• British Airways to cease all flights to Colombo

    British Airways announced that it is to cease all flights to Colombo from March 2015 onwards, as the route could no longer remain profitable for the airline.
  • Sri Lanka rejects OHCHR inquiry, dismisses call to cooperate
    15:46 CEST

    Sri Lanka responded to the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights' (OHCHR) oral update on the international inquiry into mass atrocities in the country, by reiterating its rejection of the inquiry and dismissing calls by several states, as well as the High Commissioner, to cooperate with the process.

    "Sri Lanka categorically rejected Resolution 25/1 and its call for the OHCHR investigation, and made its position clear of non cooperation with the investigation. To those who continue to urge that Sri Lanka to revisit this position, I wish to respectfully reply that government of Sri Lanka does not wish to help legitimise a flawed process and have a detrimental precedent established," Sri Lanka's Permanent Representative to Geneva, Ravinath Aryasinha told the UN Human Rights Council today.

    "This position has been taken after much consideration, and represents not only the will of the Sri Lankan people as reflected in the motion recently adapted in our parliament with an overwhelming majority, but also the majority within this council who refuse to support OP 10," he said, adding that the investigation was "politically motivated, and challenges sovereignty and independent of member states that it violates the fundamental principal international law".

  • Ill-conceived UN agendas against Sri Lanka says Rajapaksa at UNGA
    Sri Lanka has also become an unfortunate victim of ill-conceived agendas of some in the Human Rights Council, said the Sri Lankan President in an address to the 69th session of the United Nations General Assembly.

    Addressing a session on “Delivering on and imp0lementing a Transformative Post-2015 Development Agenda,” Mahinda Rajapaksa, speaking as the Chair of the Commonwealth, on Wednesday said,

    “Human rights are used as a tool to implement motivated agendas with no understanding or appreciation of the complexity of issues in the countries concerned. Human rights should be recognised by all as a moral and ethical concept rather than as a political tool. External intervention without adequate consideration of the structures in a society and cultural traditions of the countries where such intervention takes place, inevitably results in de-stabilisation, which is very much in evidence today, in most parts of the world.”
  • BTF welcomes UN recognition of intimidation, urges witness protection
    The British Tamils Forum (BTF) welcomed the UN Human Rights Chief's recognition of threats, harassment and intimidation of people who may testify before a United Nations inquiry into mass atrocities in Sri Lanka and called on the UN to ensure the safety of witnesses.

    In a statement released shortly after the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights oral update on the investigation was delivered at the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, BTF stated it, “welcomes the High Commissioner’s recognition of the intimidation and danger faced by these human rights defenders and victims.”

    BTF went on to call “upon the Office High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) to do everything within its power to ensure the safety of those who testify before the inquiry”.

    Earlier today, UN High Comissioner Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein said he was "shocked at the ongoing campaign of threats, harassment, intimidation and reprisals by both state and non-state actors since March against civil society groups, human rights defenders and victims’ organisations, including those who might support or engage with the international inquiry."
  • Findings of OHCHR amount to larger pattern of structural genocide against Tamils - GG Ponnambalam
    Incidents referred to by the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) oral update on its investigation into mass atrocities in Sri Lanka form “a larger pattern aimed at creating conditions of permanent subjugation of the Tamil people,” said the Leader of the Tamil National People’s Front, speaking at the United Nations Human Rights Council.

    Gajendrakumar Ponnambalam, speaking on behalf of Collectif des Femmes Africaines du Hainaut at the oral update of the OHCHR inquiry into Sri Lanka, labelling the ongoing subjugation of Tamils a “structural genocide,” said,
    “Most of the incidents referred to by the oral update are part of a larger pattern aimed at creating the conditions of permanent subjugation of the Tamil people as a whole - a process of de-Tamilsation which we interpret as the structural genocide of the Tamil Nation in Sri Lanka. An honest and forthright appreciation of the problems that face the Tamil people is fundamental and we call upon the OHCHR to conduct the inquiry in this spirit.”
  • Concern and dismay at Sri Lanka's rejection of OISL

    The UK, Canada and European Union urged Sri Lanka to cooperate with the OHCHR Investigation into Sri Lanka, following the oral update by the UN human rights chief on Thursday, whilst other states including Pakistan and the 'Like Minded Group', decried the OISL mandate as not in line with the UN Human Rights Council's core principles.

    India called for the "timely" implementation of the LLRC and for the military to be removed from the Northern province, reiterating that it wishes for a political solution on the island that respects the political aspirations of the Tamil people.

    Ireland said the investigation team has to be allowed to collect witness testimonies and that no one should be subject to reprisals, while the Philippines stressed the importance of timely accountability for reconciliation. Switzerland called on the Sri Lankan government to allow the Northern Provincial Council to fully function, noting that it was still not able to do so.

    Addressing the Council immediately after the oral update, Sri Lanka reiterated its rejection of the investigation, stating, "to those who continue to urge that Sri Lanka to revisit this position, I wish to respectfully reply that government of Sri Lanka does not wish to help legitimise a flawed process and have a detrimental precedent established." See here for more.


     

  • Accountability for systematic attacks on Tamils required in OHCHR inquiry says Pasumai Thayagam
    Those responsible for systematic attacks on Tamils must be held accountable without further delay, said the Pasumai Thaayagam Foundation at a general debate at the United Nations Human Rights Council.

    Speaking at the general debate on the oral update of the OHCHR inquiry into Sri Lanka, A.Ganesh Kumar, outlined the ongoing Sinhala militarisation and human rights violations in the North-East, stating,
    “Tamil areas in the North and East of Sri Lanka still remain under heavy military occupation. 85% of Sri Lanka’s Sinhala military is deployed in Tamil areas and 96% of Tamils live within 5-miles of an army base or checkpoint. As the High Commissioner himself pointed out, there is alarming increase in threats against human rights defenders, victims and witnesses, and there is severe escalation of violence against Tamil people of Muslim and Christian faiths.”
    “In addition, this investigation must address the underlying structural patterns of violations and discrimination against the Tamils, including systems that have led to a comprehensive failure in Sri Lanka to promote and protect human rights for all,” he added.

    Full statement reproduced below.
  • Ongoing torture of Tamils in Sri Lanka must be investigated by UNHRC - Freedom From Torture
    The UK based NGO, Freedom From Torture, called on countries to halt the ongoing deportation of Tamil asylum seekers, citing the continuing use of torture by Sri Lankan state authorities against Tamils accused of being affiliated with the LTTE.

    A new report released on Wednesday, documented at least 40 new cases in the last 8 months of post-war torture perpetrated between 2009-2013.

    The new findings brings the total number of cases of post-war torture documented by the organisation to 140.

    Calling on Sri Lanka to allow access to the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights as a matter of urgency, the group called on Prince Zeid al-Hussein to include the torture of Tamils still taking place, into the ongoing investigations into Sri Lanka.
     
  • President Rajapaksa joins Hilary Clinton in drive to conserve African elephants

    Sri Lanka’s President Mahinda Rajapaksa joined the former US Secretary of State Hilary Clinton in supporting the Elephant Action Network, a project of the Clinton Global Initiative (CGI), at the foundation’s 10th annual meeting in New York.

    The project aims to put an international spotlight on the crisis facing African elephants.

    Several other leaders were present at the event, including Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete, the president of Gabon, Ali Bongo Ondimba and the deputy prime minister of Vietnam, Pham Binh Minh.

    According to the official government news site, the president was invited by Hillary Clinton earlier this year.

  • CM Jayalalithaa files two more cases against Subramaniam Swamy

    Tamil Nadu’s Chief Minister Jaya Jayalalithaa filed two more defamation cases against the BJP’s Subramaniam Swamy for comments he made on Twitter, reported PTI on Tuesday.

    The City Public Prosecutor (CPP) M L Jegan filed the cases on behalf of the chief minister, who said Swamy ridiculed her.

    Jayalalithaa already filed cases against Swamy for comments in which he alleged the chief minister had financial interests in the fishing boats held by Sri Lanka.

  • Sri Lanka doesn’t appreciate our assistance – Indian official

    The Indian High Commissioner to Sri Lanka YK Sinha said at an event in Colombo, Sri Lanka “under-appreciated” the assistance it received from its neighbour, reported NewsFirst.

    Sinha highlighted the lack of reporting in Sri Lankan papers on India’s involvement in the launch of the train service between Jaffna and Colombo and pointed out that Sri Lanka had forgotten what India has done for millennia, while speaking during a symposium on Anagarika Dharmapala and India – Sri Lanka Relations, organised by the Centre for Contemporary Indian Studies of the Colombo University.

    “We felt that there was need to let people in Sri Lanka in particular, know, what India has done in the last few years, for Sri Lanka. Because I think the emphasis is on a ‘Look East’ policy, and to try and glorify what countries have done, for Sri Lanka in the recent past, forgetting what a country like India has done for millennia.”

  • Tamil recruits shown southern places of 'historic importance' by army
    Tamil recruits from Mullaithivu were taken on a four-day familiarisation tour of Colombo by the Sri Lankan Army to visit places of "historic importance", reports the Sri Lankan army website.
  • Man injured in machete attack in Jaffna
    A man has been injured in a machete attack in Puttur, Jaffna on Tuesday, reports Uthayan.

    A group of masked men arrived on motorbikes to the victim's house on Tuesday night around 10.30pm with their face covered in black clothes, and attacked the man with a machete.
  • #GetThePicture campaign maps Sri Lankan state massacres of Tamils

    The United States Tamil Political Action Council released an updated version of their #GetThePicture campaign map this week, detailing the long history of massacres that took place across the Tamil North-East, at the hands of the Sri Lankan state.

    Announcing the updated maps, Dr. Karunyan Arulanantham, President of USTPAC said,
    "The Tamils have suffered massacres and violence at the hands of the mono-ethnic Sinhala military since 1958 with increasing frequency and barbarity."

    "This unchecked and systematic decades-long violence culminated in a genocidal onslaught in 2009 in which 146,000 Tamils are unaccounted for, and the continuing military occupation of Tamils in the North-East and forced land grabs all point to the intention and designs of Sri Lankan state to marginalize the Tamils and reduce them into a submissive minority."

  • China to strengthen military ties with Sri Lanka

    China is to strengthen military ties with Sri Lanka, announced the vice chairman of China’s Central Military Commission, Xu Qiliang, following a meeting with Sri Lanka’s Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa on Tuesday, reports Xinhua.

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