Tamil Affairs

Tamil News

Latest news from and about the homeland

""
The Association for Relatives of the Enforced Disappeared in the North-East (ARED) has appealed to the United Nations to ensure an international investigation into enforced disappearances and mass graves across the Tamil homeland, including the ongoing excavations at Chemmani, where more than 380 human skeletal remains have been uncovered. In a letter dated 19 June 2026, the association called…

Former army chief who spearheaded 'arbitrary detentions' appointed Sri Lanka's Rehabilitation Commissioner General

Sri Lanka army commander, Major General Darshana Hettiarachchi, was brought out of retirement and reappointed as the Rehabilitation Commissioner General on Friday.

Sinhala Buddhist monks join Sri Lankan outrage at travel ban on army chief

Senior Buddhist monks from Sri Lanka’s leading Sinhala Buddhist chapters have joined the chorus of outrage at US travel sanctions imposed on the head of the army, over his involvement in mass atrocities.

The Malwatte and Asgiriya chapters of Siyam Nikaya Chapters reportedly “expressed their displeasure” after the United States announced Shavendra Silva and his family would not be allowed to travel to the country on Friday, due to his involvement in reported war crimes, including extrajudicial killings, a decade ago

Sri Lanka to withdraw from UN resolution on accountability for war crimes

The Sri Lankan government has reportedly decided to withdraw from a United National Human Rights Council resolution that mandated an accountability mechanism for the prosecution of mass atrocities, just weeks before it was due to be discussed in Geneva.

Australian judge concerned over 'over-enthusiastic' document redactions against Tamil family

The Australian Immigration Department has been accused of being over-enthusiastic in providing heavily redacted documents to the lawyers of the Eelam Tamil family fighting deportation to Sri Lanka.

Intensified surveillance and threats' against families of disappeared says Human Rights Watch

<p>Surveillance and harassment against the families of the disappeared and activists have intensified since the election of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa in November 2019, says Human Rights Watch.</p> <p>Speaking to HRW, activists working across the North and East of Sri Lanka said that government surveillance and intimidation has risen.</p> <p>One activist told HRW that prior to a victims’ meeting, “every one of the mothers got at least six telephone calls from different intelligence agencies asking ‘where is the meeting?’ Who is organising the meeting?’ What is being said?’”</p>

Sri Lanka’s embassy in Washington calls on diaspora to mobilise against sanctions

Sri Lanka’s embassy in Washington DC has reportedly called on its Sri Lankan diaspora in the United States to mobilise and lobby against a travel ban imposed on the head of its army Shavendra Silva, over his involvement in war crimes.

Sri Lankan opposition MP calls for ‘boycott of USA’ after travel ban

A parliamentarian in Sri Lanka’s opposition has called for legislators on both sides of the aisle to join together and boycott the United States until a travel ban imposed on the head of Sri Lanka’s army is lifted.

UNF Parliamentarian S M Marikkar said that he would refrain from travelling to the United States until the ban on Shavendra Silva, who led Sri Lanka’s 58 Division which committed extrajudicial killings and shelled Tamil civilians, was lifted.

He went on to call on “so-called patriots in the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna” to join his boycott.

Sri Lanka denounces travel ban on army chief in meeting with US

The Sri Lankan government criticised a United States imposed travel sanction on the head of its army over reports of his involvement in war crimes and extrajudicial killings of Tamils more than a decade ago.

Sri Lanka reportedly summoned US Ambassador Alaina Teplitz for a meeting in Colombo on Sunday, where Foreign Relations Minister Dinesh Gunawardena “formally conveyed… Sri Lanka’s strong objections” on the ban placed on Shavendra Silva and his family.

Premadasa vows to ‘stand by’ Sri Lankan army chief barred over war crimes

The leader of Sri Lanka’s opposition has vowed to “stand by” the head of the army, after he was banned from travelling to the United States over his involvement in mass atrocities over a decade ago, when tens of thousands of Tamils were killed in a Sri Lankan military offensive.

US sanctions against Sri Lankan army chief welcomed by PEARL

<p>People for Equality and Relief in Lanka (PEARL) welcomes the travel ban imposed on Sri Lankan army chief, Shavendra Silva and his family&nbsp;by the US government.</p> <blockquote><p> "This sends an important message to those who committed war crimes with impunity, not only in Sri Lanka, but around the world, that the US will not tolerate their presence. <strong>This is a small, but significant, step. </strong>The designation crucially validates Tamil victims and survivors of atrocity crimes to continue the fight for justice," &nbsp;the organisation said in a&nbsp;statement. </p></blockquote>