• Sri Lanka Air Force takes Tamil school-children on tour of army camp

    Tamil primary school children were taken around Sri Lanka’s air force camps at the military occupied Palaly airport, in what was described by the Ministry of Defence as an event to “boost goodwill and reconciliation.”
  • UN Human Rights Council should press Sri Lanka on international participation – Alan Keenan
    Members of the UN Human Rights Council and the UN Human Rights Chief “should press the (Sri Lankan) government to follow through on its commitment to meaningful forms of international participation on the proposed special court for war crimes,” said the International Crisis Group's Sri Lanka Senior Analyst Alan Keenan.
     
    In a piece entitled “Impunity and Justice: Why the UN Human Rights Council Must Stay Engaged in Sri Lanka” Mr Keenan stated that despite committing to a UN resolution last year, “Sri Lanka today is not yet the success story that many in the international community claim it to be”.
     
    “Progress on implementing the Council resolution has been slow and often grudging, and there are growing doubts about the government’s political will and ability to see the complex process through,” he added. “For Sri Lanka to stay on the path toward recovery, it needs sustained international support and engagement.”
     
    Since the UN resolution was passed in September, Sri Lankan leaders have repeatedly backtracked from commitments made, in particular the inclusion of foreign judges in an accountability mechanism for mass atrocities. Mr Keenan noted that “under domestic pressure, the president and prime minister backed away from promises to the UN and announced there will be no foreign judges”.
     
    “Given the decades-long failures of government commissions and judicial processes, international participation is essential to the credibility and effectiveness of the special court,” he continued.
  • Tamil IDPs to march with white flags into lands occupied by Sri Lanka military
    Tamil Internally Displaced Perons are preparing to march with white flags towards lands that have been occupied by Sri Lanka’s military under the guise of a High Security Zone in Jaffna.

    The President of the Valikamam North Rehabilitation Society, A Gunabalasingam, on Friday said, the people had stopped protesting for their resettlement after the new president promised in December that the Valikamam North people would be resettled within six months.
  • Suicide and domestic violence plagues war torn North-East

    Domestic violence and suicides have increased in Jaffna following the end of the armed conflict on the island more than seven years ago according to a counsellor based in the North-East, reports the New Indian Express.

    Speaking on condition of anonymity, the counsellor said that “domestic violence, mainly in the form of wife beating, is increasing in Jaffna making it a significant social evil here”.

    The incidence is particularly increasing amongst men who were themselves victims of torture at the hands of Sri Lankan security forces and was having widespread effects on women and children in the area, report the Express.

    Women have since seen higher rates of suicides, whilst “the new culture of social impunity” has also seen an increase an anti-social behaviour from children, the paper reported.

  • ‘It’s all about implementation of resolution’ says UK ambassador
    Britain’s Ambassador to the United Nations in Geneva said implementation of a UN resolution calling for international participation in an accountability mechanism is “key”, in an interview with Ceylonews this week.

    Ambassador Julian Braithwaite told reporters that implementation of the resolution was key, as he emphasised the importance of the ongoing UN Human Rights Council session.
    “It’s all about implementation on the ground,” said the ambassador.” We know how difficult that is and we know politically it remain difficult. But we are delighted that this issue is coming back here."
  • Tamil Nadu governor echoes demand for justice for genocide against Eelam Tamils
    The governor of Tamil Nadu, K Rosaiah in his inaugural address to the Tamil Nadu assembly on Thursday reiterated calls for those responsible for the genocide of Eelam Tamils in Sri Lanka to face justice, reported The Indian Express.
  • Further reforms necessary before Sri Lanka can be considered to be on track - UN Special Rapporteur
    Further reforms are necessary “before Sri Lanka can be considered on a path to sustainable democratisation governed by the rule of law,” said the Special Rapporteur on the Independence of Judges and Lawyers Monica Pinto during an oral update at the 32nd Session of the United Nations Human Rights Council.
  • Indonesian police fire warning shot at Tamil refugees fleeing Sri Lanka
    Indonesian police fired a warning shot into the air to stop Tamil asylum seekers from disembarking from the boat which is currently stranded off Aceh's coast, The Age reported.

    The group of 44 men, women and children have been stranded there since June 11.
  • Jaya urges justice for genocide against Eelam Tamils
    The chief minister of Tamil Nadu, J Jayalalithaa this week called on the Indian prime minister, Narendra Modi ensure those responsible for genocide against Tamils to be brought to justice.
  • Sri Lanka's military must return all occupied lands to Tamil people says TNA
    The leader of the Tamil National Alliance condemned the new Sir Lankan government’s failure to release all Tamil lands and called for the immediate release of lands held by military in the North-East in parliament on Monday.

    Highlighting that the Tamil victim community were yet to see tangible change, despite voting in the new government, Mr R Sampanthan said,

    “The most affected people, the people most affected by injustice, inequality and violent conflict, the Tamil people of the North and the East, not merely made a very substantial and significant contribution towards the achievement of this change, but did so with certain definite expectations. They expected justice, equality, restoration of their lives and contentment. They expected conditions to be created for genuine reconciliation. But seven years after the conflict came to an end, seventeen months after a new President was elected, nine months after a new Government was elected, they remain a discontented people. In that context, reconciliation in the proper sense is not yet visible.”
  • US 'very firmly' committed to in Sri Lanka says Nisha Biswal
    The US Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia Nisha Biswal said the US stood ‘very firmly’ on the need for progress on accountability in Sri Lanka.
  • Tamil patience running out amidst militarisation and colonisation of North-East says TNA
    The Tamil National Alliance spokesperson MA Sumanthiran said the day to day lives of Tamils in the North-East are yet to change, stressing that the “people’s patience is running out” amidst militarisation and state sponsored changes in demography.

    See tweets from the event here.

    Mr Sumanthiran was speaking alongside Sri Lanka’s Ambassador to the US who called for more time and “patience” at a recent event on constitutional reform hosted by the Congressional Caucus on Sri Lanka.

    The event, chaired by Wall Street Journal Columnist Sadanand Dhume at Capitol Hill on Tuesday, started with Sri Lanka’s Ambassador to the US Prasad Kariyawasam and Tamil National Alliance spokesperson MA Sumanthiran  addressing the congressional gathering.

    Sri Lanka’s Ambassador to the US called for “patience”  claiming  “we have achieved a lot already. Daily violence has stopped. ”

    The Ambassador said that ‘the government of Sri Lanka is working closely with international partners such as the UN, European Union and United States.”

    Stressing that ‘all efforts will take time,’  Sri Lanka’s Ambassador said  “the need of the hour is patience and tenacity, and support for moderate forces.”

    In response Mr Sumanthiran noted that the day to day issues of Tamils haven’t changed, lamenting ongoing militarisation and state sponsored colonisation.
  • Govt inaction putting Sri Lanka's economy at risks - IMF
    The International Monetary Fund (IMF) on Tuesday warned that the Sri Lankan government's inaction on critical areas was putting the country's economic outlook at risk, reported Reuters.

    "Despite positive growth momentum, the Sri Lankan economy is facing challenges due to the difficult external environment and a period of significant political transition," the IMF executive board was quoted by the news site as saying.
  • Amnesty urges Indonesia to allow Tamil asylum seekers to disembark
    Amnesty International on Wednesday called on the Indonesian government to allow over 40 Tamils fleeing from Sri Lanka to disembark and meet with UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) officials.

    “These people have endured a long and difficult journey already. Now that they have reached land in Aceh, they should be allowed to disembark and meet UNHCR officials,” Amnesty International’s director of campaigns for South East Asia and the Pacific, Josef Benedict said in a statement.

    Noting the ongoing discrimination against Tamils, Amnesty said in a statement:
    "Despite many recent improvements, there are still concerns about discriminatory practices against Tamils by law enforcement officials."

    "The UN Human Rights Council noted in April that Sri Lanka saw a spate of arrests of Tamils under the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA). Arrests carried out under the PTA have, in a number of cases, failed to meet the minimum standards of due process laid out in directives by Sri Lanka’s National Human Rights Commission. Tamil Sri Lankans remain deeply concerned about what they say is a persistent culture of surveillance in the north and east of the country."
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