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UNP demands transparency in refinery expansion dealThe United National Party (UNP) yesterday charged the Government was preparing to hand over the lucrative Sapugaskanda Oil Refinery expansion to a Chinese company, disregarding a much cheaper and reputed US company option. UNP MP Dr. Harsha de Silva insisted the Government is preparing to disregard a tender of US company Bentec, which had agreed to undertake the expansion at $ 1.5 billion in favour of a Chinese company that would allegedly charge $ 2.2 billion. The Government proposes to double the capacity of the refinery from 50,000 barrels a day to 10,000. “This is a national travesty. We appeal to the Government to think of the country rather than the personal agendas of a few powerful people. It is the people who have to pay for these mistakes. Do a technical evaluation and then decide,” he said. Dr. de Silva also noted several multinationals had bid for the project including Germany’s Maritech, South Korea’s Keangnam and a Romanian company. However, he said Bentec had been selected by the tender committee as the best bid, but powerful members within the Government were not planning to handover the project to the Chinese. “We have already seen the results of Norochcholai. If this project is also handed over to the Chinese, it will become a big headache. This is supposedly the biggest foreign contract the Government is planning to date and it should be done transparently in the interest of the nation.” In early 2013 the modernisation project ran into a hurdle and the Sri Lankan Government has requested Iran to reconsider its conditions on financial commitments of both countries imposed in the Memorandum of Understanding signed in 2008. The financial hurdle followed a feasibility study conducted by KBS Technologies of Singapore, which had estimated the project cost to run up to $ 2 billion. Earlier it has been estimated at $ 1.5 billion but funding by Iran fell through after the ally put a condition on Sri Lanka to commit $ 500 million, which is 30% of the total cost. With the new cost, the Sri Lankan Government’s share went up to around $ 667 million resulting in the Treasury disapproving the deal, media reported. |
Provide fair payments in BudgetUNP MP Dr. Harsha de Silva also spoke up for the public sector yesterday, calling on them to support the Opposition in upcoming elections and calling on the Government to provide fair incentives to pensioners. He questioned the disparity between public workers and pensioners, pointing out inflation affected everyone in the same way. He demanded a transparent structure for increasing pensions in line with Government increases on pay and allowances to State employees. “The UNP stands by a Rs. 10,000 increase for all State workers. But the Government also owns pensioners a payment increase in a sustainable manner and not just as an election hangout, he said. |