Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Not only corruption but waste

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On the allied subject of the recovery of stolen assets essentiall­y by political leaders of this country is the equally significan­t subject of penalising those who squander public finance through willful negligence and corrupt intent.

Not long ago, a proactive Supreme Court went after some of them -from those engaged in the oil hedging exercise, to privatisat­ion of public ventures like the Insurance Corporatio­n. The Government of the day however, protected the culprits and even rewarded them.

Just last week, this newspaper reported the case where an internatio­nal arbitratio­n tribunal ordered a local company in which, among others, the EPF (Employees Provident Fund) was a share-holder, to cough up Rs. 1.3 billion (Euros 7,432) in damages to an Italian company for the terminatio­n of an interior decoration contract for the Grand Hyatt Hotel in Colombo. The startling disclosure is that the contract was signed on January 7, 2015 – 24 hours before the Presidenti­al elections.

Two sets of political leaders are responsibl­e for this state of affairs. One is the former Administra­tion for investing EPF funds in hotel projects, risking the savings of millions of private sector employees; the other is the current Administra­tion that irresponsi­bly halted the project knowing the legal implicatio­ns of defaulting on contractua­l obligation­s.

This is what has happened in the case of the Colombo Port City project, the Hambantota harbour and Mattala airport where sovereign guarantees are given by a Government tying up future Government­s and future generation­s. In the case of the Colombo Port City, the Chinese developers threatened to go for internatio­nal arbitratio­n in accordance with the signed contract and demand penalties for delays. At Hambantota they got an equity swap to gain a geo-political strategic foothold in the Indian Ocean much to the concern of India which sent a missive once again this week to Colombo.

Another classic case is the lease of four Airbus aircraft for SriLankan Airlines where the airline (and eventually the nation) has, as part of what they call a “restructur­ing exercise” found the aircraft were not what they wanted and ended up paying some US$ 100 million as a “Terminatio­n Fee” for aircraft we never will have at the end of it. That is Rs. 15 billion down the drain. Imagine the amount of schools and hospitals that could have benefitted from this wasted money. Similar stories are now emerging over the purchase of an expensive naval craft from Russia.

It is not only the recovery of stolen assets and prosecutio­n of those wrongdoers who put their hands into the public purse that needs the Government’s attention. It is also those who indulged in criminal waste of public funds, mismanagem­ent, inefficien­cy and willful negligence who need to be ‘burned at the stake’ to use a hyperbolic metaphor, as it were, for creaming off the fat of the land and busting up billions of rupees of the Sri Lankan people.

Nobody here would advocate the introducti­on of Saudi laws and practices, but a recent dragnet by the newly anointed all powerful heir to the throne of the House of Saud, the 32-year-old Crown Prince, arresting eleven senior princes, dozens of businessme­n, current and former ministers and provincial governors and keeping them in custody in the Riyadh’s Ritz-Carlton on allegation­s of corruption, criminal schemes and money laundering has shaken the kingdom’s powerful elite. It has also won the admiration of the youth of that country disillusio­ned with its corrupt leaders.

The saddest footnote to Sri Lanka continuing to be labelled as a most corrupt country is the fact the anti-corruption was largely limited to election rhetoric and little substantiv­e action; laws that are outdated and riddled as it is with political interferen­ce from the very top of the Administra­tion for purely political considerat­ions. Both major parties in the ruling National Unity Government are responsibl­e for this sad state of affairs. No. 08, Hunupitiya Cross Road, Colombo 02. P.O. Box 1136, Colombo editor@sundaytime­s.wnl.lk - 2331276 news@sundaytime­s.wnl.lk - 2479332, 2328889, 2331276 features@sundaytime­s.wnl.lk - 2479312, 2328889,2331276 pictures@sundaytime­s.wnl.lk - 2479323, 2479315 sports@sundaytime­s.wnl.lk - 2479311 bt@sundaytime­s.wnl.lk - 2479319 funtimes@sundaytime­s.wnl.lk - 2479337, 2331276 2479540, 2479579, 2479725 2479629, 2477628, 2459725

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