• Sri Lankan Major General exposed government's abductions to US - Wikileaks

    Prasad Samarasinghe, a Major General in Sri Lanka's army and former military spokesperson to the Sri Lanka High Commission in London informed the US about the Rajapaksa adminstration's use of abductions as "political retribution against those though to be disloyal to the Rajapaksa administration", and the prosecution of scapegoats to "appease the international community", according to a US embassy cable, dated 6th June 2007.

    Major General Samarasinghe is also the chief signal officer of the army and chief controller at the centre for research and development at Ministry of Defence. He was also the commander for three separate brigades in Jaffna, vanni and Trincomalee, Colonel General Staff, 22 Division Headquarters, Trincomalee, Colonel General Staff, Directorate of Operations, Army Headquarters, Assistant Military Secretary, Army Headquarters and the Centre Commandant, Sri Lanka Signal Corps.

  • TNA holds talks with US war crimes envoy

    Members of the Tamil National Alliance met with US Ambassador-at-Large for War Crimes Issues, Stephen Rapp, who is on a 4-day visit to Sri Lanka.

    Mr Rapp and TNA leader R. Sampanthan and MP M A Sumanthiran held discussions relating to the issues faced by Tamils on the island.

  • Senior US diplomats to visit SL for war crimes talks

    The US State Department said on Monday two senior diplomats are due to visit Sri Lanka later this month for talks about war crimes committed during the final months of the military conflict against the LTTE.

  • ‘Killing Fields’ production team nominated for Nobel Peace Prize
    An ITN team have been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize, for producing Channel 4’s documentary “Sri Lanka’s Killing Fields”, a film that revealed the atrocities committed against civilians during the dying weeks of the civil war in 2009.

    The nomination for the 2012 Nobel Peace prize was put forward by British Member of Parliament Siobhain McDonagh and Australian Senator Lee Rhiannon, after they wrote to the selecting committee on the 1st of February.

    With graphic evidence of war crimes and crimes against humanity being committed against civilians, the documentary was first broadcast in July 2011 clocking over 1 million views in the UK. It has since been screened on national television in Australia, India, Denmark, Norway and Belgium. A follow-up film entitled "War Crimes Unpunished" will reveal more evidence of the atrocities committed during the war and is set to be screened later this year.

    The letter to the Norwegian Nobel Committee details “timely and ethical journalism” displayed by the  team and states,
    “At a time when the failure of existing UN institutions is increasingly noted in relation to safeguarding human life and preventing brutal wars, the contribution of a documentary such as ‘Sri Lanka’s Killing Fields’ in bringing to light not only this failure in the context of the war, but also promoting the need for reviewing and revitalising the UN’s capacity in cases similar to the Sri Lankan war, are immense."

    “By bringing to light the breaches of international conventions by the Government of Sri Lanka in a bold manner and by piecing together numerous forms of evidence in a coherent way, the value of independent journalism to the building of a peaceful global order in the century ahead has been amply demonstrated by the ITN team.
    The full letter has been reproduced below.
  • 13th Amendment 'full of flaws' says TNA

    The Tamil National Alliance (TNA), widely criticised for its perpetual dithering, slammed the 13th Amendment to Sri Lanka's constitution as "full of flaws" on Saturday.

    The TNA's spokesperson, MP Suresh Premachandran, said,

  • Expropriation bill ‘biggest issue’ for US projects in Sri Lanka
    The Vice President of the International Executive Service Corps stated that the “biggest issue” in providing loans for US enterprises to carry out projects in Sri Lanka, is the much berated expropriation bill.

    The bill, which allows the government to acquire enterprises and assets deemed to be underperforming, has been criticised by numerous organisations, including Moody’s credit rating agency and the Economist Intelligence Unit.
  • Buddhist Stupas for Army to be built in all provinces
    Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa laid the foundation for a Buddhist Stupa dedicated to Sri Lankan Army soldiers in Anuradhapura earlier this week, the first of such religious monuments to be built across the country.
  • LLRC recommendations not implemented - TNA

    Dismissing Mahinda Rajapaksa's address on Sri Lanka's independence day, TNA MP Sumanthiran, said that the recommendations of the LLRC has not been implemented.

    He added that the TNA believes the Sri Lankan government had received a letter from the US urging action.

  • Mahinda's devolutionary Chinthana

    It was just this week Mahinda Rajapaksa asserted that only the Parliamentary Select Committee would decide on devolution, dismissing India's external affairs secretary, SM Krishna's statement that 13+ changes had been promised by Sri Lanka.

    On Thursday his words were:

    "The PSC, in which all parties in parliament would be represented, was the best forum to discuss and take a decision on the matter.”

    “I cannot reveal it. If I say anything on it, people will say, I am biased. Let parliament decide. I’ll accept its recommendations.”

    Yet speaking Saturday, at celebrations for what Sri Lankans commemorate as their independence day, Rajapaksa revealed his devolutionary vision and his guiding light:

    "Ethnic communities have no separate regions. The entire country belongs to all ethnic communities."

    "what is required today is the formulation of policies based on a vision that is commonly applicable to the whole country."

    "The words of the Buddha show the path we should take and how we should solve problems.

    Akkodhena jine kodham – asadhum sadhuna jine
    Jine kadariyam danena – saccena alikavadinam

    "Let this thought guide all in making the freedom of our motherland meaningful!"

  • Exhibition in Westminster highlights Tamil genocide

     

    Gavin Barwell, Conservative MP, Croydon Central. Photographs Tamilnet

     

    British MPs and peers endorsed the call for an international, independent investigation, at an exhibition organised by the All Party Parliamentary Group for Tamils (APPGT) and the British Tamil Forum (BTF). Photographs Tamilnet.

     

  • Virginia University students' ‘unfriendly’ visit in Sri Lanka

    A group of students from the University of Virginia’s School of Law visited Sri Lanka as part of a Human Rights Study Project (HRSP).

  • Tamil refugees trapped in Togo
    Around 200 tamil refugees who have fled from Sri Lanka have found themselves stranded in the West African country of Togo, where they are now held by the army, reported the BBC.

    The refugees, who include at least 19 women and 11 children, are being detained in an open stadium in the capital of Lome, where they are held under tight security.
  • US official arrives in Sri Lanka to discuss Iranian sanctions
    The United States Deputy Assistant Treasury Secretary Luke Bronin visited Sri Lanka on Thursday to discuss Sri Lanka’s options, as US sanctions on Iran look set to cut off Sri Lanka’s crude oil imports.
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