Tamil Affairs

Tamil News

Latest news from and about the homeland

""
The Association for Relatives of the Enforced Disappeared in the North-East (ARED) has appealed to the United Nations to ensure an international investigation into enforced disappearances and mass graves across the Tamil homeland, including the ongoing excavations at Chemmani, where more than 380 human skeletal remains have been uncovered. In a letter dated 19 June 2026, the association called…

TNPF calls on church to 'preserve sanctity of the Maaveerar month'

The Tamil National People’s Front (TNPF) urged the Catholic Church to reverse its call to commemorate between November 21 to 27 all those who died in the war of liberation - including civilians, during a week usually reserved for remembering the sacrifices of Tamil liberation fighters.

International Law Commission rejects Mohan Peiris' bid for election

The International Law Commission (ILC) rejected Sri Lanka's nomination, Mohan Peiris, following a campaign calling on the UN General Assembly (UNGA) to turn down his nomination. 

'Reject Mohan Peiris' 

Former US Envoy urges international pressure to end religious persecution in Sri Lanka

Writing in The Diplomat, former US for religious minorities during both the Obama and Trump administrations, Knox Thames has urged for international pressure and sanctions on Sri Lanka to force a change in the government's policy of religious persecution against Hindus, Christians, and Muslims.

Catholic leaders warn of Sinhala colonisation in Tamil homeland

The Catholic leadership in the North-East warned that the Sri Lankan government was in the midst of a “concerted effort to change the demography of the Tamil majority Trincomalee, Mullaitivu and Mannar districts by settling Sinhalese from other areas,” according to a report in JDS Lanka.

The religious leaders raised the concern whilst meeting with Switzerland’s ambassador to Sri Lanka Dominik Furgler in Jaffna on Wednesday.

‘I can do that if I want to’ - Rajapaksa warns of military rule

Sri Lanka’s war crimes accused president Gotabaya Rajapaksa, nicknamed ‘The Terminator’, warned that he had the ability to enforce “a military system” on the island if he wanted to.

Speaking to an audience at Mandaduwa Stadium last week, Rajapaksa hit back at the supposed two groups that have criticised him.

“One group is the ones who have no idea about the last two years,” he said “They think that these last two years are ordinary years.”

Returning a favour? Rajapaksa explains why a Sinhala Buddhist monk was appointed university chancellor

File photograph: Rajapaksa with the monk earlier this year.

Sri Lanka’s president Gotabaya Rajapaksa justified his recent controversial appointment of a Sinhala Buddhist monk as Chancellor of the University of Colombo, by stating that the monk had “helped this government to come into power”.

Sri Lanka’s finance minister presents budget amidst economic crisis and soaring defence spending

Sri Lanka’s finance minister presented the 2022 budget in Parliament today with a bombastic speech that praised the ruling regime and continued with the government's increased focus on military spending and 'national security'.

Basil Rajapaksa, a brother of both president Gotabaya Rajapaksa and prime minister Mahinda Rajapaksa, was full of praise for his siblings.

Rajapaksa opens new ‘National Defence College’ as militarisation rumbles on

Sri Lanka’s president Gotabaya Rajapaksa was the chief guest at a ceremony to open a new “National Defence College” in Colombo this week, as the military continues its expansion on the island.

Rajapaksa, who stands accused of war crimes, was flanked by several senior military officers who also stand accused of rights abuses, as they sang the Sri Lankan national anthem.

Amidst protests and commemorations, Sri Lanka introduces new restrictions

The Sri Lankan government announced new legislation that will restrict the number of people allowed to attend public gatherings, supposedly due to the risk of coronavirus transmission, as protests continued across the island and Tamils in the North-East prepared to commemorate Maaveerar Naal.

The new legislation, issued via extraordinary gazette this week, states that the director-general of health services may “from time to time” determine the number of permitted participants, location, setting and structure of any “gathering, activity event or similar place of meeting”.