• Sri Lankan government refuses to pardon Tamil political prisoners

    Sri Lankan’s Minister of Law and Order and Prison Reforms refused to grant any pardons to Tamil political prisoners held in jails across the island, following protests against their continued detention last week.

  • ‘No empirical research’ in opposition to CEPA says Indian High Commissioner

    India’s High Commissioner to Sri Lanka Y. K. Sinha said he was surprised by opposition to Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) between the two governments, stating there was no empirical basis for its rejection.

    “They state a large number of Indians would come to Sri Lanka including barbers, lawyers and professors even and that they would take over Sri Lanka... These claims are amusing and completely untrue,”
    said the High Commissioner at the Annual Research Symposium 2015 held in Colombo.

    “What surprises me the most is that there is no empirical research to lay the proper facts before the people here,” he added.

  • Sri Lankan president vows to protect 'hard-earned dignity' of army

    Sri Lankan president Maithripala Sirisena pledged to protect the country’s military, stating that he “will not allow anyone to degrade the armed forces in any way”.

    Addressing the unveiling of a “War Hero Monument” at Panagoda on Monday, Mr Sirisena declared:

    “I will not let the quality and standards of the Armed Forces deteriorate in any way, nor would I allow any forces to degrade the image of the hard-earned dignity of the Sri Lankan armed forces”.

    Referring to his willingness to increase the number of Sri Lankan troops participating in UN peacekeeping missions, the president added:

    “The world has recognized your services, and the UN positively responded to my request for allocation of more and more openings for our servicemen to serve in peace-keeping contingents. They would certainly assist us”.

    “Despite various criticisms, in front of  this Monument, I assure you that our armed forces would not in any way be weakened, nor it be subjected to any degradation under me,” added Mr Sirisena.

  • Promises to break cycle of impunity in Sri Lanka must be kept says ICTJ
    Sri Lanka must break the cycle of impunity by overcoming political pressure to water down the approach concluded the International Center for Transitional Justice (ICTJ).

    Speaking to the think tank, co-founder of the South Asian Center for Legal Studies Niran Anketell, stressed that Sri Lanka lacked the core competencies regarding the investigation and prosecution of international crimes as well as witness protection.
  • PEARL calls for release of Tamil political prisoners
    In a statement coinciding with the anniversary of the Bindunuwewa massacre of 27 Tamil political detainees, People for Equality and Relief in Lanka (PEARL) called for the release of Tamil political detainees in Sri Lanka.
     
    Highlighting that Tamil prisoners continue to languish indefinitely in prisons, PEARL's release, said,

    “The Bindanuwewa massacre came days after Tamil detainees launched a protest for their release. Fifteen years later, hundreds of Tamil political detainees across the country are still calling for their immediate release from illegal, arbitrary detention, with widespread protests held across the North-East by Tamil civil society earlier this month, in support of the hunger-striking detainees. Most of the detainees have been incarcerated for many years, without being charged — a clear violation of international law. Disturbingly, a recent UN report found that sexual abuse and torture of Tamil detainees was likely to be widespread and systemic. Sri Lanka’s recent pledge to swiftly deal with the issue of unlawful detention is promising; without action, however, such words are meaningless.”

    Reiterating calls for the release of political prisoners, the statement added,

    “PEARL urges the U.S. government to demand that Sri Lanka uphold its obligations under international law and  release  political prisoners. Families of thousands of “disappeared” Tamils are demanding answers as part of the right to truth. The government of Sri Lanka must immediately release a list of names of all detainees and then process their cases expeditiously. Investigations into prison massacres against Tamils must be conducted with international oversight, with credible and effective prosecutions of the perpetrators. Families desperate for answers deserve nothing less.”
  • UN working group to work towards certainty on disappearances for families in North Sri Lanka
    One of the UN Working Group on Disappearances' roles will be to give certainty to the families of the disappeared, “particularly in Northern Sri Lanka,” said the Vice Chair of the UN Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances.
  • Ranil slams Rajapaksa for attempting to save surrendering LTTE officials

    Sri Lankan Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe criticised Mahinda Rajapaksa for reported attempts to facilitate the surrender of LTTE officials, who were subsequently executed by Sri Lankan troops.

    "Who wanted to save Pulidevan?” questioned Mr Wickremesinghe in parliament on Friday.
    "I do not shed any tears for Pulidevan,” he added. “If not for him, Rajapaksa would not have been able to take power. It is by trying to save Pulidevan that the country is now facing this white flag crisis.”

    LTTE Chief Peace Secretariat Pulidevan, political wing leader B Nadesan and other senior LTTE officials were gunned down by Sri Lankan troops whilst attempting to surrender on the morning of 18 May 2009. The incident, since dubbed the “white flag” killings, has been described in detail by reports and eye witnesses.

    "Why did the regime want to save Pulidevan?” said the prime minister on Friday. “I don't like people being killed, but Pulidevan is a man whose actions put the Tamil community in jeopardy,” he added. "Instead of leaving battle field decisions to field commanders, the then government tried to interfere. They were negotiating a surrender… If it was not a surrender that was negotiated, we won't be facing this problem today."

    The prime minister also implicated the former president Mahinda Rajapaksa in the assassination of former Sri Lankan Foreign Minister Lakshman Kadirgamar. 

    "There is a connection between the Kadirgamar assassination and the presidential election," Mr Wickremesinghe said. “The Kadirgamar assassination must be thoroughly probed and all this will come out.”

  • Rajapaksa calls on MPs not to allow ‘jailing of war heroes’

    Former Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa called on lawmakers “regardless of party affiliation” to block moves to pass new legislation to prosecute for war crimes in Sri Lanka.

    In a statement delivered at a press conference, Mr Rajapaksa said “the people of this country should be aware of the challenge confronting the country as a result of the government co-sponsoring the Geneva resolution against Sri Lanka”.  

    “This is nothing but a project to persecute our war heroes,” he said, adding that “no self-respecting citizen should allow this to happen”.

    A UN Human Rights Council resolution on Sri Lanka calls for the “reform its domestic law” to allow for “the trial and punishment of those most responsible for the full range of crimes under the general principles of law recognized by the community of nations relevant to violations and abuses of human rights and violations of international humanitarian law”.

    “Parliament has the power to thwart all these plans being made to victimise our war heroes who sacrificed so much in the war against terror,” said Mr Rajapaksa.

  • ‘Jaffna has become a den of RAW’ claims JVP
    JVP leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake claimed India’s intelligence agency, the Research and Analysis Wing (RAW), had infiltrated Jaffna and was aiming to destabilise the region.
  • Sri Lankan president pays tribute to UNP minister

    Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena paid tribute to the late UNP minister Gamini Dissanayake on Saturday, stating that he hoped to complete the much colonisation projects that were started decades ago.

    Speaking at the 21st death anniversary commemoration ceremony, Mr Sirisena said he admired the late minister, who headed the controversial Mahaweli Development project.
    The project, which began under the UNP government of 1977, was one of many state-sponsored colonisation projects that took place in the Tamil North-East.

    “I like the Mahaweli Development Ministry for several reason,” said Mr Sirisena. “On one hand, I admire the Mahaweli civilisation and culture Minister Dissanayake made, and on the other, I want to complete the Moragahakanda-Kaluganga project he hoped to do.”

    Speaking on the colonisation projects at the time, Mr Dissanayake had said “We have decided to colonise four districts including Mannar with Sinhalese people by destroying forests. A majority of Sinhalese will be settled there. If you like you also can migrate there.” (S
    ee more on state sponsored colonisation here.)

    Mr Sirisena also praised Mr Dissanayake, who was killed by a suicide bomber in 1994. The minister is infamous for his statement weeks after the Black July riots in 1983, where he warned that “in 14 minutes, the blood of every Tamil in the country can be sacrificed to the land by us [the Sinhalese]”.

  • 15 years since Bindunuwewa prison massacre

    Police officers who were convicted but then released on appeal for the massacre of Tamil political detainees in 2000 (Virakesari)

    Fifteen years ago an armed mob of Sinhala villagers stormed a rehabilitation centre and killed at least 28 Tamil youths, as security forces stood by and even joined in.

    The centre in the southern town of Bindunuwewa was jointly run by several bodies, including the Presidential Secretariat, under then-president Chandrika Kumaratunga, the Child Protection Authority, the Ministry of Defence and the Ministry of Rehabilitation and Reconstruction.

    Dozens of Tamil youths in their late teens and early twenties were held here on suspicion of supporting the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, supposedly undergoing rehabilitation for a few months before their release. A few days before the massacre, detainees protested against prolonged detention, sometimes over a year, and the deliberate withholding of letters from relatives by the authorities.

    The next morning a mob of local Sinhalese, reported by UTHR to be 2,000 strong, had formed outside the detention facility. They entered the centre and attacked the inmates with knives, machetes, clubs and iron rods, and set fire to the residence halls. Police officers stood by and in at least one instance opened fire on the inmates. A military detachment in the area was also withdrawn the previous day, indicating a premeditated attack.

  • Sri Lanka must tell truth about international component of UNHRC resolution says Tamil CIvil Society Forum

    The Tamil Civil Society Forum (TCSF) spokesperson, whilst speaking on the findings of Sri Lanka’s Presidential Commission of Inquiry into Complaints of Abductions and Disappearances, called on Sri Lanka’s government to take the reconciliation process forward by telling the truth about the United Nations Human Rights Council resolution on accountability in Sri Lanka.

     



    Noting that the government was downplaying the international component of the criminal investigation that it signed up to at the UNHRC, Guruparan Kumaravadivel said,


    “The new government cosponsored the UN resolution on accountability in Sri Lanka which called for foreign judges and prosecutor participation but they have been playing down the foreign involvement part of the resolution and suggesting merely involvement of experts.…They are not speaking truth about the resolution let alone being prepared to speak about what really happened in Sri Lanka, not just in the last phases of the war but over the last 30 years. And this is where the problem is. If even this government is not willing to talk to the Sinhalese on the need for an honest recounting of what happened. They should start by honestly telling the Sinhalese the honest purpose of the resolution.”

  • Sri Lanka police rejects HRW report on torture

    The Sri Lankan police force has rejected a report by Human Rights Watch, which said that detainees were regularly tortured in custody.

    The New York-based organisation found that police frequently use torture to try to obtain confessions rather than undertaking the more difficult and time-consuming process of gathering evidence through investigations.

    Cases detailed in the report are only from the south of the island, as access to the Tamil-dominated North-East was restricted to human rights organisations.

    The report named 'We Live in Constant Fear': Lack of Accountability for Police Abuse in Sri Lanka, detailed severe beatings, electric shocks, rubbing chili paste on genitals and suspension from ropes in stress positions, amongst various methods used by the Sri Lankan police.

  • Sri Lanka's Foreign Minister announces four new institutions to deal with truth, accountability and reparations
    Sri Lanka’s foreign minister, speaking in parliament after a debate on the United Nations Human Rights Council, Mangala Samraweera outlined government plans to create four separate institutions to ensure the suffering of those who have lost loved ones is recognised, crims is punished, and any injustice is remedied.

    Mr Samaraweera outlined four separate institutions; A commission for Truth Justice Reconciliation and Non-recurrence; An Office on Missing Persons based on the principle of the families right to know, to be set up by Statute with expertise form the ICRC; A Judicial Mechanism with a Special Counsel to be set up by Statute; An Office for Reparations to be set up by Statute.

    Full speech reproduced below:
  • Is Sirisena ready to release Tamil Political Prisoners? - Taylor Dibbert
    Sri Lanka’s government could be doing much more to heal the wounds of the war and address Tamil grievances writes Taylor Dibbert in the Diplomat.
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