• International investigation central to Tamil political demands - TNPF


    Speaking at a press conference on Saturday, Gajendrakumar Ponnambalam of the Tamil National People's Front (TNPF) welcomed the boycott of CHOGM by the leaders of Canada, India and Mauritius.

    Explaining TNPF's engagement with Mauritian officials, Ponnambalam said:
    "We made very clear to the Mauritian envoy that what is happening here is a genocide,"
    Criticising international claims that recent Northern Provincial elections were a marker of progress and reconciliation, he said:
    "If the international community is pointing to an unwanted provincial council, that was forced upon the Tamil people, as a sign of progress, then Rajapaksa and Sinhala nationalists will be reassured that no matter what they do, the world will always fall at their feet,"
  • SL state media calls British Premier an 'unmitigated boor'

    Sri Lanka’s state media referred to British Prime Minister David Cameron as a buffoon, a boor and a bully today, in response to his calls for an international independent investigation into war crimes should Sri Lanka fail to complete one by March.

  • Families of the disappeared hold candle-lit vigil
    Families of the disappeared staged a candle-lit vigil in Vavuniya, Sunday

    The event was organised by the Vavuniya civil monitoring group in a further attempt to raise awareness about the plight of the disappeared and their families.


    Hundreds of effected families also staged demonstrations to raise awareness during the historic visit of the British premier, David Cameron, to the North-East on Friday.

  • Sri Lanka told to protect human rights by China

    China has told Sri Lanka that it should "make efforts to protect and promote human rights", during a media briefing earlier today, PTI reports.

    Foreign ministry spokesperson Qin Gang was responding to a question on the Commonwealth summit, human rights and British Premier David Cameron’s pledge to push for an international investigation through the UN Human Rights Council, if Sri Lanka doesn’t complete an independent, credible inquiry by March.

    "Due to the differences in the economic and social development of different countries, there could be differences on human rights protection," Qin said.

  • CHOGM hotel occupancy ‘far below’ expectations

    The average occupancy rates of the hotels in Colombo remained far below expectations during the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM), the Daily Mirror reports.

  • David Cameron has to act on his threat to Sri Lanka – The Times

    Welcoming British Premier David Cameron’s ultimatum to Sri Lanka over its forces’ wartime abuses, The Times newspaper Monday urged him to make good on his threat and to ignore charges of neo-colonialism in doing so.

    Hailing Mr. Cameron’s ‘unequivocal’ warning to Sri Lanka’s government that if it does not conduct an independent inquiry into the last months of the civil war, he would push for one to be held under the auspices of the United Nations Human Rights Council, the paper said in its editorial:

    “[Mr. Cameron] should not stop there. His threat to challenge Sri Lanka at the UN should be acted upon.

  • Gotabhaya accuses Cameron of pandering to LTTE rump

    The Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa has accused the British Prime Minister David Cameron of being influenced by the “LTTE rump”.

  • Rajapaksa should accept international investigation - Gulf News

    The Gulf News, a Dubai-based newspaper, has called on Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa to accept an international investigation, in an editorial published on Monday.

    The paper said the government's campaign against the LTTE was 'marred by excesses', and that Rajapasa should admit that crimes were committed and establish responsibility for them.

    See full editorial below.

    In 2009, the Sri Lankan government won the decades-long struggle against the separatist Tamil Tigers, who had fought a particularly brutal war against the government with regular use of random acts of terror. The Sri Lankan army’s final campaign was marred by excesses, as the soldiers were desperate not to allow the terrorists to escape, even as they used tens of thousands of villagers as human shields to avoid the army’s assault.

  • Labour Party pledges support if Cameron government acts on accountability for Sri Lanka war crimes

    Labour leader Ed Miliband said in the House of Commons today that Britain cannot let the human rights situation in Sri Lanka rest, and that his party would support any government moves to take action towards a war crimes inquiry.

    "The Prime Minister of Canada and the Prime Minister of India decided not to attend this summit. In explaining his decision, Prime Minister Harper said this: 'In the past two years, we've seen a considerable worsening of the situation.

  • Cameron reiterates commitment to push for international war crimes inquiry in March

    The British Premier, David Cameron, briefing the House of Commons on his trip to the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM), reiterating his calls for a credible, independent and international inquiry into Sri Lanka's war crimes should Colombo fail to undertake its own by March.

    Following Cameron's summary of his CHOGM trip, the House of Commons embarked on an extensive discussion regarding the issues Tamils faced in Sri Lanka.

  • Singh would have run the show' - Basil
    Looking back on the Commonwealth Heads Of Government Meeting, Sri Lanka’s Economic Development Minister Basil Rajapaksa lamented the absence of Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, reported the Hindu.
     
    Speaking on the final day of the summit, Basil Rajapaksa, brother to Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa said,
    “Unfortunately, the Indian Prime Minister was not here; that is my only concern.”
    “He is the closest friend we have. Had he come here, he would have run the show.”

    “We Asians, we like Indians. He should have been here.”

  • Trouble in paradise' - Jon Snow's experience of CHOGM in Sri Lanka

    Channel 4 News reporter, Jon Snow described his experience of the Commonwealth summit in Sri Lanka and its build up as ‘trouble in paradise’.

    See extracts form the blog post below.

    “This turned out to be the worst attended Commonwealth leaders’ summit on record. 25 of the 53 presidents or prime ministers stayed away.”

    “Hence the entire summit proved a strange event indeed.”

  • Economist predicts growth in Rajapaksa's 'popularity among the majority'

    The Economist in a blog post today, summarised findings from the hosting of the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Sri Lanka.

    See extracts below.

    “International coverage focused heavily focused on disappearances of people during and after the civil war, media suppression and persistent allegations that war crimes were committed in 2009 as Tamil Tiger rebels were crushed.

  • SL government forced Tamil doctors to mislead international media

    Speaking in a new documentary on the genocide of Tamils in Sri Lanka, a former doctor in the North-East, outlined his experience of being captured and imprisoned at the end of the ethnic conflict in 2009.

  • Displaced Trincomalee Tamils protest demanding justice for genocide
    Photographs TamilNet

    Displaced Tamils braved military intimidation to protest demanding justice for genocide in Trincomalee over the weekend, as word leaders gathered for the Commonwealth Heads Of Government Meeting in Colombo.

    The protest took place at Kiliveddi camp, with protestors carrying placards demanding justice for genocide, the day after Sri Lankan military intelligence went door-to-door intimidating displaced families not to take part in the protest.
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