• I wanted my PM to go there first - Khurshid

    India's External Affairs Minister Salman Khurshid said on Friday that he regretted the Indian Prime Minister was not the first head of state to visit the Northern province since 1948, after the British Premier, David Cameron made a historic visit to Jaffna. 

    Speaking to reporters, Khurshid said:
    “Is it not sad? Who is to blame? I wanted my PM to go there first. I was the second Indian foreign minister to go there [after the war]. But who do I blame for it? I am only disappointed that I could not take the Prime Minister to an area where we are building 50,000 houses. We can’t show him this and the roads and projects that we are building [in Jaffna],”

  • Cameron leaves CHOGM early
    Published 13:00 GMT

    The British Prime Minister David Cameron has left Sri Lanka ahead of the CHOGM gala dinner tonight and concluding sessions tomorrow.

    Leaving at 1pm local time on a British Airways special flight, Mr. Cameron landed in UAE a short while ago.
  • Ananthy Sasitharan describes attacks and public threats on Tamil demonstrators

    The newly elected member of the Northern Provincial council, Ananthy Sasitharan, in an interview with Journalists for Democracy, outlined  attacks on families of the disappeared when they attempted to stage demonstrations in front of the David Cameron.

    Describing the attacks Ms. Sasitharan, who received the second highest number of votes in the Northern Provincial elections, said,

    “When we tried to wave flags and chant slogans, the anti-riots squad police personnel unleashed waves of brutal attack on us. They beat us with batons and kicked us with boots on. Even the Catholic priests and wailing elderly mothers of the disappeared were badly assaulted as the VIPs were going past as mere onlookers.

  • Welcome to Sri Lankan reconciliation..
    Banner across the CHOGM 2013 speaker's podium exemplifies what Sri Lanka means by 'reconciliation' and its famous 'tri-lingual policy'.


  • Cameron announces £2.1m for demining in Jaffna, Kilinochchi and Mullaitheevu
    The UK government has pledged £2.1 million over the next 2 years for a demining programme in the Tamil regions of Jaffna, Kilinochchi and Mullaitheevu.

    Announcing the fund at a press conference following his visit to Jaffna, the British Prime Minister David Cameron said,
  • Journalists banned from final CHOGM international press conference

    Several journalists were prevented from entering the final press conference of the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Saturday.

    See below for tweets from the excluded journalists.

  • Cameron arrives in Colombo for 'diplomatic showdown'
    British Prime Minister David Cameron arrived in Colombo for the Commonwealth Heads Of Government Meeting, earlier on Thursday, after vowing to send 'strong messages' to the Sri Lankan government over their human rights record.

    Cameron spoke to reporters before his departure, where he vowed to have a "frank conversation" with Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa, over the need for independent investigations into allegations of war crimes.

    The Guardian described the touted meeting as a "diplomatic showdown", with the Independent , in a piece entitled 'On a wing and a prayer in Sri Lanka', stating,
    "Never in 40 years of Commonwealth summits has a British Prime Minister faced such a diplomatic showdown with a host leader as Mr Cameron faces."
    Meanwhile the Telegraph reported that the Sri Lankan President may even snub a meeting with the British Prime Minister over the "diplomatic row".

    Before he left for Colombo, Cameron stated,
    “The images in that film [No Fire Zone] are completely chilling... It’s an appalling set of allegations and of course these allegations have been backed up by the work of the UN Special Rapporteur who has had them verified."
    “These are chilling images of appalling acts and they need to be properly investigated.”

    "There are legitimate accusations of war crimes that need to be properly investigated"

    Sri Lanka has responded angrily to criticism over its human rights record, with a government minister stating Sri Lanka was "not a colony" and Rajapaksa himself retorting that he "will also have to ask some questions" to Cameron if they meet.

    Speaking to the BBC before his departure, he was asked by the BBC's Nick Robinson,
    "How on earth is it right that that man and that coutry is able to chair an important organisation like the Commonwealth and welcome you as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom?"
  • We will never talk Sri Lanka into decency - Opinion

    Please see below extracts of an opinion by Philip Collins written for The Times. See here for article in full.

    The Rajapaksa regime is happy to butcher its citizens. Britain should have joined the summit boycott.

    "This is a regime of unspeakable brutality whose original ethnic hatred has transmuted into a love of power and a ruthless happiness to butcher anyone who stands in the way. This is a regime from the dreams of tyranny.

    "This is no country for any summit of a reputable international body such as the Commonwealth. This is no place for a British Prime Minister or heir to the throne to visit. Foreign policy sometimes means dialogue with the deranged but there has to be a line and the Sri Lankan Government long ago crossed over to the darker side.

  • SL police stop Tamil demonstrators from voicing issues to Cameron

    Tamil demonstrators protesting to highlight the prevalent disappearances, human rights abuses, on-going militarisation and lack of accountability and justice in the North-East were prevented from voicing their concerns to David Cameron today, as the British Premier met the Chief Minister C.V Wigneswaran in Jaffna.

    Protestors faced strong intimidation from the Sri Lankan police as they attempted to stage demonstrations near sites being visited by David Cameron in Jaffna.

    See below for twitter updates from this morning’s events.

  • Cameron upstages Commonwealth summit with Jaffna trip - AFP
    Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron made an historic visit Friday to Jaffna, stealing the spotlight from a Commonwealth summit, AFP reported.
     
    "I'm the first PM or President to go to the north of Sri Lanka since 1948.
  • Prince Charles avoids Sri Lanka human rights row in CHOGM speech

    The Prince of Wales steered clear of criticising Sri Lanka's record on human rights as he made his first address to a Commonwealth summit as the Queen's representative, The Telegraph reported

  • British Premier's historic Jaffna visit raises Tamil hopes

    Last updated 00:49 GMT 16 Nov 2013

    Cameron meets Uthayan journalists in Jaffna

    British Prime Minister David Cameron made a historic visit to Jaffna on Friday, during which he met with journalists and staff at the Uthayan newspaper, displaced people at a refugee camp and Tamil political leaders.

    Mr. Cameron pointedly left the much vaunted Commonwealth summit just after it was officially launched to travel to Jaffna, having arrived in Colombo the previous night from his visit to India.

    He is the first foreign leader since 1948 to visit Jaffna, once Sri Lanka’s second wealthiest city after Colombo, before decades of armed conflict and discriminatory state policies. Jaffna has been under government control since 1995.

    The symbolic move boosted Tamil morale in a city gripped by an all pervasive military presence which prevents many from resettling in their army-occupied homes and terrorises political, civil society and media activity.

    It also infuriated the Sri Lankan government, particularly his planned visit to the Uthayan, press reports said.

    Mr. Cameron flew to Jaffna by military plane, after the Sri Lankan government cancelled all flights to the north earlier this week, to be confronted by what he later described as "incredibly powerful" images.

    The first of these came at the outset of his visit, when Mr. Cameron's vehicle and those of accompanying British journalists were mobbed by relatives of people ‘disappeared’ by Sri Lankan security forces in Jaffna, desperate to seek his help in locating the missing.

    Mr. Cameron had been meet in the library with Northern Province Chief Minister C.V. Wigneswaran, accompanied by Tamil National Alliance (TNA) leader R. Sampanthan and TNA parliamentarian M.A. Sumanthiran.

    Police struggled to hold back hundreds of people waiting for the Premier to arrive, and as his convoy left the library, they broke through the cordon to thrust pictures of their loved ones against vehicle windows,  Britain’s ITV reported. Others pressed photographs and petitions into the hands of the foreign journalists.

    See below a video of the chaotic scenes taken by The Telegraph journalists from inside their vehicle.


    Saro Sripavan, mother of three, told The Hindu she has been looking for her husband for seven years now.

    “He was working as manager in a cooperative society and went missing in 2006. Till date, I have no information about him,” she said, looking at his photograph.

    “Every time someone important comes to Jaffna, we all assemble and try to highlight our concern, but ultimately I know only I have to look for my father,” said her son Sripavan Daneesh, who works as a sales executive.

    Speaking to Tamil Guardian later in the evening, Gajendrakumar Ponnambalam of the Tamil National Peoples Front (TNPF), reflected on what he had seen at the protest through out the day.

    "They [relatives of the disappeared] have lost it all and have nothing else left to lose,"  said Mr. Ponnambalam, "but they still hope, because that is all that they can do and that is what drew them out in such numbers, despite the security forces."

    He explained, "the agony and pain that the parents, children and relatives of the disappeared and those surrendered does not end here. What we saw today was a transcendental agony which forms part of their daily existence."

    Describing the moment when hundreds of protesters rushed forwards and broke through the police blockade, Mr Ponnambalam said, "even the security forces could not contain their pain."

    "Despite so many broken promises by the world and its leaders, these people still come for these protests hoping that one day they will be able to hear about their loved ones whether dead or alive."

    Mr. Cameron was also confronted by a state-sponsored demonstration condemning international pressure over Sri Lanka’s war crimes. (See the BBC Political Editor Nick Robinson’s revealing report here).

  • ORSD calls on UK to take leading role in preventing genocide of the Tamil nation
     In a statement released Friday, the Organization of Relatives of Surrendees and the Disappeared (ORSD), called on the British government to take a leading role in preventing the destruction of the Tamil Nation in the North-East.

    In a written statement the ORSD Chair Person, Ananthy Sasitharan, also a member of the Northern Provincial Council who received the second highest number of votes, outlined the on-going destruction of the Tamil Nation.

    Highlighting that the problems affecting the Tamils in the North-East were not just a lack of ‘accountability and reconciliation’, the statement identified the problem as,

    a program of Sinhalization with intent to destroy the identity of Tamils existing as a distinct nation.

    See full statement here. Extracts from the statement reproduced below:

    “Our organization wishes to stress the fact that the violations of Human Rights that our members face should not be seen as mere violations of individual Human Rights, but a far deeper systematic plan that targets the national identity.
  • Cameron clashes with Rajapaksa over war crimes - BBC
    Updated: 18:25 GMT

    British Prime Minister David Cameron clashed with Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa today, after an hour long direct meeting where allegations of war crimes were discussed, reported the BBC.
  • Mauritius Premier calls for an international independent investigation and maximum power devolution to the Tamil North-East

    The Mauritius Premier, Navin Ramgoolam, has pulled out of hosting the next Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting (CHOGM) following his boycott of the current summit in Sri Lanka.  

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