Tamil Affairs

Tamil News

Latest news from and about the homeland

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The number of skeletal remains identified at the Chemmani mass grave in Jaffna has risen to 366, as excavators uncovered further remains of children on Tuesday, at one of the largest mass graves unearthed on the island and a site long tied to the enforced disappearance and extrajudicial killing of Tamils by the Sri Lankan military. Six sets of skeletal remains, including those of children,…

HRCSL criticises Sri Lanka's arbitrary arrests

Sri Lanka’s human rights commission has criticised police for arbitrary and illegal arrests in the aftermath of the Easter Sunday attacks.

Hundreds have been arrested in the months following the attacks, with Sri Lankan police receiving high profile criticism for cases such as that of a Muslim woman arrested for wearing a dress which supposedly insulted Buddhism, and a Muslim doctor arrested following a smear campaign by a Sinhala newspaper.

“Arrests should not be made merely on hearsay,” the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka (HRCSL) told Sri Lanka’s acting police chief, noting that the commission had received a number of complaints alleging illegal arrests.

Muslims face threats and attacks in Sri Lanka - HRW

Muslims in Sri Lanka continue to face the threat of mob violence and arbitrary arrests amongst other abuses warned Human Rights Watch (HRW) today, as it called on the government to do more to protect the Muslim community.

“The ethnic violence and human rights violations that many Sri Lankans have suffered are now being directed against Muslims,” said Meenakshi Ganguly, South Asia director at HRW. “The Sri Lankan government needs to take a stand against discrimination and intolerance, use the law to punish those responsible for abuses and protect, rather than target, vulnerable people."

Sri Lanka’s executioners ‘ready for the job’

Sri Lanka’s newly hired hangmen are “ready for the job,” said a prison official this week, as president Maithripala Sirisena vowed to press ahead with executions despite widespread international outcry.

Bandula Jayasinghe, an official at the Justice and Prison Reforms Ministry, told Arab News that the two executioners “have been fully trained”.

“Now they are ready for the job,” he said. “It’s good to keep their names secret so that the public and even their own family members don’t know they are hangmen.”

Arab News reports that up to 20 prisoners — eight Muslims, eight Tamils and four Sinhalese — could face the death penalty for alleged drug offences.

Sri Lanka’s tourist numbers fall by more than half

Sri Lanka’s tourist industry is still struggling to recover from the aftermath of the Easter Sunday attacks, with arrival numbers dropping by more than half from last year.

The Sri Lanka Tourism Development Authority said there were just 63,072 tourist visits to Sri Lanka last month, a drop of 57% from June 2018, when the number was 146,828. Tourist numbers in May had fallen 70.8% to 37,802 compared with 129,466 a year ago

61 Sri Lanka troops sent on a UN mission to South Sudan

<p>The Sri Lankan army has confirmed that it will send 61 army personnel including 11 officers to assist the UN mission of South Sudan (UNMISS) in supporting their new hospitals.</p> <p>The deployment of Sri Lankan troops to assist with the medical project on behalf of the UN has raised concerns given the problematic record of the Sri Lankan military abroad. The UN had previously accused 134 Sri Lankan soldiers of sexually abusing and exploiting 9 Haitian boys and girls from late 2004 to mid-2007. The report read that:</p> <blockquote><p>

13 STF members acquitted of Trinco Five killings

Trincomalee Chief Magistrate, M.Hansa, delivered the verdict today acquitting 13 Special Task Force members who were suspected of executing five Tamil youth whilst they spent an afternoon at Trincomalee beach on 2 January 2006.

Fifteen charges were filed against suspects and they were released due to the lack of evidence.

Sri Lanka arrests police chief and former defence secretary for ‘crimes against humanity’

Sri Lankan police arrested the country’s police chief and its former defence minister on Tuesday, for alleged negligence over the Easter Sunday bomb attacks that killed over 250 people.

The arrests of police chief Pujith Jayasundara and former defence secretary Hemasiri Fernando, comes after Sri Lanka’s Attorney General de Livera accused the two of committing a “grave crime against humanity” for failing to prevent the attacks. Both men were reportedly receiving medical treatment at state-run hospitals at the time of their arrests. 

Protest in Jaffna after death of political prisoner

Tamils protested in Jaffna on Tuesday demanding the release of political prisoners, following the death of a detainee last month.

Muthaiya Sahathevan died of illness after 14 years of detention. Despite high profile protests and campaigns across the North-East, and the involvement of Sri Lankan politicians - including the president - the situation of Tamil political prisoners remains unchanged, with the majority in detention without trial or charge.

President Sirisena rejects appeal by UN chief over death penalty

<p>Sri Lankan President, Maithripala Sirisena, said he rejected an appeal by United Nations Secretary-General, Antonio Guterres, to reconsider his restoration of the death penalty after 43 years.</p> <p>“I told the Secretary-General that I want to save my country from drugs,” Sirisena said in a meeting in Colombo.</p> <p>“He telephoned me last week shortly after I signed four death warrants. I told him please allow me to stamp put the drug menace,” Sirisena said.</p> <p>He also accused the European Union of interfering in Sri Lanka’s domestic affairs.</p>

Attacks on religious minorities continued says US State Department

<p>Religious minorities in Sri Lanka continue to be attacked, said the US Department in its 2018 report on International Religious Freedom.</p> <p>According to the report, Buddhist nationalist groups, such as the Bodu Bala Sena (BBS), continued to promote the supremacy of the ethnic Sinhalese Buddhist majority and vilify religious and ethnic minorities, especially via social media during the Kandy riots in March 2018. These social media campaigns targeting religious minorities fuelled hatred and incited violence.</p>