• Sri Lankan troops hand out school items to Tamil children in Kilinochchi

    Sri Lankan soldiers in Kilinochchi held an event to distribute stationary items to 200 Tamil school children on Sunday, reports a military website.



    Troops from the 651 Brigade went to the Thevanpiddi Roman Catholic School, where garlanded commanders helped distribute gifts to the school children.
  • Monks form organisation to protect 'war heroes'

    Buddhist monks in Sri Lanka have formed a new organisation to protect 'war heroes', after some military personnel were arrested over abductions and other crimes.

    "The current government hates the word, patriotism," president of the organisation, Bengamuwe Nalaka said, adding that the head of state should not have made a recent statement in which he allegedly branded patriots as extremist.

    He said the organisation was formed to protect 'war heroes' from 'local and international threats' and to look after their families and to ensure their welfare.

    "There are no extremists in Colombo. We are not extremists but patriots. We love this country and we want to save our war heroes and protect the peace we won," the monk said.

  • Sri Lanka to abolish executive presidency in January

    Sri Lanka's parliament is set to move a resolution in January which would convert the house into a constitutional assembly paving the way for the process of drafting a new constitution and abolishing the executive presidential system.

    Officials said the constitutional assembly would be formed on January 9, the first day of President Maithripala Sirisena's second year in office.

  • Sri Lankan government has responsibility to implement UN resolution in full says GTF
    Global Tamil Forum spokesperson Suren Surendiran said it is the government of Sri Lanka’s responsibility to implement in full a UN Human Rights Council resolution passed earlier this year, in comments made to The Island yesterday.

    Mr Surendiran said that “it is Government of Sri Lanka’s responsibility and by co-sponsoring the resolution, it’s her commitment to the UN and wider international community, to implement the resolution in full”.

    “It is the humanity’s obligation to the tens of thousands of victims to ensure justice is served, after all which is what the resolution is trying to achieve,” he added.

    The GTF spokesperson further noted that Sri Lankan Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera announced to the UN Human Rights Council that Sri Lanka would consult all stakeholders on setting up of the accountability mechanism by the end of February 2016 and that the Council would be expecting an update by June 2016.
  • Floods in North-East add to suffering of Tamil IDPs

    Thousands of internally displaced persons (IDPs) in the North-East have been affected by heavy flooding in the area reports ucanews.com, with many at risk of starvation.

  • Fishing ban costs Sri Lanka ‘over $100 million per year’ says Minister

    Sri Lanka’s Fisheries Minister Mahinda Amaraweera said over $100 million per year after the European Union’s ban on imports of fish caught in Sri Lanka.

    "We are losing over $100 million per year because of this ban,”
    said Mr Amaraweera. However, he stated the government was expecting the ban to be lifted “before the Sinhala and Tamil New Year (local new year) in 2016".

    "During the coming months, the proposal to lift the fishing ban will be presented to the European Parliament," said the minister, adding “we are expecting a favourable response from them”.

  • Nepalese girls rescued from being trafficked into Sri Lanka

    A group of 5 Nepalese girls have been rescued from being trafficked into Sri Lanka, reports the Himalayan Times.

    The five girls were being taken to Mahendranagar, from where it was reported they were to be smuggled into India and finally into Sri Lanka.

    Earlier this year, the US State Department stated that “the Government of Sri Lanka does not fully comply with the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking” in its annual ‘Trafficking in Persons Report’, placing Sri Lanka on the’ Tier 2 Watch List’ for a third consecutive year.

    Leaked US embassy cables also revealed Tamil paramilitaries ran prostitution rings for Sri Lankan troops in government-controlled parts of the Northeast, and child sex trafficking rings using their networks in India and Malaysia, with the knowledge and support of the Sri Lankan government.

    The Sri Lankan navy has also been accused of being directly involved with human trafficking, especially that of Tamil asylum seekers, looking to flee the island.

  • 'Without that acknowledgement, nothing can move forward' - Prof R Cheran
    The exiled Tamil poet. Professor R Cheran, speaking to the Alignist on his poetry and submission to Amnesty International’s poetry contest, stressed that without genuine acknowledgement of Tamil grievances by the majority community of Sri Lanka, nothing could move forward.


    Extracts of his interview with writer and Lawyer Gowri Kneswaran reproduced below.

    See full interview here.

    Highlighting how poetry can be used as a tool to discuss injustices, Professor Cheran said,

    “In the case of Sri Lanka, literary organizations in Sri Lanka and South Asia have been inactive. There’s been an unwritten rule to not discuss or talk about these [human rights] issues. So, when Amnesty International proposed this idea, we welcomed it. Disappearances in Sri Lanka is a mind bogglingly huge issue but it hasn’t received the attention and care it deserves. More than 75,000 people [have been] disappeared and the culprits are still [out] there. In that context, [the poetry contest] is crucial even as a small gesture.”
  • Nisha Biswal in Sri Lanka on Private visit says US Embassy
    The United States Embassy in Colombo told journalists that the US Secretary of State for South and Central Asia Nisha Biswal was visiting Sri Lanka on a purely private visits, reports Colombo Page.
  • Sampanthan not happy with Tamil People's Council

    The leader of the Tamil National Alliance, Rajavarothayam Sampanthan says the party will not encourage acceptance or accept members of other organisations without the consent of the leadership, when asked about the formation of the Tamil People's Council.

    Mr Sampanthan said acceptance of the TPC, which is chaired by Northern Province Chief Minister CV Wigneswaran, would "create confusion and complications in the future", Ceylon Today reported.

    "I cannot make any comment with regard to the formation of the Tamil People's Council. I will make a comment later. I shall not rush it" he said.

    The TPC has the support of a wide range of Tamil civil society groups and political actors, including sitting MPs of the TNA.

  • Sri Lankan warships dock in India

    Two Sri Lankan war ships are on a three day visit to the South Indian port in Kochi, Kerala.

  • Government has let TNA down - MP

    TNA MP Seenithamby Yogeswaran says the Sri Lankan government has failed to support the party and let it down, despite the TNA's indirect support.

    "There is a change in government but we have not changed the people. It is the same people in a new government. That is the difference between the former and present government," the Batticaloa MP said at an event in Kalkuda, Ceylon Today reported.

  • US defence official discusses accountability with Sri Lankan military leaders

    US Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense (DASD) for South and Southeast Asia Dr Amy Searight discussed accountability and justice mechanisms with senior Sri Lankan military leaders, as she concluded her visit to the island this week.

    A US embassy press release said Dr Searight met with Sri Lanka’s Chief Defence Staff and the respective Tri-Service Commanders, “to stress the need for land returns, reconciliation and a credible transitional justice mechanism, and to discuss future security requirements”.

    Dr Searight also “placed a priority on meeting with human rights activists and emphasized the “key role civil society plays in informing military policy and defense relationships”,” added the press release.

    “She raised their concerns about accountability and reconciliation efforts in discussions with senior military leaders,” it further said.

  • Political prisoners re-remanded by Sri Lankan court
    A group of 27 political prisoners were re-remanded by a court in Colombo on Monday, reports The Island.

    The 27 prisoners are accused of being members of the LTTE have been re-remanded until January 4. Bail has not been granted, with the Sri Lankan Attorney-General’s approval needed before any such measure can take place.

    The Sri Lankan government had pledged to release Tamil political prisoners by December 15, after large scale protests and hunger strikes across the island. The deadline has since passed with no significant action having taken place.
  • US Ambassador meets with Sinhala hardliner to discuss new Sri Lankan constitution
    US Ambassador Atul Keshap met with the General Secretary of the Buddhist monk party, the Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU), to discuss the development of a new constitution for Sri Lanka.

    During a meeting last week, the US embassy stated Ambassador Keshap stressed “the United States supports the Sri Lankan voters’ vision of a unified, peaceful, prosperous, and reconciled Sri Lanka with equal opportunity and human rights for all, regardless of ethnicity or religion.”

    Mr Ranawaka, an outspoken Sinhala nationalist, vowed that “federalism will never be given to the North” and stated “we will never support a federal solution”. He also recently pledged to ensure “national security is in the forefront of everything”.
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