Tamil Affairs

Tamil News

Latest news from and about the homeland

Sri Lankan police officers have been accused of intimidation and discrimination after intercepting a group of Tamil youths travelling from Jaffna to Vavuniya late last night. The incident occurred at a checkpoint in Mankulam, where police stopped the vehicle by shining powerful torch lights directly into the eyes of the passengers, causing significant discomfort and distress. When the youths…

US-Sri Lanka military ties grow as Washington pledges another vessel

The Commander of the United States Indo-Pacific Command (INDOPACOM), Admiral Samuel J. Paparo, visited Colombo from 19 to 21 March 2025, reinforcing the growing military relationship between the United States and Sri Lanka. 

More organisations welcome UK sanctions on Sri Lankan war criminals

Tamil diaspora groups and international human rights organisations have welcomed the United Kingdom’s decision to impose targeted sanctions on four individuals implicated in grave human rights violations during Sri Lanka’s armed conflict.

In photographs - Eid al-Fitr in Tamil Eelam

Eid al-Fitr was marked in Tamil Eelam this week, as Muslims in the Tamil homeland joined those around the world to celebrate the festival.

See footage from across the North-East below.

Mannar

Trichy-Jaffna flight touches down after 47-year gap

A direct flight service between Tiruchirappalli in Tamil Nadu and Jaffna in Sri Lanka officially commenced on 30 March 2025, marking the first such connection between the two cities in nearly five decades.

India and Sri Lanka to sign defence pact and electricity grid connectivity agreement 

India and Sri Lanka are set to sign their first-ever defence cooperation agreement during Prime Minister Narendra Modi's visit to Colombo, with reports that a deal to link electricity grids with a cable connecting Mannar to Tamil Nadu will also be inked next week. 

Modi is set to visit Colombo from April 4 to 6, where the agreements are slated to be finalised and signed. 

Sri Lankan Navy arrests deepen India-Sri Lanka tensions over Tamil fishermen dispute

The arrest of eleven Tamil Nadu fishermen by the Sri Lankan Navy last week has reignited tensions between New Delhi and Colombo over the decades-long maritime conflict in the Palk Strait, as India’s External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar acknowledged the enduring diplomatic and historical challenges behind the crisis.

Sathiyalingam welcomes sanctions on Sri Lankan war criminals

Sathiyalingam condemned the Sri Lankan government’s continued refusal to investigate or acknowledge the existence of torture camps and other human rights violations committed in the North-East, as he welcomed the recent set of sanctions by Britain on Sri Lankan war criminals.

Sri Lanka risks US$1.23 billion loss if EU withdraws GSP+ trade benefits, warns new study

Sri Lanka could lose up to US$1.23 billion in export revenue if the European Union (EU) withdraws its preferential trade access under the Generalised Scheme of Preferences Plus (GSP+), according to a new report by the Institute of Policy Studies (IPS). 

The study warns of severe economic and labour market repercussions, particularly for Sri Lanka’s key export sectors and its vulnerable workforce.

Sanctions are just the start 

The UK’s move must mark a new chapter, not the end, of international efforts.

Sri Lankan Supreme Court Justices recuse themselves from Karannagoda 'Navy 11' disappearance case

Two justices of the Supreme Court of Sri Lanka, Dilip Nawaz and Priyantha Fernando, announced on 28 March that they would recuse themselves from hearing petitions related to the controversial case of former Navy Commander Wasantha Karannagoda and the enforced disappearance of eleven Tamil and Muslim youth between 2008 and 2009.