Seminar on Beneficial Ownership compliance in Sri Lanka: Challenges, responsibilities, and best practices for company secretaries

A high-level seminar and discussion on the current issues surrounding Beneficial Ownership (BO) compliance in Sri Lanka will be held on 22 July 2026 at The Kingsbury Hotel, Colombo, from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m.

Organised to provide clarity and practical guidance for company secretaries, the seminar will address pressing challenges in the registration and filing of Beneficial Ownership information under the Companies Act No. 12 of 2025 and the CBSL Finance Business Act, Direction 2 of 2026 (dated 17 March 2026).

Key topics

Scope and responsibilities of company secretaries in BO declarations

Challenges in the first submission of BO information to the CBSL

Operational and system-related issues in filing BO 05 and BO 07 forms

Statutory deadline of 30 September 2026 and risks of non-compliance

The role of the Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU) in oversight and interaction with BO filings

Distinguished speakers

CBSL Director – Financial Intelligence Unit Dr. Subhani Keerthiratne

Heritage Partners Precedent Partner Dr. Arittha Wikramanayake

LOLC General Insurance Chairman Kithsiri Gunawardene

Registrar of Companies, Attorney-at-Law Sunethra Dharmakeerthi

SEC Sri Lanka Former Director General Malik Cader

This seminar will serve as a vital platform for professionals in corporate governance, compliance, and company secretarial practice to gain insights into regulatory expectations and best practices for timely compliance.

Spotlight on success: CFA Society Sri Lanka Capital Market Awards on 10 September

The 13th edition of the CFA Society Sri Lanka Capital Market Awards is scheduled to be held on 10 September 2026 at the Oak Room, Cinnamon Grand, Colombo. As the Society’s flagship platform for recognising and celebrating excellence across Sri Lanka’s capital markets, the Awards continue to uphold the highest standards of professionalism and industry best practices.

CFA Society Sri Lanka Capital Market Awards Project Chairperson Kithma Gamalath, CFA, underscores the importance of nurturing future-ready capital market professionals: ‘Capital markets continue to evolve, and professionals must progress alongside them. The profession has changed significantly over the past 25 years. As we celebrate a quarter of a century, we are also looking ahead to the next generation of market leaders.’

She urges participants to continually upskill and stay relevant amid changing investor expectations, whilst gaining a deeper understanding of emerging trends such as artificial intelligence (AI), environmental, social, and governance (ESG) concerns, sustainability reporting, digital finance and regulatory developments.

‘The Awards are designed to spur continuous improvement-not simply reward performance. As such, the judges look beyond technical skills and consider research that is timely, actionable, insightful and relevant to investors. We invite greater participation from across research houses, listed companies, investor relations teams and the unit trust industry,’ Gamalath enthuses.

CFA Society Sri Lanka CEO Aruna Alwis said: ‘CFA Society Sri Lanka celebrates a history of 25 years, serving the investment profession through education, advocacy and professional development. The Awards continue to bring together the entire capital market ecosystem – regulators, listed companies, stockbrokers, analysts, fund managers, investor relations professionals and CFA charterholders.’

‘The CFA Society Sri Lanka Capital Market Awards have contributed to improving standards in investment research, investor relations, disclosure practices and corporate governance. Moreover, the Awards complement CFA Society Sri Lanka’s wider efforts through education programs, certifications, and continuous professional development,’ he adds.

Alwis notes: ‘The continued participation across award categories is a sign of the industry’s commitment to raising standards, and we wish this year’s participants the very best.’

CFA Society Sri Lanka President Rashmi Peiris-Paranavitane, CFA highlights the significant legacy of the awards, stating that ‘the CFA Capital Market Awards have become a benchmark for excellence in Sri Lanka’s capital markets over the past 13 years.’

‘This year marks 25 years of CFA Society Sri Lanka’s contribution to the country’s capital markets. The Society has evolved alongside Sri Lanka’s capital markets, assuming a broader role in advancing corporate governance and market transparency,’ she remarks.

Whilst congratulating the participants, and encouraging them to continue striving for excellence and innovation, she affirms: ‘The Awards are about more than recognition – they celebrate professionals and institutions that are shaping stronger, more transparent capital markets. They also reinforce the behaviours and standards that contribute to a resilient and globally competitive capital market.’

Awards will be presented under the categories of Best Equity Research Team, Best Equity Research Report, Best Sector Report, Best Investor Relations Team and Best Unit Trust Team, with awards for Gold, Silver and Bronze in each category respectively.

The CFA Society Sri Lanka Capital Market Awards involves a rigorous judging process by a distinguished panel comprising CFA charterholders as well as industry experts.

Industry participants are strongly encouraged to participate in the Awards.

CoPF backs tariff policy measures, phased Customs reforms

The Parliamentary Committee on Public Finance (CoPF) has approved a Resolution under the Customs Ordinance and two Orders under the Sri Lanka Export Development Act, paving the way for the implementation of the Government’s National Tariff Policy and a comprehensive overhaul of the country’s import tariff structure.

The approvals were granted at a meeting chaired by CoPF Chairman MP Dr. Harsha de Silva, which considered the Resolution published in Extraordinary Gazette No. 2478/03 under the Customs Ordinance and Orders published in Extraordinary Gazette Nos. 2478/04 and 2479/38 under the Sri Lanka Export Development Act.

The Gazette Notifications are scheduled to be debated in Parliament today before being submitted for approval.

Officials from the Finance Ministry, Sri Lanka Customs, and the Export Development Board (EDB) told the Committee that the measures give effect to the 2026 Budget proposal to introduce a National Tariff Policy by restructuring Customs import duty rates from the existing 0%, 15%, and 20% bands into a four-tier structure of 0%, 10%, 20%, and 30%, with effect from 1 April 2026.

Officials said the reforms extend beyond changes to import duty rates and represent the first phase of a long-term tariff policy aimed at creating a more scientific and predictable trade regime capable of integrating Sri Lanka more effectively into global supply chains.

Under the new framework, imports will be classified according to the UN Broad Economic Categories (BEC Revision 5), requiring the reclassification of numerous Harmonised System (HS) tariff codes into four principal categories: capital goods, intermediate goods, sensitive intermediate goods, and consumer goods.

The Committee was informed that the policy seeks to balance the protection of domestic industries with revenue stability while improving Sri Lanka’s competitiveness as a manufacturing and export destination.

Officials also revealed that the effective import tax on ceramic tiles, currently estimated at around 85% to 90%, will be reduced in stages to 20% by 2029 as part of measures to lower construction costs and encourage investment in housing and infrastructure.

The Government also plans to introduce new national tariff subcategories in response to requests from domestic industries, while gradually phasing out para-tariffs, including the CESS and the Ports and Airports Levy (PAL), by 2029 in favour of a simpler tariff regime.

The CoPF advised officials to develop measures to mitigate any adverse effects arising from tariff liberalisation.

According to officials, the reforms are expected to support the EDB’s target of doubling Sri Lanka’s export earnings from $ 18 billion to $ 36 billion over the next five years while strengthening the country’s integration into global value chains, particularly in electronics, rubber products, pharmaceuticals, and information technology.

The Committee also expressed concern over delays in maintaining trade statistics, with Dr. de Silva noting that the Department of Trade and Investment Policy’s trade database had not been updated since 2021. The Committee instructed officials to update all trade data and related information required for evidence-based policymaking within one week.

The meeting was attended by Deputy Ministers Chathuranga Abeysinghe and Dr. Kaushalya Ariyarathna, along with MPs Ravi Karunanayake, Harshana Rajakaruna, and Lakmali Hemachandra.

Asia-Pacific tourists outspend Europeans despite shorter stays: SLTPB Chief

Sri Lanka is witnessing a notable shift in tourist spending patterns, with visitors from the Asia-Pacific region, particularly India, spending more per day than many traditional long-haul markets despite shorter lengths of stay, Sri Lanka Tourism Promotion Bureau (SLTPB) Chairman Buddhika Hewawasam said yesterday.

Highlighting changing traveller behaviour, Hewawasam said the average daily expenditure of Indian tourists has increased to around $ 154, exceeding Sri Lanka’s overall average daily spend of $ 148.

‘Sometimes Indian travellers spend more than European tourists,’ he said, noting that visitors travelling specifically for wildlife and marine tourism spend between $ 160 and $ 170 per day, stressing the growing demand for high-value niche tourism experiences.

India remains Sri Lanka’s largest tourism source market by a considerable margin. Year-to-date (YTD), 301,875 Indian tourists have visited the country, accounting for 26% of total arrivals recorded so far in 2026. During the first six days of July alone, 8,192 Indian visitors arrived in Sri Lanka, representing 24% of total arrivals during the period.

Hewawasam said Sri Lanka Tourism has intensified promotional activities across India, covering several major cities, new destinations like Gujarat and Ahmedabad, and market segments as part of its strategy to strengthen its position in the country’s largest outbound travel market.

‘We are positioning Sri Lanka not only as a leisure destination but also as a destination offering diverse experiences,’ he said.

The SLTPB Chairman also pointed to significant differences in spending patterns across source markets. According to data, he said travellers from Malaysia also spend more, though the United Arab Emirates (UAE) records the highest average daily expenditure at around $ 195, while visitors from Egypt and Trkiye spend over $ 180 per day, although they generally remain in the country for around six to seven days. In comparison, tourists from Belgium, Austria, and the Czech Republic spend below $ 145 per day.

However, he said European visitors typically stay between 11 and 14 days, whilst noting that the Asia-Pacific region generates higher overall tourism revenue because of stronger daily spending levels despite relatively shorter visits.

He attributed the changing spending patterns to growing demand for premium and experience-based tourism products.

‘Visitors are increasingly seeking unique and premium experiences, including wellness tourism, cultural experiences, nature-based activities, adventure tourism, and authentic local experiences rather than conventional sightseeing alone,’ he said.

Hewawasam stressed that Sri Lanka Tourism’s strategy is focused on increasing both visitor spending and the average length of stay by diversifying and upgrading the country’s tourism offerings.

‘Our objective is to increase both tourist spending and the average length of stay by continuously enhancing Sri Lanka’s tourism product portfolio,’ he added.

2027 Budget to strengthen public healthcare to reduce private treatment costs: President

President Anura Kumara Dissanayake yesterday said the 2027 Budget will prioritise strengthening Sri Lanka’s public healthcare system with the twin objectives of improving service quality and reducing the cost burden on patients who seek treatment from the private sector.

Chairing the pre-Budget discussion on the Ministry of Health and Mass Media at the Presidential Secretariat, the President said the Government was prepared to allocate the necessary funding to elevate Sri Lanka’s healthcare services to internationally recognised standards.

A key focus of the 2027 Budget will be strengthening primary healthcare through the proposed ‘Arogya Suwa Seva Centres’, with the President directing officials to place greater emphasis on expanding frontline health services across the country.

He also called for an accelerated technological transformation of the State hospital system, noting that establishing advanced medical facilities accessible nationwide would significantly improve the quality of healthcare while enabling public hospitals to provide more efficient and standardised services. The President said this would help reduce the high costs borne by the public when seeking treatment from private healthcare providers.

The President instructed officials to submit scientifically based strategic proposals without delay to improve the quality of Sri Lanka’s healthcare system.

The discussion also focused on strengthening the Suwa Seriya ambulance service, with the President directing that hospitals procure internationally compliant, fully equipped high-technology ambulances instead of conventional vans.

Officials said the Government has recommenced 26 large-scale healthcare construction projects that had been suspended after previous administrations curtailed capital expenditure. These include the five-storey building complex at Monaragala District Hospital and Emergency Treatment Units at the Trincomalee, Ampara and Chilaw hospitals. In total, work is now under way on 48 healthcare construction projects.

The meeting also reviewed technology-driven reforms to pharmaceutical procurement to ensure uninterrupted medicine supplies, the expansion of medicine quality testing facilities, and progress on digital health initiatives including the Patient Health App, telemedicine services and a National Electronic Health Record system.

In addition, officials discussed a comprehensive review of the healthcare workforce, issues affecting newly appointed doctors, and future recruitment requirements in consultation with the Ministry of Finance. The pre-Budget discussion also reviewed budget priorities relating to the Mass Media sector, including journalist training, the Government Film Unit, school media societies, a proposed Government media operations centre, and the modernisation of the Department of Posts and the Government Printing Department.

Global investment rises 6% to $ 1.6 t, but development gains remain uneven

Global foreign direct investment (FDI) rose 6% to $ 1.6 trillion in 2025, ending two years of decline, but the recovery remains narrow, fragile, and uneven, according to the World Investment Report 2026 by UN Trade and Development (UNCTAD) released this week.

Inflows to developed economies rose 11%, while developing economies recorded only 2% growth, reaching $ 901 billion. The figures point to a rebound that is not translating evenly into development opportunities. The issue is not only how much capital is moving, but where it is going, what it is building, and whether it is expanding productive capacity, creating jobs, strengthening skills, and supporting technology transfer.

The world’s top 20 host economies attracted more than 80% of global FDI in 2025, underscoring a trend that runs throughout the report: investment is becoming more concentrated across countries, sectors, and projects.

The recovery should also be interpreted with caution: headline FDI numbers do not always translate into new factories, infrastructure, jobs, or technology transfer.

Developing economies received more than half of global FDI in 2025, but growth was modest and uneven across regions. Developing Asia remained the largest recipient region, attracting $ 644 billion, while Latin America and the Caribbean rose 14% to $ 188 billion and Africa received about $ 70 billion, still one third above its 2010-2024 average despite falling from the exceptional level reached in 2024. Least developed countries saw inflows rise 21% to $ 43 billion, but still accounted for only 2.7% of global FDI, with flows concentrated in a small number of mostly resource-rich economies.

This concentration is particularly visible in industries linked to technology, energy, and industrial policy. Strategic sectors such as Artificial Intelligence (AI) infrastructure, semiconductors, critical minerals, and energy-transition technologies and services accounted for 44% of global greenfield project values in 2025, up from 16% in 2020.

The growth in project values was driven mainly by data centres, followed by oil and gas and semiconductors. Most other sectors registered declines, including renewable energy, infrastructure, and manufacturing, showing how narrow the recovery remains.

Low-income and lower-middle-income economies attracted only about 10% of strategic-sector investment between 2020 and 2025, compared with more than 20% in other sectors.

Governments are also taking a more active role in shaping investment flows. In 2025, countries adopted a record 229 investment policy measures. While most remained favourable to investors, many were designed to attract investment into strategic industries, strengthen domestic economic priorities, or respond to economic security concerns.

For developing countries, the new investment landscape brings both opportunities and risks. But many countries risk being left behind as investment becomes more capital-intensive, technology-intensive, and shaped by policy support that many developing economies cannot easily match.

UNCTAD says developing countries need more than investment promotion to compete in this environment. They need realistic entry points into evolving value chains, stronger investment facilitation, reliable infrastructure, workforce skills, supplier development, and regional markets that make projects more viable. International cooperation will also be needed to ensure that investment partnerships support both resilience for investors and development priorities for host economies.

Prospects for 2026 remain difficult. Trade policy uncertainty, geopolitical tensions, conflicts, high financing costs, and economic fragmentation continue to weigh on investment decisions. At the same time, competition for projects linked to strategic industries is expected to intensify as governments seek to secure future sources of growth and technological advantage.

The findings will help frame discussions at UNCTAD’s World Investment Forum 2026, to be held in Doha, Qatar, from 25 to 27 October, where governments, investors, and development partners will examine how to turn a more selective investment landscape into broader development gains.

The central question is no longer simply how much investment is moving across borders. It is where that investment is going, what it is building, and who stands to benefit from it.

New short- and long-term mechanisms launched to clean and beautify Beira Lake

A high-level joint meeting between State and non-State sector stakeholders was recently convened at the Hunupitiya Gangaramaya Temple to implement an immediate and sustainable long-term action plan aimed at cleaning and beautifying Colombo’s historic Beira Lake.

The crucial discussion was chaired by Gangaramaya Temple Chief Incumbent Ven. Dr. Kirinde Assaji Thero. The Governor of the Western Province, the Secretary to the Prime Minister, and several top-tier Government officials actively participated in formulating the strategic roadmap.

To address the critical condition of the Lake effectively and without delay, prominent businessman and engineer Nahil Wijesuriya has officially agreed to sponsor an immediate short-term mechanism. This targeted intervention will focus on cleaning and refreshing the Beira Lake by flushing it utilising sea water.

For lasting environmental sustainability, extensive restoration and development projects will be carried out under the allocations of the current Government Budget. These initiatives will be executed through the combined, synchronised efforts of key State bodies: The Colombo Municipal Council (CMC), Urban Development Authority (UDA), and Sri Lanka Land Development Corporation (SLLDC).

The ongoing pollution of Beira Lake, situated at the heart of the capital city, severely impacts the entire national economy. As a central landmark, its current state poses a direct threat to Sri Lanka’s tourism sector, public health, urban environment, and overall social wellbeing. Therefore, this collective initiative marks a pivotal milestone in restoring the aesthetic, ecological, and economic value of Colombo.

UNFPA and Sri Lanka Parliament partner to build a more inclusive future

The United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) and the Parliament of Sri Lanka have signed a Memorandum of Understanding to strengthen the use of population data and evidence in policymaking, reinforcing a shared commitment to ensuring that the country’s changing population dynamics are reflected in future legislation and national development priorities. The MoU was signed between Secretary-General of Parliament Kushani Anusha Rohanadeera and UNFPA Sri Lanka Representative a.i., Phuntsho Wangyel.

The partnership will help ensure that the laws and policies shaping Sri Lanka’s future are informed by reliable population data and evidence, enabling the country to respond more effectively to population ageing, changing family structures and evolving development needs while advancing gender equality and protecting the health and rights of women and young people.

UNFPA Regional Director ad interim for Asia and the Pacific Dr. Aleksandar (Sasha) Bodiroza said: ‘The decisions made today will shape the lives of future generations. This partnership is about ensuring that Parliament has the evidence, data and insights needed to build policies that respond to a changing population while protecting people’s rights, expanding opportunities and ensuring that no one is left behind. Demographic change is not something to fear. It is an opportunity to build a stronger, more inclusive future if we prepare for it together.’

The agreement was a key milestone during Dr. Bodiroza’s official visit to Sri Lanka from 28 June to 4 July, focused on strengthening partnerships to support the country’s long-term development priorities.

During his visit, Dr. Bodiroza also met with Prime Minister, Dr. Harini Amarasuriya; Speaker of Parliament, Dr. Jagath Wickramaratne; and Health and Mass Media Minister Dr. Nalinda Jayatissa and Secretary to the Ministry of Women and Child Affairs, W. M. D. T. Wickremasinghe. Discussions focused on strengthening health systems, advancing gender equality, supporting women and young people and preparing for Sri Lanka’s changing population landscape through evidence-based, rights-centred policies.

Dr. Bodiroza also visited communities affected by Cyclone Ditwah to observe UNFPA’s ongoing interventions to support women and girls in estate communities through reproductive healthcare, protection services and humanitarian assistance. Additional engagements with development partners, civil society organizations and the private sector reinforced the importance of broad partnerships in advancing inclusive development and ensuring that women, girls and young people can fully participate in Sri Lanka’s future.

Litmus test for effective enforcement of laws and regulations

Foreign and local investors, law abiding businesses, administrators and civil servants, investing public, journalists, professionals and rule of law and justice committed citizens have been shocked and dismayed by news reports alerting that perceived well run public and private sector leading entities, during the past 9 months of having reported massive losses of national resources, especially scares external resources.

The extent of these losses was unheard of in relation to past reported similar incidents.

Most of them are perceived to be due to frauds, scams, IT hacking, involving mostly local citizens, aided by some external parties and scammers.

In addition, Sri Lankan authorities have during the same period failed to diligently follow Sri Lanka’s claim for environmental and other massive damages to the ecology, marine environment and people by the Express Pearl disaster.

The most shocking revelation was that these frauds and associated losses were due to systemic failures, indicating serious flaws in the overall structure, policies, or procedures, human interventions/behaviours, that caused cascading issues across the entire network/institutions.

Systemic failures envelop key regulators and public institutions

The biggest surprise was that expected professional oversight and systems of internal control, compliance with regulations failed not only at entity level; but more importantly at all levels of secondary regulatory reviews, independent practitioner’s reviews and including even the break down in corporate culture of integrity, transparency and commitment to diligent, good faith driven requirements of acting in the best interests of the institutions by acknowledged and accountability endowed Professionals in Governance.

These massive frauds, scams and lackadaisical control mechanisms in force reflect that the weakest links in the chain of management with transaction flows being executed without expected lack of care and commitment though exercised by capable and competent professionals. The lack of oversight supervision by the leadership executives alongside a breakdown in cultures of integrity and embedded best fit good governance practices are clearly visible.

Most strangely these massive leakages have happened within a governance regime committed to maintain a strict ‘zero-tolerance’ policy on corruption, asserting that no one is above the law. Current administration views combating systemic fraud, bribery, and organised crime as the essential foundation for the country’s long-term economic and democratic governance recovery. The President has firmly asserted that the full force of the law will apply without exception and declared that no offender will receive political protection, and that the corrupt will face strict justice with the law taking its course irrespective of political status or relationships, noting that the era of political patronage shielding drug lords, the corrupt and the traffickers has ended.

In pursuit of these commitments the Clean Sri Lanka’, a flagship program touted as the operational arm of a new social contract grounded in anti-corruption, transparency, and the rule of law has been initiated.

Most professionals, including members of the Institute of Chartered Accountants, are committed to upholding a practice of reporting all instances of Non-Compliance with Laws and Regulations (NOCLAR).

Under the Financial Transactions Reporting Act, (FTRA) financial institutions and designated non-finance businesses are legally mandated to report suspicious transactions, unlawful activities as well as non-compliance with Anti-Money Laundering and Countering Financing of Terrorism (AML/CFT).

Mandated institutions are required to conduct ongoing due diligence and continuously scrutinise customers (know your customer rule) and their transactions and note, review and report on any inconsistencies infecting transactions with customer profile being regularly assessed. They are required to report suspicious transactions, strictly enforce and report transactions above set thresholds, including those via electronic fund transactions, telegraphic transfers and letters of credit and cash transactions exceeding specified thresholds. These institutions are required to appoint Compliance Officers to manage their accountability under the Act.

The Act further requires regulatory and supervisory institutions like the Central Bank, Bank Supervision, Exchange Management Department, Import Control, Customs, and FIU to exercise diligent oversight over transactions above set thresholds.

The recently enacted Proceeds of Crime Act mandates designated institutions, including financial institutions, designated non-financial businesses, and virtual asset providers to disclose information, conduct due diligence, and report suspicious transactions to combat money laundering and illicit wealth acquisition and repatriating such wealth out of the country.

Proceeds of Crime Investigation Division is authorised to coordinate with, seek information, and assistance of specified state and private institutions to trace, freeze and recover assets related to proceeds of crime. (Important to recognise the binding of Sate Institutions under Section 33. (1) Notwithstanding any provision of any law which requires a person or an institution to maintain confidentiality of certain information, the officers specified in subsection (2) shall, upon information pertaining to any one or more of the following coming to his knowledge, provide such information in writing to the Designated Officer under whose purview the investigation of the relevant proceeds of crime or the offence has been vested by this Act:- (a) the possible existence of proceeds of crime; (b) the identity of persons who may be possessing, having custody, exercising dominion or control of proceeds of crime; (c) the possible committing of an unlawful activity and the person who had been complicit in such offence; or (d) the committing of an offence under this Act) This binding, along with the commitments under Financial Transactions Reporting Act, applying as an accountability of persons leading State Institutions, Regulatory Bodies, Public authorities/entities and even on Business and Civil Society leaderships including Directors and Officers of Companies, appear not recognised, prioritised with commitments to uphold.

Primary path to assure good governance under ‘Clean Sri Lanka’

In the light of the above, State commitments, legal empowerments and regulatory controls must embed in systems and processes their effective implementation, to assure and enforce, an expanded scope of application of laws and regulations. Under such a governance regime, all parties who have directly or indirectly participated or facilitated or even by their gross negligence aided and abetted the above frauds, scams or professional actions with gross negligence or have acted without good faith, diligent application of their expected executive functions, knowingly and willfully or otherwise, and have thus caused losses of vital national resources, (here importantly including Regulators and Public Institutions) should be investigated and if guilty prosecuted and penalised.

It must be recognised that the above implementation framework whether effectively in place, will be assessed under the APG review due at the end of this year, where failure to do so will lead to catastrophic consequences of a downgrade to the ‘GREY LIST’, due to strategic deficiencies in countering money laundering, terrorist financing, and proliferation financing.

Passing the buck for lapses in effective governance, regulatory controls and systems supervision, with associated inactions with arrogance and uncaring governance and communications, as seen in the case of the significant value frauds, scams, systemic failures and ineffective enforcement of the laws and regulations will certainly culminate with Sri Lanka being downgraded to the Grey List.

Recommendations

The President and Cabinet must resolve and require following immediate actions:

1. Require law enforcement and the prosecutors of the Attorney General›s Department to expedite investigations, which must be conducted professionally and with diligence under best advice.

2. Require all leaderships in charge of Regulatory Institutions and Public Authorities connected with these reported frauds, scams and lackadaisical enforcements, to immediately inquire, reform and upgrade enforcement action to be pursued with commitment, transparency; thus, mitigating risks of repetitive systemic failures assured under effective change management initiatives.

3. Any lacunae in the laws and regulations along with recommended best practices of risks, controls and compliance processes must be reformed, embedded in the legal framework early and effectively enforced

4. Public Administration, Finance Ministry, Central Bank, FIU, Bank Supervision, Exchange Management Departments, and Key Revenue Agencies must issue new good governance assurance requirements for management compliance ensuring effective best practices of risks and controls and compliance processes are embedded and are effectively embedded; with compliance officers specifically required ensure they are in force along with processes for whistle blowing and reporting of non-compliance with laws and regulations (NOCLAR)

5. Law Enforcement and Attorney General’s Department must ensure that any institution and any key leadership persons failing to discharge their accountability for effective governance, regulatory controls, oversight supervision with best practices of risks mitigation, control and compliance, including all associated parties who have directly or indirectly participated or facilitated or even by their gross negligence aided and abetted the any frauds, scams or professional accountability actions with gross negligence or have acted without good faith, diligent application of their expected executive functions, knowingly and willfully or otherwise, and have caused losses of vital national resources, (here importantly including Regulators and Public Institutions) should be investigated and if guilty prosecuted and penalised.

6. All directors and officers, entrepreneurs, professionals and public practitioners, including External Auditors, Professional Accountants, Lawyers, Valuers, Consultants etc associated with or have failed in the due discharge of their professional accountability or have by their negligence caused or have aided and abetted the fraud, scam or money laundering or other offenses with proceeds of crime and wealth accumulation must also be investigated and if guilty prosecuted and penalised.

7. All professional bodies (eg. Institute of Chartered Accountants, Chartered Financial Analysts, BASL, OPA, Bankers Institute, Institute of Engineers, Computer Society), must strictly enforce Codes of Conduct and Ethics, and Professional Standards and enforcement of disciplinary actions against the errant.

8. Auditor General must be required to review all such instances of fraud, scams and money laundering by the conduct of a post audit and make recommendations with lessons learnt based reform measures essential for effective management and supervision with implementation surcharge provisions against errant parties

9. Revisit the Express Pearl Claim Processes and associated illegal actions of any of the involved parties and local authorities, local agents and officials of public institutions and enforce effective action to recover damages assessed.

Classic Car Club of Ceylon celebrates another successful year at AGM

The Classic Car Club of Ceylon (CCCC) successfully concluded its 34th year at its Annual General Meeting, held on 25 June 2026 at The Kingsbury Hotel, Colombo.

The meeting marked the culmination of another outstanding year for the Club, highlighted by a series of successful events and initiatives celebrating Sri Lanka’s vibrant classic motoring community. These included Starlight and Classics, the Ceylon Motor Show 2026, the Heritage Rally, British Car Day 2026, the Classic Car Diaries video series, and the Club’s annual Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) project.

The meeting was chaired by Protem Chairman Dr. Harsha Cabral, who proposed the nomination of Sanjiv Alles for a fourth consecutive term as President. The nomination was unanimously endorsed by the members present, who also elected the Office Bearers and Executive Committee for the 2026-2027 year.

In his acceptance address, the President thanked the membership for the confidence placed in him and the Committee, and reaffirmed the Club’s commitment to preserving and promoting Sri Lanka’s rich classic motoring heritage. He highlighted the importance of continuing to innovate through unique events, educational initiatives and digital engagement, while encouraging members to actively participate in the Club’s activities and help inspire the next generation of classic motoring enthusiasts. As the Club embarks on its 35th year, it looks forward to another exciting calendar of events that will continue to celebrate Sri Lanka’s motoring heritage, strengthen the camaraderie among enthusiasts, and inspire greater appreciation for classic vehicles across the country.

Office-Bearers and Executive Committee for the year 2026/2027 Office Bearers:

President: Sanjiv Alles

Vice Presidents: Senaka Kotagama and Hatim Akbarally

Secretary: Priyanga Samaratunga

Assistant Secretary: Rajitha Cooke

Treasurer: Suhen Vanigasooriya

Assistant Treasurer: Shiraz Akbarally

Immediate Past President: Clive de Silva Jr.

Competition Secretary: Chanaka Jinasena

Executive Committee:

Social Secretary: Shalike Ganewatta

Ramani Ponnambalam

Chandana Amaratunga

Dinesh De Silva

Ramal Jasinghe

Kishan D. Perera

Dilshan Gomes

Amrit Alles

Vice Patrons

Asgi Akbarally

Geepal Fernando