• Sri Lanka enforces massive 7 ½ hour power cut as crisis worsens

    The Sri Lankan government has enforced a more than 7-hour power cut across parts of the island today, amidst soaring prices and an economic crisis that continues to worsen.

  • EPDP MP attacks students in Vavuniya

    Last week, an EPDP MP, Thileepan attacked a student in Vavuniya. The youth was attacked by the EPDP members during a confrontation between two student groups in Vairavapuliyankulam, Vavuniya.

    There have been a series of clashes between youth groups in the Vairapuliyankulam area in Vavuniya for the past two days.

  • Sri Lanka ends COVID burial policy, almost 2 years into pandemic

    After almost two years of the coronavirus pandemic and amidst widespread protests, the Sri Lankan government announced it would end the widely condemned practice of requiring Muslim Covid-19 victims to be buried at a government-designated site in the North-East this week

    In a special announcement from Sri Lanka’s ministry of health, the government said that “dead bodies can be disposed of adhering to normal procedure adopted before the COVID-19 pandemic”.

  • ‘Do you feel proud?’ – Former UK High Commissioner to Sri Lanka questions abstention over Ukraine

    The former British High Commissioner to Sri Lanka slammed states that abstained in this week’s United Nations vote on Russia’s “aggression” into Ukraine – including the country that he was formerly posted in.

    In a tweet sent out earlier today, James Dauris said the vote at the UN General Assembly was “historic”.

  • ‘Gotabaya is pursuing policies hostile to Tamils and Muslims’ - Human Rights Watch

    In a statement released earlier today, the international NGO Human Rights Watch (HRW) called out the Sri Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa for “pursuing policies that are hostile to the Tamil and Muslim communities” and using the military to “intimidate and suppress human rights activists and the families of victims of enforced disappearance.” 

  • Russian tourists lead the way in Sri Lanka, including an oligarch or two

    As Sri Lanka’s economic crisis continues to worsen amidst staggeringly low tourist numbers, visitors from Russia remain the islands highest source of tourists.

  • UN experts call for immediate moratorium on use of draconian PTA

    UN human rights experts have called on the Sri Lankan government to issue an immediate moratorium on the use of the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) amidst increasing scrutiny over the draconian legislation.

  • Sri Lanka closer to default as tourism and tea exports drop

    The risk of default has increased in Sri Lanka as tourist numbers and tea exports are negatively impacted by the conflict in Ukraine.

    In recent years Sri Lanka has invested heavily in promoting holidays to citizens from Ukraine and Russia. Last year tourists from Ukraine were amongst the first to visit the island following the government's reopening of borders. Almost a quarter of all tourist arrivals in Sri Lanka this year were from Russia and Ukraine, Bloomberg reports. As the conflict in the Ukraine escalates following Russia's invasion, it is expected that tourists, which provide a vital source of foreign currency to the country, will drop. Last week  Ukrainian tourists in Sri Lanka staged a protest outside the Russian embassy in Colombo

    The strict economic sanctions on Russia will damage the exports of tea from Sri Lanka. Russia was the third-biggest buyer of tea from Sri Lanka over the past two years and rose to second place in January. In total it is estimated that tourism and tea earned Sri Lanka more than USD $260 million this year, Bloomberg reports. This figure is due to be severely impacted following the escalation of conflict in Ukraine. Sri Lanka which faces a forex crisis is due to make debt repayments of USD $5.7 billion in 2022, it's foreign reserves dropped to USD $2.36 billion in January. The January foreign reserves only provide 1.4 months worth of import cover. However, critics have pointed out that the actual number to be at USD $800 million of useable reserves, roughly 3 weeks worth of imports. The USD $2.36 billion includes the Chinese swap of 10 billion yuan, which equals roughly USD $1.5 billion. The holding of yuan although bolstering the nation's reserves is not being used to finance vital imports or settle debt repayments as the country spirals into a deepening economic crisis. As the island nation battles with rising inflation, essential good items have reached record highs restricting vulnerable households access to food.

     

  • Sri Lanka abstains as UN overwhelming condemns Russian invasion of Ukraine

    The Sri Lankan government was one of a handful of countries to abstain on a United Nations General Assembly resolution that condemns Russia’s invasion of Ukraine earlier today.

  • US Ambassador visits temples amidst heightened concerns of religious persecution

    US Ambassador to Sri Lanka, Julie Chung, made visits to both the Hindu Ponnambalawaneswaram temple and the Buddhist Gangaramaya monastery amidst heightened concerns of religious persecution in Sri Lanka.

  • What are thermobaric and cluster bombs? A look at their use by the Sri Lankan army

    As Russia continues its offensive in Ukraine, it has been accused of launching deadly types of weaponry during its assault – thermobaric and cluster bombs.

    Both types of weaponry have been used around the world before, including in Sri Lanka. We look back at their deployment by the Sri Lankan military.

  • An inconsistent international order - Lessons from Ukraine

    With global outrage and distress at Russia’s actions, however, there has also been growing dismay around the world at the radically different lens through which Western states have viewed Moscow’s offensive and Ukraine’s resistance to it. The past week has made it abundantly clear to many peoples around the world; it is not that Western states do not understand the politics of resistance to oppression. It is that they deem some nations or people as apparently unworthy of practising it.

  • Sri Lanka recruits 'youths' to monitor and report political activities to the police

    The Sri Lankan government plans to recruit youth volunteers to monitor and report political, criminal and social activities to police across the country.

    The Daily Mirror reports, that the Sri Lankan government plans to recruit at least two youths for each 'Grama Nildhari Division' who will directly report to and assist police officers in obtaining individual and community participation in various activities within their respective 'Grama Niladhari' (GN). There are currently 14,022 GN's across the country, which are a sub-unit of a divisional secretariat, in which there are 331.

    The Ministry of Public Security in collaboration with the State Ministry of Community Police Service and the Sri Lanka Police has taken steps to deploy two full-time "community assistants" to each GN division under the Community Police Service Programme.

    Young people over 18 years of age residing permanently in the relevant GN division who have held School Prefect positions and active in youth clubs and other voluntary services could apply for Community Assistants positions, a memo to the cabinet prepared by Public Security Minister Sarath Weerasekara had noted.

     

  • Sri Lankan soldier videos those signing petition against PTA

    A Sri Lankan soldier was seen videoing locals signing the 'repeal the Prevention of Terrorism Act' (PTA) petition in Kodikamam this morning. 

  • ‘We are not going to allow that’ – Sri Lanka slams UN evidence gathering mechanism

    Sri Lanka’s foreign secretary has slammed a United Nations resolution which calls for an evidence gathering mechanism to be set up and collect evidence of mass atrocities, stating that his government would not allow it to operate.

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