Daily Mirror - Print Edition

Certain political elements behind delaying A/L answer script correction

19 Apr 2023 - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}      

  • Political groups and unions must consider this a national constraint without considering their personal benefits
  • The teachers’ unions had agreed to the government’s programme of scrutinizing answer scripts

By Chaturanga Pradeep Samarawickrama  

An intelligence report revealed that certain extremist political groups wanted to promote extremist political ideologies by using the frustration of the youth by delaying the scrutinization of GCE (A/L) answer scripts, Education Minister Susil Premajayantha said.  

After signing a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between the Vocational Training Authority (VTA) and the Sri Lanka Bureau of Foreign Employment (SLBFE) at the Bureau office in Battaramulla, he told the media that the intelligence report was released last week and that the report said that extremist political groups are trying to inconvenience youth  in the 18, 19 and 20 age group by delaying the scrutinizing of answer scripts.  


The minister said that the teachers’ unions had agreed to the government’s programme of scrutinizing answer scripts.  


“We need 19,000 teachers to complete the task.” A/L practical tests have already begun, and teachers are already engaged in their duties. The Ministry had taken measures to minimise the delay in scrutinizing the answer scripts to some extent. We hope that the Federation of University Teachers’ Association (FUTA) will engage with the programme soon,” he said.  


“Political groups and unions must consider this a national constraint without considering their personal benefits. 350,000 students had faced the A/L examination, and 600,000 students were to face the Ordinary Level (O/L) exam. The O/L exam was postponed by the examination department by two weeks to create a gap between the two main examinations,” Minister Premajayantha said.  


Therefore, the minister requested that the unions commence scrutinizing answer scripts in the name of their children.