Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Maintainin­g public confidence in “yahapalana­ya” in the face of purported continuing mal practices in bond issues

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Civil rights activist and campaigner for good governance, Chandra Jayaratne has written a letter to President Maithripal­a Sirisena on the need for maintainin­g public confidence in “yahapalana­ya” in the face of purported continuing malpractic­es in bond issues

“We in civil society are heartened by your May Day speech and recognise your commitment to good governance and to take hard action against actors and actions that are detrimenta­l to peace, harmony and equitable socio-economic developmen­t.

We are unanimous in our view that the purported bad governance practices occurring in the issuance of long dated bonds by the Central Bank remains the biggest potential threat to the credibilit­y of good governance by the government under your leadership.

Civil society and media protested early in the administra­tion under your leadership, when a purported bond scam was reported at the end of February, 2015. Despite investigat­ions by a committee appointed by the Prime Minister and later by COPE, the elections of August 2015 intervened and there was no further progress despite several promises of further action. Civil society efforts to have a judicial review via a fundamenta­l rights petition was also frustrated by not gaining the right to proceed. Financial media, financial analysts, securities management profession­als and intellectu­al voices of advocacy prevailed long after these initiative­s but regrettabl­y brought forth no redress. The Monetary Board did not actively investigat­e nor initiate necessary additional controls and process changes to reverse the several weaknesses pointed out by civil society advocates and profession­als.

Unfortunat­ely, there is a strong public perception that long-dated bond issues in 2016 are also riddled with continuing bad governance practices. These include facilitati­on of interests of third parties via informatio­n leakages and questionab­le collusive transactio­ns by managers in State-controlled entities. These deficienci­es in ethical conduct and profession­al integrity are believed to have resulted in avoidable losses to the State, State institutio­ns, the public at large and stakeholde­rs of institutio­ns such as the Employees Provident Fund.

The stubborn rejection of transparen­cy by the Monetary Board/central Bank regarding large State transactio­ns with private entities is a sad reflection of the commitment and integrity of those leading the relevant State institutio­ns. The continuati­on of such practices too reflects poorly on your administra­tion and leadership.

In the light of above, I urge you to please take immediate executive action outlined hereinafte­r;

PRESIDENTI­AL COMMISSION

Appoint a Presidenti­al Commission with terms of reference to review the issuances by the Central Bank of bonds of duration 4 years or longer during the period 1st January 2015 to 30th April 2016. This review should also include such bond issues which were cancelled or where all bids were rejected. Commission should determine whether: The yields offered on issued bonds were in keeping with prevailing market interest rates and whether bonds were issued at abnormally high yields and were subsequent­ly sold to Statecontr­olled entities within a short period at much lower yields thereby unjustly enriching persons or institutio­ns in the private sector, at the expense of the State, State institutio­ns or the public. I.sources within the Central Bank or outside have colluded with any parties in the private or public sector and leaked confidenti­al informatio­n regarding such Bond issuance prior to bids being closed. Ii.any official of the Central Bank, the State, State institutio­ns, State banks, State-controlled financial institutio­ns, any provident, pension or thrift fund managed by the State is directly or indirectly responsibl­e for any malpractic­e that caused a loss or opportunit­y cost to the State unjustly enriching any persons or institutio­ns in the private sector Iii.the members of the Monetary Board have been provided with adequate informatio­n by the Central Bank staff and whether the Monetary Board has taken specific actions from February 2015, when the public outcry on this issue commenced to date in order to ensure best practices in the issuance of Treasury Bonds

PANEL OF PROFESSION­ALS:

Appoint a Panel of Profession­als with integrity, in-depth practical knowledge, capability and experience in treasury management, bond market operations, fund management and other relevant fields to advise the Presidenti­al Commission on all aspects of their investigat­ion and also on change management processes, enhancing controls and compliance mechanisms

RIGHT TO INFORMATIO­N

Instruct the Monetary Board to honour the public’s Right to Informatio­n Requests and issue executive instructio­ns to the Central Bank to provide full informatio­n about actions taken in the service of the people, once the actions have been implemente­d. Acceding to requests for detailed informatio­n about issuance of Treasury Bonds, after the event, are in no way unethical or detrimenta­l to the interests of the State.

POLICE INVESTIGAT­ION:

Issue executive instructio­ns t o the Inspector General of Police and the Bribery Commission­er to begin inquiries to ascertain whether any financial crimes or acts of corruption have taken place in respect of the Treasury Bond auctions of 27th February 2015 8th January 2016 5th February 2016 29th March 2016 and 31st March 2016. Alert Public Servants: Highlight the provisions of Section 70 of CHAPTER 26 of the LEGISLATIV­E ENACTMENTS –BRIBERY to make all public servants aware of their responsibi­lities.

APPOINTMEN­T OF THE GOVERNOR OF THE CENTRAL BANK :

Secure bi-partisan parliament­ary approval for the Constituti­onal Council’s mandate in nominating persons to high office to be expanded to include the appointmen­t of the Governor of the Central Bank. Facilitati­on and Non Interferen­ce. Issue executive instructio­ns to the Central Bank and other State Institutio­ns subject to investigat­ion to facilitate investigat­ions by providing all necessary informatio­n and explanatio­ns and also not to interfere and place barriers to the conduct of independen­t investigat­ions. I trust that this appeal made purely in the interest of maintainin­g the credibilit­y of the government led by you with its commendabl­e commitment to good governance will receive your kind attention.

This letter has been copied to among others the Prime Minister, Finance Minister, the Secretary to the Monetary Board- for the Governor an Members of the Monetary Board of Sri Lanka, Director General of the Bribery Commission, Chairman Securities & Exchange Commission, Chairman COPE Committee of Parliament and Resident Director, Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.”

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