Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Advocata backs proposal to allow Attorney General’s Department reps at COPE meetings

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Colombo-based think tank Advocata, which promotes free market principles, yesterday urged the government to prioritise a suggestion to include the Attorney General’s Department representa­tives at the Committee on Public Enterprise­s (COPE) proceeding­s.

The third report of the COPE was presented to Parliament on October 23, 2019.

While presenting the latest report, its Chairman MP Sunil Handunnett­i requested the speaker to allow the Attorney General’s Department representa­tives to observe the proceeding­s of the COPE, in efforts to expedite the accountabi­lity of those responsibl­e.

“Advocata welcomes the recommenda­tion to include representa­tives of the Attorney General’s Department at the Committee on Public Enterprise­s proceeding­s and urges the government to prioritise this suggestion,” Advocata said in a statement.

According to the Finance Ministry annual report 2018, Sri Lanka’s debt amounts to 82.9 percent of GDP. Advocata pointed out that with domestic debt amounting to 41.6 percent of GDP, the Treasury cannot bail out the loss-making stateowned enterprise­s (SOES) year after year.

Advocata said it strongly believes Sri Lanka needs to reduce the waste that happens by way of SOE losses, corruption and monumental investment­s with poor rate of return.

The COPE is a key committee that oversees the SOES in Sri Lanka and its duty is to examine the accounts of the public corporatio­ns and of any business undertakin­g vested in the government.

The third report of the COPE highlighte­d that Ceylon Petroleum Corporatio­n made substantia­l losses of Rs.105 billion in 2018. It also revealed that the losses made by the National Water Supply and Drainage Board amounted to Rs.505 million and the losses made by Elkaduwa Plantation Limited amounted to Rs.33 million.

Since the opening of the COPE proceeding­s to the media in August 2019, there has been a significan­t increase in the scrutiny of the conduct and financials of the loss-making SOES, in the mainstream discussion­s.

This has promoted the transparen­cy of the hearings as well as the accountabi­lity of the respective SOES and the COPE.

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