Tamil Affairs

Tamil News

Latest news from and about the homeland

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  The lawyer representing detained Tamil rapper Sangeethsan Ganeskumar challenged allegations that his client sought to revive the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) during proceedings before the Jaffna Magistrate's Court this week, arguing that the material cited by police contains no reference to the organisation or its leadership. Sangeethsan, better known by his stage name…

‘Burden now rests with Sri Lankan government’ – HRW

Human Rights Watch said the proposed UN Human Rights Council resolution on Sri Lanka needs to be thoroughly implemented and the burden now rests with the Sri Lankan government to honour its pledges.

“This resolution makes it clear the time has come for the Sri Lankan government to act,” said John Fisher, Geneva director at Human Rights Watch. “The resolution’s endorsement of a judicial mechanism with international participation is an important recognition of the need for an international role to ensure justice for victims.”

British MPs express ‘concern and disappointment’ at lack of international probe for war crimes in Sri Lanka

British parliamentarians have written to Prime Minister David Cameron to express “concern and disappointment” at the government’s apparent support for a domestic mechanism to investigate and prosecute violations of international humanitarian law in Sri Lanka.

The group of nine MPs said there was “no reason to pass all responsibility for justice to the national government,” and they disagreed with Minister of State at the Foreign Office Hugo Swire’s statement that the new Sri Lankan government has the UK’s “full confidence”.

“Change in Sri Lanka is slow, and confidence in the state apparatus is very low amongst Tamils,” said the MPs in a letter to Mr Cameron.

Noting a recent report from Freedom From Torture, the letter said “there has been limited action from the new administration to tackle vested interests in the military, police and intelligence services”. “Furthermore, President Sirisena himself served as Defence Minister in the final days of the civil war, when most civilian casualties occurred. Meanwhile, many of the most senior government and military figures remain unchanged from those dark days.”

“How can the Sri Lankan people have faith in a purely national mechanism, when key witnesses still do not have access to proper protection and are afraid to speak out? How can a national tribunal convened by a government whose members are themselves implicated in the crimes be expected to hold the right people thoroughly to account?”

Ranil consults with military and monks over UN resolution

Sri Lankan Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe met with members of the Buddhist clergy and the Sri Lankan security forces to discuss a United Nations Human Rights Council resolution on prosecuting violations of international humanitarian law on the island.

Government minister Harsha de Silva tweeted a photograph from the meeting on Saturday, stating that the prime minister met with Buddhist monks, as well as with Sri Lankan civil society members.


Mr De Silva further tweeted on Monday that the prime minister had met “all 2 star and above officers of the military and police” to discuss the resolution.

Justice mechanism controlled by Sri Lanka will not be credible say Tamil parties, civil society and trade unions

Expressing concern over the consensus resolution on Sri Lanka due to be tabled at the UN Human Rights Council, North-East civil society groups, trade unions and Tamil political parties, including three out of the four constituent parties of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) stressed that “a mechanism, which is by and large managed and controlled by the Sri Lankan state, will not in our opinion be deemed credible by the victims in Sri Lanka”.

Stating that operative paragraphs 4 and 6 of the current draft resolution “do not adequately provide for the setting up of such a credible hybrid mechanism”, the signatories said that they noted with “deep regret that in the interest of arriving at a consensus resolution with Sri Lanka that many key components of the initial draft have been omitted.”

The joint statement was signed by a number of civil society groups and trade unions across the North-East, including The Social Architects (TSA), the Tamil Civil Society Forum (TCSF), and the Tamil Action Committee for an International Accountability Mechanism (TACIAM), which led a signature campaign in the run up to the UNHRC’s 30th session in Geneva this month, as well as Tamil political parties, including the TNA constituent parties – the Eelam People’s Revolutionary Liberation Front (EPRLF), the Democratic People’s Liberation Front (PLOTE) and Tamil Eelam Liberation Organisation (TELO), and the Tamil National People’s Front (TNPF).

UN Rights Chief to visit Sri Lanka before year end

The UN Human Rights Chief is expected to visit Sri Lanka before the end of the year, said Sri Lanka’s foreign minister Mangala Samaraweera.

Mr Samaraweera said that Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein had accepted an invitation to visit Sir Lanka before the end of the year.

Sri Lanka signs MoU with US on Rule of Law Assistance

Sri Lanka and the USA on Tuesday signed a Memorandum of Understanding worth $2.6 million on Rule of Law Capacity Building Assistance, Sri Lanka’s ministry of Foreign Affairs reports.

Sri Lankan prime minister rejects foreign judges

Sri Lankan Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe said foreign judges will not be involved in a probe on violations of international humanitarian law committed during the armed conflict as Sri Lanka’s constitution would not allow it.

Mr Wickremesinghe told reporters that Sri Lanka’s judiciary would have to approve any involvement of foreign judges, as has been stated in a resolution presented to the UN Human Rights Council. Foreign judges can be consulted but not actually involved in proceedings, said the prime minister.

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New Indian Express reported the prime minister as stating that “he and his government had saved both the Rajapaksas from facing an international war crimes inquiry by "properly handling" the issue since January”.

“It was Rajapaksa's blunder that forced Sri Lanka to subject it to an international inquiry,” he was further reported to have said.

Sri Lankan army distributes toys to Tamil schoolchildren

Sri Lankan army officers in Kilinochchi distributed toys to Tamil schoolchildren last week, despite ongoing criticism regarding the intrusion of the military into civilian life in the North-East.

Officers from Sri Lanka’s 11 (V) Gajaba Regiment, dressed in full military attire, handed out the toys and stationery to schoolchildren in Mulankavil on 24 September 2015.

‘South will look after the Southerners’ says Ranil

Sri Lankan Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe said the people from the South “will look after Southerners”, when asked if members of the former government would face charges for war crimes.

Mr Wickremesinghe stated that the government “would not sacrifice anybody”, when asked if members of the military may be brought before a war crimes trial, reports Daily Mirror.

When questioned on whether former president Mahinda Rajapaksa and former defence secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa would be put before a war crimes tribunal, Mr Wickremesinghe said they would be looked after.

Noting that both foreign minister Mangala Samaraweera and justice minister Wijeyadasa Rajapaksha were from the South, he reportedly smiled and told reporters, “Those from the South will look after the Southerners”.

India must back fully international mechanism – DMK

DMK leader M Karunanidhi called on the Indian government to back a fully international mechanism to investigate and prosecute for mass atrocities committed during the final stages of Sri Lanka’s armed conflict.

“A domestic investigation will not be impartial and a probe by the accused into the crimes will turn justice into a mockery,” said the DMK chief. “The Indian government should voice its support for an independent, credible and international investigation and introduce a resolution for it in the United Nations Human Rights Council”.

His comments come after India’s Ministry of External Affairs said it hoped for justice in Sri Lanka and remained hopeful that a resolution would pass with the consent of the Sri Lankan government at the UN Human Rights Council later this week.