• Accountability will lay basis for progress in Sri Lanka – UN Secretary-General

    Advancing accountability will lay the basis for future progress for peace, democracy and development in Sri Lanka, said the Office of the Spokesperson for the Secretary-General.

    Speaking on the deferral of a United Nations investigation into mass atrocities, Farhan Haq, Deputy Spokesman for the Secretary-General, said UN Secretary-General Ban Ki Moon “stressed the importance of Sri Lanka to show firm and clear commitment to accountability, reconciliation and human rights”.

    “Advancing accountability, like other parts of the post-war agenda in Sri Lanka, will lay the basis for the country to make further progress on peace, democracy and development,” added Mr Haq.
  • Delay only justified if OISL gathers more evidence from victims - ICET
    The International Council of Eelam Tamils (ICET) urged the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights to ensure that the UN inquiry obtains additional evidence from the victims in the North-East, stating that only this could justify the 6 months delay in publishing its report on the OHCHR Investigation on Sri Lanka (OISL).

    "The only way this delay can be justified is if the OISL personnel gather additional evidence from the victims on the ground. We sincerely hope that OHCHR will tenaciously use its powers to gain unhindered access for the OISL team to directly gather the necessary evidence. Only such action can justify the delay in the process to bring justice to the victims," ICET said in a statement on Monday.

    The OISL report, which was scheduled to be released at the UN Human Rights Council's 28th session next month, was on Monday deferred till September, in order to give Sri Lanka 6 months to cooperate with the inquiry in view of gathering further information.

  • UN investigators should come and speak to victims directly says TNPF
    The Tamil National People's Front (TNPF) said the delay in the publishing of the findings of the UN inquiry into mass atrocities against the Tamil people in Sri Lanka could only be justified if the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights collected evidence directly from victims on the ground and ensured that Sri Lanka ratified the Rome Statute in order for it to be investigated by the International Criminal Court.

    "From the Tamil people's view, if this delay is truly to ensure a comprehensive inquiry to the victims, and not just for a regime change agenda, then we have certain demands," TNPF president, Gajendrakumar Ponnambalam told a press conference on Tuesday.

    "Firstly, as we all now, the former government did not allow the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights to visit and conduct a proper inquiry. This needs to happen. As far as we are concerned the majority of people who were affected are living on this soil, not just in the diaspora. A significant number of testimonies from those living here must be recorded," he said.

  • Doubts emerge over Sri Lanka's 'new' 1000 acre resettlement plan
    A proportion of the  recently announced 1000 acre government resettlement plan in the Jaffna Valikamam High Security Zone (HSZ), was previously deemed unacceptable by Tamil families, reports the Uthayan.

    Speaking to Tamil Guardian, Northern Provincial Councillor, Ananthy Sasitharan, said that the Tamil people had previously rejected the plan as the scheme did not resettle them to their original lands. Commenting on the new government's resettlement proposals for the displaced families in Valikamam, Ms Sasitharan said that the same issues of not allowing families to resettle in their original traditional lands remained.

    The TNA spokesperson Suresh Premachandran speaking at a press conference on Friday, noted that there were at least 18 military run hotels in the Tamil areas that would have to be demolished to make way for resettlement.
  • Awaiting Justice

    The UN Human Rights Council’s decision to give the new government 6 months to cooperate with the OHCHR Investigation on Sri Lanka (OISL), in view of gathering more information, and defer the publishing of the UN inquiry into mass atrocities till September, has been met with mixed reactions. Whilst Colombo celebrates what it sees as a diplomatic coup, human rights groups have cautiously welcomed the prospect that more evidence can be found. However, Tamil victims, witnesses and campaigners for justice have expressed deep disappointment that justice, denied to them for so long, is delayed once again.

    Describing it as a “difficult decision”, the High Commissioner for Human Rights, Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein’s acknowledged the inevitable disappointment of witnesses, but said the decision was based on the promise of “broad cooperation” by the new government and the prospect of “a stronger and more comprehensive report”. Mr Zeid’s unequivocal statement that the deferment was “for one time only” and his personal commitment to ensure its release at the Council’s 30th session is welcome. However, despite the new government’s very basic promises (outlined in the foreign minister’s letter to Mr Zeid), the Tamil people’s deep scepticism that it will deliver on them remains palpable - nowhere more so than in the North-East.

  • Wigneswaran calls for action against Sinhala political chauvinism
    The Northern Provincial Council Chief Minister, C V Wigneswaran, in a speech made shortly after tabling the NPC resolution on Sri Lanka’s genocide against Tamils, warning of "Sinhala political chauvinism," stressed the “importance of the younger generation’s participation and courage to see the resolution implemented,” and stop the government from "betraying" the Tamil people.

    Highlighting Tamils had been, over decades of subjugation and brutality, been forced to supress their demands, Mr Wigneswaran said,

    “I look at our resolution as a tool to express the truth. This resolution has been formed to express that the activities that have happened against Tamils until present, without a doubt, amount to genocide under several articles in international law.”

    Drawing upon his engagement with official in the new Sri Lankan government, including Prime Minister Ranil Wickremasinghe and the resettlement minister D Swaminathan, Mr Wigneswaran highlighted that recent government plans to resettle Tamils and reduce militarisation were disingenuous, stating,

    “I’ve realised the plot is to betray us.”
  • Justice has been delayed' by deferring OISL report, says TNA MP
    The deferral of a United Nations inquiry into mass atrocities committed against the Tamil people has delayed justice, said Tamil National Alliance MP Suresh Premachandran.

    “The Tamil people expected justice from the United Nations and thought the report might be the basis for resolving our problems,” Mr Premachandran told the LA Times.

    “Unfortunately, justice has been delayed. We don’t know whether it will be denied,” he added.
  • OISL deferral must lead to stronger report – Amnesty International
    The decision to defer a United Nations investigation into mass atrocities in Sri Lanka must ensure that perpetrators of crimes committed during the armed conflict cannot escape unpunished, said Amnesty International.

    “A delay is only justifiable if more time will lead to a stronger document and to a concrete commitment by the new Sri Lankan authorities to actively pursue accountability. This includes by co-operating with the UN to investigate conflict-era abuses and bring perpetrators to justice,” said Richard Bennett, Amnesty International's Asia-Pacific Director.    

    Mr Bennet further added that “survivors of torture, including sexual abuse, people whose family members were killed or forcibly disappeared have waited a long time for this report.”
  • Continuing militarisation of Tamil school children across North-East

    (All photos: Sri Lanka Army)

    The Sri Lankan military continues to involve itself in activities involving school children and their education, across the Tamil regions in the North-East of the island.

    Soldiers from regiments which stand accused of commiting mass atrocities, stationed in Batticaloa, Kilinochchi and Mullaitivu, organised several activities in the last few weeks, involving young school children, despite Sri Lanka's foreign minister, Mangala Samaraweera, telling delegates gathered at a conference in Washington last week that "involvement of the military in civilian activities has ceased".

    Troops from the Special Forces Regiment, based in Kilinochchi organised a trip to Colombo from February 11-12, for 37 children from Kanagapuram Central School to visit a photographic exhibition about the military, also taking them to a Buddhist stupa in the Viharamahadevi Park, named after Sinhala king Dutugamenu’s mother.

  • Tamil issues must be resolved before considering Sri Lanka's unity government, says TNA
    The Tamil National Alliance (TNA) said that Tamil issues would have to be addressed before any decision could be taken on joining a unity government with the new regime.

    Responding to questions on the prospect of the TNA forming a unity government, TNA spokesperson Suresh Premachandran, speaking to Xinhua, said,
  • Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera to visit China

    Sri Lanka's External Affairs Minister Mangala Samaraweera will visit China later this month, the first high-level visit to Beijing since the new government came to power in January.

    Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying said Mr Samaraweera would meet his Chinese counterpart and other officials on his Feb 27-28 trip.

    "We hope to use the opportunity of this visit by Foreign Minister Samaraweera to have a further deep exchange of views on the future of Sino-Sri Lanka ties under this new situation," Ms Hua told media on Tuesday.

    According to Sri Lanka's Ministry of External Affairs, Mr Samaraweera will undertake the visit at the invitation of Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi.

  • Sri Lanka must use extra time to work with UN – Hugo Swire

    Britain’s Foreign and Commonwealth Office Minister Hugo Swire urged the Sri Lankan government to use the time gained by the deferral of the Sri Lanka inquiry report to work with the OHCHR to ensure the investigation is “thorugh and consistent”.

    Speaking the day after the deferral, Mr Swire welcomed the opportunity for Sri Lanka to contribute to the report, as per its commitment to engage with the investigation, reiterating the UK’s commitment to see the report published in September.

    “The UN investigation is a vital part of the process of addressing the grievances of those affected by the conflict and of achieving lasting peace in Sri Lanka. And we recognise how important this report is for many communities in Sri Lanka and around the world who are looking for answers. That’s why we, and the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, have made clear that the report must be published and discussed by September 2015 and we will stick to that,” he said.

    “The UK wants to see reconciliation in Sri Lanka. That’s why we argued last year for a UN investigation into alleged war crimes and it is why we supported the deferral of this report for six months.”

  • TNA accuses government of reneging on promises regarding demilitarisation

    The Tamil National Alliance has demanded the return of Tamil land in the North-East, occupied by the military in so-called High Security Zones, by the start of the UN Human Rights Council session in March, as promised by the new government ahead of the presidential elections.

    “Before the election the new government pledged it will release land occupied by the military and the people will be resettled [in those land],” MP MA Sumanthiran said, according to the Uthayan.

    “However not an inch of land has been released, in Sampur, Keppapilavu, Mullikkulam, Paravippanjaan and Vali North, land which the government promised will be returned,” the MP charged.

    Mr Sumanthiran rejected the recent announcement of the release of 1,000 acres of land in Vali North and the building of a model village, implying the move was made to show progress ahead of Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera’s meeting with US Secretary of State John Kerry.

  • India will call on Sri Lanka to take tangible steps to reconcile Tamils says Alan Keenan
    The Sri Lanka analyst at the International Crisis Group (ICG) Alan Keenan, speaking to Duetsche Welle, said that India will call on President Maithripala Sirisena to “take tangible steps towards meaningful reconciliation with Tamils, particularly in the north and east of Sri Lanka.”

    Commenting on Sirisena’s trip to meet India, Mr Keenan, noting that the Northern Provincial Council (NPC), had “limited constitutional powers,” added that India would urge Sri Lanka’s new government to cooperate with the elected Northern Provincial Council, develop its powers and “provide relief to Tamils in the north and east, through the release of land occupied by the Sri Lankan military.”
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