Tamil Affairs

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Latest news from and about the homeland

A protest march was held last month opposing limestone excavation, mineral sand mining and a proposed wind power project across the villages of Veravil, Valaipadu, Ponnaveli and Kiranchi, in the Poonakary Divisional Secretariat division of Kilinochchi. The demonstration was organised against plans to establish wind power stations and to carry out mineral sand and limestone extraction in the…

Tamil 'Disappearances' campaigner and 13y daughter held by Sri Lankan military

Updated 18:41

A Tamil rights activist campaigning for the families of those ‘disappeared’ in Sri Lankan military custody is tonight herself being held, along with her 13 year old daughter, at an unknown location.

Earlier today Sri Lankan police and soldiers entered Balendran Jeyakumari’s home in Tharmapuram, as hundreds of troops were deployed in the area.

 

Local residents told the Uthayan newspaper late this evening they had seen Ms. Jeyakumari and her daughter being arrested and taken away by police.

 

Sri Lankan government will formally reject UNHRC resolution - Minister

The Sri Lankan government says that it will formally reject the resolution that is to be proposed at the UN Human Rights Council.

Minister Dinesh Gunawardena told media that the government is willing to accept constructive criticism, however it will not abide by any resolution which could harm Sri Lanka’s interests.

Tamils fearful after disappearances campaigner and daughter arrested by SL police

Tamils in Kilinochchi were left in fear today, after a prominent campaigner against disappearances, and her 13 year old daughter were arrested by the Sri Lankan police.

Balendran Jeyakumari and her daughter Vipoosika, gained prominence during British Prime Minister Cameron’s visit to Jaffna in November, with Vipoosika’s desperate pleas for the return of her missing brother gaining widespread coverage.

Britain reiterates support for international investigation

Foreign Secretary William Hague reiterated the British government’s support for an international investigation in a written statement delivered in parliament on Thursday.

Hague said, as no credible domestic accountability process had been established, the time has now come for international action and that the UK has been talking to a wide range of UNHRC members to garner support for a resolution calling for an international investigation.

“[N]o credible domestic accountability processes have been set up to date in Sri Lanka. As a result, the time has now come for international action on the human rights situation in Sri Lanka."

NPC to consider resolution against military involvement in school and civil events

A resolution on stopping the military from being invited to take part in school and civil events in the Northern Province will be considered by the NPC, reports Uthayan.

Speaking to press after a meeting with the French ambassador, the Chairman of the Northern Provincial Council, C V J Sivagnanam, outlined that the resolution was being discussed and drafted within the Council leadership.

Sri Lanka regrets ‘unconstitutional’ removal of Ukrainian president

The Sri Lankan government has expressed its regret at the “unconstitutional removal” of the President of Ukraine, Viktor Yanukovych.

In a statement, the External Affairs Ministry said the removal aggravated the political crisis.

NPC minister will take action against continued appropriation of Tamil land

The Health Minister for the Northern Province, Dr P Sathiyalingam, stated that families had made complaints that over 100 acres of land in the Vavuniya, were in the process of being appropriated by the Sri Lankan government to settle Sinhala military families.

The minister reiterated that the land was native to Tamils, and had been occupied by the military, whilst civilians fled the region during the end of the ethnic armed conflict in 2009.

Draft resolution not satisfying - TNA MP Suresh Premachandran

Tamil National Alliance MP and spokesperson, Suresh Premachandran said the UN Human Rights Council resolution addressing accountability in Sri Lanka was not satisfying and called for it to be strengthened, reports the Thinakurral newspaper.

According to Thinakkural, the Jaffna MP met with representatives at the US embassy on the island, demanding an international mechanism that will address accountability and for the subject of demilitarisation to be explicitly mentioned in the draft resolution.

Peace will come when Army leaves North, NPC tells French Ambassador

The speaker for the Northern Provincial Council S Sivagnanam met with the French Ambassador earlier this week, where he described the ubiquitous militarisation in the North and asserted that normality could not return whilst the army occupied the region.

Weak UN resolution will endanger justice

Acclaimed journalist J. S. Tissainayagam, wrote in Asian Correspondent on Wednesday, calling for a strengthening of a United Nations Human Rights Council resolution on accountability in Sri Lanka, stating one that does is not “will only enhance turmoil and violence”.

Tissainayagam was detained by Sri Lanka's Terrorism Investigation Division in 2008 and sentenced to 20 years of "rigorous punishment" for inciting "communal feelings". Following international pressure, including a mention from US President Barack Obama, Tissainayagam was eventually pardoned and is currently living in exile.

See his full piece in the Asian Correspondent here.

Extracts have been reproduced below.

Language in the draft resolution now before the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) for an investigation into past and ongoing human rights abuses in Sri Lanka lacks teeth say critics. A resolution that establishes a weak investigating body will only render ineffectual what the international community says it is working for – strengthening human rights to promote reconciliation in a country recovering from war.

Adding to this, post-war militarisation in the former warzone of northern and eastern Sri Lanka, continues to spawn grave human rights abuses – disappearance, torture and sexual violence. In the face of Colombo’s stonewalling, the only option for justice and accountability for past and ongoing violations was an international investigation.