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…

NPC resolution demands transport links between North-East and India

A resolution passed by the Northern Provincial Council has called for transport links to be reestablished to connect the Tamil homeland to India.

The resolution, presented by Councillor MK Sivajilingam and seconded by Kandaiah Sarveshwaran of the TNA, said flights should travel directly from Indian airports to the airports in Palaly in the Jaffna district and Trincomalee on the east coast.

India to support international investigation – The Telegraph

An international investigation into crimes by the Sri Lankan army will be supported by India, according to The Telegraph.

The decision to support the campaign for an international probe, led by the UK and the US, will be a serious blow to the Sri Lankan president, Mahinda Rajapaksa, the British daily said, adding that India’s status as a regional power will increase the likelihood that a resolution will pass at the Human Rights Council.

Parliamentarians stage Lok Sabha walkout over ‘inaction’ on fishermen

Members of the Indian parliament, headed by Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Jayalalithaa walked out of Lok Sabha earlier today, slamming India’s “inaction” over fishermen arrested by Sri Lankan security forces.

In response to the question of what the government was doing to secure the safety of Indian fishermen from the Sri Lankan Navy, raised by the leader of the Opposition Sushma Swaraj as well as from members from AIADMK, DMK and Congress, Parliamentary Affairs Minister Kamal Nath stated that,

Police continue to block Trinco grave site

Sri Lankan police have continued to block access to a site in Trincomalee where skeletal remains were found last week, sources have told the Tamil Guardian. 

Workers, who were digging a well, uncovered skeletons at the playground in Trincomalee last Thursday and police have since blocked all access to the site.

Defining moment

UN Human Rights chief Navaneetham Pillay’s forthcoming report to the Human Rights Council, extracts of which appeared this weekend in a Sri Lankan newspaper, makes a clear and unambiguous call: for an international investigation into the mass atrocities of the final months of the island’s civil war. The High Commissioner’s call will be welcomed by the diverse array of actors, both ‘local’ and international, who have been steadfastly campaigning for five years for accountability for the war crimes and crimes against humanity in which at least 70,000 people were systematically slaughtered in 2009. In particular, it will be enthusiastically welcomed by the Tamil people, for whom the mass killings – described by an earlier report by a UN panel of experts as amounting to ‘systematic targetting' and 'persecution’ of them – constituted genocide by the Sri Lankan state.

Death sentences commuted in Rajiv Gandhi case

Three men who were sentenced to death for their alleged involvement in the assassination of Rajiv Gandhi, have had their sentences commuted by India’s Supreme Court.

Murugan, Santhan and Perarivalan have been imprisoned for more than 20 years and were sentenced to death by hanging in 1998. After submitting mercy pleas, they were kept in a state of limbo, until in 2011 when their pleas were rejected. Intervention by the Madras High Court saw their executions delayed, until today, when the decision was finally taken to remove the men from death row.

Pro-Sri Lanka resolution not of our making – SL Government

Media minister Keheliya Rambukwella has said that countries friendly to Sri Lanka are planning to submit a resolution supportive of the country.

Rambukwella told the Daily Mirror that the move was not initiated by the government.

Northern Provincial Council representative returns from UNHRC

The Northern Provincial Councillor, Aanthy Sasitharan, who received the second highest number of votes in the elections, commented on of her recent visit as a representative of the Northern Provincial Council to United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC), in Sri Lankan press today.

Sasitharan, outlined that she had stressed the problems faced by war-affected women and children to international human rights organisations and diplomats during her visits, and also highlighted disingenuous presidential commissions.

Speaking on her visit she said,

India to increase developmental aid to SL

The Indian Ministry of External Affairs has had its budget increased by 20% from Rs117.39bn (£ 537.5mn) last year to Rs141.3bn (£646.9mn) in 2014-15, by Finance Minister P Chidambaram.

According to the figures in the Economic Times of India, Sri Lanka is the third highest recipient of Indian developmental funds, and saw an increase from Rs4.1bn (£18.8mn) to Rs5bn (£22.9mn).

We aren’t afraid of sanctions – SL Minister

Sri Lanka’s Minister of Irrigation and Water Resources Management, Nimal Siripala de Silva has stated the government is not afraid of being subjected to economic sanctions over human rights abuses.

De Silva said the government had taken measures after the war to ensure economic stability, saying this will be continued, despite international pressure.

“We have brought peace to this country and we will not allow terrorism to raise its head again,” he said.