• Transitional justice is about justice for war crimes – British MEP

    The Sri Lankan government must ensure that transitional justice also includes justice for war crimes, stated Syed Kamall Conservative MEP for London.

    Responding to questions from the British Tamils Forum, Mr Kamall said that EU member states noted more had to be done to ensure accountability on the island.

    Transitional justice is indeed about rehabilitation and reconstruction, but also about achieving justice for war crimes,” said Mr Kamall. “The EU Member States have in their most recent Council conclusions on Sri Lanka welcomed progress made, but also noticed the need for more to be done.”

  • Exiled Tamil victims call for international judges – ITJP

    Exiled Tamil victims who survived the final stages of the armed conflict on the island have called for international judges to participate in an accountability mechanism for mass atrocities, in a new report by the International Truth and Justice Project.

    Launched on Friday, the report clearly identified the top priority of the victims as criminal accountability, including “the prosecution of those who were in positions of superior and command responsibility”.

    The victims stated they would testify by video to a special court in Sri Lanka only if international judges were involved and their identities protected.

    “These findings have huge implications for the design of the transitional justice mechanisms in Sri Lanka,” said Yasmin Sooka. “It’s important that thousands of Tamils who’ve fled Sri Lanka have a voice, especially as some are the only known surviving witnesses to alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity”.

  • Live – ITJP report launch in London

    Watch a live stream of the International Truth and Justice Project report launch in London below.

  • British citizen beaten and arbitrarily detained in Sri Lanka
    Updated 10 June 2016
    Reports of the arbitrary detention and beating of a British Tamil citizen that arrived in Sri Lanka to visit his mother have emerged.

    Mr Velauthapilai Renugaruban was beaten and forcefully arrested by two men who entered his family home in Jaffna on 2nd of June. The men informed the family that they had come to arrest Mr Renugaruban on suspicion of assisting LTTE activities in the UK. Neither an arrest warrant nor identification was provided by the two men, who dragged him out of the house and took him away in a van.

    Though an official torture plea has not been extracted from Mr Renugaruban, the detainee's family and representative lawyer in Colombo claim he has been tortured in custody.


    A day after Mr Renugaruban was arrested, two men alleging to be representatives of the British High Commission, visited the detainee’s mother at her family house in Jaffna, advising the family to confess that they were LTTE members so to help them negotiate Mr Renugaruban’s release. When asked for identification the two me failed to produce documents.


    In response to the detention, Mr Renugaruban’s family approached the British government and human rights activists, who inquired into the case. Upon contact, the president’s advisor and Governor of the Eastern Province Mr Austin Fernando managed to locate the detained British citizen and confirm that he was in Sri Lankan police custody.  Shortly after the inquiries made by international officials, Mr Renugaruban was produced in front of the Jaffna Magistrates Court and is now officially detained until 17 June under charges of an alleged assault incident. The commander of the Sri Lanka’s Security Forces stationed in Jaffna, Major General Mahesh Senanayake, is confirmed to have contacted Mr Renugaruban’s family.

  • No chemical emissions from weapons says Ranil
    The Sri Lankan Prime Minister, Ranil Wickremesinghe on Wednesday assured parliament that no chemical emissions from weapons had affected civilians during the armed conflict.
  • Sri Lankan president vows to ‘eradicate the LTTE ideology’

    Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena vowed to “eradicate the LTTE ideology” in calling for a separate state, in comments made to a gathering in Colombo this week.

    Mr Sirisena told a crowd that calls for a separate state still exist both on the island and internationally, pledging that his government will take action to "eradicate" it.

  • Sri Lanka to issue 'certificate of absence' for missing
    The Sri Lankan cabinet on Tuesday passed draft legislation to issue a 'certificate of absence' for people missing during the armed conflict, reported Colombo Page.
  • Closing window of opportunity in Sri Lanka warns Pasumai Thaayagam
    Sri Lanka’s window of opportunity for reconciliation will close if it fails to act on accountability and militarisation, said the Pasumai Thaayagam Foundation in a written statement to the 32nd session of the United Nations Human Rights Council.

    In a statement endorsing the findings of an investigative report by People for Equality and Relief in Lanka (PEARL), Pasumaya Thaayagam said,
  • TNA to brief UN on Sri Lanka
    A delegation from the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) is to brief the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights ahead of the upcoming Human Rights Council session, on progress made in Sri Lanka on the implementation of the resolution passed last year, TNA spokesperson MA Sumanthiran told Tamil journalists this week.
  • British head of diplomatic service discusses political settlement with TNA
    The head of the British diplomatic service, Simon McDonald and the secretary at the UK Department for International Development visited Sri Lanka on Wednesday held discussions with the Tamil National Alliance leader R Sampanthan regarding political settlement and the challenges facing Tamils in the North-East.



    The visiting diplomats also met with the prime minister, Ranil Wickremesinghe and other government officials, discussing the government's progress on reconciliation and implementation of reforms.

    Meeting with the minister for prison reforms, rehabilitation, resettlement and Hindu religious affairs, MA Swaminathan, the UK diplomats discussed land-returns and the return of IDPs.

  • Sri Lanka must not ‘squander good will’ says Amnesty International
    The Sri Lankan government must not “squander the good will” of those who have “waited decades for their human rights demands to be addressed” said Amnesty International, in a written statement released last week.

    The statement, which was submitted to the 32nd regular session of the UN Human Rights Council taking place this month, said the “vast majority of alleged abuses before, during, and after Sri Lanka’s armed conflict has not been effectively investigated”.

    It also called on the international community to monitor “progress and implementation” of a United Nations resolution that Sri Lankan co-sponsored, which calls for an accountability mechanism with international judges to prosecute perpetrators of mass atrocities.

    “Perpetrators have not been prosecuted and torture in police custody persists with impunity,” said the human rights organisation.
  • UK officials arrive in Sri Lanka
    Two UK officials arrived in Sri Lanka on Monday, for discussions on reconciliation and human rights, as well as wider areas of cooperation between the two countries, the British High Commission said.
  • Sri Lanka tightens defence cooperation with Russia
    Sri Lanka agreed to increase its defence ties with Russia following a meeting between Russia's deputy defence minister, Anatoly Antonov and Sri Lanka's defence secretary Karunasena Hettiarachchi, on Sunday.

    Looking to the future, cooperation will extend to the training of Sri Lankan military officers at Russian institutions.
  • Sri Lanka's foreign minister encourages French businesses to invest in 'business paradise'

    Sri Lanka’s foreign minister Mangala Samarweera highlighted Sri Lanka’s potential to be a investment paradise during an investment meeting in Paris, reports Colombo Page.

  • EU development strategy aims at ‘implementation of UNHRC Resolution’

    The European Union is revising its development strategy for Sri Lanka, in order to assist with the implementation of a UN resolution that calls for trials with foreign judges to prosecute those accused of committing mass atrocities.

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