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Latest news from and about the homeland

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Environmentalists and civil society activists protested at Galle Face in Colombo on 17 June against proposed heavy mineral sand mining along the eastern coastline from Oluvil to Pothuvil, warning that the project threatens the land, fisheries and livelihoods of Tamil and Muslim communities across the Eastern Province. According to the People's Alliance for Right to Land (PARL), exploration…

Sri Lanka paid $6.5 million to Washington lobby firms in 2014

Updated 1000 GMT

Sri Lanka paid an estimated US $6.5 million to a major fundraiser to the Obama campaign in order to lobby US officials and is yet to finish making payments, reports Foreign Policy.

According to the paper’s investigation, the Sri Lankan government over a five month period in 2014 paid $6.5 million to Imaad Zuberi, a venture capitalist whp was one of the biggest contributors to Obama’s re-election campaign.

A document obtained by Foreign Policy found that a lobby firm owned by Mr Zuberi was paid $2 million by the Sri Lankan government for consulting services which included influencing the US government.

The transactions have come under scrutiny after it was found that payments to Mr Zuberi were not disclosed to the US Justice Department as required under federal law. The Foreign Agents Registration Act of FARA states that paid representatives of foreign governments must disclose those relationships to the Justice Department and carries a punishment of up to 5 years in prison.

Through Mr Zuberi, Sri Lanka “made hundreds of contacts with government officials, think tanks, and journalists, and arranged meetings on Capitol Hill”. One such meeting was on July 14 2014, when former Sri Lankan MP Vass Gunawardena and 14 other Sri Lankan officials, spent thousands of dollars on food and drinks for members of Congress in Washington DC.

Mr Zuberi however denied he worked for individuals, telling FP, “Our work was for the government of Sri Lanka… not Mr Vass Gunawardena as a person”.

He also rejected allegations of corruption within the then Sri Lankan government, led by Mahinda Rajapaksa. “Perhaps we were lucky that we didn’t encounter corruption,” said Mr Zuberi. “But we only explored opportunities and didn’t really make any investment.”

Karunanidhi warns of cover up if Sri Lanka conducts inquiry

The Tamil Nadu politician and DMK leader, M Karunanidhi warned of a cover up if Sri Lanka is allowed to conduct its own inquiry into war crimes, criticising the US for its stance on a domestic inquiry, The Hindu reported

Earlier this week the US said it would support such a move if it was credible, with some degree of international involvement.

“The US government's move looks as if it wants to cover up the war crimes. I hope it will not happen. If Sri Lanka is allowed to conduct its own inquiry, the DMK will strongly condemn the US,” Mr Karunanidhi was quoted by the paper as saying in a statement.

‘UK remains fully committed to OHCHR investigation’ – British High Commission

The British High Commission in Sri Lanka stated the UK was still fully committed to the UN process, including the upcoming report on mass atrocities on the island, yet called on the Sri Lankan government “to make progress domestically”.

In response to a query from The Island a spokesperson for the High Commission said:

"The UK remains fully committed to the UN process, including the OHCHR investigation and the publication of its report in September. It will then be for the government of Sri Lanka to demonstrate what progress it has made towards reconciliation and accountability, and how it will take forward the recommendations of the OHCHR report.”

The spokesperson went on to say:

“We have consistently called for Sri Lanka to make progress domestically. It is important that any accountability process is credible, inclusive, transparent, independent and meets international standards."

More than 35,000 houses needed in Jaffna - District Secretary

More than 35,000 houses are needed in Jaffna in order to resettle Tamils living below the poverty line in the peninsula, said Jaffna District Secretary N. Vedanayagam.

Mr Vedanayagam said the figure had been arrived at through data collected by the Jaffna District Secretariat.

He went on to note that large areas in Jaffna still remained under military control and had not been released to their rightful owners. If this land does ever get released, more houses would be needed, he added.

He appealed to organisations from around the world to contribute towards the reconstruction.

Human remains suspected inside covered up Mannar well

Photographs Tamilwin

Investigations began on Friday into a covered up well in Mannar, unearthed adjacent to where a mass grave containing over 80 bodies was found last year, which is believed to hold human remains.

The well, found near Thiruketheesvaram in Mannar district, was inspected by the Mannar judge, A G Alexrajah on Friday, together with a lawyer representing missing persons, Niranjan and Ranitha and a representative of the Mannar Lawyers Forum, M Sapoortheen, land surveyors from the Mannar district council and police officers.

TNA demands opposition leader post

The Tamil National Alliance has laid claim to the leader of the opposition post, in Sri Lanka's parliament.

In a statement published on Saturday, the TNA said as the party with the second-highest number of seats, the UPFA, has decided to form a national government with the UNP, it is not anymore an opposition party and as such the TNA is now the largest opposition party.

"It has been announced that a National Government has been formed and that Members of Parliament who contested and were elected under both the UNP and the UPFA have accepted cabinet portfolios. Accordingly, both the UNP and the UPFA bear collective cabinet responsibility. As political parties in Parliament, they thus must publicly support all Governmental decisions made in Cabinet. This support includes voting with the Government when sitting in Parliament. There is thus no question whatsoever of the UPFA sitting in opposition in Parliament," the statement said.

UNP MP ignores court summons for the third time

A newly elected parliamentarian with the ruling UNP government has ignored three consecutive summons to appear before a magistrates court for threatening a police sergeant, The Island reports.

Sri Lanka's police force is said to have requested an arrest warrant for Sujeewa Serasinghe after his initial failure to appear in court, however the magistrates only reissued a notice for the MP to come before the Homagama court.

Inquiry must be credible with 'some degree of international involvement' - US

Updated 0700 GMT

Any investigation by Sri Lanka into mass atrocities committed at the end of the armed conflict must be credible to the international community and must have some degree of international involvement, said the US assistant secretary of state for democracy, human rights and labor, Tom Malinowski, speaking to journalists in Trincomalee on Thursday.  

Elaborating on yesterday's statement by the US assistant secretary of state for South and Central Asian affairs that the US would work with Sri Lanka to table a resolution at the upcoming UN Human Rights Council session and support a domestic process, Mr Malinowski said,

"The important thing is that there be a judicial process that is credible to the people of Sri Lanka and to the international community."

"For that process to be credible, I don’t think it has to be a completely international process, but it does have to be independent of political leadership."

"It has to be led by people who are trusted by the minority communities and it should have some degree of international involvement, even if it is a domestic process organized under the laws of Sri Lanka."

Mr Malinowski said in Colombo, in an earlier press conference, that,

“We support a domestic mechanism that will be credible to all of the affected communities in Sri Lanka... I would also add that international support for this process has been, and will continue to be important to building trust and confidence”.

TNA still demand international investigation, NPC chair tells Japan rep

The Tamil National Alliance will stand firm in their calls for an international investigation into Sri Lanka's war crimes, Northern Provincial Council chair C. V. K. Sivagnanam has said.

TNA 'demanded international accountability mechanism' – M. A. Sumanthiran

Tamil National Alliance MP M .A. Sumanthiran said his party demanded an international mechanism of accountability for the mass killings of tens of thousands of Tamils, during a meeting with senior US officials earlier this week.

Colombo Mirror
quoted Mr Sumanthiran as stating the party had “demanded for an international accountability mechanism” when meeting with US Assistant Secretaries Nisha Biswal and Tom Malinowski this week.

He also added that the TNA raised the issues of “the immediate release of political prisoners, return of lands and steps to be taken to speedily address the cases of disappearances”.

Earlier this week Assistant Secretary Biswal commented on her meeting with the TNA, reassuring  them their demands were heard. She said,

“We heard from them on their concerns, their expectations, and they’ve been quite clear and quite public in their call for an international process and mechanism... We’ve reiterated again that we have been a strong voice for advancing issues of accountability and reconciliation and we will continue to be a strong voice”.