• Over 1000 families remain displaced in Jaffna says minister

    Sri Lanka’s Minister of Rehabilitation, Resettlement and Hindu Affairs told parliament that 1318 families remain displaced and live in resettlement camps across the Jaffna district on Wednesday.
  • Families of Indian fishermen protest against Sri Lankan navy
    Indian fishermen and their families observed a hunger strike on Wednesday to protest against the Sri Lankan navy’s repeated arrest of Tamil Nadu fishermen.

    Members of 11 fishing associations held the protest in Rameswaram, calling on the Indian government to help them trace Vilvaraj – a fisherman who went missing at sea last month.

    Colleagues of Vilvaraj told of how the Sri Lankan navy had rammed their fishing boat with the attack craft causing the boat to sink. Whilst three of the fishermen were subsequently threatened at gun point by the Sri Lankan navy not to reveal details of the incident, Vilvaraj is thought to have been trapped and drowned in the sunken boat.
  • Vishvamadu rape case highlights structural sexual violence against minorities says WAN
    The case of a Tamil woman raped by Sri Lankan military soldiers in Vishvamadu highlights the structural nature of the sexual violence against ethnic minority women in Sri Lanka, and the barriers such victims face in seeking justice, said a collective of women's groups based in the North-East, Women's Action Network (WAN), on Thursday.

    Saluting the bravery of one of the victims who pursued justice despite being intimidated and harassed by the military after she lodged a complaint in June 2010, WAN criticised the "insensitive manner in which the [southern] media has reported on or dealt with cases of sexual violence against women" including this case.

  • Two paramilitary members detained by CID over TNA MP killing
    Two paramilitary members were detained by Sri Lanka's Criminal Investigation Department (CID) on Thursday, for questioning over the assassination of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) MP, Joseph Pararajasingham in 2005.

    The two men were detained in Batticaloa, the Colombo Page reported.

    Edwin Silva Krishna Kandaraja and Rengasami Kanyagama were two former LTTE members who broke away with the Karuna faction of the LTTE which later aligned itself with the Sri Lankan government.

  • Sri Lankan army gifts charity bikes to children in Kilinochchi


    The Sri Lankan military handed over bicycles to school children in Kilinochchi on Wednesday.



    The event took place as part of the Sri Lankan cricketer, Kumar Sangakkara's 'Bikes for Life' campaign, and happened in conjunction with a cricket tournament also organised with the assistance of the Sri Lankan military in Kilinochchi for local school cricket teams.

  • Two Indian citizens arrested on visa violations
    Two Indian nationals were arrested by Sri Lankan police in Vakarai on Wednesday for allegedly violating their visas, reports Ceylon Today.

    The men, aged 36 and 40 from Tamil Nadu, were accused of engaging in commercial activities.

  • Sri Lankan soldiers sentenced for gang rape of Tamil woman

    A group of four Sri Lankan soldiers have been sentenced to 25 years in jail for the gang rape of a Tamil woman that took place in 2010.

    The Jaffna High Court found the men from Sri Lanka’s 572 Brigade guilty of raping the 27-year old Tamil mother of two, in Kilinochchi in 2010.

  • Sri Lankan parliament debates implementation of death penalty
    Sri Lankan lawmakers called for the reinstatement of capital punishment today, in a debate ahead of interviews for a new hangman next week.

    The debate was started by Colombo District UNP MP Hirunika Premachandra’s motion to reinstate the death penalty in the face of “increasing anti-social and violent activities”.

    Sri Lanka’s Minister of Justice Wijeyadasa Rajapaksha meanwhile noted 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 debate came ahead of Sri Lanka’s interviews for the post of hangman next week. The gallows at the Welikada Prison, a site notorious for the endemic use of sexual violence and torture against Tamil detainees, were also being refurbished.
  • Sri Lankan military engaged in fishing in North-East
    Sri Lankan military personnel are actively engaged in catching shrimp in the North-East which is having damaging effects on the environment, complained the Mullaitivu district Federation of Fishermen Societies.

    The fishermen stated the military involvement in shrimp fishing was affecting their livelihoods and the use of boats was having detrimental environmental effects on the river.
  • Janatha Sevaka Pakshaya calls for rejection of UN resolution on Sri Lanka

    The general secretary of the Janatha Sevaka Pakshaya said that the Sri Lankan government should reject a United Nations Human Rights Council resolution calling for accountability for mass atrocities committed on the island.

    Addressing a press conference, Somawansa Amarasinghe, the former leader of the JVP who founded the JSP party earlier this year, said:

    “This is a clear threat to our sovereignty and integrity as we are capable of conducting a domestic probe. The US, motivated by separatists, only wants to reap certain benefits from bringing the resolution. If this resolution was implemented, it will be a victory to the separatist elements.”

  • Sri Lanka authorises CID to detain former paramilitary cadres for questioning
    Sri Lanka’s Chief Magistrate authorised the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) to detain 2 former LTTE cadres for a period of 90 days to question them about the assassination of a former MP Joseph Pararajasingham.

    Edwin Silva Krishna Kandaraja and Rengasami Kanyagama were two former LTTE members who broke away with the Karuna paramilitary group which later aligned itself with the Sri Lankan government.
  • Tamil Civil Society Forum activist's residence visited by Sri Lanka surveillance outfit

    The residence of a well-known lawyer and rights activist Father Yogeswaran was visited by persons claiming to be from the “Police Media Unit” in Trincomalee on Monday.

    Father Yogeswaran who is currently still abroad after speaking on panels at the United Nations Human Rights Council last month is a co-ordinator of the Trincomalee branch of the Tamil Civil Society and anti-disappearances activist.

    The “Police Media unit” is thought to be a proxy surveillance unit for Sri Lanka’s intelligence service. Last month, Tamil activists organising campaigns calling for an international accountability process to deal with the findings of the OISl report were also approached by personnel from the “Police Media Unit.”

    Father Yogeswaran was well received at the UNHRC and spoke on Tamil sentiment in Sri Lanka at a range of side events organised by Amnesty International and the International Movement Against All Forms of Discrimination and Racism (IMADR).

    Speaking at an Amnesty International event at the UNHRC last month Father Yogeswaran said,

    “We talk about transition but there is still no transition in the North-East. There is still military presence and surveillance.”

    Commenting on the Tamil vote to bring in Sirisena at January’s presidential elections Father Yogeswaran said, “The victim community suffered for years before the war through systemic discrimination, they didn’t randomly pick up arms. Despite the systemic discrimination, the minority community brought positive change for the whole island. Yet still for the minority community nothing has changed. This is why there was a rise in protests in North-East over last months.

  • Finance bill discourages private sector investment - Ceylon Chamber of Commerce

    The Ceylon Chamber of Commerce says the finance bill proposed in March was sending 'negative signals' to the private sector and discouraged investment, LBO reports.

    “The CCC believes that the Finance Bill of March 2015, presented to Parliament recently sends a negative signal to the private sector and is likely to deter investment,” the statement said.

  • ‘India should realise the real face of Sri Lanka’ says DMK leader

    Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) leader and M Karunanidhi called on the Indian government to “realise the real face of Sri Lanka” in a statement issued in Chennai on Monday.

    Calling on India to support an international inquiry into mass atrocities committed by Sri Lanka the former chief minister said:

    “Countries like the United States of America and the United Kingdom that moved the resolution and countries like India that supported it should realise the real face of Sri Lanka.”

    “A [UN] resolution by India for an international inquiry will fulfil the long pending demand of the Tamils across the world. It will also provide India an opportunity to correct itself,” he added.

  • Minister guarantees protection of Sri Lanka’s ‘war heroes’

    A Sri Lankan minister said his government would ensure the safety of Sri Lankan troops, after a UN resolution mandated an accountability mechanism to prosecute for mass atrocities committed during the final stages of the armed conflict.

    The Island quoted Sri Lanka’s University Education and Highways Minister Lakshman Kiriella as saying “the government would not allow injustice to be caused to the war heroes” and that it would “ensure the safety of the war heroes so that there would be no problem for them”.

    He also said the probe would be a “domestic” mechanism.

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