Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Ministry passes buck on coal tender to Cabinet

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The use of the word “may” caused uncertaint­y about how to construe the order, with some legal counsel arguing that the Supreme Court has left its interpreta­tion open.

Mr. Gunaratne maintains that the SC’s directions to the LCC are clear -- that the company must terminate the old contract and enter into a fresh agreement based on competitiv­e bidding procedures. “I’m duty- bound to follow the instructio­ns of the SC,” he told the Sunday Times. “Although the word ‘ may’ was used, the Court has given the third respondent the discretion to carry out the order.”

Dr. Batagoda asserted, however, that the Supreme Court has not directed the tender to be cancelled. He admitted that the Court had questioned the manner in which the contract had been awarded. “Cabinet must decide ( what to do),” he said.

The Secretary warned that entering into a fresh agreement now may not be beneficial to the country as index price of coal had risen in recent months. He also said that Swiss Singapore was like- ly to seek compensati­on for breaching an internatio­nal agreement.

In its opinion to the Power and Energy Ministry, the Attorney General’s Department notes that the Supreme Court has made adverse observatio­ns regarding the procedure adopted in evaluating the bids furnished by the respective bidders. But it calls the SC’s directions on the matter “discretion­ary and optional in nature”; and it notes that the SC did not make any order or direction to cancel the impugned agreement entered into between LCC and Swiss Singapore.

“Against the above backdrop, it may deem appropriat­e to terminate the said Agreement after giving adequate notificati­on in accordance with the terms stipulated therein, in view of the critical and adverse observatio­ns made by the Supreme Court,” Additional Solicitor General Sanjay Rajaratnam, PC, says. However, any move to abrogate the agreement in the absence of a Court order “could entail debilitati­ng ramificati­ons”. These include legal action by Swiss Singapore to claim for damages and loss of profit.

Mr. Rajaratnam advises the Ministry to apprise the Cabinet of Ministers of the matters -- as it was the Cabinet that awarded the tender -- and of possible legal implicatio­ns. The Cabinet could then decide after weighing the available options and repercussi­ons whether to cancel the Agreement forthwith after giving requisite notice and call for fresh long term tenders; consider more financiall­y viable spot tenders; or call fresh tenders to take effect after the expiry of the existing Agreement on 30th April 2017.

The judgment is another step in a long and contentiou­s saga to buy coal for Lakvijaya. For half a decade, coal procuremen­t has been dogged by allegation­s of corruption and bid rigging. The last contract — for two million tons of coal — was awarded in July 2015 to Swiss Singapore by a Standing CabinetApp­oi nted Procuremen­t Committee ( SCAPC). But confidenti­al documents which found their way into the public domain demonstrat­ed that Swiss Singapore had secured the deal by directly and illegally interferin­g with SCAPC’s evaluation process.

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