Monday, February 19, 2007

Sri Lanka 's Jaffna University reopens after six months

Associated Press, Mon February 19, 2007 03:33 EST . - - JAFFNA, Sri Lanka - (AP) Sri Lanka's Jaffna University reopened Monday, authorities said, after being closed in August following renewed fighting in the northeastern region between the military and separatist rebels. The university, famed as one of the best educational institutions in Sri Lanka, has about 5,000 students and six faculties. The university was opened in 1974.

It was shut down after fighting broke out between the separatist Tamil Tiger rebels and the military on Aug, 11. After the clashes, the road to Jaffna from the south was closed by the government, saying the rebels were using it to transport weapons and fighters and taxing traders.

The university was subsequently shut down. The A-9 road remains closed, but supplies have resumed to Jaffna, the traditional homeland of the ethnic minority Tamils, by sea.

The Tamil Tigers have been fighting since 1983 to establish an independent homeland for Tamils following decades of discrimination by the Sinhalese-dominated government

SRI LANKA: Newsprint Shortage Adds to Curbs on Media

ipsnews.net, February 19, 2007. COLOMBO, Feb 19 (IPS) - Residents of the embattled northern Sri Lankan town of Jaffna who get to see the ‘Uthayan’ newspaper often get a copy that is thumb-worn and soiled from having passed through the hands of many avid readers.

Every single copy of this Tamil-language daily published in Jaffna, where the demand and the thirst for news has soared in the past year, is read by more people per copy than the average in most countries.

"Some 30 to 40 residents read each copy which is passed from house to house down a street and then returned to its original owner," says V. Kanamylnathan, the long-standing editor of the newspaper that is struggling to cope with an unlikely opponent -- an acute shortage of newsprint

Srilankans executed in Saudi

bbc, February 19. The Saudi Arabian interior ministry says four Sri Lankans convicted of armed robbery have been beheaded by the sword in the capital Riyadh. A statement published by the official SPA news agency named the four as Victor Corea, Ranjith de Silva, Sanath Pushpakumara and Sharmal Sangeeth Kumara.

It said they had been executed for robbing a number of businesses at gunpoint.

Executions are usually carried out in public in conservative Saudi Arabia, which applies a strict form of Sharia, or Islamic law. The Saudi government has announced at least fifteen executions so far this year.