A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, April 30, 2013
BBS US Pictures: Sumptuous Feasts For BBS Monks
April 30, 2013
The picture below shows the Bodu
Bala Sena Secretary General, a Buddhist monk Galagodaththe
GnanasaraThero having a meal while he was in the US two weeks
ago.
“Sumptuous
feasts for BBS while bread and dhal for faithful” an ordinary citizen told
Colombo Telegraph.
Sri Lanka 'intensifies crackdown on dissent' - Amnesty
30 April 2013
Amnesty International has accused Sri Lanka of intensifying a crackdown on dissent and urged the Commonwealth not to hold its summit there unless the human rights situation improves.
Amnesty International has accused Sri Lanka of intensifying a crackdown on dissent and urged the Commonwealth not to hold its summit there unless the human rights situation improves.
The
final phase of the war, in 2009, left many thousands of people dead
It
says the government is responsible for harassing and imprisoning critics.
Sri
Lanka has rejected the allegations, saying that a rehabilitation process is
under way after years of conflict.
Last
week Commonwealth foreign ministers agreed to hold the summit in Colombo despite
objections by Canada.
The
next Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) is set to take place in
Colombo in November and Sri Lanka would then represent the Commonwealth as its
chair for the next two years.
Canada's
Foreign Minister John Baird has said he was "appalled" that Sri Lanka had been
chosen to host the meeting, arguing it had failed in the fundamental
Commonwealth values of "freedom, democracy, human rights, the rule of law and
good governance".
Dismissing
Canada's objections, Sri Lanka's cabinet spokesman and information minister
Keheliya Rambukwella told the BBC: "We have dealt with this human rights issue
and we feel they are very biased and very unfair."
But
Amnesty International's report, released on Tuesday, echoed some of the
criticisms.
It
says that journalists, lawyers, human rights activists and opposition
politicians are among those who have been targeted in what the report calls
"government-sanctioned abuse".
"Violent
repression of dissent and the consolidation of political power go hand in hand
in Sri Lanka," Polly Truscott, Amnesty International's deputy Asia Pacific
director, said in the report.
"Over
the past few years we have seen space for criticism decrease. There is a real
climate of fear in Sri Lanka, with those brave enough to speak out against the
government often having to suffer badly for it."
It
said that human rights violations must end before Colombo is allowed to go ahead
with hosting the meeting.
The
Sri Lankan High Commission in London rejected the group's allegations, saying
that a rehabilitation process is under way after years of conflict.
Sri
Lanka's army defeated Tamil rebels after a brutal 26-year war in 2009. The
entire conflict left at least 100,000 people dead.
Both
sides were accused of human rights abuses throughout the conflict, with much
focus on what happened in its final stages, when thousands of civilians were
trapped in a thin strip of land in the north of Sri Lanka as fighting raged
around them.
Estimates
of civilian deaths in the final months range widely from 9,000 to 75,000.
Last
month the UN's Human Rights Council passed a resolution highly critical of Sri
Lanka's record.
The
resolution encouraged Sri Lanka to conduct an independent and credible
investigation into alleged war crimes.