• Eight European Human Rights Ambassadors denounce the continued detention of Hejaaz Hizbullah

    In a joint statement by eight human rights ambassadors, including the UK, Germany, and Sweden, denounced the continued detention of Muslim lawyer Hejaaz Hizbullah by the Sri Lankan authorities.

  • Sri Lankan police claim to uncover ammunition in Chemmani

    Sri Lanka Special Task Force (STF) has searched a Hindu cemetery in Chemmani, to allegedly uncover  5 kg of ammunition following a Jaffna Magistrate court order.

    According to police records, 3 kg 750 mg C4 and rennet ammunition detonators and wires were found within the bag. 

  • Draft resolution completely fails to rise to the challenge’ – UK Liberal Democratic leader calls for Sri Lanka to be referred to ICC

    Writing to British Foreign Secretary, Dominic Raab, leader of the UK Liberal Democratic party, Ed Davey, slammed the proposed resolution on Sri Lanka stating it “completely fails to rise to the challenge” and called for Sri Lanka to be referred to the International Criminal Court.

  • UN resolution will keep Sri Lanka ‘firmly on agenda’ says UK

    A United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) resolution on accountability in Sri Lanka, will ensure that the country is kept “firmly on the UNHRC agenda” said British Minister of State for South Asia Lord Ahmad, in a letter this week, as the UK continued to decline referring Sri Lanka to the International Criminal Court (ICC).

  • Sri Lankan army steal Tamil traders’ goods at Mannar checkpoints

    Tamil traders have complained about Sri Lankan army officials confiscating their goods at Mannar checkpoints and keeping it to sell for themselves.

  • Sri Lanka's invitation to Myanmar's military junta sparks outrage

    Sri Lanka has been accused of officially recognising the military regime in Myanmar which seized power on February 1, after Sri Lankan foreign secretary Dinesh Gunawardena sent a letter to Wunna Maung Lwin, a military-junta appointed foreign secretary, inviting him to a ministerial meeting.

  • Politicians across the globe express support for Ambihai Selvakumar’s hunger strike for justice

    As Ambihai Selvakumar enters her 13th day of hunger-striking, she has garnered international support from politicians across the globe.

  • ‘No surrender’ at United Nations vows Sri Lankan foreign secretary

    Sri Lanka’s foreign secretary Jayanath Colombage vowed that his government would not “surrender” at the UN Human Rights Council, where a new resolution on accountability for mass atrocities is being considered, and instead trashed UN estimates of 70,000 Tamil civilians having been killed during the final phase of the armed conflict.

    Speaking to Roar Media, the former Navy Admiral criticised the recent UN High Commissioners report as being “unfounded” and “not based on facts”. He added that UN estimates of 70,000 Tamil civilians killed in the final phases of the armed conflict are flawed as there are no “bodies” or “skeletons” and that “there had not been that many [civilian] loses during the final stages of the war”.

    Following this, Colombage went on to state that the “army had to exercise restraint” in the final stages of the war as “they did not want to kill civilians” and followed their “zero [civilian] casualties” strategy. He added the military forces had become their “protectors” taking them to “various centres” and that after a “lapse of a few years” they were allowed to go home and questioned why the government is accused of human rights abuses.

  • Sri Lanka 'will not hesitate' to introduce laws to protect soldiers from war crimes trials – SLPP Chairman

    Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) Chairman G.L. Peiris claimed the Sri Lankan government “wouldn’t hesitate” to make constitutional amendments to guarantee protection for their armed forces from potential war crimes trials.

    His comments to The Island, came following a damning report released by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights which urged member states to consider asset freezes and travel bans on Sri Lankan officials, as well as pursuing trials in their respective national courts. His remarks come as the 46th session of the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) is underway in Geneva.

    The former foreign secretary speaking at an SLPP press brief told reporters, that the constitution could be amended to protect the armed forces, stating the UNHRC is pursuing an “agenda” against Sri Lanka.

  • Despite human rights concerns, the UK eclipses China as top direct investor in Sri Lanka

    Despite rising international concern over the deteriorating human conditions in Sri Lanka, the UK has outpaced China as a direct investor into the Sri Lanka economy.

  • Tamil journalist intimidated and harassed by Sri Lankan Forest Department officials in Mullaitivu

    Tamil Guardian correspondent Kanapathipillai Kumanan was intimidated and harassed by three Sri Lankan Forest Department officials in Mullaitivu on 27th February. 

  • US Secretary of State pays tribute to Tamil lawyer who 'fights for justice’

    US Secretary of State Antony Blinked paid tribute to Ranitha Gnanarajah this week, as he awarded her the Secretary of State’s International Women of Courage Award for 2021 in a virtual ceremony.

    Gnanarajah, a Tamil lawyer who has worked with the Centre for Human Rights and Development (CHRD), was praised by Blinken as he spoke at the ceremony.

  • British Tamil woman enters 12th day of hunger strike demanding justice for genocide

    A British Tamil woman who has been on hunger strike in London, demanding the international community deliver justice for the Tamil genocide, has entered her 12th day of protest this morning.

  • The Tamil Nationalist Case Against Kendriya Vidyalaya

     

    “I studied Tamil ma’am.” This seemingly innocuous statement poleaxed my new history teacher. I had just completed Class 10 (the Indian equivalent of GCSE) and recently joined the Kendriya Vidyalaya, a system of schools run by the central Ministry of Education, for the final two years of my schooling. My history tutor was shocked because the school did not offer the language I said I studied until the previous year. And it was compulsory to do a language in addition to English in order to be eligible to sit the final exams (A Levels). One might presume that I’d have moved out of Tamil Nadu for high school. I kid you not, I still lived in the heart of Chennai, the capital of the only Tamil-speaking state in the Indian union! 

  • French Tamils call on the international community to break their silence

    Protests were held in Paris, which called on the international community to refer Sri Lanka to the International Criminal Court (ICC) for the war crimes and genocide the state had perpetrated against Tamil people during the peak of the armed struggle in 2009. 

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