• Government commission finds civilian casualties were ‘collateral damage’

    Sri Lanka’s government appointed disappearances commission said in a report the Tamil deaths, caused by incessant government shelling of the so-called No Fire Zones (NFZ), were collateral damage and blame should rest with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam.

    Foreign experts, appointed to the commission by former president Mahinda Rajapaksa, said civilians would have lost their protected status if they voluntarily assisted the LTTE.

    “As unfortunate as it is, the civilian casualties should be considered collateral damage and the ultimate responsibility for their loss would rest on the LTTE due to their grave breaches of [international humanitarian law],”

  • OISL report deferral ‘greatest success’ of Sirisena government – former minister

    Former minister Mahinda Samarasinghe said convincing the UN Human Rights Council and the US to postpone the release of the OHCHR report on the investigation into Sri Lanka was the new government’s greatest achievement so far.

    Mr Samarasinghe, who represented Sri Lanka as former president Mahinda Rajapaksa’s human rights envoy at previous HRC sessions, said the release of the report in March would have been “extremely dangerous” for the country.

    "Various people may say various things but as a person who frequented Geneva and faced the US sponsored resolution against Sri Lanka, I was aware of what was in store for us. If it was taken up in March 2015 as scheduled, the result would have been extremely dangerous for the country," he said in parliament on Thursday.

  • London Borough of Redbridge calls for justice and political solution for the Tamil people

    Redbridge Council, a borough in the North-East of London, passed a motion calling on the British government and the UN to ensure justice for war crimes and crimes against humanity committed against the Tamil people.

    The motion, which was unopposed, also calls for a "permanent political solution addressing the root cause of the conflict which will meet the aspirations of the Tamil people in their home nation" and a mechanism which ensures that "socio-economic and cultural wellbeing is enhanced while safeguarding historical identity within their Tamil nation.”

  • Army blocks displaced Tamils from viewing seized land in Jaffna

    All photographs: Tamil Guardian

    The Sri Lankan military blocked displaced Tamils from visiting land that had been seized by the military in Jaffna earlier today.

    Villagers from Vasavilan and Palali attempted to view 197 acres of land that had been taken over by the Sri Lankan military. The seized land has been marked as a “High Security Zone” for the last 25 years. However, the military stopped the villagers from accessing their land at the barbed wire border.
  • Released Tamil disappearances campaigner denied access to daughter
    A Sri Lankan court has refused to allow the teenage daughter of Tamil disappearances campaigner Balendra Jeyakumari from being reunited with her mother, reports Uthayan.

    Ms Jeyakumari, who was released on conditional bail earlier this month, filed a petition at the Kilinochchi court, requesting that her teenage daughter Vipoosika be allowed back into her care. Her daughter is currently being housed at the  Mahadeva Saivait Children's Home. The court however, refused to grant Ms Jeyakumari access to her child.

    “Neither of them are free,” said the judge.
  • Swiss FM visits reconstruction project in North-East

    Swiss Foreign Minister Didier Burkhalter in Akkarai, Jaffna (Photos: EDA)

    Switzerland’s foreign minister, Didier Burkhalter visited a Swiss-funded reconstruction project in the village of Akkarai on the Jaffna peninsula on Wednesday.

    Touring the village after holding talks with NPC Chief Minister CV Wigneswaran and Governor Mr Palihakkara, the foreign minister, who was Swiss president until last year, said he was delighted at the role Switzerland played in helping the people.

    "The houses of Akkarai show that a shared commitment can give people renewed hope and prospects. I am delighted that Switzerland can play its part in helping the people of Akkarai build their own future after all they have been through", said Mr Burkhalter.

  • Anger at 'hideous collusion' over Scottish training of Sri Lankan police

    Scotland’s police service is due to renew a controversial deal under which Sri Lanka’s security forces receive training, The National reported on Thursday.

    The Scottish Police College (SPC) has provided the training since 2007 but the current contract is due to expire at the end of this month.

    However, in a move that has been condemned by politicians and human rights campaigners, the SPC have confirmed that they are close to sealing a new contract for 2015-2016 to further work to develop Sri Lanka’s National Police Academy.

    Independent MSP John Finnie, who has previously raised concerns about SPC training in the Maldives due to human rights concerns, said that an extension of the contract would cause “reputational damage” to the Scottish Police Service.

    Mr Finnie, a former police officer, said: “Once again the Scottish Police Service finds itself linked with an oppressive regime whose police officers it trained.

  • Tamil schoolchildren admitted to Jaffna hospital after water poisoning

    Schoolchildren from the Erlalai Sri Murugan Vidyalayam in Jaffna were rushed to hospital after consuming water from their school tank that was reportedly contaminated. 

    A total of 27 students were hospitalised at the Thellipalai Base Hospital in Jaffna, before 26 of them were transferred to the Jaffna Teaching Hospital for further treatment. "The school well has been kept closed due to suspicion of oil contamination,” said a teacher from the school. “Therefore, the students consumed water from the water tank kept there by the Pradesha Sabha.”
     
    “This morning after the morning athletic exercises and prayers, the students have as usual drunk the water,” continued the teacher. “It was only at about 9am that we realized the water had been poisoned.”
  • UK grants tortured Tamil asylum seeker reprieve from deportation to Sri Lanka

    Photographs: Journalists for Democracy Sri Lanka

    A Tamil asylum seeker who suffered from torture at the hands of the Sri Lankan government has won a last minute reprieve from deportation to the island, after his lawyers successfully passed an emergency injunction against his removal.

    Kannan Kalimuththu, a 36 year old former Tamil Eelam policeman from Puthukudiyirippu escaped to the UK in 2014, after suffering from extensive torture and sexual violence by Sri Lankan security forces. Mr Kalimuththu had witnessed the final days of the armed conflict, where he saw the shelling of unarmed Tamils by the Sri Lankan military – making him a key witness to the mass atrocities that took place, says Journalists for Democracy Sri Lanka.
  • Sri Lanka pledges to review proscription of Tamil diaspora groups

    Sri Lanka said on Wednesday that it would review the proscription of 16 Tamil diaspora groups and over 400 individuals by the previous government last year, shortly after the UN Human Rights Council mandated a resolution calling for an international investigation.

    “The previous government used the UN Regulation No. 1 of 2012 under UN Security Council resolution 1373 to list 424 individuals and 16 entities under Extraordinary Gazette 1854/41 of 21 March 2014 in the run up to the Presidential election. This was done to build up the hysteria about the LTTE regrouping,” the foreign minister, Mangala Samaraweera told Sri Lanka’s parliament.

    “They banned several Sri Lankan Tamil diaspora groups under these provisions for their alleged links to the LTTE. However, most of the organisations listed may have merely been vocal proponents of Tamil rights. There was hardly any tangible evidence to link them to the LTTE. Some of the individuals listed had even been dead for some time.”

    “Reviewing this list of individuals and entities is an important exercise at this juncture when the Government of President Maithripala Sirisena is seriously committed to expedite the reconciliation process. In doing so, the Sri Lankan diaspora whether it be Sinhala, Tamil or Muslim, has am extremely important role to play not only in taking the reconciliation process forward but they have an important role to play in taking Sri Lanka forward as a nation.”

  • Zeid will visit Sri Lanka in June - Mangala

    The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Zeid Ra'ad al Hussain, will visit Sri Lanka in June, according to Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera.

    Speaking in parliament on Wednesday, the minister said Mr Hussain's visit was in line with the UN's focus on Sri Lanka, the Daily Mirror reported.

  • EU delegation due in Sri Lanka to discuss GSP+

    A high-level delegation fro the European Union is due to arrive in Sri Lanka next week to discuss the suspension of GSP+ trade concessions, withdrawn due to Sri Lanka's human rights record.

  • Sri Lankan minister dismisses ‘No Fire Zone’ documentary

    Sri Lanka’s Deputy External Affairs Minister Ajith Perera has dismissed the award winning documentary ‘No Fire Zone’, which details massacres committed during the final days of the armed conflict on the island, stating that it will not seriously affect the country.

    The Sunday Leader spoke to Mr Perera who said the documentary director had “a hidden agenda”, dismissing the launch of the Sinhala version of the film earlier this month.

    “They will not get any positive or any additional publicity by showing this,” said Mr Perera adding that the video had no credence.

  • Equality, justice, peace and dignity needed for Tamils says India

    India’s External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj said Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to Sri Lanka had underlined calls for “equality, justice, peace and dignity” for Tamils on the island.

    “The visit expressed India’s strong support for democracy and reform in Sri Lanka,” said Ms Swaraj. “Prime Minister noted in his address to the Parliament that recent elections reflected the collective voice of the nation – the hope for change, reconciliation and unity.”

    Addressing the Lok Sabha, Ms Swaraj further added “India stands with Sri Lanka in its efforts to build a future that accommodates the aspirations of all sections of society, including the Sri Lankan Tamil community, for a life of equality, justice, peace and dignity in a united Sri Lanka.”
    “Prime Minister also declared that we believe that the early and full implementation of the 13th Amendment and going beyond it would contribute to this process,” she continued.

  • Tamil politicians and rights activists discuss Tamil genocide in Sri Lanka in Geneva
    A panel discussion by Tamil politicians and rights activists took place in Geneva today, on the 'Tamil genocide in Sri Lanka and the international community's responsibility to protect'.

    Watch the video here:


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