• Sajith Premadasa appointed UNP deputy leader

    Sajith Premadasa with UNP leader Ranil at party conference September 6th. Photograph Colombo Page


    Sajith Premadasa has been formally appointed as the leader of the United National Party (UNP), following a nomination by Ranil Wickremasinghe earlier this month.

     

    Addressing crowds as the UNP's 68th annual convention on September 6, Wickremasinghe said he was "confident that Sajith is qualified to lead the party same way as his father did to create another golden era of the party",

     

  • Australia would have breached refugee convention if Tamils detained at sea deported says UN

    The UN High Commissioner for Refugees said Australia would have breached the UN refugee convention if it had deported over 150 asylum seekers detained at sea, to India, whilst making a submission to the High Court in Australia, reports an Australian news agency.

    The court is currently looking the legality of the Australian government’s handling of the incident, when 157 asylum seekers originally fleeing from Sri Lanka were detained on board a boat heading for Australia and kept at sea for 4 weeks.

    "Intercepting a refugee in international waters and taking him or her back to the place of persecution would violate the spirit of the refugee convention," the UNHCR submission said, stating that it would have been a case of refoulement, which is prohibited by the convention.

  • Tamil Media House forced to shut down after assassination attempt on senior official
    17:11 BST, last updated 21:06 BST

    Today's print edition of Eelamurasu announcing cessation of publishing. Headline reads: 'Now we take our leave. When it dawns we meet'


    The France based Tamil Media House has been forced to shut down, after an assassination attempt was made against a senior official last week.
     
    The official, whose name has not been disclosed for security reasons, was shot at by an masked gunman, by his home in Paris on September 18, before receiving death threats, warning him to stop running the organisation or face death.

  • Four Indian fishermen arrested by Sri Lanka

    Indian authorities stated that 4 fishermen from Tamil Nadu were arrested by the Sri Lankan navy on Monday night, as the detention of Indian fishermen by Sri Lankan security forces continued.

    Sekar, the Assistant Director of Fisheries in the Jagadapattinam district, confirmed that the men had been arrested after they failed to return on Tuesday, reports PTI.

    The latest incident comes as another group of fishermen from Rameswaram stated the Sri Lankan navy damaged their fishing equipment. Rameswaram Fishermen Organization President S Emerite said that over 500 boats from India were fishing near Katchatheevu when Sri Lankan navy personnel threatened them and destroyed their fishing nets.

  • Tamil massacre memorial goes ahead despite police disruption

    Sri Lankan police have again attempted to disrupt a Tamil memorial event in the North-East of the island.

    A candlelight memorial was held despite the attempted disruption, to commemorate the 24th anniversary of a massacre committed in Puthukkudiyiruppu near Batticaloa, reported Uthayan.

    Seventeen Tamil civilians were hacked to death on September 21, 1990, with Muslim Homeguards and Sri Lankan soldiers suspected to be behind the attack.

  • Thunderclap
    The eyes of the world were on Scotland last week, as the Scottish people voted in a historic referendum on independence. The majority of Scots (55%) chose to keep their homeland as part of the United Kingdom with the promise of more devolved powers, turning down the opportunity to secede. Whilst the outcome has, quite rightly, been embraced by all as the collective will of the Scottish people, the process inspired and re-energised nations elsewhere struggling for independence. That the question of independence was freely expressed, debated and decided through a democratic process was observed with a feeling of hope and bittersweet envy by, amongst others, Catalans, Kurds, Kashmiris, Balochs, West Papuans and Eelam Tamils - whose own aspirations are denied, even criminalised and violently suppressed.

  • Sri Lanka wants UN to investigate.. use of armed drones in counter terrorism

    Addressing a panel discussion at the UN Human Rights Council Monday, Sri Lanka’s permanent representative to Geneva called for an investigation into the use of armed drones to ensure it is in line with international human rights and humanitarian law.

    “Sri Lanka is therefore greatly concerned about the increasing use of remotely piloted aircrafts or armed drones in counter terrorism operations, violating the international human rights and humanitarian laws in particular the principle of proportion, distinction and proportionality,” said Ambassador Ravinath Aryasinha.

    “Sri Lanka calls on all actors to ensure that the use of remotely piloted air crafts or armed drones in counter terrorism strategies be carried out in compliance with international law, including international human rights law and humanitarian law, and respecting the sovereignty of states,” he added.

  • Sri Lanka arrests 7 Indian nationals in Kalmunai

    Seven Indian nationals were arrested at the weekend, for alleged visa and trade violations in Kalmunai in the Eastern province, reports Daily Mirror. The seven were said to be selling clothes as well as other items in the Nayapattimuna area.

    The Sri Lankan police spokesperson Ajith Rohana said they would be brought before Kalmunai magistrate.

  • Govt launches website to counter international criticism ahead of UNGA
    The Sri Lankan president’s office has launched a new website this month in an attempt to counter international criticism of Sri Lanka over allegations of mass atrocities committed by state forces at the end of the armed conflict, ahead of Rajapaksa’s attendance at the UN General Assembly 69th session in New York this week. The website, which purports to list Sri Lanka’s achievements in reconciliation and development, also highlights i
  • Tamils protest against military land grabs in Puthukkudiyiruppu

    Tamils in Puthukkudiyiruppu protested against land grabs by the Sri Lankan security forces on Monday, reports Uthayan.

    Demonstrators shouted slogans and held placards reading, “Army get out", "We want our land", "We want our house" and "Stop Sinhala settlements".


    'Why farming lands for the army? we want our farm lands'

    Protesters also condemned the ongoing enforced disappearances, saying, "Release our disappeared
    children", "What happened to the disappeared, Government give us an answer!", and "[We] do not want development or compensation, give us an answer for our missing first!".

  • Recognise Tamil right to self-determination, Tamils tell Labour Party

    Tamils for Labour have called on the British Labour Party to acknowledge the Tamil people's right to self-determination.

    Addressing the annual Labour Party Conference on Monday, Tamils for Labour's Chair Sen Kandiah, reflected on the Scottish independence referendum, saying "hundreds of thousands of [Tamil] lives have been lost for the same right as those people enjoyed in Scotland a few days ago."

    Outlining the atrocities and the ongoing abuses against Eelam Tamils during and after the armed conflict, Mr Kandiah called on the Labour Party to "support targeted sanctions, such as travel bans and asset freezes, on Sri Lankan military personnel and politicians" and to "acknowledge the Tamil people’s right to self-determination".


  • Ruling UPFA wins Uva election

    The ruling United Peoples Freedom Alliance (UPFA) won the Uva Provincial Council election yesterday, securing 19 seats, 6 seats more than the opposition, United National Party (UNP) which won 13. The JVP won 2 seats.

    The UNP made gains, winning 274773 votes, compared to 129144 votes in 2009. The election saw a 70% voter turn out.

  • Merge North-East and acknowledgment of right to self-determination - TNA
    A re-merger of the Northern and Eastern Provinces as a single political administrative unit alongside acknowledgment of the Tamil people’s right to self-determination, is the only way to achieve a true political solution for Tamils in the North-East, the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) spokesperson told the Sunday Leader.

    Deeming the de-merger of the Northern and Eastern provinces as an attempt to deliberately change the demography of the North-East, Suresh Premachandran said,

    “The military has formed Sinhala colonies in the North, thereby depriving our population the right to their own lands. This issue started after the controversial Court ruling to de-merge the two provinces. This situation deteriorated after the end of the war. Sinhalese from the South had been settled in our lands and the government has deliberately changed the demography in the North and the East. Tamil ancestral lands in Murugandi that the military had taken over had been used to construct housing projects consisting of more than 10,000 housing units with Chinese aid, for the military personnel.”

  • Buddhist monks lead protest against Catholic statue

    Buddhists have protested against an attempt by Catholics to place a religious statue at a junction in the town of Kalutara.

    Monks from the Sihala Ravaya led a large mob and said they will not allow the statue to be erected in the town, according to Colombo Gazette.

  • PMK condemns reports that Sri Lanka is auctioning off detained boats
    India's Pattali Makkal Katchi (PMK) condemned reports that the Sri Lankan government is auctioning off fishing boats that have been seized from arrested Tamil Nadu fishermen.     

    PMK leader Ramdoss said "the act of the Island government has shocked Indian fishermen," in a statement this week, adding that 72 boats are currently being detained by the Sri Lankan navy.
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