Friday, March 31, 2023

Showers in Uva, Central, Southern, Sabaragamuwa, Western, North-Western and North-Central provinces and in Mannar district

Weather forecast issued at 05.30 a.m. on 01 April 2023 by the Department of Meteorology

Showers or thundershowers will occur at several places in Uva, Central, Southern, Sabaragamuwa, Western, North-Western and North-Central provinces and in Mannar district during the afternoon or night. Fairly heavy showers above 50mm are likely at some places in above areas.

Showers may occur in the Batticaloa, Ampara and Monaragala districts in the morning.

Winds will be south-easterly to south-westerly in direction and wind speed will be (20-30) kmph.

General public is kindly requested to take adequate precautions to minimize damages caused by temporary localized strong winds and lightning during thundershowers.



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UK grants ‘third country’ asylum for two Sri Lankans following suicide attempts

Two Sri Lankan asylum seekers who were transferred to Rwanda earlier this month after attempting suicide on the Indian Ocean island of Diego Garcia were approved by UK authorities on Thursday to receive asylum in a third country.

Documents notifying the man and woman of the decision, which The New Humanitarian has reviewed, say they will not be returned to Sri Lanka, where they fear persecution by the government. A third country for resettlement has not yet been identified, however.

The two asylum seekers, Hamshika Krishnamoorthi, 22, and Ajith Sajithkumar, 22, were among the first 89 Tamil asylum seekers to arrive on Diego Garcia in October 2021. Their boat broke down near the island, and they were rescued by British forces.

The numbers of Sri Lankan asylum seekers swelled to nearly 200 in 2022, but many either accepted payments from the UK to return to Sri Lanka or voluntarily left by boat to seek asylum on the French island of Réunion.

Of the remaining 68 asylum seekers, many say they were tortured and sexually abused by Sri Lankan security forces for alleged links to the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) – a separatist group that fought for independence during a 26-year-civil war against the Sinhalese-dominated Sri Lankan government.

While more than 50 people have had their asylum claims assessed by UK officials on the island, most have been rejected. Their rejection letters include the line: “A removal order will be issued for your return to Sri Lanka.”

“I am very happy, but at the same time, worried about how much longer it will be,” Krishnamoorthi told The New Humanitarian via WhatsApp from the Rwanda Military Hospital in the Rwandan capital, Kigali.

Geeth Kulasegaram, a senior legal adviser at London-based Jein Solicitors who represents the two asylum seekers, said he is seeking a stay order from a judge in the UK to prevent his clients from being brought back to Diego Garcia.He said the opinions of medical experts in Rwanda were instrumental in securing asylum for his clients.

“We had already submitted strong medical evidence for both [clients], warning the BIOT [authorities] that they are suffering from serious mental health issues and [are] at high risk of suicide,” he told The New Humanitarian via WhatsApp. “Initially, the BIOT did not appear to have considered them properly or [with] enough weight. However…the doctors in Rwanda also confirmed the same, which must have left the BIOT with no choice.”

“I’m hopeful that this will have a positive impact on other cases in Diego Garcia,” he added. – The New Humanitarian



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Sri Lanka: IMF Loan Risks Eroding Rights

(Washington, DC) – The government of Sri Lanka should ensure that policies to enhance revenues do not further erode economic and social rights and that anti-corruption reforms provide accountability, Human Rights Watch said on Thursady. On March 20, 2023, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) approved a US$3 billion loan to Sri Lanka to help resolve the spiraling economic crisis that began after Sri Lanka defaulted on its debt in April 2022.

The loan was approved seven months after IMF staff and government officials reached an initial agreement and following financing assurances from the country’s major bilateral creditors. Although it focuses on growing revenues and emphasizes tackling corruption and improving social protection, the program as structured risks further undermining people’s economic and social rights. The government has announced policies that effectively reduce salaries in public service agencies, eliminate subsidies, and increase regressive taxes – steps that could degrade public services and further raise prices at a time when a large segment of the population is already struggling due to high inflation.

“Official corruption and tax rules that benefitted the wealthiest were key drivers of Sri Lanka’s economic crisis, for which Sri Lankans struggling to make ends meet should not have to carry the burden,” said Meenakshi Ganguly, South Asia director at Human Rights Watch. “The government should recognize that the public deserves real accountability, whether it’s for past war crimes or ongoing misgovernance and repression of critics.”

IMF approval of the loan paves the way for multilateral institutions such as the World Bank and Asian Development Bank to offer Sri Lanka new financing, which the government has said it expects to reach $7 billion over the next four years. Financial institutions and donors should insist on transparent, rights-respecting governance.

The IMF loan is intended to provide the country with a lifeline while addressing deep-seated problems that contributed to the crisis. Under international law, governments and financial institutions have an obligation to respond to economic crises in a way that advances rather than further jeopardizes human rights, and should avoid pursuing policies that reduce low-income people’s access to essential goods and services.

Sri Lanka’s economic crisis triggered soaring inflation, as well as shortages of essential goods such as fuel and medicine, causing severe and ongoing economic hardship. In January, the World Food Programme reported that one in three families in Sri Lanka were experiencing food insecurity and half were purchasing food on credit.

Waves of protests have made ending corruption a central demand, and led to the ouster of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa in July 2022. Currently, the IMF program’s anti-corruption measures are centered on the government passing legislation in line with the United Nations Convention Against Corruption and the IMF carrying out a governance diagnostic that assesses Sri Lanka’s strengths and weaknesses in six areas, including the rule of law and fiscal governance. The conclusions could be used to set conditions later in the loan program.

For the analysis to be effective, civil society should play a prominent role, Human Rights Watch said. Subsequent anti-corruption reforms should ensure that the government enforces its rules and holds corrupt officials and private businesspeople to account, including for past malfeasance. These efforts should include recovering stolen assets, imposing back pay and penalties for tax evasion, and stemming illicit financial flows out of the country.

The program’s focus on increasing government revenues, rather than reducing public spending as a percentage of Gross Domestic Product (GDP), will better protect rights, Human Rights Watch said. When the crisis began, Sri Lanka had among the world’s lowest tax-to-GDP ratios in the world at 7.3 percent. That ratio is expected to nearly double to 14 percent of GDP. However, while some of the new measures are designed to increase taxes on the wealthy and eliminate tax exemptions that benefit them, the heavy reliance on value-added taxes can worsen the cost-of-living crisis.

The government has already increased corporate tax rates and removed all sector-specific tax exemptions, according to the IMF staff report. But most new tax revenue will come from value-added taxes (VAT), which were raised from 8 to 12 percent in May 2022 and again to 15 percent in September. Basic food items remain exempt from VAT, but the government committed to VAT reform by 2024 that would remove “almost all” product-specific exemptions.

While the wealthy pay more VAT in absolute terms because they spend more, the expense makes up a much greater share of income for low-income people. In 2019, the amount of revenue that came from VAT and income taxes were on par, but by the end of the program, VAT is expected to make up 32 percent of all taxes, whereas income taxes would make up 21 percent.

The program reduces the threshold for taxing annual income to 1.2 million rupees ($3,694), a change that some have protested as burdening families who are already struggling to realize their rights. The government should publish data on the percentage of the population that is subject to income taxes under this change, Human Rights Watch said. It should also consider advancing the introduction of taxes on property, gifts, and inheritance, which the program mandates by 2025.

The program includes other measures that could harm low-income people. Public services are central to delivering rights and are an important source of employment. The program calls for keeping any increase in public wages to less than inflation, effectively reducing real salaries, and reducing total spending on wages from 5 to 3.6 percent of GDP. It also eliminates subsidies for both fuel and electricity and imposes an excise tax on fuel, but does not ensure that these critical measures are carried out in a way that fulfills rather than erodes rights. To protect rights when removing subsidies and introducing taxes for fossil fuels, the government should adequately invest in social protection, the use of renewable energy sources, and other measures to move toward a rights-aligned economy, Human Rights Watch said.

The program includes a so-called “social spending floor” that would “gradually raise” spending on four cash transfer programs “to help cushion the potential impact of macroeconomic adjustment on the poor and vulnerable groups.” Recognizing the pervasive flaws in the country’s targeted cash transfer programs, it also mandates overhauling eligibility criteria in partnership with the World Bank to make them “based on objective and verifiable characteristics of households,” and notes the government is working with the World Bank on a new electronic registry for selecting beneficiaries.

While the floor brings up total spending on these programs to 0.6 percent of GDP, it is set at far less than developing countries’ average spending on safety nets, which is 1.6 percent. Furthermore, the insistence on targeting benefits based on eligibility criteria also risks continuing to exclude people who are unable to access goods and services essential for an adequate standard of living. The details of the new eligibility criteria and electronic registry have not been made public, but research has shown pervasive problems with targeting benefits, including high error and exclusion rates.

For example, a proposal to use electricity consumption as a proxy measure – to overcome the lack of data on household income as well as the risk of corruption in selecting beneficiaries – would leave out about 35 percent of the bottom half of the population. Because current beneficiaries who are ineligible under the new criteria would be removed by January 2024, this could mean people losing benefits they are currently receiving.

Contrary to this approach, the IMF’s technical note on social safety nets advises that in countries with “low administrative capacity” efforts should focus on enhancing tax capacity to “claw back” benefits from high-income households, rather than lowering benefits or excluding low-income beneficiaries.

“When half of Sri Lankan families are buying food on credit, it’s not the time to experiment with fixing chronic and pervasive problems with targeted cash transfer programs,” Ganguly said. “Instead of investing precious funds in new registries, the government’s focus should be on building a tax system that makes sure the wealthy pay their fair share.”



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CMLS calls for talks with trade unions

By Rathindra Kuruwita

A country facing severe crises in economic, social and political fronts needs a leader who believes in consensus building, College of Medical Laboratory Science (CMLS) President, Ravi Kumudesh says.President Ranil Wickremesinghe, when he was in the opposition, spoke extensively about consensual governance, he said.

“However, after he came to power, he has started behaving like a dictator. The government is showing that it has no respect for the labour force in the country through its actions,” he said.

Commenting on the government’s decision to send 20 Ceylon Petroleum Corporation (CPC) union activists on compulsory leave and banning them from entering CPC premises, Kumudesh said that the government is making workers increasingly resentful.

“Most of these issues could have been solved if the Minister of Power spoke with the unions. The government is trying to reform the energy sector without talking to any stakeholders. This is the antithesis of consensual governance,” he said.



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Survey claims Lankans deeply reject most politicians

Sri Lankans continue to have deeply unfavourable views of most politicians a year after the economic and political collapse in early 2022, and despite progress in recent months in stabilising the economy and in negotiations with the IMF, a survey by the Institute for Health Policy has found.

The survey conducted between Sept. 2022 and Mar. 2023 found that almost all politicians tracked by SLOTS had negative favourability ratings, and most had ratings below -30, which make most Sri Lankan politicians as or more unpopular than French President Macron today.

The most popular politician tracked by SLOTS is Dr Sudarshini Fernandopulle, former State Minister for COVID-19. She had an average net favourability rating of +7, but this was still substantially down from late 2021 when it was typically +50 – +70. The only other politicians who had positive or neutral net favourability ratings, were also professionals and from both the government and opposition: Professor Channa Jayasumuna (+1), Harini Amarasuriya (-8), and Ali Sabry (-10).

The most unpopular politicians tracked were from the Rajapaksa family, all of whom had net favourability ratings less than -50, with Basil Rajapaksa and Namal Rajapaksa being the most unpopular with ratings of -73 and -65.

Other politicians had ratings of -10 to -50, with government politicians generally doing worse than opposition ones, with the exceptions of Pavithra Wanniarachchi (-18) and Kanchana Wijesekera (-32), although both had significantly negative ratings.

Dr Rannan-Eliya, Executive Director of IHP and lead investigator, commented that “These results suggest that the whole political class is discredited. However, it is notable that the politicians with better ratings tended to be professionals or politicians with a reputation of speaking hard truths to the public—Dr Sudarshini in the case of COVID-19, or Ali Sabry about the economic crisis and the need for painful measures. I think that most politicians don’t want to say difficult things because they think it would make them unpopular, but the public seems to appreciate politicians who try to be honest, even if it means admitting difficult things.”



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Two students among ten arrested in Jaffna drug raid

By Dinasena Ratugamage

The Jaffna police conducted a rapid drug raid on Thursday and arrested 10 including two schoolchildren.

Prior to this operation, law enforcement apprehended a drug dealer who was operating near prominent schools in the Jaffna area. Following the arrest, the police gathered intelligence about other individuals who had purchased drugs from the dealer and subsequently detained them.

Among those arrested were a schoolboy and a schoolgirl.Everyone arrested were between the ages of 17 and 24, the police said.The suspects are to be produced before the Jaffna Magistrate’s Court.



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At least 600 injured after massive tornado strikes the US - 15 million under alert watch



Local media reported there aren't enough ambulances to respond to the "catastrophic" tornado.

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POLL: Should Donald Trump be indicted over Stormy Daniels 'hush money'?



POLL: Do you think Donald Trump should be indicted over an alleged hush money payment to Stormy Daniels ahead of the 2016 US Presidential Election?

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Thursday, March 30, 2023

As country’s economic woes deepened Kohila consumption jumped by 45 percent

By Ifham Nizam

A new study conducted by the Hector Kobbekaduwa Agricultural Training and Research Institute has revealed the devastating impact of the economic crisis on the food consumption patterns of Sri Lankan citizens.

According to the report, the domestic demand for Kohila surged by 45 percent during the 2021-2022 period, as citizens were forced to manage with whatever vegetables they could find. In stark contrast, consumption of beans, carrots, pumpkin, brinjal, and leafy vegetables plummeted by 30 percent.

The research report, titled “Economic Crisis and Household Food Security in Sri Lanka- 2022,” paints a bleak picture of the situation in the country. Agriculture Minister Mahinda Amaraweera stated that between September 2021 and the end of 2022, food inflation skyrocketed to an alarming 95 percent. The report also notes that this crisis is the worst economic downturn the country has experienced since gaining independence.

The report highlights the devastating impact on the food consumption habits of Sri Lankan citizens, with 86 percent of the population forced to change their diets due to a reduction in the amount of food items available. A further 75 percent had to reduce the quantity of food they used to prepare meals, while 45 percent reduced the frequency of eating altogether. A staggering 38 percent even had to cut back on the amount of food they ate.

The crisis has hit the estate sector particularly hard, with nearly 68 percent of workers having to spend the majority of their daily earnings on food. In Ratnapura, Ampara, Matara, and Hambantota districts, 75 percent of people have been forced to spend all their earnings on food just to make ends meet. The report indicates that 43 percent of the urban sector, 52 percent of the rural sector, and 67 percent of the plantation sector are now suffering from food insecurity.

The situation is even more dire when it comes to nutrition. A significant proportion of Sri Lankan citizens are now unable to access protein-rich food, with 25 percent in urban areas, 03 percent in rural areas, and 07 percent in plantation areas being affected. An even greater number of people are deficient in vitamin A foods, with 66 percent in urban areas, 46 percent in rural areas, and 41 percent in plantation areas affected. During the survey period, a shocking 56 percent of the population were unable to access any food containing iron. The report also confirmed that 78 percent of plantation workers were unable to consume meat and fish, which are essential sources of haem iron.

While the report paints a bleak picture, there is some cause for optimism. Food inflation has now reduced to 57 percent in 2023, down from its peak of 95 percent in October 2022. Amaraweera has called for more surveys like this to be conducted every three months in collaboration with academics to keep track of the situation and ensure that Sri Lankan citizens are able to access adequate food in the future.



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Hemas Hospitals makes national-level contribution through ‘Upakara’ initiative for deprived CKD patients

In a concerted effort to ensure healthcare equity for all Sri Lankans, the country’s foremost trusted private healthcare provider Hemas Hospitals introduced ‘Upakara’, an unmatched timely initiative which offers free monthly dialysis cycles to a selected number of Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) patients from low-income backgrounds, through Hemas Hospitals.

Hemas Hospitals’ Upakara is a one-of-a-kind initiative, contributing to the health and wellbeing of individuals from underprivileged and less fortunate communities, who are suffering from CKD. While most individuals face difficulties with affording basic healthcare during the country’s perilous economic situation, this facility will be considered a life-saving, monumental effort from a private healthcare provider, contributing on a national level.

“Chronic Kidney Disease is one among the most prevalent non-communicable diseases in Sri Lanka. Statistically, 20-25 percent of diabetic patients and 18-20 percent of patients with hypertension are prone to CKD. Holistically, one in 10 Sri Lankans is estimated to have CKD, while the vast majority is unaware of the fact that they have it, resulting in most patients seeking healthcare support at its late-stages. This forces CKD patients to either opt for kidney transplants or regular dialysis treatments, both bearing an intense level of financial burden on patients and their loved ones. Given the volatile macro-economic environment in the country today, this financial burden is heavier than ever before,” stated Dr. Lakith Peiris, Managing Director Hemas Hospitals.

“A statistically higher number of CKD patients from the underprivileged communities who are affected by fewer resources prompted us to address this issue by extending our support to these communities with essential infrastructure and services through Hemas Hospitals’ Upakara initiative,” he added.

CKD is fast becoming a major public health concern, attracting increased global attention due to rapid spread of the disease, and its grave impact on patients and their quality of life. With a larger number of CKD patients reported from Sri Lanka each year, the national healthcare system often finds it difficult to cater to the full requirement of all patients requiring dialysis, affecting their health and wellbeing on a large scale.

With the aim of ensuring good governance and community participation, Upakara will be overseen and operated by a governance committee inclusive of key opinion leaders within the hospital and communities.

With a vision of ‘Making Healthful Living Happen’, Hemas Hospitals intends to support CKD patients in a manner that eases the great financial burden that falls on them every month and enhances their access to life-saving dialysis treatment. At a time in the country when macro-economic volatility has destabilized personal economies, Upakara will lend greatly to easing the financial pressure of healthcare on these chronic patients and enable them to re-establish a sense of wellbeing.

“Therefore, in such a dire context, we believe Upakara is an important step forward in assuring health and healthcare equity in Sri Lanka, and consider it our duty as a responsible healthcare provider to ensure that all Sri Lankans have access to the life-saving treatment they require regardless of their financial background. Upakara was therefore borne with this vision, and we consider ourselves privileged to launch this vital CSR programme as we continue to work to eliminate disparities in the diagnosis and treatment of kidney diseases in Sri Lanka,” stated Dr. Peiris.



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Bryan Kohberger: Expert debunks wild 'accomplice' theory about accused quadruple killer



EXCLUSIVE: Criminal profiler John Kelly told Express.co.uk he assesses Bryan Kohberger as an "asocial" personality.

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President and Speaker pay last respects to the late Joseph Michael Perera

President Ranil Wickremesinghe and Speaker Mahinda Yapa Abeywardena paid their last respects to the late Joseph Michael Perera at the Parliament complex yesterday (30).



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Mum who unloaded two handguns on boyfriend has 25-year sentence overturned



Stephanie Clark was sentenced to 25 years after the prosecution alleged she had killed partner Don Juan Butler because she wanted him to "stop talking".

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Wednesday, March 29, 2023

Israeli missile attack on Syria’s Damascus area wounds 2 soldiers

Israel has conducted air attacks on targets in the Damascus area with loud explosions heard over the capital city at approximately 1:20am local time (22:20 GMT), the ministry of defence and state media reported.

The SANA state news agency said Syrian air defences were “confronting hostile targets” in the early hours of Thursday morning, the Associated Press reported.

(Aljazeera)



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Students should be equipped with modern technology to take over the country by 2048 – President

President Ranil Wickremesinghe who was the chief guest at  the 135th Annual Prize Giving ceremony of Ananda Vidyalaya in Colombo said that it is crucial for students in the country to have comprehensive knowledge of modern technology and continually update themselves with the latest advancements to prepare for the future which would  enable them to take over the country by 2048.

Additionally, the President suggested that once the economy is stabilized with the support of the IMF in four years, it would be worthwhile to evaluate whether to continue on the same old path or take a new direction that aligns with the developing world.

 



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Showers and thundershowers in Western, Sabaragamuwa and Southern provinces and in Anuradhapura, Kandy and Nuwara-Eliya districts

Weather forecast issued at 05.30 a.m. on 30 March 2023 by the Department of Meteorology

Showers or thundershowers will occur at a few places in Western, Sabaragamuwa and Southern provinces and in Anuradhapura, Kandy and Nuwara-Eliya districts during the afternoon or night.

Winds will be South-easterly or variable in direction and wind speed will be (20-30) kmph.

General public is kindly requested to take adequate precautions to minimize damages caused by temporary localized strong winds and lightning during thundershowers.



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Sri Lankan Paralympians vie for Gold in Australia

Sri Lanka’s Para Javelin stars, Dinesh Priyantha (F46) and Samantha Dulan (F44) and shot put (F42) national para record holder, Palitha Bandara will be competing for medals at the Australian National Para Athletics Open Championship which will be held at the Olympics stadium Brisbane, Australia.

 Dinesh Priyantha, with a distance of 67.79 meters entered the record books with a Gold for the longest throw at the 2020 Tokyo Games for F46 Javelin, while his team mate Samitha Dulan (F44) secured a Bronze at the Tokyo Paralympics in 2020.

 1450 Paralympians representing 23 countries will compete at this year’s games in Australia.

 Sri Lanka’s premier connectivity provider, Dialog Axiata is the proud sponsor of the Sri Lanka National Paralympic team.



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Megyn Kelly 'f****ng sick' of calls to ban guns in furious response to Nashville shooting



Megyn Kelly has a child the same age as the three youngest victims of the Nashville shooting, who were nine.

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Charles should be wary of any private conversations with Prince Harry, says commentator



King Charles and Prince Harry have not met this week though his youngest son has been pictured in London.

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Police brand stepdad 'human piece of trash' for killing daughter's ex in front of toddler



Police say the four-year-old was exposed to a traumatic scene when Jason Curtis, 52, gunned down her father hours after he had been awarded custody.

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Amsterdam launches stay away ad campaign targeting young British men

BBC reported that Amsterdam has warned rowdy British sex and drug tourists to “stay away”.

A digital discouragement campaign targeting men aged 18 to 35 in the UK is being pushed out by the Dutch city’s council. The initiative forms part of efforts to clean up Amsterdam’s raunchy reputation as Europe’s most liberal party capital.

Typically blunt, the videos show young men staggering in the street, handcuffed by police, finger-printed and having their mugshots taken. The online ads, highlighting the risks associated with the excessive use of drugs and booze, will be triggered when people in Britain tap in terms like – stag party, cheap hotel or pub crawl Amsterdam.

The message is uncompromising – a long weekend in Amsterdam may create the wrong kind of memories, the escapism you crave in the renowned party capital could result in inescapable convictions.

Brits can find return flights to Amsterdam for £50 (€57; $62). UK-based travel agencies also offer stag weekends in Amsterdam, including canal boat cruises with unlimited booze, “steak and strip” nights and red light district pub crawls.

For years people have complained of drunken Brits urinating in public, throwing up in canals, stripping off and engaging in drunken brawls. This is not a new phenomenon. Almost a decade ago, Amsterdam’s then mayor invited his London counterpart Boris Johnson, who had described the city as “sleazy”, to see for himself what Brits got up to. “They don’t wear a coat as they slalom through the red light district… they sing ‘You’ll never walk alone’. They are dressed as rabbits or priests and sometimes they are not dressed at all. I’d love to invite him to witness it,” Eberhard van der Laan said at the time.

Critics argue the targeted ad campaigns are discriminatory and are based on unfair stereotypes.



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Awful moment police car thief dies after diving out of cruiser and landing on his head



Speeding away from the California Highway Patrol, the suspect - who died at the side of the road following the encounter - leaped from his vehicle in a heart-stopping moment.

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Tuesday, March 28, 2023

Sacked PUCSL Chairman fights back, writes to Prez

By Rathindra Kuruwita

Chairman of the Public Utilities Commission (PUCSL) Janaka Ratnayake yesterday wrote to President Wickremesinghe denying all allegations levelled against him.

Earlier in the day, Ratnayake received a note informing of his removal from the PUCSL.

“I write in response to your above captioned letter dated 22 March 2023. At the outset I strongly deny all and singular the several allegations contained against me in your letter under reference,” he said.

The PUCSL Chairman said his letter contained a detailed response..

“I was given an extremely short period of one week, despite the serious consequences that could flow from the misconceived allegations made against me,” Ratnayake said.

He said that the PUCSL was not a rubber stamp for proposals put forward by the Electricity Industry including the Ceylon Electricity Board (CEB).

“But the PUCSL should duly exercise its powers and functions as an independent regulator even when the consequent decision reached by it may be one which is not desired by the CEB or the Government,” he said.

Ratnayake said that the PUCSL acting independently has resulted in the Minister of Power and Energy being unable at times to act at his whim and fancy.

“This appears to have irked the Minister of Power and Energy, and also the President. In May 2022, the secretary to the President had phoned my personal assistant instructing her to “ask the Chairman of the Commission to refrain from making any announcement or statement contradicting the speech made by the Prime Minister.”



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Sri Lanka among 22 countries benefiting from Chinese funding amounting USD 240 bn

Sri Lanka and Pakistan are among 22 countries which received bailout loans amounting to USD 240 bn from China over the past two decades, according to a report put out by the US-based research lab AidData, the World Bank, the Harvard Kennedy School and the Kiel Institute.

Almost all the funds went to Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) countries such as Sri Lanka, Pakistan and Turkey — mostly low- and middle-income nations that have received Chinese loans for infrastructure development, according to the study.

The 40-page report showed bailout loans had accelerated between 2016 and 2021, with Beijing doling out 80 percent of its rescue lending in that period.

Around the world, BRI nations have come under strain as soaring inflation and interest rates, compounded by the lingering impact of the Covid-19 pandemic, have hurt their ability to repay debts.

The bailouts allow the countries to extend their loans and remain solvent, the report said.

China says more than 150 countries have signed up to the BRI, a trillion-dollar global infrastructure push unveiled by President Xi Jinping a decade ago.

Beijing says the initiative aims to deepen friendly trade relations with other nations, particularly in the developing world.

But critics have long accused China of luring lower-income countries into debt traps by offering huge, unaffordable loans.

“China has developed a system of ‘Bailouts on the Belt and Road’ that helps recipient countries to avoid default, and continue servicing their BRI debts, at least in the short run,” the report said.

In comparison to the International Monetary Fund and the vast liquidity support extended by the United States’ Federal Reserve, China’s bailouts remain small but are growing quickly, the report said.

“Beijing has targeted a limited set of potential recipients, as almost all Chinese rescue loans have gone to low- and middle-income BRI countries with significant debts outstanding to Chinese banks,” its authors wrote.

The report warned that Chinese loans tend to be more opaque compared with other international lenders of last resort — and often come at an average interest rate of five percent, compared with a typical two percent rate on an IMF loan.

Many such agreements were so-called “rollovers”, in which the same short-term loans are repeatedly extended to refinance debts about to come due.

China this month agreed to restructure its loans to Sri Lanka, clearing the way for an IMF bailout of the island nation that lists Beijing as its biggest bilateral creditor.



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Nashville shooter Audrey Hale talks about 'growing as artist' in resurfaced college clip



Nashville shooter Audrey Hale killed three children and three adults after entering the Covenant School in Nashville, Tennessee on Monday.

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'Won't be bullied!' USS Nimitz sends Beijing defiant message in South China Sea stand-off



The arrival of the 1,092-foot-long aircraft carrier USS Nimitz in the South China Sea and South Korea has raised eyebrows in both Beijing and Pyongyang.

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Monday, March 27, 2023

Second ODI between New Zealand and Sri Lanka abandoned

The second ODI between New Zealand and Sri Lanka has been called off due to rain in Christchurch.



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Showers in Western, Sabaragamuwa, Uva and North-western provinces and in Kandy, Nuwara-Eliya, Galle, Matara and Mannar districts during the afternoon or night.

Weather forecast issued at 05.30 a.m. on 28 March 2023 by the Department of Meteorology

Showers or thundershowers may occur at a few places in Western, Sabaragamuwa, Uva and North-western provinces and in Kandy, Nuwara-Eliya, Galle, Matara and Mannar districts during the afternoon or night.

Winds will be north-easterly or variable in direction and wind speed will be (20-30) kmph.

General public is kindly requested to take adequate precautions to minimize damages caused by temporary localized strong winds and lightning during thundershowers.

 



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Lahiru takes five wickets as Joes take lead

Under 19 Cricket

Off-spinner Lahiru Amarasekara produced a five-wicket haul as St. Joseph’s restricted Mahinda to 127 runs on day one of the Under 19 traditional cricket encounter at Galle on Monday.

Amarasekara was ably supported by spinner Yenula Dewthusa and Muditha Dissanayake who shared the other five wickets.

With wickets falling at regular intervals, batting opener Ranmina Hettiarachchi anchored the top order with a knock of 33 runs. Chandupa de Silva with 29 runs, Tharusha Dilshan (15) and Hiruna Gallalge (17) were the only other batsmen to reach double figures.

In their essay St. Joseph’s were comfortably placed at 132 for two wickets but back-to-back wickets in the last two overs placed them at 132 for four wickets at stumps.

At Welisara, Dinuka Tennakoon took five wickets but Maris Stella managed to post 268 runs as Shean Adithya top-scored with 83 runs. In reply Trinity were nine without loss.

Vihanga Nimsara and Rasindu Ilukshana were the heroes for Moratu Vidyalaya as their half-centuries helped them score 249 runs against St. Sylvester’s at Boyagane.

Match Details

At Galle: Mahinda 127, St. Joseph’s 132/4

Scores:

Mahinda

127 all out in 57 overs (Ranmina Hettiarachchi 33, Chandupa de Silva 29; Lahiru Amarasekara 5/34, Muditha Dissanayaka 2/23, Yenula Dewtusa 3/32)

St. Joseph’s

132 for 4 in 42.1 overs (Sadeesh Jayawardena 53, Naren Muralidaran 41; Shehan Hasaranga 2/39)

At Welisara: Maris Stella 268, Trinity 9/0

Scores:

Maris Stella

268 all out in 93.5 overs (Kaveen Fernando 26, Shean Adithya 83, Anshen de Silva 28, Ramith Bandara 33, Nethum Basnayake 26, Levin Fernando 22; Jayavi Liyanagama 2/40, Dinuka Tennakoon 5/74)

Trinity 9 for no loss in 4 overs

At Boyagane: Moratu Vidyalaya 249, St. Sylvester’s 5/1

Scores:

Moratu Vidyalaya

249 all out in 93.1 overs (Vihanga Nimsara 82, Rasindu Ilukshana 54; Isuru Gunasekara 2/28, Pansilu Bandara 2/50, Akila Wickramasinghe 3/48, Khanka Wickramasinghe 2/31)

St. Sylvester’s

5 for 1 in 4 overs.



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Prince Harry 'surprise' appearance at High Court 'was not planned' with King Charles



EXCLUSIVE: Prince Harry's "surprise" appearance at the High Court today showed his "unpredictable" nature, according to royal commentator Richard Fitzwilliams.

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Drone footage shows Mississippi town completely wiped out by devastating tornado



Debris has been scattered across the streets and farmland, buildings have had their rooves torn off and trees have been uprooted in the small town of Rolling Fork in Mississippi following a powerful tornado.

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Massive chocolate factory explosion rocks town as 7 found dead under rubble



A local fire chief said the chance of finding survivors was "decreasing rapidly" as the blast wrought devastation upon the US town.

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Six young girls killed in devastating crash as car ‘veers off road and flips over’



Authorities have confirmed that the youngest girl who died in the horrific crash was just one year old and that none of them were above the age of 18 - but none of the victims have been named.

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Sunday, March 26, 2023

Showers in Western and Sabaragamuwa provinces and in Galle, Matara, Kandy and Nuwara-Eliya districts

Weather forecast issued at 05.30 a.m. on 27 March 2023 by the Department of Meteorology

Showers or thundershowers will occur at several places in Western and Sabaragamuwa provinces and in Galle, Matara, Kandy and Nuwara-Eliya districts during the afternoon or night.

Showers or thundershowers may occur at a few places in North Central, Uva and North-Western provinces and in Mannar district during the afternoon or night.

Winds will be north-westerly or variable and wind speed will be (20-30) kmph.

General public is kindly requested to take adequate precautions to minimize damages caused by temporary localized strong winds and lightning during thundershowers.



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Sinhala translation of Quran presented to Bharain Ambassador

Continuing his efforts to promote dialogue with Heads of Mission of Islamic countries concurrently accredited to Sri Lanka from New Delhi, High Commissioner of Sri Lanka to India Milinda Moragoda Tuesday presented a copy of the Sinhala translation of the Holy Quran to the Ambassador of Bahrain to India Abdul Rahman bin Mohammed AlGaoud on Tuesday, the Colombo foreign office said.In February Moragoda had presented copies of the Quran to the Ambassador of Morocco in India.

This Sinhala translation published by the All Ceylon Jamiyyathul Ulama (ACJU) of Sri Lanka, was presented to the Bahraini Ambassador at the Embassy of Bahrain in New Delhi.

Previously, the High Commission had presented copies of the Sinhala Quran to the Jama Masjid of Delhi and the Jamiat Ulama-i-Hind (Council of Muslim Theologians of India).

In keeping with the “Integrated Country Strategy for Sri Lanka Diplomatic Missions in India”, the policy roadmap of High Commissioner Moragoda, the High Commission of Sri Lanka in New Delhi has been promoting dialogue with all major religions in India.



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John Wick 5 news plus Ballerina and The Continental release updates from Lionsgate boss



Lionsgate are "not ready to say goodbye" to Keanu Reeves' John Wick and have teased when the spin-off movie and TV show are likely to release in the meantime.

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US 'walking a fine line' between supporting Ukraine and 'full scale war' with Russia



EXCLUSIVE: As tensions soar while Vladimir Putin moves nuclear missiles into neighbouring Belarus, a military analyst warned Express.co.uk that the "risk of escalation" between NATO and Russia is "always present".

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Fifth US state adopts execution by firing squad as lethal injection supplies run low



Although federal executions have been put on hold since 2021, individual states can still carry out the death penalty. Amid a shortage of lethal injection drugs, some states are looking for other ways to execute death row inmates.

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Meghan and Harry accused of 'calling paparazzi on themselves' at elite Hollywood hotspot



Meghan Markle and Prince Harry were pictured going out for dinner at an elite Hollywood hotspot on the same day the news broke that the couple were being kicked from their UK residence of Frogmore Cottage.

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Prince Harry must 'waive' drug use on US visa to avoid deportation, lawyers claims



The Duke of Sussex has faced criticism in recent weeks after detailing his repeated drug use in his controversial memoir, Spare.

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Saturday, March 25, 2023

India child marriage arrests leave families without breadwinner

Crackdown leaves poor families in Assam state without main breadwinner as campaigners say arrests are the wrong way to tackle
the issue

Aged 15 and already pregnant after marrying last year, Pinku Das Sarkar has no idea what to do following her husband’s February 2 arrest in a controversial police crackdown on child marriage in northeastern India.

He is among more than 3,000 men, priests and Muslim leaders who have been jailed over the last month in the state of Assam on charges of violating the country’s widely flouted laws against early marriage.

“It was 11pm and we were about to sleep when four policemen came and whisked him away. I didn’t know what was happening. I just cried all night,” Sarkar told the Thomson Reuters Foundation as she sat outside her brick and bamboo house in Radhanagar, a village in Assam’s Nagaon district.

“I really don’t know what to do,” said Sarkar, who relied on the small income her 26-year-old husband made by selling sugarcane juice from a cart.

Marriage under 18 is illegal in India, though almost a quarter of married Indian women wed before their 18th birthday, health data collected between 2019 and 2021 shows.But huge progress has been made to turn the tide on child marriage in recent years.

As recently as 2005-06, 47 percent of women got married before 18, and women’s rights campaigners say better educational access among girls and awareness campaigns in communities where the practice is culturally accepted brought down numbers.

Police action to tackle the issue is rare, however. Less than 2,000 people were arrested across India for arranging or participating in child marriage in 2021, the latest official crime data shows.

The Assam crackdown has been condemned by women’s and anti-poverty campaigners who say it unfairly punishes poor families who marry off their daughters due to financial pressures, and leaves thousands of families without their main breadwinner.

“Criminalising those who are already poor is not the best way to deal with a social problem,” said Enakshi Ganguly, co-founder of HAQ: Centre for Child Rights, a nonprofit.

“These young pregnant girls are left without any help, with their main support gone,” she said.

Presenting a petition to the Gauhati High Court in the state’s main city, dozens of campaigners called instead for improving girls’ access to education and information on sexual and reproductive health to help prevent child marriages.

Uncertain future

A few miles from Sarkar’s home, Gulsona Begum said her security guard husband was imprisoned on February 7 just two weeks after they married, saying his arrest had left the family penniless and facing an uncertain future.

“My father-in-law is physically handicapped and we have no source of income now with my husband in jail,” Begum said at her house in the village of Amlipukhuri.

She said she was 18, but police say she is still a minor and has no documents to prove her age.

“Now that he has been arrested, he will most probably lose his job,” she said. “We are managing to eat for now with the help of our neighbours and relatives … but I don’t know what will happen to us.”

Fearing arrest, several men have fled to neighbouring states, leaving their teenage wives at home, village residents said.Defending the state’s approach, Assam’s Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma told reporters that no cases of child marriage had been reported since the police operation began.

He said that of the 3,047 people arrested so far, about 251 have been granted bail.There have also been questions about whether the crackdown targeted Assam’s Muslim community, which accounts for about a third of its 34 million people.

Most of the arrests took place in districts with a large Muslim population, said human rights lawyer Taniya Sultana Laskar.

Sarma, a prominent figure in India’s ruling Hindu nationalist party, has said action was being taken against people, irrespective of their faith.

He has cited the state’s maternal mortality rate of 32 percent among girls married before 18, which is higher than the country’s average of 23.3 percent, government health data shows.

Mutual support?

Back in Radhanagar village, Sarkar’s father-in-law said his son’s arrest had forced him to question his decision to encourage the marriage, thinking it would be mutual support for the two families.

“Pinku’s mother is a domestic help and … lost her husband young. We had no woman in the house after my wife died. So it was a solution for both our families’ problems as I saw it,” he said.

“I understand child marriage is wrong and I feel helpless now when I see Pinku sad all day. I don’t even get work easily at my age. I worry what will happen when the child comes,” he said.

For now, a couple of neighbours have stepped in to help, taking her to hospital for a scheduled pregnancy check-up.

But she said she misses her husband. “His presence gave me support. He is my strength,” she said.

– Al Jazeera



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President calls for expert committee to asses development of Sports sector

During a visit to the Diyagama Mahinda Rajapaksa Sports Complex on Saturday (25) morning President Ranil Wickremesinghe instructed the Minister of Sports and officials, to establish an expert committee to assess the development of Sri Lanka’s sports sector and its future strategies.

In addition, the President instructed that the committee should comprise ministers in charge of sports and education, industry experts, as well as representatives from both the ruling and opposition parties in parliament.

Additionally, the President highlighted that consistent implementation of this program each year can yield a cohort of athletes in Sri Lanka capable of achieving international success within a few years. He also emphasized the significance of identifying children’s sporting talents between the ages of 10-12 years and providing them with appropriate opportunities for growth and development.



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'This is serious!' Harry slammed over drug use as Americans ask 'do we still want him'



Prince Harry has found himself in the crosshairs of a conservative think-tank demanding to see his visa application, now a royal expert claims Americans are rethinking whether they want the Duke to remain in the US.

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Karunaratne four-for keeps New Zealand to 274

Finn Allen made 51 at the top of the order, Daryl Mitchell made 47 through the middle, and Rachin Ravindra a debut 49 towards the close. And through these and a number of other punchy contributions, New Zealand fought their way to 274 all out on an Eden Park pitch that offered plenty of bounce and carry.
Bowling shorter lengths that are more difficult to hit at a venue known for its small straight boundaries, Sri Lanka’s bowlers kept striking, to keep the opposition in check. Chamika Karunarathne was the best of the short-of-a-length practicioners, picking up 4 for 43 from his nine overs – career-best figures in ODIs.
Kasun Rajitha and Lahiru Kumara were also effective, taking two wickets apiece, the latter frequently troubling New Zealand’s batters with his pace. The legspin of Wanindu Hasaranga, however, disappeared for 67 in 10 overs.
There were no huge partnerships in the first half of New Zealand’s innings, but there were a series of significant ones, most of them brisk. Allen gave the innings its early impetus, whipping full deliveries through midwicket, or striking them down the ground to Eden Park’s shortest boundaries. He shared a 36-run stand with debutant Chad Bowes, a 35-run stand with Will Young, who hit 26, and put on 37 alongside Mitchell.
The highlight of Allen’s innings was a three-ball sequence towards the end of his knock. Twice he deposited Hasaranga over the boundary, tonking him down the ground first, then clubbing him over deep square leg. An edged four off the bowling of Karunaratne carried him past fifty, before he ran at Karunaratne later in that 18th over, looking to clobber him to leg. The resultant leading edge flew to deep third, where it was caught athletically by Rajitha.
Mitchell’s innings was relatively staid. He hit just the one boundary in his first 22 balls, and in fact struck only five in his 58-ball stay, choosing risk-free accumulation instead, with wickets having fallen. With his dismissal in the 30th over, New Zealand were 152 for 5, and at risk of collapsing.
Ravindra and Glenn Phillips then produced the best partnership of the innings, however, putting on 66 off 59 balls, with Phillips the primary aggressor. Phillips took on the short ball, and was sometimes successful against it, hitting two sixes and three fours in his 39. But that was also his undoing – he holed out to deep square leg in the 40th over.
Ravindra didn’t have substantial support after Phillips’ dismissal, but farmed the strike and kept New Zealand moving, largely through singles and twos. Like several of his teammates, he holed out trying to lift a shortish ball over the small, straight boundary. New Zealand left their last three balls unused.
Sri Lanka caught well, and aside from Hasaranga, who struggled with his lines, and Dilshan Madushanka, who had trouble adjusting to the shorter lengths required at this venue, bowled with intensity and pep. The target remains a challenging one, however, particularly given the height and pace of New Zealand’s seamers.
Brief scores:
New Zealand 274 in 49.3 overs (Finn Allen 51, Rachin Ravindra 49, Daryl Mitchell 47, Chamika Karunaratne 4-43, Kasun  Rajitha 2-38, Lahiru Kumara 2-46) vs Sri Lanka


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Friday, March 24, 2023

Moragoda and ICCR Prez review Indo-Lanka cultural relations

Sri Lanka’s High Commissioner to India Milinda Moragoda met with the President of the Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR) Dr. Vinay Sahasrabuddhe yesterday (24) in New Delhi to follow up on the earlier discussions the two have had on ways and means to further strengthen cultural cooperation between Sri Lanka and India.

Founded in 1950, the ICCR, is an autonomous organization of the Government of India, involved in India’s external cultural relations, through cultural exchange with other countries and their peoples. Over the years, a large number of Sri Lankan students have benefited from ICCR scholarships in various academic disciplines. The ICCR offers approximately 200 scholarships to Sri Lanka for undergraduate and post-graduate studies in India annually.

During the discussion the High Commissioner and the President of the ICCR reviewed the status of the cultural cooperation between the two countries.

In particular, High Commissioner Moragoda thanked the President of the ICCR for the support that the Council has extended towards organizing the two month- long Sri Lankan exhibition “Geoffrey Bawa: It Is Essential To Be There” at the National Gallery of Modern Art in New Delhi. The exhibition was inaugurated by the External Affairs Minister of India Dr. S. Jaishankar on 17 March 2023.

High Commissioner Moragoda presented Dr. Sahasrabuddhe with a copy of the publication “Geoffrey Bawa; Drawing from the Archives”, which contains the drawings of Sri Lanka’s foremost architect the late Geoffrey Bawa.



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Putin 'trying to provoke' WW3 by flying armed jets over US military bases



Armed Russian jets have been spotting flying over a US military site in Syria at an alarming frequency this month, officials warn.

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Sciver-Brunt’s 72 and Wong’s hat-trick power Mumbai Indians into final

Nat Sciver-Brunt’s power-packed batting performance was followed by Issy Wong becoming the first to bag a hat-trick in the WPL as Mumbai Indians registered a comprehensive 72 run win against UP Warriorz to seal a date with Delhi Capitals in the final.

Sciver-Brunt struck nine fours and two sixes in her 38-ball 72 not out which took Mumbai to a formidable 182/4 at the DY Patil Stadium on Friday (March 24). Wong then headlined a clinical bowling performance as she finished with 4 for 15 from her four overs as UPW were bundled out for 110 despite Kiran Navgire’s 27-ball 43.

A sweep for a four off Grace Harris, a slice over the infield off Anjali Sarvani and two more shots over point off Rajeshwari Gayakwad gave Yastika Bhatia four boundaries in the first three overs as she got MI off to a brisk start. With the UPW line-up loaded with spin options, Hayley Matthews was kept quiet initially before the West Indian deposited a Harris delivery over the fence. But Yastika’s outing came to an end in the fifth over when she tried to force a Sarvani delivery over mid-on, finding the fielder instead. Sciver-Brunt didn’t take long to get going, getting her first boundary by flicking a Sarvani delivery to the fence. Matthews hit her first four by cutting a Gayakwad delivery between point and cover while Sciver-Brunt got a lucky break in the same over as she was put down by Sophie Ecclestone at mid off when she was on 6, with MI finishing the power-play at 46/1.

Matthews and Sciver-Brunt built a steady stand to help MI make good progress, and the former also had a reprieve as the third umpire deemed that the ball touched the ground before landing in Sarvani’s hands. But Matthews did not do much damage after that, handing a simple catch at long on trying to hit Parshavi Chopra’s first ball over the fence. The 16-year old legspinner thought she had the big wicket of Harmanpreet Kaur in the same over too but a review from the MI skipper revealed there was an inside edge, forcing the onfield umpire to reverse a leg-before decision. Sciver-Brunt, meanwhile, took on the young spinner by scoring 19 off five balls across two overs, which included three fours and a six. Harmanpreet, though, struggled to pick the wrist spinner and was also slow to get going, eventually falling to Ecclestone for a 15-ball 14. But Sciver-Brunt kept MI going with her quick-fire knock as she took her team to 116/3 after 15 overs.

Sciver-Brunt brought up a 26-ball fifty with a boundary off Ecclestone in the 16th over, followed by two successive fours off Gayakwad. Melie Kerr also struck regular boundaries as she helped raise a half-century stand off 34 balls. Three of Kerr’s five fours came in the 19th over bowled by Ecclestone before she fell to the same bowler. Pooja Vastrakar then struck a four and a six straight down the ground in the final over off Deepti, who was also hit for a maximum over mid wicket by Sciver-Brunt as MI finished with a 180-plus total.

A wicket-maiden from Saika Ishaque in the second over, in which she accounted for Shweta Sehrawat, was followed by the big wicket of Alyssa Healy as she was caught by Harmanpreet off Issy Wong. 12/2 became 21/3 as the Amanjot Kaur-Yastika combo found Tahlia McGrath short of the crease. But UPW managed to end the powerplay on a positive note as 20 runs came off the sixth over, bowled by Saika, which included a four for Harris and two boundaries and a six for Kiran Navgire. Although Harris fell to Sciver-Brunt, Navgire struck some lusty blows as she tried to keep UPW in the hunt.

84/4 became 94/8 mainly thanks to Wong’s hat-trick in the 13th over. With the required rate going up, Navgire tried to hit a big one off Wong but she found Sciver-Brunt at deep midwicket. Simran Shaikh missed a yorker to be bowled next ball and Ecclestone completed the hat-trick of victims as she inside-edged onto the stumps. Deepti Sharma, after scoring two fours, fell to Matthews for 16 off 20, with Jintimani Kalita taking a good catch at short fine leg. All UPW could do from thereon was to reduce the margin of defeat, which still happened to be a big one as Kalita and Saika cleaned up the tail.

Brief scores:

Mumbai Indians women 182/4 in 20 overs (Nat Sciver-Brunt 72*, Melie Kerr 29; Sophie Ecclestone 2-39) beat UP Warriorz women 110 in 17.4 overs (Kiran Navgire 43; Issy Wong 4-15, Saika Ishaque 2-24) by 72 runs.



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China threatens 'serious consequences' after US warship's actions in disputed waters



China has accused the US of "undermining" stability in the South China Sea after one of its warships sailed close to contested waters for the second day running.

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Thursday, March 23, 2023

Parents can be tried for son’s school shooting: Appeals court

A Michigan court of appeals has ruled that the parents of a teenager responsible for a school shooting in the United States can be tried for involuntary manslaughter, paving the way for a groundbreaking case.

In a unanimous opinion, the three-judge appeals court called for a full trial against James and Jennifer Crumbley, whose son Ethan Crumbley opened fire at Oxford High School in 2021, killing four people and injuring seven.

The three judges – Christopher Murray, Michael Riordan and Christopher Yates – wrote in their decision that Ethan’s “acts were reasonably foreseeable”. They also determined that his parents’ “actions and inactions were inexorably intertwined” with the murders he committed.

The judges cited “visual evidence” that Ethan planned to commit violence with the gun that his parents had purchased for him, including drawings that depicted firearms, decapitated birds and human suffering.

Several illustrations had been drawn on a math worksheet on the day of the shooting with the words, “The thoughts won’t stop. Help me.”

“The morning of the shooting, Ethan Crumbley drew a picture of a body that appeared to have two bullet holes in the torso, apparently with blood streaming out of them,” Riordan told the court.

The judge noted that the gun depicted in the sketch resembled the firearm his parents “had very recently gifted to him”. His parents had been summoned to the school to discuss the picture hours before the shooting, but neither the school nor the parents demanded Ethan be brought home.

If not for the “defendants’ informed decision to leave Ethan Crumbley at school, these murders would not have occurred that day”, the judges concluded.

Their decision is likely to test the limits of negligence and liability in situations in which minors commit violent crimes. Ethan, now 16, pleaded guilty in October to 24 state charges, including first-degree murder and “terrorism”.

He may be summoned to testify at his parents’ trial.

On November 26, 2021, James Crumbley legally bought a 9mm SIG Sauer handgun that Jennifer Crumbley would later describe as a “Christmas gift” for their then-15-year-old son.

The following Monday, Ethan was caught researching ammunition on his phone during class at Oxford High School near Detroit, where he was a sophomore. A school official left a voicemail about the incident on Jennifer’s phone.

Jennifer, who had taken Ethan to a shooting range the weekend prior, responded by initiating a text-message conversation with her son in which she told him: “I’m not mad. You have to learn not to get caught.”

That Friday, Ethan opened fire in the high school with the handgun and an additional 50 rounds of ammunition in his backpack.

Prosecutors have maintained that James and Jennifer Crumbley shared responsibility for Ethan’s actions, writing in a court filing, “They created an environment in which their son’s violent tendencies flourished.”

The appeals court echoed that assessment, writing on Thursday, “a reasonable fact-finder could conclude” that the “defendants’ decision to purchase their mentally disturbed son a handgun” led to the shooting.

The court’s decision referenced instances in which Ethan described hallucinations to his parents in text messages, including the belief that he was being haunted by a demon. Ethan told a friend that his parents had brushed off his request to see a doctor, telling him instead to “suck it up”.

The judges also cited the parents’ “failure to properly secure the gun”.

An active shooter alert was sent to the parents on the day of the attack, prompting James Crumbley to go home and discover the firearm had been taken. He called emergency services a little more than half an hour after the attack to express concern that his son might be the shooter.

In the days after the shooting, prosecutors filed involuntary manslaughter charges against the parents, and law enforcement launched a manhunt to arrest them, ultimately discovering them in Detroit.

Lawyers for the parents have denied their clients are guilty of manslaughter. They are expected to request that the Michigan Supreme Court review the case.

“It was not foreseeable from the drawings on that math homework that he was going to later carry out the premeditated murders of those students,” defence lawyer Mariell Lehman previously told the court.

In Thursday’s decision, the appeals court acknowledged that it shared “the defendants’ concern about the potential for this decision to be applied in the future” to other parents whose children commit violent acts.

But it ultimately decided that the Crumbley case involved “uniquely troubling facts” that merited the consideration of a full jury trial.

“Whether a jury actually finds that causation has been proven after a full trial, where the record will almost surely be more expansive – including evidence produced by defendants – is an issue separate from what we decide today,” the judges wrote.

(Source: Al Jazeera and news agencies)



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Unions in govt.’s crosshairs

Friday 24th March, 2023

Hardly a day passes without a labour dispute reported from the state sector. There are signs of public opinion turning against the warring trade unions that resort to strikes at the drop of a hat. The government has sought to make the most of public ire to settle political scores with the trade unions that pose a threat to its interests.

President Ranil Wickremesinghe has taken a swipe at the education sector trade unions that are perennially on the warpath. Speaking at a public event, on Wednesday, he warned that if trade unions continued to ‘hold students to ransom’, the government would be compelled to declare the education sector an essential service. This could be considered a veiled threat.

The most effective way of keeping trade unions with political agendas at bay is to redress workers’ genuine grievances expeditiously. Instead, governments drive them to swell the ranks of trade unions with links to ultra-radical political outfits. So, the blame for chaos in the public sector due to frequent labour disputes should be apportioned to governments.

Workers must fight for their rights. If they don’t, who else will? But they must not ignore their responsibilities. Most of all, they must not test people’s patience. Sri Lanka’s trade union movement has a proud history. Its achievements are many. But it has gone the same way as all other institutions, over the years, owing to politicisation. More often than not, trade unions tend to overstep the line at the behest of their political masters.

The bane of Sri Lanka’s labour movement is that it is dominated by trade unions affiliated to political parties, which use workers as a cat’s paw to advance their hidden agendas at the expense of the public. There are some trade unions that are independent of political parties but they are the exception that proves the rule. They, too, act in an irresponsible manner at times with no consideration towards the public.

Everybody flays politicians for dereliction of duty—and rightly so. But trade unions are no better. It is doubtful whether labour leaders ever make a serious attempt to persuade their members to work hard and help enhance national productivity. The phenomenal growth of shadow education, or private tuition, as it is popularly known, is an indictment of the state sector teachers. Parents have to spend huge amounts of money for their children’s supplementary education. There are many exemplary teachers who are like candles, which burn so that others can get light, but overall there is much to be desired from the public school system.

All political parties including the UNP led by President Wickremesinghe himself have politicised and polluted the trade union movement so much so that politicians steal the limelight on the International Workers’ Day, when workers shamelessly offer their services to political leaders as palanquin bearers, as it were. Politicians craftily use workers to compass their ends when they happen to be in the political wilderness but after winning elections and being ensconced in power, they suppress trade unions. This is the name of the game in Sri Lankan politics.

Trade unions in this country are apparently playing the role traditionally assigned to the political Opposition, which is too meek to take on the government the way it should. Why trade unions are in the government’s crosshairs is not difficult to understand. The ongoing battle between government leaders and irresponsible trade unionists is, in our book, a case of sinners casting stones at one another.



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Bordeaux town hall set on fire in France pension protests

BBC reported that the Bordeaux town hall has been set on fire as French protests continued over plans to raise the pension age.

More than a million people took to the streets across France on Thursday, with 119,000 in Paris, according to figures from the interior ministry. Police fired tear gas at protesters in the capital and 80 people were arrested across the country. The demonstrations were sparked by legislation raising the retirement age by two years to 64.

Fire engulfed the front door of the town hall in the southwest city of Bordeaux on Thursday evening after a day of protests and clashes. It was not clear who was responsible for the blaze, which was quickly put out by firefighters.

In Paris, generally peaceful demonstrations saw occasional police clashes with masked rioters who smashed shop windows, demolished street furniture and attacked a McDonald’s restaurant, according to Reuters news agency. One police officer who lost consciousness was dragged to safety by fellow officers.

Police used tear gas and were pelted by objects and fireworks.



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Deadly fungus infections are sweeping across America - how worried should you be?



Deadly fungal infections have been detected in over half of the US. Here's everything you need to know about the rapidly evolving situation.

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Walmart shoppers fuming as retail giant to start charging 34p per bag for delivery orders



Walmart shoppers will see a 34p per bag fee added to their delivery orders, leaving customers outraged. The fee already applies to in-store shopping.

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Meghan's mum sent heartwarming message as Duchess struggled with suicidal thoughts



Doria Ragland made the heartwarming gesture as Meghan privately struggled with her mental health.

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Joe Biden warned he's missing 'true spark of WW3' as US takes its eye off key region



EXCLUSIVE: Joe Biden has been warned about a "deteriorating geopolitical situation" threatening a new war.

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Wednesday, March 22, 2023

ICC arrest warrant; a setback for authoritarian rule

As should be expected, the arrest warrant issued by the International Criminal Court (ICC) on Russian President Vladimir Putin on war crimes allegations has given rise to a widespread debate on how effective it would be as an instrument of justice. What compounds the issue is the fact that Russia is not obliged to cooperate with the ICC, given that it is not a signatory to the Rome Statute which outlaws the crimes in question and envisages punitive action for signatory state representatives who act in violation of its provisions.

Predictably, the Russian side has rubbished the ICC allegations and its arrest warrant on the basis that they are totally irrelevant to Russia, considering that it does not recognize the ICC or its rulings. However, the fact remains that important sections of the international community would be viewing Putin and his regime as war criminals who should be shunned and outlawed.

The possibility is great of the Putin regime steadily alienating itself from enlightened opinion the world over from now on. In other words, Putin and his cohorts have incurred a heavy moral defeat as a consequence of the ICC’s arrest warrant and its strictures.

Morality may not count much for the Putin regime and its supporters, locally and internationally, but the long term consequences growing out of this dismissive stance on moral standards could be grave. They would need to take their minds back to the white supremacist regimes of South Africa of decades past which were relentlessly outlawed by the world community, incurring in the process wide-ranging sanctions that steadily weakened apartheid South Africa and forced it to negotiate with its opponents. Moreover, the ICC measures against Putin are bound to strengthen his opponents and critics at home, thereby boosting Russia’s pro-democracy movement.

However, the Putin administration could earn for itself some ‘breathing space’ at present by proving the ICC’s allegations wrong. That is, it would need to establish beyond doubt that it is not guilty of the crime of deporting Ukrainian children to Russia and other war-linked offences. It could liaise with UNICEF and other relevant UN agencies for this purpose since it does not recognize the ICC.

A wise course of action for President Putin would be to pick up this gauntlet rather than ignore the grave allegations levelled against him, in view of the long term consequences of such evasive behavior.

Besides, the Russian President would need to restrict his movements from now on. For, he is liable to be arrested and produced before the ICC by those governmental authorities who are signatories to the Rome Statute in the event of Putin entering their countries. That is, Putin’s head is likely to be increasingly restless as time goes by.

However, the gravest consequence flowing from Putin and his regime ignoring the ICC and its strictures is that later, if not sooner, they could find themselves being hauled up before the ICC. There is ample evidence from recent history that this could be so. All the alleged offenders need to do is take their minds back to the convulsive and bloody Balkan wars of the nineties to see for themselves how the ICC process, though slow and laborious, finally delivered justice to the victims of war crimes in that tempestuous theatre.

All those war criminals who have lulled themselves into believing that it is possible to escape being brought to justice before the world’s tribunals, need to recollect how former Serbian President Slobodan Milosevik and his partners in crime Rodovan Karadzic and Ratko Mladic were brought before the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) in the early years of this century and required to pay the price for their criminality. So confident were they initially that they would never be brought to justice that they agreed, tongue-in-cheek, to fully cooperate with the ICTY.

It is pertinent to also remember that the criminals mentioned were notorious for their ‘ethnic cleansing’ operations and other war-time excesses. Accordingly, those accused of war crimes the world over would be only indulging in wishful thinking if they consider themselves above the law and safe from being held accountable for their offences. Justice would catch-up with them; if not sooner, then later. This is the singular lesson from Bosnia.

Meanwhile, Chinese President Xi Jinping has considered it timely to call on President Putin in Russia. He did so close on the heels of being elected President for a third straight term recently. This is a clear message to the world that Russia could always depend on China to be a close and trusted ally. It is a question of two of the biggest authoritarian states uniting. And the world they see as big enough for both of them.

Interestingly, China is having the world believe that it has a peace plan for Ukraine. While in Russia, though, XI did not spell out in any detail how the crisis in Ukraine would be resolved with China’s assistance. However, China has drafted what is termed its ‘Position on the Ukraine Crisis’. It contains 12 points which are more in the nature of a set of principles.

Seen against the backdrop of the developments in Ukraine, some of these principles merit close scrutiny. For instance, the first principle lays out that the sovereignty of all countries must be respected. Besides, International Law must be universally recognized, including the ‘purposes and principles of the UN Charter’. However, ‘double standards’ must be rejected. Hopefully, the West got the hint.

Principle 4 has it that ‘Dialogue and negotiations are the only viable solution to the Ukraine crisis.’ Principle 8 points out that, ‘Nuclear weapons must not be used and nuclear wars must not be fought’.

Needless to say, all the above principles are acceptable to the international community. What is required of China is to evolve a peace plan for Ukraine, based on these principles, if it is in earnest when it speaks of being a peace maker. The onus is on China to prove its credibility.

However, China could be said to be characteristically pragmatic in making these moves. While further cementing its alliance with Russia, China is placing the latter on notice, though in a subtle way, that its war in Ukraine is proving highly counter-productive and costly, both for the states concerned and the world. The costly economic consequences for the world from the war speak for themselves. Accordingly, nudging Russia in the direction of a negotiated settlement is the wisest course in the circumstances.



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Heroic moment ex-MMA fighter and bouncer takes down masked gunman at strip club



The former fighter made quick work of the armed intruder who attempted to storm a Florida strip club.

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Rapper Tekashi 6ix9ine viciously beaten by several men inside a gym restroom



Rapper Tekashi 6ix9ine is kicked in the stomach and head as his attackers tell him to shut the f**** up".

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'Covid was nothing' compared to 'terrifying zombie viruses' set to spread as Earth warms



Permafrost is a layer of frozen soil that contains many harmful viruses and bacteria that have been frozen for thousands of years, but as the Earth warms, this layer is melting, and these viruses could be unleashed on the World, Dr Zeeshan Afzal told Express.co.uk.

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Property tax to be replaced with Wealth Tax, Gift Tax and Estate Tax – President

President Ranil Wickremasinghe while tabling the IMF agreement in Parliament today (22) in his capacity as the Minister of Finance said that he would introduce Wealth Tax, Gift Tax and Estate Tax  in lieu of the existing Property tax.



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Trump 2024 rival DeSantis slams Biden 'failure' in new interview with Piers Morgan



"The guy I'm gonna focus on is Biden because I think he's failed the country," DeSantis told Piers Morgan.

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Tuesday, March 21, 2023

Sri Lankan sailing teams compete in Pakistan

The Sri Lankan national team of two sailors and one windsurfer, with the Navy team of a sailor and a windsurfer, were invited to participate at the first Chief of Navy Staff International Sailing Regatta 2023 held from March 14 to 20 in Karachi, Pakistan. Twelve countries including Australia, Bahrain, Croatia, Egypt, China, Kazakhstan, Malaysia, Oman, Singapore, Thailand and Turkey had sent their teams to Karachi. The Sri Lankan national team consisted of Laser Standard sailor (ILCA 7) NGMU Ghanawardene, Sri Lanka Navy, Priyantha Gunawardene, Sri Lanka Navy participating in the Windsurfing RSX Class and Laser 4.7 (ILCA 4) sailor Tharen Nanayakkara. The Navy team consisted of Laser Standard sailor (ILCA 7) JMPL Jayasuriya, Sri Lanka Navy and WAS Weeratunge, Sri Lanka Navy participating in the Windsurfing RSX Class.



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Melania Trump's 'humiliation' by Donald for Stormy Daniels affair branded 'bull****'



The former First Lady's ex-advisor has slammed claims that Melania Trump left her husband after finding out about his affair with Stormy Daniels.

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Meghan and Harry make strategic move to 'keep wealthy friends on their side'



The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have yet to respond to King Charles' Coronation invite following months of controversy over Prince Harry's memoir and book tour.

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Prisoner serving 241 year sentence describes surreal first hours in society after release



Bobby Bostic was arrested in December 1996, when he was just 16-years-old, and sentenced to 241 years in prison for 17 different crimes relating to armed robbery spree.

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Horrifying CCTV shows moment thug shoots tourist dead in ‘execution-style killing’



GRAPHIC CONTENT: The video shows spring breakers walking under umbrellas before repeated gunshots ring out and have them bolting from the scene.

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Monday, March 20, 2023

WFP finds 32 percent of Lankan households are food insecure

The latest statistics by the World Food Programme shows that 32 percent of Lankan households are food insecure.

“Over the past four months, food security levels have remained above the 30 percent range. Wholesale traders have reported a decline in prices of essential food commodities, attributing it to the recent release of food stocks in local markets. Additionally, there has been a decrease in vegetable prices due to revamping of the disrupted supply chain”, says the Remote Household Food Security Survey Brief of the WFP.

It said:  “Households across the country continue to turn to food and livelihood-based coping strategies. Seven in ten households (73 percent) are adopting food-based coping strategies, and 68 percent of households are consuming less preferred food. Food and fuel prices remain a prime concern for many households. Fifty one percent of households are purchasing food on credit. Consumption of adequate diets remains low. Thirty percent of households are facing insufficient food consumption, with 40 percent consuming limited portions. Female-headed households continue to fare worse than male-headed households. Households in the estate and rural areas experienced higher levels of acute food insecurity than those in urban areas in January. Similar disparities can be found across income sources. The ongoing maha season harvest (February – March is likely to improve the situation. Despite the ongoing harvest season, a combination of factors such as less land cultivated, lower yields and the ongoing economic crisis could result in a short-lived food security situation.

“Thirty two percent of households are facing acute food insecurity in January, which continues to be of concern. Food insecurity levels are observed to be fluctuating in the thirties over the last four months. Compared to December, there was a marginal decrease in food insecurity levels in January. Severe food insecurity levels stood at 1.3 percent in January, almost similar to the past three months levels.

“The Uva province reported the highest number of food insecure households in January, followed by Sabaragamuwa. Generally, there was a marginal increase in food insecurity in Western, Uva and North Central provinces in January. Western province, however, saw a decrease of 10 percentage points. The highest number of households (84 percent) turning to food based coping strategies were from the Western province. In January, as in December, Uva and Sabaragamuwa provinces had the highest percentage of households that are food insecure.”



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Viyathmaga II

Sri Lanka is fast creating a Viyathmaga II. When observing how various categories of professionals – teachers, musicians, artists, officers from armed forces, doctors …. are getting on a single stage, it reminds us how Viyathmaga was formed and what they did and finally how its choice carried the whole country towards disaster. Whatever happened later, their choice had some reputation gathered during the war against the LTTE.

The chosen Party of Viyathmaga II does not have any past to boast of but they show themselves as an uncorrupted group. But corruption comes with power and without any power there cannot be any opening to involve in corruption.  Even if a few persons already known could be considered trustworthy though inexperienced, a government is an assembly of many and there could be many who are unheard of.

Listening to tales criticizing one’s enemies and how they are going to be punished may be music to ears, but those vows cannot be fulfilled easily and quickly, and also will not bring people a country with Kiri Peni. Sri Lanka has no time to experiment and “This time we’ll vote for them and see” will bring more disaster.

Every political party has capable and incorruptible members and what we need urgently is, all opposition parties to join up to form a government with such people. Any party which has a genuine love for the country, at this moment should not act with over-evaluation of their capabilities or popularity and bring more disasters.

A Ratnayake



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Horrifying moment two neighbours viciously beat man over parking spot



GRAPHIC CONTENT: Horrifying video captured the moment two New Yorkers allegedly beat a man over a row about a parking spot, sending him to hospital in critical condition.

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Donald Trump arrest will 'make him more popular' - Chris Rock warning over 2024 campaign



Donald Trump is expected to face criminal charges for allegedly handing £106,000 to adult film star Stormy Daniels to keep their sexual relationship secret.

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Kim Jong-un readies troops for ‘immediate and overwhelming nuclear attack’ on US



The dictator is preparing his troops for nuclear war, accusing Washington of "aggressive" tactics.

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New Zealand seal 2-0 whitewash despite Sri Lanka’s resistance

Despite a strong resistance by Sri Lanka’s lower order, three wickets apiece by Tim Southee and Blair Tickner helped bundle out the visitors for 358 to help New Zealand clinch the second Test at the Basin Reserve in Wellington by an innings and 58 runs, on Monday. With the win, the hosts also sealed the two-match Test series 2-0.

Brief scores:

Sri Lanka 164 (Dimuth Karunaratne 89; Matt Henry 3-44, Michael Bracewell 3-50) & 358 (Dhananjaya de Silva 98, Dinesh Chandimal 62; Tim Southee 3-51, Blair Tickner 3-84) lost to New Zealand 580/4 decl. (Kane Williamson 215, Henry Nicholls 200*; Kasun Rajitha 2-126) by an innings and 58 runs



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Sunday, March 19, 2023

Showers in most parts of the island

Weather forecast issued at 05.30 a.m. on 20 March 2023 by the Department of Meteorology

Showers or thundershowers will occur at several places over most parts of the island during the afternoon or night.

Showers may occur in Western and Sabaragamuwa provinces and in Nuwara-Eliya, Galle and Matara districts during the morning as well.

Fairly heavy showers above 50mm are likely at some places in Western, Sabaragamuwa, Central, Uva, North -Central and Eastern provinces and in Galle and Matara districts.

Winds will be southerly to south-westerly and wind speed will be (20-30) kmph.

The sea areas around the island will be slight to moderate.

General public is kindly requested to take adequate precautions to minimize damages caused by temporary localized strong winds and lightning during thundershowers.



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