• Sri Lankan authorities block meeting on land grabs in Amparai

    Sri Lankan authorities blocked a meeting on land grabs in Amparai earlier this month, leading to commotion outside the venue as hundreds of people attempted to enter amidst police presence.

  • ‘No one can divide country’ declares Mahinda

    Mahinda Rajapaksa, Sri Lanka’s former president and brother of current presidential candidate Gotabaya Rajapaksa, stated that his party would not concede to any demands made by the Tamil National Alliance, at a rally in Beliatta yesterday,

    "There is no need to agree to any of the conditions,” Rajapaksa told the crowd. The country should come first. No one should be allowed to divide the country.”

  • Tamil Eelam beat Yorkshire in CONIFA World Football Cup qualifier

    The Tamil Eelam football team managed to secure victory over Yorkshire last month, in a pulsating encounter at Ingfield Stadium in Ossett. 

    The tight contest saw Tamil Eelam go ahead thanks to Thomas A, with a cross by Nirun from the left flank met by his surging run and finished off with a sliding right-footed shot. Tamil Eelam doubled their lead with a second half finish into the bottom left corner by Prashanth R, who was making his tenth appearance and scored his seventh goal for Tamil Eelam. Yorkshire scored a well worked goal in the latter stages of the game and pressed on as they searched for an equaliser. However, the Tamil Eelam defence held on and went on to take another win, as the team continues to grow.

  • JVP lashes out at North-East merger demand by Tamil parties

    The Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) came out and declared it would not back the merging of the Northern and Eastern provinces, as demanded by Tamil parties, stating that it was the “ambition of separatists”.

    JVP Propaganda Secretary Vijitha Herath said the National People's Power (NPP) coalition which is led by the party, would not back the proposal.

  • Sajith Premadasa vows to ‘suffer any punishment’ to protect Sri Lankan military 

    Sri Lankan presidential candidate Sajith Premadasa said he was willing to “suffer any punishment on behalf of” the Sri Lankan military in order to protect troops from allegations of rights abuses.

    The Daily Mirror reports Premadasa as telling a rally this week that he would “take full responsibility” over what he claimed were “allegations made against the Sri Lankan Security Forces”.

  • Don’t Forget the Tamil Genocide'

    In an article for the Jacobin, former Australian senator Lee Rhiannon, draws upon Ben Hiller's new book "Losing Santhia: Life and Loss in the Struggle for Tamil Eelam", and argues the need to stand in solidarity Tamils who have faced genocide by the "exclusivist, chauvinist Sinhala-Buddhist state".

  • Extremist monk Gnanasara to appear in court over contempt charge

    Extremist Buddhist monk, Gnanasara Thero, of the Sinhala nationalist Bodu Bala Sena organisation has been ordered to appear in court on November 8, for violating a court order. 

  • Fonseka says Gotabaya gave no advice on war
    <p>Former army commander, Sarath Fonseka,&nbsp;told a press briefing&nbsp;last week that Sri Lanka Podujana&nbsp;Peramuna (SLPP)&nbsp;&nbsp;presidential candidate, Gotabaya Rajapaksa,&nbsp;did not give him advice in the final phase of the war.&nbsp;</p>
  • British Tamils rally against deportation to Sri Lanka

    Tamils gathered in front of the Home Office, today, demanding an end to the deportation of Tamil asylum seekers. 

    The protest follows news that a Tamil student in London has been refused asylum and may be subject to administrative removal.
     

  • Tamil students shot dead by Sri Lankan police remembered three years on

    Students at the University of Jaffna held a vigil in memory of two of their peers who were shot dead by Sri Lankan police three years ago.

  • Gotabaya and Sajith - New faces, same Sri Lanka?

    Sri Lanka's upcoming presidential election may bring a new face to power, but concerns remain from Tamils on the island and around the world that their plight may remain unchanged.

  • Sinhala organisation files police complaint against TNA spokesperson
    <p>A pro-Rajapaksa Sinhala organisation which had previously filed court petitions seeking Sri Lanka’s withdrawal from the UN Human Rights Council resolution, filed a complaint against TNA spokesperson and MP M A Sumanthiran for allegedly rejecting the concept of a unitary state.</p>
  • Slain Tamil journalist Nimalarajan remembered

    Memorial services for the slain Tamil journalist, Mylvaganam Nimalarajan, was held in Vavuniya, Batticaloa and Jaffna, on the 19th anniversary of his death. 

  • Sri Lanka argues for diplomatic immunity for Brigadier Fernando

    In response to the retrial of Brigadier Priyanka Fernando, which will be adjourned by the 19 November, Sri Lanka’s Foreign Ministry has defended the Brigadier, maintaining that under the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations of 1961, he is entitled to diplomatic immunity.
     

  • Families of disappeared slam Gotabaya’s disappearances denial

    Families of the disappeared in Vavuniya protested on Wednesday, condemning presidential candidate and former defence secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s denial of hundreds of cases of disappearances of surrendered Tamils from the end of the war.

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