• State complicit in attacks against TNA - Sampanthan

    TNA leader Sampanthan made a special statement in Parliament about attacks targeting TNA members and meetings, and the complicity of the Sri Lankan security forces in violence in the North.

    Sampanthan asked the Speaker to observe that:

    "the common feature of all these attacks is that they have been carried out by or with the connivance of the security forces and the police and even though the assailants were identifiable, no arrests have been made. These are also carried out under the watchful eyes of the police. This is clearly indicative of the complicity of the authorities."

  • Army report is a 'joke' - TNA MP

    The Sri Lankan army's report absolving themselves of any crime is a "joke" said the TNA MP Suresh Premachandran on Wednesday. Premachandran went onto to dismiss the government's claims that India was responsible for the protracted war as "absurd".

  • Sri Lankan artists hold pooja against Indian protests

    In an apparent response to protests by the Tamil Nadu film industry against the genocide of Eelam Tamils, dozens of Sri Lankan held a 'Adhisthana Pooja' in Colombo on Thursday.

  • SL blames India for duration of armed conflict

    Sri Lanka blamed India today for the 30 years of armed conflict, reports NDTV.

  • UAE urged not to deport Tamil journalist

    Human rights groups are urging the UAE not to deport Tamil journalist Rathimohan Lokini to Sri Lanka.

  • It wasn't the army, says the army - volume II

    The report by the Sri Lankan Army Court of Inquiry, which was appointed by the Commander of the Army, Lieutenant General Jagath Jayasuriya, was handed over to the Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa on Wednesday.

  • JHU tells India to look at Kashmir crimes first

    The Sinhala nationalist JHU (Jathika Hela Urumaya) said that India should look at its own human rights violations, including those in Kashmir.

  • India’s former ambassador to UN on Sri Lanka’s war crimes, country-specific resolutions and China

    Updated 13:45 Hardeep S Puri retired last month from the Indian Foreign Service.

  • Asylum seeker boat arrives at Australian port

    A boat carrying 66 asylum seekers from Sri Lanka has arrived at the busy Western Australian port of Geraldton, completely undetected until its arrival.

  • US Ambassador warns of 'next steps' after Geneva

    The US Ambassador to Sri Lanka Michele J. Sison, has warned that unless accountability was addressed in Sri Lanka, the island would see a “return to a conflict situation”, whilst addressing the Foreign Correspondents Association of Sri Lanka.

    See her full speech here.

    Speaking in Colombo, Sison said,

    “History has shown that societies that do not adequately address reconciliation and accountability usually return to a conflict situation at some point down the road. Thus, however difficult this process is, it is ultimately vital to the stability of Sri Lanka”.

    As we examine next steps, we will renew our consideration of all mechanisms available, both in the Human Rights Council and beyond. But it is important to emphasise that calls for reconciliation and accountability should not simply be seen as exhortations by the international community – reconciliation and accountability should be viewed as essential to ensuring a peaceful and prosperous future for the country”.

    “We looked at the conditions around the country. We compared those to the government's commitments and stated goals. We realised that not only were many of the concerns that led to the first resolution still there, but also that in some ways the situation had deteriorated."

    In terms of accountability, Sison expanded saying,

    "We mean identifying those responsible for committing abuses and imposing consequences for these acts or omissions."

  • Sri Lanka will not comply with resolution - GL Peiris

    Sri Lanka's Foreign Minister GL Peiris has stated that Sri Lanka will not comply with a recently passed resolution at the UN Human Rights Council this March.

    Speaking in Parliament, the Minister said,

  • Bodu Bala Sena plan US visit to create 'worldwide BBS network'

    The Sinhala Buddhist group of Sri Lankan monks, the Bodu Bala Sena, who are responsible for recent anti-Muslim campaigns, have announced that they will be sending a delegation to the US in order to contruct a worldwide BBS network.

    The executive committee member, Dilantha Vithanage, made the announcement on Monday.

  • Only in #lka ...

    Tweet from an organisation of Sinhala Buddhist monks on the morning of an anti-Muslim campaign.

  • Buddhist monks fight for Kollywood films to be banned

    The organisation of Sinhala Buddhist monks, Ravana Balaya, has launched a campaign to ban the screening of all films from Tamil Nadu in Sri Lanka.

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