• ‘This is a test of moral authority’ – UK Shadow Minister calls for a comprehensive rewrite of UN resolution

    Writing to Minister of State for Asia, Nigel Adams, UK Shadow Minister for Asia and the Pacific, Stephen Kinnock, has called on the government to ‘comprehensively rewrite’ the current proposed UN resolution and questioned why the government’s review of its Global Human Rights sanctions regime does not include “a single senior Sri Lankan government minister, official or military officer”.

    In his statement Kinnock criticised the government's refusal to consider referring Sri Lanka to the ICC, maintain that Britain’s position, “should not be determined simply by the veto-wielding intentions of two of its permanent members”.

  • International Women’s Day marked in Mullaitivu with rally for justice

    Tamil families of the disappeared braved military intimidation and marched across Mullaitivu this morning, as they marked International Women’s Day with another rally demanding justice for their disappeared loved ones.

    The families dressed in black for their rally as a sign of protest. They have been demonstrating for more than 4 years on the roadsides of the North-East, demanding information on the whereabouts of their loved ones and justice for their disappearances.

  • British Tamil woman enters her ninth day of hunger strike demanding justice for genocide

    Ambihai K Selvakumar, a director of the International Centre for the Prevention of Genocide (ICPPG), is on her ninth day of hunger-striking as she continues to demand justice for the genocide of Tamils carried out by the Sri Lankan state.

  • Remembering Dominic Jeeva

    Famed Eelam Tamil and Dalit writer Dominic Jeeva passed away on 28 January 2021.

    Jeeva was the editor of Mallikai, a monthly journal on Tamil literature for more than four decades, and courageously narrated intersectioning tales of oppression and marginalisation on the island.

    We share below some excerpts of his work and words as a tribute to the renowned writer.

  •  'India must not take a stance in favour of Sri Lanka at UNHRC' says DMK President

     

  • Britain rejects ICC referral claiming ‘insufficient UN Security Council support’

    Responding to a petition with over 13,500 signatures, calling on the British government to refer Sri Lanka to the International Criminal Court, the UK government has responded citing “insufficient UN Security Council support”.

    Responding to the British statement, Tasha Manoranjan, Executive Director of PEARL stated: “We are disappointed that the UK Government has shied away from pursuing international criminal accountability for the mass atrocities against the Tamil people in Sri Lanka”.

  • Tamil man left in limbo for decades by UK Home Office failures

    A Tamil man who arrived in the UK almost 40 years ago remains in immigration limbo due to a series of Home Office failures and delays, The Guardian reports. The man’s solicitor has written to the Home Office stating that judicial review proceedings will follow if the case is not resolved speedily.

    Ponnambalam Jothibala, 69, came to the UK as a student in 1983. Though he was granted periods of temporary leave to remain in the 1980s, his studies were halted after he was the victim of a traumatic arson attack in which three people died but which he survived by jumping out of a first-floor window.

  • UK defence engagement with Sri Lanka questioned in parliament

    A debate on Sri Lanka was held in the UK House of Commons on March 2, with three Labour MPs questioning the Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) on the UK’s engagement with and on Sri Lanka, including on the UK’s ‘extensive support’ to the Sri Lankan police and military.

  • Sri Lanka bans importing Islamic religious books unless approved by the Ministry of Defence

    Sri Lanka’s Ministry of Defence has issued a ban on importing Islamic religious books except for those that the ministry approve.

  • Tamil lawyer granted US International Women of Courage Award

    Ranitha Gnanarajah, a Tamil lawyer who has campaigned years against Sri Lanka’s draconian Prevention of Terrorism act, is to be awarded the United States’ International Women of Courage award during a virtual ceremony on 8 March, hosted by Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken.

  • Vavuniya police assaults Tamil man in custody

    Vavuniya police of Puliyankulam town brutally assaulted a Tamil man in custody on Thursday, causing severe injuries.  

    The police went to the house of Arumugam Balakrishnan, 50, who lives in the Puliyankulam-Ramanoor area on March 4 and asked him whether he possessed a gun. 

    Following an interrogation, the police arrested Arumugam and took him to the police station where he was assaulted by the police. 

  • Prevention should be at the heart of the UNHRC resolution'

    Alan Keenan, senior consultant for the International Crisis Group, has called for the UN Human Rights Council must go beyond looking at issues of accountability to focus “on preventing a return to violence and be followed by a sustained international effort to persuade the Sri Lankan government to pull back from its dangerous trajectory”.

  • Sri Lanka begins first burial of COVID-19 victims in Batticaloa

    Nine bodies were buried in a second burial site in Oddamavadi, Batticaloa today after the Sri Lankan government lifted a ban on burials for COVID-19 victims, which has generated months of controversy and protest from the island's Muslims.

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