• Indian minister confirms Delhi is considering rail link with North-East

    The Union Minister of State for Transport, Pon Radhakrishnan, said India’s government is considering a proposal to establish a rail link between Rameshwaram in Tamil Nadu and Talaimannar, in the Tamil-dominated North-East of the island.

    The minister, speaking to reporters in Chennai, said the Prime Minister Narendra Modi-led BJP government is considering a proposal to establish a bridge to connect the two countries.

    In June India’s road transport and highways minister, Nitin Gadkari, said that a proposal for bridging the divide across the Palk Strait had been submitted to the Asian Development Bank (ADB), for a pre-feasibility study and subsequent financing, however the Sri Lankan government said it has not held any discussions with India on this issue.

  • Gotabhaya to cancel US citizenship

    Sri Lanka’s former defence secretary Gotabhaya Rajapksa says he has applied to have his US citizenship cancelled.

    Speaking to Ada Derana in response to conflicting reports regarding the forthcoming elections, the former president’s brother said he will not contest the polls in August, but that this decision was unrelated to the issue of his dual citizenship.

    “This has nothing to do with my citizenship issue,” he said, adding that he has already taken measures to cancel his dual citizenship. “I’ve already handed over the relevant documents to the US embassy, in this regard.”

    There have been repeated demands that the former defence secretary is prosecuted by US authorities, as he is a citizen of the country.

    In March Mr Rajapaksa said that if he was to move to the USA, he would be prosecuted and sentenced to death by electric chair.

  • Sirisena's reinstatement of Sri Lanka's regulatory Press Council condemned

    The Sri Lanka Press institute (SLPI) “vehemently” condemned the reactivation of the Sri Lanka Press Council by Maithripala Sirisena.

  • TNA MP rejects domestic inquiry, calls for international process to solve ethnic issue in Sri Lanka
    The Tamil National Alliance (TNA) MP for the Eastern Province P Ariyanethiran stressing the need for an international process to solve the “ethnic issue,” rejected Sri Lanka’s announcement of carrying out a domestic inquiry, reports Ceylon Today.

    “As we urged for an international inquiry the government is now emphasi

  • TNA decides on nominations for Sri Lankan parliamentary election
    The Tamil National Alliance (TNA) on Monday held a meeting to decide on the allocation of nominations within the alliance for the parliamentary election on August 17.

    The four member coalition met for eight hours to discuss the nominations, after the overall number of seats across the Jaffna electoral district were reduced. For the five vacant parliamentary seats in the district, each party is allowed to field a total of 10 nominations, which will be announced by the parties this week.


    Across the Northern and Eastern provinces, the Ilankai Thamil Arasu Katchi (ITAK) was allocated 23 nominations, Eelam People's Revolutionary Liberation Front (EPRLF) was allocated 8, Tamil Eelam Liberation Organization (TELO) 8 and the People's Liberation Organisation of Tamil Eelam (PLOTE) 5 nominations.

  • Military coordinates Hindu temple festival held in Sri Lankan HSZ

    The Sri Lankan military “organised and facilitated” a Hindu temple ceremony at a temple inside a High Security Zone (HSZ) in Jaffna on Tuesday, reports an official military website.

    The annual festival of the Veeramanikkathevanthurai Sri Kanngathevi temple, which is situated inside the Myliddy HSZ, took place on June 30 with the Sri Lankan military overseeing festivities.

  • Karumpuli Naal observed at Jaffna University


    Students at Jaffna University observed Karumpuli Naal - Black Tigers Day – on Sunday.
  • Maithri 'unaware' of Rajapaksa nomination

    A senior Buddhist monk says President Maithiripala Sirisena told him he did not know about the nomination of Mahinda Rajapaksa to contest the forthcoming general elections.

    Maduluwawe Sobitha, a key figure responsible for Sirisena's victory at January 8 vote, told reporters that he spoke with the president who claimed he was unaware of Rajapaksa getting a UPFA ticket.

  • JHU to withdraw from UPFA

    The Jathika Hela Urumaya, one of the main coalition partners of the current government led by President Sirisena, says it will leave the UPFA.

  • End of war did not signify end of conflict in Sri Lanka says Wigneswaran at Tamil diaspora meet

    The Northern Provincial Council Chief Minister, stressed that the “end of the war did not signify end of conflict,” whilst calling on Tamils in the US to assist in the creation of an environment that allowed Tamils in the North-East to thrive.

  • Former Sri Lankan army general denied US visa

    The former army commander and suspected war criminal Lt Gen Jagath Jayasuriya is thought to have been denied a visa to enter the United States for a private trip, the Daily Mirror reports.

    The visa application is said to have been submitted in May for the trip at the end of June, but while Mr Jayasuriya's wife's passport was returned by the embassy, the former Chief of Defence Staff's passport had still not been returned.

    When contacted by the Daily Mirror, a spokesperson for the US embassy in Colombo said that as a matter of policy, they cannot comment on individual cases. “That’s all we have to say at this moment,” he said.

  • GSP programme renewed for Sri Lanka

    The US has renewed its Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) benefits programme with Sri Lanka.

    In a statement the Department of Commerce said “The US President signed into law HR 1295 on June 29, 2015 re-authorizing the US GSP Program until 31 December 2017 providing preferential duty free entry into US market for nearly 5000 products from 122 designated beneficiary countries and territories, including Sri Lanka.”

    “The Embassy of Sri Lanka in Washington DC was an active member of the Alliance of GSP countries which joined other US stakeholders in advocating early renewal of the US GSP Program. In 2014, the United States has imported US $ 178 million worth of goods under the GSP program from Sri Lanka demonstrating 12.5 percent increase compared to 2013,” the statement further said.

    A review on Sri Lanka's eligibility for the programme was initially carried out after a petition was filed in 2008, outlining shortcomings in Sri Lanka’s recognition of worker rights.

  • Maithri pledges to 'protect silent revolution'

    Sri Lanka's President Maithripala Sirisena said he would not allow the "silent revolution" of the January 8 win over Mahinda Rajapaksa to be overturned.

    Speaking at an event in Matara, the president said he would protect the change which came to the country.

    "I did not enter politics randomly or abruptly – my experiences in politics spans close to 49 years. . . I will not let any party decision tarnish or harm the transformations that occurred in this country after January 8 – I will protect it,” he has said according to the DailyMirror.

    Meanwhile former minister and Rajapaksa-confidante T.B. Eknanayake told the paper the former president would contest from the Kurunegala district.

  • UNP outlines post-election priorities
    A prominent United National Party (UNP) MP Harsha de Silva said that the party would give top priority to develop the country’s education and health sector after elections.

    Speaking at a media brief, the former deputy finance minister, Mr de Silva, said,
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