US lobbyists making a killing of killings in Sri Lanka

by senthil5000 | July 18, 2009 at 08:16 pm
132 views | 16 Recommendations | 4 comments

A famous newspaper from Sri Lanka, Sunday Leader found the government of Sri Lanka is paying a Washington  firm Patton Boggs 35,000$ per month to "to provide guidance and counsel to the Embassy of Sri Lanka regarding its relations with the Executive and Legislative Branches of the US Government."    


The money was paid to keep US scrutiny away from the conflict in the north.



The Sunday Leader has learned that the Government of Sri Lanka is paying the Washington firm Patton Boggs $35,000 a month "to provide guidance and counsel to the Embassy of Sri Lanka regarding its relations with the Executive and Legislative Branches of the US Government."

In other wordsthe firm is/was being paid to lobby on behalf of the current administration and keep US scrutiny away from the conflict in the north. The use of lobby groups as a means to sway the attention of those at the pinnacle of power in the world's most powerful nation is common practice. In Washington there are lobby groups for absolutely everything from soft drinks and fast food, to gun control and free trade agreements.

That this country's current administration sees the need to engage the rather expensive services of professional lobbyists however is an indication of the government's desperate desire to keep itself somehow in the US' good books. Or at least out of its bad books.





It has also been reported that in 2008 another firm, Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck, LLP (BHFS) was contracted, for an annual fee of $600,000 by Sri Lanka's Washington Embassy 'to advise and assist the government with issues relating to Sri Lanka and the United States of America.'

An initial $ 300,000 payment was made to BHFS by Sri Lanka's previous Ambassador in Washington, Bernard Goonetileke in May, 2008. The government's lavish expenditure however appears to have fallen somewhat flat.





Sources claim that Patton Boggs arranged meetings between Sri Lanka's Ambassador to the US, Jaliya Wickramasuriya and Senator Richard Lugar.

However these meeting have evidently borne little fruit. The government's relations with the US remain at a low ebb. Crucially the US continues to drag its feet on the matter of the IMF loan which remains an urgentnecessity in terms of stabilising the country's battered economy.

Ultimately it appears that millions ofrupees of tax-payers' money has been spent enriching expensive law firms and slick Washington lobbyists adding to the billions already thrown into theblack hole of government waste.

And next time the government might want to look into cheaper and more effective methods of swaying US public and political opinion.

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tallison

Atleast there is somebody to be afraid about scrutiny in anarchic world.

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sara star

Isn't capitalism grand?

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JamalDavid

Our tax money well spent. :-)


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KevinKulasekera

The US is one of our biggest trading partners. $35000 is nothing compared to what we earn by exports to the US, mainly thanks to the special concessions obtained by the use of these lobbyists. This money is not just spent on propaganda related to the war.


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Suranee
First Flagged at 9:49 PM, Jul 18, 2009 by Suranee

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