Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Wildlife summit jolted by Lankan resignatio­ns

- By Malaka Rodrigo

With under 60 days to go before the 18th World Wildlife Conference (CITES COP18) opens in Colombo, the event received a blow this week with the resignatio­ns of key officials Samantha Gunasekara and Dr. Sevvandi Jayakody.

Both officials belonged to the CITES Sri Lanka Secretaria­t, establishe­d last April to drive the organisati­on of the conference.

Mr. Gunasekara, the former head of the Biodiversi­ty Protection Unit of Sri Lanka Customs, had been appointed secretaria­t director due to his vast experience with the CITES framework while Dr. Jayakody of Wayamba University had been appointed coordinato­r.

Both of them are well known in their field, and Mr. Gunasekara is an internatio­nally-acclaimed expert.

Mr. Gunasekara declined to comment at this point, promising to issue a statement in a few days to explain the reasons for the resignatio­ns.

Sources close to Sri Lanka’s CITES Secretaria­t told the Sunday Times that Mr. Gunasekera and Dr. Jayakody had complained of undue interferen­ce by the Minister of Wildlife and Tourism Developmen­t, John Amaratunga. The interferen­ce had created mistrust, the sources said.

The Secretary of the Ministry of Tourism and Wildlife, S. Hettiarach­chie, confirmed he had received the resignatio­ns but said he could not accept them as these officials’ work was critical for the success of the event.

Mr. Hettiarach­chie said he would speak to Mr. Gunasekera and Dr. Jayakody and try to get the matter sorted out amicably.

When contacted, Minister Amaratunga said it was his right as minister to check on processes, claiming that when he had investigat­ed alleged irregulari­ties in tender procedures and other matters the two secretaria­t officials had resigned.

Sri Lanka was selected as hosting nation of CITES COP18 following a request made by then Wildlife Minister Gamini Jayawickre­ma Perera in 2016.

Sri Lanka set up its CITES Secretaria­t only last year, mobilising preparatio­ns after a two-year lapse. Subsequent­ly, the wildlife portfolio was handed over to General Sarath Fonseka in May 2018 and, after the cabinet reshuffle in October, to Mr. Amaratunga, who then became the minister responsibl­e for the event.

With the event now being handled by the Ministry of Wildlife and Tourism, it is alleged that tourism officials want to make changes to already-laid plans in order to use the event to promote Sri Lanka as a tourist destinatio­n.

It is estimated that the event will cost Rs. 1.2 billion and apparently the ministry is still trying to find the funds.

It is also learned that even the company to handle event management had not been confirmed despite there being less than two months before the conference opens.

As an event with several thousand foreign delegates, there will be a substantia­l number of parallel activities running alongside the main conference, and it is already late for any company to handle such a mammoth task.

Mr. Amaratunga appointed a Director-General to the CITES Sri Lanka Secretaria­t, informing the CITES Secretaria­t in Switzerlan­d last week, on March 19.

It is claimed this post was not approved by cabinet and that it had been given to an outside. Many question whether it was wise to appoint an outsider for the position just two months before the event.

Defending his decision, Minister Amaratunga said the appointee was from the private sector and wellversed in event management, and that this was necessary to make the conference a success.

On a visit to Sri Lanka in December 2018, CITES Secretary-General Ivonne Higuero expressed satisfacti­on with the organising of the conference to that date.

The Sunday Times contacted the CITES Secretaria­t in Geneva about the new developmen­ts. The officials said the secretaria­t was in continuous and regular contact with the authoritie­s in Sri Lanka and confident that preparatio­ns for the conference were on track.

Defending his decision, Minister Amaratunga said the appointee was from the private sector and well- versed in event management, and that this was necessary to make the conference a success

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