• China blocks loan, demands insurance payment from Sri Lanka

    China has blocked a loan of over $69m, saying it will only release the funds once Sri Lanka pays fees to China’s state-run insurance company, reported The Sunday Times.

  • Chief of the Indian Army to visit Sri Lanka

    The Chief of the Indian Army, General Bikram Singh will visit Sri Lanka this week, with the intent of discussing ways to strengthen their bilateral defence ties.

  • SL police warns of more arrests

    More arrests of Jaffna University students are feared, as Sri Lankan security forces claim those arrested had previous LTTE links.

    The police's media spokesperson SSP Prishantha Jayakody said,

  • Canadian MP condemns Jaffna student arrests

    The Canadian NDP MP for Scarborough-Rouge River, Rathika Sitsabaiesan, condemned the arrests and attacks on Jaffna university students by Sri Lankan security forces as a "clear assault on freedom of speech, freedom of assembly, and breach of human rights" and asserted it was "completely unacceptable".

  • EU to fund 4,000 homes in North-East

    The European Union has announced it will assist 4,000 families to build permanent homes in their "villages of origin" in the North-East of Sri Lanka.

    EU Ambassador H.E. Bernard Savage said:

  • Sri Lanka ‘concerned’ at North Korean rocket launch

    The Sri Lankan have expressed concern at the launch of a rocket by North Korea earlier this week, in a statement released by the Ministry of External Affairs.

    The full statement says,

  • Gasoline prices raised to record levels

    Sri lanka's state run Ceylon Petroleum Company has increased fuel prices by 6.7% to help stem further losses, an official announced on Saturday.

  • Sri Lanka must be held accountable – Bob Rae

    The leader of Canada’s Liberal Party, Bob Rae, has issued a statement expressing concern about the student unrest in Jaffna and called for Sri Lanka to be held accountable for human rights violations.

  • Refugee advocates slam "terrorist" slurring

    In a statement released on Friday, the Tamil Refugee Council have strongly rejected comments made by the Sri Lankan High Commissioner to Australia that groups calling for a boycott of Sri Lanka’s cricket tour have “terrorist” connections.

    TRC spokesman, Mal Bala said,

    “The Admiral’s comments are not just laughable. It is insulting to these people to be told they are connected to terrorism”.

    Responding to comments by the High Commissioner that he has brought up the planned leafleting campaigns and protests against the cricket tour with “relevant authorities”, Bala responded,

    “Thanks to freedom of speech here we can do it. But if you did it in Sri Lanka you would quickly be disappeared into the bowels of a torture centre.”

    See the full text of the statement below.

  • Student found strangled, 3 more female students summoned by TID

    A 21-year-old student from Jaffna University, Nadarasa Kiyani, has been found strangled to death in her house in Chunnakam, reports JDS.

  • Sri Lankan Army coerces Tamil women into joining

    The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC), on Tuesday, forwarded a statement from the Women’s Action Network, expressing concern on the plight of Tamil women coerced into joining the Sri Lankan military, reported the BBC.

  • Boycott of cricket tour debated on Australian radio

    Trevor Grant, former chief cricket writer for The Age, has appeared on Radio Australia calling on both Cricket Australia and the Australian government to ban future matches against Sri Lanka, until there is an investigations into the killing of up to 40,000 Tamils in “safe zones” during the latter stages of the armed conflict.

    He appeared on the show alongside Sri Lanka's high commissioner to Australia Admiral Thisara Samarasinghe. The Admiral was the Sri Lankan Navy's Northern commander during 2009 and himself stands accused of participating in the shelling of civilians.

    Grant, who has been leading calls for Australia to boycott the Sri Lankan cricket team, said,

    "This cricket team is part and parcel of maintaining credibility for a government that has been called out on war crimes and crimes against humanity by the UN and continues to persecute Tamils in the Northern and Eastern regions, and what’s more has refused point blank to many requests for independent reviews of things going on in that country”.

    “We are taking a lesson from the anti-apartheid boycotts back in the 1970s. it has been proven that those boycotts in fact were probably the deciding factor in alienating South Africa so much that apartheid was killed.”

    “We are trying to create an awareness. We know that this tour cannot be stopped now, but we would like to ask fans to think twice now about going to the game and also we want to government and Cricket Australia to ban future matches against Sri Lanka until things change.”

    Listen to the full interview here.

    Admiral Thisara Samarasinghe meanwhile responded,

    "I categorically, totally deny baseless, unsubstantiated allegations of 40,000 deaths, crimes against humanity, various other allegations… This is a way of bringing discredit to the country, to people with vested interests… The rest of the world should hail Sri Lanka.”

  • US ‘violated’ rights of SL citizens – Minister

    The Power and Energy Minister Patali Champika Ranawaka has slammed US sanctions against Iran, saying they ‘infringe’ on the rights of Sri Lankans.

  • Monks attack pastor and vandalise church

    Buddhist monks led a mob of roughly 1000 people to vandalise a church and attack the pastor on 9th December, reported the Morning Star.

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