News
Lankan Tamils stranded on ‘secretive’ British island in Indian Ocean
Sixty Lankan Tamil refugees, including at least 16 children, claim to have been ‘unlawfully detained’ on Diego Garcia since 2021, said a report published by The Week of the UK yesterday.
It said: A paradise island in the Indian Ocean has become the centre of a complex legal dispute, a battle for control – and a “prison” for stranded migrants.
In 2021, Sri Lankan Tamils fleeing persecution attempted to sail to Canada to claim asylum, when their fishing boat suffered a leak. British Navy ships rescued dozens and brought them to Diego Garcia, the largest of the disputed Chagos Islands in the British Indian Ocean Territory (Biot) – long claimed by Mauritius – and site of a secretive military base leased by the UK to the US. The group of 60, including at least 16 children, claim to have been “unlawfully detained” since: the first people to file asylum claims in the Biot.
The territory’s Supreme Court was due to rule on the claim last week, but hours before the judge and lawyers got on the US military plane to start their journey, the US cancelled the hearing. Officials said they were “withdrawing its consent” for access to the “heavily restricted” island, with communication seen by the BBC describing the reasons as “confidential” – but that the visit presented “risks to the security and effective operation” of the base.
But parts of the island where access was denied (such as a gym and a swimming pool) were visited by US cheerleaders and celebrity chefs earlier this year. The fact that the Biot Supreme Court has been “prevented from sitting in its own territory on Crown land is an extraordinary affront to the rule of law”, said Tessa Gregory, a partner at Leigh Day, the London-based solicitors representing the Tamils.
Diego Garcia is the largest of the Chagos Islands, an archipelago about 310 miles south of The Maldives. The Biot is constitutionally separate from the UK, but administered from London.
The UK took the Chagos Islands from its then colony Mauritius in 1965 and evicted the population of more than 1,000 people, to build a military base. It signed an agreement in 1966 to lease the base to the US for 50 years, which has been extended and is now set to expire in 2036. So although Diego Garcia is technically in a British territory, most of the island is under US military control, including the accommodation and transport.
The US has sent planes from Diego Garcia to bomb Afghanistan and Iraq, while two B52 bombers were sent there for training earlier this year. The CIA has also denied allegations that it has been used as a base to interrogate terror suspects after 9/11.
Since Mauritius gained its independence in 1968, it has claimed ownership of the islands. In 2000, the British High Court ruled that the forceful eviction of Chagossians had been illegal, and granted them right of return – to any island except Diego Garcia.
The International Court of Justice ruled in 2019 that the UK’s control of the whole territory was “unlawful” and should end. In 2021, a separate UN maritime court found that the UK’s control of the islands amounted to an “unlawful occupation”.
But “regardless of widespread international opinion in favour of Mauritius, London has largely ignored these decisions”, said Foreign Policy. The UK government also argues that the refugee convention does not apply there.
Foreign Office plans to give the Chagos Islands back to Mauritius in a “Cyprus-style deal” were scrapped earlier this year, said The Telegraph. Then Defence Secretary Grant Shapps “urged” David Cameron not to cede the islands to Mauritius – a growing ally of China.
“In many ways, the island – with its pure white sands, palm trees and azure seas – looks a lot like paradise”, said The Guardian. But for the 60 asylum seekers, “that idyll could not be further from their reality” – they remain “stuck there” in a “desperate, dangerous limbo”.
They are forced to live in a “makeshift tented camp the size of a football pitch, surrounded by a 7ft-high metal fence”. The tents are “infested with rats, mice and cockroaches”. One person told the paper: “My mental state is deteriorating. I live in a body that has no life inside it”.
Many of the detainees “say they are escaping torture and persecution by either Sri Lankan security forces” due to their Tamil ethnicity, said The New Humanitarian, or Indian security forces due to being Sri Lankan refugees.
But on Diego Garcia, guarded by private security company G4S, “they are treating us like prisoners”, two asylum seekers said in an anonymous written statement. A G4S spokesperson denied the claims, saying the company “treats the migrants on the island with dignity and respect at all times”.
But there have been “multiple suicide attempts” and “reports of sexual harassment and assaults”, said the BBC. Some have been flown to Rwanda for medical treatment, but remain under Biot administration. “During Tuesday’s virtual hearing, one of the migrants on the island collapsed multiple times.”
Last year, UN representatives who visited the camp reported that “conditions there amounted to arbitrary detention”. The Foreign Office has also said that the island is not suitable for migrants. A ruling in their favour could allow them to claim compensation for years of detention, as well as having implications for Chagossians’ calls for reparations for their eviction.
The asylum seekers are “pinning all their hopes on their legal teams to get them off the island and to a place of safety where their troubled children can thrive”, said The Guardian. One told the paper: “We hope we will be allowed to escape from hell.”
News
Development Officers threaten to intensify their protest
Protesting Development Officers continued their hunger strike near the Presidential Secretariat, Colombo yesterday (01), for the seventh consecutive day.The protesters, who are members of the Lanka School Development Officers’ Association, are demanding that they be absorbed into the teacher service as they have served as teachers in state-run schools for nearly seven years.
Secretary of the Association, Viraj Manaranga, said the protesters were seeking an urgent meeting with the President. He added that a presidential aide had visited the protest site and offered to arrange for a meeting with the President on 03 Feb., but the union insisted on an earlier date. Manaranga warned that failure to grant a meeting could trigger a massive protest in Colombo today (02).
Four officers participating in the hunger strike have been hospitalised due to deteriorating health, while two more joined the fast on Saturday (31).
In a bid to raise awareness of their grievances, on 30 January a delegation of the All Island Development Officers’ Association visited Most Venerable
Warakagoda Sri Gnanarathana Thera, Mahanayake of the Asgiriya Chapter, and subsequently with the Chapter’s Registrar, Ven. Dr. Medagama Dhammananda Thera. The prelates said promises that had been made to them should be fulfilled.
The protest began on 26 January as a satyagraha, after authorities failed to respond to repeated requests to integrate the officers into the teaching service. The escalation into a fast-unto-death underscores the protesters’ frustration over the prolonged delay
by Pradeep Prasanna Samarakoon
News
Auditor General to be appointed tomorrow
The long-vacant post of Auditor General would be filled on 03 Feb., after months of controversy and delays, Minister of Transport, Highways and Urban Development Bimal Rathnayake said on Friday (31) in Kandy.
The Constitutional Council met at the Parliamentary complex on Friday to discuss the appointment but failed to reach a decision on a suitable candidate. The President had previously proposed four names on four separate occasions, all of which were rejected. The Council is now set to consider the fifth nominee.
The post has remained vacant since April 2025, following the retirement of Chulanta Wickramaratne, who served as the 41st Auditor General. More than 10 months have passed without a permanent appointment.
Sources said a female officer in the Auditor General’s Department has been nominated again, though her previous recommendation was rejected due to some allegations against her.
Meanwhile, senior audit officer Dharmapala Gammanpila, with 31 years of service and the department’s most senior official, has received backing from the Mahanayake Theras of the three Nikayas, the Maha Sangha, and several civil society groups for appointment as the 42nd Auditor General.
Sources noted that the three civil society representatives on the Constitutional Council will play a crucial role in the final decision.
by Chaminda Silva and SK Samaranayake
News
Two arrested for aiding and abetting murder
Two 18-year-old youth were arrested by the Southern Division of the Western Province Crime Division on 31 January for allegedly aiding and abetting two murders carried out in Dehiwala and Kohuwala. ICE (crystal meth) was found in their possession at the time of arrest.
The suspects are residents of Mount Lavinia and Boralesgamuwa, according to the police. They are accused of having helped carry out a murder at a hotel in the Dehiwala Police Division on 9 January, 2026, and an attack on a person travelling in a three-wheeler at Bodhiyawatta, Kohuwala, on 12 December, 2025.
Police said the charges included sending photographs of the victims to a criminal living overseas.
Investigations revealed that the youth had acted under the direction of a criminal known as Sando.
Under the guidance of Janaka Kumara, Director of the Southern Division of the Western Province Crime Division, investigations are being led by Police Inspector Hemanta Kumara, assisted by Sub-Inspectors Prasanna Gunathilaka and Prasanna (40248), and Constables Chaminda (72987), Anil (79598), Kumar (88762), and Senanayake (19363), who are continuing the probe.
by Norman Palihawadane and Chaminda Silva
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