Tamil Affairs

Tamil News

Latest news from and about the homeland

Sri Lankan military involvement in civilian life across the Tamil homeland has continued this week, with the armed forces continuing to entrench themselves in events across the North-East. Pottuvil, Amparai: Military embedded in civilian and ecological spaces On 26 April 2025, the Sri Lankan Navy partnered with the Rotaract Informatics Institute of Technology to plant 1,000 mangrove plants at…

Fifth anniversary of Easter bombings commemorated across the North-East

Residents in Kalmunai staged a protest calling for justice to be meted out to the victims and survivors of the terror attacks on Easter Sunday. They also called for an investigation to be carried out without further delay. 

Tamils protest illegally constructed Buddhist Vihara in Thaiyiddy

Tamils protested outside the Tissa Raja Vihara in Thaiyiddy, Jaffna, which was illegally constructed and is encroaching on the lands owned by local residents. 

Residents were joined by the Tamil National People’s Front (TNPF) yesterday as they demanded the return of the 100 parappu of land owned by 14 Tamil families that surrounds the vihara.

Finally home - Released Rajiv Gandhi convicts return, but face more questioning in Sri Lanka

A group of three Tamils who were released after spending three decades in prison over the assassination of Rajiv Gandhi were finally reunited with their families, but faced further questioning from the Sri Lankan police on their arrival back on the island.

Sri Lankan security beefed up in Keppapulavu as residents demand their lands back

Security was tightened last week in Keppapulavu over planned protests by residents who have been demanding the release of their lands currently occupied by the Sri Lankan military.

Several police officers were seen deployed in the morning and speaking to residents who had gathered in front of the occupying Security Forces Headquarters in Mullaitivu. 

Tamils in Kalmunai continue protest calling for funds for development

Tamil residents of Kalmunai North held protests last week opposing a move by the Sri Lankan government to subjugate their division under the Kalmunai South Division, adding that Tamils in the region have been longing for a separate divisional secretary 40 years ago and were assured a fully-fledged secretariat to address their community-specific needs. 

Beyond Katchatheevu

Last week, India’s most senior political figures sparked off a row that continues to rage. Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Foreign Minister S Jaishankar expressed their outrage at the 1974 decision by Congress to cede the Katchatheevu islet to Sri Lanka after a set of new documents were publicly unveiled. The small island midway across the Palk Strait remains uninhabited but carries significant political weight, with Indian political parties in Tamil Nadu and beyond seeking to distance themselves from the decision to grant the territory to Colombo. Though the row is domestic for now, it scratches at a deeper issue that remains emotive and crucially important for millions of Tamils – the safety of Tamil Nadu fishermen.

Complaint lodged at Human Rights Commission over Vedukkunaari arrests

Six of the eight Tamils who were arrested at Vedukkunaari Hill temple in Vavuniya last month, filed a complaint at Sri Lanka's Human Rights Commission (HRC)  in Colombo after the local office in Vavuniya failed to take action over the case. 

British Tamil teenager makes history with debut for England cricket team

British Tamil teenager Amuruthaa Surenkumar made history as the first professional Tamil cricketer to represent the English national team last week, making her debut in an under-19 match against Sri Lanka.

Indian PM sparks row over Katchatheevu, ahead of Tamil Nadu elections

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has sparked off a decades-old row around Katchatheevu island, after he labelled the release of documents on the 1974 decision to hand the territory to Sri Lanka “eye opening and startling!”.

“New facts reveal how Congress callously gave away Katchatheevu,” tweeted the Indian Premier. 

Sri Lanka breaches prison capacity by more than double as minister considers house arrests

Sri Lanka is spending Rs. 4 Billion per year to jail more than 30,000 individuals, despite the maximum capacity of its prison being only 12,000, State Minister of Justice and Prison Affairs Anuradha Jayaratne admitted to reporters in Colombo last month, stating his government was now looking into enacting house arrests instead.