Sri Lanka

Taxonomy Color
red
  • What Liberation?

    Based on field trip between 10 and 14 December 2007, the author continues to query the much heralded liberation of the East in this the second of a three part series.
  • U.S. Declaration of Independence validates Tamil Statehood
    Applying the "self-evident" truths celebrated in the Declaration of Independence, the United States should recognize the right of Sri Lanka's long oppressed Tamil people to independent statehood from the racial supremacist Sinhalese.

    To deny the statehood right — sought by the Tamil people since 1976 — would mark one of the United States' most ill-conceived hours. Double standards beget enmity or contempt, a steep price even for a superpower.
  • Genocide is not a war against terrorism
    They lay lifeless. Row by row, lines upon lines, bodies of young Tamil women draped in cloths, as horrified family members search frantically for their daughters, nieces and sisters, fearing the next covering they lift up will expose the face of their loved one. I was disgusted. Disgusted with myself, disgusted with what the world had become. I was at disgust with myself, for I was behind a computer screen, in the safety of my own home.
  • Stop military aid to Sri Lanka: PDK
    One million signatures submitted to Indian defence minister
  • Kudos to wider Tamil identity
    The decision of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) to select Razeen Mohamed Imam as a national list member of the Sri Lanka parliament on February 8 has been received with wide appreciation from different sections of the Tamil-speaking people, including the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress. Mr. Razeen Mohamed, 60, is a lawyer from Jaffna and has been a member of the Ilankai Thamizh Arasuk Kadchi (the Federal Party started by the late S.J.V Chelvanayakam) for more than 30 years.
  • Vanni bus blast claims civilians including children
    Sri Lankan military’s Deep Penetration Unit targeted a bus ferrying children from a sports event in Vanni killing 20 people including 11 children.
  • “What can I do?” - thoughts for the Tamil Diaspora
    The plight of our people has been steadily reaching newer levels. And, after being an observer with a hands-off approach, I decided to do something about it. I became proactive - in small ways. As a mother of two young children living in Sydney, Australia and having many commitments, it was not easy to change my inaction - but I did. I firmly believe now, that if we all do our little part and started working towards a common vision, that vision will and must materialize.
  • What Liberation?
    Based on field trip between 10 and 14 December 2007, the author queries the much heralded liberation of the East in this the first of a three part series.
  • The Thirukkural: the householder and the nation’s wealth
    The second of a three-part series looking at this Tamil treasure.
  • Journalists live dangerously in Sri Lanka
    Sri Lankan journalists are going through a trying period. Government leaders are taking a hard line on media freedom, with even senior media persons facing death threats and murderous assaults.

    Media watchdogs, both national and international, have publicised serious incidents of intimidation by the state and other agencies directed against media organisations. But President Mahinda Rajapaksa denies any repression.
  • Back to the future: APRC reverts to 1987
    Under heavy pressure from the international community to put forward a credible political solution to the long-drawn ethnic conflict in the island, the Sri Lankan government finally unveiled its proposal to devolve power – a recommendation to go back 20 years.
  • Dambulla bus blast leaves scores dead, injured
    A powerful explosion tore through a bus at Dambulla in north-central Sri Lanka, killing at least 18 people and injuring 51 others.

    Military spokesman Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara said, on Saturday February 2, a blast inside the private bus that was heading to north-central Anuradhapura city from Kandy occurred at 7.05 a.m. local time at a bus stand in Dambulla town, 148 kms from Colombo.
  • Eastern polls lead to increased violence
    There has been an increase in the levels of violence experienced by civilians in the east, following the Sri Lankan government’s decision to go ahead with polls in the volatile region, despite cautions and warnings against the plans by local politicians and political groups and boycotts by the major opposition groups.
  • ‘Democracy cornerstone eroding’
    The safety of journalists in Sri Lanka is in serious jeopardy as several serious attacks and anti-media statements by government officials demonstrate a lack of respect for the value of media freedom in the country and international media watchdog said this week.

    The Committee to Protect Journalists (JPJ) said it is alarmed by Sri Lankan Defense Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa’s brazen public call Sunday to censor the media and reintroduce criminal defamation laws.
  • Killing and abduction of civilians increase in Jaffna
    Violence against Tamil civilians continues to escalate in the Sri Lanka military controlled Jaffna peninsula with 10 people killed and 15 injured in the last week alone.

    Most of the killings were carried out in southern Jaffna peninsula, Thenmaraadchi, close to the Forward Defence Lines at Muhamaalai. In each case unidentified armed men who carried out the attacks escaped through Sri Lanka Army’s (SLA’s) High Security Zones and checkpoints without being challenged.
Subscribe to Sri Lanka