Environmentalists and civil society activists protested at Galle Face in Colombo on 17 June against proposed heavy mineral sand mining along the eastern coastline from Oluvil to Pothuvil, warning that the project threatens the land, fisheries and livelihoods of Tamil and Muslim communities across the Eastern Province.
According to the People's Alliance for Right to Land (PARL), exploration…
Sri Lankan President, Mahida Rajapaksa, handed over 100 houses that were built under the ‘Api Wenuwen Api’ housing program for the Sri Lankan nations ‘war heroes’.
The keys to the high quality accommodation, built under the 12th phase of the program, were symbolically handed over to military personnel by Rajapaksa.
See here for Sri Lanka's high commissioner to the UK, Chris Nonis on Monday telling the BBC his version of demographics on the island and speaking about the 'wonderful' and 'comprehensive reconciliation' in the Northeast.
The Trincomalee Urban Council suspended its Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the US Embassy in Colombo, after the Sri Lankan government deemed that the MoU had been signed without the External Affairs Ministry's knowledge, reports ColomboPage.
The MoU, signed very recently, was aimed at establishing an American Corner in Trincomalee.
Sri Lanka's Eastern Provincial Council (EPC) has run into crisis, reports the Island, as ruling party members are boycotting the sessions demanding postponement of the Northern PC polls until the replacement of the Governor and Chief Minister and restoration of the administrative structure.
Deputy Chairman of the Council, M.S. Subair clarified that:
New Zealand's Foreign Affairs Minister, Murray McCully is to set off on Monday for his trip to India and Sri Lanka.
Radio New Zealand reports that McCully is expected to discuss the hosting of CHOGM and supposedly address human rights issues and the progress of reconciliation in Sri Lanka.
Sri Lanka will table a new bill later this year, which will attempt to introduce a “Media Code of Ethics”, according to Mass Media and Information Minister Keheliya Rambukwella.
The bill would apparently be aimed at creating “a salutary media culture in the country”, with the Official Government News Portal of Sri Lanka reporting the Minister as having said,
The CEO of the Pegasus hotel chain has said that the one million tourists that visited Sri Lanka last year had not made the expected impact on the hotel industry, in his company’s annual report.
"It is therefore prudent to surmise that this influx of tourists have patronized the bungalows, guest houses and residences of relatives as their preferred abode as opposed to regular hotels," he said.