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இலங்கை அரசாங்கம், விடுதலைப் புலிகளின் உறுப்பினர் ஒருவருக்காக 40 மில்லியன் ரூபாவைச் செலவிடுகிறது

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  • கருத்துக்கள உறவுகள்

வீரகேசரி இணையம் - இலங்கை அரசாங்கம் தமிழீழ விடுதலைப் புலி உறுப்பினர் ஒருவரைக் கொலை செய்வதற்காக 2004 ஆம் ஆண்டு முதல் சுமார் 40 மில்லியன் டொலர்களைச் செலவிட்டுள்ளதாக ஐக்கிய தேசியக் கட்சி தெரிவித்துள்ளது.

இராணுவ தளபதி சரத் பொன்சேகா, கடந்த வாரம் வெளியிட்ட தகவல் ஒன்றில் தமிழீழ விடுதலைப் புலிகளின் 13 ஆயிரம் பேரை படையினர் கொன்றிருப்பதாகத் தெரிவித்திருந்தார்.

அரசாங்கம் 2004 ஆம் ஆண்டில் இருந்து இன்று வரை போருக்காக 583 மில்லியன் ரூபாவைச் செலவிட்டுள்ளதாக ஐக்கிய தேசியக் கட்சியின் நாடாளுமன்ற உறுப்பினர் ரவி கருணாநாயக்க தெரிவித்துள்ளார்.

இராணுவத் தளபதியின் கூற்றுப்படி ஒரு புலி உறுப்பினருக்காக அரசாங்கம் 42 மில்லியன் ரூபாவைச் செலவிட்டுள்ளதாக அவர் குறிப்பிட்டுள்ளார்.

Edited by தமிழ் சிறி

  • கருத்துக்கள உறவுகள்

இதில் எவ்வளவு பணம் மகிந்த - சரத் குடும்பங்களுக்குப் போகின்றது?

UPDATE 1-Sri Lanka budget heavy on war, foreign borrowing

By Shihar Aneez

COLOMBO, Nov 6 (Reuters) - Sri Lanka on Thursday forecast record defence spending on its war with Tamil Tiger rebels in 2009 and raised taxes on imports, hoping to stave off currency depreciation as it faces a possible cash and credit crunch.

President Mahinda Rajapaksa, who is also the island nation's finance minister, predicted the economy would grow in excess of 6 percent next year, despite an International Monetary Fund forecast of 5.8 percent.

The budget he presented in parliament also forecast gross foreign borrowing to rise 17.7 percent to 222.5 billion Sri Lanka rupees ($2.02 billion), which analysts said would pose a serious risk if the country keeps taking expensive commercial financing.

The IMF last week warned that Sri Lanka's external accounts were vulnerable in a global economic crisis that has drastically cut credit availability.

Analysts also say the rupee is under pressure against a stronger dollar, especially with cash reserves dropping and its tea, rubber and garment export sectors forecasting downturns.

'It would appear challenging for the government to raise an increasing proportion of its budget deficit financing from overseas in a cost-effective manner, especially given the Rajapaksa said defence spending was forecast to grow as much as a fifth to 200 billion rupees ($1.82 billion), which would be the highest absolute figure in history.

'We view such expenditure as a priority need towards establishing a stable economic environment to restore democracy, consolidate human rights and achieve economic development,' Rajapaksa said.

The military has captured swathes of rebel-held territory since the start of the year, and Rajapaksa's government is increasingly confident of ending a 25-year war with the separatist Tigers.

The budget will also slap taxes on a host of import goods from food to electrical items, Rajapaksa said.

'In the backdrop of the global economic crisis, our main objective should be to improve local production,' Rajapaksa said. 'Our external reserve could also be increased.'

Currency dealers said the import substitution strategy may bolster the rupee in the short term by discouraging dollar outflows, but was not sustainable and could pump up inflation.

'In the long term, importers anyway will have to bring in essential goods, which are not produced adequately locally. So this will have an adverse impact on the reserves and inflation,' Murray Fernandezs, deputy treasury manager at NDB Bank, said.

Annual average inflation in Sri Lanka cooled off last month to 20.2 percent from a peak of 28.2 percent in June, but is still among the highest in South Asia. The central bank's main tool to control it is by keeping a close watch on the money supply.

The IMF last week urged the central bank to allow more flexibility in the rupee, instead of supporting it as it has since September at the cost of a quarter of its foreign exchange reserves. The central bank allowed some depreciation last week.

Other analysts said that the government's sizeable need for local financing in 2009 would keep market interest rates high, a situation which dampened corporate growth this year and has seen the stock market drop around 25

percent this year.

'That shows interest rates will kill the growth of stock market, similar to this year,' Geeth Balasuriya, assistant research manager at HNB Stockbrokers,

http://www.hemscott.com/news/static/tfn/it...=69960723121057

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