Tamil Affairs

Tamil News

Latest news from and about the homeland

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The number of skeletal remains identified at the Chemmani mass grave in Jaffna has risen to 366, as excavators uncovered further remains of children on Tuesday, at one of the largest mass graves unearthed on the island and a site long tied to the enforced disappearance and extrajudicial killing of Tamils by the Sri Lankan military. Six sets of skeletal remains, including those of children,…

Women will bear the brunt of the economic crisis' - Feminists warn against IMF bailout

(Photo: Tamil families of the disappeared protest in Mullaitivu)

“We are witnessing the unfolding of a humanitarian crisis”, warned a petition signed by 21 feminist organisations in Sri Lanka, the majority of which are based in the North-East, that raised concerns over the prospect of an International Monetary Fund (IMF) bailout.

13 years today - Thousands of British Tamils occupy Parliament Square as Sri Lanka shells No Fire Zone

13 years ago today, thousands of British Tamils continuously occupied Parliament Square in London for 72 days as Sri Lanka intensifed its military offensive which led to the massacre of tens of thousands of Tamils in Mullivaikkal. 

Bridgerton star’s ‘dream production’ would be on Tamil genocide in Sri Lanka

British Tamil actress Charithra Chandran, one of the breakout stars of the hit Netflix show Bridgerton, told Teen Vogue that her “dream production” would be on the Tamil genocide in Sri Lanka, as she spoke on colourism and culture this week.

Speaking to Versha Sharma, the 25-year-old Oxford graduate brought up the ethnic conflict in Sri Lanka when speaking about her dream projects and future roles.

“My dream production, whether I’m producing or starring in it, I’d love to make a film about the crisis in Sri Lanka with the Tamil population,” said Chandran. “I think it is so complex and nuanced: the situation with the Tamil Tigers and the Sri Lankan government, the genocide that happened. It’s something obviously near and dear to my heart because it’s my community.”

Sri Lanka’s president ‘will not resign under any circumstances’ as protests kick off in parliament

A newly appointed Sri Lankan minister declared that embattled president Gotabaya Rajapaksa will not resign “under any circumstances” in a defiant address to parliament as protests continued to rumble across the South.

Addressing parliament this morning, Highways Minister Johnston Fernando said that “6.9 million people voted for the president".

"As a government, we are clearly saying the president will not resign under any circumstances,” he continued. “We will face this."

OHCHR warns that militarisation in Sri Lanka has left it unable to address crisis

The United Nations human rights office warned Sri Lanka that it was “closely following developments” and reiterated that the island’s “drift towards militarisation and the weakening of institutional checks and balances” have left it unable to effectively deal with the economic and political crises.

TNA urges India for implementation of 13th Amendment to resolve economic crisis

Sri Lanka’s army chief lashes out at police for ‘unethical’ behaviour after masked soldiers stopped in South

The heads of Sri Lanka’s army and police force publically clashed today, after the war-crimes accused military head Shavendra Silva demanded an inquiry into two Sri Lankan police officers, after they stopped a group of masked and armed soldiers on unmarked motorbikes near protests outside parliament. 

A statement released by the Army said,

Sri Lanka’s embattled president revokes emergency law as MPs leave ruling coalition

Sri Lanka’s embattled president Gotabaya Rajapaksa revoked a state of emergency that he had declared, as lawmakers from the ruling collation sat independently in parliament today following more protests across the South.

Late on Tuesday evening, Rajapaksa issued a gazette revoking the state of emergency, effective from midnight on April 5.

‘Gota needs to go – but so does the ethnocratic state’

Responding to the crisis which has engulfed Sri Lanka, Mario Arulthas, an advisor to People for Equality and Relief in Lanka (PEARL), stresses that for a “more just stable and prosperous island”, it is not the President that needs to go but the deeply entrenched ethnocratic state.

‘Protesting is not new to us… it’s new to them’ – A Tamil student reflects on the protest in Jaffna

As anti-government protests engulfed the south of Sri Lanka this week, Tamil students at the University of Jaffna have expressed their frustrations at how Sinhalese students had failed to join them at previous protests as they joined a rally through the Northern city on Monday.