Prominent members of BOI resign
Several prominent members of the Board of Investment of Sri
Lanka have resigned from their positions with immediate effect.
A BOI statement confirmed the resignation of “prominent
members” from its board, but fell short of naming them.
It says,
Prominent members of the Board of Directors of the Board of
Investment have stepped down from their positions.
The Chairman, members of the Board of Directors and Director
General assumed office with the singular intent of supporting His Excellency
the President’s vision to double Sri Lanka’s GDP in this decade.
In line with this, the Board of Investment’s role in
transforming the country into a preferred investment destination by creating a
compelling investment climate arose through the conceptualisation and execution
of strategic and proactive investment promotions.
To achieve this strategic agenda, the cabinet and the
leadership team of the Board of Investment recognized that many transformations
were required internally to enable the Board of Investment to compete against
over 1,000 international promotion agencies active globally.
They also recognized that this task could not be achieved in
silos, and that collaborative efforts through a public-private partnership
model was essential.
This included the infusion of specialist skills through the
acquisition of new talent for selected positions and also the obtaining of
specialist professional services to attract and create new investment
portfolios to stimulate the country’s trajectory towards a knowledge driven
economy.
Unfortunately, the efforts of the leadership to achieve this
urgently required transformation, was strongly and continuously resisted by
isolated factions both within and outside the organization, who have put their
self-interest over the public.
Such factions either failed or refused to comprehend the
competitive realities of the international promotion landscape, in which Sri
Lanka needs to compete much more effectively, if it is to attract FDI at the
scale the country needs.
It is also a matter of regret that the progressive agenda of
the leadership has come into question in public fora, also implying
mismanagement based on events that occurred during 2017 and 2019, a period
prior to the time of the current leadership.
The many distortions and misconceptions publicised about the
Board of Investment as a result of this confusion, has affected the reputation
of the Board of Investment internationally, as well as the reputations of its
key personnel.
Despite these unfortunate developments, the leadership of
the Board of Investment remain confident about the significant potential their
programme of reforms can provide to support Sri Lanka’s economic progress in
future, if it is continued to its natural culmination.
They are hopeful that all stakeholders will collectively
work in that manner necessary for the greater good of Sri Lanka and all its
citizens.
No comments