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PHU: UNHRC resolution could be tied to aid for Sri Lanka

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… country’s unitary status may be in jeopardy

By Shamindra Ferdinando

Pivithuru Hela Urumaya (PHU) leader Udaya Gammanpila, MP, has warned that the forthcoming resolution at the Geneva-based United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) could be tied to financial assistance as the incumbent government struggled to cope up with the developing political-economic-social crisis. The UNHCR consists of 47 countries, divided into five groups.

Asserting that a heavy defeat was inevitable at the vote expected to take place before Oct 07, Attorney-at-Law Gammanpila told the media yesterday (19) that Western powers would exert pressure on Sri Lanka on the basis of the outcome. The lawmaker declared that the UNHRC could transform the resolution as a weapon and the bankrupt country could be placed in an extremely uncomfortable situation.

The Sri Lanka Core Group, led by the UK, has proposed that Sri Lankan leaders and officials guilty of economic crimes face travel bans, freezing of assets and other legal action.

Lawmaker Gammanpila asserted that the resolution against Sri Lanka could receive 24 or more votes. The PHU leader compared the growing threat faced by Sri Lanka with the crisis experienced by Indonesia in 1997 that ultimately forced Jakarta to allow an independent state in East Timor. The MP urged Western powers not to undermine Sri Lanka’s unitary status at a time the country was experiencing economic fallout.

MP Gammanpila said that the rebel SLPP group publicly warned the country of the impending danger from the powers that be to deliberately weaken the economy to create an environment conducive for the separatist project and also to privatize profit-making state enterprises.

Blaming former President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s government for allowing the deterioration of the national economy, MP Gammanpila said that the incumbent government lacked a proper plan to overcome the daunting Geneva challenge.

Foreign Minister Ali Sabry, PC, recently declared that not only individuals but entire fighting divisions had been ‘blacklisted’, he pointed out and urged the government to set the record straight in Geneva and also at the forthcoming United Nations General Assembly in New York. Declaring that the country is in a crossroads, the former minister said that the latest Geneva resolution could pave the way for unprecedented manipulation of Sri Lanka.

Referring to a statement issued by the UK based Global Tamil Forum (GTF), lawmaker Gammanpila alleged that the government seemed to be very weak in its defence. “They are on the offensive. They feel, Sri Lanka, in economic difficulties can be manipulated to accept a remedy that’ll further undermine the political and economic independence,” MP Gammanpila said.



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Ms. U. L. Mathisha Jinanjalie Jayathilake, appointedto the post of Commissioner, Department of Probation and Child Protection Services

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The Cabinet of Ministers approved the resolution furnished by the Minister of Women and Child Affairs to appoint Ms. U. L. Mathisha Jinanjalie Jayathilake, the officer in Grade I of Sri Lanka Administrative Service to the post of the Commissioner at the Department of Probation and Child Protection Services with immediate effect.

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Commander of the Navy pays courtesy call on Speaker of the Parliament

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The Commander of the Navy, Vice Admiral Damian Fernando paid a courtesy call on the Speaker of the Parliament, Dr Jagath Wickramaratne at the Office of the  Speaker, today (7 July
2026).

The meeting marked the Commander of the Navy’s first official interaction with the Speaker following his assumption of command of the Sri Lanka Navy. During the cordial discussion, they exchanged views on the Navy’s role in matters of national importance.

The formal meeting drew to a close with an exchange of mementoes, signifying the importance of the occasion.

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Prison mayhem leaves at least 26 dead; five officers killed in revenge violence

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Police and STF personnel rushing an injured prison officer to an ambulance after yesterday’s clash at the Negombo Prison.

At least 26 people, including five prison officers and 20 inmates, have been confirmed dead following violent unrest at Negombo Prison, hospital sources said yesterday, as authorities struggled to restore full control over the facility.

According to unconfirmed reports the prison officers were killed by rioters yesterday morning,  in retaliation, and weapons carried by those officers were grabbed by them.

Negombo General Hospital Director Consultant Dr. Pushpa Gamlath said nearly 100 injured persons had been admitted, following the clashes, and eight of the critically wounded had been transferred to the National Hospital, in Colombo, for further treatment.

The violence, which initially broke out on Sunday (5) between remand prisoners and convicted inmates, left two inmates dead and 38 others injured before being temporarily brought under control.

However, tensions flared again on Monday (6), with prison officials reporting renewed unrest inside the facility despite earlier assurances that the situation had stabilised.

Police said the initial confrontation was triggered by a dispute linked to the exposure of an alleged drug trafficking network, operating within the prison, and was reportedly orchestrated by a drug trafficker, identified as Suresh, who is said to have links to an underworld figure known as ‘Booru Moona’.

The violence rapidly escalated, with female inmates staging a protest on the Prison roof in support of those involved in the clashes, while relatives gathered outside demanding information on detainees. Police later facilitated visits for selected family members to hospitalised inmates.

The Negombo Prison, which houses around 1,800 remand and convicted inmates, descended into widespread disorder as rival groups clashed, with reports indicating that the violence later spread beyond the initial confrontation.

Authorities said rioting inmates had allegedly seized firearms during the renewed unrest on Monday, prompting heightened security measures.

The Sri Lanka Air Force deployed drones for aerial surveillance and a Bell 412 helicopter to monitor the situation, while additional military personnel were sent to reinforce security around the prison.

Prisons Department spokesperson A.C. Gajanayake said a special investigation team had been appointed, under the direction of the Commissioner General of Prisons, to probe the incident, while a separate police investigation is also underway.

Justice Minister Harshana Nanayakkara told The Island that he had called for a detailed report on the disturbances.

By Norman Palihawadane

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