවත් අයගේ ගිණුම් තුළ මුදල් තිබුණ ද කිසිවකුත් නැති දුප්පතුන්ගේ ගිණුම් හිස්ව පැවැතිය හැකි ය. එසේ වුව ද, මෙම ගිණුම් ඔස්සේ එම දුප්පතුන්ට ද සම ආයෝජන අවස්ථාවක් හිමිවෙයි.

බෞද්ධ ජනරජයේ යම් පොදු ආයෝජන කාර්යයකට විශාල පිරිසක් දායක කරගත හැක්කේ ඒ වෙනුවෙන් එක් අයකුට තම ගිණුම ඔස්සේ ආයෝජනය කළ හැකි මුදල යම් උපරිමයකට යටත්කිරීමෙනි. තමන් හට ලබා දී ඇති අවස්ථාවේ උපරිමයට ළඟා වූ විට ධනවත් අයකුගේ ආයෝජන දායකත්වය එයින් සීමා කෙරෙයි. එහෙත් හැකියාව ඇති, ඒ ඔස්සේ මුදල් උපයාගත් අයකු එවන් සීමාවකට කොටු කළ යුතු නොවේ. එසේ නම් එවැන්නෙකුට වැඩි ආයෝජන අවස්ථාවක් සළසාදිය හැක්කේ කෙ ලෙසින් ද?

මුදල් නැති, එ මෙන් ම ඉතා සීමිත මුදලක් ඇති අයගේ ගිණුම් හරහා ආයෝජනය සඳහා අවස්ථාවක් ධනය ඇති, අනලස් අයට ලබාදීමෙන් මෙම කාර්යය සිදුකළ හැකි ය. මෙම අවස්ථාව වෙනුවෙන් අදාළ ධනවත් පුද්ගලයා විසින් ගිණුම හිමි දිළින්දාට ගෙවිය යුතු මිලක් වෙයි. දිළිඳු අයගේ ගිණුම භාවිතයට ගැනීම වෙනුවෙන් කරනු ලබන ගෙවීමක් ලෙසින් මෙය සිදුවෙයි. කිසියම් ගිවිසුම්ගත කාලයක් සඳහා එවැනි ගිණුම් භාවිතාකිරීම වෙනුවෙන් ධනවත් පාර්ශ්වය විසින් දිළිඳු පාර්ශ්වයට මෙම මුදල් ලබාදෙයි. ආයෝජන කාර්යයෙන් ලබන ලාභයෙන් කොටසක් (නිශ්චිත සියයට ගණනක්) ලබාදීමක ආකාරයෙන් මෙම ගෙවීම සිදු කළ හැකි ය.

මේ අනුව, ආයෝජන හැකියාව ඇති අය සඳහා වැඩි අවස්ථාවක් නිර්මාණය වෙයි. එසේ වූ පමණින් දිළින්දන් නො සළකා හැරීමක් ද සිදු නොවෙයි. මෙම ක්‍රමය යටතේ ග්‍රාමීය අරමුදල තුළ තමන් සතු ගිණුම තුළින් මුදලක් උපයාගැනීමේ අවස්ථාව ද එය මනාව කළමනාකරණය කරගැනීමෙන් අනාගත ආයෝජකයකු බවට පත්වීමේ ඉඩ ද දිළින්දන් හට ද හිමිවෙයි.

ගම් සභා පාලනය යටතේ වගකීම් සහගත අයුරින් අදාළ ගිණුම් කටයුතු සිදු කරදීම තුළින් මෙම කාර්යය යථාර්ථයක් බවට පත් කළ හැකි වෙයි. පෙර ලිපියකින් කී පරිදි, සෑම ගම් සභාවක් වෙනුවෙන් ම පත්කරනු ලබන ගිණුම්කරුවන් හට මෙම වගකීම පැවැරෙයි.
ආචාර්ය වරුණ චන්ද්‍රකීර්ති

Shavendra responds to Ranil’s criticism

August 9th, 2021

Courtesy The Daily Mirror

Responding to former Prime Minister and UNP Leader Ranil Wickremesinghe over his remarks on Presidential Task Force on Prevention of COVID-19, Army Commander General Shavendra Silva said that the decisions taken by the Task Force are collective decisions and not individual decisions.

Mr. Wickremesinghe recently said that the Covid -19 Taskforce is a failure and it has no powers. Therefore, it should be dissolved and the task of controlling the pandemic situation should be entrusted with the institutions which enjoy constitutionally guaranteed power such as the Disaster Management Council and the Cabinet. 

Responding to journalists over former Prime Minister’s remarks, the Army Commander said in Kandy that “the people are very pleased with the vaccination being carried out by the Armed Forces, especially the Army. In such a situation, it is my duty as the Chief of the Defence Staff and as the Commander of the Army to respond to criticism made only by one person”.

General Silva said that the Presidential Task Force is headed by the President and the task force also includes the Ministers of Health, several Cabinet Ministers, Commanders of the three Armed Forces, the Inspector General of Police, ministry secretaries and health experts.

He said that although the former Prime Minister has criticized the Presidential Task Force, he also has obtained the Covid vaccine from the  Narahenpita Army Hospital.

He said that the people of the country should decide on the service rendered by armed forces.(Darshana Sanjeewa Balasuriya)

China behind Sri Lanka’s vaccination programme success: Pavithra

August 9th, 2021

Courtesy The Daily Mirror

The Chinese government has come forward to fulfil 80% coverage of vaccines in Sri Lanka making the vaccination programme a great success and thereby strengthen the country, Health Minister Pavithra Wanniarachchi said.

She expressed these views at a special discussion held with the Chinese Ambassador to Sri Lanka Qi Zhenhong at the Chinese Embassy this morning.

“The Chinese Government has extended its support to the Government of Sri Lanka in strengthening the programme to save the lives of people infected with Covid-19 and to control the virus by providing essential medical equipment to Intermediate Treatment Centres and Hospitals,” the Minister said.

Minister Wanniarachchi also thanked the Chinese Government for their support to control Covid virus in Sri Lanka from the outset, further strengthening the long standing international relations between the two countries.

In response, the Chinese Ambassador said the Chinese Government is giving priority to providing all assistance to control the Covid-19 epidemic in Sri Lanka. Accordingly, steps will be taken to provide grants and necessary assistance to Sri Lanka in the future, he said. (Sheain Fernandopulle)

Every hospital to be converted to treat COVID patients

August 9th, 2021

Courtesy The Daily Mirror

Every hospital island-wide will be converted into hospitals where COVID-19 patients are treated within this week, Chairman of State Pharmaceuticals Corporation (SPC) Dr. Prasanna Gunasena said.

He said it has been observed that people had shown a little reluctance to seek medical care when they feel unfit.

People are kindly requested to go to the nearest hospital wherever symptoms similar to COVID-19 appear without endangering others,” he said.

People must have been panicked to seek medical assistance at hospitals due to the recent videos and images shared on social media,” he underscored.

He said the congestion at hospitals is being addressed and people should not be scared of reaching the hospitals.

Moreover, Dr. Gunasena said in a situation where Delta variant is spreading like a wildfire in Sri Lanka, it is essential that people must avoid attending large gatherings. (Sheain Fernandopulle)

40,000 elderly forgo COVID vaccine in Colombo

August 9th, 2021

Courtesy The Daily Mirror

At least 40,000 persons above 60 years of age have not received their COVID-19 vaccine in the Colombo city owing to several misconceptions, Chairman of State Pharmaceuticals Corporation (SPC) Dr. Prasanna Gunasena said.

In a special discussion held at the Government Information Department, he said they had been several misconceptions like vaccine is not suitable for people with different diseases and also some vaccines are ideal for separate purposes like going abroad.

All these misconceptions are baseless. The WHO has categorically stated that all current vaccines equally provide shield to protect one from being hospitalized with complications and succumbing to the virus,” he stressed.

Some people are just slow adopters and are taking a wait-and-see approach. However, hesitancy to get the COVID-19 vaccine needs to be addressed if we are to turn the tide on this pandemic whether based in fear, mistrust or false assumptions,” he pointed out.

Therefore, Dr Gunasena said it is paramount to get any kind of vaccine without further delay and reluctance.

He also urged people to register with 1906 hotline by giving your name, telephone number and the address so that they will be directed for vaccination.

However, it is noteworthy that no one would get the full and ideal protection despite receiving a single of a vaccine. It is essential to take both the doses plus immunity starts to build only after two weeks of full vaccination,” Dr Gunasena underlined.

So far, 96 percent of target population has received a single dose while only 25 percent has been offered with both doses.

He said they were hoping to administer the second dose for all first dose recipients before the end of this month.

It should also be mentioned that the recipients of a COVID-19 irrespective of any kind of vaccine will get full protection only by the mid-September,” he added. (Sheain Fernandopulle)

Sri Lanka holds mass cremations amid surge in Covid-19 deaths

August 9th, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

Sri Lanka’s daily fatalities count moves past 111

August 9th, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

The Director General of Health Services today confirmed another 111 Covid-19 related deaths for August 08.

Sri Lanka’s death toll due to the coronavirus has climbed to 5,222 with this. 

According to the data released by the Department of Government Information, the latest victims confirmed today include 56 males and 55 females.

None among the victims are aged below 30 years while 21 victims aged between 30-59 years and 90 others aged 60 and above.

Ministerial committee appointed to resolve teachers’ salary anomalies

August 9th, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

A four-member ministerial committee has been appointed to look into the teachers’ and principals’ salary issues.

The committee has been appointed by the Cabinet of Ministers today (August 09), Minister Keheliya Rambukwella stated.

The newly-appointed committee consists of Ministers Wimal Weerawansa, Prasanna Ranatunga, Mahinda Amaraweera, and Dullas Alahapperuma.

The Committee is to study and submit proposals to resolve the salary anomalies of teachers and principals.

With 1,010 new COVID cases, daily count climbs to 2,938

August 9th, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

The Epidemiology Unit of the Ministry of Health reports that another 1,010 persons have tested positive for Covid-19 today, pushing the daily count of new cases to 2,938.

This brings the tally of confirmed cases of coronavirus identified in the country to 332,947.

Sri Lanka’s total recoveries stand at 295,518 while over 32,318 COVID-19 positive patients are currently being treated at hospitals. 

The death toll in Sri Lanka due to the virus is 5,222.

Homecare program for asymptomatic COVID-19 patients from today

August 9th, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

An integrated homecare-based treatment program for asymptomatic COVID-19 patients commences from today (August 09).

The program which was carried out as a pilot project in the Western Province until now will be launched island-wide from today, the Ministry of Health stated.

Under the program, patients between the ages of 2 and 65 years, who do not show symptoms or show mild symptoms, are to be treated at home under medical supervision.

The decision was taken due to the increasing number of COVID-19 patients exceeding the hospital capacities.

Patients who are diagnosed with COVID-19 after a PCR or antigen test should be examined by the local Medical Officer of Health (MOH) and be recommended to be treated at home.

Arrangements will then be made to treat the infected person at home under the relevant health guidelines and the patient will be placed under medical supervision after registration made over the phone.

The relevant activities will be coordinated through the 24-hour hotline number 1390, the Ministry of Health stated.

On What Conditions should Teachers on the Street be Allowed Back in the Classroom?

August 9th, 2021

By Shivanthi Ranasinghe Courtesy Ceylon Today

How to resolve the issues of the principals and teachers is no longer the question. The real question is whether we should allow these individuals to teach, influence and mould the character of our children. A teacher by definition would be an educated person. However, the ongoing trade union action by the primary and tertiary academic staff has challenged the very definition of an educated person. 

A misconstrued education 

The purpose of an education ought to be to understand the correct method of pursuing a matter. The sophistication of an educated person thus overrides all other adornments, may it be money or muscle. A person’s insight on specific subjects or overall surroundings becomes the measurement of his education standards. Independence in thought and action is the ultimate hallmark of a well-educated person. 

Most unfortunately in Sri Lanka, education is not a means of personal growth in terms of character or knowledge. Instead, it is simply a stepping stone to society. Without even the most basic education certificate, an average Sri Lankan citizen cannot gain a foothold in society. Therefore, the entire Sri Lankan education system is geared towards pushing its students to collect these paper qualifications. 

The children must push past the numerous bottlenecks in the system to collect these papers. Students in schools less facilitated than the established schools in developed cities are challenged not only by lack of labs for science and computer subjects. They also suffer from a teaching staff with a high turnover. These schools are often without even water for sanitation or drinking or a proper ground for sports. 

The solitary path to degree courses are by gaining the required marks at the Advanced Level exams. Gaining university entrance is however not an automatic process for the deserving. Out of nearly 300,000 students who sit the Advanced Level exam, only about 30,000 students gain admittance to a tertiary education. A student in rural areas may enter a better facilitated school via the grade V scholarship programme. However, that student may still lose a place in university to a student from the home area. The reason being, the aggregate needed for university entrance from a rural area school is much less than from an urban area school. 

There are other avenues now to gain different levels of qualifications, especially in vocational fields. However, the entrance to these is often constrained by narrow minded criteria. This writer once interviewed a chef who had achieved the rare feat of consecutively winning two gold medals at the Culinary Olympics – the highly competitive International Exhibition of Culinary Art. He shared his difficult journey to the culinary field as the Hotel school rejected his application on the grounds his fluency in English was poor. 

Naturally, this highly competitive rat race to gain paper qualifications breeds a generation entirely absorbed in their own advancement. They do not have the space for compassion for even their own fellow students. From the day a child enters the Sri Lankan education system the focus is to get him (or her) through the Ordinary Level exams – the basic of qualifications. That same pressure is applied for the subsequent qualifications to be achieved. 

Hence, the child’s other experiences are greatly curtailed. Our education system, a leftover by the British forced occupiers, does not cultivate patriotism or nationalism. Empathy and compassion, as noted above, are devalued currencies. Memorising instead of reading is encouraged for a scripted answer is assured of a good grade. Independent work that might deviate from the standard answer is a risk students are discouraged from taking. 

Our education system fails to realise that all these exams and qualifications are to enhance the quality of life and not the life itself. If we were to approach life the way our education system approaches education then we from the day of birth will feel compelled to lie still in our coffins for we would only be concerned of the final destination and not the journey itself. 

In summary, our education system has degraded education into a mere certificate. This is producing a citizenry demanding that the society be responsible for their individual needs, whilst refusing to be responsible for the society. 

This is the background to the ongoing trade union actions by school principals and teachers at the height of an unprecedented pandemic that has engulfed the entire world. This situation is not to be taken lightly. The education system’s narrow framework contributes to psychopaths as Rohana Wijeweera and Vellupillai Prabhakaran being able to manipulate teenagers and young adults. 

Students have been trained from a young age onwards only to rely on a given note as the only true doctrine. Teachers extract these notes from the Government issued text books without challenging its veracity. The shocking contents of Government issued text books for Islam lessons in the aftermath of the Easter Attack is a case in point. Neither the teacher nor student is encouraged to broaden their knowledge base. 

Hence, the generations that are coming forth are increasingly behaving mindlessly and selfishly. On the pronouncements of an individual entity, the followers of the JVP and LTTE perceive mostly imagined grievances against society. Those two eras destroyed too many of our promising youth. Those who escaped the clutches of those two devils are now in responsible positions as school principals and teachers. However, it is obvious that they are still susceptible to becoming someone else’s pawns. 

Teachers pay hikes: an unjust call

KLL Wijeratne who retired from the Sri Lanka Administrative Service and functioned as the Secretary of Salaries & Cadres Commission from 2006-2009 and Chairman of the Salaries & Cadres Commission from 2016-2019 gave the background of the salary anomalies in ‘The Island’ of 03 August   . 

Prior to the establishment of the Teachers Service on 06 October 1994, teachers’ salaries were based on their qualifications as trained teachers, non-trained teachers, honours graduates, general degree holders and diploma holders. Thus five salary scales determined the pay of nearly 25 categories of teachers providing neither a grading system nor a promotional scheme” writes Wijeratne.

On 27 September 1994 the Minister of Education & Higher Education Richard Pathirana sought Cabinet approval to establish a Teachers’ Service. Chandrika Kumaratunga as the Finance Minister whilst accepting the proposal on principle to establish such a Teachers’ Service cautioned that the salary scales included therein would create anomalies on the Public Service Salary Structure and emphasised the need to first examine and compare other sectors of the Public Service depending on work norms and other conditions of service. Irrespective of these observations the Cabinet Paper 94/14/13 was approved by the Cabinet of Ministers on 28 September 1994.”

Wijeratne continues to say This approval included the implementation of the proposed salary scales. In response, Finance Minister Kumaratunga sought Cabinet approval for amending the Cabinet decision by including the words ‘it was decided to refer the proposals to the Salaries & Cadres Committee for a comprehensive examination and report before implementing the proposals’.”

However, this caution was thrown to the wind when UNP Presidential candidate Srima Dissanayake issued a full page notice promising to implement the proposed salary scale, recalls Wijeratne. Immediately, Kumaratunga who was also contesting at the 1994 Presidential Elections gazetted the salary scale. This is the first time a salary scale was gazetted before establishing a Service” observes Wijeratne. 

As expected this paved the way for anomalies to arise in the education sector and other parallel services – especially in the Principals Service Salaries.  To resolve this issue the Supreme Court directed principals’ salaries to be increased. This created anomalies between the salaries of Teacher Educators Service and the Sri Lanka Education Administrative Service (SLEAS).” The matter again ended up in the Supreme Courts” states Wijeratne.

This was finally resolved in 2006 with the Mahinda Rajapaksa Government issuing a new National Wage Policy with a salary structure and promotional scheme considering all the grades of the Public Service, removing the anomalies between the Principals Service and the SLEAS. Therefore there are no anomalies between the Principals Service, the SLEAS and other Services due to the overall, overarching comprehensive new salary structure and promotional scheme adapted across the entire Public Service.

Moreover the pensionable salary of all public servants has been increased by more than 100 per cent between 2016 to 2020” concludes Wijeratne.

The Treacherous Target

If as Wijeratne explains there are no salary anomalies, then arises the question the reason for the protests. Even if Wijeratne is wrong and the principals and teachers do have a justifiable grievance, gives rise to the question as to the reasons for the trade union actions to erupt at this particular juncture of time. After all, by the admission of the protesters themselves, this is an issue that has been festering for nearly quarter of a century. 

These protesters could have taken to the streets with this same intensity during the last Government. After all, the then Education Minister Akila Viraj Kariyawasam earned the wrath of teachers for his ill-conceived decisions. His directive to forcibly transfer teachers who had served in the same school for a decade was deeply resented. Teachers personally felt that they were being punished for a wrong they did not commit. Many felt humiliated for having to exchange places where they had to take up positions due to lesser qualified teachers whilst the lesser qualified took places that required greater experience. Consequently, teachers with training to teach larger classes ended in smaller numbered classes. They were replaced with teachers who could not handle a large group of students. Many suspected that the then Minister took this foolish decision to justify the appointment of his supporters to teaching positions without the necessary teaching experience. 

The same protest organisers

The protests initially started to oppose the proposed Kotelawala Defence University Bill. When Ceylon Teachers Union General Secretary Joseph Stalin and other organisers were detained and sent to a quarantine centre, releasing him became another demand. It was on top of this the grievances alleged to salary anomalies was added. 

Before the principals and teachers began their protests, the farmers protested over the agrochemical fertiliser ban. In all these protests, the same organisers could be seen. 

Judging by the response generated in social media, it is clear that the public too is beginning to suspect a scam. 

Sri Lanka is on a very tight rope. It must balance both the raging pandemic and the directly impacted economy. This is the opera that the Opposition never dreamed of getting. If not for the COVID-19 pandemic the Opposition would have been sulking ducks they were soon after the successful completion of the war against terrorism. 

Despite the challenges and doomsday predictions, the Gotabaya Rajapaksa Administration is still holding the economy together. When the Administration recently settled the USD 1 billion loan, the Opposition was left speechless. They see their only recourse to discredit the Government is to upset the carefully managed pandemic. 

Despite sadistic expectations from certain quarters including credit rating agencies, the Government managed to get honor the USD one billion loan ahead of time. Whether the trade unionists’ protests that has intensified since then is coincidental is quite questionable. Trade unions that were dormant during the Yahapalana Government to suddenly rise to an issue that has been festering for 24 years seems to be motivated by more than an actual grievance. 

When the Health sector too tried to kick the Government in the belly via its trade union muscle the military took over the vaccination drive and produced far better results. By August, 86 per cent of those above age 30 had been vaccinated with at least one dose; 19 per cent has been given both vaccines and 50 per cent will have got both vaccines by mid-August. 

Instead of supporting this effort as responsible citizens a total of 120 protests have been held across the country on the month of July alone. Each protest has had over 1,500 participants. The sudden spike in COVID-19 infected, especially with the dreaded delta variant, is due to these protesters who refuse to follow the health guidelines has been the observation of the intelligence services. 

The trade unions of principals and teachers have stated that until they get the pound of flesh, they will continue to agitate in the streets. According to Minister Gamini Lokuge, Rs 56 billion would be needed per month to fulfil this anomaly. This is an impossible demand. Yet, the trade unionists have rejected Education Minister Professor GL Peiris pledge to address these anomalies at the forthcoming budget proposals that are only three months away. 

As State Minister Dr Nalaka Godahewa noted that the annual state sector salary and pension bill is a staggering Rs 1.2 trillion. To meet this commitment in the face of the dwindling revenue is a mean task. 

Responding to a question raised by the Opposition Leader Sajith Premadasa Health Minister Pavithra Wanniarchchi noted that in comparison to the 1000-1500 infected per week detected in the past, the new numbers have jumped to 2000-2500 per week. Ragama hospital among others are now treating patients three times its capacity. If this situation continues, the country will be again forced into another lockdown. This is clearly the target of the unionists. Minister Lokuge recalls that even in 2014 similar protests, instigated by foreign funded NGOs took place. 

The discerning public should understand the objectives of these foreign funders’ attempt to derail the incumbent Government. Memories of the Yahapalana Government are still fresh. These western oriented funders applauded and praised the servitude of a weak and bumbling Government even as the country’s economy and national security crumbled. 

Way Forward

Whether these trade unions are politically motivated or acting on the orders of foreign agents is a moot point. Either way, this issue needs resolving. 

If the principals and teachers want a higher salary, then the Government as the negotiator of Sri Lankan citizens must also forward certain demands. Chief among these must be that teachers must prove their performance. Teachers’ salaries are paid by the people’s taxes. Then, it is grossly unfair for the parents to pay more to meet teachers’ salaries AND also pay to privately tutor their children. The burden of coaching children should not fall on the parent either and nor must the child be overburdened with homework. The education ministry must play an active role to ensure that children have adequate play and rest time after school hours, which means that the set homework must be reasonable and possible for children to attend without a parent’s intervention.

This is a most reasonable demand and would be much welcomed by all parents. Teachers today have lost their respectable standing in society. They, who have flouted healthcare regulations and are holding the entire nation hostage, will have an uphill journey to be taken seriously as disciplinarians. Their only recourse too would be to prove their commitment to their profession. 

(ranasingheshivanthi@gmail.com)

45,000 of COVID-19 cases so far are children, Lady Ridgeway overcrowded

August 9th, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

Nearly about 45,000 of the total coronavirus cases reported so far (out of 329,994 of total) in Sri Lanka have been children, Dr. Nalin Kitulwatta of Lady Ridgeway Children’s Hospital stated.

He pointed out that a total of fourteen children have died from COVID-19 in Sri Lanka

Dr. Kitulwatta says that the COVID-19 wards at the Lady Ridgeway Children’s Hospital are overcrowded as the COVID-19 infection is rapidly spread among children.

We have taken steps to open two more wards elsewhere in Rajagiriya. As of this morning, about 150 children are being treated at Lady Ridgeway Children’s Hospital and the other two wards under its control.

According to statistics, 45,000 children with COVID-19 have been reported in Sri Lanka so far. About 20,000 of them are children under 10 years of age. Fourteen of them have died.”

Dr. Nalin Kitulwatta states that there is no need to hospitalize children with COVID-19 infection who show normal symptoms.

Not every child needs to be hospitalized. If possible, it is better to take care of children with colds and mild fever at home without bringing them to the hospital.

However, the child could be brought to the hospital anytime if they have high fever and do not eat or drink, with symptoms of vomiting and diarrhea.”

COVID-19 Survivors Have Broad, Longer-Term Immunity

August 8th, 2021

BY RAJEE SURI Courtesy The Epoch Times

People who have recovered from COVID-19 retain broad and effective longer-term immunity to the disease, according to a new study.

Findings of the study, which is the most comprehensive of its kind so far, have implications for expanding understanding about human immune memory as well as future vaccine development for coronaviruses.

For the longitudinal study in Cell Reports Medicine, researchers looked at 254 patients with mostly mild to moderate symptoms of SARS-CoV-2 infection over a period of more than eight months (250 days) and found that their immune response to the virus remained durable and strong.

The findings are reassuring, especially given early reports during the pandemic that protective neutralizing antibodies didn’t last in COVID-19 patients, said Rafi Ahmed, director of the Emory University Vaccine Center and a lead author of the paper.

The study serves as a framework to define and predict long-lived immunity to SARS-CoV-2 after natural infection. We also saw indications in this phase that natural immunity could continue to persist,” Ahmed said.

The research team will continue to evaluate this cohort over the next few years.

The researchers found that not only did the immune response increase with disease severity but also with each decade of age regardless of disease severity, suggesting that there are additional unknown factors influencing age-related differences in COVID-19 responses.

In following the patients for months, researchers got a more nuanced view of how the immune system responds to COVID-19 infection. The picture that emerges indicates that the body’s defense shield not only produces an array of neutralizing antibodies but activates certain T and B cells to establish immune memory, offering more sustained defenses against reinfection.

We saw that antibody responses, especially IgG antibodies, were not only durable in the vast majority of patients but decayed at a slower rate than previously estimated, which suggests that patients are generating longer-lived plasma cells that can neutralize the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein.”

Ahmed said investigators were surprised to see that convalescent participants also displayed increased immunity against common human coronaviruses as well as SARS-CoV-1, a close relative of the current coronavirus. The study suggests that patients who survived COVID-19 are likely to also possess protective immunity even against some SARS-CoV-2 variants.

Vaccines that target other parts of the virus rather than just the spike protein may be more helpful in containing infection as SARS-CoV-2 variants overtake the prevailing strains,” Ahmed said. This could pave the way for us to design vaccines that address multiple coronaviruses.”

The researchers said the study more comprehensively identifies the adaptive immune components leading to recovery, and that it will serve as a benchmark for immune memory induced by SARS-CoV-2 vaccines.

We can build on these results to define the progression to long-lived immunity against the new coronavirus, which can guide rational responses when future outbreaks occur,” Ahmed said.

The National Institutes of Health funded the work, which is a collaboration between Emory University and the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle, Washington.

යුනිවර්ස් හෙවත් ලෝක ධාතුව

August 8th, 2021

වෛද්‍ය රුවන් එම් ජයතුංග 

යුනිවර්ස් හෙවත් ලෝක ධාතුව තුල චක්‍රාවාට නොහොත් ගැලැක්සීස් බිලියන 125 (1.25×1011) පමණ තිබෙනවා. සත්‍ය අගය මීට වඩා වැඩි වෙන්නටත් පුලුවන්. මෙහි විශ්කම්භය ආලෝක වර්ශ බිලියන 93 පමණ. අපට පෙනෙන ලෝක ධාතුව එනම් ඔබ්සවර්බල් යුනිවර්ස් එකට වඩා තත්‍ය ලෝක ධාතුව අති විශාලයි. අපට පෙනෙන ලෝක ධාතුව ෆුට් බෝලයක සයිස් එකක් නම් තත්‍ය ලෝක ධාතුව ෆුට් බෝල් පිට්ටනියකටත් වඩා ලොකුයි. යුනිවර්ස් එකේ වයස වසර බිලියන 14 පමණ වෙනවා. ලෝක ධාතුව (යුනිවර්ස් ) එක  ප්‍රසාරණය වෙමින් පවතිනවා. 

යුනිවර්ස් එක ආරම්භ වුනේ බිග් බෑං හෙවත් මහා පිපුරුමත් සමග. මහා පිපුරුම වීමට ප්‍රථම යුනිවර්ස් එක ටීක් බෝලයක් තරම්. එය පිපිරීමෙන් තමයි තරු ඇතුළු චක්‍රාවාට හට ගත්තේ. පිපුරුමත් සමග අධි විශාල තාපයක් ඇති වුනා. මේ තාපය ක්‍රමක් ක්‍රමයෙන් සිසිල් වෙමින් පවතිනවා. තව වසර ට්‍රිලියන ගනනකට පසු මුළු ලෝක ධාතුව අධි ශීත වෙනවා. ඒ වන විට ලෝක ධාතුවේ සිටින ජීවීන් සියල්ල මිය ගිහින්. තරු , චක්‍රාවාට පවා මිය ගිහින්. ඒ වන විට ලෝක ධාතුව යළි සංකෝචනය වෙනවා. යම් කාලයකට පසුව  ලෝක ධාතුව  ඇරඹි අවස්ථාව වන අර ටීක් බෝලයේ ප්‍රමාණයට පත් වෙනවා. ඉන් පසු යලිත් වරක් බිග් බෑං හෙවත් මහා පිපුරුම ඇරඹිලා යලිත් තරු , චක්‍රාවාට ඇති වෙනවා. මෙය චක්‍රයක් වගේ ක්‍රියාවක් ඒ නිසා යුනිවර්ස් එකේ උපත කවදාද කියා කියන්න බැහැ.  

අපි යුනිවර්ස් හෙවත් ලෝක ධාතුවක් ගැන කතා කලාට තව ලෝක ධාතු තියනවා. සමහර තාරකා විද්‍යාඥයන් පැරලල් එනම් සමාන්තර යුනිවර්ස් එකක් පවතින බවත් කියනවා. නමුත් බොහෝ විට ලෝක ධාතු අති විශාල ප්‍රමාණයක් පවතින මල්ටිවර්ස් එකක් (බහු ලෝක ධාතුවක් තිබෙන්න පුලුවන්. තරුවක් මිය ගිය පසු බ්ලැක් හෝල් එකක් එනම් කළු කුහරයක් ඇති වුනු පසු බ්ලැක් හෝල් එක හරහා වෙනත් යුනිවර්ස් එකකට යන්න පුලුවන් බව සමහර තාරකා විද්‍යාඥයන් පවසනවා. යුනිවර්ස් හෝ මල්ටිවර්ස් එක දෙවියෙකු මවන ලද්දක් නොවෙයි. එය ඇති වූයේ ඉබේටම. උදාහරණයක් කියනවා නම් දිය ඇල්ලක් වැටෙන කොට දිය බුබුළු ඇති වෙනවා. ඒවා කිසිවෙකු මැව්වේ නෑ. එය හට ගත්තේ යම් හේතුවක් නිසා. මේ අපරිමිත විශ්වයේ දෙවියන් කියා ප්‍රපංචයක් නොමැති බව ස්ටීවන් හෝකින්ස් තම අවසාන කාලයේ කියා සිටියා. එඬේර යුගයේ මිනිසුන් විසින් තම පරිකල්පනය තුල නිර්මිත ඊෂ්වර,  ජෙහෝවා හෝ අල්ලා යන දෙවිවරු විසින් මේ නිමක් කොනක් නොමැති ලෝක ධාතුව මවන ලද බව කීම තර්කාන්විත නෑ.

පෘතුවිය හැරුනු කොට මේ ලෝක ධාතුව තුල විවිධ වර්ගයේ ජීවීන් සිටිය හැකියි. සමහර ජීවීන් ඉතා කුඩා ක්‍ෂුද්‍ර මට්ටමේ සිට ඩයිනසෝරයන්ටත් වඩා විශාල විය හැකියි. සමහරක් ජීවීන් ඔක්සිජන් නොව හයිඩ්‍රිජන් ආශ්‍රිත කොට ජීවත් වන ප්‍රභේදයක් විය හැකියි. එසේම ප්‍රභා සංස්ලේෂණය මගින් දිවි ගැට ගහ ගන්නා මිනිසුන්ට සමාන ජීවීන් ඉන්නටත් පුලුවන්. සමහර ජීවීන් මිනිසාට වඩා උසස් දියුණු – එනම් භෞතිකව සහ ආධ්‍යාත්මිකව දියුණු ජීවීන් විය හැකියි. තවත් සමහරක් ප්‍රිඩේටර් වර්ගයේ දරුණු ජීවීන් විය හැකියි. ඒ නිසා අපගේ පැවැත්ම පිලිබඳව විශ්වයට රේඩියෝ පණිවිඩ යැවීම ඉලාගෙන කෑමක් වෙන්නටත්  පුලුවන්. සමහර විට පිට සක්වල ජීවීන් පෘතුවියට ඒම ස්පාඤඥ ජාතිකයන් ඉන්කා මායා ශිෂ්ටාචාර සොයා ඒමක් වගේ ව්‍යසනයකින් කෙලවර වන දෙයක් වෙන්නටත් පුලුවන්. නමුත් යම් දිනක අපිට පිට සක්වල ජීවීන් සමග ගනුදෙනු කිරීමට සිදු වන බව නම් ඒකාන්තයි.


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