• Sri Lanka to resubmit application for GSP+ in January

    The Sri Lankan government will resubmit its applications to regain the EU's GSP+ trade concessions, which were withdrawn over its human rights record/

    International Development Minister Malik Samarawickrama told textile industry representatives earlier this month that the EU's ban on fisheries exports will be removed, which would pave the way to regaining GSP+, The Sunday Times reported.

    In November the EU's ambassador to Sri Lanka, David Daly said that the reinstatement of the GSP+ benefits were further away than the government claimed, a few days after Mr Samarawickrama told parliament that the concessions would be reinstated in June 2016.

    Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe in June claimed GSP+ would be granted after the Human Rights Council last September.

  • Sri Lankan president says Iglesias gig organisers should be ‘whipped'

    Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena called for the organisers of an Enrique Iglesias concert to be “whipped with toxic stingray tails”, calling the behaviour of concert goers “uncivilised”.

    Addressing a public meeting in Amparai, Mr Sirisena was outraged by reports that female fans at the concert had thrown undergarments at the 40 year old singer, while one fan got on stage and kissed him.

  • Sri Lankan to update Buddhist chronicles with recent presidents' reigns
    The Sri Lankan government announced that the latest chapter of a Buddhist chronicle is to be printed and will contain details of the island’s armed conflict.

    The Ministry of Internal Affairs, Wayamba Development and Cultural Affairs said the latest chapter of the Mahavamsa would cover from 1978 to 2010 and would examine the presidencies of J. R. Jayawardene, Ranasinghe Premadasa, Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga and Mahinda Rajapaksa.

    Under Mr Rajapaksa, the Sri Lankan government had previously announced funding for 3 additional chapters dedicated solely to the former president, more than any of the predecessors in the text.
  • Jaffna protestors demand clean water

    Protestors in Jaffna took to the streets on Sunday to demand that the Sri Lankan government provide safe drinking water.


    Demonstrating by the Chunnakam Iyanar temple, the protestors also called on the Northern Provincial Council to ensure safe drinking water was being provided for residents.
  • Ranil to table resolution to set up constitutional reform process
    Sri Lanka’s prime minister Ranil Wickremesinghe is to table a resolution that will set up a parliamentary constitutional assembly on January 9 2016 reports Colombo Page.

    The resolution will set up a process that will seek to build Sri Lanka’s 3rd constitution.
  • Tsunami victims remembered in Jaffna 11 years on


    The tens of thousands killed by the Boxing Day tsunami of 2004 was remembered today in events across the North-East.

  • Multi-faith remembrance ceremony held in remembrance of tsunami victims in Mullaitivu

    A multi-faith remembrance ceremony was held in Mullaitivu on Saturday to commemorate the lives lost in the Boxing Day tsunami 11 years ago.

    Hundreds of people gathered at the St Peter Tsunami Memorial Church, where Muslim, Hindu and Christian prayers were held in memory of the lives lost.


  • Tsunami memorial event held in Vavuniya

    A commemoration ceremony for those killed in the 2004 Boxing Day tsunami was held in Vavuniya today, as mourners gathered to remember those killed in the tragedy.

  • What’s missing out there? People or Politics?

    The new “Tamil Makkal Peravai” TMP platform must act prove that it will act in a way that avoids mirroring the Tamil National Alliance’s (TNA) political naivety to prove itself relevant to furthering Tamil aspirations, writes Colombo based Journalist Kusal Perera.

    Highlighting the TNA’s failure to mobilise its electorate into action and pressure the new Sirisena government during the early days of forcing reform, Mr Perera added that the formation of the TMP highlighted doubts regarding the "capability and wisdom of the TNA leadership that seems a failure in advancing the political aspirations of Tamil people for realistic answers."

    Full op-ed reproduced below.

  • Local government terms extended by six months

    President Maithripala Sirisena has announced that the term of all local government bodies will be extended by 6 months.

  • Remembering the tsunami


    On December 26th, 2004, over 35,000 people perished during the catastrophic tsunami that hit the coasts of the North-East and South of the island of Sri Lanka.

    The United Nation High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) said
    five days after the disaster that almost two thirds of those killed were in the Tamil homeland of the North-East.

  • Catholic leaders call for release of political prisoners in Christmas Day message

    Catholic leaders have called for the release of Tamil political prisoners in a Christmas Day message released earlier today.

    The Commission For Justice & Peace of The Catholic Diocese of Jaffna said that the delay in releasing prisoners who are being held in jails across the island is causing suffering and hardship to families across the North-East.

    The statement identified 15 prison sites across the island, where at least 176 prisoners are currently being detained.

    Stressing that the figures compiled were not the complete numbers of those being detained, the statement identified 50 people who had been held for 10 to 15 years in Sri Lankan prisons. At least 8 women were amongst those being held in the infamous Welikada (or Magazine prison) in Colombo, it added.

    See the full text of the statement (in Tamil) below.

    Earlier the Rev. Fr. S.V.B. Mangalarajah told The Island that Tamil political prisoners were admitting to crimes they did not commit, just so that they could be produced in court. "Most of the families of these prisoners are undergoing unbearable hardships as they are the bread winners of their families” he said. “Repeated instances of hunger-strikes and peaceful demonstrations by these prisoners and their loved ones cause us lot of pain."

    The leaders’ call comes as the Sri Lankan government announced that 550 prisoners would be released on Christmas Day. However, Commissioner General of Prisons Nishan Dhanasinghe said those released would be prisoners held for “minor crimes”, with no word of whether Tamil political prisoners would be amongst the released.

  • Sri Lankan military to ‘protect natural resources’ declares president

    Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena said the military would be used to “protect the natural resources including forest and coastal areas” of Sri Lanka, after a meeting in Colombo in Tuesday.

    Speaking with leaders of Environment Protection organisations at the Presidential Secretariat, Mr Sirisena said that soldiers from all branches of Sri Lanka’s armed forces would be used to “protect natural resources”.

    Commanders of Sri Lanka’s Tri Forces and the Inspector General of the Police were also present during the discussions, reports the Ministry of Defence.

  • Sri Lanka invites Saudi Arabia to set up oil refinery in Hambantota
    Sri Lanka has invited Saudi Arabia to set up a petroleum refinery in the southern part of the island, announced the Governor of the Central Bank Arjuna Mahendran.

    Mr Mahendran led a delegation of CEOs of commercial and state banks in Sri Lanka to Saudi Arabia in his visit to the Kingdom, which ended on Wednesday.
  • No justice 10 years on from Pararajasingham Xmas assasination in Sri Lanka

    Today marks the 10th death anniversary of the late Tamil politician Joseph Pararajasingham, who was shot dead on Christmas Eve by armed government paramilitary men in 2005.

    To this day no one has been held accountable for his death.

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