• Former Sri Lankan ambassador pushes to avoid confrontation with India

    A former Sri Lankan ambassador has renewed efforts to construct an India Studies Centre (ISC) in Colombo in order to “avoid any confrontation with the regional superpower,” reports The Hindu.

    Former Ambassador Kalyananda Godage told The Hindu that “it’s now more than ever necessary to understand what India plans for South Asia as the world seems to be making space for India in the high tables of international diplomacy”.

    “As India finds a new and more intense international role, smaller neighbours of India too will have to understand New Delhi’s behaviour in order to avoid any confrontation with the regional superpower as cooperation is in mutual interest,” he added.

    Mr Godage was Sri Lanka’s High Commissioner to Malaysia, before he was recalled abruptly by Colombo after he was accused of sympathetic involvement with Tamil organisations in Malaysia.

  • Sri Lankan president assures ‘dignity of country will be safeguarded’ at meeting on UN resolution

    Sri Lankan president Maithripala Sirisena assured an all-party meeting on Tuesday that he would ensure the “the dignity of the country is safeguarded” in regard to action on a UN Human Rights Council resolution on accountability for mass atrocities.

  • UN confirms existence of secret torture camps in Sri Lanka, calls on gov to reveal other possible locations
    The United Nations Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances  (UN WGEID) announced that it had discovered a “secret underground detention cum torture center” located in Sri Lanka and called on the government to reveal the existence of other such centers if any existed.




    Speaking at a press conference concluding the UN team’s visit to Sri Lanka, Ariel Dulitzky, said that the center most probably would have been used from 2010 according to dates scribbled in blood on the walls.

    "We saw the dates that some people wrote on the walls. Clearly some of the latest dates were from 2010. We believe that it is an important discovery that should be investigated. Our understanding is that people were held there for very long periods of time," said the UN official.

    The UN investigator added that there was a high probability of other torture sites existing on the island.

    Mr Dulitzky stressed that the impunity in which disappearances had taken place in Sri Lanka had caused deep wounds in affected communities in Sri lanka. 
  • Sri Lanka fixes market price of 'essential commodities'
    Sri Lanka’s Consumer Affairs Authority has brought in a new set of Maximum Retail Price (MRP) regulations for six essential consumer items reports the ft.lk.

    The Ministry of Industry and Commerce Rishad Bathiudeen, in a statement made on Tuesday said,
  • President’s Counsel slams plan to scrap PTA

    The President’s Counsel in Sri Lanka has lashed out at the government over reported plans to scrap the much criticised Prevention of Terrorism Act, reports The Island.

    Manohara de Silva said Sri Lanka “was still vulnerable to terrorism” and slammed the Sri Lankan government over plans to scrap the law, after sustained international pressure.

  • Sri Lankan reforms will grow bilateral trade says US Ambassador


    Photograph : US Embassy Colombo

    The US Ambassador to Sri Lanka reiterated the importance of government reform on the island, as he opened an American sponsored trade show in Colombo today, showcasing opportunities for American companies to work in Sri Lanka.

    “It is clear to me that there is a new and tremendous opportunity for the United States and Sri Lanka to work together to enhance our economic relationship and expand bilateral trade,” said US Ambassador Keshap. 

    “That’s because the people of Sri Lanka have made clear their intent to leave aside the divisive politics of the past in order to build a promising future, and the government has responded with plans to adopt policies that will make it easier for businesses to operate in and trade with Sri Lanka, for not only the United States, but businesses from across the globe,” he added.  

    The ambassador went on to state however that “achieving this vision will not be easy work”.

    “Representatives of US companies have regularly told me they would like to see more economic policy consistency, a more fiscally stable government and sustained enforcement of anti-corruption policies in Sri Lanka,” he said.

  • SLFP Gen-Sec pledges to give Rajapaksa more prominent role in uniting party for elections
    Sri Lanka’s former president Mahinda Rajapaksa will be given a more prominent role in the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) announced the party’s general secretary on Tuesday.

    SLFP General Secretary Duminda DIssanayake said that there was no need for the SLFP to work as two groups, adding that Mahinda Rajapaksa had a responsibility to ensure that he SLFP wins future elections.
  • Wigneswaran dismisses Sumanthiran's threat, reiterates commitment to voters

    Northern Province Chief Minister CV Wigneswaran on Tuesday dismissed TNA spokesperson MA Sumanthiran's threat to sack him from the Tamil National Alliance and accused party leader R Sampanthan and Mr Sumanthiran of wanting to be in the good books of the new government whilst ignoring Tamil demands.

    Mr Wigneswaran said he was able to remain "neutral" with regards to party politics as he was not a member of any of the political parties that make up the TNA.

    The chief minister pointed that he had only agreed to be a candidate on the condition that he would be supported by all parties and that he was, in reality, a candidate of the people of the Northern Province which was why he got 130,000 preferential votes. Therefore, his only commitment would be to the voters, the New Indian Express quoted him as saying.

  • Peiris warns against amending PTA and releasing Tamil political detainees

    Sri Lanka's former foreign minister GL Peiris has warned of the "dangers" of amending the controversial /Prevention of Terrorism Act.

    Speaking to media in Colombo on Monday, the former minister accused the government of buckling under pressure from the Global Tamil Forum and the Tamil National Alliance.

    The former minister said the government would amend the act first, as an initial step to repeal the PTA in full, in order to implement pledges made to the TNA.

    Mr Peiris claimed that the remaining 235 political detainees were all responsible for acts of terrorism, adding that former president Mahinda Rajapaksa's government had rehabilitated and released around 12,000 former LTTE members.

  • Ambassador Power to visit Jaffna next week

    The US Ambassador to the UN Samantha Power will travel to the North-East next week, after visits to southern Sri Lanka and India.

    Ambassador Power will visit Jaffna and meet with local government officials, NGOs and communities affected by the armed conflict. She will also meet with members of the local press corps, including by visiting the headquarters of Uthayan newspaper, which has been repeatedly targeted throughout the conflict. She is expected to meet with NPC Chief Minister CV Wigneswaran when in the Tamil-dominated North-East.

    The senior US official will also participate in the inauguration of a new wing of Osmania College, which suffered significant damage during the conflict, as well as tour the Jaffna Library, where she will announce US support for the local restoration of ancient Tamil manuscripts, according to a press release.

  • Over 100k affected by severe floods in North-East Sri Lanka
    Over 100,000 people are expected to be affected by severe flooding in the North-East of Sri Lanka following heavy rainfall over the last four days.

  • Sri Lankan minister lashes out at France in wake of Paris attacks

    A Sri Lankan government minister has hit out at France for teaching Sri Lanka about “good governance and democracy”, in the aftermath of the Paris attacks that killed 129 people.

    Minister Nimal Siripala de Silva said the French government, alongside other Western countries had put pressure on Sri Lanka to adhere to "good governance" during the armed conflict.

  • Sri Lankan president reiterates Buddhist links with Aung San Suu Kyi

    Sri Lankan president Maithripala Sirisena has reiterated Buddhist links with Myanmar’s opposition National League for Democracy (NLD) party, led by Aung San Suu Kyi, in a congratulatory message following the party’s electoral victory last week.

    “It is indeed a personal achievement for you and your party in the peaceful struggle for democracy over the years in your country,” said Mr Sirisena.

    “Sri Lanka and Myanmar share long standing relations which is underpinned by Theravada Buddhism and had been nurtured by frequent exchange of pilgrims and people to people contacts,” he added.

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