• Canadian Tamils and local groups provide assistance to Mullaitivu families

    Local groups in Mannar and Tamil donors in Canada have helped provide relief packages to support families across Mullaitivu, that continue to struggle with the military-enforced curfews. The assistance was given this week in response to the hundreds of families that have not been able to access essential goods, including food, as a result of curfew restrictions. 

  • ‘Soap and solace scarce as Sri Lanka’s tea pickers toil on amid lockdown’
    <p>Sri Lanka’s tea plantation workers “with a history of exploitation face hazards including a lack of masks and overcrowded accommodation,” despite tough lockdown measures across the island, Yasmin Gunaratnam writes for <em>The Guardian</em>.</p> <p>“A caveat on the country’s lockdown order, issued on 20 March, read: ‘Paddy farming and plantation, including work on tea small holdings and fishing activities, are permitted in any district,’” she wrote.</p>
  • TNPF member found dead in Jaffna

    The body of a member of the Tamil National Peoples’ Front (TNPF) has been discovered washed up on a beach in Jaffna this morning.

  • ‘Due process concerns in arrests of Muslims’ – HRW
    <p>Sri Lanka’s authorities should uphold due process rights and ensure that recently detained Muslim figures have proper access to lawyers, Human Rights Watch said in a statement.</p> <p>“Sri Lankan authorities have a responsibility to prosecute those responsible for the horrific Easter Sunday attacks last year, but the arrests should be lawful, and not used to vilify an entire community,” said Meenakshi Ganguly, HRW’s South Asia director.</p>
  • Another British Tamil doctor dies from coronavirus on UK frontline

    Dr Vishna Rasiah, a consultant neonatologist in the Midlands, has died after contracting coronavirus whilst on the frontlines of the country’s National Health Service.

    Dr Rasiah, who has family in Malaysia and in Trinidad, worked at Birmingham Women's and Children's NHS Foundation Trust and was the clinical lead in the region for neonatal work.

    At least 13 NHS workers have now died in the midlands alone, with more than 100 reported deaths of health and care workers across the country.

  • 30 Sri Lankan Navy personnel test positive for coronavirus
    <p>30 Navy personnel at Welisara Navy camp have tested positive for Covid-19, Army commander Shavendra Silva said.&nbsp;</p>
  • Tamil healthcare workers on the COVID-19 frontline – April 24th

     

    With healthcare workers across the globe working to tackle the coronavirus pandemic, we look at some of the Tamils on the frontlines of the battle to save lives.

    From nurses and doctors to our paramedics and porters, every single contribution is invaluable. And alongside thousands of other workers, the Tamil community has been actively involved in efforts to fight the pandemic.

    We will be highlighting stories around the world from those who are working to keep us all safe.

  • Sri Lankan Defence Secretary vows to punish Easter Sunday attackers

    Sri Lankan Defence Secretary, and accused war criminal, Kamal Gunaratne, vowed to “punishing the culprits” behind the Easter Sunday bombing and to strengthen “national security”.

  • Families of disappeared commemorate Sunday Easter attack victims

    The victims of the Easter Sunday bomb attack in Sri Lanka last year, were paid tribute by families of the disappeared in Vavuniya, on Tuesday.

    Tuesday marked one year since the incident that took away the lives of hundreds of civilians in a coordinated unprecedented act of violence.

  • Rajapaksa’s fake news spin

    Sri Lanka’s president boasted on Twitter earlier this week that his regime was ranked 9th in the “Global Response to Infectious Diseases Index” – a ranking system devised by a little known Australian accountancy organisation that has close ties to Sri Lanka’s ruling party.

  • Free walk-in medical camps set up for Tamil villagers across Mannar

    An initiative to provide free walk-in medical camps for the villagers of Madu in Mannar, was established to assist them with their healthcare needs at a time where the COVID-19 pandemic has made access to check-ups and medicine very difficult. 

    The second instalment of these mobile medical camps were set up for villagers on Saturday (18th April), where around 100 people were able to get free medical check-ups and medicines.

  • Tamils struggling to reclaim their land from Sri Lankan occupation

    More than a decade after the end of the armed conflict, the Sri Lankan military continues to occupy vast swathes of land reports Reuters, as it spoke to Tamils on the island and abroad who are attempting to reclaim their land.

  • UK and US express ‘solidarity’ with Rauf Hakeem

    The British and American envoys to Sri Lanka met with the leader of the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress Rauf Hakeem this week, where he says they expressed “solidarity”.

  • Japan grants Sri Lanka $1.2 million to combat coronavirus
    <p>The Government of Japan has granted Sri Lanka $1.2 million through international organisations to combat Covid-19.</p>
  • Sri Lankan police arrest man after shots fired in Amparai

    Sri Lankan police officers announced the arrest of a man who allegedly fired a T-56 rifle in Amparai this week.

    Officers in Sammanthurai reported that gunshots were fired on Monday evening at approximately 9.30pm.

    They subsequently arrested a man who was in possession of a T-56 rifle.

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