News
Raghavan alerts parliament to resolution about to be passed in Ontario against Lanka
By Saman Indrajith
SLPP MP Dr Suren Raghavan yesterday called on the Speaker and other MPs to take immediate action to prevent a wrong being committed against Sri Lanka at Canada’s Legislative Assembly in Ontario.
MP Raghavan said that a Bill was being debated in the Ontario Legislative Assembly to name a week in May as the Tamil Genocide Education Week in that province.
“That Bill has passed its first reading stage and is being debated now in the second reading stage. If this is passed that week would be used to highlight what is called Tamil genocide here. That would also be taught in 4,800 schools in that province. We must protest and stop this.”
He said that particular Bill had been moved by Vijay Thanigasalam, who was a member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario from the Progressive Conservative Party. “He is originally from Velvetithurai. His Bill is factually wrong because no genocide took place here. Five years after the war in 2014, the then UN High Commissioner for Human Rights too stated that there was no evidence to investigate genocide claims but only the war crimes charges would be investigated. Now, there is this Bill in the Ontario Legislative Assembly. It was moved on April 13, 2019. The Progressive Conservative Party is the ruling party in the Assembly. It has a strong majority and the support of the Tamil community there. Ontario’s Toronto has the highest Tamil diaspora concentration in a city. I know this since I used to have Canadian citizenship and taught at the University of Ottawa.”
Dr Raghavan urged Speaker Mahinda Yapa Abeywardena and MPs to form a Sri Lanka-Canada Parliamentary group so that Lankan MPs could discuss the matter with Canadian counterparts and prevent that wrong against this country being committed there. “Passing of this Bill will be inimical to whatever reconciliation processes we have here. I urge the Canadian politicians including Doug Ford, who is the Premier of Ontario to take the real situation and facts into consideration and throw this Bill away. I also urge fellow MPs in this House to take this threat against the motherland into consideration and take whatever action they can to prevent our motherland’s name being tarnished for political gains by several individuals.”
Latest News
Death toll 635 as at 06:00 AM today [09]
The Situation Report issued by the Disaster Management Center at 06:00 AM today [09th December] confirms that 635 persons have died due to floods and landslides that took place in the country within the past two weeks. The number of persons that are missing is 192.

News
Cyclone Ditwah leaves Sri Lanka’s biodiversity in ruins: Top scientist warns of unseen ecological disaster
Sri Lanka is facing an environmental catastrophe of unprecedented scale in the wake of Cyclone Ditwah, with leading experts warning that the real extent of the ecological destruction remains dangerously under-assessed.
Research Professor Siril Wijesundara of the National Institute of Fundamental Studies (NIFS) issued a stark warning that Sri Lanka may be confronting one of the worst biodiversity losses in its recent history, yet the country still lacks a coordinated, scientific assessment of the damage.
“What we see in photographs and early reports is only a fraction of the devastation. We are dealing with a major ecological crisis, and unless a systematic, science-driven assessment begins immediately, we risk losing far more than we can ever restore,” Prof. Wijesundara told The Island.
Preliminary reports emerging from the field point to extensive destruction across multiple biodiversity-rich regions, including some of the nation’s most iconic and economically valuable landscapes. Massive trees have been uprooted, forest structures shattered, habitats altered beyond recognition, and countless species—many endemic—left at risk.
Among the hardest-hit areas are the Royal Botanical Gardens, Peradeniya, Seethawaka Botanical Garden, Gampaha Botanical Garden, and several national parks and forest reserves under the Department of Wildlife Conservation and the Forest Department. Officials describe scenes of collapsed canopies, destroyed research plots, and landscapes that may take decades to recover.
Prof. Wijesundara said the scale of destruction demands that Sri Lanka immediately mobilise international technical and financial support, noting that several global conservation bodies specialise in post-disaster ecological recovery.
“If we are serious about restoring these landscapes, we must work with international partners who can bring in advanced scientific tools, funding, and global best practices. This is not a situation a single nation can handle alone,” he stressed.
However, he issued a pointed warning about governance during the recovery phase.
“Post-disaster operations are vulnerable to misuse and misallocation of resources. The only safeguard is to ensure that all actions are handled strictly through recognised state institutions with legal mandates. Anything else will compromise transparency, accountability, and public trust,” Prof. Wijesundara cautioned.
He insisted that institutions such as the Department of Wildlife Conservation, the Forest Department, and the Botanical Gardens Department must take the lead—supported by credible international partners.
Environmental analysts say the coming months will be decisive. Without immediate, science-backed intervention, the ecological wounds inflicted by Cyclone Ditwah could deepen into long-term national losses—impacting everything, from tourism and heritage landscapes to species survival and climate resilience.
As Sri Lanka confronts the aftermath, the country now faces a critical test: whether it can respond with urgency, integrity, and scientific discipline to protect the natural systems that define its identity and underpin its future.
By Ifham Nizam
News
Disaster: 635 bodies found so far, 192 listed as missing
The Disaster Management Centre (DMC) has categorised 192 persons as missing as search operations were scaled down in flood-affected areas.
The death toll has been placed at 635, while the highest number of deaths was reported from the Kandy District. Kandy recorded 234 deaths.
According to the latest data, a total of 1,776,103 individuals from 512,123 families, in 25 districts, have been affected by the impact of Cyclone Ditwah.
The DMC has said that 69,861 individuals from 22,218 families are currently accommodated in 690 shelters established across the country.
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