• Sajith Premadasa announces run for Presidency

    Leader of the Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB), Sajith Premadasa, has announced that he intends to run for the Presidency once Gotabaya Rajapaksa resigns.

    The SJB holds 50 members in parliament and will require the support of 113 MPs to secure the position.

  • India refuses to let Sri Lankan president land in air force jet

    The Indian government has refused to let Sri Lanka’s Gotabaya Rajapaksa land at a civilian airport in the country using an air force jet reports SBS Sinhala, as the embattled president reportedly searches for a way to flee the island.

    According to SBS, “the Indian government refused to allow a Sri Lankan air force AN32, carrying the president, to land at an Indian civilian airport”.

  • US denies visa to Gotabaya Rajapaksa

    The US embassy has reportedly denied embattled Sri Lankan president Gotabaya Rajapaksa a visitor's visa to enter the country, after reports that he attempted to flee the island last night.

  • Stuck in Sri Lanka - Drama at Colombo airport as Rajapaksa attempts to flee

    Sri Lanka's embattled president Gotabaya Rajapaksa was left stuck on the island, after airport staff blocked his attempts to flee the country in yet another humiliating blow to the accused war criminal.

    The 73-year-old former defence secretary was reportedly trying to flee the country before he is scheduled to step down on Wednesday, and lose immunity as a head of state that protects him from prosecution for a range of crimes. He reportedly fears being arrested and placed on trial where he could face prosecution for his financial crimes, as well as his genocide of Tamils.

  • Time for Tamil Eelam

    Sri Lanka’s economic and political crisis has reiterated what the island’s Tamils have been saying for decades. Only an independent Tamil state can bring stability to the island.

    This weekend, enraged protestors ran through the Sri Lankan president’s official residence and burnt down the prime minister’s home, in scenes which reflected the anger and outrage over the island’s economic collapse. All across the Sinhala south there have been rallies and protests, decrying how the island has fallen into financial ruin.

     In the Tamil homeland however, there are different sentiments to be found. Though the North-East has been hit just as hard by the financial crisis, if not harder given the decades of destruction it has faced, the protests of the south do not resonate the same way with Tamils. There is bemusement at how the same people who overwhelmingly elected a man who platformed on bringing a militaristic rule, have turned on him within a few short years. There is scepticism as to whether these demonstrations will ever lead to any deep-rooted change for an island that has been plagued by cycles of violence. And there is a sense of vindication over what Tamils have known and said for decades. Sri Lanka is not just in crisis - it is a failed state, that in its current form is not fit for purpose. It is time for the Tamil people to be free from it.

     

  • ‘The military wants to see this struggle win’ claims war criminal Sarath Fonseka

    Former Sri Lankan Army Commander and accused war criminal, Sarath Fonseka, joined the protests on Saturday and claimed that Sri Lankan armed forces wanted “to see this struggle win”.

  • ‘Only Hitler led mobs could do this’ – Sri Lankan Prime Minister responds to the burning of his house

    Responding to the burning of his private residence, Sri Lanka’s Prime Minister, Ranil Wickremesinghe, has decried the actions of protesters as comparable to Hitler in a special statement.

    "I had [paintings, Buddha statues and artworks], now nothing is left. They have been completely destroyed. Only Hitlerists would do things like that. There is background for that".

  • Sri Lanka's president remains all at sea

    Sources have told the BBC that Sri Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa is stationed on a navy vessel in Sri Lankan waters whilst a lawmaker claimed he is in a "nearby country", after being escorted from his home before protesters occupied his residence this weekend.

  • British police arrest man at airport over suspicion of being LTTE member

    UK police have arrested a man at Luton airport last week on suspicion of being a member of and supporting the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), which remains a proscribed organisation in Britain.

  • TNA support is conditional on meeting certain demands – MA Sumanthiran

    Speaking to the Hindu, Tamil National Alliance MP, MA Sumanthiran, maintained that support for an interim all-party government would be conditional on meeting certain demands.

  • ‘We are closely monitoring ongoing developments’ – IMF concerned by crisis in Sri Lanka

    Responding to mass unrest in Colombo, which saw the burning of the Prime Minister’s house, the International Monetary Fund has raised deep concerns over the crisis whilst stressing the need for a resolution that will “allow for the resumption of our dialogue on an IMF-supported program”.

  • BJP lawmaker calls on Indian military to support Rajapaksa’s

    Responding to mass demonstrations in Colombo and continued calls for Sri Lanka’s President to resign, Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) lawmaker Subramanian Swamy demands that India’s military be prepared to support the Rajapaksas.

    On Twitter he stated:

  • Sri Lankan army admits to opening fire during protests

    A statement from the Sri Lankan army admitted that soldiers opened fire during Saturday’s protest, after video clips of the shootings were widely shared, but denied there was any “intent on causing deliberate harm to the protesters”.

    In a statement entitled ‘The army sets the record straight about Saturday firing’, the military said its attention “has been drawn to a few video clips going viral”.

  • Flowers and prayers for victims of Navaly church bombing

    The Church of St Peter in Navaly commemorated over 140 Tamil civilians that were killed in its premises by Sri Lankan Air Force bombs 27 years ago.

  • Questions of corruption as over 17 million rupees uncovered in Rajapaksa's residence

    Following the breach of the Presidential residence yesterday, a video has circulated showing protesters recovering an estimated Rs. 17,850,000 in the President's residence.

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