• Justice minister says capital punishment will not be scrapped in Sri Lanka

    Sri Lanka’s justice minister Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe said though a moratorium on the death penalty is in place, the decision has not been made to scrap capital punishment.

    Speaking to The Sunday Leader he denied capital punishment had been scrapped but said “the Foreign Ministry is considering voting for the moratorium this year also”.

    The European Union recently called for the abolition of the death penalty worldwide and welcomed Sri Lanka’s stand on the moratorium.

    However, the government is set to interview candidates to fill the post of hangman this week, with the gallows at Welikada prison reportedly undergoing refurbishment.

    Sri Lanka’s President Maithriapala Sirisena stated last month that he was expecting to approve capital punishment on the island by next year but, though he did not have to, would seek parliamentary approval first.

  • Wigneswaran urges president to ensure fasting Tamil detainees are not harmed
    The chief minister of the northern province, C V Wigneswaran, on Monday urged the Sri Lankan president, Maithripala Sirisena to ensure that Tamil detainees at Magazine prison who had launched a hunger strike demanding their release were not harmed by prison officials as has occurred routinely in the past.

    In a letter to the president, Mr Wigneswaran said, "Tamil prisoners are staging a fast today to register their protest at their prolonged imprisonment. There is concern that the fast may be violently dealt with by prison officers, as has happened in the past."

  • Red Cross official solicited 'sexual favours' for houses from Tamil war widows

    The Indian government has demanded an investigation into reports that an official from the Sri Lanka Red Cross Society (SLRCS) solicited “sexual favours” from Tamil war widows in return for houses from an Indian government-funded project.

    The Indian Express reported that Indian foreign ministry officials were taking the matter “extremely seriously” and called for a joint probe with the SLRCS. Instructions were also passed on to the Sri Lankan foreign ministry to prevent the accused individual from leaving.

    “We don’t want the accused officials to escape, so the Sri Lankan foreign ministry and their immigration authorities have been informed,” an Indian official said.

    “India will not condone any such activity by any of the implementing partners of this project. The Government of India – through its High Commission in Colombo and the consulate in Jaffna – is conducting a joint probe along with the Sri Lankan Red Cross officials,” said an Indian High Commission spokesperson. Another diplomat told the Indian Express that the report would be investigated “expeditiously and thoroughly” and there was “no time-frame”.

    The probe comes after the Sunday Times reported SLRCS Kilinochchi Branch Secretary Thampu Sethupathy had received more than 30 written and verbal complaints with similar allegations of demands for sexual favours.

  • Inquiry is a ‘witch hunt against war heroes’ says UPFA MP
    UPFA member of parliament Dinesh Gunawardena slammed the proposed accountability mechanism to prosecute violations of international humanitarian law in Sri Lanka, stating it was “witch hunt against war heroes”.

    Mr Gunawardena, who is also the leader of the Mahajana Eksath Peramuna (People's United Front), told the Sunday Observer that though the UN resolution on Sri Lanka was a “clear violation of our constitution”.

    “Those who have been agitating for a separate state and supporting terrorism, are again at work,” he warned.
  • Military using vehicles abandoned by Tamil civilians during conflict

    The Sri Lankan military is using vehicles that fleeing Tamil civilians abandoned during the final phase of the armed conflict in 2009, reported the Sunday Times.

    Citing the case of 62 year old Kanthan Thadchanasingham, a farmer from Kilinochchi, it reported the military was now continuing to use his tractor that he had abandoned as he fled from shelling during the final days of the armed conflict, which saw tens of thousands of Tamil civilians killed.

    Mr Thadchanasingham, who lost his 12 year old daughter due to shelling in the final months of the war, told of how his family had fled from Kilinochchi to Mullivaikkal using his tractor. On the 15 May 2009, the farmer heeded the military’s call and crossed over to Sri Lankan government territory. He was subsequently held at the Menik Farm camp in Vavuniya.

    Since then he discovered his tractor, abandoned at Mullivakkal is now under the possession of the Sri Lankan military, which has been using it at the Iranamadu military camp in Kilinochchi.

    “I asked the military to handover my vehicle explaining the hardship we are facing but they refused. I went to many senior officials but nothing worked,” he said. “I even borrowed money from neighbours to get a Sinhala translator and to travel to the police station in Kilinochchi. I am now in debt.”

  • Sri Lanka and India complete joint counter-terrorism excercise

    A 14 day joint military training exercise on “counter terrorism and insurgency operations”  between Sri Lankan and Indian military was completed on Monday.

  • Sri Lankan govt to pay for legal costs of military facing war crimes charges
    The Sri Lankan government will pay for the legal costs of military personnel facing war crimes charges, Minister Champika Ranawaka assured military officers, the country's Sunday Times newspaper reported.

    The minister, who is also the General Secretary of the Buddhist monk party, the JHU, has reportedly been assigned the task of speaking to the armed forces about the OHCHR Investigation on Sri Lanka report, by the president, Maithripala Sirisena, and the prime minister, Ranil Wickremesinghe.

  • This is not a hybrid process reiterates Mangala
    Sri Lanka's foreign minister Mangala Samaraweera reiterated that the investigation to be established was not a "hybrid" mechanism, but a domestic process with the participation of foreign judges.

    “To make it credible we need the help of foreign experts,” Mr Samaraweera told the Sunday Times.

    The framework of the investigation would only take place after consultation with all stakeholders, which the government wanted to be completed by January he said.

  • Sri Lankan minister dismisses estimate of 40,000 Tamil deaths
    The Sri Lankan minister for skills development and vocational training, and former minister for human rights, Mahinda Samarasinghe, dismissed the estimate of 40,000 Tamil civilians killed at the end of the armed conflict in 2009, accusing the former UN official, Gordon Weiss of having "propagated the lie regarding 40,000 civilian deaths", reports The Island.

    There was absolutely no basis for such accusations, he reportedly added.
  • Sri Lanka committed to enhancing relations with China says FM
    Sri Lanka's foreign minister, Mangala Samaraweera on Friday reiterated the government's commitment to enhancing ties with China and bring relations "to a higher level", reports Colombo Page.

    China's Special Envoy and vice minister of foreign affairs, Liu Zhenmin, visited Sri Lanka this week, and also met with the president, Maithripala Sirisena and the prime minister Ranil Wickremesinghe.

  • Sri Lankan MP wants to take India to ‘International Tribunal’ over fishing issue

    Sri Lankan MP and Leader of the Democratic Left Front Vasudeva Nanayakkara called for India to be taken before an international tribunal, over the issue of Indian fishermen poaching in “Sri Lankan waters”, as Tamil Nadu's chief minister called for a "strong and sustained diplomatic initiative" from the Indian prime miniser.

    "We must take the case before the International Tribunal under the Law of the Sea Convention,”
    said Mr Nanayakkara. “The continuous violation of International Admiralty Law or the guidelines set by the International Maritime Courts is an international issue.”

    “The attempts at the bilateral level failed to find solutions," he added.

    His comments come as Tamil Nadu Chief Minister J Jaylalithaa wrote again to Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi saying “it is time the issue is taken up not only through the normal diplomatic channels, but at an appropriately high political level and the release of the fishermen and the boats secured without further delay”.

    "We are still awaiting the much anticipated strong and sustained diplomatic initiative to resolve the vexatious issue," she said.

  • Sri Lanka to scrap presidential commission on missing persons

    The Sri Lankan government announced that it will scrap a long running presidential commission on missing persons and replace it with another commission.

    Sri Lanka’s Justice Minister Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe, who is also minister for the Buddha Sasana, announced the abolition of the commission but said “we will not abandon its procedure”. Admitting that “even locally, most of the people are not happy with the Commission and they have no faith in its process” he added the government “will go ahead with a commission which will be more effective.”

    So far two interim reports have been submitted from the commission to the government, but have yet to be released publically.

    The chair of the commission, Justice Maxwell Paranagama, rejected criticism of the mechanism, stating that no one could do the job better. He had earlier spoken out against the UN Panel of Experts' estimated death toll of 40,000 Tamil civilians at the end of the armed conflict in 2009.

    Mr Rajapakshe also said the Sri Lankan government is also “considering” the repeal of the Prevention of the Terrorism Act (PTA).

  • Former Eastern Provincial Council Chief Minister arrested

    The Criminal Investigation Department (CID) has arrested the former Eastern Province Chief Minister Sivanesathurai Chandrakanthan, also known as Pillayan, over the killing of TNA MP Joseph Pararajasingham.

  • IMF and World Bank will give Sri Lanka unconditional support says Finance Minister
    Sri Lanka’s finance minister Ravi Karunanayke calimed that the World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF) had already agreed to extend unconditional support for Sri Lanka’s development initiatives, reports dailymirror.lk.

    Speaking from the annual meeting of the IMF and World Bank in Lima, Mr Karunayake, told press,
  • Sri Lankan army says ready to defend nation at all times on Army Day

    The Sri Lankan army is ready to defend the nation at all times said the army's Commander Lieutenant General Crishanthe De Silva on Saturday, addressing the 66th Army Day.

    Lieutenant General Crishanthe De Silva said in his address that “Sri Lankan soldiers are admired world over for their display of humanity, discipline, professionalism and integrity”. “These attributes will without doubt enable us to be more efficient when we embark on increasing our participation in UN.”

    “I urge all members of the Army to remain steadfastly loyal to the nation,” he added.

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