• Tamils suffered genocide in Sri Lanka says British MP at parliamentary Mullivaikkal remembrance event

    Photograph: Tamil Guardian


    “What happened to Tamils in Sri Lanka is Genocide,” said Member of Parliament for Enfield Joan Ryan and vice chair of the All Party Parliamentary Group for Tamils (APPG-T), speaking at a Mullivaikal remembrance event at the House of Commons on Tuesday.

    See live tweets from the event here.

    The event which was organised by the Tamil Co-ordinating Committee (TCC), saw a cross-party turn-out from MPs.

    Condemning ongoing torture of Tamils in Sri Lanka, the chair of the All Party Parliamentary Group for Tamils MP for Kingston and Surbiton James Berry, said, “We must also shine a spot light on the disgraceful and continuing practice of torture. Whether or not it is sponsored at the highest level, it is taking place in Sri Lanka – last year, last month and probably yesterday. It is taking place frequently and Freedom From Torture produced a compelling report on this.”

    Mr Berry highlighted the need for the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) to be repealed whilst stressing the need to pressure Sri Lanka to demilitarise the Tamil homeland in the North-East of Sri Lanka.

    MP for Ilford North Wes Streeting, lamenting that the world looked away and did not act fast enough in 2009, reiterated his commitment to ensuring that the UNHRC resolution is fully implemented, adding,

    “We have not taken our eye of the ball in ensuring the resolution is implemented. Plenty of parliamentarians who will not look away this time.”

    “It is important Sirisena knows that the international community is watching,” he concluded.
  • Justice cannot be compromised' - civil society organisations

    A wide range of civil society actors have expressed 'urgent concerns' regarding the Sri Lankan government's proposed Office of Missing Persons (OMP), and called for 'substantial international involvement', in a letter to President Maithripala Sirisena.

    The signatories, which included members of southern civil society and Tamil civil society from the North-East, noted that the government is yet to share the ideas for the mechanism and said there were concerns about continuing violations, such as white van abductions and harassment of victims' families by security forces.

    The letter urged that justice cannot be compromised and that the OMP should facilitate rather than impede justice mechanisms.

    "We reject the idea that seeking truth may be separated from victim families’ right to justice, and insist that the pursuit of these two rights be recognized as complementary. In this regard, a model that excludes or insulates the OMP from sharing information gathered during tracing investigations with a criminal investigative process would be unacceptable. Information available to the OMP must be made available to other transitional justice mechanisms, with appropriate safeguards in the interests of protection of witnesses or victim families,

    "We strongly suggest that the Government rename the proposed Office as ‘Office of Missing and Forcibly Disappeared Persons’, so as to reflect accurately the mandate of the body," the letter further said.

    "We are also concerned about, and would like to draw the Government’s attention to continuing incidents of harassment and intimidation of victim families and activists that are not helpful in creating a conducive environment for public consultations or operationalization of the OMP mechanism. The continued use of the draconian Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA), the lack of due process in carrying out arrests and resuming the use of white vans in the past month have heightened the sense of fear and insecurity among affected people."

  • We don't need GSP+ - Gammanpila

    The leader of the Pivithiru Hela Urumaya, Udaya Gammanpila, said the EU's GSP+ trade concessions "are not a must", after it emerged that the EU imposed strict conditions on its re-granting to Sri Lanka.

    Mr Gammanpila, who came third in Colombo in the general election, said the GSP plus scheme was first granted to Sri Lanka in 2004 and lost in 2010.

  • ‘War machinery still in place in Sri Lanka’ – UN Special Rapporteur

    The current Sri Lankan government continues to keep “much of the war machinery” in place said UN Special Rapporteur Monica Pinto, at a press conference in Colombo on Saturday.

    "The government has changed, the war is over,” said Ms Pinto. “But much of the war machinery is still in place."

    The Special Rapporteur went on to state that “Sri Lanka is at a crucial moment in its history”.

    “It is now critical and urgent to replace the legal framework that allowed serious human rights violations to happen and set up sound democratic institutions and legal standards that will give effect to and protect the human rights embodied in the constitution or Sri Lanka as well as the international human rights treaties it has voluntarily ratified,” she said.

    Claims of “international terrorism and organized crime… can never justify the continuation of repressive practices or a normative framework that contributes to violations of fundamental rights and civil liberties,” she added.

    Ms Pinto also outlined steps the government should take to implement judicial reform and bring about prosecutions for violations of international humanitarian law.

    “The government should ensure that the bodies set up or existing which have to deal with these issues, be composed by independent and impartial people, completely beyond any questioning by the society, well learned in law,” she said.

  • Sri Lankan military ‘thrills’ Jaffna Tamils

    The Sri Lankan army organised a “mega musical extravaganza” in Jaffna to “strengthen the cordial relations prevailing between the Army and the civilians”, reports an official military website.


    The event saw the Commander of the Sri Lankan Security Forces in Jaffna Major General Mahesh Senanayka honoured as the chief guest, as he strolled along a red carpet to enter the Jaffna Municipal Grounds for the show last Saturday.

    Meanwhile a band from the Sinhala south played songs to “entertain thousands of civilians who cried in joy” according to the Civil Military Coordination Jaffna website.
  • Murdered Tamil journalists remembered in Jaffna

    A memorial event was held in Jaffna last week, marking the tenth anniversary of the murder of two Uthayan journalists.

     

  • Sri Lanka reiterates strengthening defence ties with China
    Sri Lanka’s government reiterated on Saturday that its defence ties with China remained on strong footing, reports Colombo Gazette.

    Defence Secretary Karunesena Hettiarachchi told Chinese news outlet XInhua, that Sri Lanka’s defence relations included military training that would continue to be further strengthened in the near future.
  • Sri Lankan govt to study UN rapporteur's statement
    The Sri Lankan government on Sunday said it would examine the statement made by the UN Special Rapporteur on Torture, who highlighting the ongoing use of torture by the state, the Daily Mirror reported.
  • Our struggle for freedom should continue says TNA MP
    The Tamil National Alliance (TNA) MP S Sritharan condemned the Sri Lankan military's ongoing encroachment and control over Tamils lands, and urged the Tamil people to continue the struggle for freedom.
  • Australia defends deportation of asylum seekers from Sri Lanka
    The Australian government confirmed that it deported a group of asylum seekers to Sri Lanka.

    A group of 12 men, women and children were returned to Sri Lanka on May6 , confirmed Immigration Minister Peter Dutton, adding,

    “They were in a good state – they had made the journey down and they quickly made the journey back.”
  • Ranil 'furious' over GSP plus conditions - Sunday Times
    The Sri Lankan prime minister Ranil Wickremesinghe was reportedly furious over the conditions agreed to in order to regain the preferential trade deal, GSP plus, the Sunday Times reported.
  • Sirisena to visit UK, India next week
    The Sri Lankan president, Maithripala Sirisena is to travel to the UK next week followed by visit to India where he will meet the Indian prime minister, Narendra Modi.

    Mr Sirisena's visit to the UK will be on May 11 and 12. Talks with Mr Modi will commence on May 13.
  • Mullivaikkal remembrance will be held says Shivajilingham
    The Northern Provincial councillor M K Shivajilingham stressed that Mullivaikkal remembrance events beginning on May 12th would go ahead as planned despite attempts to block them.

    Tamils slaughtered at the final stages of the armed conflict in May 2009 would be remembered across the week, with the main event on May 18 in Mullivaikkal.
  • US eases military trade restrictions on Sri Lanka
    The United States government announced that it will ease a set of long standing trade restrictions on Sri Lanka and review all further applications on a “case-by-case basis”.
  • Sri Lanka's judiciary unfit for international crimes finds TAG
    A briefing note by Together Against Genocide (TAG) on the capability of Sri Lanka’s judiciary to deal with international crimes found that it was “not yet capable of justly administering a war crimes tribunal to the standard expected by victims and the international community.”

    The 5 page document concluded that,
Subscribe to Tamil Affairs