• Video of maltreatment of female recruits 'stage-managed' claims army

    Commenting on a video that emerged earlier this week depicting the maltreatment of female army recruits by male officers, the Sri Lankan Army said that the video had be "stage-managed" in order to "tarnish and discredit the Army".
  • MDMK pledges to lift ban on LTTE and work for Eelam referendum
    The Marumalarchi Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (MDMK) party in Tamil Nadu, outlined in their new manifesto, released today, that they would lift the ban on the Liberation Tamil Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), should they be voted into power.
  • Human Rights chief's focus on Sri Lanka shows prejudice, says External Affairs Ministry
    The United Nations Human Rights Commissioner, Navi Pillay's, focus on atrocities committed in Sri Lanka, showed that she was prejudiced, a Sri Lankan External Affairs Ministry official told the Island.
  • New report finds torture and sexual violence against Tamils in Sri Lanka increasing
    00:52 GMT



    A report released today on Sri Lanka  - An Unfinished War: Torture and Sexual Violence in Sri Lanka, 2009 - 2014 - concludes that
    "abduction, arbitrary detention, torture, rape and sexual violence has increased in the post-war period" against Tamil people by Sri Lankan security forces and there was "a prima facie case of post-war crimes against humanity by the Sri Lankan security forces, with respect to (a) torture and (b) rape and sexual violence."

    Describing the violations carried out by the Sri Lankan security forces as "widespread and systematic", the report also concluded that the violations "occur in a manner that indicates a coordinated, systematic plan approved by the highest levels of government."

    Outlining the Sri Lankan government's failure to deliver justice, the authors
    called for an independent international inquiry at the UNHRC, and called upon the UN Security Council "to refer this report, which indicates reasonable grounds to believe that crimes against humanity are occurring in Sri Lanka to the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court for further action against those who bear the greatest responsibility". As an alternative, the authors urged the ICC Prosecutor to "explore the cases of individuals who bear the greatest responsibility and who hold a nationality of a State Party to the Rome Statute."

    See full report here.

    Produced by human rights lawyer and co-author of the UN Panel of Experts report on mass atrocities in Sri Lanka, Yasmin Sooka, as well as the UK Bar Human Rights Committee of England and Wales (BHRC) and the International Truth & Justice Project, Sri Lanka, the report draws on testimonies, medical examinations and psychiatric assessments from 40 victims - Tamil men and women who had sought asylum in the UK.

  • Video: Geneva Press Club event - ‘Is the Sri Lanka resolution at the UNHRC part of the problem?’

    Below is the video of today’s panel discussion at the Geneva Press Club. The speakers were, in order:

  • Full backing of EU secured for UNHRC resolution on Sri Lanka - Cameron

    14:59 GMT

    The British Prime Minister David Cameron said today that he had "secured the full backing of all the EU" in favour of an UNHRC resolution calling for accountability in Sri Lanka, due to be voted on next week.

  • Activists in North at risk says Amnesty, calls for urgent action
    Amnesty International called for "urgent action" over the recent spate of arrests and detentions of activists in the North of Sri Lanka, and for Balendran Jeyakumari, a prominent disappearances campaigner to be released or charged with a recognisable criminal offence.

    In a statement released Friday, the organisation said,
    Human rights defenders in Northern Sri Lanka have been arrested, detained, and threatened. This has coincided with the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva considering a resolution calling for an international investigation into alleged war crimes in Sri Lanka. Prominent Sri Lankan human rights activist Balendran Jeyakumari, was arrested along with her teenaged daughter in Kilinochchi, Northern Sri Lanka on 13 March. Officials confirmed that she has been detained by the Terrorist Investigation Department (TID) at the Boosa Detention Centre. Her daughter was later turned over to the Department of Probation and Child Care Services.

  • Sri Lanka: Government rounds up activists as UN fudges on inquiry - Tissainayagam
    Writing in the Asian Correspondent today on the heightened militarisation in the North-East, and the spate of recent arrests of activists, the Tamil journalist in exile J.S. Tissainayagam, warned that the international community's deletion of 'demilitarisation' from the draft UNHRC resolution text "signals to Colombo that there will be no serious opposition to it ruling northern Sri Lanka through the military."

    See full article here. Extracts reproduced below:
    "As the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) in Geneva was discussing the clauses of its resolution on Sri Lanka, the Colombo government used troops and special laws to arrest human rights defenders (HRDs) in the northern part of the country last week. It is ironic that while the Sri Lanka Government decided to beef-up militarisation in the former warzones and arrest activists, the UNHRC agreed to delete the word “demilitarisation” from its draft resolution."

  • We cannot give in to international pressure due to pride – Peiris

    Sri Lanka’s External Affairs Minister GL Peiris said in parliament on Wednesday that Sri Lanka could have easily avoided action at the UN Human Rights Council, if it had given in to international pressure, but that they cannot give in due to “national pride”.

    He said that Sri Lanka would never accept an international inquiry and compromise the sovereignty of its people, and although countries like the US, the UK or blocs like the EU could impose sanctions on Sri Lanka, this was unlikely.

  • New report on 'systematic' torture and sexual violence in Sri Lanka discussed at HRC side event

    Photo: Tamil Guardian

    A new report, to be launched on Friday in London, will reveal systematic torture and sexual violence, perpetrated by Sri Lankan security forces, the author of the report Yasmin Sooka said at an event on the sidelines of the 25th session of the UN Human Rights Council.

    The report titled, “An Unfinished War: torture and sexual violence in Sri Lanka”, uses sworn affidavits from 40 victims, 20 men and 20 women, who testified their experience of abduction, torture, rape and sexual violence, majority of which occurred in 2013/14, and focuses on “white van” abductions, arbitrary detention, torture, rape and sexual violence in the post-war period.

  • Sri Lankans burn effigies of Navi Pillay protesting against UNHRC resolution
    Sri Lankans staged protests in Trincomalee today against an imminent United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) resolution calling for an international inquiry into atrocities committed in Sri Lanka, reports Colombo Page.
  • SL military detain youth and raid homes in North-East - Uthayan
    Hundreds of Sri Lankan military personnel rounded up young Tamil men and women in the regions of Sithanthirapuram, Puthukudiyiruppu and Iranaimadu and interrogated them in an unknown place, reports the Uthayan.

    The youths were interrogated by officers from the military, police and Terrorist Investigation Division (TIC), reported the paper. Eight detainees were detained further in police custody for further interrogation, whilst the rest were released.

    Meanwhile former LTTE fighters in Kilinochchi and Mullaitivu were also reportedly instructed to present themselves to army checkpoints.

    This latest incident comes amidst a state of increased fear amongst Tamils in the North-East, following the arrests of activists and house to house search operations by military personnel.

  • Amnesty slams Sri Lanka's 'dirty tactics'
    In a statement released today on Sri Lanka, Amnesty International, condemned Sri Lanka’s use of ‘dirty tactics’ to evade international scrutiny.
  • NGO event at UNHRC calls for investigation into sexual violence in Sri Lanka


    An event hosted by NGOs on the sidelines of the 25th session of the UN Human Rights Council examined issues of gender based violence in an ethnocracy, in the context of Sri Lanka.

    The event, hosted by the Society of Threatened Peoples (STP), Tamils against Genocide (TAG), TRIAL, The Sentinel Project, CNRJ and Sri Lanka Advocacy, started with a statement by Kelebone Skelemani, read out by the moderator of the panel, Theodor Rathgeber. Others on the panel were Jan Jananayagam of TAG, Angela Mattli of STP, Anna Gall of the European Centre for Constitutional Rights, and Ananthy Sasitharan, a TNA councillor in the northern province of Sri Lanka.

    Ms. Skelemani, the former Deputy Permanent Secretary in the ministries of health, trade and home affairs in Botswana, said the debate “Sri Lanka: Torture, Sexual Violence in a context of Ethnicity and Failed Domestic Processes”, came at an “opportune time”, as it complemented the ongoing efforts by the UN to find a permanent solution to problems facing Sri Lanka.

    “The report of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights […] concludes, among others, that human rights violations in Sri Lanka continue unabated,” she said.

    “The same report also concludes that even where the Government has launched initiatives and established mechanisms such as military courts of enquiry, the initiatives lack independence to be effective and to inspire confidence.”

  • TNA councillor condemns land grabs by Govt in Sampur
    The Tamil National Alliance Provincial Councillor for Trincomalee, S Nanthakumar, condemned on-going land grabs by the Sri Lankan government in Sampur.
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