Tamil Affairs

Tamil News

Latest news from and about the homeland

  To mark 16 years since the Sri Lankan military onslaught that massacred tens of thousands of Tamils, we revisit the final days leading up to the 18th of May 2009 – a date remembered around the world as ‘Tamil Genocide Remembrance Day’.  After providing an initial death toll of 40,000, the UN found evidence suggesting that 70,000 were killed. Local census records…

Witnesses 'deeply disappointed' by UN inquiry delay says TAG

The rights group, Tamils Against Genocide (TAG) said witnesses would be "deeply disappointed" by the UN Human Rights Council's decision on Monday to delay the publishing of the findings of a UN inquiry into mass atrocities against Tamils in Sri Lanka.

"We are deeply disappointed on behalf of our witnesses, who came forward to submit their testimonies and evidence of war crimes to the UN inquiry at grave risk to themselves and families back home," Jan Jananayagam, the director of TAG, which has worked closely with Tamils who were witnesses and victims of mass atrocities during the end of the armed conflict told Tamil Guardian.

"Hearing that the inquiry's findings will not be released at the Council's coming session is going to be extremely difficult for them to accept. In the interests of transparency, we stress that the evidence of mass atrocities should be published as soon as possible, regardless of any political changes."

Batticaloa mothers demand Sri Lanka govt releases detained children


Tamil mothers and relatives of the disappeared held a demonstration in Batticaloa on Monday, calling on the Sri Lankan government to release their children from custody.


Holding photographs and clothing of their missing children and husbands, women from across the region, came together to hold a seven hour fast in Kaanthippoongavil, Batticaloa town.

Tamil Nadu political parties welcome NPC resolution, call on India to take action

Political leaders across Tamil Nadu, welcoming a recent Northern Provincial Council resolution in Sri Lanka calling on the UN inquiry to investigate genocide of the Tamil people, called on the Indian central government to endorse the resolution and take action to address the grievances of the Tamil people in Sri Lanka.

The Hindu retrieved reactions of figureheads from a plethora of political parties in Tamil Nadu.

Speaking to The Hindu, the Dravida Munnettra Kazhagam (DMK) treasurer ML Stalin said, India must pass an internal resolution acknowledging the Tamil genocide in Sri Lanka.

India’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) representative in Tamil Nadu, S Ramadoss, called on the Delhi to take action and facilitate a referendum living across the world for an independent state of Tamil Eelam.

The general secretary of the Marumalarchi Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (MDMK) G Vaiko, highlighting that militarisation of the North-East continued under Sri Lankka’s new government, said the NPC resolution proved the new Sirisena government would not be able to meet the needs of the Tamil people in Sri Lanka.

Wigneswaran calls for further devolved power to address issues in Northern Province


Noting that the elected leaders of the Northern Province had no control over their own offices, the Chief Minister of the Northern Provincial Council  CV Wigneswaran called on the government to hand over authority and power to the provincial administration during a Provincial Council meeting on Monday.

Over 100,000 war widows remain in the North-East of Sri Lanka said Mr Wigneswaran addressing a meeting of the Special Coordinating Committee for the Northern Province, in Jaffna.

The meeting was chaired by the Central Public Administration and Good Governance Minister Karu Jayasuriya, reports the New Indian Express.

Tamil protesters sign petition demanding release of political prisoners and disappeared


Families of the disappeared participated in a protest demanding the release of detained political prisoners and investigation into the disappeared, on Friday outside the Jaffna Central Bus Station.

As part of a petition organised, families member signed their names on a banner that outlined key demands of finding the disappeared and releasing all detained political prisoners.

Tamil diaspora orgs urge UN human rights chief to release Sri Lanka inquiry report


A coalition of 15 key Tamil diaspora organisations worldwide have urged the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights,  Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, to ensure the report on the UN inquiry into mass atrocities against Tamils in Sri Lanka is released next month as originally intended in a resolution adopted by the UN Human Rights Council in March 2014.

In a letter sent to Mr Zeid on Sunday, the organisations - Australian Tamil Congress (ATC), British Tamil Conservatives (BTC), British Tamil Forum (BTF), Centre for War Victims and Human Rights (Canada), Federation of Tamil Sangams of North America, Global Tamil Forum (GTF), Ilankai Tamil Sangam (ITS), New Zealand Tamil Society (NZTS), People for Equality and Relief in Lanka (PEARL), South Africa Tamil Federation, Swedish Tamil Forum, Tamils Against Genocide (TAG), Tamils for Labour, US Tamil Political Action Council (USTPAC) and World Thamil Organization (WTO) - endorsed the Northern Provincial Council's resolution on genocide and its call to ensure the report is released next month.

"Our organisations representing the 1-million strong Tamil Diaspora forced out of Sri Lanka due to the conflict, and having lost tens of thousands of relatives, fully endorse the call by the Northern Provincial Council, and urge you to release the OISL report in March 2015 as originally mandated," the coalition said, adding, "President Sirisena’s election and short tenure do not negate the need for a timely release."

Sri Lankan president arrives in India for official visit


Sri Lanka's new president, Maithripala Sirisena, arrived in New Delhi on Sunday as part of an official visit. He was greeted on arrival by India's Minister of State for Road Transport & Highways, Shipping, P Radhakrishnan.

India must support UN investigation adoption says DMK chief

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has been urged to back a resolution at the UN Human Rights Council, which will support the adoption of a report on mass atrocities in Sri Lanka, said Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) M Karunanidhi.

“Now that the Sri Lankan Provincial Government has passed a resolution calling for an international probe into genocide, I request you to kindly consider moving a suitable resolution in the UNHRC,” said Mr Karunanidhi earlier this week.

"The community of the Tamils anxiously expect the Indian government to support the adoption of the report in the UNHRC," he added.

Mr Karunanidhi’s comments come as Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena arrived in India on his first official visit of the country. Since Mr Sirisena took office in January though, efforts taken towards appeasing Tamil demands have failed to materialise said Mr Karunanidhi.

"What is now happening in Sri Lanka has upset the Tamils. The promises and announcements are too many and what has been achieved is either nil or very little," Mr Karunanidhi said. “What can be done in a couple of days has not been done and there are no positive signals towards what should be done within a timeframe.”

Domestic investigation unacceptable regardless of when OISL report is released says TNA

A domestic investigation cannot be accepted regardless  of when the release of the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights report into Sri Lanka’s atrocities (OISL) occurs, the Tamil National Alliance said on Sunday.

Commenting on Sri Lanka’s requests to delay the OISL report to allow for a domestic initiative, TNA MP M Sumanthiran, said,

“The government has announced that it is seeking support from the international community for an internal investigation. We do not have hope in an internal investigation.”

Human rights, accountability and reconciliation are ‘critical priorities’ for Sri Lanka says Ban Ki Moon


Photograph: Sri Lankan Ministry of External Affairs

UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon discussed human rights, accountability and reconciliation with the Sri Lanka’s Minister of External Affairs Mangala Samaraweera, outlining them as “critical priorities” for Sri Lanka on Friday.

The meeting at UN headquarters in New York comes after Mr Samaraweera visited the UK and US, where he announced publicly that Sri Lanka was seeking to delay the findings of a United Nations investigation into mass atrocities on the island.

Speaking to Reuters on condition of anonymity, UN diplomatic sources said Mr Samaraweera had made the same call to the UN Secretary General. Inner City Press reported that Sri Lanka's outgoing Ambassador to the United Nations Palitha Kohona was also present at the meeting.