Tamil Affairs

Tamil News

Latest news from and about the homeland

A protest march was held last month opposing limestone excavation, mineral sand mining and a proposed wind power project across the villages of Veravil, Valaipadu, Ponnaveli and Kiranchi, in the Poonakary Divisional Secretariat division of Kilinochchi. The demonstration was organised against plans to establish wind power stations and to carry out mineral sand and limestone extraction in the…

Jaffna businesses face difficulties due to Southern traders

Businesses in Jaffna are suffering as traders from the South are setting up stalls and shops across the North without having to obtain any government permission, said the Valikamam South Traders Union leader Layan C Hariharan.

Speaking at the Valikamam South Chamber of Commerce’s General meeting, Hariharan said that whilst businesses in Jaffna are required to obtain permission to set up from the regional council every year, traders from the South are coming into the North and setting up businesses and stalls without any such requirements.

Special tribunal reviews LTTE ban in India

MDMK Chief Vaiko has appeared before a special tribunal reviewing India’s ban on the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) on Wednesday.

The LTTE ban was recently extended by five years under the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act in India.

The special tribunal, headed by Justice G P Mittal, was set up in July to review the ban and had issued a call for responses.

Presidential probe will not be punitive – chairman

The chairman of Sri Lanka’s presidential commission into disappeared people said the probe will only be able to provide details of individuals involved in such cases, and will not be able to make decisions on punishments.

Chairman Maxwell Paranagama said any decisions on punitive measures can only be taken by President Mahinda Rajapaksa and the Attorney General, while speaking to the BBC Sinhala Service.

Panaragama pointed out that although the new international advisory panel was appointed by the commission, the panel will not become “a stakeholder” in the probe.

Shop selling Buddha shoes raided in southern Sri Lanka

A shop selling shoes with the images of Buddha has been raided by police in the southern Sri lankan town of Balangoda, after a tip off.

Two people were arrested by local police, who said they will carry out further investigations, reported Colombo Gazette.

Power plant shutdown costs Rs. 600 million a day

A Sri Lankan minister has said the ongoing shutdown of the Norochcholai power plant is costing the government Rs. 600 million a day, as controversy continued in the Ceylon Electricity Board (CEB).

Science, Technology and Atomic Energy Minister Patali Champika Ranawaka stated that with the trouble-ridden power plant being run by the CEB, the daily losses were mounting. The minister went on to blame the CEB officials, labelling the “thieves” and part of the “power mafia”, according to the Island.

See more on the Ceylon Electricity Board's losses in our earlier post:

‘Debt-ridden’ SL electricity board seeks more loans
(12 August 2012)

Ranawaka's comments come as  Ceylon Electricity Board (CEB) General Manager Shavindranth Fernando found himself criticised for announcing an upcoming Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on the Norochcholai power plant with China, without consultation from the Sri Lankan government.

See more from the Island here.

Sri Lankan government looking to control rubber prices

Responding to a global drop in rubber prices, the Sri Lankan government is looking to control the price of rubber by introducing a certified price, said Plantation Industries Minister Mahinda Samarasinghe.

A joint proposal by the Ministry of Plantation Industries, the Ministry of Finance and Planning, Ministry of Economic Development and the Treasury would see the government enforce a set prices for rubber, said the minister.

See more from ColomboPage here and the Island here.

The announcement comes as the government raided over 400 rice vendors who sold rice at higher than government set prices.

NYT editorial 'unjust' and 'insensitive' says SL ambassador

Sri Lanka's ambassador to the United States, Prasad Kariyawasam, criticised an editorial published by the New York Times last month on Sri Lanka's refusal to allow in UN investigators, as "insensitive" and "unjust".

The editorial, 'Sri Lanka's Intransigence' published August 22, argued that the country's intransigence "puts Sri Lanka in the company of North Korea and Syria, two countries that also barred access to United Nations human rights investigators."

In a letter to the editor, published by the NYT on September 2, Kariyawasam said the editorial "makes insensitive assertions about my country."

"To compare Sri Lanka to human rights and humanitarian emergencies elsewhere in the world is unjust," he added, before reiterating Sri Lanka's refusal to engage with the UN inquiry.

Six more students detained by TID at Sabaragamuwa University

Six first-year undergraduates of the Sabaragamuwa University were detained and interrogated by the Terrorism Investigation Department (TID) on Tuesday, becoming the third set of students arrested at the southern university.

Body found washed up in Mannar

A dead body has been found washed up on the beach in Mannar, reported Uthayan on Wednesday.

The body, found in a severely decomposed state, was spotted by fishermen who informed the police. It is yet to be identified.

Mannar police are reportedly investigating the death.