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…

People in North-East 'too scared' to meet with British official

The British Deputy High Commissioner to Sri Lanka Laura Davies has detailed how she was monitored and people she met questioned, during her visit to Amparai, Batticaloa and Trincomalee, in the North-East of the island.

In a blog post "Looking over my shoulder", published on Tuesday, Davies said several people were “too scared” to meet her.

“[It] gradually became impossible to ignore the fact that I was being watched,” she wrote on the Foreign Office blog page.

“Worse, it was clear that the people I was meeting were having follow-up visits or phone calls, asking what I had done and said. Some of this was almost comic: I met with one individual who had invited a large press corps to capture the moment of our meeting.”

Tamil asylum seekers deported from Australia raped and tortured

An investigation by a researcher into Australia’s asylum seekers policies found that those deported back to Sri Lanka faced “unthinkable sexual abuse and torture".

Writing in the Sydney Morning Herald, Dr David Corlett, who travelled to Sri Lanka under the guise of a tourist to establish contact with asylum seekers that had been deported from Australia and targeted by the Sri Lankan state, highlighted several accounts of rape and torture that could be attributed to the “highest levels” of Sri Lankan governance.

 “One woman, who says she had political problems in Sri Lanka, said the Sri Lankan military raped her before she eventually boarded a boat and fled. On her second attempt to escape, Australian border officials intercepted her vessel," said Corlett.

Highlighting previous conclusions that torture in Sri Lanka could be attributed to the “highest level” of government, Corlett noted similar findings from previous international investigations, including a study by human rights Lawyer Yasmin Sooka entitled 'An Unfinished War: Torture and Sexual Violence in Sri Lanka 2009-2014'.

Tamil politicians call for abolishment of Prevention of Terror Act

Tamil politicians and members of Sri Lankan civil society called for the abolishment of Sri Lanka’s Prevention of Terror Act (PTA) in an interview with  The Hindu on Tuesday.

A Tamil National Alliance (TNA) parliamentarian, M. A. Sumanthiran, highlighting that Tamil activists were arbitrarily detained using the PTA, said,

“It is still in existence five years after the end of the war, which the government claims was against terrorism. We demand that it be repealed immediately. It was the existence of such an act that made the detention of Ms. Jeyakumari and several others without charges possible."
The leader of the Tamil National People’s Front (TNPF), G.G. Ponnambalam, added that the government had detained enforced disappearances activist Jeyakumari for fear that she would testify to the ongoing international probe into Sri Lanka, where enforced disappearances had become a key issue. 

Dangerous' Sri Lankan propaganda published in US defence journal says international consultant

The Sri Lankan president and defence secretary’s joint publication of an article in an United States Department of Defence (DoD) journal, is a “dangerous piece of state-sponsored propaganda” writes an international consultant for the Washington based Asian Correspondent.

“Rajapaksa’s essay is clearly designed to defend the actions – past, present and future – of the ruling regime. The writing is smooth and clear. Astute Sri Lanka watchers are unlikely to be persuaded by some of the false, misleading or dubious claims in this article. Nonetheless, an intelligent general audience would be more susceptible to this sort of sophistry,” said Taylor Dibbert.

Warning that such a publication could mislead readers, he said,
“Given the fact that Washington has been so vocal about Sri Lanka’s clear lack of progress on accountability, human rights and the rule of law, why would Rajapaksa’s piece even be considered for publication? Does Washington view this piece as constructive engagement with an authoritarian regime.”

Government land surveyors halt work due to local opposition

Surveyors working for the Sri Lankan government were forced to stop operations in Vadamaratchi East on Monday, due to pressure from local land owners that opposed government appropriation of their land.

THe surveyers had to stop their work after they failed to receive adequate protection from the police.
 
Over 700 acres of land in the region is under government instruction to be surveyed reports the Uthayan.

OIC head to visit says Sri Lanka

The Secretary General of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), Iyad Madani, will visit Sri Lanka shortly, following an invitation by the President Mahinda Rajapaksa, reports Arab News, citing a senior official within the Sri Lankan embassy.

“This is the first time such a visit is being made to Sri Lanka and we are really proud of it,” the official was quoted as saying. See here for more.

Sri Lanka increases defence budget by 12.25% to new high

Sri Lanka has increased its 2015 defence budget by 12.25% to a record high despite the end of the armed conflict over 5 years ago.

According to the government's official figures released on Friday in a bill tabled in parliament, 285 billion rupees have been allocated to defence in 2015, reports
AFP.

Sri Lanka's spending on defence has increased year on year since the end of the armed conflict, despite increasing
international calls for the military to scale down following the end of the armed conflict.
 

Three Tamil youth injured in sword attack

Three Tamil youths were injured in a sword attack in Alavetti on Sunday night, reports Uthayan.

Santhirasekaram Collins, 20, Thevarasa Jeganathan and Sinnarasa Jude Anthony both aged 23 and all from Mallakam were attacked on their way home from a sporting event by men on motorbikes.

They were admitted to Jaffna Teaching Hospital with serious injuries.

#FreeJeyakumary campaigners protest in Colombo

Protestors gathered in Colombo on Monday to call for the release of a prominent Tamil rights campaigner, Balendran Jeyakumari, who has been detained under the Sri Lankan Prevention of Terror Act (PTA) since March 2014.

The demonstrations, held outside Colombo Railway Station, were met with pro-government protestors, who yielded posters mocking members of the Sri Lankan civil society.


Photographs: Pathivu

Tamil politicians, including Tamil National Alliance (TNA) MP M A Sumanthiran and the leader of the Tamil National People’s Front (TNPF) G G Ponnambalam,
attended the rally.


Pro-government demonstrators protesters oppose #FreeJeyakumary campaigners Photograph: @Mari_desilva

Sri Lankan police was eventually called to form a barrier between the protesters calling for the release of Jeyakumari from the Boosa detention facilities and the pro-government demonstrators.

Australia commends LLRC progress in Sri Lanka

The Australian prime minister commended Sri Lanka's successful implementation of the LLRC recommendations and the country’s ability to maintain a remarkable economic growth.
Photograph: ColomboPage