• Tamil Nadu commemorates Lt Col Thileepan

    Whilst Sri Lanka has imposed a ban on commemorating the sacrifice of Lt Col Thileepan across Eelam, Tamils across Tamil Nadu have taken to paying tribute to his hunger strike, despite the coronavirus pandemic that has gripped the state.

  • Sri Lanka to be paid $1.84 million over ship fire as captain barred from leaving

    The owners of the New Diamond supertanker which caught fire off Sri Lanka’s coast have agreed to pay $1.84 million to the Sri Lankan government, whilst the Colombo Magistrate's Court imposed a travel ban on the captain preventing him from leaving the island.

  • Sri Lanka sends 21 containers of “hazardous hospital waste” back to Britain

    Sri Lanka has returned 21 containers of up to 260 tonnes of waste, back to Britain after officials say the waste was brought onto the island in violation of international laws governing the shipping of hazardous material.

  • Ceylon Teachers' Union endorses hartal

    Responding to the widespread hartal across the North-East, in protest of Sri Lankan attempts to ban the commemoration of those who gave their lives for Tamil rights, Ceylon’s Teachers Union has called on educators to stand in solidarity with the protest movement.

  • More threats from Sinhala Buddhist monk as hartal underway

    A Sinhala Buddhist monk has called on the Sri Lankan president and military to investigate the hartal that is currently underway across the North-East, claiming it was a "call for a separate Tamil state".

    On a video clip that has been widely shared across social media, the monk Ampitiye Sumangala called said Gotabaya Rajapaksa was the "true Sinhala-Buddhist President" of Sri Lanka and called on him to investigate the protest.

    Just days ago the monk, who has become notorious for his frequent violent outburst and assaults, threatened officials of the Department of Archaeology over a delay to demarcate an archaeological reservation land in Chenkalady

  • Sri Lankan police attempt to break hartal by forcing shops to open

    (Police patrolling Vavuniya)

    Sri Lankan police have attempted to break the hartal being carried out across the North-East by threatening and intimidating participants into reopening their stores.

  • Hartal shuts down North-East as protests against Sri Lankan repression step up

    A hartal is being carried out across the North-East today, as Tamils were joined by Muslims and others across the region as they protested Sri Lankan attempts to ban the commemoration of those who gave their lives for Tamil rights and ongoing intimidation.

    The hartal - a day long shutdown - took place despite intimdation from the Sri Lankan security forces, with reports that traders were threatened to continue business as normal.

  • Rajapaksa shifts up a gear

    Sri Lanka’s president has wasted little time in getting to work. Within weeks of his party sweeping parliamentary polls, Gotabaya Rajapaksa rapidly produced the long-promised 20th Amendment to Sri Lanka’s constitution, which seeks to further concentrate power into the executive presidency he occupies. As expected, there are few checks on his power and with a super-majority in parliament, a determined Rajapaksa looks set to steamroll it through.

  • North-East plans hartal in protest of Thileepan memorial ban

    Tamil political parties and civil society actors have planned a hartal across the North-East in protest of a Sri Lankan court ban and intimidation from the security forces, preventing them from commemorating those who gave their lives for Tamil rights.

  • ‘Let the spirit of Thileepan unite Tamils globally’- Tamil diaspora groups

    A coalition of Tamil diaspora groups around the world released a joint statement commemorating Thiyagi Thileepan’s sacrifice, calling for action “demanding that the militarised Sri Lankan dictatorship recognise international conventions on the right to remember the dead”. 

  • Easter Sunday bomber met with intelligence officer before attack claims Sri Lankan former inspector general

    Former Inspector General of the Police, Pujith Jayasundara, testifying before the Presidential Commission of Inquiry probing the 2019 April attacks, claimed that the bomber of the Tropical Inn in Dehiwela had met with an intelligence official 45 minutes before he blew himself up.

  • Controversial Rajapaksa ally appointed as Sri Lanka’s UN representative

    Mohan Peiris, former attorney general and legal advisor to Mahinda Rajapaksa has been appointed as the new permanent representative of Sri Lanka to the UN in New York.

    Peiris was congratulated by the UN representative in Sri Lanka, Hanaa Singer, in a tweet despite Peiris being found on record to have misled the UN Committee against Torture (CAT). Singer’s tweet has been met with backlash from activists critical of Peiris’s record. His appointment is seen as an expansion of the Rajapaksa’s inner circle.

  • Jaffna University commemorates Thileepan amidst military intimidation

    Students at Jaffna University took a knee to commemorate the death of Lt Col Thileepan this morning, despite intimidation from the Sri Lankan security forces a day earlier.

  • Modi tells Rajapaksa that implementation of 13th Amendment is ‘essential’

    Indian Prime minister Narendra Modi told Sri Lanka’s Prime Minister that implementation of the 13th Amendment - which devolves power to a merged North-East - was “essential”, as the two leaders met in a virtual summit today.

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