• BJP to ‘free Sinhalese’ from oppression

    The leader of the Bodu Jana Peramuna (BJP) Galagodaaththe Gnanasara says the party is contesting the forthcoming election to “free” the Sinhalese from oppression by “invading groups and fundamentalist groups”.

    Mr Gnanasara told Ceylon Today that the only goal of the BJP is to “revive the Sinhalese”, who have been suppressed by invaders.

    “The Sinhalese were suppressed since they achieved so called freedom. They were suppressed by Black Europeans vigorously throughout history and continue to be so,

    “That is why we are coming forward. We will free the Sinhalese from invading groups and fundamentalist groups. These fundamentalists have manipulated the prominent individuals of this country,

  • India approves Chinese manufacturing plant proposal in Tamil Nadu

    India’s home ministry gave clearance to a major Chinese telecommunications firm to set up a manufacturing base in Tamil Nadu.

  • Sri Lanka concludes joint military training exercise with China
    Sri Lanka and China concluded  the second phase of a joint army exercise called “Exercise Sil Route on 2015,” on Monday.

    The joint exercise focused on ground combat, jungle warfare and aircraft and building training, reports

  • Tamil people must attain self-rule' - Northern Province Chief Minister

    The Northern Province Chief Minister, C. V. Wigneswaran, has stressed that comprehensive autonomy for Tamils in the North-East is the only way of recovering from the effects of genocide.

    “For the well-being of Tamils in our country, the Tamil people must attain self-rule,” Mr Wigneswaran said while addressing the annual conference of the Federation of Tamil Sangams in North America (FeTNA).

    Speaking of the genocide resolution recently passed by the Northern Provincial Council, Mr Wigneswaran said:

    “Several of my Sinhalese friends asked how I, with my interest in humanitarianism and spirituality, could have allowed such a resolution to pass. To that I replied that I had passed this resolution because of my commitment to humanitarianism and spirituality.”

  • Sinhalese organisations slam CM Wigneswaran

    The Federation of National Organisations said the use of the term “Tamil lands” by the NPC Chief Minister CV Wigneswaran during his visit to the US was a “grave threat”, AdaDerana reported.

    Gevindu Kumaratunga, a member of the collective, said in a press conference the chief minister had used the term while urging the withdrawal of troops.

    “What if we say this is ‘Sinhalese’ lands? How will voices be raised regarding racism if any person accidentally uses that word?” he asked.

  • Ranil and Mahinda should work together – BJP

    Former president Mahinda Rajapaksa and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe should work together and cooperate, Bodu Bala Sena General Secretary Galagodaaththe Gnanasara, who is also the head of the new party Bodu Jana Peramuna (BJP), said on Tuesday.

    Mr Rajapaksa and Mr Wickremesinghe should not treat each other as enemies when contesting, the monk said, requesting former president Chadrika Kumaratunga not to treat Mr Rajapaksa with enmity, the DailyMirror said.

    He further said Sarath Fonseka, Gotabaya Rajapaksa, Udaya Gammanpila, Champika Ranawake, Wimal Weerawansa and the JVP should forget their political differences and treat each other with respect and honour.

    “We should consider these people as Sri Lankans and should work under a national policy for at least two years. Party leaders should cooperate with each other because if not it will be catestrophic for Sri Lanka,” Mr Gnanasara said.

  • UPFA confident about winning general election

    The UPFA says it will win the election without difficulty as the 6.2 million people who voted for President Maithripala Sirisena would not vote for the new alliance, the UNFGG, while the 5.8 million who voted for Mahinda Rajapaksa would continue to vote for him.

    General Secretary of the party, Susil Premajayanthe said 600,000 Tamil votes and 700,000 JVP votes must be deducted from the votes received by Mr Sirisena in January, as the electorate would vote for the parties themselves.

    "It means 1.3 million deducted from the 6.2 million the UNFGG is hoping to obtain," he said at a press conference.

    “We have won 10 out of 22 districts at the January 8 presidential election. We lost three districts -- Badulla, Gampaha and Puttalam in a close fight and there is no doubt that we can regain those easily at the election. Then Polonnaruwa district is an absolute win for the UPFA making it 14 out 22 districts for the UPFA. Then we will get 14 bonus seats also from the 14 districts we will win,

  • Ranil and Mahinda get blessings from sacred tooth relic

    Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesighe and former president Mahinda Rajapaksa both visited the Temple of the Tooth on Tuesday, to get blessings ahead of the general elections in a month’s time.

  • Sirisena vows to defeat Rajapaksa

    Incumbent Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena vowed to defeat the former president Mahinda Rajapaksa in the upcoming Sri Lankan general elections

    "I continue to stand against Mahinda Rajapaksa," said Mr Sirisena, adding that "he will be defeated again". The current president went on to state that he was against the nomination of Mr Rajapaksa under the ruling UPFA coalition. However former president Rajapaksa indicated he will be running for the post of prime minister with the UPFA, after having submitted his nomination papers, despite Mr Sirisena being the coalition leader.

    The move has stirred unrest and criticism in the UPFA, with many high level defections and criticism of the president in recent weeks. Mr Sirisena responded by saying he applauded the criticism, which he said was only possible to his election victory earlier this year.

    However he went on to warn that the freedom that he claimed to restore "should be enjoyed with a sense of responsibility".

  • Bribes deterred German investors from Sri Lanka claims minister
    A Sri Lankan government minister claimed that German investors were deterred from working in Sri Lanka, as the previous government demanded bribes and commissions.

    Speaking on the announcement by German car manufacturer Volkswagen to set up a plant on the island, Sri Lanka’s Deputy Investment Promotions Minister Eran
    Wickremeratne said previous demands for bribes had been a major deterrent.
  • Shivajilingham contests against Rajapaksa to demonstrate Tamil opposition
    The Northern Provincial Councillor, M K Shivajilingham announced on Tuesday his decision to contest Sri Lanka's general election from the Sinhala district of Kurunegela where the former president, Mahinda Rajapaksa will be contesting.

    "Our aim is to show our fierce condemnation of the former president Mahinda Rajapaksa, the current president, Maithripala Sirisena and the current prime minister [Ranil Wickremasinghe]," Mr Shivajilingham told reporters on Tuesday.

    "During the rule of former president Mahinda Rajapaksa, tens of thousands of Tamil people were massacred. In this situation where we face a variety of hardships, and in order to prominently demonstrate our opposition [to him], 18 of us, including myself have decided to contest the Kurunegala district."

    "Specifically, there will be Sinhalese who will support him, but we will be there to show the Tamil opposition of him."

  • TNPF files nominations for Jaffna

    The Tamil National People’s Front has filed its nomination for the Jaffna electoral district earlier today.
    The party, which will contest under the All Ceylon Tamil Congress’ bicycle symbol, is standing in all 5 electoral districts in the North-East.

  • Sri Lanka teaches Indonesia about ‘rehabilitation success’

    The Sri Lankan military hosted an Indonesian government delegation this week and showcased the “success” it has had in rehabilitating former LTTE cadres.

    The commander of Sri Lanka’s army met with the five member Indonesian delegation, as they listened to a lecture on the “rehabilitation” programme the Sri Lankan government has in place for former LTTE fighters.

    A report last year detailed the programme of physical and psychological torture in Sri Lanka’s “rehabilitation” camps for former LTTE members.

    Tamils Against Genocide (TAG) gathered evidence from former detainees, who detailed systematic torture, beatings, humiliation and sexual abuse in the camps, and concluded that rehabilitation in Sri Lanka is a “physical and mental pacification programme that forms a cornerstone of the Sinhala-Buddhist nationalist state-building project”.

    Major General Hettiarachchi however told the Indonesian delegation that Sri Lanka was ”taking all necessary efforts in transforming the minds of those brainwashed combatants from violence to non-violence and enlightened them on the value of life and correct social commitments while living in harmony with all as law-abiding citizens of one country”.

  • Civil society organisations call for power sharing and accountability
    Over one hundred civil society organisations and individuals called for a “meaningful power sharing” solution to Sri Lanka’s ethnic conflict and accountability for those who have disappeared, in a letter addressed to all political parties competing in the upcoming Sri Lankan parliamentary elections.

    The letter, which has 123 signatories, called for all parties to “commit to a political and constitutional settlement of the ethnic conflict based on meaningful power-sharing”. 

    Signed by organisations and individuals from across the island, the letter says that after the presidential elections earlier this year, “there appeared to be a consensus that… the longer term issues of peace and reconciliation, the process of transitional justice, an end to the culture of impunity in respect of all human rights violations and a political settlement of the ethnic conflict, would be addressed in earnest”. 
  • RSF & JDS condemn revival of Sri Lankan Press Council

    Reporters Without Borders (RSF) and Journalists for Democracy in Sri Lanka (JDS) said they were “alarmed” at a move by Sri Lankan President Maithripala to revive the government’s much criticised Press Council.

    Benjamin Ismaïl, the head of RSF’s Asia-Pacific desk, said,

    “By reviving this mechanism for harassing the Sri Lankan media, President Sirisena is dashing the hopes raised by his election and is again placing the media under a permanent threat of authoritarian abuses”.

    “We urge the president to rescind this decision and instead to begin a complete overhaul of the Press Council with the aim of turning it into an entity that guarantees media independence,” he added.

    JDS also said, “the government’s move to re-enact the controversial legislation reinforces serious and legitimate fears, as the desire to curtail media freedom always reflects anti-democratic intentions”.

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