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…

Christian shrine vandalised in Vavuniya

A Christian shrine was vandalised by a group of unknown persons in Vauvuniya earlier today, in what locals have denounced as a move to try and create religious disharmony in the region.

The Madha shrine, located by a row of private homes in Vavuniya, was found vandalised by locals.

Sri Lankan police have been informed and are reportedly carrying out investigations.

OMP begins process to ‘validate’ missing persons status

The Office of Missing Persons (OMP) have started the process of issuing Interim Reports to the families of the disappeared which will allow them to obtain a Certificate of Absence (CoA), to 'validate' the status of a person reported missing.

In a press release, the OMP stated that:

Former LTTE cadre arrested over murder of Sri Lankan police officer

Batticaloa Magistrate's Court has ordered Sri Lankan police to detain two men over the murder of a Sri Lankan policeman in Vavunathivu last week, including a former LTTE cadre.

A 55-year-old Tamil police officer attached to Valaichchenai police station, named by authorities as Thambipillai Sivarasar, was found murdered last week.

Gunasekaran Surendran,a  former LTTE cadre from Vavunathivu, was arrested alongside 31-year-old Mohamed Azmi in connectioned with the murder.

Another day in Eelam - Sri Lankan military checkpoints in Vavuniya

The Sri Lankan military has recently ramped up search operations across the Tamil homeland, including the searching of buses travelling from Jaffna to the south of the island.

Discarded munitions collection cause explosion in Mullaitivu

 

At least one person has been admitted to hospital after an explosion at a home in Mullaitivu, where a Tamil man had reportedly been collecting discarded munitions, in order to extract chemicals to sell.

Rajapaksa requests moratorium from India as Sri Lanka’s debt repayments pile up

Sri Lanka’s prime minister Mahinda Rajapaksa revealed that he requested a moratorium on all loan repayments to India for three years, as his regime struggles with Sri Lanka’s repayment obligations.

In an interview with The Hindu, Rajapaksa admitted that Sri Lanka’s debt repayments, with servicing totalling $60 billion, were “a worry”.

Notice issued to ex-navy chief over 11 youth murder and abduction case

A notice has been issued to Wasantha Karannagoda, a former Sri Lankan navy chief, to appear in court over the abduction and murder of 11 primarily Tamil youths, the Colombo Gazette reported

This is the third notice that has been issued to Karannagoda as he has failed to appear in court on two previous occasions.   

The former Sri Lankan navy chief is the 14th suspect named in the abduction and murder of 11 primarily Tamil youths between 2008 - 2009. 

Modi urges Sri Lanka to implement 13th Amendment

During a meeting between Sri Lankan Prime Minister, Mahinda Rajapaksa, and India’s Prime Minister, Narendra Modi, Modi stated the need for the government to “carry forward the process of reconciliation” and to implement the Thirteen Amendment, which relates to devolving power to provincial councils across the island.

In a statement Modi said;

Tamil diaspora groups demand FCO investigate crimes committed by British mercenaries

Tamil diaspora groups have called on the Foreign Commonwealth Office (FCO) to 'investigate and report' on the allegations of crimes against Tamil civilians committed by British mercenaries. 

In a joint letter to the UK's Foreign Secretary, Dominic Raab, the groups highlight that a private British company, Keenie Meenie Services (KMS) was "involved in inflicting death and carnage to Tamils in Sri Lanka, and worse, enjoys impunity in this country."

Review: ‘Keenie Meenie - The British Mercenaries Who Got Away with War Crimes'

This month saw the release of an explosive new book that documents how a private British company formed of former Special Air Service (SAS) veterans turned mercenaries, went on to effectively set up one of Sri Lanka’s most notorious military units – one that has been accused of committing egregious mass atrocities.

Authored by Phil Miller, ‘Keenie Meenie: The British Mercenaries Who Got Away with War Crimes', goes into meticulous detail of how a band of former British soldiers trained and even flew helicopters for the Sri Lankan military whilst massacres were reportedly underway, all under the watchful eye of the UK Foreign Office.