• Germany to initiate resolution to back GSP+ reinstatement claims Sri lanka

    The German government has initiated a resolution at the parliament of the European Union in support of Sri Lanka regaining the GSP+ trade concession, reports Colombo Gazette.
  • Asylum seekers told by Australia's navy to go back to Sri Lanka and die

    The Australian Navy told Sri Lankan asylum seekers to go back to Sri Lanka and die during interviews with asylum seekers, reports Colombo Gazette.
  • India keen to build ADB funded road link to Sri Lanka
    India said it was still interested in a bridge or undersea tunnel link between India and Sri Lanka after signing a road transport agreement with Bangladesh, Bhutan and Nepal.

    Speaking to press, India’s roads minister Nitin Gadkari, said,

    “When I met Asian Development Bank (ADB) officials (in June), the told me to look at a connectivity project between the Indian mainland and Sri Lanka as well. They said they would finance it. They proposed a bridge between Rameswaram and Sri Lanka.”

    Adding examples of existing overseas connections, Mr Gadkari said,

    “When I recently visited Rotterdam, I visited an immersed tunnel connecting Rotterdam and Belgium. So it could be an immersed tunnel or a bridge. We are looking at it.”

    Sri Lankan government ‘not interested’ in bridge to India states Minister (31 Dec 2015)

    See our editorial:
    Sri Lanka’s Indophobia (07 Aug 2015)
  • ICRC offers assistance to Sri Lanka to deal with families of missing persons
    The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has offered to assist the government families of those reported missing reports ColomboGazette.
  • Sri Lanka is overcoming obstacles internationally - President Sirisena

    President Maithripala Sirisena said Sri Lanka was overcoming obstacles internationally, while some are making baseless accusations.

    Speaking at an event in Polonaruwa, Mr Sirisena said that the government was not being influence, despite of what political opponents were saying.

    The president also claimed that he can save former president Mahinda Rajapaksa and those who engaged in the war from the electric chair.

  • Sri Lanka not averse to international probe - Ranil

    Sri Lanka's Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe said his government was not averse to international participation in the country's touted accountability mechanism, however stressed that "final judgement will be made by the internal judicial system".

    The prime minister, who was visiting a temple in Guruvayur, said officials from neighbouring countries such as India, Pakistan, Afghanistan and Bangladesh would be able to participate in discussions on war crimes, alongside representatives from the US and human rights organisations.

    Mr Wickremesinghe said Sri Lanka wanted to ensure that those responsible for civilian deaths are held to account, whether they were from the military or the LTTE, adding that the UN said it was possible that up to 40,000 people were killed in the last phase of the war.

  • Former Rajapaksa cabinet minister appointed as Northern Province governor
    A former cabinet minister under Mahinda Rajapaksa’s regime was appointed as the Governor of the Northern Province on Sunday, reports Colombo Page.

    Reginald Cooray, was sworn in at President Maithripala Sirisena’s office on Sunday with his appointment to be effective from February 16th.
  • IMF to audit US $250 billion of Sri Lanka development projects initiated under former regime
    Representatives of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) will visit Sri Lanka next week for a joint ‘Forensic Audit’ on development projects that amount to US $250 billion launched by the former Rajpaksa regime.

    Government Minister Sarath Amunagama told media that the consensual government was in a dilemma as to how capital investment could be raised for the projects, as the previous regime had commenced the project without full financial backing.
  • Mahinda Rajapaksa to form new political party
    Sri Lanka’s former president Mahinda Rajapaksa set up a coordinating office in the wake of announcing that a group of MPs loyal to him will form a new political party.

    A large number of parliamentarians loyal to Mahinda Rjapaksa reportedly met at his residence this week to discuss the final details of the new party and finalised the name and party symbol reports Colombo Page.
  • Sri Lankan govt launches consultations process on reconciliation

    The Sri Lankan government on Friday launched a consultations process, the 'Secretariat for Coordinating Reconciliation Mechanisms'.

  • Jaya urges Modi to halt Sri Lankan navy's repeated arrests of Indian fishermen
    The chief minister of the Tamil Nadu, J Jayalalithaa, on Firday urged the Indian prime minister Narendra Modi to take action over the arrests of Indian fishermen by the Sri Lankan navy, after the latest arrest of 12 fishermen took place this week.

    There is an "urgent and imperative need" to find a lasting solution to the situation she wrote in her latest letter to Mr Modi, the PTI reported.

    "My Government stays committed to ensuring and upholding the traditional rights of fishermen from Tamil Nadu to fish in their traditional fishing waters of Palk Bay," her letter read.

  • No foreign influence says Sri Lankan president
    The Sri Lankan president, Maithripala Sirisena on Friday reiterated that his government was not under any foreign influence.
  • Vanni's Volunteer teachers demand permanent appointments

    Volunteer teachers in Vanni called for permanent appointments to be made as promised months ago by the provincial council.

  • ‘Victims must feel justice is done’ – UN High Commissioner

    UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Al Hussein said victims of Sri Lanka’s armed conflict must feel that justice is done, no matter the form of accountability mechanism enacted.

    Speaking to reporters at the end of his visit to the island earlier this week, Mr Al Hussein reiterated his office’s support for international involvement in accountability, stating:

    “The suggestion of having an impartial and independent court is fundamental because it must address the needs of victims on all sides. And we thought by having international participation this can be guaranteed.”

    With reporters reminding the human rights chief of comments from Sri Lankan leaders, who have repeatedly rejected foreign involvement, the High Commissioner noted that there “may be other views”.

    However, he added that “certainly the victims views have to be brought into this discussion – and that’s why the consultation that the government has begun is all the more important that their views be taken into account”.

    He continued to say:

    There has to be set in motion a process to establish the truth, to establish a mechanism which will confirm or not whether there were systemic violations of a planned and organised manner and whether those thresholds then merit prosecution. All of this requires a step by step approach.”

    “However in the end… whatever you do will be for nought if the victims themselves do not feel that justice is being done.”

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