Hon. Rohana Bandara
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Recent Speeches
The speech as provided is too brief and lacks substantive content to generate a meaningful summary. The speaker, Hon. Rohana Bandara, appears to be requesting a response on an unspecified matter, citing that many people are awaiting clarity, but no further detail, context, or subject matter is included in the text provided.
Read full text →Hon. Rohana Bandara raised a supplementary concern regarding a Gazette notification on the appointment of external Substitute Postmasters as Registered Substitute Postmasters, which sets an age limit of 30 years. He noted that many qualified candidates who served for years in substitute roles have been disqualified due to administrative delays causing them to exceed this age threshold. He requested that the Minister consider raising the age limit to 35 or 40 years to ensure fairness to these candidates.
Read full text →Hon. Rohana Bandara raised concerns about two related issues affecting Sri Lanka's pharmaceutical sector: persistent drug shortages in public hospitals, illustrated by a personal account of a heart attack patient being forced to purchase medicines from a private pharmacy, and the circulation of unregistered medicines in the market. He noted that MP Mujibur Rahuman had formally lodged complaints with the National Medicines Regulatory Authority (NMRA) and the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) regarding the sale of NMRA-unregistered drugs. Bandara directed a question to the Minister demanding to know what concrete steps are being taken to address both drug availability in hospitals and the quality control of medicines in circulation.
Read full text →## Summary Hon. Rohana Bandara poses a written question to the Minister of Health and Mass Media regarding the operational and financial performance of the State Pharmaceuticals Manufacturing Corporation (SPMC). The question requests a year-by-year breakdown (2020 to present) of drug varieties manufactured by the SPMC, including specific details on any medicines sold to private traders below production cost, the resulting financial losses incurred by the Corporation, and what remedial measures are planned. The question implicitly raises concerns about potential mismanagement or below-cost pricing practices at the state-owned pharmaceutical manufacturer.
Read full text →## Summary Hon. Rohana Bandara spoke in support of a motion on preventing bribery and corruption, commending the government's improvement in Transparency International's Corruption Perceptions Index from rank 121 in 2024 to 107 in 2025. He called for investigations into a series of specific alleged irregularities, including a container scandal, coal fraud, import irregularities involving potatoes and onions, salt pricing losses, and a number plate tender, as well as fuel misuse allegations against four Ministers and the Speaker. He raised particular concern about an incident on 2 February involving an alleged forced entry into a Sri Lanka Telecom employee's home and seizure of devices in connection with a theft investigation, warning of the data security implications for institutions such as Mobitel. Concluding, he urged government members to pursue swift, clean governance to further improve Sri Lanka's anti-corruption standing and protect the ruling party's credibility.
Read full text →## Summary Hon. Rohana Bandara raised several constituency and policy concerns spanning multiple sectors. On labour matters, he highlighted hardships faced by Civil Security Department personnel being transferred far from home districts — including those being redeployed to the Wildlife Department for electric fence duties — and called for fair treatment of long-serving staff; he also urged a revised age criterion for postal substitute recruitment to accommodate current serving staff. Regarding graduate recruitment, he requested that the examination deadline extension be accompanied by recognition of degrees completed up to 31 December 2025, to allow public officers whose studies were delayed by COVID to qualify for the teaching service. On the Supplementary Charge List debate, he argued that import taxes on agricultural produce such as potatoes and onions must be seasonally calibrated and data-driven rather than applied uniformly year-round, and called on the Government to transparently channel tax revenues to directly support farmers — thereby reducing the conditions that lead to protests and produce dumping — while also urging installation of paddy drying machines to address falling paddy prices in Anuradhapura.
Read full text →## Summary Hon. Rohana Bandara raised a procedural concern regarding a recently gazetted teachers' examination notification (issued 2nd February), arguing that its eligibility window — restricting applicants to graduates completing degrees between 10 February 2023 and 30 June 2025 — unjustly excludes graduates who completed degrees by 31 December 2025, and called for the Gazette to be amended to include all 2025 graduates. On broader political matters, the Member criticised the Government for alleged selective application of the law, specifically citing fuel misuse allegations against the Speaker and drawing a parallel to a former North Central Province Chief Minister and his Private Secretary who received 20-year sentences for a comparable offence; he demanded the Speaker temporarily step aside pending investigation. Bandara also challenged the Government's characterisation of southern visitors travelling to Anuradhapura as promoting nationalism, arguing such visits constitute religious devotion rather than communal activity. He further accused the ruling party of political inconsistency — having previously championed Mahinda Rajapaksa — and warned against diaspora influence and the revival of communalism.
Read full text →Hon. Rohana Bandara posed a direct question to the relevant authority demanding clarification on whether security protection would be granted to him, and if so, requesting a specific timeline for when it would be provided. The speech was brief and sought a clear, unambiguous response on the matter of his personal security arrangements.
Read full text →Hon. Rohana Bandara raised concerns about contradictory statements made by the Inspector General of Police (IGP) regarding a reported threat. He noted that the IGP initially acknowledged a threat based on a North Central Division Crime Investigation Unit report, stating it would be considered upon Cabinet approval, but subsequently reversed his position by characterising the matter as an internal party issue. Bandara questioned whether this change in stance was due to Cabinet intervention or political pressure, suggesting the second letter lacked genuine intelligence basis.
Read full text →The speech fragment provided is too brief and lacks sufficient content to generate a meaningful summary. The single sentence — "This too is in the police report" — suggests Hon. Rohana Bandara was referencing documentary evidence contained in a police report, likely in support of a broader argument, but without additional context the full substance of the speech cannot be determined.
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