• No dollars means no power in Sri Lanka as crisis worsens

    The Ceylon Electricity Board (CEB) has been compelled to enforce daily hour-long power cuts in Sri Lanka, as a worsening economic crisis has meant the power utility is unable to purchase fuel oil for its power stations.

  • China forces Sri Lanka to pay up

    The Sri Lankan government has caved to pressure from Beijing and agreed to pay almost US$6.9 million for a shipment of fertilisers that it had previously rejected as substandard.

  • Reverend Father Mary Bastian commemorated in Mannar

    The 37th anniversary of the assassination of Tamil human rights activist and local Catholic parish priest, Reverend Father Mary Bastian, who was shot dead by the Sri Lankan Army (SLA) in 1985, was commemorated at the Vankalai St. Anne’s Church in Mannar last Thursday.  

  • Sri Lanka requests debt restructuring from China

    With the country on the brink of financial default, Sri Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa has requested for debt restructuring from China.

  • Sri Lanka sells over half its gold reserves

    To boost the country’s foreign reserves the government has sold over half its gold reserves, worth an estimated $382.2 million at the end of November.

    Its value plummeted by half by the end of December reaching a value of $175.3 million.

  • Forests, another frontier of Tamil resistance

    The Sri Lankan military has undertaken massive deforestation of parts of the Tamil homeland since the end of the armed conflict. Sharing images from Google Earth on Facebook, Kilinochchi journalist M. Thamilselvan illustrated the loss of forest cover surrounding army camps on the east side of the A9 road between Mankulam and Murikandy in the Mullaitivu district.

  • Lasantha Wickramatunge commemorated in Batticaloa

    Murdered Sri Lankan journalist Lasantha Wickrematunge was commemorated in a ceremony held by the Batticaloa Press Club earlier today, marking 13 years since he was gunned down in Colombo.

  • The Tamils killed to cover up Lasantha’s murder

    As we mark 13 years since the murder of Sunday Leader editor Lasantha Wickramatunge, we look back on the murder of two Tamil youth who were killed as part of cover up by the Sri Lankan security forces.

    In the aftermath of Wickramatunge’s murder, details of the killing began to slowly become revealed over the years as international pressure over the assassination mounted.

  • ‘A reliable friend’ – India’s foreign minister affirms support for Sri Lanka

    Amidst an economic crisis in Sri Lanka which has seen people forced to ration food, India’s foreign secretary Subrahmanyam Jaishankar affirmed Indian support during these “difficult times”.

  • Sri Lanka’s Indo-phobia and Gammanpila’s U-turn - A closer look at the Trinco oil deal

    The Sri Lankan government has signed a long-awaited agreement with India that will allow New Delhi to restore at least 75 oil tanks in the eastern city of Trincomalee this week.

    Sri Lanka’s energy minister Udaya Gammanpila “claimed that 85 of 99 tanks will be under Sri Lankan control which were under Indian control”.

    A closer look at the deal, however, reveals a slightly different picture.

  • Tamils protest against construction of new Buddhist vihara in Trincomalee

    Tamils protested against plans to construct a new Buddhist vihara in Periyankulam, Trincomalee today. 

    The demonstration was organised to block efforts by a Sinhala Buddhist monk seeking to build a new vihara in place of a row of Tamil businesses. Following orders from the monk, Uppuveli police threatened two Tamil traders, claiming that their shops will be removed to accomodate the new vihara. 

  • Kumar Ponnambalam remembered 22 years on

    Human rights lawyer and former leader of the All Ceylon Tamil Congress (ACTC), Kumar Ponnambalam, was remembered yesterday, 22 years after his assassination in Colombo.

  • Slain Tamil students remembered in Trincomalee

    The five Tamil students summarily executed by Sri Lankan Special Task Force troops 16 years ago were remembered on Sunday at Trincomalee beach, where they were murdered.

  • Our state respects the freedom of speech of its critics, claims Sri Lankan Media Minister 

    Sri Lankan Media Minister, Dullas Alahapperuma, claimed that the Sri Lankan President and the government are “open to constructive criticism” and have never considered placing restrictions on the freedom of speech of government critics, at a press meeting on Wednesday. 

  • ‘Stop being unethical!’ – President Rajapaksa urges his cabinet to stop criticising the government

    Faced with increasing dissent within his own cabinet and party, Sri Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa has chastised ministers for being “unethical” and criticising the government to further their own personal agendas.

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