Tamil Affairs

Tamil News

Latest news from and about the homeland

A controversial cricket stadium and "sports city" promised for Jaffna, launched with presidential fanfare less than a year ago, is being scaled back to a modest cricket ground after Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) admitted it lacks the funds to deliver it. Speaking at a media briefing on Thursday, the SLC honorary secretary, Prakash Schaffter, said the project was under review and its scope being…

Sri Lanka's president found to be paying for promotion on social media

Sri Lanka’s president Maithripala Sirisena has been using public funds to boost his image via social media, reports Colombo Telegraph.

A right to information request has been field by members of civil society to ascertain the total amount of expenditure.

The issue was raised after Sirisena’s Facebook page was found to be using Facebook’s paid promotion service.

 

 

UN Human Rights Chief orders probe into intimidation of Tamil activists at UNHRC

UN Human Rights Commissioner, Zeid Raad Al Hussein, expressed his concern regarding the reports of intimidation against Tamil activists in Geneva.

“Assistant Secretary-General Andrew Gilmour, the system-wide coordinator for action on reprisals, will be looking into this, and I trust, Mr President, you will also give these cases close attention,” he said.

TNA welcomes UNHRC resolution, calls on international community to ensure implementation of 30/1

The Tamil National Alliance (TNA) welcomed the adoption of UN Human Rights Council resolution 34/L 1, which grants Sri Lanka two more years to implement the unmet actions outlined in resolution 30/1 from October 2015.

“We urge the Government of Sri Lanka to honor its commitment with regard to these resolutions and implement the same in letter and spirit. In keeping with its commitments, we also urge the government to sincerely address the issues of land release, the detention of Tamil political prisoners, grievances of the families of missing persons, and the enactment of constitutional reforms,” TNA statement read.

Sri Lanka's justice minister says war crimes inquiry will harm reconciliation

Sri Lanka's justice minister, Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe criticised the international community for making what he described as 'unrealistic demands' of Sri Lanka, the Daily Mirror reported. 

Speaking at a debate in parliament on Thursday, Mr Rajapakshe said investigating war crimes whilst promoting reconciliation was "not realistic at all."

"Reconciliation and probing crimes which took place during the war is like railway tracks which never get together. Probing war time crimes will actually create tension among ethnic groups," he added. 

Indian government feels anguish over Sri Lanka's war crimes says minister


The Indian government feels anguish and pain over the war crimes committed by Sri Lanka's military against Tamil civilians, the External Affairs Minister, Sushma Swaraj was quoted by The Hindu as saying on Friday. 

“The anguish with which the members have raised the issue [of crimes committed during the war of 2009], the government associates itself with the same pain,” Ms Swaraj was quoted by the paper as saying. 

Zeid: Sri Lanka's unwillingness to investigate reinforces need for hybrid court

The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights on Wednesday criticised what he described as Sri Lanka's "consistent failure to effectively investigate, prosecute and punish serious crimes" arguing that such failure "appears to reflect a broader reluctance or fear to take action against members of the security forces". 

Addressing the UN Human Rights Council, Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein highlighted a number of areas on which Sri Lanka had failed to take any or adequate action on. 

Gotabhaya blames Fonseka for Sri Lanka death squads

The former Sri Lankan defence minister, Gotabhaya Rajapaksa, who was named by the country's Criminal Investigation Department as running death squads in a report submitted to a Magistrate's Court this week, sought to deflect responsibility to the former army commander, Sarath Fonseka. 

“He [Fonseka] was the army commander at that time," Mr Rajapaksa told The Hindu on Tuesday.

UNHRC adopts Sri Lanka resolution: fully implement 30/1 resolution by 2019

The UN Human Rights Council on Thursday adopted a resolution on promoting reconciliation, accountability and human rights in Sri Lanka without a vote, granting the country two more years to implement the actions set out in resolution 30/1 which was adopted in October 2015. 

This session's resolution was sponsored by Sri Lanka, as well as Australia, Canada, Germany, Israel, Japan, Montenegro, Norway, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, UK and the US. 

We demand justice mechanism with international judges - Tamils protest across North-East

Protests were held in various locations across the North-East last Thursday demanding a justice mechanism with international judges.

No compromise on foreign judges says Sumanthiran

The spokesperson for the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) reiterated the party's view that an justice mechanism examining mass atrocities committed in Sri Lanka must include international judges. 

"There is no compromise on the view that an investigation on war crimes and human rights violations in Sri Lanka's war must include international judges as a necessity," the TNA said in a statement published on its website on Friday. 

"The Tamil National Alliance has pointed out that there is no constituitional barrier to conducting an investigation which includes international judges," he added.