Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Sri Lanka: Sentenced for Buddha keyrings


Photo courtesy: Hemant Buch

By Charles Haviland | BBC News
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Two men in Sri Lanka have received a suspended jail sentence after a magistrate ruled that they insulted religion by selling keyrings containing an image of Lord Buddha.

Buddhism is the majority religion in the island, the faith of most of its Sinhalese majority population.


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Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Sri Lanka: IDPs 'ordered to move'



By P Sivaramakrishnan | BBC Tamil Service
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Around five thousand internally displaced people (IDP) are being sounded to be ready to be shifted from one camp to another giving the inmates less than 24 hours notice, a Tamil lawmaker has said.

The IDPs at zone 4 of the Menik Farm camp have been instructed to be ready to move to the Kadirgamar camp on Wednesday morning according to the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) Vanni distrisct MP Vino Noharathalingam.


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Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Latin Americans in Canada support Tamil refugees



Barrio Nuevo
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Several Latin American community groups in Canada have come out strongly defending the hundreds of Tamil migrants, which include more than 100 women and children, who arrived in Canada aboard the MV Sun Sea.

The joint statement has denounced the Canadian media and public officials for "politically motivated stereotyping by classifying these refugees as terrorists", and has "called upon the people in Canada to express their solidarity with the Tamil people". The full text of the statement follows:


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Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Lanka's Defence Secretary cites Indian Docs' example



By Sutirtho Patranobis | The Hindustan Times
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Defence secretary, Gotabhaya Rajapaksa on Tuesday cited the example of the first batch of Indian doctors who treated the internally displaced Tamils in 2009 to argue that Sri Lanka did not have anything to hide about civilian casualties. Deposing before the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC), set-up to look into the last years of the civil conflict, Rajapaksa said the Indian medical team was the first one to treat those displaced who were evacuated by ship from the final theatre of battle. In March, 2009, a team of Indian doctors had set up a field hospital in Pulmodai, near the east coast.

"They were brought to the (Indian) hospital. They (Indian doctors) were the ones to receive them…to treat them and send them to other places. There was nothing we were hiding," Rajapaksa said.


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Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Tamil refugees symptom of international failure in Sri Lanka



Press Release | National Democratic Party
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The arrival of the 490 Tamil boat people seeking refuge in Canada is a symptom of the continued humanitarian suffering in Sri Lanka. It’s time for the government of Canada to rally international efforts to pressure the Sri Lankan government improve living conditions on the ground, say New Democrats.

“After the bloody civil war in Sri Lanka, Minister Cannon simply moved on from the file and failed to maintain international attention on the plight of Tamils,” said New Democrat Foreign Affairs Critic Paul Dewar (Ottawa Centre). “Meanwhile hundreds of thousands of displaced people continued to be targeted for brutal human rights violations in government-run camps in unhealthy and unsafe conditions and without access to international aid agencies.”


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Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Sri Lanka opposition protests court martial of former army chief



Deutsche Presse-Agentur
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Opposition parties staged a protest inside Sri Lanka's parliament against the court martial of former army commander Sarath Fonseka, who defeated separatist Tamil rebels last year.

Parliament met for the first time since a three-member tribunal of military officers ruled Friday to dishonourably discharge Fonseka.


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