Tamil Affairs

Tamil News

Latest news from and about the homeland

This week, the number of skeletal remains uncovered at Chemmani reached a stark record of 387. With that figure, a patch of earth on the edge of Jaffna town became the largest mass grave ever uncovered on the island, surpassing the 376 remains recovered at Mannar. Recent days alone have seen the bodies of several children exhumed, alongside beads and bangles. These are the contents of the…

Mahinda to brief government advisors on UNHRC

Sri Lankan president Mahinda Rajapaksa will, tomorrow, brief Chief Buddhist prelates from the Maha Sangha, in an attempt to satisfy a request by the Buddhist institution to outline the situation at the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC).

The Maha Sangha, in a letter addressed to the president last week, drawing upon the Buddhist institution’s long history of assisting rulers of Sri Lanka to combat efforts by western and power-greedy groups to split the country, expressed the need to be fully briefed on happenings in Geneva.

We will not tolerate foreign interference – Mahinda Rajapaksa

Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa has accused western countries of being pushed by the Tamil diaspora to take the UNHRC resolution forward, saying that Sri Lanka will not tolerate foreign interference.

“Madam (Navi) Pillay (UNHRC chief), U.S., U.K., all are moved against us by the Tamil diaspora,” he said at an election rally in Kaluthara.

“We are being punished for ending terrorism. We did not fight Tamils, we only fought terrorism,
“We will not tolerate any foreign interference and that will be the message,” he said.

SL says William Hague ignorant of ground realities – Sunday Island

The Sunday Island has quoted a “senior government source” as saying that the British Foreign Secretary William Hague is ignorant of ground realities, after he suggested that an international tribunal should be set up.

The official said that any such move would also have to examine India for supporting “terrorism” in the 1980s and the government would raise India’s accountability during the conflict.

US expresses concern over intensifying pressure on civil society and rights activists

Reiterating its commitment to pursuing a resolution on Sri Lanka at the UN Human Rights Council this month, the Unite Stated said it was "concerned by intensifying pressure on Sri Lankan civil society and human rights activists" and that the "detentions and the continued harassment of those who support the quest for reconciliation and accountability send a chilling effect" across Sri Lanka's civil society.

In a statement released Friday, the State Department said,
"The United States is concerned by intensifying pressure on Sri Lankan civil society and human rights activists. We are especially concerned by the detention of well-known human rights defenders Ruki Fernando and Father Praveen Mahesan after they made inquiries regarding the arrest of another activist. While it is encouraging that Mr. Fernando and Father Mahesan have since been released, they continue to face harassment by security forces. We are also aware of reports that additional human rights groups are being targeted for investigation by security forces.

Tamils demonstrate in Chavakacheri against land grabs


Carrying banners and placards, residents of Uthaya Sooriyan village protested in Chavakacheri against land grabs on Friday morning, reports Uthayan.

Over 300 Tamil youths interrogated by military in Vaddukoddai - Uthayan

Over 300 Tamil youths in the Vaddukoddai area were rounded up last night and interrogated by Sri Lankan military personnel reports the Uthayan.

According to the paper, over 600 troops arrived late on Friday night, and rounded up the Tamil young men and women before taking them to the Vaddukoddai police station for questioning.

The military officers claimed the reason for the mass interrogation was that the alleged criminal, Gopi, was now hiding in that area, said residents.

Video of maltreatment of female recruits 'stage-managed' claims army

Commenting on a video that emerged earlier this week depicting the maltreatment of female army recruits by male officers, the Sri Lankan Army said that the video had be "stage-managed" in order to "tarnish and discredit the Army".

In a statement issued this weekend the Sri Lankan military said,

MDMK pledges to lift ban on LTTE and work for Eelam referendum

The Marumalarchi Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (MDMK) party in Tamil Nadu, outlined in their new manifesto, released today, that they would lift the ban on the Liberation Tamil Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), should they be voted into power.

Adding further issues relating to Eelam Tamils in the manifesto, the MDMK also pledged to work towards holding a referendum to create a state, Eelam, as a political solution for Tamils in Sri Lanka.

Human Rights chief's focus on Sri Lanka shows prejudice, says External Affairs Ministry

The United Nations Human Rights Commissioner, Navi Pillay's, focus on atrocities committed in Sri Lanka, showed that she was prejudiced, a Sri Lankan External Affairs Ministry official told the Island.

The Island also alleged that Navi Pillay, in a recent meeting with the South Korean Foreign Minister, Yun Byung-se, equated Sri Lanka with North Korea.

New report finds torture and sexual violence against Tamils in Sri Lanka increasing

00:52 GMT



A report released today on Sri Lanka  - An Unfinished War: Torture and Sexual Violence in Sri Lanka, 2009 - 2014 - concludes that
"abduction, arbitrary detention, torture, rape and sexual violence has increased in the post-war period" against Tamil people by Sri Lankan security forces and there was "a prima facie case of post-war crimes against humanity by the Sri Lankan security forces, with respect to (a) torture and (b) rape and sexual violence."

Describing the violations carried out by the Sri Lankan security forces as "widespread and systematic", the report also concluded that the violations "occur in a manner that indicates a coordinated, systematic plan approved by the highest levels of government."

Outlining the Sri Lankan government's failure to deliver justice, the authors
called for an independent international inquiry at the UNHRC, and called upon the UN Security Council "to refer this report, which indicates reasonable grounds to believe that crimes against humanity are occurring in Sri Lanka to the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court for further action against those who bear the greatest responsibility". As an alternative, the authors urged the ICC Prosecutor to "explore the cases of individuals who bear the greatest responsibility and who hold a nationality of a State Party to the Rome Statute."

See full report here.

Produced by human rights lawyer and co-author of the UN Panel of Experts report on mass atrocities in Sri Lanka, Yasmin Sooka, as well as the UK Bar Human Rights Committee of England and Wales (BHRC) and the International Truth & Justice Project, Sri Lanka, the report draws on testimonies, medical examinations and psychiatric assessments from 40 victims - Tamil men and women who had sought asylum in the UK.