Tamil Affairs

Tamil News

Latest news from and about the homeland

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Mannar Urban Council Chairman Daniel Vasanthan has strongly condemned the arrest of Tamil rapper Sangeethsan Ganeskumar under Sri Lanka's Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA), stating that the detention reflects a situation where "Tamils do not even have the freedom to sing". Speaking at a media briefing held at the Mannar Urban Council on Friday, Vasanthan criticised the decision to arrest the…

Milking militarisation


Sri Lankan army soldiers embarked on their latest venture into the civilian life of Tamils in the North-East, with a milk programme.

The 51st Division of Kopay, have gave Tamil children in four Jaffna schools a cup of free milk on July 16th.



The four schools were: St James Maha Vidhyalaya, St. Roches Roman Catholic Vidyalaya, Seevari primary school and Thordarmalee school.

The Sri Lankan army's 'Civil Military Coordination' in Jaffna, proudly states, "The company sponsored the project not as a promotion to its product but as compliance to the request of the Army."

Black July commemorated in Toronto and London

Tamil youths have led commemorations of the Black July pogroms against Tamils in 1983, with events held in Toronto and London to mark the 30th anniversary.

TNPF: Black July was designed to 'ethnically cleanse Tamils from the Sinhala homeland'

Marking the 30 year anniversary of the Black July anti-Tamil pogrom, the Tamil National People's Front (TNPF), said that it "was not an 'anti-Tamil riot' but the most naked act of Genocide committed by the Sri Lankan state against the Tamil nation", intended "not merely to cause death to the Tamils, it was also designed to ethnically cleanse Tamils from the Sinhala homeland and at the same time structurally undermine the self-sustaining economy of the Tamil nation".

In a statement to Tamils worldwide, marking the 30 year anniversary with remembrance events taking place Saturday, the TNPF added:

During Black July govt confirmed NE was Tamil homeland - TNA MP

In a statement in Sri Lanka's parliament, highlighting the 30th year anniversary of Black July, the TNA MP M.A. Sumanthiran, spoke of his own experiences during Black July when he was shipped to the North for his safety by the state, asserting that it was the actions of successive governments that had confirmed the North and the East as the homeland of the Tamils.

He
said:
"We ourselves took shelter in a Muslim house nearby, who gave us shelter, and subsequently, Sinhalese friends, kept us in their house for four days and we were put in a ship and transported to Jaffna.

That was the second such incident in my life. The first being, in the year '77, when there was violence unleashed against Tamils in Colombo. Then too, I was transported that time by air, from Ratmalana airport to Palali, by the government of Sri Lanka.

So twice in my student days I was taken away from the capital city, once by air and once by ship, totally at the cost of the government of Sri Lanka, to the North. The government being unable to protect me, in its own capital, thought that I'd be safe in my home, and sent me to my homeland.

Armed forces granted interest free housing loans

The Sri Lankan government granted interest free housing loans, worth Rs. 300,000 each, to members of its armed forces.

In a special ceremony to take place on Saturday, the Chairperson of the Ministry of Defence Seva Vanitha Unit, Ioma Rajapaksa, granted loans to 47 members of the army, navy, air force and police force.



Freelance journalist attacked in Jaffna

 A freelance journalist, C Mayuran, was attacked by 5 individuals that ambushed him with a white van in Jaffna today, reported Lankasri news.

The journalist and a friend, C Sivadas, were taken to Jaffna Teaching hospital to have their injuries treated.

Tamil Nadu protest documentary to be released on Sunday

'Arappor', a documentary on the mass protests that swept across Tamil Nadu earlier this year, is set to be released in Chennai on Sunday the 28th of July.

Tamil Guardian will be tweeting live from the event. You can follow all the action live from our Twitter account here.

The event is set to start at 12:00 BST.

Thirty years backwards

This week marks the 30th anniversary of the anti-Tamil pogrom on the island of Sri Lanka, remembered as 'Black July'. The attacks saw Sinhala mobs roaming streets across the country, killing, burning, looting and raping their way through Tamil neighbourhoods. Tamils were singled out for attack purely on their ethnic identity - their facial appearance, their fledgling Sinhalese, their cultural symbols, and their names on electoral rolls. The pogrom was brutal - an inevitable outcome of decades of rising Sinhala nationalism and anti-Tamil sentiment. Black July was not a reactionary act of rioting. It was the persecution of one ethnicity by another, with the full endorsement of the state - an act of genocide. 

Another commission...

The Sri Lankan president, Mahinda Rajapaksa, has asked his secretary, Lalith Weeratunga, to appoint a commission to look into disappearances that have taken place over the 30 years of armed conflict, announced the President's media unit.

According to the President's spokesperson, Mohan Samaranayake, the terms of reference and members of the commission are yet to be appointed.

High Commissioner for Pakistan calls for strengthened trade links

The High Commissioner of Pakistan in Sri Lanka, Qasim Qureshi, visited different provinces to explore opportunities to develop economic, cultural and people to people links, whilst understanding the ground situation,  reported Colombo Page.