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,…

Sri Lankan army’s Maaveerar Naal crackdown in Jaffna caught on CCTV

CCTV footage from outside a home in Chavakachcheri in Jaffna, showed armed Sri Lankan police and army personnel surrounded it, as part of a crackdown across the North-East on Maaveerar Naal.

The residents inside the home were holding a small private ceremony to mark the day, which pays tribute to fallen Tamil freedom fighters.

Even in the remembrance of the dead, there is discrimination against the Tamil people' - Sumanthiran

Tamil National Alliance (TNA) parliamentarian, M A Sumanthiran highlighted the discrimination faced by Tamils in their right to remember those who gave their lives in the struggle for liberation, in a fiery exchange in the Sri Lankan parliament.

Maaveerar Naal commemorated in Germany

Tamils in cities and homes across Germany marked Maaveerar Naal on November 27, 2020.

See photographs from events below.

British Tamils speak on the importance of Maaveerar Naal

With Maaveerar Naal this week, British Tamil organisations spoke on the importance of the day and why it is commemorated.

Members of organisations including Tamil Youth Organisation UK and Tamil Coordinating Committee outlined why the day is marked, the pain felt by those who lost their loved ones, and why it is important for the youth to carry forward the Tamil liberation struggle.

Tamil nation marks Maaveerar Naal 2020

Tamils in the homeland braved Sri Lankan military intimidation and court orders to join others around the world and mark Maaveerar Naal on November 27, to remember and pay tribute to the Maaveerar who sacrificed their lives in the Tamil struggle for liberation.

Maaveerar Naal marked by Tamil politicians across the North-East

Politicians from all major Tamil parties commemorated Maaveerar Naal across the North-East amidst a military crackdown by the Sri Lankan state. 

See the various commemorations that took place across the homeland by politicians below.

Tamil efforts to commemorate Maaveerar Naal ‘at the forefront of the fight against hegemony’ - PEARL

Tamil efforts to commemorate Maaveerar Naal “puts them at the forefront of the fight against hegemony and authoritarianism” said People for Equality and Relief in Lanka (PEARL), in a statement released today condemning the “exceptionally vicious response” of the Sri Lankan security forces.

“While the heightened repression is a consequence of the strengthened authoritarian regime under Rajapaksa, this didn’t start with them,” said the group. "It is crucial to understand the structural causes, rooted in the Sinhala-Buddhist supremacist nature of the state, that enables the state to perpetrate repression and genocide - across decades and across governments.”

An unstoppable force

For the first time in decades there will be no mass gatherings across the world today, as Eelam Tamils commemorate Maaveerar Naal. In the Tamil homeland, the return of the Rajapaksas has plunged the North-East back into a familiar repression. Many will be marking the day in secret, fearing the threat of Sri Lankan military reprisals. Pandemic restrictions around the world have also meant that the well-established large scale events held by the diaspora have been moved to virtual spaces. This relative absence of public display, however, does not detract from the solemnity of this day.

Instead, the will to overcome these obstacles and commemorate the sacrifices demonstrates the tenacity of the Tamil nation.

Tamils in the homeland hold private commemorations to mark Maaveerar Naal

Tamils across the homeland lit lamps and laid flowers in their homes to pay tribute to the lives lost in the Tamil struggle for liberation. 

Families held small, private commemorations in their homes as Sri Lanka has thwarted attempts to commemorate the fallen publicly by imposing court ordered bans and ramping up their surveillance and intimidation.