Tamil Affairs

Tamil News

Latest news from and about the homeland

Sri Lanka’s Defence Secretary, Air Vice Marshal Sampath Thuyacontha, met with Pakistan’s Defence Minister, Khawaja Muhammad Asif, in Islamabad this week on the sidelines of the 5th Sri Lanka-Pakistan Bilateral Defence Dialogue, the Sri Lankan government announced. The meeting took place on Tuesday 29 April, the second day of the three-day dialogue, which aims to enhance defence cooperation…

Sri Lankan authorities arrest Indian nationals

Sri Lankan police have arrested two Indian citizens for an alleged breach of their visas, reports Ceylon Today.

Police in Ella initially arrested a man, reportedly a textile merchant from South India, for alleged visa violations. After receiving information from interrogating the individual, Sri Lankan authorities in Badulla went on to arrest another Indian national on the same charge.

See our earlier post: Bilateral relations? (10 Apr 2012)

Sri Lankan military university budget larger than all other universities combined

Sri Lanka’s Kotelawala Defence University (KDU) was allocated a government budget almost double that of all the other universities on the island combined, reports Colombo Telegraph.

Last year the government invested 16.3 billion rupees in the KDU, which houses under 1,500 students, training cadets for the Sri Lankan army, navy and air force.

The island's other universities, with over 88,000 students attending, received a combined government budget of 9.7 billion rupees.


Infographic: Colombo Telegraph

Army detain Tamils registered to reclaim 'LTTE gold'

Tamils who registered to reclaim personal assets from the Sri Lankan government, that were confiscated from banks running in the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam’s (LTTE) de-facto state, have been detained by the Sri Lankan army.

Following a government announcement alleging that all gold that had been deposited in the LTTE banks would be returned to Tamil families, families in the North-East travelled to Kilinochi on Thursday.

LTTE remains significant threat to Sri Lanka - Gotabaya

Sri Lanka's Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa said the re-emergence of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam remained the foremost threat to the country's national security, reported Ceylon Today.

Sri Lanka unperturbed by UK travel warning

Sri Lanka's tourism industry is unlikely to be affected by the recent travel advisory from the UK, which warned of political violence ahead of the presidential election next month.

Industry experts told the Sunday Times that large-scale election violence was unlikely and the peak season was looking good.

“Bookings are great (for December) and I don’t expect any election violence that would deter arrivals,” one official said, adding: “These are routine advisories issued ahead of any election”.

Rumy Jauffer, managing director of the Sri Lanka Tourism Promotion Bureau, said that arrivals would reach the targeted 1.5 million this year with China closing in on the UK’s position as the second largest country of origin.

Sri Lankan military helps Tesco distribute school uniforms to Tamil children

British retail giant Tesco has donated 7,000 school uniforms to Tamil children in Mullaiththivu, at an event organised by the Sri Lankan army.

The 68th division of the Security Force headquarters – Mullaiththivu coordinated the event in Puthukkudiyiruppu with officials from Tesco PLC and Hydramani Apparels, its production partner in Sri Lanka.

Major General Jagath Dias, who stands accused of mass atrocities committed during the final phase of the armed conflict in Sri Lanka, took part in the event as the chief guest.

Earlier this year Dias was refused a visa to Australia over the crimes he is suspected to have committed in 2009.

UNHCR warns more refugees risking Indian Ocean despite dire conditions

The UN Refugee Agency warned in a report released on Friday that the number of asylum seekers risking their lives in smugglers' boats in the Indian Ocean has risen despite the risks and attempts by governments at deterrence.

Listing countries from where people were fleeing, including Myanmar, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh, the UNHCR said that it "estimates that 54,000 people have undertaken irregular maritime journeys in the region so far this year, based on reports by local sources, media and survivors. This includes some 53,000 people leaving from the Bay of Bengal towards Thailand and Malaysia, and hundreds of others moving further south in the Indian Ocean."

"Conditions on the smugglers' boats were dire. Survivors consistently described overcrowded conditions and daily rations of one sparse meal and one to two cups of water. People who asked for more or tried to use the toilet out of turn were beaten or kicked down ladders by the armed crew on the deck above. An estimated 540 people have reportedly died this year at sea from such beatings, starvation or dehydration, and their bodies thrown overboard," the Refugee Agency added in a statement.

Australia approves controversial temporary visas for asylum seekers

The Australian parliament has approved the reintroduction of temporary visas for asylum seekers, allowing them to work and live in Australia for three to five years, but maintaining the government's right to deport them if the situation in their country of origin is deemed to have improved. 

The temporary visas were criticised previously by the UN as well as human rights groups, who said that Australia would be in violation of UN Refugee Convention by denying permanent protection to those it deems to be at risk.

The change in immigration law was passed by 34 votes to 32 votes and approved by MPs this week.

The visas have been hailed by the Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott, known for his tough stance on immigration, as a "win for Australia".

"We always said that three things were necessary to stop the boats - offshore processing, turning boats around and temporary protection visas, and last night the final piece of policy was put in place," he was quoted by the BBC as saying.

Buddhist blessing for SL Navy on 64th anniversary

Photographs: www.defence.lk


The Sri Lankan navy was blessed by monks at a grand Buddhist ceremony on Thursday at the city of Anuradhapura, considered sacred by Sinhala Buddhists to mark its 64th anniversary.

Tamils in South Africa condemn arrival of Sri Lankan war criminal

The South African Tamil Federation condemned the presence of the former Sri Lankan military general Srilal Weerasooriva in South Africa, due to his involvement in the "genocide of between 70,000 and 100,000 Tamils in Sri Lanka" and the Chemmani mass killings in the late 1990s.

General Weerasooriya is understood to have arrived in South Africa on November 30 in order to attend a conference organised by the Association of Military Christian Fellowships.

In a letter to the organisers, the federation expressed "concern, disdain and disappointment" at the invitation extended to the general, calling for him to be convicted for mass atrocities.