• Opposition leader criticises Sri Lanka's failure to defend EU proscription of LTTE

    The leader of the opposition United National Party (UNP), Ranil Wickremesinghe, revealed that he had called for the European Council to appeal against the European Court of Justice decision to lift sanctions against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).
  • India's Army War College learns from Sri Lankan warfare experiences says SL army commander
    A delegation from India's Army War College called on the Commander of the Sri Lankan army Lieutenant General Daya Ratnayake this week, said the Sri Lankan military in order to learn from Sri Lanka's warfare experiences.
  • Govt coalition party slams UN Human Rights chief's criticism
    A Sri Lankan government coalition partner slammed criticism of the country by the UN Human Rights Commissioner, Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein on Tuesday, accusing Zeid of distorting the truth.

    Speaking at a press briefing, the spokesperson for the National Freedom Front (NFF) said Zeid's condemnation last Friday of Sri Lanka over its refusal to cooperate with the UN inquiry into mass atrocities against the Tamil people, were 'distortions of the truth', reports Colombo Page.

    The spokesperson, Mohammed Muzammil, accused the UN Human Rights Council of drawing a conclusion ahead of the publishing of the OHCHR Investigation into Sri Lanka (OISL) report, which is due in March 2015.

  • UN Committee Against Torture condemns Australia's treatment of asylum seekers
    The UN Committee Against Torture (UNCAT) condemned Australia's treatment of asylum seekers in the country's off shore detention centres as effectively "cruel, inhuman and unlawful punishment", during the second day of Australia's review at before the UN panel in Geneva.

    “Healthcare services are not denied to asylum seekers,” the Department of Immigration and Border Protection told the UNCAT on Tuesday.

    “International Health and Medical Services are required to deliver healthcare that is the best available in the circumstances and broadly comparable with the health services within the Australian community," he said, adding that Papua New Guinea and Nauru were legally responsible.

    On Monday however, the UNCAT's chairperson, Claudio Grossman rejected Australia's claim of lack of responsibility.

  • Rajapaksa pardons Indian fishermen, after India files appeal

    Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa has pardoned five fishermen from Tamil Nadu, who were convicted of drug trafficking offences in October.

    The men will be released without conditions in the next few days, said Deputy Minister of Telecommunication and Information Technology Prabha Ganesan, who conveyed the news to the Indian high commission in Colombo.

    The move comes soon after the Indian government said it is filing an appeal against the sentencing.

    India’s external affairs ministry spokesperson Syed Akbaruddin said to reporters earlier on Wednesday that the government “gives high priority to the issue of the five Indian fishermen” and “will pursue all avenues”.

    “I can confirm to you today that on behalf of those five Indian fishermen an appeal in the Sri Lankan Supreme Court has been filed,” he said, adding that a top Colombo lawyer had been hired for the case.

  • Buddhist shrine built by military in Kilinochchi

    The Sri Lankan military has completed the construction of a new Buddhist shrine in the headquarters of the 7 Sri Lanka Artillery division in Kilinochchi, the former de-facto Tamil capital.

    The shrine was constructed using funds collected from members of the security forces and civil officials, the army's official website reported.

  • IATAJ condemns cyber-attacks on news websites

    The International Association of Tamil Journalists condemned the suspected cyber attacks on two websites critical of the Sri Lankan state.

    In a statement, the group, representing Tamil journalists from across the world, said that inioru.com and lankanewsweb.com have been disabled due to attack on their domains, saying that this was in retaliation for news items published on the websites.

  • Ban Ki-moon backs UN human rights chief’s condemnation of Sri Lanka

    UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon supported the recent statement made by the High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra'ad al-Hussein, in which he slammed Sri Lanka’s refusal to co-operate with a United Nations inquiry into mass atrocities.

  • Give Buddhism prominence or we will field presidential candidate - BBS

    The Bodu Bala Sena has threatened to contest the presidential elections to be held next year, if none of the other candidates do not give sufficient prominence to Buddhism, reported the Daily Mirror.

    According to BBS leader Gnanasara, the BBS will make a decision based on the other candidates’ election manifestos.

    “We have four options: to support the present government, to support the opposition, to remain neutral, to contest in the forthcoming Presidential Election,” Gnanasara said.

    “We are ready to go even for the last option, after carefully monitoring the election manifestoes of various parties. We will decide depending on how the political parties give prominence to Buddhism.”

  • Rajapaksa free to contest presidency for third term - Supreme Court

    Sri Lanka's Supreme Court has ruled that President Mahinda Rajapaksa can contest for a third term, according to leader of the parliament Nimal Siripala de Silva.

  • NPC Councillor Ananthy Sasitharan concerned for safety

    NPC Councillor Ananthy Sasitharan said she feels "threatened", after she was followed by unidentified men on motorbikes, while she was travelling between meetings with foreign diplomatic officials in Colombo on Tuesday.

    Sasitharan, who arrived back in Sri Lanka on Monday after attending a Tamil conference in Malaysia, said at least two men were following her vehicle, without making any attempt at hiding their presence.

    The councillor tweeted pictures of the men, saying that the members of the Terrorism Investigation Department were "following and threatening" her.

    “I felt threatened by the manner they menacingly followed me, being deliberately conspicuous, making no attempt to hide themselves,” she told the Tamil Guardian.

    “I raised the issue with the foreign officials I met, but I am worried for my safety.”

  • Protest against sexual violence held in North-East

    (Pictures: Uthayan)

    A protest against sexual violence was held by campaigners from the North-East, demanding justice for victims of rape, highlighting a recent case of an 18-year-old woman who was kidnapped and raped in Ariyalai, reported the Uthayan.

    The campaigners gathered at Vembadi Junction in Jaffna, demanding that violence against women is stopped and pledged to continue voicing for the rights of victims.

  • Chief Minister slams militarisation of North-East

    The Chief Minister of the Northern Province CV Wigneswaran has criticised the ongoing militarisation of North-East by the Sri Lankan government, stating the area is “under an occupying force.”

    Delivering the inaugural Kannabiran Memorial Lecture at Chennai this weekend, Wigneswaran said,
    “As I have repeated on numerous occasions the militarisation of the North of Sri Lanka, where I am the Chief Minister, takes place not due to any real security threat, but to maintain a stranglehold over the populace; to subjugate them and make them compliant; to stifle any form of democratic or political dissent.” 
    “We have long advocated a phased withdrawal of the military and the handing over of administrative matters to the civil forces according to a transparent timeline. How can Human Security exist when the people are under an occupying force?  And indeed the North and East of Sri Lanka are under an occupying force!”
    The Chief Minister went on to comment on Sri Lanka's arrest of those attempting to gather evidence for a United Nations inquiry into mass atrocities, saying,
    “In the last few weeks Sri Lanka is openly arresting and intimidating those who are trying to collect evidence for the investigation... The State does not want to allow the evidence to leave the shores of the country – just as in the incarceration of the 350,000  Tamils, the primary aim was to let no evidence leave the shores.”
  • UK criticised over arms sales to Sri Lanka and other repressive states
    Over £60 million worth of weapons have been sold by the United Kingdom to “countries of concern” this year, including Sri Lanka, according to figures revealed by the Commons committees on arms export controls.

    Sri Lanka received more than £8 million worth of arms including shotguns, assault rifles and ammunition.

    Former Conservative defence minister Sir John Stanley, who chairs the committee, said in a recent parliamentary debate that a “significant change in policy” had made it easier to export arms to countries which have poor human rights records.

    Peter Hain, a former Foreign Office minister said,
    “The present government has run a coach and horses through our arms export controls, circumventing the legislation we put in place by putting a particular spin on it. It has enabled them to sell arms to countries and for purposes that should not be allowed under the legislation.”

    “There is a clear policy in the legislation that arms should only be sold to countries for defensive purposes and not for internal suppression or external aggression.”
    The case of Sri Lanka, one of the Foreign and Commonwealth Office’s 28 countries of top human rights concern, was brought up by Member of Parliament Jeremy Corbyn who expressed “deep concerns” over the island.
  • Dead body of woman found in Jaffna
    The dead body of a woman has been recovered from a house in Point Pedro, Jaffna, reports Uthayan.

    The woman has been identified as 52 year old Loganathan Ambikathevi.

    The body has been handed to Point Pedro hospital where a post-mortem is to be carried out. Point Pedro police are reportedly investigating her death.
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