• 19 Indian fishermen arrested by Sri Lankan navy



    Nineteen Indian fishermen were arrested by the Sri Lankan navy on Saturday off the coast of Vadamaradchi East.

    The arrested men, who are from Tamil Nadu, were accused of violating the international maritime border. They will be produced before Point Pedro magistrate today.

  • ‘There is much to be done in Sri Lanka’ says UK minster

    The British Minister of State at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office said there remains “much to be done” in Sri Lanka after a resolution was passed at the UN Human Rights Council, mandating an accountability mechanism for violations of international humanitarian law committed during the armed conflict.

    “I’m hopeful that the next stage of this process will be accompanied by further progress on some of the other commitments President Sirisena has made – from demilitarisation, to anti-corruption work, to the release of political prisoners, to reducing tensions between communities and disengaging the military from commercial activities,” said Hugo Swire, in a blog post earlier this week.

    “There is much to be done, and we in the UK are keen to offer support wherever we can. We’ll be discussing this with the Sri Lankan government in the coming weeks.”

  • Sri Lanka ranked 6th on CPJ impunity index
    The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) ranked Sri Lanka 6th in its 2015 Global Impunity Index, which “spotlights countries where journalists are slain and the killers go free”.

    Published this week, ahead of the International Day to End Impunity for Crimes against Journalists on November 2, the index examined journalist murders across the world that took place between September 1 2005, and August 31 2015.

    “Sri Lanka moved to sixth place from fourth on this year's Index, its improvement due not to prosecutions-the island nation still maintains a perfect record of impunity in journalist slayings-but to the fact that no journalists have been murdered for their work since the end of civil war in 2009,” said the CPJ.
  • Sri Lanka parliament to debate OISL report this month
    Sri Lanka's parliament is to debate the OHCHR Investigation on Sri Lanka (OISL) report and the subsequent UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) resolution on October 20 and 21, reports the Daily Mirror.

    The Sri Lankan prime minister, Ranil Wickremesinghe said the reports of the commissions of Udulagama and Paranagama will also be debated on those days.


  • UPFA to stage countrywide protests against UNHRC resolution warns Sri Lanka MP

    The opposition United People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA) will stage “massive countrywide protests” to raise awareness about the dangers of the United Nations Human Rights Council resolution on Sir Lanka’s atrocities, warned an MP on Saturday.

    The leader of the Mahajana Eksath Peramuna, a coalition member of the (UPFA), said,

  • Sri Lanka acquires EU grant to develop Central and UVA Provinces

    The European Union agreed to provide a Euro 43.7 million grant for development projects in Sri Lanka.

    30 million of the grant will go to the Central and UVA Provinces reports Colombo page.

  • US announces further support for demining efforts in Sri Lanka

    The US Ambassador to Colombo Atul Keshap, announced an additional $1.745 million to add to the demining initiatives of international and domestic organisations working under the National Mine Action Committee (NMAC)

    Reiterating US support for demining in Sri Lanka, Mr Keshap said,

  • Pastor harassed by officials and Buddhist monks

    Police summoned and questioned a Christian pastor after four Buddhist monks forcibly entered a church in Bandaragama, in the Kalutara District, on September 6, and claimed the church was not a registered place of worship.

    The Officer in Charge of the police station ordered the pastor to register the church with the Ministry of Buddha Sasana and Religious Affairs in order to continue operation, and was made to sign a document stating he would not continue with his religious activities until this was done.

    The incident was reported in the National Christian Evangelical Alliance of Sri Lanka, in its periodic incident report.

    The church was initially visited by officials on August 31, when 2 officers from the Ministry of Buddha Sasana and Religious Affairs informed the pastor that they were investigating a petition submitted against him and his religious activities.

  • UNHRC resolution betrayed country - former JVP leader

    The general secretary of the People's Servants' Party, Somawanse Amarasinghe, said the resolution passed at the UN Human Rights Council last week was a betrayal of Sri Lanka.

    Mr Amarasinghe, who formerly led the JVP said he would form "the widest front" against imperialist, as they had not given up their agenda of dividing the country, the state-owned Daily News reported.

  • Japan lends $375m to Sri Lanka for new BIA terminal
    Japan has agreed this week to lend Sri Lanka $375 million in order to build a new terminal at Colombo's Bandaranaike International Airport (BIA).

    The agreement is part of the 'Partnership for Quality Infrastructure' and follows the Sri Lankan prime minister, Ranil Wickremesinghe's visit to Japan this week.

    See here for more.

  • 73 return after fleeing Sri Lanka to seek asylum in India
    Seventy-three refugees who fled Sri Lanka during the armed conflict and sought asylum in India left on Thursday to return home, reports The Hindu.

    Together with the assistance of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), the refugees intend on returning to their homes in the North-East.

    Many of those were young children when they fled and grew up in refugee camps across Tamil Nadu, where according to the paper, 1.02 lakh refugees remain.

  • Sri Lanka resolution key US outcome at UNHRC alongside Syria, Yemen
    The resolution on Sri Lanka was a key United States outcome at the UN Human Rights Council's (UNHRC) 30th session, alongside Syria, Yemen, Sudan, Burundi, and Bahrain, the US State Department noted in a statement following the session, which ended earlier this month in Geneva.

    "The U.S.-led resolution, which Sri Lanka co-sponsored, highlights the Sri Lankan government’s efforts to advance respect for human rights and strengthen good governance since January 2015, encourages the reform of domestic laws to facilitate accountability for past crimes related to the Sri Lankan civil war, affirms the importance of the participation of foreign judges and prosecutors in domestic accountability mechanisms, and requests further reporting by the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR)."

  • ‘Inclusion of exiled victims will be litmus test for Sri Lanka’ – Frances Harrison

    The inclusion of exiled victims and witnesses in Sri Lanka’s consultation for an accountability mechanism will be a litmus test of its credibility, writes former BBC correspondent Frances Harrison.

    Writing in the Huffington Post, Ms Harrison noted that “the extent of organised sexual violence and torture by the Sri Lankan security forces in the post-war period and right up to the present day and the chilling way every medical facility was deliberately attacked is now a matter of record,” with the release of the OISL report.

    “The fact the Sri Lankan security services this week went to question the only Tamil activist who spoke in public in Geneva appears to be an attempt to embarrass the government,” she added. “This sort of harassment causes disproportionate bad feeling and suspicion, especially when the target is a highly respected Catholic priest who works tirelessly with the families of the Disappeared.”

  • EU calls for death penalty to be abolished

    The European Union(EU) called for the abolition of the death penalty worldwide and welcomed Sri Lankan Justice Minister’s announcement that his government would vote in favour of the UN General Assembly resolution on a moratorium on the Death Penalty.

    The EU statement comes as Sri Lanka’s parliament debated the reinstatement of capital punishment and as the government prepares to interview for a new hangman next week.

    Sri Lanka’s Minister of Justice Wijeyadasa Rajapaksha said this week 
    that the Foreign Minister told the UN Human Rights Council last month that Sri Lanka would not implement capital punishment. Mr Rajapaksha, who is also minister of the Buddha Sasana, said that the matter had to be considered carefully, and would not be implemented this year as Sri Lanka voted in favour of a UN resolution for a moratorium on the death penalty.

    “The death penalty is a cruel and ineffective punishment,” said the EU. “Many death sentences are issued after confessions obtained by torture. Innocent people die and a person more likely to be sentenced to death if they are poor or belong to an ethnic or religious minority.”

  • Purely domestic inquiry to prove 'blamelessness of Sri Lanka' says SLFP

    The Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP), headed by President Maithripala Sirisena, said that there would be no room for an international or hybrid mechanism for Sri Lanka’s investigations into war time atrocities.

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