• Parliamentary brawl as Sri Lanka's former army chief admits staging LTTE bombing to gain sympathy

    Sri Lanka’s parliament erupted into a brawl after Sri Lanka’s former army chief claimed that a previous bomb attack that had been blamed on the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) was actually staged-managed by Sri Lanka’s defence secretary at the time.

  • Sri Lanka military enrol pre-school Tamil children in Vanni


    The Sri Lankan military's civil security division enrolled pre-school children in Vanni, forcing children to wear uniforms bearing the Sri Lankan military emblem.

    Parents have been instructed they must send their children to school in that uniform, whilst being asked to pay 600 rupees towards the cost of it.

  • Former LTTE Batticaloa intelligence head arrested
    The former head of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam's (LTTE) intelligence wing in Batticaloa was arrested by Sri Lankan police officers on Monday in Eravur.

    Sri Lanka's Terrorism Investigation Division (TID) told the family of Krishnapillai Kalainesan, known as Lt. Col. Prabha that he was arrested in relation to an investigation of the alleged regrouping of the LTTE.

    Mr Kalainesan was arrested at his home on Monday at 6.30am and has now been taken to Kalmunai for further interrogation, his wife, Kayalvili told reporters.

    Following the end of the armed conflict in 2009, he was initially registered as disappeared, before reports emerged that he was in fact being held by the Sri Lankan military.

    In 2013 Mr Kalainesan was released after completing the government's 'rehabilitation' programme. 

  • Husband was stripped by Sri Lankan army after his surrender - relatives testify in Kilinochchi

    Sri Lanka’s Presidential Commission on disappearances made its final sitting in Kilinochchi last week, calling over a thousand witnesses to testify about their missing relatives.

    The wife of former LTTE member Kannan, alias Gnanaselvan Uthayarasa, testified after seeing a photo of her husband with other captive LTTE cadres stripped naked and alive at the hands of the Sri Lankan military.


    “My husband is an LTTE member that surrendered to the army on May 18, 2009.

    I and my two children witnessed it in person. Thereafter there is no information about my husband

    Under these circumstances I got photo evidences of war crimes telecast by Channel 4. There were photos of my husband taken while he was taken by the army in stripped condition, and was seen sitting near a ditch.”

  • Supreme Court orders Wigneswaran to appear over NPC resolution

    Updated 2300 GMT

    Sri Lanka's Supreme Court has ordered Chief Minister CV Wigneswaran and other Tamil politicians to appear before it with regards to the resolution calling for a federal solution in a merged North-East passed by the NPC last week.

  • Federalism will not cause secession says Wigneswaran
    The chief minister of the Northern Province rejected assertions that the call for federalism was racist and aimed at secession, stating that it was "madness" to suggest so.

    In an interview with the Tamil newspaper, Virakesari this week, Mr Wigneswaran said,

    "For many years politicians have been ceaselessly saying federalism would secede the nation. That makes you also believe in those lines. You have become accustomed to such remarks. Read newspapers and books to understand about federalism. Federalism is in vogue in India. It is followed in Canada and Switzerland also. A country will never be divided because of federalism."

  • Journalists in Colombo demand justice for Sivaram

    Over a hundred journalists and media workers based in Colombo staged a demonstration on Friday, calling for justice for murdered Tamil journalist Dharmeratnam Sivaram.

    Members of the Working Journalists Association, Tamil Media Alliance, Free Media Movement, Muslim Media Forum and the Federation of Media Employees Trade Union took part in the protest alongside other trade unions.

    Speaking to AP Media rights activist Lasantha Ruhunage said the Sri Lankan government must do more to punish those responsible for attacks on journalists.

    “More than compensation, the attacks on journalists, media workers and media institutions should be properly investigated and those responsible for the attacks should be punished, in order to ensure justice to the media community," he said.

  • Sri Lankan prime minister lashes out at the media

    Sri Lankan Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe lashed out at the island’s media institutions on Saturday, accusing them of attempting to revive the LTTE.

  • Tamil school children excel in Britain

    British Tamil school children are outperforming their peers who have registered English as their first language in reading, writing and mathematics, reports The Express.

    Looking at exam results from the previous year for children aged 10 and 11, the Express reported that children who reported Chinese and Tamil as their mother tongue outperformed children whose first language is English in all tests.

  • Global champion of human rights'? Controversy over Power comment

    Remarks made by US Permanent Representative to the UN, Ambassador Samantha Power, calling Sri Lanka a "global champion for human rights" have come under fire.

    Writing in The Diplomat, commentator Taylor Dibbert said the Obama administration's rhetoric "continues to be wildly out of step with reality".

    "Sri Lanka watchers will notice that instead of the United States clearly calling for accountability for wartime abuses (a hugely controversial issue in post-war Sri Lanka), the language seems to have shifted to 'accountable democracy.' This is something to watch going forward. Is Washington still genuinely pushing for wartime accountability?" he wrote.

    Highlighting the recent increase in abductions, Mr Dibbert further said,

    "Global champion of human rights and accountability? That’s quite an assertion.

  • France says time to start 'solid relationship' between navy

    Officials from the French navy said that it was time to start a "solid" partnership with Sri Lanka, the Daily Mirror reported.

  • 551 acres earmarked for land grabs in Kilinochchi says TNA MP
    Attempts are being made to acquire 551 acres of private land in Kilinochchi from the Tamil people, the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) MP, S Sritharan said this week.

    Writing a letter to the TNA leader, R Sampanthan and to the president, Maithripala Sirisena, Mr Sritharan called for the land grabs to be halted.
  • Vavuniya citizens committee calls for May 18 remembrance event at Mullivaikkal
    The Vavuniya Citizens Committee, together with the Mullaitivu Citizens Committee and the Forum for Searching, Handed, Kidnapped and Forcibly Disappeared Relatives - Tamil Homeland), called for a public remembrance event on May 18th to mark the genocide of the Tamil people in 2009.

    Reiterating the need for justice, the three groups urged people to come to Mullivaikkal to make their demand for justice heard.

  • Federal system won't divide country says Wigneswaran
    The chief minister of the Northern Province on Friday rejected concerns that the Northern Provincial Council (NPC) was trying to divide the country by calling a federal system.

    Speaking to journalists in Sinhala, Mr Wigneswaran said such a system would unite the country.

    “The country is not divided by a Federal system as claimed by some people. Politicians have reiterated for years that a federal system leads to division of the country and the people have been forced to believe that. This system is being practised in several countries such as India, America, Canada and Switzerland,” he was quoted by the Daily Mirror as saying.

  • Sampanthan calls for referendum on power sharing in North-East

    Tamil National Alliance leader R Sampanthan challenged the Sri Lanka state to hold a referendum in the North-East to decide on whether the Tamil people wanted a power sharing mechanism on the island.

    Speaking to the Daily Mirror in a wide ranging interview, the TNA leader was questioned on whether proposals for federalism had the backing of the Tamil people of the North-East.

    “People want genuine power sharing,” said Mr Sampanthan. “Have a referendum in the North and the East and decide.”

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