• Sri Lanka in ‘firm protest’ against Canadian Bill advocating for Tamil Genocide Education Week

    Sri Lanka is in ‘firm protest’ against Bill 104 which advocates for Tamil Genocide Education Week in Ontario, Canada.

    In a statement, the High Commission of Sri Lanka in Ottawa said:

  • UK following Sri Lanka’s current political situation closely says Minister
    <p>UK Minister said that the British government is following the current political situation in Sri Lanka closely.</p> <p>Lord Ahmad, Minister of State for South Asia answered a written question posed by The Marquees of Lothian, a Conservative Peer.</p>
  • UN Chief expresses alarm at clampdown on freedom of expression in Sri Lanka

    UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet expressed alarm at the clampdown on freedom of expression in Sri Lanka during the coronavirus pandemic.

    The UN Chief said that “arrests for expressing discontent or allegedly spreading false information through the press and social media” were reported in Sri Lanka, a press release stated.

  • New task force to conserve all archaeological sites in East irrespective of religion says Defence Secretary

    The Presidential Task Force (PTF) on ‘Archaeological Heritage Management in the Eastern Province’ is to conserve all archaeology heritage sites in the East irrespective of religion, says Kamal Gunaratne, Sri Lanka’s Defence Secretary.

     

  • Wigneswaran calls for the release of Tamil political prisoners

    Former Chief Minister of Northern Province in Sri Lanka and Secretary-general for Thamizh Makkal Thesya Kootanii (TMTK), C.V. Wigneswaran, has written an appeal for the 91 Tamil political prisoners who have been detained for the past 10-15 years under the draconian Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA).

  • Asian Development Bank grants Sri Lanka £3 million despite human rights abuses
    <p>The Asian Development Bank (ADB) has granted Sri Lanka £3 million, financed from the Japanese government, in response to the coronavirus pandemic despite concerns over the island’s human rights record.</p> <p>This grant was approved on 2 June for the purchase of test kits, diagnostic reagents, personal protective equipment, and further essential medical supplies.</p> <p>Chen Chen, ABD’s Country Director for Sri Lanka, warned that:</p>
  • Former SriLankan Airlines manager found dead in Colombo
    <p>Former SriLankan Airlines manager, Rajeewa Jayaweera, has been found dead at Independence Square, Colombo this morning.&nbsp;</p> <p>He was also a well known freelance journalist who exposed corruption at SriLanka Airlines.&nbsp;</p>
  • Police ban commemoration of Suthanthirapuram massacre

    Sri Lankan police banned Tamils from commemorating those who were killed by the Sri Lankan air force in Sumanthirapuram on June 10, 1998. 

    Twenty-two years have passed since the tragic massacre that left 33 dead and 52 injured, when a temple was struck by Sri Lankan air force. 

  • Sri Lanka slides into authoritarianism – Sri Lanka Campaign for Peace and Justice

    Sri Lanka Campaign for Peace and Justice has released a statement warning against Sri Lanka’s slide into authoritarianism and calling for the international community to push back against the increasing militarisation of Sri Lanka.

  • Sri Lanka, statues and solidarity

    Once upon a time, a common man made history. Nelson Mandela, alongside the thousands of Black South Africans that fought against Apartheid by his side, changed the course of history. In fact, he built the foundation upon which many liberation struggles around the world stand on today. Without this man’s perseverance and determination, South Africa and the world could be very different as we know it. However, he did not make history for his name to be tarnished as an accompaniment to modern-day politics and oppression. This is in the context of reports emerging last month that a statue of Nelson Mandela will be hoisted in Sri Lanka. The statue of a freedom fighter in a land where Tamils still have no freedom.

  • ‘Sri Lanka is a Buddhist Sinhala country’ - BBS

    Bodu Bala Sena’s (BBS) secretary general, Galagoda Aththe Gnanasara claimed the North-East was “not Tamils homeland” and instead said Sri Lanka is a Buddhist Sinhala country, according to comments reported in the Uthayan last month.

  • Sri Lankan government officials ‘engage in systematic discrimination’ – US State Dept

    The United States 2019 Report on International Religious Freedom said Sri Lankan government officials “continued to engage in systematic discrimination against religious minorities,” according to reports received from religious communities and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs).

    The report highlighted how during 2019, “local government officials and police reportedly responded minimally or not at all to numerous incidents of religiously motivated violence against minorities”.

  • Jayasundara appointed STF Commandant

    A former senior Sri Lankan front line commando has been announced as the new Commandant of the Special Task Force (STF), a police unit accused of widespread atrocities.

    Waruna Jayasundera, an STF officer with frontline combat experience during the armed conflict, was appointed the new Commandant in a reshuffle this week.

  • Sri Lanka Archaeology Task Force harms inter-religious harmony and direct threat to Tamils and Muslims – Father Rohan

    Sri Lanka President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s decision to implement a “Presidential Task Force for Archaeological Heritage Management in the Eastern Province” is a move that “threatens minorities” and puts their “inclusive democratic rights into question,” said Rev. Fr. Rajan Rohan, the secretary of Inter-Religious Forum in Batticaloa.

  • Sri Lankan police register households in Colombo with some collecting ethnicity details

    Sri Lankan police have been registering the details of occupants in households across Colombo according to reports emerging from the city, with at least some forms also asking for the ethnicity and religion of any occupants.

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