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 police question Wigneswaran… 7 months later

Sri Lankan police have questioned the former Supreme Court justice and current leader of the Tamizh Makkal Kootanii over a press release from December, with just days left until Sri Lanka’s parliamentary election.

C V Wigneswaran said police had visited him to question him about the press release, where had spoken on the history of Tamils on the island.

See the full text of the press release here.

"I stand by every word of what I have said here," the former chief minister told the questioning SL Police inspector on Friday, according to an interview with TamilNet. “You may collect it and you can question me on anything if you like.

‘Candidates on the verge of withdrawing due to ferocious threats’ – TNPF

Candidates from the Tamil National People's Front (TNPF) who are contesting in the Eastern province are “on the verge of withdrawing due to ferocious threats and harassment” from paramilitary groups, said party leader Gajendrakumar Ponnambalam, with parliamentary elections scheduled for next week.

Rajapaksa confident SLPP will secure two-thirds majority at elections

Sri Lanka Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa said he was confident that the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) will win with a two-thirds majority in the upcoming parliamentary elections, at a rally earlier this week.

Rajapaksa claimed the SLPP “was born and emerged as a strong party due to the intimidation and harassment by the Yahapalana Government” and highlighted how the previous government overlooked the SLPP as the opposition party, despite winning 53 seats.

Sri Lankan diplomats spend 7 hours discussing genocide denial strategy

The heads of Sri Lanka’s diplomatic missions spent 7 hours on a call with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs discussing “strategic communication” on the issue of genocide, reports a column in the Sunday Times this week.

The call, part of what the Sunday Times called a “time-consuming exercise”, was part of a new drive of video conferences from Colombo.

During the “record” 7 hour discussion on genocide “the Ministry spokesperson maintained stoic silence throughout,” it added.

Sri Lanka's former Foreign Secretary calls for ‘special treatment’ from India

Sri Lanka's former Foreign Secretary has called on New Delhi and Colombo to “nourish the roots” of their relationship in a piece where he recalls ties between the two governments and makes the case for “special and differential treatment for Sri Lanka”.

Writing in The Hindu, Prasad Kariyawasam also recalled the Buddhist history between the two countries, stating “the advent of Buddhism to Sri Lanka during the time of Emperor Ashoka was the result of cross-border discourse”.

Sri Lanka’s State Responsibility for Historical and Recent Tamil Genocides

Reports of genocide committed by the Sri Lankan state against Eelam Tamils need to be “addressed and recognized” wrote Tasha Manoranjan and Meruba Sivaselvachandran in Opinio Juris last week, 37 years after the Black July pogroms that killed thousands of Tamils.

“Eelam Tamils have suffered at least two genocides: Black July of 1983 and the Mullivaikkal Massacre of 2009," said the piece.

‘What Nelson Mandela was to South Africa, Gotabya Rajapaksa is to Sri Lanka’ claims KP

Kumaran Pathmanathan, a former LTTE official who switched to become a staunch supporter of the Rajapaksas,  has heaped praise on Sri Lankan president Gotabaya Rajapaksa, calling him “the right leader for the country” and compared him to Nelson Mandela, in an interview where he sang the praises of the accused war criminal.

In a recent interview to FT Lanka, Pathmanathan, also known as KP, went on to slam the Tamil diaspora, downplayed reports of war crimes and claimed that civil-military relationship in the North-East is “excellent”.

‘Obviously collateral damage is there’ admits former Sri Lankan MP

A former Sri Lankan parliamentarian who has lobbied against an international inquiry mechanism into atrocities committed by state forces admitted that “obviously collateral damage” had occurred as the military launched an offensive that killed tens of thousnads of Tamil civilians in 2009.

Sri Lankan army block Tamil farmers from accessing their land

Tamils from a village have complained about the Sri Lankan army for blocking them from carrying out farming activities on their land.

Last week, the Tamil farmers from villages bordering North Vavuniya, stated they were not given permission to access their 250 acres of land. The land was assigned to Tamil people of Paddikudiyiruppu and its bordering villages for agricultural activities. A well was also reconstructed and handed for agricultural activities for these people.

During the war, the Sri Lankan government approved the development of several villages that were adjacent to Tamil-populated farming land. The Sinhala settlers promptly took over this farming land.

UPFA General Secretary says its members are 'hindering chances of SLPP gaining two-thirds majority'

The United People's Freedom Alliance (UPFA) General Secretary, Mahinda Amaraweera said that a few members of the UPFA are “preventing an opportunity for the party to gain a two-thirds majority in the general election”, during a public meeting held in Hambantota on Sunday.

Amaraweera said that voters are losing courage because of the comments made by some individuals. “Despite the President's advice not to cause conflict, they are acting without any regards to what he said”, he added.