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ONUR Bill passed without vote

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TNA, ACTC vote against it at Second Reading

By Saman Indrajith

The Office for National Unity and Reconciliation Bill was passed in Parliament yesterday without a vote.

However, at the end of the Second Reading of the Bill, All Ceylon Tamil Congress Jaffna District MP Gajendrakumar Ponnambalam called for a division.

The Second Reading of the Bill was passed with a majority of 41 votes.

The vote taken on the Bill received 48 votes in favour while seven MPs voted against it.

TNA and All Ceylon Tamil Congress (ACTC) voted against the Bill.

SJB, JVP and dissident SLPP MPs were not in the Chamber when the vote was taken.

ACTC leader Jaffna District MP Ponnambalam said that his party would call for a division on the Bill and would vote against it. “What is the use of this office? There is nothing new going to come about it. The chairman of the office is to be appointed by the President on recommendation of the Minister of Justice. We know what their views on reconciliation are. They have majoritarian views. They unilaterally decide what they think as reconciliation and then take it to the grassroots and force it down the throat of a reluctant population. This Bill enables only that. This has nothing to do with reconciliation.

This is window dressing to go before the international community to say that we have an office for reconciliation,” Ponnambalam said.

TNA Jaffna District MP Shanakiyan Rasamanickam said that the Bill was nothing but a mere eyewash. “What reconciliation would be there when you are not listening to the concerns of the victims? This Bill does not address the genuine concerns of victims. This is an attempt to mislead the international community and to get the victims’ votes at coming elections,” the MP said.

Justice Minister Dr Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe said MP Rasamanickam has mixed the ONUR Bill with the Truth and Reconciliation Commission Bill.

Badulla District SLPP dissident MP Dilan Perera, during the debate, said that ONUR office had been neglected during the time of Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s presidency. “The first chairperson of ONUR was former President Chandrika Kumaratunga. President Rajapaksa was not against reconciliation but was against Chandrika Kumaratunga. So, this office was neglected because he did not like the chairperson. Passing this Bill would show our commitment towards reconciliation. If implemented to the letter, the provisions of this Bill would be able to put an end to the culture of politics and politicians who capitalize on race, language, religion and caste. These differences perpetuated by identity politics still exist; it is that brand of politics that keeps us down as a nation,” Perera said.



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Navy seize an Indian fishing boat poaching in Mannar seas

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During an operation conducted in the dark hours of 22 Feb 26, the Sri Lanka Navy seized an Indian fishing boat and  apprehended  twelve (12) Indian fishermen while they were poaching in Sri Lankan waters, in the sea area south of Mannar.

The seized boat  and the Indian fishermen were handed over to the Fisheries Inspector of Dikovita for onward legal proceedings.

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Families of those sentenced to death for killing MP Atukorale seek AKD’s intervention

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FSL assures legal backing for them

Families of those sentenced to death by the Three-member Gampaha High Trial-at-Bar, over the killing of SLPP MP Amarakeerthi Atukorale, and his police bodyguard, met a senior official of the Presidential Secretariat, yesterday (23), to seek backing for their move to appeal against the verdict.

Having made representations, they addressed the media, outside the Presidential Secretariat, where they declared their intention to move the higher court against the decision.

The SLPP MP and his security officer were killed by an Aragalaya mob on 09 May, 2022, at Nittambuwa. The same day Aragalaya mobs unleashed violence against the then government MPs across the country, torching dozens of their properties.

The Frontline Socialist Party (FSP) yesterday said that they would help the families of those sentenced to death to move court against the Gampaha High Court Trial-at-Bar decision. Responding to The Island queries, FSP spokesman Pubudu Jayagoda said that their representatives had already met the families and necessary work was being done to move the Supreme Court. Twenty three persons were acquitted and four handed six-month prison terms, suspended for five years

Jayagoda said that one of the HC judges differed in the ruling. Asked whether they received backing from any other political party and groups that had been involved in the 2022 protest campaign to defend those who had been found guilty, Jayagoda said such support was lacking.

The JVP/NPP played a significant role in the violent protest campaign that forced President Gotabaya Rajapaksa to step down. Pointing out that the Attorney General, too, was appealing against the court decision on the basis that the number of persons sentenced to death should be much higher, Jayagoda said that the Nittambuwa incident couldn’t be examined in isolation without taking into consideration the SLPP goon attack on Galle Face protesters on 09 May, 2022. (SF)

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OPV leaves Baltimore, expected in Colombo in May

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SLN officers wave to those on the shore as the newly acquired P 628 departs Baltimore, US (pic courtesy SLN)

Offshore Patrol Vessel P 628 of the Sri Lanka Navy departed Baltimore, USA, for Colombo, on 20 February.

The ex-United States Coast Guard Cutter, USCGC Decisive was officially handed over to the SLN on 02 December, 2025, as the latest addition to the SLN fleet, under the Pennant Number P 628.

Measuring 64 metres in length, this ‘B-Type Reliance Class 210-foot Cutter’ is equipped with advanced technological systems and facilities, capable of conducting extensive surveillance operations spanning up to 6,000 nautical miles per patrol.

The vessel’s voyage to Colombo is historic, possibly marking the longest-ever passage undertaken by a Sri Lanka Navy ship. Covering approximately 14,775 nautical miles, the journey will see the P 628 navigate from Baltimore through the Atlantic Ocean, the Panama Canal (a first for a Sri Lankan naval vessel), the Pacific Ocean, and into the Indian Ocean, via the Straits of Malacca. The ship is expected to arrive in Sri Lanka during the first week of May, 2026.

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