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…

Wimal says West engaged in destabilising project in SL

Wimal Weerawansa has said at a public meeting in Amparai that the West was behind political instability on the island.

He said that the US had caused rifts between the judiciary and the parliament in Pakistan, and is now doing the same in Sri Lanka, reported The Island.

Weerawansa also added that those subverting the country were taking orders from Washington and London.

37 Tamil Nadu fishermen arrested by SL Navy

Thirty-seven Tamil Nadu fishermen were arrested by the Sri Lankan Navy off the eastern coast of Pulmoddai at 5am, reports the PTI.

The navy spokesperson Kosala Warnakulasuriya, who announced the arrest, said the fishermen were to be brought to Trincomalee where there would be handed over to the police.

More arrests of students feared as military watches over uni

The Jaffna University adminstration is believed to have been given the list of at least ten students that are wanted by the Sri Lankan security forces, reports JDS, adding to fears of further arrests.

Speaking to JDS, a source from Jaffna said,

India donates 175 fishing boats to IDPs in Mannar

The High Commissioner of India, Ashok K. Kantha, donated over 175 fishing boats fishing equipment to over 350 IDPs on Sunday, during a visit to Mannar.

Addressing those present, Kantha said that India was also working towards building up a fishnet factory in Gurunagar, Jaffna, through the supply of 152 million rupees worth of equipment.

Canada reiterates threat of CHOGM boycott

The Canadian prime minister, Stephen Harper, will not attend the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) unless Sri Lanka's human rights situation improves, said the Canadian foreign minister's spokesperson, Chrystiane Roy, when speaking to the Sunday Leader.

Roy said,

“Prime Minister Harper has clearly stated that unless there is significant progress on political reconciliation, accountability and respect for human rights in Sri Lanka, he will not attend the CHOGM hosted by Sri Lanka in 2013,”

“Canada also notes the Secretary General’s comments and will work with the international community to ensure mistakes made in Sri Lanka are not repeated,”

Sri Lanka looks to Iraq for crude oil

The Sri Lankan government has announced that they are considering purchasing crude oil from Iraq, after US-imposed sanctions on Iran, the island’s main supplier of crude oil.

The announcement follows the US Senate passing another wave of sanctions aimed at Iran’s energy sector. The country was estimated to have provided up to 92% of Sri Lanka’s crude oil prior to the sanctions being put in place.

Army says it was deployed for 'security'

The head of the Jaffna Security Forces, Major General Mahinda Hathurusinghe, dismissed the widespread news at the Sri Lankan military, along with the police, were responsible for attacks at Jaffna university over Maaveerar Naal commemoration events, and on the editor of the Tamil newspaper, the Uthayan.

Accusing Uthayan of attempting to discredit the military, Major General Hathurusinghe said:

Jaffna University students arrested by Sri Lankan TID

Four students from Jaffna University have been transferred to Colombo after being arrested by the Sri Lankan Terrorist Investigation Department (TID) on Friday.

The arrested students are:

Paralingam Tharshananth (Secretary of the Jaffna Students Union)

Ganesamurthy Sudarsan (Medical Faculty Student)

Kangasundaraswamy Janamejeyanth (Arts Union President)

Sanmugam Solomon (Final year Science Faculty Student)

Rs 100bn loss for Ceylon Petroleum Corporation

The Ceylon Petroleum Corporation has incurred losses of over Rs 100bn, reported The Sunday Times.

A senior official at the Ministry of Petroleum Industries said that the losses are due to arrears from state institutions and providing fuel at concessionary rates.

The Ceylon Electricity Board (CEB) owes Rs 47 billion, SriLankan airline Rs 21 billion, the Defence Ministry Rs 14 billion and Sri Lanka Railway Rs 5 billion.

TAG - suppression of remembrance is an attempt to destroy national memory

In a statement published on Friday, Tamils Against Genocide (TAG) urged all foreign donors to demand the "immediate release of all students taken into custody following Tamil Remembrance Day", as well as the "witholding of further economic assistance and military cooperation until the government allows Remembrance Day to be marked by the families of the dead."

See here for full statement, extracts reproduced below:

"Tamils Against Genocide (TAG) condemns the violent repression of Tamil freedom of expression by the Sri Lankan military and police forces and the accompanying destruction of collective history.
 
It is critical that these latest instances of State perpetrated violence be seen not in isolation but in the context of the systemic and structural persecution by the Sri Lankan State
 
These acts of violently destroying national memory may be viewed as one of the ‘different coordinated actions’ referred to in Raphael Lemkin’s definition of genocide. Lemkin defines genocide as a ‘a coordinated plan of different actions aiming at the destruction of the essential foundations of the life of national groups.,. (where) The objectives of such a plan would be the disintegration of the political and social institutions, of culture, language, national feelings, religion, and the economic existence of national groups’