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 president to visit North-East

Sri Lanka's President Maithripala Sirisena announced that he is to visit the North-East of the island next month, reports Daily News.

According to the government-owned website, Mr Sirisena is to chair a meeting at the Jaffna District Secretariat, which is expected to be attended by several politicians from the Northern Provincial Council, including Chief Minister CV Wigneswaran.

A resolution passed by the Northern Provincial Council earlier this month called on the United Nations to ensure an international investigation took place into the genocide of Tamils by the Sri Lankan government, stating “"Tamils have no hope for justice in any domestic Sri Lankan mechanism, whether conducted by the Rajapaksa regime, Sirisena regime, or its successor."

TNA discusses appropriation of Tamil land with UN under-secretary general

The Tamil National Alliance (TNA) met the UN Under-Secretary General for Politcal Affairs Jeffrey Feltman to discuss issues of land appropriation issues and Sri Lanka’s proposition of a domestic probe into the armed conflict in Sri Lanka, reports Colombo Gazette.

The TNA spokesperson Suresh Premachandran said that the part told the UN official that they had no faith in any domestic probe conducted in Sri Lanka.

The UN official will visit Jaffna on Monday, before holding a media brief on Tuesday.

Tamil Nadu delegation secures $4 billion foreign investment ahead of global forum in Chennai

A Tamil Nadu delegation visiting Singapore, Japan and South Korea, led by the chief secretary in the industries department of Tamil Nadu, secured $4 billion of a $ 16 billion foreign investment target set by the Tamil Nadu State.

A Global Investor’s Meet (GIM), with the aim of raising $16 billion foreign investment into Tamil Nadu is scheduled to take place in Chennai later this year, reports the
economictimes.com.

The Tamil delegation as held a series of meetings with public and private sector officials in the there countries, whilst promoting the GIM – which will be held from May 23-24 this year.

We will welcome Chinese investors, Sri Lanka's foreign minister tells Beijing



Sri Lanka's foreign minister, Mangala Samaraweera said that his government would welcome Chinese investment during a visit to Beijing on Friday.

His visit comes as doubs remain over whether the new government will allow China's proposed Colombo Port City development project, agreed to by the former Sri Lankan government, to go ahead as planned.

Stating that the issue was not explicitly discussed, Mr Samaraweera said that Sri Lanka would not make any decision on Chinese projects without consultation with China, reported Reuters.

Truth before political solution - Sampanthan

The leader of the Tamil National Alliance, R Sampanthan said truth over mass atrocities committed during the conflict in the North-East must be established before negotiations to find a political solution to the Tamil question can be held.

During talks with South Africa's Deputy Minister of International Relations and Cooperation Namoindia Mfekoto, Mr Sampanthan and fellow TNA MP MA Sumanthiran welcomed South Africa's initiative towards resolving the political issue, reported Ceylon Today.

"With the cooperation of the international community, the TNA is prepared to engage in a peace process with the new Lankan government mediated by the South African Government. South Africa should insist on the Lankan government to reveal the truth with regard to the alleged war crimes," Mr Sampanthan said.

Tamil refugees should stay in India - JHU

The Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU), a key party in the ruling coalition led by President Maithripala Sirisena, said it would oppose the resettlement of Tamil refugees from the North-East who fled to India during the armed conflict, reported the Daily Mirror.

Sri Lankan navy arrests 86 Indian fishermen

The Sri Lankan navy has arrested 86 fishermen from Tamil Nadu of the coast of Mullaitivu in the North-East of the island and seized 10 of their boats, reports the Hindu.
The arrest comes after Sri Lanka postponed talks that were scheduled to take place with India regarding the contentious issue of arrests of fishermen, ahead of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to the island.
However the Hindu reported Fisheries Secretary Nimal Hettiarachchi as saying,
“Our new government has prioritised its 100-day programme, so we do not have time to work on this at the moment.”

Sri Lanka to push for free trade agreements with US and China

Sri Lanka will push for a free trade agreement with the Untied States and China to  further economic benefits the Deputy Economic Development Minister, Harsha De Silva told press.

Speaking at a forum of exporters in Colombo, De Silva said,

“The US Free Trade Agreement (FTA) is something we need to aggressively push. We have already started talking to some people on it.”

De Silva added that Sri Lanka’s foreign policy should be tied to trade,

Tamil orgs reject Sri Lanka's Commission on Missing Persons, call for international mechanism

The Tamil Civil Society Forum (TCSF) and Welfare Organisation for the Forcibly Disappeared Persons, announced that they would be boycotting Sri Lanka’s presidential Commission on Missing Persons, stating that a “credible inquiry”  can “only be achieved through international means.”

Questioning the credibility of previous sittings at the Presidential Commission, the statement, released on Thursday, said,


“no results whatsoever have been forthcoming from such inquiries. Recent reports suggest that one of the international experts so appointed was also hired by the then Sri Lankan Government to advise them on how to handle international community pressure on human rights issues, clearly pointing to a conflict of interest in his appointment as an expert.” 

UNHRC defends deferral of OISL report

The UN Human Rights Council on Wednesday defended its decision to defer the release of the report on the OHCHR Investigation on Sri Lanka as a "very rational" decision taken in a "relatively unique" case, reported Outlook India.

Speaking ahead of the 28th session next week, UNHRC president Joachim Rucker pointed out that both the stepping down of the Chairperson of the Commission of Enquiry on the 2014 Gaza Conflict, William Schabas, and deferral of the OISL report by 6 months were "relatively unique cases" and warned against drawing conclusions of a general nature about them.