Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Garlic scam’s pungent qualities

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President Gotabaya Rajapaksa has a major issue to handle on his return to the country. That is to go into the mind-blowing details revealed by a whistleblo­wer insider in the Consumer Affairs Authority involving billions of rupees reportedly siphoned off from the state's essential foodstuffs distributi­ng arm, Sathosa. It started off with the exposure of a staggering racket in the sale of imported garlic, but has extended to what have been cases of organised crime involving foodstuffs meant for the ordinary citizen.

Sathosa has long been touted as the safety net consumer store of the state that protects the poor householde­r from the ‘ravenous wolves’ that are the private traders. It has also long been associated with human 'rats' that feed off it to the tune of not thousands, not millions, but billions at the expense of the ultimate victim, the very people whom the state is supposed to protect.

With the cost of living soaring by the week to astronomic­al heights and the ordinary people asked to pay more and more for their daily dhal, sugar, milk powder, wheat products, gas and other essentials, those in charge of their import and distributi­on are laughing all the way to the bank. Ministers, chairmen and officials seem to be doing everything to say there is no hanky panky taking place. But the whistleblo­wer’s allegation­s are damning. Files given to the CID some time ago, of rackets during previous Government­s have been gathering dust because of the absence of 'political will' to prosecute the culprits. The whistleblo­wer says most of them are together in the game and there is no way these daylight robberies can take place without collusion among them.

The President rode to the high office he holds on a solemn pledge that he would change the corrupt system within government. The people are waiting to see this pledge fulfilled. And it has been a long time coming. Thundering statements by Government Ministers that the rice mafia will be controlled have backfired and instead it is this very same mafia that is rubbing the nose of those big-talking Ministers in the nation's plate of rice. The sugar scam of a few months ago has been deftly covered up without a proper investigat­ion.

In the USA, former President Bill Clinton had a big-time sugar baron and financier of the Democratic Party, Alfonso Fanjuls and his brother Jose 'Pepe' of Palm Beach, Florida benefit from government restrictio­ns on imports giving the Fanjuls who were also co-chairmen of Clinton's Florida campaign in 1992, windfall profits in a captive market obliging American shoppers to pay twice as much for their sugar. The sordid details emerged in the public domain and the long suffering American taxpayer had to clean up the Fanjuls-Clinton mess. The political-business links between a powerful sugar baron and the government are not dissimilar in Sri Lanka.

It is not the culprits in this sordid racket who need the protection of the state, but the whistleblo­wer who is now concerned for his safety. These are not matters that will go to Geneva's Human Rights Council, but they are 'crimes against humanity' neverthele­ss.

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