• Lankan Navy continues attacks on Tamil Indian fishermen

    Fourteen Tamil Indian fishermen were attacked yet again by the Sri Lankan Navy off Kodiakkarai on October the 17th.
  • Sri Lanka plans to use KP to speak to Tamil diaspora

    Adding to recent unsubstantiated claims by the Sri Lankan government that it is talking to the Tamil diaspora, the Minister Keheliya Rambukwella explained that it was a government strategy to use the recently freed former LTTE commander, Selvarasa Pathmanathan or KP to forge "constructive dialogue" with the Tamil diaspora.

  • Case filed against detainees for 2007 offensive
    A high court complaint has been filed against two political detainees, allegedly ex-LTTE cadres, for the deaths of four soldiers, including two senior officers, in the Wilpattu National Park in 2007. According to Uthayan , the complaint, filed at the Anuradhapura High Court, accuses the detainees of a bomb attack and gunfire, killing two senior army officers and two further army personnel. The detainees
  • UK to deport 60 asylum seekers on Tuesday

    British authorities are set to deport 60 failed asylum seekers to Sri Lanka on Tuesday the 23rd of October, according to reports.

    A specially chartered plane is set to take the asylum seekers to Sri Lanka, departing from an undisclosed terminal at Heathrow Airport reported Ceylon Today.

  • Douglas arrest warrant not revoked

    A court in Chennai has refused to revoke a non-bailable arrest warrant for Sri Lankan Minister of Traditional Industries & Small Enterprise Development, Douglas Devananda.

    Douglas is wanted in India for the shooting and killing of a lawyer in Chennai in 1986 and has been wanted for murder in the country since.

  • 13th Amendment won't work says JVP

    The JVP reiterated their stance that the 13th Amendment to the constitution will not provide a solution to the 'ethnic issue', reports Colombo Page.

  • Legislation to ‘monitor NGOs’ to be introduced
    The Sri Lankan government has planned to introduce new laws that will monitor non-governmental organisations in the country, reported ColomboPage.
  • Resettled in the forests
    110 families from Kepapilavu are to be resettled permanently in the Suriyapuram forest areas where they are currently staying, despite being promised that they could return to their own homes within two months, reported Jaffna newspaper Uthayan.
  • Ban Ki-Moon calls for a political solution to address Tamil grievances

    In a meeting with a senior Sri Lankan Government official, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon stressed the need for a political solution that addressed the underlying factors behind the country’s civil war, despite the Sri Lankan official’s attempts to highlight that ‘progress’ had been made by the Sri Lankan government on resettlement issues.

  • US criticises “rushed resettlement” of IDPs

    The US Embassy in Colombo has expressed concern over Sri Lanka’s Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) resettlement programme.

    A press release by the embassy welcomed the government’s speedy resettlement of a large number of IDPs, but noted concern about resettlement on land “without adequate shelter, water and sanitation”.

  • TNA urges China to consider Tamil sentiments

    The Tamil National Aliance met with Chinese Embassy officials in Colombo and discussed Tamil concerns about China's support to the government.

  • India-SL Navy continue training away from TN

    Under the code name 'SLINEX', the Indian and Sri Lankan Navy will continue to hold joint exercises, but do so away from India's four southern states, reports the Press Trust of India.

  • More triumphalism planned for 2013

    The Sri Lankan government has announced that its annual Independence Day celebrations will be held in Tamil-dominated Trincomalee next year, reported the Defence Ministry’s website.

  • UK Foreign Affairs Committee criticises asylum seeker removal to SL

    The UK’s Foreign Affairs Committee has released a report calling on the British government to do more to assess the risk of asylum seekers who are removed from the UK, particularly highlighting removals to Sri Lanka.

    The report examined a case covered by the Guardian earlier this year which followed a deported Tamil asylum seeker (see here).

    It also noted the UN Committee Against Torture’s report which detailed “allegations of widespread torture, secret detention centres, enforced disappearances and deaths in detention in Sri Lanka”, and Human Rights Watch’s comments to the committee that they had "documented many cases of torture and ill-treatment (including rape) of failed asylum-seekers at the hands of security forces".

    The report stated that,

    “In addition, the Government failed to give a direct answer to our request for an assurance that it was content that its policy on deportation of Sri Lankans was not putting people at risk of torture.

    “We find it unsatisfactory that the Government has not been more forthcoming to Parliament about its efforts—in general and in specific cases—to assess the level of risk to the safety of those who are removed from the UK.”

    “However, the routine air of the FCO's initial responses to our questions has not given us particular confidence that the FCO is being as energetic as it might in impressing upon the UK Border Agency the degree of risk.”

    “We encourage the FCO to be energetic in evaluating reports by non-governmental organisations and media sources of torture of deportees from the UK, including in Sri Lanka, and in spelling out the risk to the UK Border Agency.

  • Gold thieves rampant warns police in Jaffna

    Despite the army barracks, checkpoints and ever increasing numbers of security forces in the North-East, gold theft is rising. 

    The Superintendent of Police in Jaffna, Erik Perera, instructed Tamil girls in Jaffna walking alone to avoid wearing gold, reported Uthayan.

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