• Pro-Sri Lanka resolution not of our making – SL Government

    Media minister Keheliya Rambukwella has said that countries friendly to Sri Lanka are planning to submit a resolution supportive of the country.

  • Northern Provincial Council representative returns from UNHRC
    The Northern Provincial Councillor, Aanthy Sasitharan, who received the second highest number of votes in the elections, commented on of her recent visit as a representative of the Northern Provincial Council to United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC), in Sri Lankan press today.
  • India to increase developmental aid to SL

    The Indian Ministry of External Affairs has had its budget increased by 20% from Rs117.39bn (£ 537.5mn) last year to Rs141.3bn (£646.9mn) in 2014-15, by Finance Minister P Chidambaram.

    According to the figures in the Economic Times of India, Sri Lanka is the third highest recipient of Indian developmental funds, and saw an increase from Rs4.1bn (£18.8mn) to Rs5bn (£22.9mn).

  • We aren’t afraid of sanctions – SL Minister

    Sri Lanka’s Minister of Irrigation and Water Resources Management, Nimal Siripala de Silva has stated the government is not afraid of being subjected to economic sanctions over human rights abuses.

  • 67 bodies discovered at Mannar mass grave so far

    A total of 67 bodies have now been unearthed at the Mannar mass grave, with the number set to rise as more excavations being planned.

    Tuesday saw the 25th excavation take place, since the site was discovered on the 20th of December 2013.

    See the report from the Uthayan here.

  • SLMC gave spy report to Pillay' - NFF

    The National Freedom Front, a party in the ruling government coalition has accused the Sri Lankan Muslim Congress of handing over a 'spy report' to the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, warning them not to 'betray this country'.

  • USTPAC respond to Navi Pillay's leaked conclusions
    The United States Political Action Council (USTPAC) welcomed conclusions from the UN Human Rights High Commissioner’s report that were leaked by Sri Lankan press on Sunday.

    Speaking to Tamil Guardian the organisation urged the UNHRC to adopt a resolution that called for an international investigation into war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide,  stating,
  • Negative pro-LTTE narrative unabated within UN - SL envoy
    Sri Lanka’s Permanent representative to the United Nations in Geneva, Ravinatha Aryasinha alleged that negative narratives organised by pro-LTTE elements continue unabated in Geneva.

    Speaking to the expatriate Sri Lankan community, Aryasinha, commended the efforts of Sri Lankans in Switzerland who had challenging ‘on-sided’ events held in Geneva and debunking falsehoods.
  • BJP won’t offer military support to Sri Lanka – Vaiko

    India’s Bharatiya Janata Party will not give any support to Sri Lanka militarily if they were to come into power in the upcoming general elections, stated MDMK Chief Vaiko earlier this week.

    Talking to reporters after meeting Prime Ministerial candidate Narendra Modi in Chennai, Vaiko stated,

  • Jaya slams ‘inexplicable insensitive’ India over fishermen attacks

    Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Jayalalitha has written yet another letter to Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh expressing her dismay at India’s lack of action on repeated attacks and arrest of Tamil Nadu fishermen by the Sri Lankan Navy.

  • UK ‘concerned at military involvement in civilian activities’
    The United Kingdom has expressed concern at the Sri Lankan military’s involvement in civilian activities in the North and noted the British Prime Minister David Cameron has called for demilitarisation, stated Minister of State at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office Hugo Swire earlier this week.

    Responding to a question raised in parliament, Hugo Swire, stated,
  • Desperate search for disappeared continues
    Thousands of desperate relatives of the disappeared have testified before a disappearances commission this week, in vain hope of discovering the fate of those who have been missing for years, reported the BBC.
  • Tomas Stangeland mourned
    Tomas Stangeland (centre) and Jon Westborg (to Mr. Stangeland's left) talking to LTTE political heads Anton Balasingham and S.P. Thamilselvan. 


    News that Norwegian diplomat Tomas Stangeland passed away last week on February 12th, aged 43, from cancer caused widespread dismay amongst those who interacted with him during the Oslo-facilitated peace process in Sri Lanka.

    The main Norwegian point of contact for local and international media and many others at the time, Tomas is remembered as unassuming, intelligent and deeply engaged with a sophisticated grasp of the complexities of Sri Lanka.

    A Second Secretary the Norwegian embassy in Colombo during the negotiation period, he later rose to lead Norway’s global peace efforts as head of the Peace and Reconciliation section of the Norwegian Foreign Ministry.

    In a joint statement, the two most senior Norwegian figures during the peace process, Vidar Helgesen and Erik Solheim, said:
    “He was a pillar of the Norwegian peace efforts in Sri Lanka. He was one of our most able diplomats destined to do great things and carry even bigger responsibilities, though Tomas’ humility could mask the breadth of his ability to those who had not seen him in action.”
    See full statement here, published on the Foreign Correspondents' Association of Sri Lanka website yesterday.

    The leader of the TNPF, Gajendrakumar Ponnambalam, who was one of the five leaders of the TNA at the time of the peace talks, told Tamil Guardian:
    “For those of us who were working on the Norwegian brokered process, Tomas became the daily point of contact. Even though he was Second Secretary at the Embassy at the time, it was clear to all that his knowledge and ability to grasp very complex situations far exceeded his official rank."

    "One can safely say, he will go down in Tamil history as being synonymous with the few good memories that peace process had to offer. But for all his knowledge, Tomas was one of the most down-to-earth and unassuming individuals I've ever known."

    "He will be dearly missed not just by his family but by all those who knew him. Surely that has to be the mark of the success of being born a human being.
    "
    Apart from being the main external liaison for the Norwegians, Tomas was also deeply involved in Oslo’s shuttle diplomacy between Colombo, Kilinochchi and London, where LTTE chief negotiator Anton Balasingham was based.

    “Given how highly charged and acrimonious the peace process was, it is notable that Tomas was highly respected and much liked by everyone involved. I know the LTTE’s senior political figures had the highest regard for him,” said former Tamil Guardian editor, Sutha Nadarajah.

    “Invariably good humoured and easygoing, with a keen intellect, Tomas was the archetypal diplomat.”


  • DMK calls for UN observed referendum for political solution in North-East
    The Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) party, on Sunday urged the Indian government to move a resolution at the upcoming United Nations Human Rights Council that sought a referendum that facilitated a political solution favoured by the Tamils in the North-East.
  • SL needs international inquiry concludes UN Human Rights Chief
    An international inquiry to investigate rights violations in Sri Lanka is needed deemed the UN High Commissioner  for Human Rights, Navi Pillay, whilst highlighting the lack of political will in Sri Lanka to work towards truth and justice.

    The Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) report which was leaked by a Sri Lankan paper today, outlined that the lack of truth and justice in Sri Lanka was not question of time or capacity but rather "political will" and called for an “ international inquiry mechanism to further investigate alleged violations of international human rights and humanitarian law and monitor any domestic accountability process.

    Along with 12 recommendations for Sri Lanka, the UN human rights commissioner, Navi Pillay, in her report concluded,

    “New- evidence including witness testimony, video and photographic material – continues to emerge on what took place in the final stages of the armed conflict. Human remains also continue to be discovered, for instance in Matale in November 2012 and Mannar in December 2013.”

    “As the emblematic cases highlighted above show, national mechanisms have consistently failed to establish the truth and achieve justice. The High Commissioner believes this can no longer be explained as a function of time or technical capacity, but that it is fundamentally a question of political will.

    Pillay also reiterated her concern over Sri Lanka’s failure to implement previous UNHRC recommendations and  the continuing “trend of attacks on freedom of expression, peaceful assembly and association, particularly against human rights defenders, journalists and families of victims; the rising levels of religious intolerances; and continued militarisation which continues to undermine the environment where accountability and reconciliation can be achieved.”
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