News
Govt. urged to prevent interested parties from undermining bilateral relations
Defence Secretary Gunaratne in Moscow for talks
Ex-military men serving Russia:
By Shamindra Ferdinando
A group of Sri Lankans recently urged Foreign Minister Ali Sabry, PC, not to allow interested parties to exploit the ex-military personnel serving with the Russian military to cause a rift between the two countries.
The request was made when the group, based in Russia, met Minister Sabry at the Sri Lankan Embassy at No 24 Schepkina Street, Moscow.
The President of the Sri Lanka-Russia Business and Professionals Society, Jagath Chandrawansa, who had been among the group that met Minister Sabry, told The Island that the government should be mindful of the developing situation as Russia battled the combined Western powers engaged in the war in Ukraine.
Chandrawansa appreciated the willingness on the part of Minister Sabry to meet the delegation, at short notice, following a request made through Chargé d’Affaires P.M. Amza.
Chandrawansa said that they had opportunities to speak with military personnel, including some of those who had been wounded in Ukrainian attacks, before making representations to Minister Sabry. The Foreign Minister was returning home, via Moscow, after having attended the BRICS Foreign Ministers’ meeting in Nizhny Novgorod, Russia at the invitation of his counterpart, Sergey Lavrov.
The BRICS meeting was attended by high level representatives of 22 countries, including 17 Foreign Ministers.
“We were able to bring the entire range of issues to the Minister’s attention though it was a short meeting,” Chandrawansa, a long-standing resident of Moscow, told The Island.
Against the backdrop of the issue at hand, Sri Lanka should re-examine the status of bilateral relations with Russia anew, Chandrawansa said. Responding to a query, Chandrawansa pointed out that since 2010 the vital mission had been headed by political appointees. Referring to the importance of the mission in Moscow, Chandrawansa said that successive governments overlooked the shortcomings therein for obvious reasons.
Members of the war-winning ex-military joining the Russian war effort, subsequent deaths of some personnel, injuries suffered by many, and the absence of proper procedure in the payment of salaries, as well as compensation, caught the mission in Moscow by surprise, Chandrawansa asserted. But what made a bad situation worse was nothing but the overall absence of a national agenda in respect of foreign and defence relations at any level, Chandrawansa said.
At the onset of the meeting, Minister Sabry has explained their inability to influence and control reportage of the issue in local media, but urged the Russia–based group to set the record straight. They have agreed that unless tangible measures were taken to counter what he called destabilization efforts, anti-Russian sentiments could be instilled. That could have had a catastrophic impact on the large number of Russian tourists vacationing in Sri Lanka, Chandrawansa said, declaring that the country, still desperately struggling on the economic front, couldn’t afford to lose Russian tourists.
The delegation included Sanath Abesekera, Janaka Wijesuriya, Bernard Ramesh and Amila Kanchana.
During the course of the discussion, the Russia-based group reminded Minister Sabry of the disastrous consequences of detention of SU 289 flight at the Bandaranaike International Airport (BIA) on June 2, 2022, over a complaint filed by Ireland’s Celestial Aviation Trading Limited leasing company against Aeroflot.
Russia resumed flights after a lapse of four months after Sri Lanka assured there wouldn’t be a repetition.
Chandrawansa said that our relations with the Russian Federation were at a crossroads. Unfortunately, the government and the Parliament hadn’t paid sufficient attention to the pivotal importance of relations with Russia.
“Our ex-military personnel have ended up with both Russian and Ukrainian militaries. There had been fatalities among men serving on both sides. Unfortunately, the media focus is only on men serving on the Russian side,” Chandrawansa said, claiming a high profile media campaign compelled the government to respond to the developing issue. But, the concerns of those who had been with the Ukrainian military were conveniently brushed under the carpet, Chandrawansa said.
Chandrawansa mentioned that Russian Ambassador in Colombo Levan Dzhagaryan recently questioned as to why Sri Lanka ignored ex-military personnel joining the Ukrainian military. The joint media briefing by State Foreign Minister Tharaka Balasuriya and Ambassador Dzhagaryan exposed the obvious double standards in dealing with parallel issues.
Russia intensified military operations against Ukraine in late February 2022. According to Chandrawansa enlistment of foreign military personnel has begun after the escalation of fighting and Sri Lankans were among those who volunteered to serve with the Russian military.
Referring to a conversation he had with a soldier there, Chandrawansa said the vast majority of them willingly accepted the risks as they couldn’t live with the paltry government pension they received here (Sri Lanka). Chandrawansa repeated the extremely difficult post-retirement period of a former soldier who now served the Russian military. Chandrawansa quoted the wounded man as having said that he would return to the front once he recovered.
Responding to calls to bring back men from Russia-Ukraine battlefields, Chandrawansa said that those willing to continue there shouldn’t be prevented from doing so. The government should take appropriate measures to ensure that Lankan volunteers serving there received their salaries and were paid compensation in case of being wounded.
Referring to a recent statement made by Ambassador Dzhagaryan, Chandrawansa said that Russia wouldn’t take ex-servicemen without government approval.
Defence Secretary Kamal Gunaratne is in Russia now for talks with relevant authorities. Chandrawansa said that they hoped the two governments could reach a consensus on matters at hand.
According to him, at least 15 Lankan men died during their deployment with the Russian military. Approximately 1,000 personnel are believed to be in Russia though exact numbers could vary, Chandrawansa said.
However, the situation of those with the Ukrainian military remains unclear as Sri Lanka didn’t at least have a diplomatic presence there, Chandrawansa said. At the moment, the Sri Lankan mission in Turkey is responsible for looking after government interests in Ukraine.
Chandrawansa alleged that certain Western countries encouraged and facilitated foreign nationals, including Sri Lankans, joining Ukraine for obvious reasons.
News
Sallay’s wife further complains to HRC over continuing violation of husband’s FRs by CID
The wife of retired Major General Suresh Sallay has lodged a further complaint with the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka (HRCSL), alleging that her husband’s fundamental rights continue to be violated as Criminal Investigation Department (CID) officers prevent him from having confidential consultations with his lawyer while he is under detention at the National Hospital.
In a letter addressed to the HRCSL Chairman on Thursday, Mrs. S.B.M.S.B. Sallay has said the latest complaint was filed in relation to an earlier complaint concerning the detention and treatment of her husband.
Full text of the letter: I, Mrs. S.B.M.S.B. Sallay, respectfully write to lodge this further complaint in relation to my earlier complaint bearing reference H RC-HO-1 103-26, concerning the detention and treatment of my husband, Retired Major General Suresh Sallay.
I wish to bring to the attention of the Commission a further serious violation of his fundamental rights that occurred on 08 July 2026 during a consultation between my husband and his Attorney-at-Law, Mr. Asith Siriwardena, while my husband remains under detention and is receiving treatment at the National Hospital.
I am informed by his Counsel that he is presently permitted to consult with my husband only once a week for a period of approximately twenty minutes. During the consultation held on 08 July 2026, officers of the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) stationed at the Cardiac Coronary Care Unit of the National Hospital informed Counsel that they had received instructions from higher authorities that my husband should not be permitted to meet with his
legal counsel in private. Consequently, the officers remained present throughout the consultation and refused to permit a confidential lawyer-client meeting.
This conduct constitutes a grave infringement of my husband’s fundamental right to communicate privately and confidentially with his legal counsel. Confidential communication between an accused or detainee and his lawyer is an indispensable safeguard of the right to legal representation, the right to prepare his defence, and the right to a fair trial. The denial of confidential legal consultations undermines these fundamental protections guaranteed under the Constitution of the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka and the applicable provisions governing persons detained under the Prevention of Terrorism Act.
The confidentiality of communications between a lawyer and client is also a well-recognized principle under international human rights law and forms an essential safeguard against arbitrary detention, coercion, and unfair legal proceedings.
In view of the foregoing, I respectfully request the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka to urgently intervene and take all necessary steps within its statutory mandate to:
1. Ensure that my husband is afforded immediate and unrestricted confidential access to his legal counsel without the presence or supervision of law enforcement officers;
2. Inquire into the instructions allegedly issued by higher authorities requiring CID officers to remain present during lawyer-client consultations;
3. Direct the relevant authorities to cease any practice that interferes with confidential legal consultations; and
4. Take such further action as the Commission considers appropriate to safeguard my husband’s constitutional and human rights.
This complaint is made as a further complaint to Complaint No. H RC-HO-1103-26, and I respectfully request that it be placed on the same file and considered together with my previous complaints.
I respectfully seek the Commission’s urgent intervention in this matter.
News
SC upholds Commercial HC ruling that Weerawansa violated intellectual property rights of JVP
The Supreme Court yesterday (9) upheld a Colombo Commercial High Court order directing former Minister Wimal Weerawansa to pay Rs. 1 million in damages to Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) General Secretary Tilvin Silva for violating intellectual property rights.
A three-member Supreme Court bench dismissed in its entirety an appeal filed by Weerawansa challenging the earlier Commercial High Court ruling.
The case was instituted by Silva, who alleged that Weerawansa had violated provisions of the Intellectual Property Act by publishing his book “Neththa Wenuwata Aththa” (“Truth Instead of Lies”), which contained the JVP’s political ideology and official party documents without authorisation.
The Supreme Court also affirmed the order restraining the publication and distribution of the book in its existing form. However, the court ruled that the book could be republished if the 60-page section identified as infringing intellectual property rights was removed.
News
Communist Party regrets failure of Justice Minister to visit a single prison
The Communist Party of Sri Lanka (CPSL) has blamed what it describes as a systemic collapse of the country’s prison administration and the government’s adherence to IMF-backed austerity measures for the recent violence at Negombo Prison, calling for an independent investigation and sweeping reforms to the correctional system.
In a statement issued by its General Secretary, Dr. G. Weerasinghe, the CPSL extended condolences to the families of those killed during the unrest at Negombo Prison and subsequent incidents at other prisons, describing the violence as “not merely an administrative failure within a single institution but a profound systemic breakdown in Sri Lanka’s criminal justice and correctional framework.”
Full text of the statement: The Communist Party of Sri Lanka (CPSL) extends its condolences to the families of the people who lost their lives during the recent grave events that unfolded at Negombo Prison and subsequently at other prisons. It also expresses its deep concern and firm condemnation regarding the incidents, which represent not merely an administrative failure within a single institution but a profound systemic breakdown in Sri Lanka’s criminal justice and correctional framework.
The CPSL reiterates that prisons are institutions of rehabilitation, not arenas of violence. The Party has long maintained that Sri Lanka must transition from a punitive model to a restorative justice system, to one that rehabilitates offenders and reintegrates them as useful members of society. The lives of prisoners are of value to the nation, and the greatest effort should always be taken to preserve life.
It is therefore significant that President Anura Kumara Dissanayake himself stated that the loss of even one prisoner’s life is unacceptable. Yet the public was shocked by footage of an STF officer firing apparently indiscriminately through the Judas Window of the main gate of Negombo Prison. This raises serious questions: Why were non-lethal alternatives, including drone-based surveillance and assessment, not deployed? Why did command decisions fail at the most basic level?
The CPSL also notes with deep dismay that the honourable Minister of Justice and National Integration has not visited a single one of the prisons that come under his purview, since his appointment.
The outbreak at Negombo Prison is a symptom of a wider malaise. These include:
1. Extreme Overcrowding: Negombo Prison, designed for 650–680 inmates, was forced to house 2,600. Prisoners reported severe shortages of toilets, with up to 60 inmates queuing for a single facility. Nationally, the system built for 10,000–11,000 inmates now holds 39,000–41,000. This level of overcrowding is not mismanagement, it is institutional collapse.
2. Medical Neglect: Prisoners have repeatedly complained of insufficient access to medication. Amid ongoing epidemics, including Dengue Fever, inmates fear for their lives. A correctional system that cannot provide basic medical care is failing in its most fundamental duty.
3. Severe Undermanning: The prison service faces a shortage of 1,500 personnel, worsened by the ongoing recruitment freeze. Officers are overworked, underpaid, and insufficiently motivated due to disgracefully low public sector salaries.
The CPSL holds the Government fully responsible for this disaster. Its willingness to accommodate the draconian austerity conditions of the IMF has crippled recruitment across the public service, including the prison system. These externally imposed constraints have prevented the Department of Prisons from fulfilling its basic obligations to inmates and staff.
This tragedy is yet another proof of the Government’s incompetence and inability to govern. A regime that cannot protect those in its custody cannot claim moral or administrative legitimacy.
The CPSL calls upon the Government, Ministry of Justice, and Department of Prisons to:
1. Conduct an independent, transparent investigation into the Negombo Prison incident, with findings released to the public.
2. Hold accountable all officials whose actions or negligence contributed to the loss of life.
3. Provide immediate medical care, protection, and humane treatment to all inmates.
4. Implement urgent structural reforms to address overcrowding, understaffing, and medical shortages.
5. Transition toward a restorative justice model, reducing recidivism and strengthening social reintegration.
6. Reject externally imposed austerity measures that undermine national sovereignty and public safety.
The CPSL urges calm among the public and calls upon all stakeholders, including prison staff, families, civil society, and human rights organisations, to cooperate with investigative processes. The Party reaffirms its commitment to defending human dignity and ensuring that Sri Lanka’s institutions serve the people with justice, compassion, and accountability.
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