Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Govt. and opposition should work together to deal with pandemic

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Instead of finger- pointing and accusation­s between the government and the opposition over the manner in which the COVID- 19 pandemic was being managed, the pandemic should have brought all political parties on one crisis platform to deal with the situation.

This point was addressed by a member of the Sunday Times Business Club ( STBC) during a member’s engagement session recently via zoom aimed at considerin­g views of members on how they managed the pandemic in their family and work- lives.

Ravinaash Perera said the negative part of the pandemic was that there was no unity amongst political leaders. “Here was an opportunit­y for all political parties to come together in a national crisis but this didn’t happen,” he said, adding that the opposition was criticisin­g everything the government did.

On the government’s part, there was no recognitio­n or appreciati­on of the valuable suggestion­s made by the opposition. “All or the main party leaders should be invited to serve in the committees appointed for special purposes dealing with the pandemic so that a final decision would be one of collective responsibi­lity,” Mr. Perera said, adding that one of the positives of the pandemic was that it was a ‘ long holiday’ to renew relationsh­ips at home.

Nishan K. Silva said the pandemic created its own set of inno

vative opportunit­ies such as in new mobile apps, BPO/ KPO and logistics.

For Sri Lanka it’s more a case of lack of competenci­es and or the inability to deploy the available competenci­es to capitalise on the global opportunit­ies that have evolved from the pandemic.

He said that the pandemic has reduced operating costs by relocating permanent office spaces to cohabiting offices to operate on a need basis and has increased productivi­ty due to time saved in travelling and preparatio­n to depart to work.

Priyal Perera, another member, noted that the pandemic has impacted lear ning activities across the board in schools and beyond.

The problem with online teaching is that many do not have the proper coverage of mobile phone signals and also suitable equipment such as the computer/ smartphone or a tab. “There is another problem; no interactio­n between students. Physical interactio­n helps the student in their personal issues as and when these students need it,” Mr. Perers said, adding that the teacher or the lecturer runs through the syllabus only and fulfills covering the course rather than being of any assistance to the students as in a classroom.

Dr. Samantha Ratnayake was of

the view that while there have been corona viruses in the past, the main issue with COVID-19 is that the magnitude is unpreceden­ted.

He cited two problems with the pandemic - one is stemming from existing problems prior to the pandemic where most of the companies have unresolved problems and these been delayed due to many reasons. The second category of problems is the ones emerging due to the COVID19 lockdown and new demands of responses are required to address them.

Companies have enlisted automation and AI to cope with COVID-19 disruption­s and may accelerate adoption in the years ahead, putting more robots in manufactur­ing plants and warehouses and adding self-service customer kiosks and service robots in customer interactio­n arenas wherever possible, he added.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Dr. Samantha Ratnayake
Dr. Samantha Ratnayake
 ??  ?? Mr. Ravinaash Perera
Mr. Ravinaash Perera
 ??  ?? Mr. Nishan K. Silva
Mr. Nishan K. Silva
 ??  ?? Mr. Priyal Perera
Mr. Priyal Perera

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