Sri Lanka's plantation workers are a long-marginalized group who ... to work on plantations that grew first coffee, and later tea and rubber. Those crops are still Sri Lanka's leading foreign ...
Almost 5% of the population of Sri Lanka work in the billion-dollar tea industry, picking leaves on the mountain slopes and processing the tea in plantation factories. The cultivation and selling ...
Although Germany's Supply Chain Act on Sri Lanka's tea industry is minimal, tea exporters are likely to be driven out of the ...
With the recent wage hike given to plantation sector workers, Sri Lanka’s once lucrative tea industry is facing a threat of collapse due to the inability to increase labour productivity and declining ...
Two centuries have passed since indentured laborers were taken to Sri Lanka for plantation work ... that poignantly capture the plight of tea estate workers in Sri Lanka. Vinodh's work serves ...
Time stands still at the Tea Plantation Workers’ Museum & Archive in Gampola. Located in a row of traditional line rooms that are over a century old, the museum attempts to convey what life was like ...
A New Age Old World man and bestselling author of The Suicide Club, he is a tea plantation owner ... has presented a history of Sri Lanka, like no other has yet to do. Tales accessible to the masses, ...
Culinary adventures in Kandy are as vibrant and varied as its landscapes. The local cuisine is a fiery dance of flavours – ...
Gamage’s groundbreaking work focuses on the biodiversity of ... A History of Transformation The history of Sri Lanka’s central highlands is deeply tied to its coffee and tea plantations, which have ...
Almost 5% of the population of Sri Lanka work in the billion-dollar industry, picking leaves on the mountain slopes and processing the tea in plantation factories.
This signals alarming shifts in global weather patterns, and Sri Lanka, a nation heavily reliant on plantation crops like tea, rubber, coconuts, and spices (such as cinnamon), must brace for the ...