Tamil Affairs

Tamil News

Latest news from and about the homeland

A newly published study has identified the earliest scientifically confirmed evidence of prehistoric human settlement on Velanai Island in the Jaffna Peninsula, dating back around 3,460 years and overturning an erroneous long-held Sri Lankan assumption that the region was largely uninhabited until much later. The study, published in the Journal of Island and Coastal Archaeology and led by…

Rajapaksa vows to send in the troops over ‘garbage tea’

Sri Lankan president Gotabaya Rajapaksa vowed to send in troops from the notorious Special Task Force if tea plantations continued to produce “garbage tea”, in a warning to factory owners on the island.

Speaking to factory owners last week, the war crimes accused head of state said there had been reports of “instances of adulterating the quality tea by mixing sugar, glucose, sodium bicarbonate and ferrous sulphate”.

Modi and Rajapaksa to discuss 'defence and security' with Sri Lanka in virtual summit

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Sri Lankan Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa to meet virtually for a bilateral summit on 26 September, for the first time since the Rajapaksa regime’s parliamentary election victory last month, where defence, security and other “international issues of mutual interest” are to be discussed.

Authoritarianism is on the rise in Sri Lanka – Abarna Selvarajah and Brannavy Jeyasundaram

Writing in Jacobin, Abarna Selvarajah and Brannavy Jeyasundara highlight the growing authoritarianism in Sri Lanka as President Gotabaya Rajapaksa plans to bring forwards a 20th amendment to the constitution which will “expands the role of the presidential office and scales back constitutional checks and balances on executive powers”.

‘Pension and ambassador post’ offered in exchange for Easter Sunday attack blame 

Sri Lanka’s former president Maithripala Sirisena is alleged to have offered a senior police chief a “pension and a position as an ambassador in any country he wished to serve,” if he accepted blame for a series of security lapses that led to the Easter Sunday bombings according to the former Defense Secretary Hemasiri Fernando, as controversy continued at a President Commission looking into the attacks.

 Ancient Pandyan coins unearthed in Mannar

A trove of one thousand nine hundred and four coins was unearthed in Mannar on the 18 September.

The discovery was made as a landowner dug foundations for the construction of a house. The coins bore the distinctive symbol of the fish and sword which are attributed to the Pandya dynasty.

Demands for a public referendum on 20th Amendment

Sri Lankan lawyer, Indika Gallage, has filed a petition with the Supreme Court challenging the draft of the 20th Amendment to the constitution and requesting a public referendum on the bill.

This petition comes, on Tuesday, after the amendment was presented in parliament for a first reading. It argues that the draft amendment violates basic rights enshrined in the Constitution. If passed by the Supreme Court, the public referendum would be required in addition to the two-thirds majority in parliament.

Tamil MP commemorates Manmunai massacre amidst threats

Threats posed by Sri Lanka’s intelligence forces prevented the remembrance of the Manmunai massacre which took place on September 21, 1990, in which 18 Tamil civilians were killed by the Sri Lankan Army and Muslim Home Guards in Puthukudiyiruppu in Manmunai North, Batticaloa.

The ‘United Nations we need’ will not interfere in domestic affairs – Sri Lankan President

Speaking at a high-level meeting of the UN General Assembly, marking the 75th anniversary of the UN, Sri Lankan President, Gotabaya Rajapaksa, claimed to reaffirm commitments to the organisation whilst simultaneously insisting on need importance of “the sovereign equality of States, respect for territorial integrity and non-interference in their domestic affairs”.

Rajapaksa further stated that the UN works best “when no country is held hostage to the interests of a few”.

25 years on - Remembering the Nagarkovil bombings

Today marks the 25th anniversary of the Nagarkovil massacre, where the Sri Lankan air force bombed a school in Jaffna killing dozens of Tamil schoolchildren.

They bombed my school' - An eyewitness account of the Nagarkovil massacre

I was 11 years old. It was just after lunch on Friday the 22nd of September 1995. That’s when we heard a large aircraft circling our village. The Sri Lankan Air Force dropped the first bomb nearby the school. At this point we were surrounded by large smoke, followed by a bang. There were several bombs dropped over the school and other parts of the village.

I heard my friends screaming and running and then all of a sudden the whole place was chaotic. All the students ran in all directions. I can still see it.