Tamil Affairs

Tamil News

Latest news from and about the homeland

Displaced residents of the Valikamam North region of Jaffna held protests on Monday, in front of the Jaffna District Secretariat and near Palaly Junction, marking 36 years since their forced displacement and demanding the right to return and resettle in their lands. The people of Valikamam North were displaced from their homeland on 15 June 1990 by the Sri Lankan military. Thirty-six years on…

Rajapaksa fails to get Indian assurance on UNHRC resolution

The Indian Prime Minister, Manmohan Singh, in a brief discussion on reconciliation between Sinhala and Tamil communities on the island of Sri Lanka with Sri Lankan president, Mahinda Rajapaksa, outlined that India could not confirm its position on the draft UNHRC resolution tabled against Sri Lanka.

Buddhist monks lead protest against draft resolution

Photograph Foreign Correspondents of Sri Lanka



Buddhist monks in Sri Lanka led a protest in front of the UN building in Colombo today, against the draft resolution tabled at the UN Human Rights Council

BTF 'dismayed' by draft resolution, urges Cameron to honour promises

In a damning critique of the draft UNHRC resolution released yesterday by the US, UK and other co-sponsors, the British Tamils Forum said it was "dismayed", describing the draft resolution text as a "painful slap on the face" to the Tamil victims awaiting justice.

Colombo mosque closed by court

A mosque in the Colombo suburb of Dehiwala has been closed after the local magistrates issued a court order.

Police had filed a case against the mosque in February, saying it was operating illegally, an accusation mosque authorities denied.

Namal Rajapaksa accuses West of joining with the LTTE

The MP for Hambantota Namal Rajapaksa has accused western countries of joining “LTTE terrorists” to create secessionism and to make Sri Lanka “their centre in South Asia”.

No alternative but international inquiry says Sri Lankan civil society

In a joint memorandum released today, Sri Lankan civil society groups stressed that "there is no alternative but the establishment of an international mechanism for inquiry into human rights abuses, accountability for war crimes and crimes against humanity", outlining the on-going culture of impunity, lack of rule of law, extensive human rights violations and authoritarianism.

US stresses need for an investigation

Addressing the UNHRC on its second day, the US Under Secretary of State for civilian security, democracy and human rights, Sarah Seawall, reiterated the need for an investigation into past abuses and recent attacks, detailing the rationale for the draft resolution tabled yesterday.
"In past years we have learned that rigorous and systematic fact finding can play a critical role in helping countries heal wounds remaining from periods of conflict. Without such a process, grievances go unaddressed and impunity is allowed to triumph, creating a climate in which new abuses can occur."

Cross-party demands for international investigation at UK Commons debate on Sri Lanka

The UK Foreign Secretary William Hague stressed in parliament today that the UK fully supports the recommendation of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights that an international investigation should be established to look into past violations of humanitarian and human rights law in Sri Lanka.

"We are pursuing the issue actively at the Human Rights Council to secure an international inquiry of the type recommended by the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights," Hague said.

Ananthy Sasitharan condemns genocidal assault on Tamil activists

Northern Provincial Councillor, Ananthy Sasitharan ,at a protest demanding an international investigation into the death of a British Tamil prisoner, Gopithas, condemned the treatment of Tamil political prisoners in Sri Lankan custody.

Denmark backs ‘international inquiry mechanism’ on Sri Lanka

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