• British High Commission urges Sri Lanka to cooperate with UN investigation

    The British High Commission in Colombo, Thursday, called on Sri Lanka to cooperate with the UN war crimes probe, reports Colombo Page.

    Sri Lanka and the UK as Commonwealth Members have committed to values set out in the Commonwealth Charter such as democracy, respect for human rights and rule of law, said the British High Commissioner to Sri Lanka John Rankin.
    "It is in context of such commitments, both in the Commonwealth and in the United Nations, that we continue to call on Sri Lanka to cooperate with the international investigation mandated by the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva in March, and to fully implement the specific recommendations in your own Lessons Learned and Reconciliation Commission report, including on accountability and ensuring justice for victims of all sides during the conflict," he added.
  • Tamil asylum-seeker self immolates in fear of deportation
    Another Tamil asylum-seeker in Australia was rushed to hospital after, amidst increasing fears of deportation, attempting to self-immolate in Melbourne, reports The Guardian.

    The asylum-seeker, a 40 year old man, came by boat to Australia in 2012, after being beaten and breaking his leg at the hands of Sri Lankan security forces, said the Tamil Refugee Council.

  • Screening of Sri Lankan film in Chennai cancelled amidst criticism and threats
    The screening of a Sri Lankan film, ‘With You Without You’ was cancelled in Chennai on Saturday, after receiving threat calls from Tamil groups who claimed the film was ‘anti-Tamil,’ reports Dailymirror.lk.
  • Sri Lankan state to take over private resort

    The Sri Lankan government is set to take over a private resort worth over Rs. 500 million rupees, according to Lanka Business Online.

    Dunamis Capital Plc, the company that has a 76 percent stake in the land, said the property in Nuwara Eliya was valued at Rs. 536 million.

  • Anti-Muslim violence ‘underscores majoritarianism in Sri Lanka’ – The Hindu editorial

    The recent outbreak of Sinhala mob violence against Muslims in southern Sri Lanka has “underscored the majoritarianism that has dominated the politics of the country” said The Hindu in its latest editorial on Friday.

    Noting that the group that is largely blamed for instigating the violence, Bodu Bala Sena (or Buddhist Power Force) has been ceremoniously visited by both Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa and his brother the Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa, the editorial said the moves were “signalling powerful patronage and giving it a stamp of legitimacy”.

    The Hindu went on to say that amidst the “unsettled question of Tamil political aspirations”, Sri Lankan leaders were “driving the Sinhala nationalist desire for new enemies”.

  • HRW: Sri Lanka must probe security forces’ links to Buddhist extremist organisations

    To ensure accountability and justice for the Buddhist mob violence against Muslims this week, Sri Lanka must investigate links between its security forces and extremist Buddhist groups, Human Rights Watch (HRW) said in a statement Thursday.

    “Sri Lankan authorities need to do more than arrest those carrying out the anti-Muslim violence. They need to investigate and identify any instigators,” said HRW’s Asia Director, Brad Adams.

    “That means taking a hard look at the role and relationship between extremist Buddhist groups like the BBS and the Sri Lankan security forces,” he said, referring to the ultranationalist Buddhist movement, Bodhu Bala Sena, or Buddhist Force.

  • New Zealand Labour Party welcomes UN investigation appointment

    The New Zealand Labour Party has welcomed the appointment of international judge and Former Governor-General Dame Silvia Cartwright to a United Nations Human Rights Council investigation panel examining war crimes in Sri Lanka.

    In a statement released on Friday, says Labour’s Spokesperson for Associate Foreign Affairs Maryan Street said,

    “Her reputation is second to none and we are delighted she will be contributing to this long awaited tribunal.”

    Dame Cartwright will be quitting from her current role on the Cambodia War Crimes Tribunal, where she has sat as a judge since 2006.

    The Sri Lankan parliament voted and rejected the UN investigation earlier this week.

  • Hackers hit Sri Lankan government websites after mob attacks

    Several Sri Lankan government websites been knocked offline after hackers attacked them in the wake of Sinhala mob attacks on Muslims in southern Sri Lanka.

    Hackers from “Operation Sri Lanka” announced on their Twitter account that several government websites, including that of the Sri Lankan Treasury, Sri Lankan President and the Sri Lankan High Commission in the UK had been taken down in a spate of cyber attacks over the last few days.

    At the time of writing, the websites remain offline.

    The website of the Buddhist group Bodu Bala Sena was also amongst those shutdown by the hackers.

    The hackers also released over 340 Sri Lankan government login details, including email addresses passwords for several government agencies, with ministries and the Sri Lankan Prime Minister’s office targeted.

  • US denies Sri Lanka claim of 'secret' agreement on bypassing Iranian oil sanctions

    Sri Lanka’s Media Minister Keheliya Rambukwella told reporters that the government has been bypassing US sanctions on Iranian oil purchases by buying through third parties, claiming that there was an “understanding” with Washington, but the US “categorically” denied such an agreement, reported Reuters on Friday.

    “We have been buying (Iran crude) from third parties. But we have had some understanding with the U.S. as well,” Keheliya Rambukwella, who is also spokesperson for the government, said.

    “This is not the [permitted] quota. This is in addition to the quota. For instance, Malaysia supplied [what] happened to be Iranian oil,” he said.

    “It is a very closed secret,” he added.

    "I know the gravity of it. I know it's a serious statement," he said when asked by reporters if he was aware of the possible implications of what he was saying.

    A spokesperson at the US embassy in Colombo denied Rambukwella’s claims.

    "We categorically deny there was any agreement," a spokesman at the embassy told Reuters.

  • War crimes witnesses at risk, Suresh tells visiting US official
    The US Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for South Asia, Atul Keshap, on a trip to Sri Lanka to discuss long term political solutions and reconciliation, met Friday with the Tamil National Alliance spokesperson Suresh Premachandran.
  • TNA and TNPF protest in Jaffna against attacks on Muslims
    2nd lead - adds photographs
    Photographs TNPF


    A protest against the recent attacks on Muslims in Aluthgama, took place in Jaffna today, including a cross-party groups from the TNA and TNPF, as well as local Muslim organisations, reports Uthayan.


    Protestors called for the Sri Lankan government to bring those responsible for the attacks and killings to justice.

    The TNA MP S. Sritharan, the TNPF leader Gajendrakumar Ponnambalam, the NPC Minister of Agriculture, P Ayngaranesan, and the TNPF General Secretary S. Kajendran, as well as many others.


    Protesters shouted slogans and held placards reading: "Will ethnic cleansing bring reconciliation?", "We do not want another Black July" and "people of Aluthgama, Peruvalai need justice".


  • US is 'creating Taliban' in Sri Lanka – Minister Ranawaka

    A Sri Lankan cabinet minister said Friday the US is “nurturing and fostering” Muslim militant groups and creating another Taliban in the island by heeding Muslim accounts of the Buddhist mob violence against them, the Daily Mirror reported.

    Champika Ranawaka, Minister for Technology, Research and Atomic Energy, told reporters that US Ambassador Michelle Sison is nurturing “Sri Lankan Jihadist groups” just as the US nurtured the Taliban in Afghanistan.

    “The US is repeating the mistakes it made in Afghanistan by distorting the Aluthgama incidents and very soon will suffer dire consequences,” said Ranawaka, whose Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU) party is a key ally of President Rajapaksa’s UPFA coalition.

  • Jaffna University prayer room defaced

    The University of Jaffna's Muslim prayer room was vandalised after staff and students protested on Thursday against anti-Muslim violence in Aluthgama.

    The University Student Union released a statement on Friday, condemning the incident, in which the prayer room was defaced with oil waste.

    Pointing out the Sri Lankan chauvinism suffered by Tamils and now Muslims, the Union stated that the vandalism was "unacceptable" within a civilised institution and also declared that the Union would continue to stand against assaults on minorities.

  • Monk attacked again for supporting Muslims
    A Buddhist monk who was previously abducted and beaten for supporting Muslims against rioters, was attacked again.

    He was found, badly beaten, with his arms and legs tied with a saffron robe. See here and here for photographs.
  • Another UNP member crosses over to govt
    The United National Party (UNP) member, Ravi Gunawardena, of the Uva Provincial Council is the latest from the opposition to cross over into government ranks.

    He made his announcement in a special statement during council session on Thursday, the Daily Mirror reports.

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