• India extends ban on LTTE

    Citing a "challenge [to] the sovereignty and territorial integrity of India", the Indian government extended its ban on the LTTE for another two years. In a statement, the home ministry added that the LTTE held a strong anti-India stance and pro-LTTE groups 'continued to foster a separatist tendency' among the Indian masses.

  • India cowering like mouse before Sri Lanka - Jayalalitha

    In her continuing campaign to expel Sri Lankan Air Force personnel from India, Tamil Nadu Chief Minister J Jayalalithaa has attacked both the Indian government for being meek and DMK president M Karunanidhi's duplicity on the issue.

    In a statement made on Friday she had said of Delhi:

  • Sri Lanka re-attempts to teach the world lessons in war

    Sri Lanka’s second International Defence Seminar will be held from August 8-10 in Colombo, Army Commander Brigadier Jagath Jayasuriya announced on Wednesday.

    The conference has been themed ‘Towards Lasting Peace and Stability’ and will focus on ‘post-war 5Rs’ – rehabilitation, re-integration, re-construction, resettlement and reconciliation.

  • Sri Lanka imposes exorbitant fees on news websites

    Media Minister Keheliya Rambukwella has announced the imposition of registration fees for news websites in Sri Lanka.

    News websites will now be charged Rs 100,000 ($750) for registering and an annual fee of Rs 50,000 ($ 375).

    Rambukwella said the new measures are designed to control ‘filth’ that was being published by some websites.

  • Sri Lanka’s descent into dictatorship'

    Extracts from a report by the Washington Post on Friday:

  • Guards! Guards!

    The Jaffna magistrate has banned a demonstration protesting against the military’s appropriation of Tamil residents' lands – even though he has no jurisdiction to do so.

    According to the magistrate, the demonstration would threaten national security, create dissension among communities and would be risking the normalisation of armed culture.

  • Sri Lankan journalists protest against media suppression by the state

    Journalists, activists and opposition lawmakers have staged a protest against media suppression and intimidation by the Sri Lankan state.

    Dozens of protesters gathered in Colombo on Thursday to condemn the recent police raids of websites critical of the government, the alleged attempted abduction of a journalist and the alleged secret police gathering journalists’’ personal information.

  • Illustrating instructions
    Rajapaksa chairs meeting with cartoonists

  • TNA ‘laughs off’ Rajapakse polls claim

    The Tamil National Alliance has laughed off President Rajapakse’s claim that he will hold provincial council elections in September 2013.

    “We want to hold elections in September 2013,” President Mahinda Rajapaksa told The Hindu in an interview published on Wednesday.

  • Teachers complain about the destruction of Tamil youth’s education in the north

    Over 11% of the schools in the Northern provinces of Sri Lanka remain closed due to the continued occupation of the Sri Lankan military, said teachers in Jaffna, using statistics from the Northern provincial ministry of education, reported TamilNet.

  • Press freedom organisation ‘concerned’ about Jansz safety

    Article 19, a media freedom organisation based in the UK, has expressed concern over threats to The Sunday Leader editor’s life by Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapakse.

  • Sri Lanka FDI falls in 2011

    Foreign direct investment (FDI) in Sri Lanka has fallen in 2011, with approximately US$ 300 million invested into the country, according to a report by UNCTAD (United Nations Conference on Trade and Development).

  • Sri Lanka plans to tweak press laws to include further regulation of websites

    Sri Lanka has decided to amend a decades old media law, resulting in the regulation of all news websites and electronic media.

    The government made the announcement a week after it raided and temporarily shut down two anti-government websites.

  • Rs 18 billion paid to Sri Lanka for UN peace keeping missions

    Sri Lanka has earned a considerable income from United Nations peacekeeping operations in other countries, Army Media Spokesman Brigadier Wanigasekara has said.

    According to the Brigadier Wanigasekara, Sri Lanka has earned in excess of 18.4 billion rupees from its ‘peacekeeping’ operations around the world since 2004.

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