Sri Lankan military involvement in civilian life across the Tamil homeland has continued this week, with the armed forces continuing to entrench themselves in events across the North-East.
Pottuvil, Amparai: Military embedded in civilian and ecological spaces
On 26 April 2025, the Sri Lankan Navy partnered with the Rotaract Informatics Institute of Technology to plant 1,000 mangrove plants at…
In a statement released yesterday, Human Rights Watch urged United Nations Human Rights Council members to act on the Human Rights Chief Navi Pillay’s recommendations to create an independent international inquiry into war crimes and abuses during the armed conflict.
Commenting on the report, the Asia director at Human Rights Watch, Brad Adams, said,
Sri Lanka’s External Affairs Minister GL Peiris has said that member states in the UN Human Rights Council are not able to make independent decisions on the Sri Lanka resolution next month.
The Island reported Peiris as claiming members were being blackmailed to vote against Sri Lanka at the next session of the Council in March, and threatened with serious consequences if they failed to do so.
The release of Nalini, Robert Pious, Jayakumar and Ravichandran, who were jailed over the death of Rajiv Gandhi, has been halted by the Supreme Court in Delhi, overturning the decision made by Tamil Nadu’s state government.
The Marumalarchi Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (MDMK) and other organisations staged demonstrations across Tamil Nadu yesterday, demanding an international probe into the 'methodically organised genocide' committed by the Sri Lankan government and a referendum within the Tamils on the island and Tamil diaspora on creating a new state of Tamil Eelam.
Protestors made further calls for the removal of Sinhalese residential colonies that had been established in previously Tamil areas in the North-East of Sri Lanka.
Elaborating on calls for a referendum on Tamil Eelam, the protestors urged the United Nations to recognise the state of ‘Tamil Eelam’ as the homeland of Tamils on the island and directly supervise a referendum on the Tamil national question that incorporated diaspora Tamils across the world.
The Senior Minister of State for the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO), Baroness Warsi, speaking at the House of Lords, noting recommendations made by the UN Human Rights Chief in a report released last week, reiterated the UK’s commitment towards passing a resolution for an international investigation into crimes in Sri Lanka.
Responding to comments made by Lord Naseby questioning the validity of a resolution at the UNHRC, Baroness Warsi, reiterated,
“We have yet to see a meaningful, time-bound, independent, domestic-led political process with clear milestones in this matter.”
Speaking on behalf of the opposition, Lord Bach, highlighted cross-party support for the FCO’s work towards passing a UNHRC resolution that called for an international investigation into war crimes in Sri Lanka and confirmed the earnestness of the work at the UNHRC, stating,
“The Opposition support the Government’s response to this question.Can the Minister confirm to the House that the Prime Minister will be true to his word on this, and that the Government will continue to work closely with the United States Administration and others at the forthcoming session of the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva, to which she has already referred, in the order that an independent international inquiry can be set up at the earliest possible time?”
Samples of human remains found in a mass grave in the central Sri Lankan town of Matale will be sent to the Beta Analytical Archaeological Laboratory in Florida, reported the Daily Mirror.
A commission set up by President Mahinda Rajapaksa to look into the mass grave ordered the investigation.
In a report on the human rights situation in Sri Lanka, released today, the US state department highlighted ‘serious human rights problems' that were found ‘often predominantly in Tamil areas.’
The report outlined human rights issues, including unlawful killings by security forces and government-allied paramilitary groups, torture and abuse of detainees by police and security forces, improper prison conditions, arbitrary arrest and detention by authorities and neglect of the rights of internally displaced persons (IDPs) to be prevalent in Tamil areas.
An Amnesty International report,’Sri Lanka: Suppressing calls for justice’, released today, reiterated its ‘urgent call on the UN to establish an independent international investigation into alleged war crimes, crimes against humanity and other crimes under international law committed by all sides of the armed conflict.”
The report outlined threats on to people meeting with visiting foreign MP’s, retaliations faced by people speaking to US diplomats and retaliations faced by people protesting enforced disappearances.
Speaking in Amnesty International’s press release, the Amnesty International’s Deputy Asia-Pacific Director, Polly Truscott, said,
“Sri Lanka is doing whatever it can to avoid accountability for the alleged horrific violations by its security forces during the armed conflict”
“We urge UN member states to use the HRC to agree a strong resolution establishing an independent international investigation into alleged war crimes. And its equally crucial that the world does not lose sight of the still very troubling assault on dissent in Sri Lanka today.”
“The pattern of harassment, surveillance and attacks against those opposing the Sri Lanka authorities is deeply disturbing and shows no sign of letting up”
There are serious doubts over Sri Lanka's reconciliation efforts, including the touted Truth and Reconciliation Commission, reported Deutsche Welle (DW).
Germany's international broadcaster, speaking to several NGOs, said it was unlikely, given Sri Lanka's hostility to accountability, that it was serious about delivering justice.