Sri Lankan postal department will remove disputed French stamps with pictures of LTTE Leader and logo, before delivering the letters and parcels says the Post Master General of Sri Lanka. "We will take actions to protect the sovereignty of the country whilst protecting the rights of the general public to receive letters without any trouble,”… Continue reading Letters ‘delivered without stamps’
Category: Featured
Internment continues unchecked in Sri Lanka, as an era ends in US
During the final assault in Mu’l’livaaykkaal, Sri Lanka’s armed forces herded nearly 300,000 Tamil civilians, including close to 50,000 children and elderly, and LTTE non-combatants, in 21st century version of over-crowded internment camps encircled by barbed wire fences. While GoSL manipulates its demographic politics with the captive internees, in the U.S., an internment era, where… Continue reading Internment continues unchecked in Sri Lanka, as an era ends in US
Rajapaksa Dynasty And Their Education Qualification Saga
In 1999, the Ravaya published an article under the byline Mahinda Rajapaksa which analyses the provincial council elections results. The late Jeyaraj Fernandopulle asked me who wrote that. I said it was Mahinda Rajapaksa, and he laughed heartily. Everyone around us were very curious about that and asked, “Why are you laughing?” He asked MPs… Continue reading Rajapaksa Dynasty And Their Education Qualification Saga
Who Is Sarath Fonseka
Has everybody forgotten who Sarath Fonseka really is? Clearly the bankrupt United National Party has. It is this same party and its current leader Ranil Wickremasinghe who accused Sarath Fonseka of the murder of Lasantha Wickrematunge. Today, Wickremasinghe and the UNP are flirting once more with Fonseka hopeful that his colourful track record will help… Continue reading Who Is Sarath Fonseka
Is it a covenant never to be consummated?
by Kumar David Writes The national question in Sri Lanka has remained unresolved for 36 years short of a century if you start counting from 1948. This is the date to set the start as it was then that the Upcountry Tamils were disenfranchised and their citizenship robbed by the Senanayake-Bandaranaike UNP government. The history… Continue reading Is it a covenant never to be consummated?
Govt boycotts ANC centenary
Sri Lanka has refused to accept an invitation from South Africa’s ruling African National Congress (ANC) to attend today’s centenary celebrations attended by some 40 heads of state or government. The reason — a delegation from the London-based Global Tamil Forum (GTF) also has been invited for the same event. Giving it official status and… Continue reading Govt boycotts ANC centenary
PROBLEM & SOLUTION: PARAMETERS OF POSSIBILITY
The New Year brought a valuable gift in my email. It was a dossier entitled ‘Seeking Space for State Reform’ and carried an even more beguiling subtitle, ‘Consensus and Contradictions in Public Perceptions’. A publication of the ICES (the International Centre for Ethnic Studies, from and of which I hadn’t heard for quite a while),… Continue reading PROBLEM & SOLUTION: PARAMETERS OF POSSIBILITY
Sound of Silent Speech
One can speak not only through words but through expressive conduct often called "Symbolic speech" – legally defined as nonverbal gestures and actions intended to communicate a message. In Western liberal democracies, most forms of symbolic speech are constitutionally protected. The Tamil diaspora’s recent use of such protected expressive speech to publicize symbols of Colombo… Continue reading Sound of Silent Speech
Krishna to take stock of IDP housing project
After a series of delays at various levels, false-starts, slip-shod trial and error experimentation at the Indian and Sri Lankan capitals, the massive Indian housing project for the displaced Tamils is set to take off. External Affairs Minister S.M. Krishna, and his team that deals directly with the project, including the Joint Secretary (BSM) Harsh… Continue reading Krishna to take stock of IDP housing project
Sri Lanka’s democratic institutions have metastasized into something dangerous
January 8 marks the third death anniversary of Lasantha Wickrematunge a human rights journalist from Sri Lanka who fought fearlessly for the freedom of the press and relentlessly pursued what he believed was right. On January 8, 2009 he was brutally murdered by the Sri Lankan authorities for his journalism. Three years after Lasantha’s brutal… Continue reading Sri Lanka’s democratic institutions have metastasized into something dangerous
