Wednesday, December 7, 2011

‘Twisting facts’: SB warns GMOA

, The Island.

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By Don Asoka Wijewardena

Higher Education Minister S. B. Dissanayaka yesterday warned the Government Medical Officers’ Association (GMOA) against distorting facts about the recommendations made by two committees that looked into the degree awarding status of the Malabe private medical college. The committees which included officials of the University Grants Commission and Sri Lanka Medical Council had recommended that all basic training facilities be made available for medical students. When the PMC had all the required facilities and the recommendations SLMC were fulfilled, it was legal to recognise it as a degree awarding college, he said.

On the contrary, GMOA General Secretary Dr. Chandika Epitakaduwa yesterday said the two Committees appointed by Minister S. B Disanayaka had not recommended degree awarding status to the Malabe Private Medical College as it had not followed the proper procedure to admit students and because there were lapses as regards clinical training, tutorial staff etc.

Minister Dissanayaka said that the government had, on the recommendations of the two Committees, asked the Malabe PMC to provide adequate lecturers, facilities for clinical training and admit those with the required educational qualifications. He said he was confident that the medical school would be able to meet such criteria. It would be a fully-fledged private medical college and a boon to the country.

Dr. Epitakaduwa, addressing the media, said that the degree awarding status of the Malabe medical school had been gazetted in the midst of several problems faced by the school. The medical students had no place to do clinical work and they were without sufficient lecturers and some students were not qualified to study medicine.

He said that the GMOA with consensus of all professional associations had taken a unanimous decision to meet President Mahinda Rajapaksa and request him to intervene to resolve a plethora of problems faced by the medical sector. The GMOA would also ask the President not to appoint non-medical or politically affiliated person as the President of the Sri Lanka Medical Council.

UGC, universities urged not to squander public funds

, The Island.

By Shamindra Ferdinando

The Committee on Public Enterprises (COPE) has called for an explanation from the University Grants Commission (UGC) over the payment of Rs. 106 mn to UGC employees as language proficiency allowance.

The COPE, in its latest report tabled in parliament on Dec. 1, said that such payments had been contrary to public enterprises circulars. The report dealt with waste, corruption and irregularities in the public sector.

The COPE also faulted the UGC for including academic allowances in the computation of employees’ contributions to the ETF, EPF and gratuity. Responding to a query by The Island, COPE sources said that the practice didn’t comply with the circulars issued by the Commissioner General of Labour. The UGC should do away with this illegal practice forthwith.

For want of scrutiny on the part of the Higher Education Ministry, those in charge of the UGC and Universities had violated rules and regulations with impunity. In spite of the COPE taking up contentious issues with University authorities periodically, respective administrations had ignored advice, sources said.

A case in point, they said was the Sri Jayewardenepura University. Despite several reminders, it hadn’t submitted annual reports for 2008 and 2009. Although the audit and management committee of the University should have met at least once in every three months, the committee had met only twice each in 2009 and 2010. The COPE faulted Sri Jayewardenepura administration for spending Rs 3,010,188 on a waste water refining project without having the ownership of the land, where the project was situated, verified.

Commenting on a fund categorized as ‘Vice Chancellor’s Fund’, the COPE declared that there was no provision for such a fund in the University Act.

Due to failure on the part of the administration, the University had suffered a loss of Rs. 9.83 mn. Had the University acted swiftly, this amount could have been recovered from the consultancy firm for the collapse of the roof of the library building. The COPE has called for a report, including the names of those responsible for the losses from the University administration.

Inquiries also revealed that the university was yet to recover Rs. 69 mn from lecturers, who had breached agreements. The COPE has directed that in the future there should be provision in agreements to recover any dues from lecturers from their EPF in case of breach of agreements.

The COPE also blamed the university for acquiring land at Boralesgamuwa to put up a hostel without carrying out a proper survey. Due to this lapse, though the land had been acquired construction couldn’t go on due to drainage problem.

The COPE has also directed the UGC to submit a full list of all those lecturers who had breached agreements and bonds. According to COPE, the University of Moratuwa was yet to recover Rs. 17,789,658 from 28 lecturers.