Tamil Affairs

Tamil News

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 schoolchild raped and then beaten by Sri Lankan police for reporting crime

A 14 year old Tamil school child who was raped last month was beaten by Sri Lankan police officials as she tried to report the crime, reports Colombo Telegraph.

The girl, who was reportedly abducted and raped by her school bus driver on June 19th, attempted to report the crime to Haputale police on the 7th of July.

A woman police constable proceeded to beat the child, warning her not to reveal details of the rape to the Judicial Medical Officer (JMO). If the child spoke, the constable “threatened to kill the victim’s parents and everyone else in the family,” according to reports.

China ready to support Sri Lanka in every way possible claims minister

The Chinese Government said it will assist Sri Lanka in any way possible, claimed Sri Lanka’s Ministry of National Policy and Economic affairs on Friday.

Quoting the commercial counsellor at the Chinese embassy Wang Yingqi, Siri Lanka’s Minister of National Policy and Economic Affairs Niroshan Perera, said China was fully involved in the development of the country.

The Minister added that Sri Lanka had opened Chinese language training centres to help assist the tourism industry deal with Chinese visitors.

Welsh town rallies to save Tamil man from deportation to Sri Lanka

A Tamil man who feared for his life after facing deportation from the United Kingdom has won the right to stay in the UK, after residents in his Welsh village rallied around him.

Rakuvaran Parameswaran, a 25 year old man who fled the island in 2005, has been in the UK since he was 13. Originally from Puthukkudiyiruppu, his parents sent him from the island as fighting began to intensify, with the Sri Lankan military preparing to launch a major offensive in the Tamil North-East.

“My parents sent me to the UK when I was 13 to keep me safe,” said Mr Parameswaran. “I never heard from them again.”

Sri Lanka ‘will never bring down foreign judges’ declares FM

Sri Lanka’s Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera told a crowd in Colombo that his government “will never bring down foreign judges” to prosecute for violations of international humanitarian law, reports the Sri Lanka Mirror.

Speaking at the inaugural session of the mayors’ conference in Colombo, Mr Samaraweera was reported to have said that “war crimes allegations will be investigated and resolved through a local mechanism”.

Sri Lanka Mirror went on to add that the foreign minister said this was the “firm stance of both president Maithripala Sirisena and prime minister Ranil Wickremesinghe” and that “certain media and groups were painting a wrong picture when the government was acting with transparency”.

‘Erosion of confidence’ in Sri Lankan courts, requires international involvement – US official

US Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy, Human Rights and Labor Tom Malinowski reiterated the importance of international involvement in an accountability mechanism to prosecute for violations of international humanitarian law, in a press roundtable in Colombo on Thursday.

“An erosion in the confidence" of Sri Lanka's courts led to the call for foreign judges to become involved said Mr Malinowski. “Sri Lanka itself has contributed judicial expertise to other countries and it has perhaps benefited from that.”

"These are complicated issues and there needs to be a process of consultation with all in order to ensure these things are done in a way that earns confidence of the people," he added, speaking alongside US Assistant Secretary for South and Central Asian Affairs, Nisha Biswal.

After his meeting, he tweeted,

“In Colombo, stressed US support for #SriLanka democratization, reconciliation and fully seeing through Geneva commitments.”

Sri Lankan army’s list of 'surrendered LTTE cadres' rejected by court

A list of supposed LTTE cadres who surrendered to the Sri Lankan military has been rejected by a court in Mullaitivu, after the military only submitted names of those who had gone through a government rehabilitation process.

Mullaitivu District Magistrate S M S  Samsudeen rejected the list on Thursday, which was submitted after families of missing Tamils filed Habeas Corpus petitions, for their relatives who surrendered to the military in the final stages of the armed conflict in 2009.

During Major General Chanayaka Gunaratna, head of the Army’s 58th Division, admitted during proceedings earlier this year that the army had kept a list of all those that surrendered. Yet the military had twice failed to submit that list.

Former Sri Lankan army commander joins chorus against foreign judges

Sri Lanka’s former army commander Sarath Fonseka joined the president and prime minister in speaking out against foreign judges in a justice mechanism for mass atrocities.

“Foreign judges cannot be allowed to engage in a probe as the Sri Lankan Constitution does not provide provisions for such a thing, “said the field marshal, who was recently appointed to the post of Provincial Development Minister.

He went on to state that whilst “technical assistance” would be allowed, judges would not.

Ongoing complaints of land and language disputes with Sri Lanka's police in Jaffna and Kilinochchi

Several complaints had been lodged against police in Jaffna and Kilinochchi with regards to land dispute and linguistic rights violations.

According to the coordinator Human Rights Committee for Jaffna T Kanagaraj, several complaints have been registered at the Jaffna Office of the Human Rights Committee.

Mr Kanagaraj added that in Kilinochchi there were many complaints made to the Human Rights Committee pertaining to land disputes with the local police.

Northern Provincial Council slams Sri Lankan military interference

The Northern Provincial Council (NPC) passed a resolution criticizing the continued interference in Tamil civil administration by the Sri Lankan military.

The resolution, which was passed at the NPC’s 56th session, highlighted the large role that the military continues to play in daily life in the North-East.

T Ravikaran, who proposed the motion, noted in particular that the military had become increasingly involved with affairs of fishermen in the region.

Sri Lankan military destroys Tamil homes in HSZ

 

The Sri Lankan military has been destroying the last few remaining houses located inside the High Security Zone in Valikaamam North earlier this week.