• Another tour of cricket, another year of sanctioning impunity'

    As the England cricket team commences its 2012 tour of Sri Lanka, the Tamil Youth Organisation UK (TYO UK) and the undersigned UK university Tamil societies continue to call on the England and Wales Cricket Board to suspend all bilateral arrangements with Sri Lanka's national cricket team until there has been meaningful progress on ensuring accountability and justice for war crimes and crimes against humanity. We call for an immediate end to the on-going human rights violations being committed by the Sri Lankan Government and its security forces in the North-East of the island.

    Almost three years after the end of the armed conflict, and a year since we first called for a boycott of Sri Lankan cricket - in line with wider trade sanctions, and economic isolation as a means to urging Sri Lanka to act - there has been no significant progress on human rights or accountability. Instead, the time and space afforded to Sri Lanka by the international community, in the name of development, reconciliation and international engagement, have led to an ever increasing and brazen disregard for human rights by the Sri Lankan state and fiercer attempts to prevent accountability and justice.

    Instead of repealing emergency laws, scaling down the military, and working to protect and safeguard individual rights and freedoms, the Sri Lankan state has been emboldened by the international community’s continued sanctioning of impunity. It is pursuing an agenda of increased militarisation and colonisation of the Tamil areas, as well as widespread, and systematic human rights abuses. Reports published by international human rights organisations over the past year, have detailed evidence of on-going human rights violations against Tamil civilians in the North-East of the island, including abduction, illegal detention, torture, the torture of asylum seekers deported from the UK, extra-judicial killings, sexual violence, and the relentless clamp down on media freedom.

    Sri Lanka’s on-going disregard for human rights is against a back drop of impunity. Three years post-conflict the credible allegations of war crimes and crimes against humanity, resulting in the deaths of at least 40,000 Tamil civilians as detailed within a UN Panel of Experts report, remain unaccounted for. The past year has seen nothing but the failure of Sri Lanka’s internal inquiry and continued indignant resistance towards an independent process.

  • Media Ministry rejects half of all media registrations

    After ordering the mandatory registration of all websites disseminating news on Sri Lanka with the Media Ministry last year, the ministry's secretary, W.B Ganegala stated that 50 of the 100 applications made by news websites for registration had been rejected.

  • Free landing offered at Mahinda’s airport
    Sri Lanka’s President Mahinda Rajapaksa has offered free landing and parking for all airlines during the first year of operations at the new international airport being constructed in his hometown of Hambantota.

    In addition, authorities have granted 50% off handling fees as they attempt to entice airlines to the new airport, currently projected to cost US$209 million.
  • US grants request and gives SL oil concession
    The United States has allowed Sri Lanka time to scale down its import of Iranian oil after Sri Lankan pleaded with US officials for concessions.

    Petroleum Industries Minister, Susil Premajayantha said that Sri Lanka now had to cut down its import of oil from Iran by 15% for the current year, managing to evade a total ban that comes into force in June of this year.
  • TNA welcomes adoption of UNHRC resolution

    The Tamil National Alliance has welcomed the passing of the US-sponsored resolution at the 19th session of the UN Human Rights Council.

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  • England cricket fans fume over “foreigner” ticket prices
    English cricket fans have been outraged by a decision taken by the cash-strapped Sri Lankan Cricket board to charge “foreigners” higher prices for tickets than for locals, with prices up to ten times higher than those charged to Australian fans, just seven months ago.

    Representatives from England’s Barmy Army, the unofficial suppo

  • Reconciliation and accountability necessary for peace - Clinton

    Welcoming the UN resolution passed at the 19th session of the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva on Thursday, the US Secretary of State, Hiliary Clinton said,

  • Sri Lanka remains stubbornly defiant after UN resolution
    State backed media and government politicians have rallied together to condemn a resolution passed at the UN Human Rights Council on Thursday, vowing to remain defiant.
  • The Hindu, on Geneva and India …

    Extracts from the editorial Friday of The Hindu, which has hisotircally been a vocal supporter of President Rajapaksa’s regime and its predecessors:

  • HRW hails ‘important first step’, calls for close monitoring

    Comments by Juliette De Rivero, advocacy director at Human Rights Watch, on the UN Human Rights Council’s resolution on Sri Lanka on Thursday:

  • “I will break your limbs in public!” – Minister threat to human rights activists

    Sri Lankan Minister Mervyn Silva has threatened human rights activists who attended the 19th UN Human Rights Council Session in Geneva, where a resolution about Sri Lanka was adopted yesterday.

  • US eases restrictions on defence sales to Sri Lanka

    The US state department has eased restrictions on defence exports to Sri Lanka on Thursday, the same day as the passing of a resolution on Sri Lanka at the UN Human Rights Council, AP reports.

    Tensions between the countries are high, as Sri Lanka rejected the US-sponsored resolution and condemned the interference into what it says are internal matters.

  • Aid for flood hit areas misappropriated - UNP MP

    Dayashri Jayasekara, an MP with Sri Lanka’s main opposition United National Party (UNP), told parliament that Rs. 6.35 million sent as aid to areas highly affected by floods in the East of Sri Lanka in 2011 had been misappropriated.

    Jayasekara stated during a debate that several officials involved with the bank had been involved with embezzlement.

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