• Indo-Lanka naval exercise ends amid protest

    A large scale 5-day naval exercise between India and Sri Lanka ended Friday, as various Tamil groups registered their protest at India’s participation.

    Paattali Makkal Katchi leader S Ramadoss said,
  • Lawsuit filed against Shavendra Silva in US
    A lawsuit was filed against Sri Lankan General, Shavendra Silva, accused of war crimes whilst commander of the 58th division of the Sri Lankan Army in 2009.
     
    Silva is currently Sri Lanka’s Acting Permanent Representative to the UN.
     
    The lawsuit was filed by the American University Washington College of Law’s UNROW  Human Rights Impact Litigation Clinic in the Southern District of New York.

    Ali Beydoun, lead counsel on this case said,
    “These egregious violations of international and domestic law have gone unanswered for over two years now, as survivors continue to suffer in suffocating silence on the island.

    Finally, after years of waiting for someone to answer for the loss of loved ones, the voices of Tamil victims  and survivors have been granted their day in court.

    Today, U.S. courts provide a forum for justice and accountability, where there would otherwise be continued impunity for Sri Lanka’s crimes against Tamils.”
    Beydoun is also the director at American University Washington College of Law’s UNROW Human Rights Impact Litigation Clinic, and a Senior Partner at SPEAK Human Rights Initiative.
     
    In a statement released Friday, the counsel argued,
    "This lawsuit  seeks damages  for violations of international, Sri Lankan and domestic law under the Alien Torture Claims Act (ATCA) and Torture Victim Protection Act (TVPA).

    These statutes grant jurisdiction to U.S. courts  over human rights  violations committed  abroad, and serve to ensure that the U.S. does not become a safe haven for war criminals.
    The day will not be getting any easier for Sri Lanka’s President Mahinda Rajapaksa, as  massive protests greet his arrival in New York for the 66th U.N. General Assembly. This day marks a uniquely perfect storm for justice, as demands for accountability begin to echo throughout New York and the world.
  • Dias faces arrest if he returns
    Major General Jagath Dias, Sri Lanka’s Deputy Ambassador to Germany and Switzerland, will face a criminal investigation if he were to return to Swiss territory due to his “personal involvement” in alleged war crimes.
  • Takers, keepers

    “When asked why can't [Tamil] refugees go back to the villages that they originally came from, the government said that it is not possible because those areas are now special economic development areas, uncleared minefields or on land the military wants to keep.”

  • Lies and landlords
    While Channel 4’s investigative documentary Sri Lanka’s Killing Fields is yet to be shown at the UN despite numerous requests, the Sri Lankan Government’s counter-documentary was granted permission to be screened earlier this month.

    The decision to air the documentary “Lies Agreed Upon” (and not

  • Tamil lawyers protest against police impunity

    Tamil lawyers in Jaffna reportedly boycotted the Court of Law, on Thursday, in protest against the arrest and brutal assault of a Tamil civilian by the Sri Lankan police.

    Describing the conduct of the seven policemen involved as an "affront to the authority, dignity and the sanctity of the Courts of Law", they added that such conduct "constitutes a brazen and blatant violation of all norms of behaviour that are expected of the guardians of the law."

  • India shields Devananda from arrest

    India's External Affairs Ministry reportedly informed the Madras High Court that Douglas Devananda, as a cabinet minister of Sri Lanka, could not be arrested as he enjoys diplomatic immunity, warning that any attempt to arrest Devananda would sour relations between Sri Lanka and India.

    Devanda, leader of the pro-government paramilitary group-cum-political party, EPDP, is wanted in a 1986 shootout and murder case in Chennai, Tamil Nadu.

    He was also been accused of kidnapping a boy in 1988. In 1989, he was arrested and later let out on bail.

    Under Secretary in the Ministry of External Affairs, Kaghal Matha Praphullachandra Sharma, also stated that India did not have an extradition treaty with Sri Lanka.

    However, according to a report in the The Hindu, under sub-section (1) of Section 3 of the Extradition Act, there was an extradition arrangement between the governments with effect from September 1, 1978.

    Leaked US embassy cables, sent in June 2009, describe Devananda to have a "violent and even criminal history", showing "few signs of reforming".  

  • Australian campaign for Sri Lanka’s Commonwealth suspension

    A group of Australian academics, politicians and human rights campaigners is calling for Sri Lanka's suspension from the Councils of the Commonwealth until the government agrees to cooperate with an international investigation into war crimes.

  • JVP suffers major split' - The Island

    The Janata Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) has suffered a major split and a new party has been formed according to reports in The Island.

    The dissidents led by Dimuthu Atygala, Pugbudu Jagoda and Waruna Rajapakse are said to have walked out a Committee meeting on Monday after announcing the breakaway.

  • Mahinda Economics

    Sri Lanka’s trade, currency and debt quandary

    The International Monetary Fund suspended its programme of supplying Colombo with credit in exchange for reform on Monday after Sri Lanka refused to follow advice and abandon a policy of actively intervening in foreign exchange markets to support the value of the Rupee.

    Earlier this month Brian Aitken, the IMF’s head of mission in Colombo, warned that Sri Lanka’s policy of selling dollars to maintain the value of the rupee “does not seem to be in line with the fundamentals in the economy”’ and that the policy was rapidly depleting foreign currency reserves.

    He pointed out that Colombo’s “non-borrowed reserves.. have steadily declined, reflecting foreign exchange sales by the central bank.”

  • British High Commissioner questions 'peace'

    Speaking at an event held to mark International Day of Peace, John Rankin, the British High Commissioner to Sri Lanka, stressed that the absence of war does not necessarily equate to peace and that peace "means different things to different people.

  • Human Rights Groups urge Navi Pillai to fulfil responsibilities of UN Human Rights Council

    Sixteen Human Rights organisations, including Amnesty International, FORUM-ASIA, Human Rights Watch, International Crisis Group and International Commission of Jurists undersigned a letter addressed  to the High Commissioner of the Human Rights Council, Navi Pillai, appealing for

  • Sri Lanka calls on US Senate to approve GSP

    Sri Lanka’s ambassador has urged the US to pass the GSP programme in a joint letter sent to the Senate on Monday.

    Sri Lanka was joined by the 9 other members of the Coalition of Generalized System of Preferences in advocating for the renewal of the GSP program, which will be discussed in the Senate later this week.

  • Asylum seekers held under PTA
    44 asylum seekers, who attempted to flee from Sri Lanka to Australia, have been intercepted and arrested by the Sri Lankan Navy under the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA).

    The asylum seekers, all Tamil, included two boys aged four and seven, who were released to their grandparents, after being bailed out for 100,000 rupees.

    The remaining refugees have not been brought before a court as of yet, and are being held in a detention camp reported The Age.

    Sri Lanka’s detention laws have come under increased scrutiny, as Sri Lanka apparently ended Emergency Laws, but replaced them with equally strict legislature while holding onto the PTA.

    The tactic was labelled “a cynical ‘bait and switch’” and brought Sri Lanka under greater international pressure to end such "draconian" legislation.

    The Sri Lankan Navy’s capture of the asylum seekers received praise from the Australian High Commissioner Kathy Klugman, but also drew much criticism from human rights groups and other Australian politicians.

    John Dowd, president of the International Commission of Jurists and former NSW Liberal attorney-general urged Australia to do more to protect the rights of asylum seekers commenting that,
    ''It is likely these asylum seekers will be treated harshly when all they have done is exercise a legal right.
    People who are desperate to get away from Sri Lanka know that it is a dangerous enterprise coming by sea. We Australians praise ourselves as great humanitarians - this is hardly an example of compassion.''
  • Australia's Greens urge suspension of Sri Lanka from Commonwealth

    Australia's Greens launched a campaign to call for the suspension of Sri Lanka from the Commonwealth until a credible independent invesigation into alleged war crimes takes place, reported The Australian.

    Greens senator, Lee Rhiannon, reportedly expressed hope of 'building bipartisan political support' for the suspension of Sri Lanka.

    The Greens have the backing of several human rights activists and jurists.

    John Dowd QC, a member of the International Commission of Jurists and former New South Wales attorney-general explained,

    "If Sri Lanka is used as a host, it ignores the fact that war crimes have been committed. The Commonwealth has to realise it can't keep being polite when one of its members is guilty of (such) crimes."

    Senator Rhiannon added,

    "We will be looking at whether delegates of the Sri Lankan government may be refused a visa to visit Australia for CHOGM if it can be proved they do not meet the 'character test' and 'public criteria test'."

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