Tamil Affairs

Tamil News

Latest news from and about the homeland

As Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi departed Sri Lanka earlier this month, New Delhi’s media was already hailing the visit as a diplomatic triumph. A raft of development projects had been announced and a significant new defence pact between the two governments signed. Images broadcast showed Modi beside a smiling Sri Lankan president Anura Kumara Dissanayake, arms raised aloft in symbolic…

Australia Foreign Affairs Department concerned over evidence of torture in Sri Lanka

The Australian Department of Foreign Affairs (DFAT) has expressed concern over the evidence of torture by Sri Lanka’s security forces working in cooperation with the Australian Federal Police (AFP), reports Colombo Mirror.

An investigation by ABC news, found that two former asylum seekers that were deported form Australia in 2009 were abused by members of Sri Lanka’s Central Investigation Department (CID) in the presence of an Australian Federal Police officer in Sri Lanka.

The victims’ lawyer, Lakshan Dias, said that CID officers beat men with wooden planks and threatened to rape their family members.

One of the victims, aged 31, Sumith Mendis, told reporters,

“I was tortured. I was unable to pass urine for two days. I had unbearable pain in my body.”

The AFP confirmed that an officer was in the building at CID building at the time of the event but denies that it witnessed the abuse.

Speaking to ABC news, an AFP spokesperson said,

“The AFP can confirm records indicate an AFP officer was present in the building on th day the offence was alleged to occur. At no stage did the AFP officer witness any mistreatment by CID officers of any persons held in custody.”

NPC member summoned by Sri Lanka police for involvement in commemorating Tamil war dead

A Northern Provincial Council Member T Ravikaran, on Monday, was summoned by Sri Lankan police to be investigated regarding his actions on Maveerar Naal, which is used by Tamils across the world to commemorate their war dead.

A police notice, written out in Sinhalese was given to Mr Ravikaran by two policemen who visited his house.

The instruction came from Colombo and requested that the Northern Provincial Council member visited the Mullaitivu police station for investigation.

Sixteen Tamils from North-East arrested by Sri Lanka over past 100 days

The Sri Lankan Terrorist Investigation Division (TID) has arrested at least 16 Tamil men from the Batticaloa district at Colombo’s Katunayake International Airport over the past 100 days.

A vast majority of those detained at the airport were former Liberation Tamil Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) cadres that had gone through Sri Lanka’s ‘rehabilitation’ scheme, reports Tamilnet.

Tamil National Alliance parliamentarian P Selvarasa, confirmed to press on Sunday there had been at least 16 separate incidents of arrests of Tamils at Colombo’s international airport.

Sri Lankan army organises Buddhist festival in Jaffna

The Buddhist festival of Vesak is currently being held in Jaffna, organised by Sri Lanka's security forces.

The first day of the festival was declared open on Sunday by the commander of the security forces in Jaffna, Major General Nandana Udawatta.

Will agree to CEPA with India only if beneficial to us - Sri Lanka

Sri Lanka will only sign the Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) with India if it is advantageous to the country, deputy minister of policy planning and economic development Harsha de Silva said at an event in Colombo.

“We have to be convinced that this agreement is beneficial to Sri Lanka. I don’t represent the government of India, I am representing the government of Sri Lanka,” he said at a seminar on CEPA and its implications on the Sri Lankan economy, organised by the National Chamber of Commerce of Sri Lanka in Colombo.

“We will win for this country and therefore our government will not enter into any agreement that is not in the best interest of our country.”

Sri Lankan president calls for strengthening of Buddhist vision

The Sri Lankan president, Maithripala Sirisena, on Sunday called for a strengthening of the Buddhist vision, reports Colombo Page.

Speaking at the Buddhist festival of Vesak, Mr Sirisena said "Buddhist philosophy is the only solution for social ills brought on due to the commercialization of the society by new technology".

He called for the Buddhist vision to be strengthened nationally "as well as international levels to create a virtuous society."

US reassures Tamils of commitment to genuine accountability

The United States Secretary of State, John Kerry, on Sunday reassured Tamils of the US' commitment to seeing genuine accountability for mass atrocities committed against the Tamil people.

Mr Kerry, who is currently visiting Sri Lanka, met with senior MPs of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) in Colombo on Sunday. Following the meeting the US embassy in Sri Lanka tweeted: "[John Kerry] stresses to TNA leaders US commitment to genuine & credible process for accountability and reconciliation."

Speaking to BBC Tamil, the TNA spokesperson, Suresh Premachandran said the party had told Mr Kerry of the urgent need for a political solution to the ethnic conflict, as well as the need for demilitarisation and resettlement in the North-East.

6 years on Tamils search for loved ones - LA Times

As the 6th anniversary of the end of the armed conflict approaches this month, the American journalist Shashank Bengali reporting from Kilinochchi, described the ongoing suffering of the many Tamils who continue to search for the whereabouts of their missing loved ones six years post conflict, in an article published in the Los Angeles Times on Sunday.

See full article here. Extract published below.
"Tamil leaders say Sirisena's government has not fulfilled pledges to withdraw security forces from the north, where soldiers still watch over public sites and counter-terrorism police patrol towns and villages on bicycles. Sirisena has not said whether he will repeal a controversial anti-terrorism law that activists say is being used to detain hundreds of Tamil prisoners without charges.

Sri Lanka navy denies firing on Tamil Nadu fishermen

The Sri Lankan navy denied firing shots at Tamil Nadu fishermen accused of crossing into Sri Lankan waters.

“We have in the past, and still continue to discourage Indian poachers in the Palk Strait using minimum force but have stopped short of firing on them," a senior naval official was quoted by Sri Lanka's Sunday Times newspaper as saying.

"Indian fishermen were always treated in a humane manner and despite several warnings Indian fishermen continued to illegally cross the International Maritime Boundary Line (IMBL)," he reportedly added.

Sri Lanka misses fiscal deficit target in 2014

Sri Lanka's Central Bank said it has missed its fiscal deficit target and reversed its falling trend in 2014, due to a fall in revenue and higher government expenditure, Reuters reported.

The 2014 fiscal deficit hit 6% of GDP, much higher than the 5.2% forecasted, as it reversed its declining trend for the first time since 2009, central bank data showed. It rose from the previous year's 5.9%.