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SC e-filing portal operational

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The Supreme Court of Sri Lanka has taken a landmark step in judicial modernisation with the launch of its e-filing portal under the e-courts Project, marking a major milestone in the digital transformation of the country’s judiciary.

Officially opened to the public on 10 February 2026, the portal allows Attorneys-at-Law to file cases electronically. Since its launch, several cases have been successfully processed through the system, signalling growing acceptance among legal professionals, said a release issued by the Media Unit of the Supreme Court.

On Thursday (26), the Court conducted its first fully electronic, paperless proceeding in open court, handling SC Contempt 03/2026 entirely through the e-filing system. In this landmark case, all parties submitted documents, digitally, while the Registrar read, digitally signed, and uploaded the charge sheet in real time, making it immediately accessible to both Counsel for the Respondents and the Attorney General’s Department.

The case arose from non-compliance with a Supreme Court judgment delivered on 31st December 2024 concerning the leak of the Grade 5 Scholarship 2024 examination paper. One of the Respondents had been ordered to pay Rs. 3 million in compensation to the State but failed to comply, prompting contempt proceedings.

The session was presided over by Chief Justice Preethi Padman Surasena, alongside Justices Arjuna Obeyesekere and Dr. Sobitha Rajakaruna. The proceedings were attended by Registrar Manodhi Hewawasam, Deputy Registrars Abimani Seneviratne and Tharindu Weerasena, the Supreme Court IT team, and staff.

The e-Filing platform was developed with support from Uvindu Anuradha of SLT-Mobitel.

The initiative is expected to streamline court procedures, reduce reliance on physical documentation, cut costs, and promote sustainability, aligning Sri Lanka’s judiciary with global standards in digital court administration. Legal experts anticipate growing adoption of the system due to the cost savings on paper, printing, and other materials, while improving overall case management.

As the Supreme Court approaches its 225th anniversary, the e-Filing launch underscores its commitment to modernisation, efficiency, and forward-looking judicial services across Sri Lanka.



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Cardinal: Presidents, IGPs and AG sabotaged Easter carnage probes before 2024 regime change

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Ven. Omalpe Sobitha Nayaka Thera, Malcolm Cardinal Ranjith and Rev. Dr. Andrzej Józwowicz, Apostolic Nuncio in Sri Lanka, at an event held yesterday at St. Anthony's Church, Kochchikade, Colombo, to mark the seventh anniversary of the Easter Sunday terror attacks. (pic by Nishan S. Priyantha)

… successive governments sat on PCoI report handed over in Feb. 2021

His Eminence Malcolm Cardinal Ranjith yesterday (21) alleged that those who were in power from 2019 to September 2024 sabotaged investigations into the Easter Sunday carnage (2019).

Addressing the Seventh Year Commemoration of the Easter Sunday suicide attacks, at St. Anthony’s Church Kochchikade, Colombo, the Archbishop of Colombo said that unlike the present leaders of the country, almost all the power holders, since the 2019 April attacks, including former Presidents, Heads of the Police and the AG’s department officials, instead of sincerely finding out as to who and what was behind the horrific crime, tried their best to confuse the public, muddle up the investigations and appointing all kinds of committees, with highly suspect investigators, in order to come out with conclusions crafted by them, and tried to sabotage the truth from emerging.

In spite of the change of government, in September 2024, certain officials of the “deep state” were seeking to obstruct the smooth flow of ongoing investigations.

Regardless of the Presidential Commission of Inquiry (PCOI) giving clear directives to the Attorney General and to that department to take clear legal and disciplinary actions against some of the political figures, officials of the security establishment and organisations for criminal neglect of duty, very little has so far been done on this matter by them.

The PCoI handed over its report to President Gotabaya Rajapaksa in February 2021.

The Catholic leader emphasised the need to investigate possible links between the Easter Sunday massacre and attacks, targeting the Muslim community, on the night of 5th May and, once again, on 11th, 12th and 13th May, starting from the Nattandiya-Madampe area, through Kotaramulla to Minuwangoda. The Cardinal said: “This may have a link to the main attacks on 21st April 2019. One must also verify as to whether anyone in the security establishment prevented those responsible from controlling these attacks as and when they began.”

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CIABOC asks Parliament not to transfer witness in case against Deputy Secy General

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The Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption (CIABOC) has directed the Secretary General of Parliament Kushani Rohanadeera to cancel an internal transfer of a senior official.

Sources said that the CIABOC intervened as the female official to be transferred is a key witness in the ongoing investigation into the conduct of suspended Deputy Secretary General of Parliament Chaminda Kularatne. The CIABOC has asked the Secretary General to delay the transfer until the conclusion of its investigation.

CIABOC initiated the investigation following a complaint against Kularatne, who himself complained against Speaker Dr. Jagath Wickremaratne over corruption and irregularities.

The female official’s transfer was to take effect on 20 April.

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UN wants Sri Lanka to deliver concrete results in Easter Sunday bombing probe

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The United Nations has urged Sri Lanka to deliver concrete results after long-running investigations into the 2019 Easter Sunday suicide bombings that killed 279 people, including 45 foreigners.

The UN’s top envoy to the country, Marc-Andre Franche, said survivors and families of victims were still waiting for answers, despite multiple probes and renewed political pledges following the formation of a new government in September 2024.

“Public commitments by the government to pursue justice are important and must be welcomed,” he said, as the nation marked seven years since the bombings on Tuesday.

“But what matters now is results,” he said at a remembrance service in Colombo.

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