• Sri Lanka's politicised relief measures preventing aid reaching people - Sajith

    Samagi Jana Balavegaya leader, Sajith Premadasa, highlighted the government’s failure to adequately provide relief and insisted “the government relief is not reaching people properly since the relief program is through the local government political leadership.”

    Premadasa called on the government to implement a mechanism to provide relief to people affected by the military-enforced lockdown, through state officials including village officials, in a statement made yesterday.

  • Sri Lankan police arrest more local councillors providing aid to under-privileged families in North-East

    Kodikamam police in Jaffna arrested local councillors providing voluntary relief packages to vulnerable villagers of Chavakachcheri, that have been struggling with the pressures of the military-enforced curfew.

    Local councillors and volunteers have been scrutinised and often arrested in the past weeks for aiding the vulnerable people affected by the lockdown, despite having curfew passes.

  • The Slow March Towards Accountability for War Crimes

    The current situation in Sri Lanka underlines why an international approach is often the only way of ensuring that perpetrators of war crimes are held accountable for their misconduct, writes Graham Newsome in International Policy Digest.

  • Moody warns of possibly downgrading Sri Lanka’s rating
    <p>Moody, a global rating agency, has placed Sri Lanka on a list of countries which may have their rating decreased if their economic situation worsens meaning that Sri Lanka may lose its B2 rating and be seen as a greater risk for investors.</p> <p>This statement follows calls from Gotabaya Rajapaksa, Sri Lanka's President, and&nbsp;Ranil Wickremesinghe, former Prime Minister, call for an easing of the lockdown.</p>
  • Government neglect plunges impoverished Vavuniya villagers towards starvation

    Hundreds of villagers across the district of Vavuniya found to be living in very poor housing conditions in the coronavirus (COVID-19) crisis, are on the verge of dying from starvation as the government continues to neglect on providing support to these vulnerable villagers.

    With the nationwide military-headed lockdown in place, villagers - of which many are labourers - have become particularly vulnerable and struggling to even have afford one meal a day, due to the lack of income.

  • Children’s books tackle COVID-19 in Tamil

    Humanitarian organisations have teamed up with a children’s author to create a storybook on how to stay safe from the coronavirus in Tamil, as part of a global initiative to provide accessible information in different languages around the world.

    “My Hero Is You,” a new illustrated book by Helen Patuck, was project developed by the Inter-Agency Standing Committee Reference Group on Mental Health and Psychosocial Support in Emergency Settings (IASC MHPSS RG) with support from the World Health Organization, the United Nations Children’s Fund and Save the Children.

  • Another Tamil father dies searching for his son

    The father of another disappeared Tamil teenager has died, more than a decade after his son was forcibly disappeared, and still with no answers as to his whereabouts.

    Ponniah Nagarasa, a father from Pudukkudiyiruppu area, passed away yesterday.

  • Australian Federal Court grants victory to Tamil asylum-seeking Biloela family

    The Australian Federal Court has ruled in favour of the Tamil asylum-seeking Biloela family stating that two-year-old Tharunicaa was not “afforded procedural fairness” in making her application - a decision that prevents the family from being deported until the process is resolved.

  • ‘People are near starvation’ in North-East warns Sumanthiran

    Former Tamil National Alliance (TNA) parliamentarian M A Sumanthiran warned that a military enforced curfew had left people in the North-East “near starvation”, whilst Sri Lankan government bodies have refused to release emergency funds in the region.

  • Former Sri Lankan minister alleges political revenge as brother arrested over terror attacks

    Former Sri Lankan minister and leader of the All Ceylon Makkal Congress (ACMC) Rishad Bathiudeen MP has spoken out against the arrest of his brother in connection with last year’s Easter Sunday attacks, alleging that the arrest was an act of political revenge.

  • Sri Lankan President considers resuming day-to-day economic activity

    Sri Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa is currently considering resuming day-to-day economic activity at the provincial level to safeguard the national economy, reports the President’s Media Division.

  • Sri Lanka's arrest of Muslim lawyer slammed as ‘illegal and arbitrary’

    The family of a prominent Muslim lawyer have denounced his arrest as “illegal and arbitrary,” stating it was acarried out by Sri Lankan authorities “with the intention of stifling dissent” after he was  arrested over the alleged involvement in the Easter Sunday bombings a year ago.

    Hejaaz Hizbullah was arrested under Sri Lanka’s Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) on Tuesday, alongside six other people.

  • The Cost of Resistance

    The following poem, reproduced from Adi Magazine, has been written by an activist based in Jaffna, working with war-affected Tamil communities.

  • COVID-19 - A Parent’s Perspective

    The mother of a healthcare worker on the frontlines of Britain’s NHS writes about how it feels to be the parent of a key worker during the coronavirus pandemic.

  • Tamil healthcare workers on the COVID-19 frontline - April 16th

    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.

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