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,…

Mannar Professors' Union protests for an end to ‘militarisation of free education’

The Mannar Chancellors’ and Professors’ Union organised a protest in the district earlier yesterday demanding higher wages and an end to militarisation of free education through the Kotelawala National Defence University (KNDU) Bill. 

Former Sri Lankan Prime Minister files petition against Commission on political victimisation

Former Sri Lankan Prime Minister, Ranil Wickremesinghe, has filed a petition seeking to void the recommendations made against him by the President’s Commission on Political Victimisation.

Indian central government appeals against court order to consider citizenship for Eelam Tamil refugees

File photograph: Eelam refugees in Tamil Nadu, 2012. Courtesy EC/ECHO Arjun Claire

The Indian central government has appealed to the Madras High Court challenging the June 17, 2019 order which stated that the plea of 65 Eelam Tamils seeking Indian citizenship, some of whom are descendants of Malayaga Tamils, should be considered. 

German Tamils protest against deportation of Tamil torture survivor at Frankfurt Airport

German Tamils held a protest at Frankfurt Airport today to stop the deportation of torture survivor and asylum seeker Sasi K, after he was taken into immigration detention on Friday. 

The flight which was set to deport Sasi K. has been temporarily delayed by 1.5 hours. 

‘Political influence’ keeps more than 20,000 Tamil families out of Sri Lankan housing scheme

More than 20,000 Tamil war-affected families in Jaffna have been left out of a Sri Lankan government run housing scheme due to “allegations of administrative flaws” and “political influence”, according to the Sunday Times.

The families are from various Divisional Secretariats from across Jaffna, which has been under Sri Lankan military occupation since 1995, with the highest number of displaced families from Chavakachcheri, Tellipalai and Kopay.

Massacre of Tamils by IPKF remembered 32 years on

The massacre of up to 64 Tamils in Valvettithurai by Indian Peace Keeping Forces (IPKF) on August 2, 1989 was marked in an event by former Northern Provincial Councillor M K Shivajilingham. 

Yesterday marked 32 years since IPKF officers, led by Brigadier Sankar Prasath, entered homes in the region after imposing a curfew and shot and stabbed residents to death.

Some young men were dragged to the local junction where they were shot and killed. 

Remnants of a massacre - Mortar shell recovered at Mullaitivu hospital

An undetonated mortar shell was recovered at Mullaitivu District Hospital on Wednesday, more than 12 years after it was subjected to intense Sri Lankan military bombardment.

The Sri Lankan police removed the device after workers uncovered the mortar shell during road construction on the hospital premises.

Sri Lanka’s High Commissioner seeks to restore trust with India

Sri Lanka’s new High Commissioner to India, former cabinet Minister Milinda Moragoda, is reported to be preparing for a visit to India in mid-August to restore trust between the countries.

According to Moragoda, whose appointment was announced in August 2020, “in recent years, the Indo-Sri Lanka bilateral relationship has been increasingly dominated by a transactional approach.” He adds that this is because “of the changes in the geopolitical equilibrium in the region” and has resulted in a “growing trust deficit”.

‘India’s My Lai’ – Remembering the 1989 Valvettiturai massacre

On this day 32 years ago, up to 64 Tamil civilians were killed by the Indian Peace Keeping Force (IPKF) in Valvettithurai in a massacre that was termed “India’s My Lai”.

The massacre, which saw dozens killed, came on the background of escalating violence and rights abuses committed by Indian forces across the Tamil homeland. As Tamil militant groups continued hostilities with the IPKF, the Indian forces imposed a curfew on August 2, 1989, following an ambush attack.

Mullaitivu photographer found dead in home

A Mullaitivu photographer was found dead in his home in Mallavi - Palinagar on Monday.

Mallavi police said they were investigating the circumstances surrounding the death of Shanmugaratnam Vinothan.

Vinothan was 34 years of age and a father of two children.