Sri Lankan authorities on Tuesday arrested more than 100 people that threw rocks at police and soldiers who stopped them from chasing men thought to be "grease devils," or nighttime prowlers who have sparked an island wide spate of deadly violence. At least five people including a police officer have been killed over the past… Continue reading More than 100 arrested in new Sri Lanka Grease Devil clash
Author: Reuters
Sri Lanka okays new IDs to boost post-war security
Sri Lanka’s government, two years after winning a three-decade war against Tamil Tiger separatists, said on Thursday it would issue electronic identity cards to its citizens as a new security measure. The island nation’s cabinet has approved the proposal by President Mahinda Rajapaksa, cabinet spokesman Keheliya Rambukwella told reporters in Colombo. He did not say… Continue reading Sri Lanka okays new IDs to boost post-war security
War crimes push aimed at ousting Sri Lanka government
A Western-led push for a war crimes probe into Sri Lanka’s war to destroy the Tamil Tigers is motivated by a "hidden agenda" to oust President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s government, the island nation’s defence secretary said Thursday. Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa, the architect of Sri Lanka’s destruction of the separatist Tamil Tigers in 2009 and the… Continue reading War crimes push aimed at ousting Sri Lanka government
Sri Lanka corruption will scare investors-ex-chief justice
Rising levels of corruption in Sri Lanka will scare off foreign investors who have poured funds into the country since the end of its three-decade war, the nation’s former chief justice said on Tuesday. Sarath N. Silva, a well known critic of President Mahinda Rajapaksa, told an opposition forum the country’s anti-graft laws were "ineffective",… Continue reading Sri Lanka corruption will scare investors-ex-chief justice
Sri Lanka’s Rajapaksa in China as West turns up war crimes heat
Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa landed in China on Tuesday seeking tighter economic ties in a stormy financial world, and against the backdrop of an aggressive Western push for a probe into war crimes allegations. Rajapaksa was due to attend the Universiade sporting event in Shenzhen and will later meet President Hu Jintao and Prime… Continue reading Sri Lanka’s Rajapaksa in China as West turns up war crimes heat
FACTBOX-Key political risks to watch in Sri Lanka
Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s ruling alliance swept local government elections in late July, but the former Tamil Tiger political proxy won handily in the old war zone, exposing the still-deep ethnic divide despite two years of peace. Following are the key political risks to watch: TAMIL-SINHALA POLITICAL DIVIDE Rajapaksa and his United People’s Freedom… Continue reading FACTBOX-Key political risks to watch in Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka’s northern Tamils elect ex-rebel Tamil party at polls
The Tamil National Alliance (TNA), a party formerly controlled by the separatist Tigers, won 15 of 20 local councils in the old northern war zone and three of six in the east, which was Tiger territory until the military ran them out in 2007. "This means Tamils like freedom from a military regime and protecting… Continue reading Sri Lanka’s northern Tamils elect ex-rebel Tamil party at polls
Sri Lanka’s war-weary north votes amid intimidation, mistrust
Citizens in Sri Lanka’s old war zone voted for local leaders for the first time in at least a dozen years, in a poll marked by intimidation, vote-buying and scepticism by the mostly Tamil electorate of any kind of post-war political change. Soldiers remained on the streets across the north, as they have since the… Continue reading Sri Lanka’s war-weary north votes amid intimidation, mistrust
Tamils sceptical of development, voting in Sri Lanka’s war-weary north
Sri Lanka’s minority Tamils say President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s post-war development and infrastructure projects in the former war zone in the island’s north have yet to address their real concerns and have not excluded their participation. Sri Lanka’s northern cities hold local polls for the first time in many years on Saturday amid opposition and poll… Continue reading Tamils sceptical of development, voting in Sri Lanka’s war-weary north
War over, fear still stalks polls in north Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka’s northern cities hold local polls for the first time in many years on Saturday and though the civil war is over, fear and intimidation remain rife, poll monitors and opposition politicians say. Voters in the separatist Tamil Tigers’ self-declared capital of Kilinochchi, and in Mullaittivu where they were defeated by government forces in… Continue reading War over, fear still stalks polls in north Sri Lanka
