• Sri Lanka army uses elections as cover to ramp up security in North-East

    The Sri Lankan military has acknowledged the stepping up of security operations in both Kilinochchi and Mullaitivu, claiming that it is aimed at preventing “election violence”.

  • US report on Sri Lanka highlights ‘significant human rights issues’

    The US State Department’s 2019 Country Report on Human Rights Practices in Sri Lanka highlighted a range of concerns this week, from unlawful killings and torture by government agents to the unjustified arrests of journalists and violence against lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and intersex (LGBTI) persons.

    Amongst the issues raised by the State Department was the harassment of Tamil journalists in the North-East, including of Tamil Guardian correspondents. 

  • Tamil man in hospital after being beaten unconscious by Sri Lankan police

    A Tamil man has been admitted to Jaffna General Hospital after he was arrested by Sri Lankan police and found beaten unconscious on Wednesday.

    The man, identified as Victor Sunthar of Mambalam junction, Ariyalai, was only admitted into hospital after an intervention from a Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka officer, who accompanied his wife as she attempted to get him released from custody.

  • ‘Confide in us’ says Sri Lankan army chief as coronavirus quarantine begins

    The head of Sri Lanka’s army, who is currently subjected to US travel sanctions over his role in overseeing war crimes, called on the public to “confide” in the military as it began quarantining foreigners in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic.

  • Coronavirus outbreak adds to Sri Lanka’s economic woes

    Sri Lanka’s already struggling economy looks set to suffer heavier blows this week, as the coronavirus pandemic hit tourist arrivals, caused an economic outflow from the island and may lead to a drop in remittances from abroad.

    The news comes amid reports that at least two people have been diagnosed with the coronavirus in Sri Lanka.

    The Sunday Times quoted Central Bank statistics as showing a foreign outflow of Rs 8.23 billion by Friday last week as Rs 11.42 billion government securities were encashed, with Sri Lanka’s fragile economic situation worsening.

    “Sri Lanka’s economic links with China could be directly affected as significant volumes of consumer goods, intermediate goods and investment goods are imported from China,” the Central Bank said in a statement.

  • US - Sri Lankan military training continues despite travel sanctions

    The United States continued its military relationship with Sri Lanka, as American troops took part in a Joint Combined Exchange Training (JCET) in Trincomalee this month, despite the US State Department placing sanctions on the head of the Sri Lankan army.

    The course, inaugurated at the Sri Lankan navy’s occupying  Special Boat Squadron Training School in Trincomalee earlier this month, will reportedly focus on several areas including “Human Rights, Law of armed conflict, Small unit tactics, Military operations in Urban Environment, Tactical Combat Casualty Care, Combat Marksmanship, Close Quarter Battle, Mission Planning, Maritime Operations”. 

  • ‘We cannot report freely until the PTA is lifted’ - Vavuniya newspaper director

    The  director of Vavuniya-based Thinapuyal newspaper, Sakthivelpillai Prakash, said that Tamil media on the island could not report freely until Sri Lanka’s Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) is lifted.

    Prakash, who was speaking to reporters after attending questioning at Sri Lanka’s Terrorism Investigation Division (TID), described the interrogation that his wife and another editor were subjected to.

  • Sri Lankan military sets up more road blocks in Mannar

    The Sri Lankan security forces have continued to ramp up the militarisation of the North-East, with new road blocks set up in Mannar this week.

    Locals travelling on coaches and public buses have been subjected to searches by the military, as part of increased security operations that have stepped up in recent months.

  • ‘Civil libertarians and economists quake at prospect of Rajapaksa landslide’ - The Economist

    The prospect of the Rajapaksa clan capturing a two-thirds majority in the upcoming Sri Lanka parliamentary elections has left many on the island fearing what the future may hold, reports The Economist this week.

  • Tamil asylum seeker takes on US immigration policy at the Supreme Court

    The US Supreme Court heard a landmark case brought by a Tamil asylum seeker this month, which could have wide-reaching implications for Washington’s fast-tracked immigration and deportation processes.

    Vijayakumar Thuraissigiam, a Tamil asylum seeker who reached the United States via a gruelling eight-month journey through South and Central America, was arrested just 25 yards north of the US-Mexican border and placed in expedited removal proceedings which deemed he could be deported to Sri Lanka. After years in Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) custody, his challenge of a particularly arbitrary US immigration policy has now reached the highest court in the federal judiciary.

  • ‘I wish we could have done more’ - David Miliband on Sri Lanka

    Britain’s former foreign secretary David Miliband tweeted that he wished the UK “could have done more” on Sri Lanka, as a fellow Labour parliamentarian visited the UN Human Rights Council this week. 

    Labour MP Wes Streeting, highlighted the "widespread concerns" over Sri Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa retracting from Colombo's commitments made at previous UN Human Rights Council sessions and emphasised the need to bring "people to justice for historic war crimes and atrocities committed during the Sri Lankan civil war." 

  • Families of Tamil political prisoners demand their release

    The family members of Tamil political prisoners, some of whom have been detained for years, rallied in Mannar last week, as they demanded the Sri Lankan government abolish the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) and release their relatives.

  • Sri Lanka's Human Rights Commissioner Ambika Satkunanathan resigns

    Ambika Satkunanathan has resigned from her post as the Commissioner of the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka (HRCSL) in an announcement she posted online, effective from Saturday morning

  • Sri Lankan army prepares to ‘quarantine foreigners’ in wake of coronavirus 

    The Sri Lankan military announced it had set up “improvised quarantine centres” in the Eastern province, as it prepares to “quarantine foreigners and Sri Lankan expatriates arriving here” as part of measures to tackle transmission of the corona virus.

    Shavendra Silva, the war crimes accused head of the army who is subject to US travel sanctions, travelled to the Polonnaruwa and Batticaloa districts on Monday morning, as he inspected the makeshift camps the military had constructed. 

  • ‘Not even a scratch’ on surrendered Tamils claims former Sri Lankan army commander

    Daily Mirror Sri Lanka

    The former commander of Sri Lanka’s army Daya Ratnayake has lashed out at the United Nations and staunchly brushed off reports of mass atrocities committed by Sri Lankan troops, calling them “completely baseless and fabricated”.

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