• No confidence motion against Ranil to be submitted

    Over 100 MPs from the UPFA have signed a no-confidence motion against Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe.

  • US will work with Sri Lanka to ‘promote good governance and human rights’

    The United States plans to “do a lot to support Sri Lanka” said the Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary from the Bureau of South and Central Asian Affairs, during an address made to the Washington International Business Council this week.

    Richard E. Hoagland said that the Sri Lankan presidential elections which saw the defeat of former president Mahinda Rajapaksa had “brought about a sea-change in our relationship with Sri Lanka.”

  • Sri Lanka confident in restoring GSP+ trade concessions

    Sri Lanka’s deputy foreign minister Ajith Perera said that the country would be able to end the restrictions on the GSP+ trade benefits before the end of the year.

  • Sri Lanka rejects Oakland Institute 'silent war' report

    Sri Lanka's government has rejected a recent report by the Oakland Institute, which said a "silent war" through the military occupation of Tamil land in Sri Lanka continues to seek “Sinhalese domination in former Tamil homelands".

    Deputy foreign affairs minister Ajith Perera said to media the government "strongly rejects" the report published last week.

    The Long Shadow of War: Struggle for Justice in Post War Sri Lanka highlighted that at least 160,000 military Sinhalese soldiers remained in the Tamil North-East of Sri Lanka, with the military involved in processes that seized land from local populations and “systematically” suppressed Tamil culture and history.

    Noting demographic changes in the eastern provinces, the report found that some areas had seen the Tamil population halve due to state actions.

  • SLFP to promote Mahinda at elections - party spokesperson

    The SLFP will support former president Mahinda Rajapaksa at the forthcoming parliamentary elections, according to the party's spokesperson Dilan Perera.

    Mr Perera, who is also an MP for the UPFA coalition, said the party felt Mr Rajapaksa was popular and should be promoted so the election can be won.

    “Today there is huge support for Mahinda Rajapaksa so we must market him at the polls,” he said.

  • Protestors demand an end to violence against women

    Photographs: Tamil Guardian

    Protestors in Kilinochchi called for an end to violence against women and demanded justice for Tamil schoolgirl S Vithiya, who was raped and murdered in Pungudutivu last month.

    Dozens of protestors gathered in Kilinochchi, tying black ribbon around their mouths in a symbolic act of protest.

  • Sri Lankan police arrest more students as heavy security presence continues in Jaffna

    More students have been arrested in Jaffna in connection with a series of protests over the rape and murder of a Tamil schoolgirl last month, as there continues to be a heavy Sri Lankan security presence in the region.

    Latest reports suggest that a student from the Manippay Higher Secondary school was arrested on May 31st in connection with a protest outside the Jaffna court complex last month.

    The Jaffna Crime Prevention Unit police said surveillance video and other footage was used to identify and apprehend the student. They further stated that he was in possession of illegal drugs at the time of arrest and provided information about other suspects they were searching for.

    Meanwhile riot police continue to maintain a heavy presence in Jaffna with travel along a main road near the Jaffna court complex and A9 highway suspended.

  • Mahinda will ‘definitely contest’ elections – spokesperson

    Former president Mahinda Rajapaksa will definitely be contesting the forthcoming elections as a prime ministerial candidate, although he has not yet decided which party he would run under, according to his spokesperson Rohan Weliwita.

  • Sri Lanka arrests 14 Indian fishermen
    Tamil Nadu Chief Minister J Jaylalithaa has called for the release of 15 Indian fishermen who were arrested by Sri Lankan security forces on Monday night.
  • Drugs deliberately introduced to quell desire for liberation of Tamil youth says Wigneswaran
    The Chief Minister of the Northern Province CV Wigneswaran said that hard drugs were purposely being introduced to the youth to stop them from rallying together.

    Mr Wigneswaran warned the Tamil student community that circulation of drugs was an attempt to ensure that they “should not excel in their studies, have no

  • Return of Tamil land unlikely due to parliamentary elections – New Indian Express

    The Sri Lankan government is unlikely to return thousands of acres of private Tamil land to their owners before the parliamentary elections, as it could damage the campaign of the current government led by President Maithripala Sirisena and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe.

    Returning land held by the military to Tamils is “fraught with great political risk”, The New Indian Express quoted a “highly placed source”.

    Meanwhile, resettlement minister DM Swaminathan told the paper he was optimistic the government would return land to Tamils.

    “We may or may not get all the 18,000 acres we want now, but we are optimistic. This is because President Sirisena, Prime Minister Wickremesinghe and former President Chandrika Kumaratunga (who heads the Taskforce on Reconciliation), are genuinely interested in giving back lands seized from the Tamils,” he said.

  • Mahinda suspects ‘LTTE revival’

    Former Sri Lankan president Mahinda Rajapaksa said he suspects a return of the LTTE, while speaking at a rally after a Buddhist ceremony in Anuradhapura.

  • Tamil schoolgirl reported missing in Killinochchi
    A 16 year old Tamil school girl has been reported missing in Killinochchi, reports Ceylon Today.
  • Buddhist monk warns Sri Lanka's PM against demilitarisation of North-East

    The Chief Prelate of the Asgiriya Chapter, Galagama Attadasi Thera warned that the government must be wise in responding to Tamil demands of de-militarising the North-East and ensure that Sri Lanka remains united under one flag.

  • Country belongs to the Sinhalese – BBS

    Sri Lanka “belongs to the Sinhalese” said the leader of Buddhist nationalist organisation Bodu Bala Sena (BBS), in an interview to the BBC this week.

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