• US Senator Menendez applauds adoption of resolution, accountability long overdue

    The US Senator Robert Menendez (D-NJ) and Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, applauded the adoption of the resolution calling on the Office of the High Commissioner to undertake an investigation in Sri Lanka, stating that accountability there was "long over due".

    In a statement issued yesterday, Sen. Menendez said, 
    “I applaud today’s passage of the U.S. co-sponsored resolution at the UN Human Rights Council which called for an independent international investigation into alleged war crimes in Sri Lanka. Accountability is long overdue in Sri Lanka, and I hope that an independent UN investigation will be able to pursue justice, accountability and reconciliation for the grave human rights violations allegedly committed by both sides during Sri Lanka’s civil war."

  • BTF: welcome investigation, this is 'just the start'
    Welcoming the UN Human Rights Council's mandating of an investigation into Sri Lanka, the British Tamil Forum (BTF) said that this was "just the start", stressing however, that it had "serious concerns" about the lack of a Tamil narrative within the text of the resolution.

    Speaking to the Tamil Guardian shortly after the Council adopted the resolution, Mr. S.A.N. Rajkumar of the BTF's Geneva desk, said, 
    "We welcome the investigative part of it, but we also have concerns because the whole Tamil narrative is lost, especially in trying to confine the problem into a religious minorities issues."
  • Sri Lanka says US ‘bullied’ states to support UNHRC resolution, hails India’s abstention
    Sri Lanka said Friday that the United States had ‘bullied’ several countries into voting in favour of the resolution on Sri Lanka at the UN Human Rights Council on Thursday, and hailed as ‘significant’ India’s abstention.

    A statement on the government’s official website quoted External Affairs Minister GL Peiris as saying US President Obama had intimidated many countries into supporting the proposal by saying that their friendship with the US and his future visits to those countries will be reviewed on their support to the proposal.

  • India stands on the sidelines as UN investigation brings new hope - Amnesty India
    Welcoming the UN Human Rights council's decision to mandate an OHCHR investigation into Sri Lanka, Amnesty International India, in statement issued last night, said India's decision to abstain had left it on the sidelines whilst the resolution brought new hope of justice to the victims.

    The statement read,
    'Despite two prior resolutions by the Council in 2012 and 2013, Sri Lanka has failed to take effective steps to deliver justice for the victims of its civil war, which ended in 2009. Instead, it has launched an aggressive campaign against those who advocate for accountability and an end to impunity for human rights violations throughout the country.'
  • Sampanthan defends India
    Commenting on India's decision to abstain during the vote at the UN Human Rights Council yesterday calling for an OHCHR investigation into Sri Lanka, the leader of the TNA, R. Sampanthan told The Hindu, that "India must have good reasons for its decisions".

    Conceding that it had caused 'surprise and a measure of disappointment', Mr. Sampanthan said,
    "we look forward to discussing that with India in due course.”
  • Sri Lanka frees India fishermen to thank UN vote abstention

    Sri Lanka's President on Friday ordered the release of all Indian fishermen detained for poaching after New Delhi surprisingly refused to back a US-led resolution against Colombo at the UN's Human Rights Council.

    President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s order was "a gesture of good will in response to India's stance" at the HRC, presidential spokesman Mohan Samaranayake told AP.

  • ‘This is about the safety of you and your children'

     

    Leaflets from Sri Lankan security forces, have been distributed across the North warning the Tamil population to “co-operate” with the Army, reported the Uthayan.

  • Unknown attackers damage Jaffna Medical Office

    A group of unknown person ransacked the Jaffna Municipal Council's Medical officer for Health's office this week.

  • Cross party UK politicians welcome establishment of independent international inquiry
    The All Party Parliamentary Group for Tamils (APPG for Tamils) welcomed the UN Human Rights Council's decision to adopt the resolution, mandating an international inquiry into Sri Lanka.

    In a statement issued the day after the vote, the cross party body of UK parliamentarians said,
    "Now the inquiry has been announced, the APPG for Tamils would like to seek clarification on how it is to be implemented. In particular, the APPG for Tamils asks the Office of the High Commissioner on Human Rights (OHCHR) to explain how it plans to conduct the inquiry if Sri Lanka does not cooperate."
  • India: UNHRC abstention was ‘in Tamils’ best interests’

    India on Friday justified its abstention from voting on the US-sponsored resolution on an international investigation into mass atrocities in Sri Lanka at the UNHRC as driven by the welfare of Tamils in the island, PTI reports.

    "We believe that our abstention yesterday is in the best interest of the Tamils in Sri Lanka and will assist us in our efforts to help them," Foreign Secretary Sujatha Singh told reporters.

    See Tamil reactions to the successful passing of the UNHRC resolution here.

  • Tamil Nadu fury at India abstention in UNHRC vote

    Political parties in Tamil Nadu expressed shock and disbelief while condemning India’s decision to abstain from a US sponsored resolution at the UN Human Right Council mandating an international inquiry into mass atrocities in Sri Lanka.

    See various reports by Times of India (here and here), The Hindu (here and here), Hindustan Times (here), Business Standard (here), domain-b.com (here ) and PTI (here).

    The below is a summary of key reactions.

  • US express concern over deteriorating human rights in Sri Lanka

    In statements released in the wake of a UN Human Rights Council resolution appointing an international investigation into rights abuses in Sri Lanka, US officials, US National Security Council spokesperson Caitlin Hayden and the US Ambassador to Sri Lanka Michele J. Sison, drew attention to the deteriorating human rights situation on the island.

  • ‘The time has come for accountability’ says US Congressional Caucus co-chair

    This week’s vote at the UN Human Rights Council on Sri Lanka has sent a clear message to the Sri Lankan government over accountability, stated the co-chair of the United States Caucus on Ethnic and Religious Freedom in Sri Lanka.

    In a statement released today Congressman Bill Johnson said,

    “Yesterday’s vote by the U.N. Human Rights Council illustrates the international community’s commitment to the pursuit of peaceful stability in Sri Lanka, and sends a clear message to the Sri Lankan government that the time has come for accountability and reconciliation”. 

  • Another Tamil detained by the TID
    Another Tamil living in the North-East was arrested by the Terrorist Investigation Division (TID) yesterday. Thurairasa Amuthaakaran, aged 28 from Udupiddi was arrested and taken to the TID office in Jaffna.

    The detainee’s family are yet to receive an explanation for his arrest, reports the Uthayan.

    See also:
  • TNA: We fully support this call for an investigation, have been asking for five years



    Expressing its “full support” for the call for an international investigation into Sri Lanka’s mass atrocities in the UN Human Rights Council resolution tabled this week, the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) said Wednesday: "this is what we had been asking for, for five years."

    "In this resolution, it very clearly gives a mandate to establish a comprehensive international investigation," said Mr. Sumanthiran, TNA MP.

    "We fully support the call for an investigation in this resolution - this is what we had been asking for for five years," he added.

    Mr. Sumanthiran was speaking to reporters at an impromptu press conference outside HRC plenary room, soon after UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay had presented her report on Sri Lanka.

    He was accompanied by other TNA MPs, Maavai Senathirajah, Suresh Premachandran, S Sritharan, Selvam Adaikalanathan and MK Shivajalingham.

    Calling for urgent implementation of the resolution, which is to be voted on later Thursday Mr. Senathirajah said any delay would allow Sri Lanka to carry out further land grabs, sexual violence against women, arrests, detentions, disappearances, and militarisation.

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