• Tamil local govt official stopped and searched by armed personnel in Vavuniya

    Sri Lankan army soldiers and police stopped and searched a Tamil member of Vavuniya South Divisional Secretariat on  Wednesday as she was returning hom after attending an event in in Omanthai. 

    Anchala Kokilakumar, was searched despite producing her National ID card and stating that she was a member of the Divisional Secretariat. 

  • More tensions as opening of illegal Buddha statue in Mullaitivu rushed through

    Buddhist monks harass Tamil politicians and journalists

    A large Buddha statue being illegally constructed in the land of a Tamil Hindu temple in Mullaitivu was hurriedly declared open by Sinhala Buddhist monks on Wednesday, with the aid of Sri Lankan police and the archaeology department.

    While a a Right to Information (RTI) request to Karaithuraipattu (Maritimepattu) divisional council confirmed that the monks had no permission or land rights to build the statue, the Mullaitivu magistrates court was due to hear about the illegal constructions on Thursday (Jan 24), leading locals to accuse the monks of rushing through the statue opening before a potential injunction served by the court.

  • Tamils protest in North in solidarity with estate workers

    Tamils in the North protested in solidarity with tea estate workers campaign for a raise in their minimum wage.

    Up-country Tamils have been protesting and campaigning for several months for the daily minimum wage for tea estate labour to be raised to 1000 rupees.

  • Mahinda Rajapaksa discusses ‘fake news’ and exchanges gifts with Facebook officials

    Sri Lanka’s former president Mahinda Rajapaksa met with officials from Facebook on Tuesday, where they discussed cyber security and the spread of “fake news”.

  • Sirisena says he has 'no fear' of NGOs and stands firm on capital punishment
    <p>Sri Lanka’s president stated that he would not reverse his decision to implement capital punishment on the island telling an audience in Mullaitivu that he had no “fear of NGOs”.</p>
  • US navy to transfer cargo for ships at Sri Lanka’s main airport

    The United States navy will begin an operation to transfer its cargo between planes at Sri Lanka’s main airport in Colombo, where goods will then be sent to its vessels at sea.

    The transfer operation, scheduled for later this month, will only see “non-lethal supplies” transferred between aircraft, according to a US embassy press release, and is the third reported operation to have taken place in the last few months.

  • New constitution falls far short of TNA's federal mandate - TELO
    <p>The Tamil Eelam Liberation Organisation (TELO), a constituent party of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA), has said that it would not support current proposals for a new constitution as they fall far short of an acceptable solution for Tamils, recalling that the TNA was elected on a mandate to push for a federal solution.</p>
  • Thousands still affected by tuberculosis in Tamil Nadu
    <p>Over 100,000 new cases of tuberculosis were detected in Tamil Nadu in 2018, according to India’s Ministry of Health and Family Welfare.</p> <p>Karnataka and Tamil Nadu had&nbsp;recorded the highest number of tuberculosis cases in 2017, according to a report by the Union Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, with thousands of people continuing to be impacted by the disease. As many as 4,357 people in Karnataka and 3,953 people in Tamil Nadu were detected to have tuberculosis. The large numbers of people afflicted by the lung disease has led India to being on top of World Health Organization's Global Tuberculosis report, in its list of countries impacted worldwide.</p>
  • Families of disappeared threatened when protesting president's Vanni visit

    Families of the disappeared in Kilinochchi and Mullaitivu protested against the Sri Lankan president's visit to the Vanni. 

    On Monday, protesters demonstrated outside the Vidyananda College in Mullaitivu as President Sirisena visited to highlight the commencement of 'Drugs Eradication Week', where they were threatened by men claiming to be intelligence officers, who warned they would be arrested if they protested. 

  • Chinese company to build cement plant in Hambantota
    <p>A Chinese company is planning to build a new cement plant in Hambantota.</p> <p>Sri Lanka’s deputy minister for development and international trade said the land allocation and environmental assessment for the project had already been completed and the plant was expected to start production in May 2020.</p> <p>The company is expected to source 40 per cent of the raw material locally and gradually increase on the number.</p>
  • India to fund works at Swami Vipulananda arts institute in Batticaloa

    India has agreed to fund the refurbishment of facilities of the Swami Vipulananda Institute of Aesthetic Studies in Batticaloa through a grant of over 270 million Rs (LKR).

    A memorandum of understanding (MoU) was signed on Monday by India’s High Commissioner to Sri Lanka, with Sri Lankan Minister Rauff Hakeem present.

  • Sri Lankan airlines owed over 100 million rupees for Rajapaksa private flights

    Sri Lanka’s national airline is owed 122.3 million rupees in outstanding costs for chartered flights taken during Mahinda Rajapaksa’s presidency.

    The outstanding amount, of which Rs. 114 million is attributed to the Presidential Secretariat and the remainder to the foreign ministry, was for several flights out of 65 chartered by Rajapaksa between March 2009 and December 2014, including to Israel, South Africa, Italy and Bolivia.

  • Mangala discusses ‘human rights’ with British minister in London

    Sri Lanka’s Minister of Finance & Media Mangala Samaraweera met with Lord Tariq Ahmad, the UK Minister of State for the UN and Commonwealth, and the Prime Minister’s Envoy on Preventing Sexual Violence, in Westminster on Monday.

  • Sri Lankan army dismisses UK arrest warrant for brigadier
    <p>The Sri Lankan military said it was not aware of the issuing of an arrest warrant for Brigadier Priyanka Fernando by a UK court yesterday, stating that it was “not concerned” over the matter.</p>
  • Sri Lanka’s defence secretary pledges to arrest soldiers
    <p>Sri Lanka’s current defence secretary Hemasiri Fernando stated that his government would be arresting a group of soldiers accused of committing murder, in a surprise announcement on Monday.</p> <p>He said that a group of 11 soldiers would be arrested in coming weeks, accusing them of having committed a crime - but did not elaborate on the specific incident he was referring to.</p>
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