MP Rahman’s defence of Met Dept meets whirlwind of problems



Speaking to the media on December 4, 2025 MP Mujibur Rahman argued that officials of Sri Lanka’s Department of Meteorology (DoM) had “fulfilled their duties” by issuing timely warnings as evidenced by the DoM’s media briefings from Nov 11 to Nov 23, 2025 that “a situation such as” the one then experienced—Cyclone Ditwah—“could arise” in the country.

FactCheck.lk evaluates this claim by examining whether Sri Lanka’s DoM fulfilled its duty by issuing cyclone-relevant public warnings starting on November 11, 2025.  

What counts as a ‘cyclone-relevant’ warning?

Sri Lanka is an original member of the World Meteorological Organisation and the Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (WMO/ESCAP) Panel on Tropical Cyclones, under which the Regional Specialised Meteorological Centre – Tropical Cyclones New Delhi (RSMC-TCND) co-located with the India Meteorological Department’s Cyclone Warning Division, provides the authoritative regional basis for cyclone monitoring and advisories. In RSMC-TCND’s terminology, “cyclogenesis” refers to the development of systems to depression stage or above, with depression-and-above treated as “cyclonic disturbances.” For this fact check, a warning is considered ‘cyclone-relevant’ only from the point when it communicates a plausible path toward depression or higher, not merely the presence of rain-bearing low-pressure areas.

When did DoM first issue a public cyclone-relevant warning?

Publicly available DoM official forecasts reviewed for this fact check are posted daily on its official Facebook page. These show that the first clear cyclone-relevant warning (where the term “depression” is mentioned) appears on Nov 21 on the sea forecast (but not weather forecast). We also examined media briefings by the DoM from various news channels, but which were not posted on its official pages. A cyclone-relevant warning for fisherfolk was conveyed in the media briefing on Nov 20. There is no cyclone-relevant warning from the DoM prior to that, and none on the daily weather forecast until November 25, when a special update was issued on the weather system. 

Accordingly, the MP’s specific timeline claim is incorrect: the DoM did not issue cyclone-relevant warnings “from Nov 11.” The earliest such official warning on record is Nov 21, and the earliest from media briefings is Nov 20, not Nov 11.

Did DoM have adequate information to issue cyclone-relevant warnings earlier in the Nov 11-19 window?  

The MP’s broader defence (that [the DoM] “fulfilled their duty”) could still be true even if his start date is incorrect—if cyclone-relevant information simply did not exist earlier. But the evidence indicates that cyclone-relevant information relating to Ditwah existed in the authoritative outlook of the RSMC-TCND, before DoM’s first cyclone-relevant public warning.  

The RSMC-TCND’s Extended Range Outlook (Cyclogenesis), issued on Nov 13, had a cyclone-relevant warning as arising between Nov 21-27, with a low-to-high probability of 40-60% in the South Bay of Bengal and areas close to Sri Lanka. The RSMC-TCND’s own Preliminary Report on Ditwah and its Annual Report for 2025 (Section 2.16.3, p. 286; Section 4.3.4.1, p. 363) also state that Ditwah was monitored from Nov 13, about “13 days prior to the formation of a depression on 26 November.” 

In short, cyclone-relevant information existed from Nov 13, but it was not reflected in official DoM forecasts released until Nov 21 (and not in any form until Nov 20).

The available evidence does not support the MP’s claim that officials “fulfilled their duties” by issuing cyclone-relevant warnings from Nov 11. First, DoM did not issue cyclone-relevant warnings from Nov 11; the earliest clear cyclone-relevant warning appears on Nov 20 in its media briefing. Second, cyclone-relevant information relating to Ditwah existed in the authoritative outlook of the RSMC-TCND from Nov 13, even though the DoM did not communicate the same in its official weather forecast till Nov 25.

Therefore, we classify the MP’s claim as FALSE.

*FactCheck.lk’s verdict is based on the most recent information that is publicly accessible. As with every fact check, if new information becomes available, FactCheck.lk will revisit the assessment.

Sources: The above claim was evaluated by consulting: Daily and weekly bulletins and advisories issued by the Regional Specialised Meteorological Centre – Tropical Cyclones New Delhi (RSMC-TCND); DoM daily public weather bulletins posted on its official Facebook page, and their media briefings; and the Tropical Cyclone Operational Plan (Bay of Bengal and Arabian Sea).Top of Form

 


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