• Army on standby to sell and distribute vegetables

    Reports have emerged that the Sri Lankan Army is ready to distribute and sell fruits and vegetables, as thousands of farmer protested against a new law requiring plastic crates to be used in their transportation.

  • Tamil protest against disappearances in Colombo

    Defying the heavy Sri Lankan security presence,Tamil civilians staged yet another protest against the ongoing disappearances and arbitary arrests of Tamil youths on Monday, in Colombo. 

    The relatives of missing Tamils shouted and carried placards demanding: "Release the prisoners of war immediately!", "Where are our missing relatives?", "Stop the discrimination of Tamils immediately!" and "Sri Lankan government, release our children!".

    One father tearfully recalled his son's abduction four years ago,

    “My son was abducted in 2007 in Jaffna. Unknown members came into my house and took our gold jewellery and motor bike and also took my son away. I have complaint to the police and human rights organisation but they haven’t taken any actions till date.

    We have no clues of his whereabouts and we are unsure if he’s still alive or not. This is causing me great agony. My wife passed away with the worries of our missing son. My other children and I are still suffering being without any knowledge of my eldest son.”

    The protest in Colombo, comes immediately after Tamils who had lost their loved ones staged a protest in Jaffna to coincide with International Human Rights Day.

    See video:

  • Resurgence of ‘white van’ abductions

    The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) has called for investigations into the disappearances of two activists, who helped organise a protest in Jaffna drawing attention to the plights of missing people on the island.

    The disappearances are just the latest in a string of abductions, which have seen a marked rise in the Northern and Eastern Provinces.

  • Chinese military delegation arrives in Sri Lanka
    A high-level delegation of the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) has arrived in Sri Lanka for talks.
    The group, led by General Hixiaotian, the Deputy Chief-of-Staff of the PLA, will meet with Army Commander and war crimes accused Jagath Jayasuriya to discuss training, exercises and further provision of military assistance to Sri Lanka.
  • Grateful subjects

    Mahinda Rajapaksa's ears must have been burning yesterday, as ministers took turns to confess their gratitude to the President during the parliamentary session.

    "We must be grateful to him" urged UPFA member VK Indika, lauding the "numerous benefits" Rajapaksa is said to have been bestowed upon the fisheries sector.

  • Lankan Navy attacks again
    Fishermen from India were reported to have been attacked again by the Sri Lankan Navy on Sunday, after a 12-day strike in protest of the recent wave of assaults.

    750 fishing boats were surrounded by the Sri Lankan Navy who then proceeded to pelt stones and beer bottles at the fishermen. A few of the fishermen also had their catch thrown away, before being threatened with arrest.
  • More equal than others

    Sri Lanka's Buddhist monks, charged with crimes, are to have their court cases tried in a "separate court" said Prime Minister Jayaratne on Friday.

  • Tamils protest in Jaffna against disappearances

    Relatives of missing hold up pictures (Pictures: TamilNet)

    Relatives of people that had disappeared during and after the war in Vanni staged a protest in Jaffna on Human Rights Day on Friday.

    Hundreds of soldiers and policemen across the peninsula harassed civilians in an attempt to intimidate and block the protest from going ahead, TamilNet reported.

    The protest is the latest sign of simmering anger and injustice felt by Tamils in the North-East.

    However, the growing defiance and peaceful protests staged by the Tamil people, continue to be repressed by the Sri Lankan government and ignored by the Sinhala press.

  • Asia Society forum on Sri Lanka

    At a discussion hosted by the Asia Society on December 6, 2011, documentary filmmaker Callum Macrae, Malinda Seneviratne, Editor-in-Chief of Sri Lanka's The Nation, and Bob Templer of the International Crisis Group present and assess both the Sri Lankan government and international community's perspectives on that country's decades-long sectarian conflict.

  • Navi Pillay defers Sri Lanka visit

    The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navi Pillai, has deferred a planned visit to Sri Lanka.

    Speaking to reporters in New York on Friday she said there should be accountability for the crimes committed during the war on the island.

  • Devananda set to take over Elephant Pass saltern
    The Sri Lankan cabinet has approved an application by EPDP leader Douglas Devananda to restore and commence salt manufacturing at the Elephant Pass saltern, in the Jaffna peninsula.

    Devananda, who is head of the paramilitary group and also Minister of Traditional Industries and Small Enterprise Development, submitted the proposal on behalf of a new state owned corporation.
  • ‘The image has become a powerful weapon’
    ‘Footage shows photographs of sexually abused women upon whom the military exercise a further act of domination with the camera. In one film taken on a smartphone soldiers are recorded throwing the bodies of dead females into a truck, rating their bodies as they fling them into a pile.
  • Sri Lanka fears forensic access to Vanni – British MEP

    Richard Howitt, who led a delegation of fellow European parliamentarians on a visit to Sri Lanka, says that the Colombo government is restricting access to vast areas of the north of the island to prevent the discovery of the many civilian dead buried there.

    “What everyone says is that it’s because [it is] literally where the bodies are buried, and that if people with forensic skills go in and investigations start, then the true horrors of what happened in those final days with so many innocent civilians said to have been killed absolutely unnecessarily, that that would come out and that the Sri Lankans will do everything to prevent that” he siad.

    The delegation was able to visit parts of the North-East, but was not allowed to enter military exclusion zones.

    Civilians from the affected regions will not be allowed to resettle in their homes for the foreseeable future, Mr Howitt told the BBC. (see report here)

  • Government’s plan to ban wheat will affect Tamils – UNP MP

    A member of parliament from the main opposition UNP has spoken out against the proposed ban on the import of wheat.

    Harsha de Silva said the government’s plan would mostly affect Tamils, as they were the highest consumers of wheat products on the island.

    "The statement by the Prime Minister that wheat flour imports should be banned is an irresponsible statement and must be retracted," de Silva said.

    "While it may be his choice to consume only rice, or he wishes more people in this country ate rice, he must be made aware that some people in Sri Lanka are totally dependent on wheat flour."

    "Even though price of wheat flour doubled since then to close to Rs 85 a kilogram currently, the HIES for the year 2010 found that estate Tamil households consumption only fell marginally to 15.4 kilograms per month," de Silva said.

    "The 2010 data, which covers the entire island, also show that the household wheat flour consumption in the Jaffna district was 19.3 kilograms per month while in Vavuniya it was 18.1 kilograms per month."

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