• Heavy security as military deployed to churches

    Sri Lanka’s president Maithripala Sirisena said that the security forces had been deployed to churches that had been struck by bomb blasts on Easter Sunday morning, as the death toll from the series of explosions continue to rise.

    In a statement this morning, Sirisena appealed for calm and said the security forces had began investigations into the blasts. Reports suggest that at least 200 soldiers have been deployed to churches affected by the blast. 

  • Over 250 killed as ISIS claims responsibility for Sri Lanka bomb attacks

    Developing story

    Updated 20:00 GMT, April 24

    The death toll of the bombings rose to 359, as Sri Lanka's prime minister Ranil Wickremesinghe said there were still suspects with explosives at large. Sri Lanka's parliament implemented emergency regulations without a vote, which will give the President and security forces further sweeping powers. 

    The spokesperson for the Tamil National Alliance MA Sumanithrian, urged for unity and restraint, whilst calling on the governor of the Eastern Province to be investigated for his links with the National Thowheed Jamaath, a lesser known jihadist group that has been blamed by Sri Lankan authorities for the Easter Sunday bombings that have killed over 300 people. Although the exact role of Isis in the attacks is yet to be established, it is though that the group’s involvement reoriented the local attackers away from bombs directed at destroying major Buddhist monuments and towards targets more closely associated with its global jihadist ideology, reports the Guardian.

    Accusations of the Sri lankan government’s failure to act on international intel further solidified, as the Guardian reported international sources confirming that intel had been provided to Sri Lanka in advance of the attacks. By the end of the day a total of 80 suspects had already been detained in links to the attacks. 

     

  • Annai Poopathy remembered across North-East

    Across the Tamil homeland, commemoration events were held to mark the anniversary of the death of Annai Poopathy, a Tamil woman who fasted to death 31 years ago n protest against the atrocities committed by Indian Peace Keeping Forces (IPKF).

  • Tamil women de-miners injured in explosion

    At least two Tamil women who were working as de-miners in Kilinochchi have been admitted to  Jaffna Teaching Hospital’s intensive care unit, after a landmine detonated on Thursday evening.

  • Senior Jaffna journalist injured in vehicle collision

    A senior Tamil journalist has been admitted to hospital with injuries after a vehicle collision in Jaffna on Saturday.

  • US navy ships in Hambantota for military exercise

    Two US navy ships arrived in the southern Sri Lankan port of Hambantota on Thursday, ahead of an exercise with Sri Lankan troops, as ties between two militaries continue to grow. 

  • Pakistani navy delegation tours Sri Lanka 

    Pakistan’s navy sent a delegation to tour Sri Lanka and meet with a Sri Lankan navy officer who is currently on bail over aiding a key suspect involved in the abduction and murder of 11 Tamil youths.

  • Tamil Guardian correspondent summoned by Sri Lankan police

    Tamil Guardian’s correspondent Shanmugam Thavaseelan was summoned for questioning by Mullaitivu police on Thursday, after the Sri Lankan navy filed a complaint against him for reporting on a disappearances rally in the district.

    The complaint against the Mullaitivu journalist was filed following a rally by Tamil families of the disappeared on Vadduvakal bridge on April 7.

  • Sri Lankan military organises volleyball tournament for schoolchildren in Mullaitivu

    The Sri Lankan army organised a volleyball tournament in a Mullaitivu school playground last week, as the military continues to intrude on civilian life in the Tamil North-East.

  • Tamil asylum seeker diagnosed with cancer after nearly decade in Australian detention

    Australians across the country have called for the release of a Tamil asylum seeker who has been diagnosed with leukaemia after being held in detention for almost a decade since he fled in Sri Lanka.

  • ‘United States and Sri Lanka have a strong partnership’ - State Dept

    The United States says it has a “strong partnership” with Sri Lanka, in a message released to mark the Tamil and Sinhala New Year.

    US State Department spokesperson Morgan Ortagus released a statement saying the partnership between the two governments is “based on extensive people-to-people ties and a shared commitment to democratic principles and a stable, secure Indo-Pacific”. 

  • ‘Sri Lankans’ amongst asylum seekers held in Turkey

    A group of Sri Lankans are amongst hundreds of migrants being held by Turkish security forces, accused of attempting to cross the border into Europe. 

    Anadolu Agency reports that a total of 558 migrants were arrested in total across the country in raids conducted by security forces.

    The Sri Lankans were held in Turkey’s western Edirne province.

  • Batticaloa residents call for ambulance service in Mavadivembu

    A protest was staged in Batticaloa last week with locals calling for an ambulance service to be provided to the Mavadivembu Divisional Hospital as healthcare continues to suffer in the region.

  • 13 prisoners at risk of 'imminent execution' in Sri Lanka warns Amnesty International
    <p>At least 13 prisoners in Sri Lankan prisoners are “at risk of imminent execution” warned Amnesty International, as they launched an urgent action appeal this week.</p> <p>“After 43 years without using the death penalty, the President of Sri Lanka, Maithripala Sirisena, is reportedly planning to execute prisoners on death row,” said Amnesty.&nbsp;</p>
  • Sri Lankan soldier killed by lorry in Mullaitivu, another injured

    A Sri Lankan soldier was killed and another injured after being hit by a lorry in Mullaitivu on Tuesday.

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