A resort entirely staffed and run by women in Sri Lanka seeks to break
gender barriers
[March 08, 2025] By
BHARATHA MALLAWARACHI
DAMBULLA, Sri Lanka (AP) — After leaving school, Jeewanthi Adikari was
determined to pursue her studies in accounting. But her life took a
different path when she began a three-month training program in
hospitality.
She has since worked in different hotels throughout a career spanning
over two decades. Now 42, she is in charge of Sri Lanka's first resort
fully operated and managed by women. It's an attempt to address gender
disparities in a male-dominated tourism sector crucial for the country's
economic recovery after a major crisis.
“This is a place where women can realise their potential. They will not
be inside the shell. Instead, they will come out and try to perform
better," said Adikari, who oversees the daily operations of Amba Yaalu,
a resort located in Dambulla city that serves as a gateway to most of
Sri Lanka’s tourist attractions.
Most Sri Lankan women don’t get a chance to work in the tourism
industry, earn money and own a career. In a country where 52% of the 22
million people are women, they account for only about 10% of the
200,000-strong workforce in the hospitality sector.
Amba Yaalu wants to be the driver of change
Some 160 kilometers (100 miles) northeast of Colombo, the resort is
nestled in a mango plantation and all work is managed by 75 women staff
who garden, work in the kitchens, clean the facility, address the guests
and provide security in the form of seven ex-military members. The
resort’s facilities also include training programs for women to develop
their skills in different areas of hospitality.
The resort opened in January and has been seen as a move unlocking
women's potential and driving the tourism economy in the debt-stricken
nation.

The idea was conceived by seasoned hotelier Chandra Wickramasinghe, who
said he was “inspired by the power of women," especially that of his
mother who raised him and his seven siblings as a single parent.
“I knew what these ladies can do. I got the idea and put my team to work
on it. We got a strong team to run it and it worked very well,” said
Wickramasinghe, adding that the resort would enable women to thrive as
leaders.
Social stigma, language barrier, work-life balance, lack of training
facilities and low salaries have long kept the majority of Sri Lankan
women away from the hospitality industry, especially those in the rural
areas, said Suranga Silva, professor of tourism economics in the
University of Colombo.

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A maintenance staff member carries a ladder at Amba Yaalu resort in
the Kandalama locality in Dambulla, Sri Lanka, Friday, Feb. 21,
2025. (AP Photo/Eranga Jayawardena)
 Much of this stems from a
patriarchal structure and traditional gender roles deeply embedded
in Sri Lanka’s society, even though many women have made their mark
in the country's politics and have held key positions in the
government. The island nation's current prime minister, Harini
Amarasuriya, is a woman.
“Tourism industry can’t be isolated from women,”
said Silva, adding that women’s employment in Sri Lanka’s tourism is
very low compared to the global and regional levels.
Lack of women professionals
Sri Lanka's tourism and hospitality sector contributed 2.3% to the
country's economy in 2023 — down from 5% in 2018 — and the industry
has traditionally been the country’s third largest foreign exchange
earner. But the shortage of skilled women and some of them leaving
jobs after getting married have been challenges faced by the
industry since the 2019 Easter Sunday bombings and the coronavirus
pandemic.
Kaushalya Batagoda, the executive chef at the resort, said the
industry faces a shortage of female professionals to serve in the
kitchen and as a result, most staff recruited to the resort's
kitchen were rookies still in training.
"But, the new generation has a passion for working in the kitchen,"
she said, adding that she gets a lot of applications from women.
The resort has been lauded by women’s rights activists who have long
been concerned about limited career choices for women in Sri Lanka.
Activist Sepali Kottegoda said such business enterprises can "open
up more safe employment opportunities for women.”
Silva, the professor, said that “a dramatic change” is taking place
as more young women are eager to join the industry, but suggested
that the government and the sector must jointly provide training
programs for women to improve their skills and employability.
At Amba Yaalu resort, some of these concerns are already being
tackled.
“This is purely to empower women," Adikari said. “We invite women to
come and join us, see whether they can perform better in the career,
sharpen their capacities and skills and contribute to the industry.”
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