Tamil Affairs

Tamil News

Latest news from and about the homeland

Marking the 16th anniversary of the Mullivaikkal massacre, Tamil organisations in the Netherlands held a memorial event at Dam Square in Amsterdam, on 18 May 2025, in remembrance of the tens of thousands of Tamil killed during the 2009 genocide. The event was jointly organised by the Netherlands Tamil Coordination Committee and Tamil Youth Organisation. A floral tribute ceremony, following…

Fragile reconciliation process at jeopardy in Sri Lanka warn The Elders

The Elders, in a statement released today, said that President Sirisena’s action put the “fragile reconciliation process at jeopardy and called on Sirisena to stand on his “past commitments to deliver peace, justice and reconciliation to his people.”

The acting Chair of the Elders and former Prime Minister of Norway, Gro Harlem Brundtland said,

Media rights organisations call on Sri Lanka to ensure safety of journalists and independence of media institutions

Reporters Without Borders (RSF) called on Sri Lankan authorities to respect journalists’ safety whilst condemning the take over of Sri Lanka’s press houses in a statement released this week.

See full statement here.

The International Federation of Journalists expressed also concern about the harassment of journalists and state media institutions following the appointment of Mahinda Rajapaksa as prime minister.

Sri Lankan military picks a side

After the heads of the three branches of the Sri Lankan armed forces met with Mahinda Rajapaksa this weekend, Sri Lankan military websites came out in support of the man they claim is the current prime minister.

Police interrogate Maaveerar Naal event organisers and journalist, threaten arrest

2017 Theeruvil Maaveerar Naal preparations

A Jaffna based journalist and members of a Maaveerar Naal organising committee, who organised the event last year in Theeruvil have been interrogated by Sri Lankan police and warned against organising an event this year. 

The committee members and jouranalist were summoned to the Valvettithurai police station on Tuesday, where they were interrogated for over 4 hours over the organisation of the event. 

Threat of international sanctions required to protect at risk ethnic groups in Sri Lanka - ICG

In a damning situational update on Sri Lanka, the International Crisis Group has recommended military and economic sanctions to mitigate against tangible risks faced by Rajapaksa dissenters and ethnic communities in Sri Lanka.

Stressing the importance of concerted and decisive action, the International Crisis Group statement called for the international community to make clear that military cooperation, economic development funding and trade concessions would be “reconsidered” or “immediately suspended” in response to Rajapaksa’s rise to power.

The statement, released on Tuesday, also called for a renewed and updated UN Human Rights Council resolution on Sri Lanka due its failure to adhere to commitments of providing accountability and justice for mass atrocities and war crimes.

Sirisena vows he'd have to be killed before any North-East merger or federalism

Sri Lanka's president, Maithripala Sirisena reiterated his absolute refusal to allow a merger of the North-East or a federal Tamil state saying he would have to be killed before he would allow either of the two. 

Speaking to the SLFP electoral organisers at a meeting in Colombo yesterday, Sirisena said that "some groups had been adamant about the merger of the North and East and the formation of a federal state". 

The two demands had been pushed by Tamil voters and were key parts of the Tamil National Alliance's previous election manifestoes. 

Further international condemnation of Mahinda Rajapaksa's appointment

The International Democrat Union demanded that Sri Lanka reconvenes parliament, calling the actions of Sirisena “disgraceful.”

In a statement released this week, IDU chairman and former Canadian prime minister Stephen Harper said,

Speaker allocates PM's chair to Rajapaksa as parliament set to reconvene Nov 5

The Speaker has agreed to allocate the premier's chair to the former president Mahinda Rajapaksa, who was appointed as prime minister on Friday after the surprise sacking of Ranil Wickremesinghe, which has left the country in a state of political crisis with parliament prorogued by the president. 

The Speaker's spokesperson said the chair allocation was part of the gazette notification regarding the appointment of Rajapaksa. 

Rajapaksa today announced that the president has decided to reconvene parliament on November 5. 

Since the appointment of Rajapaksa a number of UNP MPs have jumped ship and pledged support to the former president. 

ICJ calls upon Sri Lanka to uphold commitments to human rights accountability

The International Commission of Jurists (ICJ) joined the chorus of growing international voices concerned over the appointment of Mahinda Rajapaksa as prime minister of Sri Lanka and called on the government to comply with a UN resolution.

“The Human Rights Council will be watching closely to assess whether Sri Lanka is in breach of its commitments,” said Frederick Rawski, the Asia Pacific Director for the ICJ.

“Any serious threat to progress on human rights accountability will compel the establishment of an independent accountability mechanism”.

Muslims in Jaffna mark 28 years since expulsion

Photograph: @Garikaalan

Muslims in Jaffna town hung black flags to mark 28 years since they were expelled from the peninsula by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).

The LTTE remained in control of Jaffna for 5 years after the expulsion, until the Sri Lankan government captured the town in 1995.

Despite Sri Lanka's control of Jaffna for over 20 years, thousands of Muslims remain displaced today. Of the 20,000 Muslim families that were originally displaced from the district, only small fractions have managed to return. Over 14,000 Muslim families were displaced from the Northern Province in total.  

In subsequent years the LTTE expressed regret for the events of 1990.