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Gary A. caught up in failed bid to secure political asylum for LTTE cadre in Canada

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Senthuran Selvakumaran, who has denied links with the LTTE in a bid to enter Canada, had previously admitted affiliation with the terrorist group while seeking political asylum in the UK, Canadian media and news agencies reported.

His Canadian lawyer said that Selvakumaran had been advised by a British lawyer to falsely say that he had been linked to the militant group while making an asylum claim there. British authorities denied his asylum claim and he had to leave the country.

The case has taken an unexpected turn, with Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney expressing confidence in Public Safety Minister Gary Anandasangaree following a revelation that Anandasangaree, prior to becoming a minister, wrote letters supporting the immigration application of Selvakumaran, barred from Canada due to alleged affiliation with the LTTE.

Anandasangaree, who denies Selvakumaran’s affiliation claims, stated he was acting as an MP for a constituent and has since recused himself from Sri Lanka-related matters as minister.

While he was parliamentary secretary to the Minister of Justice, Anandasangaree wrote to the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) supporting an application to overturn a decision not to let Senthuran Selvakumaran, a constituent’s husband, into the country.

Canadian immigration officials had denied Selvakumaran entry after determining that he may have been affiliated with the LTTE.

Anandasangaree asked the CBSA if it would review its decision to advise the public safety minister not to grant Selvakumaran permanent residence in Canada to enable him to join his wife and child who live in his constituency. The Liberal MP wrote two letters in support of his case in 2016, as well as in 2023, when he was parliamentary secretary.

Selvakumaran had previously told British immigration authorities that he had been involved with the Tamil Tigers, a proscribed terrorist organization in Britain and Canada, a claim he denied when he applied to come to Canada to join his wife in Toronto.

In the July, 2023, letter to the CBSA, Anandasangaree said his constituent Nilushie had married Selvakumaran in 2005 but they had spent “most of their nearly 18 years of marriage separated from each other, relentlessly striving to be reunited.”

“Senthuran’s claims of affiliation to the LTTE was erroneously made when he sought asylum in the United Kingdom in 1998 to escape the growing conflicts in Sri Lanka. He was wrongfully counseled by his legal representative to lie,” Anandasangaree’s letter said.

“However, his claims were found lacking credibility, and the UK Refugee Tribunal had established that Senthuran did not have any affiliations to the LTTE. This is consistent with Senthuran’s position all along.”

In a statement, Anandasangaree said his office in Scarborough-Guildwood-Rouge Park “handles hundreds of immigration matters annually, over 9,000 since I was elected in 2015.”

“That is the nature of representing a diverse riding in the country’s largest city. That a constituent, a Canadian citizen, with a Canadian child, would want to reunite her family in Canada is not unusual,” he said. “MPs from all parties provide letters of support for constituents as a routine matter, including in Ministerial Review cases.”

Mr. Carney, asked at a press conference Wednesday about Mr. Anandasangaree’s intervention in the immigration case, said he “is being transparent about the details of that situation, and he has my confidence.”

Anandasangaree’s intervention in the immigration case was first reported by Global News.

Toronto immigration lawyer Lorne Waldman, a member of Selvakumaran’s legal team, said “numerous MPs” write letters on behalf of their constituents on immigration cases and there was “nothing unusual” about Anandasangaree doing so.

“What he did, on the contrary, was trying to help a constituent who felt herself in a very difficult situation,” Waldman said.

After Selvakumaran was denied entry by the Immigration Department, his lawyers applied for the public safety minister at the time to review the decision, asking for him to be allowed to join his wife here through “ministerial relief.” The minister upheld the decision to deny him entry to Canada.

Selvakumaran then launched a court challenge of that decision but his case was dismissed in the Federal Court in a judgment earlier this month.

Anandasangaree, who was born in Sri Lanka, was named Public Safety Minister in May by Mr. Carney, and the CBSA now reports to him.

He has recused himself from dealing with matters relating to Sri Lanka, including about the Tamil Tigers, which fought in a protracted civil war against Sri Lankan government forces in a bid to create an independent state.

“As a Tamil Canadian, active for decades in my community, I have long faced innuendo and whisper campaigns that question my allegiance to Canada. Those are scurrilous and wrong. I am a proud Canadian and proud of my Tamil heritage. I denounce terrorism in all its forms,” Mr. Anandasangaree said in an e-mail.

“When I was appointed Minister of Public Safety, I decided one way to deal with these allegations was to recuse myself from any decisions related to the listing process under the Anti-Terrorism Act for the Tamil Tigers, or the World Tamil Organization.”

He said that since becoming a minister he has not sent a letter seeking ministerial relief on an immigration matter.

“When I was appointed minister in July 2023, I instructed my constituency staff to no longer provide such letters. The letters in question here date from before I entered cabinet,” he added.



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SAARC journalists meet in New Delhi

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President of SJF Sri Lanka Chapter Rahul Samantha Hettiarachchi hands over a memento to Dr Alok Kumar Mishra Joint Secretary of the Association of Indian Universities

Members of the South Asian Journalists Forum have gathered  at the University of  New Delhi for a two day conference themed ‘Peace and Co-operation’.

Journalists from Bangladesh,  Nepal, Sri Lanka and India are attending the conference hosted by the  University of Delhi in collaboration with the India Chapter of SJF, and  will deliberate on how the media can act as a catalyst for regional stability and mutual coexsistence.

A tree plantation campaign was also held at the Ghandi Bhawan premises of the University to mark the event and symbolize growing regional ties.

The Sri Lanka delegation is led by President of SJF’s Sri Lanka Chapter Rahul Samantha Hettiarachchi.

 

 

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Governor of Gujarat met with Sri Lanka PM to discuss exposition of Devnimori Relics

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The Governor of the of Gujarat,  Acharya Devvrat, along with the Deputy Chief Minister of Gujarat,  Harsh Sanghvi, met with Prime Minister Dr. Harini Amarasuriya on Thursdy [February 05]  at the Parliamentary Complex to discuss the arrangements related to the exposition of the Devnimori Sacred Relics of  Lord Buddha, which have been brought to Sri Lanka under the patronage of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and the Government of India.

These sacred relics of  Lord Buddha were discovered during archaeological excavations conducted in the 1960s at the historic Devnimori site in Gujarat, the home state of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Until now, these relics had never been taken outside India. As a result of discussions held between President Anura Kumara Dissanayake and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi during his recent visit to Sri Lanka, the people of Sri Lanka have been granted this rare opportunity to venerate these sacred relics.

The exposition of the relics is being held for a period of seven days, from February 05 to February 11, at the Gangaramaya Temple in Hunupitiya, Colombo. Discussions were held between both parties regarding the arrangements related to this event.

The discussion was attended by Samar Nanda, Joint Secretary of the Indian Ministry of Culture; Dr. Satyanjal Pandey, Acting High Commissioner of India in Sri Lanka;  Abhijit Halder, Director General of the International Buddhist Confederation; along with several others.

[Prime Minister’s Media Division]

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INS GHARIAL makes port call in Colombo

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The Indian Naval Ship (INS) GHARIAL made a port call in Colombo for operational turnarounds on 04 Feb 26. The Sri Lanka Navy welcomed the visiting ship in compliance with naval traditions.

Commanded by Commander Gaurav Tewari, INS GHARIAL is a vessel with a length of 124.8 meters.

During this visit, ten (10) Bailey Bridges, brought by ship, through the coordination of the High Commission of India in Sri Lanka, will be handed over to the Disaster Management Center. These bridges will provide temporary transportation links while bridges damaged across the island by adverse weather conditions are repaired.

The crew’s itinerary features scheduled goodwill activities with the Sri Lanka Navy, alongside visits to several tourist attractions across the island.

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