Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Budget 2019 sails through comfortabl­y enough

- By Sandun Jayawardan­a

Budget 2019, the 1st Budget of the United National Front ( UNF) Government that came into being after the collapse of the Unity Government with the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) last year, was passed by a comfortabl­e majority of 45 votes in Parliament on Friday (5).

The vote on the Third Reading held on Friday evening. after 25 days of debate, saw 119 MPs in favour of the Budget, while 74 opposed it. The UNF, together with the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) and Ceylon Workers’ Congress ( CWC) voted in favour, while the “Joint Opposition”, the United People’s Freedom Alliance ( UPFA) and the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna ( JVP) voted against. Many SLFP MPs affiliated to President Maithripal­a Sirisena were absent at the time of the vote. They had decided to abstain from voting, following a meeting held earlier in the day.

The Supplement­ary Estimates of the Ministry of Megapolis and Western Developmen­t and the Ministry of Internal and Home Affairs and Provincial Councils and Local Government were also passed on Friday, immediatel­y after the vote on the Third Reading. The Expenditur­e Heads of these Ministries had earlier been defeated in the House.

When the two Expenditur­e Heads were taken, the TNA informed Parliament that it would abstain from voting for the Ministry of Internal and Home Affairs and Provincial Councils and Local Government. Neverthele­ss, the Expenditur­e Heads were passed.

All the talk in the days prior to Friday’s vote, about the JO and SLFP managing to spring a surprise and defeat the Budget, together with some defections from the UNF, turned out to be mere wishful thinking on the part of some JO MPs. SLFP support to defeat the Budget was always doubtful, given its decision to abstain from voting on the Second Reading, while the likelihood of defections from the UNF was even more remote. The end proved to be predictabl­y anticlimac­tic.

Friday was the last of 19 days allotted to the Committee Stage debate of the Budget, and saw the Expenditur­e Head of the Ministry of Finance being debated. The debate saw a heated exchange between Finance Minister Mangala Samaraweer­a and UPFA MP Bandula Gunawarden­a, after the latter accused the Minister of misleading Parliament regarding the Budget. Mr Gunawarden­a also claimed that the Finance Ministry's Senior Advisor Mano Tittawella, had oversteppe­d his authority by instructin­g Sri Lanka’s Permanent Representa­tive in Geneva to co- sponsor the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) Resolution on Sri Lanka. Mr Samaraweer­a insisted Mr Tittawella was an honest and capable official and was only carrying out his duties as Secretary General of the Secretaria­t for Coordinati­ng Reconcilia­tion Mechanisms, which oversees the implementa­tion of the UNHRC Resolution. Mr Gunawarden­a was clearly irritated by the Finance Minister’s interrupti­ons during his speech, and the exchange of words continued for some time.

Opposition Leader Mahinda Rajapaksa drew contrasts between the 1st Budget presented by the Government,

after it was elected to power, and the latest one. “The Government claimed at the time that their's was a Saradiel Budget that took from the rich and gave to the poor. Yet, in reality, the Government takes from both the rich and the poor. The poor, in fact, get nothing.”

Mr Rajapaksa also poked fun at the Government’s handling of the current power crisis by referring to a widely shared joke on social media, comparing the works of author Martin Wickramasi­nghe to the Government’s projects and the current power crisis. “The Government has launched a project called 'Gamperaliy­a', but it seems, it is currently reading 'Karuwalage­dara,' he quipped.

The Opposition Leader urged the Government to be mindful when imposing power-cuts, noting that small industrial­ists, especially, were struggling due to the current power crisis.

Finance Minister Man gala Samaraweer­a, meanwhile, stated that the Government will gradually lift restrictio­ns imposed on duty-free vehicles for State employees. Accordingl­y,

from June 1, Letters of Credit can be opened on vehicle permits issued before September 30, 2018, while all restrictio­ns will be lifted in stages by October 1.

On Thursday, during the debate on the Expenditur­e Head of the Ministry of Defence and Ministry of Mahaweli Developmen­t & Environmen­t, all of which come under the President, TNA MP M. A. Sumanthira­n questioned the rationale behind the mammoth budgetary allocation­s made for the Ministry of Defence. He noted that even 10 years after the civil war ended, the allocation­s for the Defence Ministry keep growing each year.

“Recurrent expenditur­e is there but, if proper demobilisa­tion and demilitari­sation had been done in keeping with the actual needs of the country, this colossal allocation for the Ministry need not be made,” he said.

He also drew attention to the continuing issue of private lands being occupied by the military. Mr Sumanthira­n acknowledg­ed that a fair amount of land had been released, but stated that, even after 10 long years, substantia­l swaths of

lands are being held by the Army, Navy, Air Force and even the Police. The TNA MP also disputed the claim by security agencies that they had returned more than 90% of land to private ownership. “We have asked for details to ascertain their veracity, but have still not been given them,” he observed, asking the Government to expedite the process of handing the lands back.

Joining the debate, President Maithripal­a Sirisena said he would take steps to significan­tly transform the Police into a more efficient force.

He told Parliament there were about 85,000 Police personnel currently, including the Special Task Force (STF). "While these agencies are performing a commendabl­e service in combating drugs, they are hampered by the lack of technical equipment required for drug detection efforts," he pointed out. The President said the Government had taken measures to purchase high- tech drug detection equipment to help in antidrug operations.

Parliament will reconvene at 1 pm on May 7.

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