• Retired Australian diplomat recounts ‘friends’ in Sri Lanka

    Australia’s former High Commissioner, Howard Debenham, has recalled his close relationship with then Sri Lankan president Ranasinghe Premadasa and other Sinhala politicians who held notoriously racist views, as part of a new memoir entitled “Waiting ‘round the Bend”.

    Debenham arrived in Sri Lanka in 1992, where he said his objective was to “to get close enough to Premadasa for him to listen to Australia's views on human rights, trade and investment”.

    He reports that after their first meeting at the presidential mansion, “…we got along well. He made it clear he would be pleased to see more of me, one-on-one”. “My relationship with the President grew and the bilateral relationship between Sri Lanka and Australia prospered,” he commented.

    Debenham was posted to Sri Lanka, as the mil

  • India is ‘patching up relationships with the Rajapaksas’

    Reporting for the Hindu, Austin Fernando, former Sri Lankan High Commissioner to India, notes that despite a relative dip in the amount of aid offered by India to Sri Lanka; the current administration is “patching up with the Rajapaksas”.

  • Dire times to come - Newsletter, 27 July 2020

    As parliamentary elections draw closer, campaigning has heated up across the island. In the North-East, Tamils, including families of the disappeared, have signaled their discontent at the current state of military occupation, repression and impunity. More than eleven years on from the massacres of Mullivaikkal, dozens of men and women have died searching for their abducted loved ones. They, and the Tamil people, remain no closer to justice for the atrocities they endured. Across the homeland, their protests have defiantly continued and their frustration is palpable.

  • Sri Lankan army and police increase presence in hospitals

    The Sri Lankan army and police are increasing their presence at hospitals treating COVID-19 patients, in an apparent move to stop patients ‘escaping’.

    Sri Lankan security forces claim this move is in response to a patients’ escape from a hospital in Mulleriyawa.

  • We could not be silenced' - Tamil protests in London, 1984

    “It had been a year since the Black July riots in Sri Lanka. We had protested in front of the Sri Lankan Embassy in London but wanted to try something different. Something bigger.

    The Sri Lankan cricket team was coming to play their first test match at Lord’s, the home of cricket. It was a big deal. Why don't we put on a protest there? It would be disruptive, yes, but was there a bigger stage for our message?

  • Remembering the Bandaranaike-Chelvanayakam Pact of 1957 

    On this day in 1957, Sri Lankan Prime Minister SWRD Bandaranaike and the leader of the Federal Party SJV Chelvanayakam signed a deal, that contained provisions for the recognition of Tamil as the language of administration for the Northern and Eastern provinces, which came to be known as the Bandaranaike-Chelvanayakam Pact. 

    However, hawkish Sinhalese-Buddhist nationalists railed against the pact, leading ultimately to the unilateral abrogation of the agreement. This was one of the earliest instances of failed negotiations and broken agreements that would eventually seal Tamil hopes of achieving a settlement through Sri Lanka’s political processes.

  • Militarisation of Trinco continues with foreign assistance

    The Sri Lankan navy opened an underwater museum in Trincomalee with the assistance of Tokyo Cement Group, despite repeated calls for demilitarisation of the Tamil North-East. 

  • Tamil journalist threatened by paramilitary-linked local politician
    <p>A Tamil journalist was threatened by a local politician with links to a former paramilitary MP on Wednesday.</p>
  • Identity checks installed at Nallur temple festival

    Devotees will be required to present proof of identity to enter the Nallur Kandasamy temple in Jaffna, the Sri Lankan police announced as the temple’s annual festival – thiruvizha – begins.

    “All arrangements for the festival have been completed. All devotees visiting the temple will only be authorised to enter the temple by showing a piece of identity at a special check point set up on the temple premises’’ stated Jaffna police.

  • Controversial British immigration detention centre to be shut down

    A controversial immigration removal centre (IRC) in Lincolnshire, UK is to be shut down. The site called Morton Hall which has seen numerous deaths in recent times will be converted to a prison once more, as it was between the years 1985 and 2011 when accommodating female convicts.

    The detention centre is currently managed by the prison service for the Home Office, and is frequently criticised for its harsh regulations and its isolated setting. 

    “The fact that this place is closing is a huge thing,” said Janahan Sivanathan, a Tamil law student and refugee who was held at Morton Hall for 5 months.

  • Explosives discovered in Vavuniya well

    Sri Lankan police recovered 14 motor bombs in the area of Omanthai, Vavuniya last week.

    A resident in the area noticed suspicious objects in the well, and informed the Omanthai police.

    Following this lead, the police and Sri Lankan Special Task Force (STF) troops retrieved and defused the 14 motor bombs. 

    Since the end of the bloody war in 2009, there have been several findings of this kind in the North-East.

  • CCUC calls for nationwide tactical voting to prevent ‘anti-democratic’ SLPP gaining two-thirds majority

    The Ceylon Communist Unity Centre (CCUC) urged people to use the upcoming parliamentary elections to vote against and “prevent Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) and the forces aligned with it” coming into power.

    The CCUC stressed the importance of exercising the right of ballot to prevent SLPP from achieving the two-thirds majority it needs in the upcoming parliamentary elections to amend the constitution.

  • ‘Don’t give us empty promises, seek immediate justice once elected’ - Mannar families of the disappeared

    The Mannar families of the disappeared association secretary, Sharmila Madutheen urged the future parliamentarians that be elected from the upcoming parliamentary election to “seek immediate justice for the missing persons”.

    “While these canvass efforts are supposedly putting pressure on the state, these campaign promises should not simply be about winning votes in the election, but ultimately also about finding a solution for those of us who are mourning the loss of our children and husband and not given answers for their whereabouts,” she said.  

  • STF and military surveillance at Neeraviyadi temple pongal event intimidates devotees

    Special Task Force (STF) and police officers took photographs of devotees and intimidated them with their heavy presence at the Pongal event held at the old Semmalai Neeraviyadi Pillaiyar temple in Mullaitivu, yesterday.

    The presence of police and state investigators intimidated devotees as they took photographs of everyone who came to the temple, including the priest, the temple administration and all devotees.

  • SLPP supporters attempt assault on TNA candidate in Mannar

    Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) supporters in Mannar attempted to assault Tamil National Alliance (TNA) Vanni candidate Senthilnathan Mayuran, while he was campaigning on Thursday.

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