Tamil Affairs

Tamil News

Latest news from and about the homeland

A fisherman in Keppapulavu, Mullaitivu, was assaulted during a visit by Sri Lanka’s Fisheries Minister, Ramalingam Chandrasekaran, as tensions flared during the Minister’s local government election campaign on 24 April. Chandrasekaran, who was touring the North-East with National People’s Power (NPP) candidates, visited Keppapulavu where he met with representatives of the Keppapulavu Fishermen…

Sri Lankan navy soldier who attacked Rajiv Gandhi to stand for elections with BBS

The Sri Lankan navy soldier who infamously attacked former Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi with his rifle in 1987, is to stand in the upcoming Sri Lankan parliamentary election.

Vijitha Rohana Wijemuni announced that he will be standing with the BJP, a party formed by Buddhist nationalist organisations Bodu Bala Sena (BBS).

Little progress on Tamil issues by Sri Lanka's interim government says TNA

Sri Lanka’s interim government has not addressed Tamil concerns, said former Tamil National Alliance MP MA Sumanthiran in an interview with the Sunday Leader.

Commenting on the interim governance's progress on issues relating to the disappeared, political prisoners, Tamil land and the national question, Mr Sumanthiran said,

“We placed those concerns before the President and brought them to his notice right at the beginning. Few steps were taken in the months of January and February but thereafter nothing happened and we could not see a progress.”

TNPF to register nominations across all 5 North-East electoral districts

The Tamil National People's Front (TNPF) will contest all five electoral districts in the North-East in Sri Lanka's parliamentary election, the party leader, Gajendrakumar Ponnambalam told reporters on Tuesday.

Nominations for Amparai were registered on Monday, Mr Ponnambalam said, adding that nominations in other districts would be filed over the next few days. Nominations in Jaffna district will be filed on the final day for all nominations, July 13.

Further human remains found in Trincomalee

Photographs BattiNews

Human remains were found in a sporting ground in Trincomalee on Monday during an excavation was ordered by a local judge, reports BattiNews.

The excavation was ordered by the court after human remains were found in February 2014 as reconstructive work was taking place at the sporting grounds.

Sri Lanka will never pose a threat to India' says Rajapaksa

The former president, Mahinda Rajapaksa reassured India, that Sri Lanka would never pose a threat to the country as he embarked on his election campaign for the upcoming general election on August 17.

"Sri Lanka will never pose a threat to India, and we have nothing to gain by helping any other country to become a threat to India," Mr Rajapaksa told an Indian news site, Rediff, in an interview on Sunday.

Reiterating the "need to maintain good relations with both India and China", Mr Rajapaksa said he intended "to be a bridge between these two rising superpowers".

Government hopes to avoid Rajapaksa victory by announcing elections ahead of UN report

The release of a United Nations report on mass atrocities committed by Sri Lankan troops influenced the decision by the Sri Lankan government to hold parliamentary elections in August, reports Reuters quoting government sources.

The UN report, widely expected to details massacres of Tamil civilians by Sri Lankan soldiers during the final phase of the armed conflict, is due to be released in September. With the possibility of a late August leak, incumbent Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena announced elections for August 17, well before any release is expected.

In doing so Mr Sirisena is attempting to stop an expected rise in popularity for former Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa, who was in power during the final massacres. A report that criticises Sri Lankan troops is believed to strengthen his popularity, reports Reuters.

Sri Lankan army holds Buddhist festivals in North-East

Sri Lankan army troops held Buddhist ceremonies in Mullaitivu and Kilinochchi this week, to invoke Buddhist blessings on the military.

Indian minister confirms Delhi is considering rail link with North-East

The Union Minister of State for Transport, Pon Radhakrishnan, said India’s government is considering a proposal to establish a rail link between Rameshwaram in Tamil Nadu and Talaimannar, in the Tamil-dominated North-East of the island.

The minister, speaking to reporters in Chennai, said the Prime Minister Narendra Modi-led BJP government is considering a proposal to establish a bridge to connect the two countries.

In June India’s road transport and highways minister, Nitin Gadkari, said that a proposal for bridging the divide across the Palk Strait had been submitted to the Asian Development Bank (ADB), for a pre-feasibility study and subsequent financing, however the Sri Lankan government said it has not held any discussions with India on this issue.

Gotabhaya to cancel US citizenship

Sri Lanka’s former defence secretary Gotabhaya Rajapksa says he has applied to have his US citizenship cancelled.

Speaking to Ada Derana in response to conflicting reports regarding the forthcoming elections, the former president’s brother said he will not contest the polls in August, but that this decision was unrelated to the issue of his dual citizenship.

“This has nothing to do with my citizenship issue,” he said, adding that he has already taken measures to cancel his dual citizenship. “I’ve already handed over the relevant documents to the US embassy, in this regard.”

There have been repeated demands that the former defence secretary is prosecuted by US authorities, as he is a citizen of the country.

In March Mr Rajapaksa said that if he was to move to the USA, he would be prosecuted and sentenced to death by electric chair.

Sirisena's reinstatement of Sri Lanka's regulatory Press Council condemned

The Sri Lanka Press institute (SLPI) “vehemently” condemned the reactivation of the Sri Lanka Press Council by Maithripala Sirisena.

Labelling the new president’s actions as a “threat on media freedom”, the SLPI said,