• India agrees to boost trade with SL

    Sri Lanka has called for the provision of greater market access to India in an attempt to help increase Sri Lankan exports and reduce the growing trade deficit with India, reported Colombo Page.

  • Mannar civil society accuses SL army of obstructing initiative
    The Mannar Citizens Committee has accused the Sri Lankan army of obstructing an awareness initiative by on laws relating to land, which the MCC created in view of the arbitrary occupation of land by the army.

    In a statement published on the 11th June 2013, the MCC Said that it "strongly feel[s] this needs to be inquired into, and those [who are] responsible at all levels held accountable. If not, such unlawful intrusions by the military into activities of the government officials, as well as civil society, will continue."

    The MCC outlined the allegations as follows:
    "On the first day, 30th May 2013, an intelligence officer of the Army had come to seminar, but the President of the MCC had told him that this was a program dealing with purely civil matters and that his presence was disturbing. He had left without saying any word.

  • Sri Lanka's 'failed state' indicators regress close to 2010 levels
    Sri Lanka has moved up from 29th to 28th 'most failed state' this year, scoring almost as bad as the state did in 2010 on key markers, in the Failed State Index, by the Fund for Peace and Foreign Policy. See here for results.
  • Sri Lankan defence officers pressured to leave Tamil Nadu
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    Two Sri Lankan defence officers receiving, Indian government sponsored, training in Tamil Nadu have left the state, following strong opposition form political parties  and other organisations.

  • Indian minister defends training of SL Army officials

    An Indian minister has defended the decision to continue the training of officers form the Sri Lankan Army.

    Union Minister of State for Commerce and Industry Sudarsana Natchiappan said consequences on the strategic relationship between Sri Lanka and India have to be considered.

  • Commonwealth leaders 'should feel sick' over Colombo summit - FT op-ed

    Writing in the Financial Times, Gideon Rachman said leaders of Commonwealth nations should "feel sick about accepting hospitality from a government with so grim a rights record".

    See extracts below, for full article click here.

  • Govt to ban sale of land to non-SL citizens
    The Sri Lankan government is working towards the prohibition of state or private land to non-Sri Lankan citizens.

    Mahinda Rajapaksa, the president, and the Minister of Finance and Planning, has submitted proposed legislation to a Cabinet of Ministers to impose the restrictions, reports the ColomboPage.
  • SL warned UK of 'LTTE threats' against cricketers
    The Sri Lankan government warned the British government and Scotland Yard of a 'possible threat to Sri Lanka's cricket team from the Tamil Tiger terrorist supporters in England', according to a report in the Sunday Leader.
  • UNP member applies for SLFP nomination
    The UNP Pradeshiya Sabha member for Chavakachcheri, Kumar Sharvendran, has applied for the SLFP nomination to contest the proposed Northern Provincial Council election to be held later this year.
  • Protesters 'got the medicine they deserved' - SL cricket spokesperson
    According to Nation.lk, Sri Lankan cricket spokesman said that the Sri Lankan cricket fans had given the Tamil #BoycottLKA protesters "the medicine they deserved".

    See here. Extract below:
  • A brief encounter with Lasith Malinga
    After bumping into Sri Lankan cricket player Lasitha Malinga, a Tamil Guardian reporter asked him a few quick questions.

  • Canada and Sri Lanka locked in High Commission dispute

    Sri Lanka and Canada are locked in dispute regarding posting of envoys as High Commissioners in their respective capitals.

  • Holding CHOGM in Sri Lanka “absolute sham” – Dr Saravanamuttu

    The Executive Director of the Colombo-based Centre for Policy Analysis has slammed the hosting of the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Sri Lanka later this year.

    Dr Paikiasothy Saravanamuttu called the awarding an “absolute sham” and criticised that Sri Lanka, a government accused of war crimes, will be the chair of the Commonwealth.

    Speaking at the London School of Economics, Saravanamuttu detailed continuing abuses committed by the Sri Lankan state, saying the government’s actions were sustaining the sources of the continuing conflict. Although the war ended in 2009, the country was far away from a post-conflict situation, he said.

    Quoting a source from Jaffna, he said that “things look better but feel a lot worse”.

  • Arrest of NGO chief politically motivated?

    The recent arrest of the head of the Friedrich Ebert Stiftung, a German NGO working in Sri Lanka, was initially said to have been made due to a “compensation issue” with a former employee.

    However a report in The Nation, has revealed that concerns had been raised about the work the NGO does on the island, including attending Tamil political meetings, which, according to the paper, would be an “act of interference in the internal affairs of a country”.

    The arrest of Nora Langenbacher, the head of the NGO,drew protests from the German foreign ministry.

    “It is reported that this individual attended a meeting organized by the Bishop of Mannar recently where strategies were discussed to develop a common political program for the Tamil Community. Political analysts point that this is an act of interference in the internal affairs of a country and not mandated by agreement or convention,” the article in The Nation said.

    “Earlier this year, the Social Democratic Party of Germany, which is the main opposition party in the country, submitted a motion on Sri Lanka’s human rights issues to the German Federal Parliament, concurrent with the UN Human Rights Council meeting in Geneva. The motion was defeated despite the efforts of the SPD. It has reportedly come to the knowledge of Sri Lankan authorities that the FES played an important role in drafting the said motion. Sources indicate that the FES has been sending confidential reports to the SPD concerning the post-conflict situation in the island.”

  • Pieris holds LTTE responsible for migrations and extortion

    Sri Lankan External Affairs Minister GL Peiris told the Australian government that the remnants of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) were still active in Australia and asked them to proscribe the organisation.

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