The Badagry house of horror: 24 Victims rescued

By Linda Agbu

The Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) has dismantled a suspected human trafficking and abduction network in Lagos State, rescuing 24 victims and arresting three suspects during a major operation in Badagry.

According to the News Agency of Nigeria, the operation, carried out by operatives of the Lagos State Command in Badagry West, followed months of intelligence gathering and community engagement efforts conducted between January and March.

Speaking during the parade of the suspects at the NSCDC Badagry Division headquarters in Ibeko on Friday, the Command’s Public Relations Officer, Oluwaseun Abolurin, said investigators uncovered what he described as an illegal confinement facility where victims were allegedly held and exploited.

According to him, the rescued victims include nationals of Togo and the Republic of Benin, as well as a Nigerian from Imo State, highlighting the transnational dimension of the suspected criminal operation.

Abolurin disclosed that some of the victims had been missing for as long as three years, while others had disappeared for periods ranging from six to nine months before their rescue.

In a disturbing revelation, he said a female victim gave birth to a baby girl while in captivity, while two other women were discovered to be pregnant.

“The victims have suffered memory loss to the point that they cannot remember how they got into those confinements,” he said.

The NSCDC spokesman further alleged that the suspects used food items laced with unknown substances to manipulate and control the victims.

He noted that many families had spent years searching desperately for their missing relatives, visiting churches, mosques and traditional shrines in search of answers, unaware that their loved ones were allegedly being held in an illegal camp.

“We have been able to smash this criminal syndicate,” Abolurin declared.

While declining to disclose the exact location of the facility for security reasons, he said investigations were ongoing and urged families with missing relatives to contact the Lagos State Command.

He reaffirmed the Corps’ commitment to working with other security agencies and community stakeholders to combat human trafficking, kidnapping and related crimes across the state.

“We will do everything within our capacity to synergise with relevant stakeholders to ensure that Lagos is not a safe haven for criminals,” he added.

The development marks one of the most significant anti-human trafficking operations recorded in the state in recent months and has raised fresh concerns about the activities of criminal syndicates operating across border communities.

Lagos APC group takes battle for Agege assembly seat primary to Abuja

By Priscilla Osaje

Some leaders of All Progressives Congress (APC) in Agege Local Government on Friday stormed the Abuja national headquarters of the party in protest against the declared outcome of the party’s primary election for Agege Constituency 0I.

The protesting group, led by Johnson Kolawole, alleged that the outcome was wrongly altered against Egunjobi Ganiyu Kola, who, according to them, won the party’s primary election conducted on May 20, 2026, but was not subsequently recognised as the party’s candidate.

They therefore called on the APC National Chairman, Prof. Nentawe Yilwatda, and the party’s National Working Committee (NWC) to review the outcome of the primary election.

Kolawole said the members of the group comprise all the chairmen of the five wards that constitute Agege Local Government and their secretaries, including the party chairman in the area and his secretary.

The group’s leader while reading the petition during a press briefing in Abuja alleged that Kola secured 9,132 votes out of a total of 10,126 votes cast across the five wards in the constituency.

He stated that another aspirant, Mr Oladipo Tunde Shola, scored 560 votes, while Mr Michael Abiola polled 434 votes.

He alleged that Egunjobi was duly screened, cleared and declared winner by the designated returning officer, Hon. Kayode Kassim Eleshin, at the conclusion of the exercise.

Kolawola further alleged that the primary election was monitored by APC officials, INEC observers, security agencies, journalists and other stakeholders, and described the process as peaceful, transparent and credible

He, however, expressed concern over what he described as the publication of Oluwagbenga Michael Abiola as the APC candidate for Lagos State House of Assembly, Agege Constituency 0I, in a newspaper publication dated May 25, 2026

The group’s leader argued that the published result did not reflect the outcome announced at the primary election and called on the national leadership of the APC to review the records of the exercise.

“We respectfully urge the National Working Committee and all relevant organs and committees of our great party to uphold the authentic result as declared by the Returning Officer and formally recognise Egunjobi Ganiyu Kola as the duly elected APC candidate for Lagos State House of Assembly, Agege Constituency 0I.”

Kolawola said the group was prepared to provide documentary and video evidence from the five wards, as well as reports from election observers and security agencies, to support their position.

He appealed to President BolaTinubu and the APC leadership to intervene and ensure that what they described as the genuine mandate of party members in the constituency is protected.

(NAN)

Executive Masterclass with Gaurav Kumar on scaling globally in AI era

TiE Colombo will host internationally renowned entrepreneur, investor, and growth strategist Gaurav Kumar for an exclusive masterclass, ‘Building a Winning Global GTM,’ on 17 July 2026 from 2:00 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. in Colombo.

The event marks Gaurav Kumar’s first engagement in Sri Lanka through TiE Colombo and is designed for CEOs, business leaders, growth executives, and founders seeking to build scalable revenue engines and successfully expand into global markets.

Gaurav is the founder of Beyond Codes Inc., Hunt Grow Consulting, and YogaFi, and the immediate past president of TiE Southern California. He an alumnus of the Stanford Graduate School of Business and serves as a board member for Stanford Angels and Entrepreneurs, Matchbook AI, VR Zoom, Alltius, Prezent AI, and many others. companies. As an active angel investor and advisor for over 25 years, he works closely with companies navigating growth, market expansion, and international customer acquisition.

He has delivered masterclasses in over 45 countries, sharing practical, field-tested frameworks on global sales strategy, market entry, and revenue expansion. His company, Beyond Codes, has been recognised on the Inc. 5000 list of America’s fastest-growing companies five times and has received multiple industry awards for sales excellence.

The masterclass will focus on how organisations can structure and execute modern GTM strategies, strengthen customer acquisition models, and successfully enter new international markets.

Commenting on the event, Gaurav Kumar said: ‘Customer acquisition has fundamentally changed, and organisations that continue relying on legacy sales models are already losing ground. This session is designed to help leaders rethink GTM strategy and build scalable, modern approaches to winning global customers and entering new markets with confidence.’

TiE Colombo President, Madu Ratnayake highlighted the importance of execution-led global thinking for regional business leaders. ‘The next phase of growth requires leaders who can think globally and execute with precision. This session brings that perspective to business leaders, helping them strengthen how they build and scale for international markets.’

The masterclass is supported by HNB and Jetwing Hotels, TiE Colombo’s Annual Corporate Sponsors, who continue to play a key role in strengthening Sri Lanka’s business and innovation ecosystem.

England set the stage alight with record batting performance; beat SL in opener

The ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2026 is bigger and bolder than ever, and hosts England fashioned a blockbuster start, piling on a tournament high of 219/1 in the opening match against Sri Lanka in Edgbaston on Friday.

By doing so, England overhauled their own record of 213/5 set against Pakistan in 2023.

It was Danni Wyatt-Hodge who set the ball rolling with an unbeaten 105. Carrying that confidence in the field, England dismissed Sri Lanka for 132 for a statement 87-run win.

Nat Sciver-Brunt’s side is not just grappling with the pressure of playing a home World Cup, but also have history to contend with – England women’s team have never lost a World Cup they have hosted, either ODI or T20I.

Meanwhile, Sri Lanka are chasing their first title at the World Cup.

After being put into bat, England started cautiously, hitting the accelerator just before the end of the powerplay to score 51/0 in the first six overs. A 135-run opening wicket partnership between Amy Jones (53) and Wyatt-Hodge gave them the perfect launchpad. They kept pressing the advantage, making sure they got the quick ones and twos even though the boundaries flowed easily.

It has been a life-changing month for Wyatt-Hodge, whose partner Georgie gave birth to their first child on 20 May. Just a few days later, she came out to score the opening hundred of the World Cup, seventh in the tournament’s history and only the second by an English woman.

She made the most of the width afforded to her. Wyatt-Hodge brought up the milestone with a sweep for four and put an exclamation on a historic innings for England with another boundary on the final ball.

That meant England scored 26 runs from the final over. Carrying her bat through, Wyatt-Hodge ended at 105 off 62, with the help of 13 fours and a six.

Jones was a tad lucky as she was dropped on 12 and then again on 48. She brought up her seventh half-century in T20Is, scoring 53 off 38.

Sri Lanka struggled to hit the spots with the ball and were sloppy in field as well. They finally got a breakthrough in the 14th over as Jones mistimed a delivery by Malki Madara and ended up spooning a catch to Chamari Athapaththu at mid-off.

However, that didn’t halt the English juggernaut. Skipper Nat Sciver-Brunt, who has recently recovered from injury, played with conviction and innovation to score 46 off 22.

Chasing a record target, Sri Lanka never really got going. Talismanic skipper Athapaththu fell for four in the fourth over, courtesy an incredible catch from wicketkeeper Wyatt-Hodge off Charlie Dean, and Sri Lanka slipped to 39/3 in the powerplay.

The only glimmer of hope was Harshitha Samarawickrama, who struck three fours and a six for 29. But Freya Kemp snuffed out the danger, as she got the ball to straighten and get past Samarawickrama’s defence.

Left-arm pacer Kemp, on a hat-trick at one point, impressed with her intelligent change-ups and finished with 4/22 in her four overs.

Lower down the order, Nilakshika Silva came up with a gritty 39, the highest score for Sri Lanka on the day, but it was too little too late.

People’s Bank opens new ATMs at Jaffna Teaching Hospital and Urban Development Authority premises

People’s Bank recently opened two new Automated Teller Machines (ATMs) at the premises of Jaffna Teaching Hospital and the Urban Development Authority in Jaffna.

The newly installed ATMs provide customers with convenient access to banking services, enabling cash withdrawals 24 hours a day, seven days a week, throughout the year.

The opening ceremonies were attended by Jaffna Teaching Hospital Director T. Sathiyamoorthy, Urban Development Authority Director D.B.S.K. Dissanayake, People’s Bank Regional Manager – Jaffna M. Mathiyalagan, Assistant Regional Managers Y. Sureshkumar and T. Bharathramana, J/Kannathiddy Branch Manager P. Partheepan, J/Main Street Branch Manager N. Thanesh, and staff members of People’s Bank.

Govt. extends deadline for Mattala Airport investment proposals till 9 July

The Government has extended the deadline for submissions under the Expression of Interest (EOI) process seeking investments to utilise resources at the Mattala Rajapaksa International Airport (MRIA) by one month, giving prospective investors additional time to prepare proposals.

Under the revised timeline, proposals can now be submitted till 9 July, while the issuance of EOI documents will remain open until 8 July. The original deadline for submissions was 9 June.

The Ports and Civil Aviation Ministry on behalf of Airport and Aviation Services (Sri Lanka) Ltd., (AASL) invited proposals from prospective investors such as companies, corporations, firms, and joint ventures, duly organised, existing, and registered under laws of its country, for investments to utilise resources of the MRIA.

Accordingly, the Cabinet Appointed Negotiation Committee (CANC) approved the extension to facilitate the submission of more comprehensive investment proposals. The CANC is entrusted with inviting, receiving, and evaluating EOIs to select the eligible party/parties to participate in the calling of Request for Proposals (RFP).

The proposals submitted under the EOI process must remain valid for 120 days from the closing date, until 5 November, while proposal guarantees are required to remain valid for 150 days, till 5 December.

The extension comes as authorities continue efforts to attract investment and improve the utilisation of infrastructure at the country’s second international airport.

Kapruka becomes first Sri Lankan tech company to open its store to AI agents

Kapruka Holdings PLC (KPHL) has become the first technology company in Sri Lanka to run a public Model Context Protocol (MCP) server.

The move makes its product catalogue, delivery and checkout available directly to AI agents, and the company has invited Sri Lankan developers to build on it through a competition called the Kapruka Agent Challenge.

The server is live at mcp.kapruka.com and listed on the official global MCP registry. MCP is an open standard, introduced by Anthropic and now used across the AI industry, that lets assistants such as Claude and ChatGPT carry out tasks in other systems rather than only describe them. What it means in practice is that an AI agent anywhere in the world can now search Kapruka’s products, check delivery to a Sri Lankan address, place a guest order with a secure payment link, and track it, all through a normal conversation.

The timing is deliberate. Much of the technology industry expects shopping to move toward what it calls agentic commerce, where people increasingly rely on AI assistants to find, compare and buy things for them. For that to work, the assistant needs platforms it can actually transact with. By making its systems available to agents now, Kapruka puts itself among the first stores those assistants can use, ahead of others in the local market.

To show the platform working in the open, and to encourage developers to build on it, Kapruka launched the Kapruka Agent Challenge. It invites Sri Lankan developers to create the most useful and creative AI shopping agent on the platform, with an Apple M4 Mac Mini for the winner. Developers across the country have already signed up, and working demos are coming in, including full-screen chat shopping experiences, several of them able to converse in Sinhala and Tanglish and take a customer from a first request through to checkout.

The MCP also extends the company’s asset-light strategy on the demand side. It makes Kapruka’s main growth areas, Partner Central (its third-party marketplace), the Services Platform, and Cross Border (its USD e-distribution business on Amazon US, UK and Canada), reachable by AI agents at little additional cost, both locally and overseas.

Kapruka Holdings PLC Chairman and CEO Dulith Herath said: ‘We have spent two years re-adjusting the business for AI, and this is about getting ready for what comes next. Shopping is starting to move from people clicking through websites to AI assistants doing it for them. We have made Kapruka one of the first stores in this part of the world that those assistants can actually buy from. Rather than keep it in-house, we opened it up and asked Sri Lanka’s developers to show us what they can build with it.’

The platform was built at low cost, in line with the company’s capital-light approach, and it gives Kapruka real optionality for the years ahead: an early position in agentic commerce, the start of a developer community around its platform, and a way for AI agents anywhere to transact on its systems in both rupees and dollars.

Mahesh de Silva joins Assetline Finance Board

Assetline Finance PLC has appointed Mahesh de Silva to its Board as an Executive Director.

He counts over 33 years of professional experience within the David Pieris Group. He commenced his career with the Group on 1 August 1992 and has held several senior management positions, gaining extensive experience in operations, business management, strategy, and corporate leadership.

He joined Assetline Finance PLC on 1 July 2019 and currently serves as the Chief Operating Officer. During his tenure, he has played a key role in driving the company’s operational excellence, business growth, process improvements, and strategic initiatives. De Silva holds a Master of Business Administration (MBA) from Anglia Ruskin University and possesses extensive expertise across multiple business disciplines.

India irked by delay in clearing urgently needed drugs in SL

India has raised serious concerns over the inordinate delay by Sri Lankan authorities in clearing over 1,000 import licences of pharmaceutical products.

The Daily FT learns that the Indian Government has conveyed its disappointment in writing to the relevant authorities including the Health Ministry.

The Indian companies have alleged undue pressure on them to reduce the Maximum Retail Price (MRP) of their products, with reference being made to those prevalent in India or that of medicines locally manufactured in Sri Lanka.

Sources opined that these comparisons are being made in an ad hoc manner without taking into account the cost of compliance, logistics, and shipping, as well as the pressure brought about by the depreciation of the Sri Lankan rupee.

Another contentious issue is that informal price control is being exercised on medicines even when they are not part of the control list of the Sri Lankan Government.

Indian Pharmaceutical Alliance sources charged that the non-tariff barrier being imposed on Indian products will impact the availability of medicines in Sri Lanka and could lead to possible shortages in the near future. It was pointed out that such prolonged challenges are also deterring Indian companies of high reputation from continuing their presence in the Sri Lankan pharma market and expanding their supply to bring in the most modern formulations.

Sources said companies usually maintain stock for three months, however, some companies have reported that at least 5-6 of their products are already out of stock.

It was pointed out that drug pricing is a core public health mechanism. A balanced drug pricing framework ensures affordable access to essential medicines, protects patients from high out-of-pocket costs, sustains domestic pharma manufacturing capacity, and strengthens national health security.

Globally, countries adopt varied drug pricing frameworks, regulating prices mainly for medicines essential to public health while allowing market-based pricing for other medicines and innovative products. This pragmatic approach is widely followed in countries such as France, India, Italy, Brazil, the UK, and Canada through a mix of regulation and negotiated pricing under public procurement and insurance systems.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) actively endorses this model, advocating targeted, transparent, and predictable pricing policies focused on essential medicines, supported by competition, stakeholder consultation, and periodic review to ensure quality and uninterrupted supply, sources emphasised.

They argued that India’s drug pricing framework is a good example and reflects global best practices. It follows a market-based system, with price regulation only for essential medicines aligned with the WHO list. The list of price-controlled medicines is developed through stakeholder consultation and reviewed once every five years, providing policy stability.

The framework is implemented by the National Pharmaceutical Pricing Authority (NPPA) under the Drug Price Control Order (DPCO), 2013.

Ceiling prices are fixed through a simple and transparent method, based on the average price of products with significant market share. Only about 18% of medicines are under price control, and price increases for those other than essential medicines are allowed only in line with inflation (i.e. basis Wholesale Price Index). In practice, due to intense competition, average annual price increases have remained in the range of 6-6.6% over the past years.

‘This stable and predictable framework, combined with strong market competition, helps keep prices affordable while ensuring quality and reliable supply, in line with global best practices,’ they pointed out.

For Sri Lanka, an effective pricing framework would be one that ensures sustained availability of medicines, quality, and investment in manufacturing to support self-reliance. As an import-dependent market, pricing policies need to reflect compliance, logistics, and financing costs, it was pointed out.

Recognising higher per-unit costs will help attract quality-assured suppliers and encourage manufacturing investment.

‘A simple and predictable pricing regime can reduce uncertainty, support continuous supply, and enhance Sri Lanka’s attractiveness as a pharmaceutical manufacturing destination,’ they added.

India’s experience demonstrates that market-based pricing with targeted regulation can achieve affordability while sustaining quality, supply, and innovation – an approach that can be adapted as per the needs of Sri Lanka.

As per the NMRA Act of 2015, a pricing mechanism is stipulated to decide the MRP in consultation with all stakeholders, which primarily includes the industry. However, it is understood that concerns of the industry were not taken into account.

Even when exports are undertaken from Pharmaceutical Inspection Co-operation Scheme (PICS)-approved plants (higher than the WHO Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) standard), at the time of submission of the dossier, bio-equivalence data is also required, which adds to costs. When it is not a PICS plant, GMP inspection is also sought, which adds to cost. Often, full-time stability data (2-3 years) is asked for, while the global practice is for accelerated stability data (6 months). All this increases compliance costs and it takes 2-3 years for a medicine to come into the Sri Lankan market.

In Sri Lanka, 61 molecules are under price control, which is approximately 30% of the market. Price of medicines has also not been allowed to increase for more than 10 years.

For medicines outside the designated control list, price control is being informally exercised during registration of products, during clearances of import licences, and also during reregistration of medicines. This is acting as a deterrent for good companies to continue and/or register new formulations. The frame of reference for seeking a reduction in price is also not clear, sources alleged.

‘Sometimes, the comparison is made to prices in India, and sometimes to those produced locally. In both cases, the economics are completely different. There are high compliance costs, logistics costs, labelling requirements etc. that need to be factored in,’ they pointed out.

There are also ambiguities/uncertainties in the regulatory process as sometimes the NMRA has disqualified the registration of a medicine based on a ‘need clause,’ determining that the country does not need that particular medicine.

Industry sources warned that over the years, some brands have exited the Sri Lankan market including GlaxoSmithKline, LEO, Sanofi, Roche, Nova etc. The Indian pharma companies of high reputation have also reduced their presence in Sri Lanka and are hesitant to register their new products.

The immediate pressing concern is the delay in clearing more than 1,000 import licences for pharmaceutical products. The NMRA insists on lowering the MRP, even for products that are not there in the control list.

The pharmaceutical companies have also highlighted the appreciation of the US dollar, which is not being taken into account by the NMRA.

Licences are believed to be pending since January 2026 and potential shortages in the market could be likely by June-July 2026.

Canadian Chamber of Commerce to host high-level dialogue on women’s development, economic empowerment and SMEs

The Canadian Chamber of Commerce in Sri Lanka (CanCham Sri Lanka) will host a high-level dialogue on ‘Strengthening Collaboration on Women’s Development, Economic Empowerment and Women-Led SMEs’ on 17 June 2026 at CanCham House, Colombo.

The dialogue will feature the participation of Dr. Hina Shah, the Founder of International Centre for Entrepreneurship and Career Development (ICECD), a globally recognised institution that has empowered thousands of women entrepreneurs through entrepreneurship development, livelihood creation, skills enhancement, and economic empowerment initiatives.

Women in Development remains a special area of interest and strategic focus for CanCham Sri Lanka. The Chamber recognises that empowering women and strengthening women-led enterprises are critical to fostering innovation, job creation, poverty reduction, and sustainable economic growth.

The event marks the launch of a new CanCham Sri Lanka initiative aimed at fostering greater collaboration among stakeholders committed to advancing women’s economic participation, entrepreneurship, and the development of women-led Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs).

The dialogue will focus on the following key objectives: Reviewing achievements, challenges, and progress in women’s development and economic empowerment in Sri Lanka; Promoting the growth, sustainability, and competitiveness of women-led SMEs and entrepreneurial ecosystems;

Facilitating networking, knowledge sharing, and collaboration among women entrepreneurs and business leaders from Sri Lanka, India, Canada, and the wider Indo-Pacific region; Building strategic partnerships among the private sector, government institutions, development organisations, financial institutions, and international stakeholders; Exploring opportunities available through the extensive Canadian Chamber network across Canada and the Indo-Pacific region; Identifying priority areas and practical recommendations to strengthen women’s participation in economic development and entrepreneurship and A key outcome of the dialogue will be the initiation of a consultative process to formulate a Five-Year Strategy and Action Plan for Women’s Development, Economic Empowerment and Women-Led SMEs in Sri Lanka.

The Canadian Chamber of Commerce in Sri Lanka (CanCham Sri Lanka) is dedicated to promoting trade, investment, tourism, innovation, and business cooperation between Sri Lanka and Canada. Through its strong partnerships and networks across Canada and the Indo-Pacific region, the Chamber supports initiatives that contribute to sustainable economic growth, entrepreneurship development, and inclusive prosperity.