• Families of Tamil disappeared hold demo as UN working group visits Jaffna office

    Photographs: Tamil Guardian

    Families of the disappeared staged demonstrations to welcome United Nations Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances (UN WGEID) to Jaffna on Thursday.

    The demonstrations took place outside the UN Jaffna office, where a member of the visiting UN team was holding consultations.
     
    Mr Seong Phil Hong met the demonstrating family members of the disappeared following his meeting at the UN office in Jaffna.
     
  • Tamil activists arrested in Sri Lanka for distributing hartal pamphlets
    Two Tamil activists were arrested for distributing pamphlets urging participation in a Hartal tomorrow.

    The activists belong to the Tamil National People’s Front political party.

    Hartals have been scheduled across the North-East to demand the release of all Tamil political prisoners.
  • 31 Tamil political prisoners taken back to jail despite being granted conditional bail
    Tamil political prisoners taken back to jail despite being granted conditional bail - Photograph- @Rukitweets
  • Japan's naval ships dock in Port of Colombo Sri Lanka
    Japanese naval ships were welcomed into the Port of Colombo on a goodwill visit on Wednesday reports Colombo Page.

    The Two Japanese Naval ships were en route to Somalia and the Gulf of Aden to embark on counter piracy operations.
  • Tamil protests in Mannar call for release of all political prisoners
    Politicians and families of the disappeared held demonstrations in Mannar to call for the release of Tamil political prisoners on Tuesday.
  • Sri Lanka's president visits Buddhist university construction site
    Sri Lanka’s President Maithripala Sirisena visited the construction site of a new International Buddhist University to inspect progress on Tuesday.

    Accompanied by Buddhist Monks President Sirisena looked over future architectural models for the new construction development.
  • Sri Lanka’s Unexpected Political Opening Won’t Last Forever

    Writing in the Diplomat, Taylor Dibbert said it was time for Sri Lanka’s political leadership to explain the content of the UNHRC resolution clearly to all its citizens and explain the importance of reforms.

    Adding that Colombo “has been reluctant to take even small steps to reach out to the Tamil community,” Mr Dibbert questioned whether “worries over a Sinhala-Buddhist backlash would again be used to justify prevarication form those in power.”

    Full piece reproduced below.

    Sri Lanka’s new government, led by President Maithripala Sirisena, has now made a range of assurances via an extensive reform agenda and is now faced with the trickier task of implementation. Elections in January (when Sirisena defeated the increasingly authoritarian Mahinda Rajapaksa in his quest to win an unprecedented third term) and August parliamentary polls, combined with the recently passed UN Human Rights Council (HRC) resolution on Sri Lanka, have presented the country with an unanticipated opening.

  • Amnesty calls on UN Working Group to investigate Sri Lanka’s mass graves and secret detention camps

    Amnesty International called on the UN Working Group on Enforced and Involuntary Disappearance to investigate secret detention camps and mass grave sites during its visit to Sri Lanka.

    Calling on the working group to investigate secret detention centres with a view to holding state actors accountable, the briefing note said,

  • Tamil families and politicians call for release of political prisoners in Mullaitivu protest
    Tamil politicians and family members of those detained under the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) took part in a public protest in Mullaitivvu calling for the immediate release of Tamil political prisoners.
  • Sri Lanka's military opens army built hotel expansion in Jaffna High Security Zone
    An expansion of an army run hotel in the government declared High Security Zone in Jaffna was opened by a member of the Security Forces on Saturday.
  • Tamil political parties call for public strike action in North-East to demand release of political prisoners
    The Tamil National Alliance and the Tamil National Peoples Front (TNPF) have called for hartals in Jaffna, Killinochchi and Vavuniya on Friday November 13 to demand for the release of Tamil political prisoners.

    The TNPF leader Gajendrakumar Ponnambalam called for the shutting down of all shops, schools, universities and higher education institutions in Jaffna and Killinochchi a statement calling for the strike action.
  • Sri Lankan military lays foundation for new Buddha statue in North-East

    The Sri Lankan navy took part in a Buddhist ceremony in Nainativu this week, where the Commander of the Navy laid the foundation stone for a new statue of the Buddha to be built.

    The navy participated in the ceremony held at the Nagadeepa Purana Rajamaha Viharaya, a Buddhist temple situated in the Jaffna peninsula islet, with the military stating the “Northern Naval Command of the Sri Lanka Navy extended all the supportive measures to make the event a successful one”.

    Following an all-night chanting ceremony, the Chief Incumbent of the temple “invoked blessings on the Sri Lanka Navy for their meritorious act and for all the assistances provided,” stated the Ministry of Defence.

  • War crimes suspect Jagath Jayasuriya takes up diplomatic post in Brazil

    Former army commander General Jagath Jayasuriya, who is widely thought to be responsible for mass atrocities during the last phase of the armed conflict, has taken up his new post as Sri Lanka's ambassador to Brazil.

    The general presented his credentials to President Dilma Rousseff earlier this week and briefed her on the political progress seen on the island since the change in government.

    The Foreign Ministry announced in June that former army commander Jagath Jayasuriya and former army chief Daya Ratnayake have been nominated as envoys to Brazil and Pakistan respectively. Both held senior positions during the last phase of the armed conflict, which saw grave violations of international humanitarian law. Mr Jayasuriya was denied a US visa earlier this year over the allegations.

  • Government changes name of Tamil island to Sinhala

    The NPC passed a resolution on Thursday demanding the revocation of the change in name of the island Nainathivu to the Sinhala name, Nagapattina.

    The resolution, which was unanimously approved, said the government gazette mandating the change of the name was an attempt to distort history.

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