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Parliamentary Election 2020- Trincomalee
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Easter Sunday commemoration shouldn’t be marked with vengeance -Vatican Amb
Apostolic Nuncio (Vatican Ambassador to Sri Lanka) Monsignor Andrez Jozwowlez yesterday (21) said that Easter Sunday attackers could be forgiven after the truth behind the attacks is established. The Vatican Ambassador said so at St. Anthony’s Church, Kochchikade, Colombo, at a commemorative event held with the participation of Archbishop of Colombo Malcolm Cardinal Ranjith.
“This commemoration should not be marked with vengeance, but with hope that justice will be served to those who were affected by the attacks,” he said at the seventh anniversary of the Easter Sunday carnage.
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Prof. Peiris questions move to appoint Trial-at-Bar targeting Ranil
Former Foreign Minister and internationally recognised legal scholar G. L. Peiris yesterday (21) questioned the recent declaration made by the government regarding setting up of a Trial-at-Bar to hear the case in which ex-President and UNP leader Ranil Wickremesinghe is under investigation over alleged misappropriation of Rs 16.2 mn in 2023.
Prof. Peiris said that only the Chief Justice could decide on a Trial-at-Bar. He dealt with the issue at a special media briefing held at Wickremesinghe’s Flower Road Office. “It is the Chief Justice who should decide and announce the decision to set up a Trial-at-Bar. The Chief Justice has not made any such announcement to this date,” he said, underscoring intervention made by a third party, in this regard, would be an insult to the CJ.
Alleging that the government was targeting its political opponents, Prof. Peiris said that recently Wickremesinghe received medical treatment in Singapore.
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Finnish MP urges government to pressure SL on accountability following new MoU
A Finnish Member of Parliament has urged Helsinki to use a newly signed memorandum of understanding (MoU) with Sri Lanka to press Colombo on accountability for war crimes committed against Tamils.
Tamil Guardian report: Finland and Sri Lanka signed an MoU in Helsinki on 25 February 2026, establishing a political consultation mechanism aimed at strengthening bilateral engagement. In response, Green League MP Bella Forsgrén submitted a formal written question to the Speaker of the Finnish Parliament on Wednesday, calling on the government to ensure that the agreement is used to advance Finland’s human‑rights‑based foreign policy.
Forsgrén said that the Sri Lankan state has systematically denied Eelam Tamils the right to self‑determination since 1948, and has repeatedly failed to cooperate with international accountability mechanisms. She highlighted Sri Lanka’s continued refusal to implement UN Human Rights Council resolution 51/1, which Finland and the European Union supported during Finland’s recent term on the Council.
In her submission, Forsgrén pointed to extensive documentation by international bodies and human rights organisations detailing war crimes, attacks on civilians, forced displacement, massacres and sexual violence committed by Sri Lankan state forces during the armed conflict. She noted that tens of thousands of Tamils remain disappeared, and that these crimes meet the threshold of genocide.
Forsgrén further warned that the current National People’s Power (NPP) government has maintained Sri Lanka’s longstanding position of rejecting international accountability, continuing to oppose meaningful cooperation with the United Nations and resisting justice for Tamil victims.
Addressing Foreign Minister Elina Valtonen, Forsgrén asked, “how does Finland intend to use the political consultation mechanism between Finland and Sri Lanka to ensure progress in the investigation of human rights violations against Tamils and war crimes committed during the Sri Lankan civil war?”
Under parliamentary procedure, Foreign Minister Valtonen is required to provide a formal response within 21 days. Tamil rights advocates have repeatedly warned that deepening bilateral ties with Colombo, without concrete accountability benchmarks, risks legitimising Sri Lanka’s record of impunity. International engagement, they argue, must be conditional on tangible progress toward justice for Tamil victims, including cooperation with UN‑mandated mechanisms and recognition of the Tamil Genocide.
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