• US government should urge Sri Lanka to release political prisoners and repeal PTA - congress committee

    The chairman of the US House Committee on Foreign Affairs has written to Secretary of State John Kerry, urging the US government to press Sri Lanka to release Tamil political detainees, repeal the PTA and return land held by the military.

  • Sri Lankan troops distribute biscuits at Tamil temple festival

    The Sri Lankan army organised alms giving stalls at the Tamil Hindu Sivarathri festival at several temples in Jaffna.

  • Sri Lankan army deployed to electricity installations island-wide
    The Sri Lankan president on Monday ordered the army to be deployed island wide to protect all Ceylon Electricity Board installations and substations.

    The deployment follows a period of prolonged blackouts over the past six months.
  • Indian cabinet approves 700m dollar swap to Sri Lanka
    India's cabinet this week approved another 700 million US dollar currency swap to Sri Lanka's Central Bank, reported Ceylon Today.

    India's Reserve Bank had previously provided a 400 million dollar swap. The current arrangement will last for 3 months or until an agreement is reached with the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

    See more here.
  • Sri Lanka to impose new taxes after credit rating downgrades

    Sri Lanka’s finance minister announced his government would be raising taxes as part of a drive to improve its debt rating and reduce the budget deficit.

    Stating that the imposition was a necessary measure, Mr Ravi Karunanayake said his government would be raising Value Added Tax and reintroducing capital gains taxes.

    "We want to tax the top end of [the consumer], which basically consumes, rather than the downtrodden,” he said.

    "Imposing new taxes is a hard-sell, but what more can you do?"

    However the taxes are expected to hit Sri Lanka's economically disadvantaged too. The reforms will lead to price rises in "a variety of goods and commodities", according to the Sunday Times.

    "[The] price of a kilo of Prima flour went up by Rs. 7.20. This will raise the price of bread, a common diet among Sri Lankans, to a new high," the paper said in its political column.

    Mr Karunanayake also slammed recent decisions to downgrade Sri Lanka’s credit rating as "absolutely unfair".

  • Jayalalithaa calls for ‘robust diplomatic response’ to Sri Lanka
    Tamil Nadu Chief Minister J Jayalalithaa called on the Indian Prime Minister to issue a "robust diplomatic response" to Sri Lanka’s latest arrest of Indian fishermen this weekend.

    Noting that she had repeatedly written to the prime minister on the issue, Ms Jayalalithaa said the "inadequate response of the Union Government on such incidents of apprehension and detention of our fishermen has emboldened the Sri Lankan Navy to harass the Tamil Nadu fishermen while exercising their livelihood rights to fish in their traditional waters of the Palk Bay."

    "I request you to put in place a strong and robust diplomatic response registering India's disapproval in the strongest possible terms of the belligerent actions of the Sri Lankan Navy," she added.
  • ‘No point talking about accountability under military occupation’ – Northern Province Councillor

    The Sri Lankan state is still practising “serious discrimination” against Tamils on the island and continues its military occupation of the North-East, Northern Province Councillor Ananthy Sasitharan told the UN Human Rights Council this week.

    “The systematic structural genocide is continuing,” said Ms Sasitharan. “The Tamil nation is still under military occupation,” she said, adding that “there is no point in talking about accountability while we are all under military occupation”.

    Noting that the Sri Lanka government still continues to practise “serious discrimination”, Ms Sasitharan said “there has been no real change for the Tamil people”. “A real reconciliation could only come through demonstrating serious commitment to resolve the conflict and address the wounds,” she continued.

    Drawing the Council’s attention in particular to the plight of Tamil women in the North-East, Ms Sasitharan said:

    “I witnessed the situation of those [who] were handed over to the SL military that announced general amnesty through loud speakers on 18 May 2009. I am a living witness to this. I handed over my husband through Catholic Father Francis Joseph on 18th of May 2009.”

    Both Ms Sasitharan’s husband, LTTE member Ellilan, and Father Francis Joseph, are currently missing, last seen in Sri Lankan military custody on that day almost 7 years ago.

  • British MP presses government to 'remain resolute' on UN resolution

    Parliamentarian Joan Ryan called on the British government to “remain resolute” in seeing through the full implementation of an UN resolution on accountability in Sri Lanka, as she pushed the UK on its engagement with the Sri Lankan government.

    In a letter addressed to British Minister Hugo Swire, Ms Ryan said that “a number of issues remain” on the island “despite the positive steps which have been taken over the past year”.

    On the issue of accountability for mass atrocities, Ms Ryan said “international participation is vital, as only through a credible truth, accountability and justice mechanism will Sri Lanka be set on the path to genuine reconciliation and a sustainable peace”.

    “I believe it is incumbent upon the UK Government, along with its international counterparts, to remain resolute in its commitment to support the full implementation of the UNHRC Resolution on Sri Lanka,” she added.

    “It is vital that the government continues to voice – in the strongest possible terms – the need for Sri Lanka to uphold the rights and freedoms of all its citizens and to impress on the Sri Lankan authorities the need to make greater progress towards realising a comprehensive political settlement which addresses the issue of Tamil self-determination.”

  • Accountability and political settlement have to go hand in hand' - FFT

    Accountability for violations of international humanitarian law must go “hand in hand” with a political solution, said Freedom From Torture in response the UN human rights chiefs remarks on Sri Lanka, made earlier this week.

    Ann Hannah, International Advocate and Researcher at Freedom from Torture, said that the UK-based charity welcomed the High Commissioner's statement.

    “Our clients, torture survivors from Sri Lanka, have told us time and again, that that they will only have confidence in a justice process where their evidence can be heard by impartial judges, where the safety and security of witness and their families are secure and they are free from harassment and intimidation,” she said.

    “This can only be achieved by the Sri Lankan government fulfilling the commitments it agreed last October at the Human Rights Council, including the participation of international judges in the process.”

  • Sinhalese students attack Tamils at Eastern Uni
    Nine Tamil students at the Eastern University's Trincomalee campus were attacked by Sinhala students on Friday night they said in to Lankasri.

    The injured Tamil students reported that over 50 Sinhala students entered the building they were inside and attacked them.



  • 28 Indian fishermen arrested by Sri Lankan navy
    The Sri Lankan navy on Saturday arrested twenty-eight Indian fishermen in separate incidents, and three vessels impounded.

    This arrest is the latest in a series of arrests by the Sri Lankan navy, with a total of 31 fishermen arrested already since the beginning of this month.

    Last week the chief minister of Tamil Nadu, J Jayalalithaa had written a further letter to the Indian prime minister, Narendra Modi, urging him to find a permanent solution to the issue.

  • Sri Lankan police recover 2kg of heroin in Jaffna

    Sri Lankan police reportedly recovered almost 2kg of heroin in Thondamanaru in Jaffna on Saturday.

    The drugs, worth an estimated 12,00,00,000 rupees, was discovered after Valvettithurai police received a tip off.

  • EU wants ‘full implementation’ of UN resolution on Sri Lanka

    The European Union (EU) has called on Sri Lanka to “further increase its cooperation” with the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights “in view of the full implementation of its commitments” of a UN resolution passed last year.

    Speaking at the 31st session of the UN Human Rights Council currently underway in Geneva, the EU also thanked human rights chief Zeid Ra'ad al Hussain for information provided by his recent visit to the island.

    “We would be interested in your views on how the international community can best support Sri Lanka at this juncture,” added the EU statement.

  • UK ‘firmly committed to full implementation’ of UN resolution on Sri Lanka

    Britain reiterated its commitment to the full implementation of a United Nations Human Rights Council resolution on accountability for mass atrocities committed during the final phases of the armed conflict in Sri Lanka, at a statement delivered in Geneva this week.

    In a statement at the UN Human Rights Council’s 31st session, the United Kingdom said:

    “We remain firmly committed to the full implementation of the resolution adopted in September and stand ready to help Sri Lanka”.

    “We encourage the government to continue in its efforts to help bring lasting peace to Sri Lanka, including by establishing credible and consultative reconciliation and accountability mechanism and, by strengthening its engagement with your office.”

  • HRW ‘concerned’ at Sri Lankan government statements on accountability
    Human Rights Watch (HRW) said it was concerned at statements made by the Sri Lankan government, which called into question its commitment to fully implement a UN resolution on accountability.
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