Southern politicians linked to drug and organized crime networks – Public Security Minister

Minister of Public Security Ananda Wijepala has claimed that certain politicians in the Southern Province are allegedly connected to drug trafficking and organized criminal networks.

Speaking at a media briefing held today (22), the Public Security Minister stated that this information is emerging based on intelligence reports and tips received from the general public.

Minister Wijepala further noted that the criminal underworld and drug networks have expanded as a result of past political culture, but emphasized that the current government is now paying special attention to dismantling these operations. The Minister also confirmed that three major drug raids were conducted today in Tangalle.

“There’s an important message for the public. We now have certain information indicating political links to serious drug and organized crime activities—particularly involving politicians from the south,” the Minister said.

Minister of Public Security Ananda Wijepala added, “The public is actively coming forward with information. Police are doing their job diligently, and intelligence agencies are receiving a large volume of data. We appeal to the public to continue sharing any information they have with law enforcement. We assure that both the information and the identity of those providing it will be protected.”

The Public Security Minister also stated that key information related to narcotics is now being uncovered from ‘Kehelbaddara Padme’, a known member of an organized crime gang, and other underworld criminals who were recently arrested in Indonesia and brought back to Sri Lanka.

They are currently being held under the custody of the Criminal Investigation Department (CID).

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CID tells court: 6,000 LTTE-linked gold items handed over to Central Bank

The Criminal Investigation Department (CID) today informed Colombo Chief Magistrate Asanga S. Bodaragama that out of 10,000 gold items believed to have belonged to the LTTE and discovered in camps, illegal banks and buildings in the Northern and Eastern Provinces during the humanitarian operation and thereafter sent to the National Gem and Jewellery Authority on court orders, 6,000 items have now been handed over to the Central Bank of Sri Lanka.

The court had earlier directed the National Gem and Jewellery Authority to examine the 10,000 gold items and submit a detailed report to court and to the CID, setting out the gold content and weight of the items.

Accordingly, CID officers told court that following such examination by the Authority, 6,000 items had been transferred to the Central Bank.

They further submitted this information while tendering an additional progress report when the case was taken up in court.

It had previously been brought to the attention of court that the gold items recovered in the Northern and Eastern Provinces during the humanitarian operation had either been voluntarily given by the local residents to the LTTE, or had been taken by the LTTE from them by force, and that investigations are continuing to ascertain these matters.

India on alert as Chinese spy ship re-enters Indian Ocean

Three years after its controversial entry into the Indian Ocean, China’s Yuan Wang 5 — a vessel officially designated as a “research ship” but widely recognised as a sophisticated intelligence-gathering platform — has once again been tracked near the region, sparking fresh concerns in India’s security establishment.

According to Indian and Bangladeshi naval sources, the ship was located at 11.0288 S and 100.9873° E at 02:38 UTC (around 8:10 pm IST) on Saturday through the Automatic Identification System (AIS). The vessel has been under close watch since it left Indonesia about 36 hours earlier, with Bangladeshi naval officers noting its likely trajectory toward the Bay of Bengal.

While Dhaka has been openly monitoring the ship’s movements, Indian authorities have remained tight-lipped. However, sources in the national security and intelligence agencies have admitted that the vessel’s entry is being taken “very seriously” given its advanced space-tracking and surveillance capabilities.

This marks the second time in three years that the Yuan Wang 5 has sailed into waters close to India. In August 2022, the ship docked at Sri Lanka’s Chinese-built Hambantota Port despite strong objections from New Delhi. At the time, Beijing defended the deployment as “marine scientific research” consistent with international law, with Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin asserting that the vessel’s movements “should not be obstructed by any third party.”

The Yuan Wang 5 belongs to China’s latest generation of space-tracking ships, used to monitor satellite launches, rockets and intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs). Its presence so close to the Indian Ocean littoral has long been interpreted by defence analysts as part of Beijing’s expanding military footprint in the region.

The timing of its return has added to strategic unease in India, coinciding with the just-concluded US-Bangladesh joint exercise Pacific Angel-2025 in Chittagong and Cox’s Bazar. Around 120 officers from the United States Air Force (USAF) participated in the drill with Bangladesh Army and Air Force personnel, departing the country on Saturday, September 20.

Analysts in New Delhi caution that the renewed presence of the Yuan Wang 5 may not only be aimed at satellite-tracking but could also provide Beijing with valuable intelligence on regional military activities — particularly as India and the United States deepen security cooperation in South Asia.

(Khabargaon)

India’s Chief of Naval Staff visits Sri Lanka to strengthen maritime ties

Admiral Dinesh K Tripathi, Chief of the Naval Staff of India, is on a four-day official visit to Sri Lanka from September 22 to September 25, according to an official statement from the Ministry of Defence.

During the visit, the Chief of the Naval Staff will call on the Prime Minister of Sri Lanka, Dr. Harini Amarasuriya, VAdm Kanchana Banagoda, and engage in bilateral discussions with the three Service Chiefs and other senior government officials on a broad spectrum of defence cooperation matters, with emphasis on maritime security, capability enhancement, training, and identifying avenues to strengthen cooperation.

He would also participate in the 12th edition of the Galle Dialogue 2025 — International Maritime Conference in Colombo, on the theme “Maritime Outlook of the Indian Ocean under Changing Dynamics.”

The Indian Navy regularly interacts with the Sri Lanka Navy through the Annual Defence Dialogue, Staff Talks, and other operational interactions, which include the Sri Lanka-India Naval Exercise (SLINEX), Passage Exercises, Training, and Hydrography exchanges.

In addition, both navies regularly participate in multilateral events such as the Indian Ocean Naval Symposium, Galle Dialogue, MILAN, Goa Maritime Conclave/Symposium, and Colombo Security Conclave.

The CNS engagements in Sri Lanka are structured to deepen bonds of friendship, paving the way for enhanced understanding in key areas of shared strategic and maritime interests, in line with the vision of ‘MAHASAGAR,’ an official statement said. The visit reaffirms the time-tested India-Sri Lanka relations, anchored on mutual respect, maritime trust, and a shared vision for peace and stability in the Indian Ocean Region.

Earlier, the Indian Navy’s indigenous stealth frigate, INS Satpura, arrived in Colombo on Sunday to a warm reception from personnel of the Sri Lanka Navy.

In a post on X, the Navy spokesperson wrote: “Indian Navy’s indigenous stealth frigate INS Satpura arrived at Colombo to a heartening welcome by the personnel of Sri Lanka Navy, showcasing both nations’ enduring friendship and joint commitment to regional peace and prosperity.”

The ship will engage in professional interactions, rescue and force protection drills, yoga, and sports fixtures with the Sri Lankan Navy. “Commanding Officer called on Rear Adm SJ Kumara, Commander Western Naval Area. Discussions held on enhancing bilateral naval cooperation and joint activities to boost operational synergy — furthering partnership under Govt of India’s Neighbourhood First and MAHASAGAR initiative,” the post added.

India is Sri Lanka’s closest neighbour, and the relationship between the two countries dates back more than 2,500 years, sharing a strong civilizational and historical connection. Sri Lanka has a central place in India’s ‘Neighbourhood First’ policy and Security and Growth for All in the Region (SAGAR) vision, as per the MEA.

Source: ANI

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Human Rights Watch Briefing on the Human Rights Situation in Sri Lanka

At the 60th session of the United Nations Human Rights Council (HRC), the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) will present its report on the human rights situation in Sri Lanka, and the Council will be asked to consider the renewal of the OHCHR mandates in the country. In 2021, HRC resolution 46/1 established two vital mandates:

To the OHCHR Sri Lanka Accountability Project (OSLAP) to collect, analyze and preserve evidence of “gross violations of human rights or serious violations of international humanitarian law in Sri Lanka, to advocate for victims and survivors, and to support relevant judicial and other proceedings, including in Member States, with competent jurisdiction.”
To the High Commissioner for Human Rights to monitor and report to the Council on human rights violations in Sri Lanka.
Human Rights Watch Briefing on the Human Rights Situation in Sri Lanka
Those mandates were renewed by the HRC in 2022 for two years, and in 2024 for one year.

To protect human rights in Sri Lanka, uphold the principle of accountability for the most serious international crimes and give victims’ families an avenue to justice in the absence of any credible domestic accountability process, the Human Rights Council at its 60th session should renew both mandates for two years.

_________________________________________________

In the nearly one year since President Anura Kumara Dissanayake has been in office – despite pledges to uphold Sri Lanka’s human rights obligations – there has been little if any improvement in any of the key human rights issues that led to action by the Human Rights Council. Impunity for mass atrocities and grave rights violations remains absolute, while intimidation and surveillance of victims and activists in previously war-affected areas continues.

The Dissanayake government invited the High Commissioner to visit Sri Lanka in June, but during their meeting the President only spoke of “commitment to national unity and reconciliation as well as to overcoming the economic challenge Sri Lanka is faced with,” instead of publicly backing the efforts of the Human Rights Council to ensure accountability.

A Crisis of Impunity

Tens of thousands of people were killed during the civil war between the Sri Lankan government and the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), including an estimated 40,000 in the final months alone. Abuses by government forces included arbitrary arrests and detention, extrajudicial killings, rape and other sexual violence, enforced disappearance, torture and other ill-treatment, and indiscriminate attacks on civilians. The LTTE committed numerous atrocities, including suicide bombings and other indiscriminate killings of civilians, torture, the use of child soldiers, forced displacement of ethnic populations, targeted killings, and summary executions.

Since end of the war in 2009, the UN has played a vital role in advancing justice and accountability while seeking to end ongoing violations. The Secretary-General’s Panel of Experts report (2011) and OHCHR Investigation on Sri Lanka (OISL, 2015) documented extensive rights abuses and violations by both sides during the conflict, some of which they found may have amounted to war crimes and crimes against humanity. The OISL report found that:

“[t]he sheer number of allegations, their gravity, recurrence and the similarities in their modus operandi, as well as the consistent pattern of conduct they indicate, all point to system crimes… these findings demonstrate that there are reasonable grounds to believe that gross violations of international human rights law, serious violations of international humanitarian law and international crimes were committed by all parties during the period under review. Indeed, if established before a court of law, many of the allegations may… amount to war crimes… and/or crimes against humanity.”

Successive Sri Lankan governments have appointed at least 10 commissions since the 1990s to examine human rights violations and war crimes, but none led to accountability or revealed the fate of thousands of victims of enforced disappearance. Instead, successive governments have blocked the few criminal investigations that had made some progress. During his June visit, High Commissioner Volker Türk warned of the “impunity trap,” and that “an absence of justice will undermine the stability of peace.” At the end of his visit, the High Commissioner stated: “Sri Lanka has struggled to move forward with domestic accountability mechanisms that are credible and have the trust and confidence of victims. This is why Sri Lankans have looked outside for justice, through assistance at the international level.” By blocking accountability successive Sri Lankan governments have deepened the suffering of victim communities, and broken commitments made to the Human Rights Council to ensure truth, justice and reparations.

The series of Human Rights Council resolutions since the war ended has shown Member States’ determination that there must be accountability for these crimes, including by establishing OSLAP to collect and preserve evidence in 2021. Those mandates have been among the very few remaining sources of hope for victims and their families seeking justice. More recently, Sri Lankan governments have rejected the Council’s resolutions outright, while valorizing “war heroes.”

In a statement to the Council on October 9, 2024, the then newly elected Sri Lankan government pledged that “[d]omestic mechanisms and processes that deal with reconciliation, accountability and justice will be credible and independent,” and stated that, “[a]s directed by the President, investigative authorities have already announced redoubling of investigation into a number of clearly identified accountability cases that were pending from the past.” However, there is little if any observable progress – whether active investigations or prosecutions, much less convictions – towards these commitments. Little has changed since prosecutions in a number of emblematic cases were halted under President Gotabaya Rajapaksa (2019-2022). While there remains no apparent prospect of new investigations or prosecutions related to human rights violations or war crimes in the northeast, high-profile proceedings such as in the 2009 murder of Colombo-based newspaper editor Lasantha Wickrematunge, and the 2010 enforced disappearance of journalist Prageeth Ekneligoda, both remain stalled, although the police have collected extensive evidence of security forces involvement in both cases. Since his election, President Dissanayake has made no progress towards his campaign promise to make the prosecutors’ office politically independent. Neither has there been any apparent progress in a promised investigation of the 2019 Easter Sunday bombings, which killed over 250 people, although President Dissanayake has supported claims by whistleblowers and the Catholic church that there was a cover-up of state complicity in the attacks.

Long and bitter experience has caused victims, their families and communities, to lose faith in domestic institutions and processes that have sought to shield alleged perpetrators. Victims’ families have therefore engaged with OSLAP, despite the risk of government reprisals – a risk that continues under the current administration.[1]

Since his election, President Dissanayake has spoken of “reconciliation,” but despite subsequently securing a large parliamentary majority his government has not taken any steps that demonstrate a willingness to appropriately address conflict-era crimes. While a country that endured decades of civil war should embark upon a process of truth telling and reconciliation, this cannot replace the need for a simultaneous justice and accountability process.

Recommendations to the government:

Allow OSLAP access to Sri Lanka to undertake investigations and to meet with victims and witnesses of crimes under international law;
Promptly initiate the process to create the Directorate of Public Prosecutions, separate from the attorney general’s office, as pledged in the election manifesto of the President’s party;
Build on and utilize evidence gathered by previous domestic commissions of inquiry to pursue justice and accountability; and
Ensure fair and thorough investigations of major crimes including the 2019 Easter Sunday bombings, and of emblematic cases that were partially investigated and prosecuted between 2015-19 before those investigations were dropped under President Gotabaya Rajapaksa.
Enforced Disappearances and Mass Graves

Sri Lanka has one of the world’s highest rates of enforced disappearances, numbering in the tens of thousands, including those who disappeared during the 1980s Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) insurgency and during and after the civil war between the government and the LTTE. Previous governments have for decades refused to reveal the fate of the disappeared, or to prosecute those responsible. The government’s Office of Missing Persons (OMP) has made almost no apparent progress investigating cases and is widely distrusted by victims’ families.

At least 20 mass graves have been discovered throughout the island, often by accident. Earlier this year a fresh investigation began at Chemmani, near Jaffna, after construction workers uncovered human remains. By late July 2025 the remains of over 100 people, including children, suspected to have been victims of extra-judicial killings by the Sri Lankan army, had been discovered, but lawyers working on the case believe the site may contain many more. Sri Lankan authorities lack the technical capacity to rigorously investigate mass grave sites, and in the past a lack of political will has also undermined investigations, meaning that almost no victims’ remains have ever been identified or other evidence suitably preserved.

When he visited Chemmani and met families of the disappeared on June 25 2025, UN High Commissioner Türk said, “One thing that needs to be done is thorough investigations… by independent experts with forensic expertise who can bring out the truth.”

Recommendations to the government:

End the security forces’ harassment and intimidation of relatives of the disappeared who are campaigning for truth and justice;
Accept international technical assistance to investigate mass graves throughout the island, and identify remains including by DNA testing;

Reform or replace the OMP, to ensure a body that is credible in the eyes of victims’ families, and upholds their rights;
Use evidence gathered by the OMP and numerous commissions of inquiry to reveal the fate of the disappeared;

Allow robust and independent criminal investigations and prosecutions of people alleged to be responsible for enforced disappearances; and Invite the Working Group on Enforced Disappearances to visit Sri Lanka for the first time since 2019.
Surveillance and Intimidation of Families and Human Rights Defenders

In the north and east of Sri Lanka, the areas which were most affected by the civil war, police and intelligence agencies continue to monitor and intimidate the families of victims who are campaigning for justice, as well as human rights defenders and other members of civil society. Among other things, security agencies attempt to monitor victim families’ and activists’ engagement with OSLAP and with the Human Rights Council process. The NGO Secretariat, responsible for regulating civil society organizations, is part of the Ministry of Public Security, indicating that civil society is treated as a threat to public security.

“Every day the police are visiting my house,” a human rights defender in Batticaloa, Eastern Province, told Human Rights Watch in July. A woman in Trincomalee, who has shared extensive information with OSLAP, said counterterrorism police questioned her at her home for three hours in June. “The monitoring is tighter now,” she said. “Sometimes they [police] approach our children to get information about us. That is a type of threat.” According to another human rights defender in the northeast, “The Sri Lankan government wants to show that they allowed the [UN] High Commissioner [for Human Rights] into the country, but they never give a visa for OSLAP to collect the victims’ and witnesses statements.”

Recommendations to the government:

Direct security agencies to end the harassment and intimidation of victims’ families and human rights defenders who are campaigning for truth and justice, including threats and intimidation related to their engagement with UN human rights mechanisms.

Prevention of Terrorism Act

President Dissanayake’s election manifesto included a commitment to the “[a]bolition of all oppressive acts including the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) and ensuring civil rights of people in all parts of the country.” Previous governments have made similar commitments, including repeatedly to the Human Rights Council. However, since his election the authorities have continued to use the PTA to detain people, often from minority communities, without credible evidence to support terrorism allegations. Many Muslims who were arrested and detained under the PTA without evidence of wrongdoing in connection with the 2019 Easter Sunday bombings continue to face harassment from the security forces.

According to human rights defenders in the Northern and Eastern provinces, members of the police and intelligence agencies routinely warn that they will be accused of terrorism because of their work. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) found in September 2023 that “broad application of counter-terrorism rules” restricts civil society scrutiny of official corruption.

Recommendations to the government:

Immediately impose a full moratorium on the use of the PTA, and promptly implement the commitment to repeal it;
Release remaining long-term PTA prisoners who were convicted on the basis of confessions obtained under torture;
Ensure that any new counterterrorism legislation is compliant with international human rights standards; and
Direct security agencies to end the harassment and intimidation of people, mostly Tamils and Muslims, who were previously accused under the PTA and released due to lack of evidence.

Rights to Freedom of Religion or Belief

The campaign to redesignate Hindu temples as Buddhist sites gathered speed in 2020, when then-President Gotabaya Rajapaksa established the Presidential Task Force for Archaeological Heritage Management in the Eastern Province. Although the task force is no longer active, the policy has continued under President Dissanayake. Agencies, including the Department of Archaeology, Department of Forests, Department of Wildlife Conservation, the military, and the police, have taken part in a concerted strategy assailing the culture and practices of religious minorities. In many cases, private lands belonging to Hindu or Muslim communities have also been affected. These actions violate rights including to freedom of religion or belief, and make government rhetoric of postwar “reconciliation” appear hollow.

Recommendations to the government:

Direct state agencies to end the practices of encroaching upon or denying access to minority religious sites;
Ensure that the police and other state agencies respect court orders upholding the rights of minorities to religious sites; and
Ensure that minority communities’ rights to lands that they use for economic activities are not subject to discriminatory interference or obstruction by government agencies.

[1] For example, according to a report by the Jaffna-based Adayaalam Centre for Policy Research, “In February 2024, two leaders from the FOD {Families of the Disappeared]… travelled to Geneva for advocacy meetings, and faced targeted harassment. While they were away, the [plainclothes police] CID interrogated their family members, relatives, villagers and other FOD, inquiring about the whereabouts and purpose of their travels. Upon their return, they were interrogated and harassed. The activist mentioned above, in particular, has been summoned by both the [anti-terrorism] CTID and CID several times since then… [One] activist concerned told the CID, ‘[Y]ou are not looking for my husband who has forcibly disappeared but are always looking for me!’” Adayaalam Centre for Policy Research, A Phantom that is Real: persisting culture of surveillance and intimidation in the north-east, February 2025, https://adayaalam.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/A-Phantom-that-is-Real_-Persisting-Culture-or-Surveilance-and-Intimidation-in-the-NorthEast.pdf (accessed August 4, 2025).

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Russia still open for nuke cooperation with Sri Lanka, but won’t force: Ambassador

Russia remains open for cooperation with Sri Lanka in the development of nuclear energy, but will not impose anything in this regard since it is the sovereign right of the country, Russian Ambassador Levan Dzhagaryan said.

In response to a question during an interaction with the press, the Ambassador on Thursday said he is seeking a meeting with the Sri Lankan Energy Minister to discuss the proposal for the setting up of a nuclear power plant.

“The ball is in your court, as I always say,” he said.

Sri Lanka has proposed nuclear power in its energy mix, both under the previous and current governments. The previous government even proposed to build three nuclear plants of 900 megawatts.

Earlier, he put forward the idea during his visit last year, when he met the Energy Minister and senior Foreign Ministry officials of the last government after prior consultations with top executives of Rosatom, Russia’s state nuclear agency.

It was a concept that involved setting up a small nuclear power facility with an initial capacity of 110 megawatts—two units of 55 megawatts each—while leaving open the option of expanding to as many as six units, depending on demand.

Commenting on the Russia-Ukraine war, he said Russia appreciates Sri Lanka’s neutral position despite pressure from the Western powers. The Ambassador said that no force could defeat Russia in this war.

26th remembrance for 24 Tamils killed in AF bombing

A remembrance has taken place for the 26th year for 24 Tamil civilians who were killed in an Air Force bombing at Manduvil in Mullaitivu in September 1999.

Relatives offered flowers and lit lamps to photographs of the victims at the event on 15 September.

A Kfir aircraft dropped two bombs on a busy street around 10.25 am, killing 10 people on the spot and injuring more than 40 others.

Fourteen others succumbed to injuries later.

NESOHR and SNE have documented details of the dead that include two girls aged 12 and 15 years.

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ICJ urges Govt. to scrap Online Safety Act

The International Commission of Jurists (ICJ) has criticised the Online Safety Act, No. 09 of 2024, in response to a call for public input on amendments, urging the Government to repeal it or substantially revise it.

In its submission to the Government earlier this week the ICJ said revisions were needed to bring it into compliance with Sri Lanka’s international human rights law obligations, and to ensure that the revision process involves full and inclusive consultations with stakeholders.

The Act, which came into force in February 2024, is elaborated in a manner likely to undermine human rights guarantees and lead to further shrinking civic space. As the Act has begun to be implemented over the past year, these human rights risks have materialised in practice, the ICJ noted.

The first arrest under the Act occurred in February 2024, when a suspect was accused of conducting online smear campaigns against the Government under the alleged instructions of a politician. Since then, public authorities and parliamentarians have invoked the Act to accuse individuals of spreading vaguely defined and overly broad “prohibited statements.”

In its submission, the ICJ emphasised that several provisions of the Act threaten the enjoyment of rights to freedom of expression, opinion, and information guaranteed under Article 14(1)(a) of the Constitution of Sri Lanka and Article 19 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), to which Sri Lanka is a party.

Key concerns include: the overly broad powers of the Online Safety Commission and appointed “experts”; vague and overbroad offences; disproportionate sanctions and punishments; lack of adequate judicial oversight; and disproportionate impact on transgender and gender-diverse persons.

Sri Lanka’s Ministry of Public Security and Parliamentary Affairs has appointed a committee to review the Act and consider amendments, which were published in the Gazette on 31 July 2024.

According to the Minister of Public Security, the committee is chaired by the Solicitor General and includes representatives from the Attorney General’s Department, the Ministries of Justice, Public Security, and Media, as well as a Senior Deputy Inspector General of Police from the Criminal Investigation Department.

France starting talks with Sri Lanka to resume projects after default ends

Talks are starting on resuming stalled projects and starting fresh ones, on the policy priorities of Sri Lanka’s new government, a top official of the French devel agency, Agence Française de Développement (AFD) said.

Sri Lanka had 426 million dollars of bilateral loans from France of which 138 million dollars were in arrears as of March 2025 and as well as unpaid interest.

A June debt bulletin said it was turned into 478 million dollars of loans.

The restructuring agreements between France and Sri Lanka were signed in August.

“So, the discussions of where we are heading to is now starting, with the Sri Lankan government on two sides,” Cyrille Bellier, Head of the Department Europe, Middle East and Asia told reporters in Paris.

“How we can re-engage the projects that have been stopped and for which the Sri Lankan government decided that they were still a priority.”

Projects which are no longer a priority can be cancelled he said.

“And then in which directions we are going to go with the Sri Lankan government, public companies, public banks, private banks, etc,” Bellier said.

“So this is a very active discussion at the moment on the future of our activity in the country.”

AFD’s private sector arm Proparco, finances and banks for on-lending to small and medium businesses as well as directly financing identified private firms of a sufficient size and track record.

AFD has a number of projects in Sri Lanka including in rural dairy, air quality management, geographical indicators for tea and renewable energy support for the Ceylon Electricity Board.

France was co-chair of the Sri Lanka’s debt restructuring efforts through the Paris Club.

The AFD, currently has an active portfolio of around 50 billion euros of which around a third has been committed to the Indo-Pacific area, Executive Director of AFD operations Philippe Orliange said.

Supporting resilience to climate change, preserving biodiversity and energy transition to reduce carbon emissions and helping countries reach sustainable development goals, are key focus areas of the French public lender.

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Katchatheevu tourism: Govt. to consult stakeholders

The recent visit to Katchatheevu Island in the northern territorial waters by President Anura Kumara Dissanayake during an official visit to Jaffna has swung the regional spotlight back on a matter which has been until now a seasonal bilateral irritant that both Governments across the Palk Strait have often brushed off.

The unprecedented move by a Sri Lankan Head of State ignited the imagination of some segments of the Indian domestic media landscape and State political voices.

When asked if the visit by President Dissanayake to Katchatheevu and the proposed tourism project which is being considered would have an impact on Indo-Lanka relations, Ministry of Foreign Affairs Spokesperson Thushara Rodrigo said: “Sri Lanka and India are strong democracies, and our relationship will not be strained by discussions of development in Katchatheevu.”

He explained that the two nations had built their partnership on deep foundations of respect and cooperation and that these values would guide them as they navigated sensitive issues related to the island, adding that Sri Lanka respected religious sensitivities and the rule of law and that both countries must act on those principles to preserve their democracies.

Rodrigo also dismissed concerns that Dissanayake’s recent visit to Katchatheevu would inflame relations with New Delhi. He described the visit as a symbolic reaffirmation of Sri Lanka’s sovereignty and stressed that it would not undermine the goodwill and mutual understanding that existed between the two countries. He further emphasised that the sanctity of religious spaces such as St. Anthony’s Church must be safeguarded, but that such issues should not be conflated with geopolitical disputes.

A small island with significance

The island of Katchatheevu, which lies in the Palk Strait between India and Sri Lanka, has long been a point of political contention. Though it measures only 285 acres, it occupies an outsized place in the narratives of sovereignty, religious devotion, and livelihood that stretch across the strait. Its status was formally settled in the 1970s through bilateral agreements in which India recognised Sri Lanka’s sovereignty, but in Tamil Nadu the issue has remained politically potent for decades.

The 1974 Indo-Sri Lanka Maritime Agreement handed sovereignty of Katchatheevu to Sri Lanka while allowing Indian fishermen and pilgrims to visit without visas. This agreement, however, did not extend fishing rights to Indian vessels, a fact that became more explicit in the 1976 accord, which prohibited Indian fishermen from Sri Lankan waters. While the agreements remain legally binding, Tamil Nadu politicians have repeatedly argued that India ceded the island without proper consultation and have called for its retrieval. Petitions to this effect remain before the Indian Supreme Court.

Dissanayake’s visit marked the first time a Sri Lankan Head of State had travelled to Katchatheevu, and it was widely seen as a strong and symbolic gesture at a time when Tamil Nadu politicians, including actor-turned-politician Vijay, have revived their calls for the island’s ‘return.’

Development plans

At the same time, the Government is conducting a feasibility study for a tourism development project in the Northern Province. The plan aims to link Katchatheevu with Neduntheevu, also known as Delft Island, and to encourage greater religious tourism as according to Fisheries, Aquatic and Ocean Resources Minister Ramalingam Chandrasekar.

Rodrigo nevertheless insisted that no development would proceed until environmental, social and religious impact assessments were completed.

Ministry of Urban Development, Construction, and Housing Secretary Ranjith Ariyaratne further noted that there had been much speculation but little concrete movement. “There has merely been conjecture on proposed development work, but no work has actually begun. It would fall under the purview of the Urban Development Authority (UDA), but I can confirm that no such project has commenced, and no such order has come from the office of the President,” he said. His clarification underscored that the project remained in the study phase and was not yet a matter of execution.

Concerns of the Catholic community

The proposal has nevertheless sparked debate, particularly among the Catholic community in northern Sri Lanka, about whether such projects might alter the sanctity of St. Anthony’s Church, which has been a sacred pilgrimage site for generations.

Deputy Minister of Buddha Sasana, Religious and Cultural Affairs Gamagedara Dissanayake emphasised that these concerns were being taken seriously. “The Government will try to iron out the concerns of the Catholic community. A development project that does not complement the religious sanctity of the location is without purpose,” he said. “We must and will respect the views of all worshippers. The Government has no intention of forcibly evicting anyone or proceeding with construction that would breach the sanctity of the site.”

He added that while protests were not unusual in relation to sensitive projects, the Presidential Secretariat was directly overseeing the initiative and had instructed that all reasonable demands made by stakeholders had to be considered during the planning and implementation stages.

Attempts to elicit a response from Roman Catholic Bishop of Jaffna, Right Reverend Dr. Justin Bernard Gnanapragasam, did not yield positive results.

Pilgrimage and security

The church is the focal point of the annual feast that brings thousands of pilgrims from both Sri Lanka and India. Rodrigo explained that Indian devotees attended under special provisions of the 1974 agreement. They do not require visas, but a list of pilgrims and vessels must be submitted in advance to Sri Lankan authorities. He noted that the practice resembled the way Sri Lankan Buddhists travelled to religious sites in India and that it was conducted within the framework of the law.

Sri Lanka Navy Spokesperson Commander Buddhika Sampath, elaborating on the entry process, said pilgrims must submit their personal details, along with boat numbers, before making the journey. These details are distributed to the District Secretary of Jaffna, the Navy, the Coast Guard, Immigration, and other agencies. On arrival, pilgrims are checked by Customs, Immigration, Police, and the Coast Guard. After the festival, officials ensure that all participants return to India.

“They cannot travel to the Sri Lankan mainland,” he emphasised. “The Navy and Coast Guard deploy assets to ensure no one penetrates into our territory. Some security measures cannot be revealed, but we have taken all necessary precautions.”

Sampath also confirmed that there were no permanent Government institutions on Katchatheevu. For the festival, temporary infrastructure is brought to the island, set up for the event, and then dismantled. “For security purposes, however, we have a continuous deployment on the island,” he said. “It is not isolated or abandoned, but we do not have permanent buildings there.”

For Sri Lankan fishermen in the north, the dispute over Katchatheevu is intertwined with the frequent challenge of Indian trawlers crossing into Sri Lankan waters. They accuse Indian boats of using bottom trawling, a destructive method banned in Sri Lanka because of its ecological damage. These incursions often lead to arrests and confiscations, fuelling anger among local communities who see their livelihoods threatened.

In Tamil Nadu, fishermen argue that their traditional fishing grounds were lost when India recognised Sri Lanka’s claim to the island. While New Delhi has proposed shifting them to deep-sea fishing, progress has been slow. The result is a persistent cycle of arrests, protests, and political demands that continue to resonate on both sides of the Palk Strait.

Attempts to contact Chandrasekar on the matter failed, with the Minister providing excuses each time he answered the phone.

The economic dimension

Amid this complex mix of politics, diplomacy, religion, and livelihoods, analysts have urged Colombo to adopt a broader view.

Centre for Policy Alternatives Executive Director Dr. Paikiasothy Saravanamuttu believes that the Katchatheevu issue is primarily a State-level political rallying point in Tamil Nadu rather than a matter of contention between the Governments of India and Sri Lanka. “There is a clear understanding that the island belongs to Sri Lanka,” he said. “I do not believe it will become a major point of contention.”

He acknowledged that presidential statements and initiatives could have a ripple effect but said they were unlikely to provoke a serious rift with India. More importantly, he argued, Sri Lanka should see Katchatheevu in terms of economic opportunity.

“India is projected to be one of the world’s fastest-growing economies. Tamil Nadu, in particular, is on track to have a trillion-dollar economy by 2030. Sri Lanka’s northern and eastern regions would be foolish to turn their backs on this economic orbit,” he explained. “Any local issues must be considered against the backdrop of this emerging economic power and prosperity.”

Balancing sovereignty, faith, and development

Dr. Saravanamuttu also addressed the concerns of the Catholic community about the sanctity of St. Anthony’s Church. He suggested that compromise was possible, with both religious devotion and development being respected.

“I believe an agreement can be reached where the sanctity of the region is observed while still looking after people’s livelihoods and development. At the end of the day, religion must serve the betterment of the people, and development is not sacrilegious,” he said.

The Katchatheevu debate thus encompasses multiple layers. For the Sri Lankan Government, the challenge is to reaffirm sovereignty, respect religious sensitivities, and manage cross-strait tensions, all while exploring opportunities for tourism and economic growth. For India, the issue remains a balancing act between the sentiments of Tamil Nadu’s electorate and the strategic realities of its partnership with Colombo. And for the people of the north, the stakes are immediate, involving livelihoods, faith, and the hope of development.

Whether Katchatheevu becomes a point of conflict or cooperation in the future will depend on how effectively these interests are balanced.