• JHU quits ruling alliance, calls on Rajapaksa to follow 'teachings of Buddha'

    The Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU) announced that it will be quitting from the ruling Sri Lankan government coalition on Tuesday, in protest against President Mahinda Rajapaksa.

    JHU leader Omale Sobitha, who announced the split on Rajapaksa’s birthday, told reporters,

    "This (quitting) is not a challenge from an enemy force.”

    "This is a birthday gift to the president to correct his ways. This is the advice of a friend given according to the teachings of the Buddha."

    Technology and Research Minister Champika Ranawaka, a senior JHU member who previously warned that Sinhalese were becoming a minority, also announced his resignation on Tuesday.

    The move led to National Freedom Front national organiser Jayantha Samaraweera to call on the JHU to reconsider its decision, stating that western factions and non-governmental organisations (NGOs) were attempting to “destroy national forces” on the island.

  • Protest prevents Sri Lankan military land grab attempt in Jaffna

    A protest held by villagers in Mathakal, Jaffna prevented the Sri Lankan navy from surveying lands which were to be acquired by the military this week.

    When surveyors from the military arrived at the area, villagers protested against their presence, reports Uthayan. The villagers, who were told to produce documents confirming their ownership of the land by surveyors, refused to allow the military personnel on to their property, stating they would not allow any surveying to take place.


  • Gendered Genocide: Sri Lanka’s War Against Tamils
     

    The following address was delivered by Tasha Manoranjan, a graduate from Yale Law School, and founder and director of People for Equality and Relief in Lanka (PEARL), at the 'Feminisms, Structural Violence and Transitional Justice Conference' held at York University, Toronto last month.
    "Tamil women have suffered disproportionately throughout Sri Lanka’s decades-long ethnic conflict. They have faced both the structural collapse of communities as well as the erosion of societal norms. In response, an increasing number of women joined the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) starting in the 1980s and throughout the years prior to 2009, and became an integral part of the armed resistance against the government.
  • Indian govt is betraying Tamils by indulging Sri Lanka - Vaiko
    The leader of the MDMK, Vaiko, accused the central government, led by the National Democratic Alliance (NDA), of "betraying Tamils by showing indulgence to the island nation", reports the Times of India.
  • Peiris slams 'unprofessional manner' of OISL to UN official‏
    Sri Lanka's Minister of External Affairs, G. L. Peiris criticised the UN inquiry into mass atrocities in Sri Lanka - the OHCHR Investigation into Sri Lanka (OISL) - to the Resident Coordinator of the United Nations, Subinay Nandy on Monday, a statement released by the ministry said.

    Accusing the OISL of acting in an "unprofessional manner" by extending the deadline for the submission of evidence unofficially, Peiris also "pointed out that what was particularly disturbing was that this development took place while a campaign to collect fabricated evidence was under way in Sri Lanka with the collusion of both local and foreign parties".

    "During this period, evidence was being concocted fraudulently in Sri Lanka on blank sheets of paper, with signatures procured under false pretences and with financial inducements.  One of the main agents in this criminal enterprise was arrested, while another has left the country unlawfully," the statement went on to say.

  • Sri Lanka HC in Australia tries to block book on war crimes - TRC
    The Sri Lankan High Commission in Australia has tried to block a new book on war crimes committed by government forces against the Tamil people being endorsed by Melbourne's Monash University, said the Tamil Refugee Council in a statement on Monday.
    The book, 'Sri Lanka's Secrets: How the Rajapaksa regime gets away with murder' by the journalist Trevor Grant, was published by Monash University Publishing, and released in August. "It is understood that at two meetings with senior university administrators, including vice-chancellor, Professor Margaret Gardner, the Sri Lankan High Commissioner, Admiral Thirasa Samarasinghe, questioned the university's selection and approval processes for the book. He also wanted it to issue some form of apology for allowing it to be publiched," the TRC said.

    "The University's links with Monash College in Colombo, a pathway school to Monash campuses in Australia, was believed to have been brought up in the discussions," the group added.

    "Admiral Samarasinghe wrote to Monash University about the book on 27 August. The letter contained a request to meet with the vice-chancellor," Dr Nathan Hollier, director of Monash University, said, confirming that Admiral Samarasinghe had met with the university's senior administrators on two occasions in September.

  • Solheim rejects Rajapaksa's accusations
    The former Norwegian peace envoy to Sri Lanka, Erik Solheim, rejected accusations made by Sri Lankan president Mahinda Rajapaksa on Saturday that Solheim had funded the LTTE, designated by the Sri lankan state as a terrorist organisation.

    In a statement released on Monday, Solheim said he had no intention of getting caught up in the upcoming election, but would "only restate obvious facts well known to everyone - President Rajapaksa included".

    "Norway as the third, facilitating party to the Sri Lankan peace process financed neither the LTTE in general nor its military operations in particular. - Norway made economic resources available to the LTTE peace secretariat in order to assist them in engaging more fully with the ongoing peace process. This included a radio transmitter. This, moreover, was done with the full knowledge of the Government of Sri Lanka under different leaders, including during the period when Mahinda Rajapaksa was prime minister. As with all our peace efforts in Sri Lanka, transparency with respect to the government in Colombo was total," the statement said.

  • Army hosts military exhibition in Mullaitivu playground

    The Sri Lankan army showcased held a military exhibition, showcasing its “soft capabilities” at a school playground in Mullaitivu this week, reports Sri Lanka’s Ministry of Defence.

    According to the MoD website, the Sri Lankan military displayed its exhibition at the “Oddusuddan Maha Vidyalaya play ground” last week, noting that the Sri Lankan Security Force Commander Maj Gen N.A.J.C Dias “graced the glorious occasion as the Chief Guest”.

  • Foreign election observers will be invited says Sri Lanka
    Foreign observers will be invited to Sri Lanka once the president officially declares elections announced Sri Lanka’s election commissioner on Sunday.

     “It has been the general practice in the recent part to invite foreign election monitors for a general election or a presidential election. Accordingly, if there is a presidential election next we will invite foreign observers,” said Mahinda Deshapriya.
  • Tamil man arrested under PTA

    A Tamil man from Mannar has been arrested by the Terrorism Investigation Department, the Uthayan reported.

    Thangathurai Jeyins, 38, attended a court hearing, when he was arrested and taken to Vavuniya, his wife told the paper.

  • Sri Lanka appointed to chair UN meeting

    Sri Lanka has been appointed to chair the Meeting of the High Contracting Parties to the Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons (CCW). The country was proposed to the 118 high contracting parties by the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM), who selected Sri Lanka to represent the bloc.

    Sri Lanka's ambassador to the UN, Ravinath Ariyasinhe expressed appreciation for the faith put in Sri Lanka by the group and said their acceptance showed the government's commitment to the UN's multi-lateral system.

    "I am deeply humbled by the confidence placed in Sri Lanka, and the recognition of Sri Lanka's contribution to the field of disarmament over many decades - through the the Indian Ocean as a Zone of Peace initiative, the Conference on Disarmament (CD), the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT), the International Atomic Energy Authority (IAEA), the Organization for Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), and particularly since the ending of the terrorist conflict by its comprehensive demining programme, a key focus area of the CCW," he said.

  • Options to release Indian fishermen are being considered - Sri Lanka

    Sri Lanka says it is still considering ways to release the five Tamil Nadu fishermen who were sentenced to death for drug trafficking.

    “The process is being discussed at the highest levels and the issue is being looked at from all angles. A decision may be taken in a day or two,” presidential spokesperson Mohan Samaranayake told The New Indian Express on Friday.

    “One of the options discussed is a staggered process beginning with the commutation of the death sentence to life imprisonment, followed by repatriation to India under the 2010 bilateral agreement on the transfer of sentenced prisoners, and then lastly, setting them free through a presidential pardon,” Samaranayake said.

  • Murder is 'another plan to chase Tamils out of country' - TNA MP
    The murder of a former member of the LTTE Police Department last week has been slammed as part of a strategy to “chase Tamils out of the country” said Tamil National Alliance MP Suresh Premachandran.

    The victim, 34 year old Naguleshwaran Krishnasuwamy was shot last week at his home in Mannar by unknown attackers.

    “His village is surrounded by army camps,” said Premachandran, an MP with the Tamil National Alliance, noting that 3 Tamil youths who were accused of working against the Sri Lankan government were also shot dead in April.

    “There are two reasons in the background of this murder,” he continued. “One is to exile Tamil youth of the country. Since the war ended thousands of Tamils have fled to Australia - it was revealed that ministers and navy officials were involved in this.”

    “In this manner, this [the murder] was yet another plan to chase Tamils out of this country,” the Uthayan reported Premachandran as saying.
  • Eelam refugees begin hunger strike in Indian camp
    A group of Eelam Tamil refugees and a Malaysian citizen have commenced a hunger strike, after being quarantined and charged with a range of offences at a refugee camp in Tiruchirapalli, India.
  • South Korean naval ships dock at Colombo

    A South Korea Destroyer and Combat Support Ship docked at Colombo port this week, where they were ceremoniously greeted by the Sri Lankan navy.
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