Sri Lanka hands cricket ground maintenance to military

COLOMBO, (Reuters) – Sri Lanka’s military will now  take care of the grounds of three cricket stadiums, a move  putting the armed forces into the operations of the country’s  sporting passion and widening an already big role in civilian  affairs, officials said yesterday.

The move into cricket follows a pattern of increasing  militarisation in Sri Lanka since the government won a 25-year  civil war in 2009.

The decision was made after Sri Lanka Cricket, ridden with a  debt of $23 million after fixing up stadiums to host the 2011  Cricket World Cup, was unable to pay salaries, officials said.

“Sri Lanka Cricket wanted to cut down the expenses,”  military spokesman Brigadier Nihal Hapuarachchi said. “It is a  service. We are supporting the country by doing this.”

Hapuarachchi said the military will not charge Sri Lanka  Cricket since armed service members are paid by the state.

The Navy will look after Pallekelle stadium, the air force  R. Premadasa stadium in Colombo and the new army stadium in  Hambantota, named after President Mahinda Rajapaksa.

“We are in a salvage financial situation and we have to  tighten our belts, so this is a forward plan in getting our  finance right,” Sri Lanka Cricket media manager Brian Thomas  said.

Almost immediately after the war, the air force reoriented   some of its fleet to start an air service called Helitours to  tap into the tourism boom, and the combined forces have since  moved into many roles in the civilian world.

That includes mandatory military-led training for university  entrants, selling vegetables, construction, development work and  even mosquito eradication. The defence minstry recently was  renamed the Defence and Urban Development ministry.

Top military commanders have been posted all over the world  as diplomats. Sri Lanka has around 350,000 armed forces members  for a population of about 21 million, and the 2012 defence  budget is expected to grow by 6.9 percent.

The government says the armed forces should be used in   post-war redevelopment and officials privately say they consider  it crucial to keep them busy in a constructive manner.