Tamil Affairs

Tamil News

Latest news from and about the homeland

The LGBTQIA+ community in Jaffna held their fifth annual Pride Walk, under the theme  “We Exist For Each Other".  The walk, organised by the Jaffna Transgender Network, began outside the iconic Jaffna Public Library and proceeded along Hospital Road and Pannai Road before ending at Jaffna Fort.  Members of the LGBTQIA+ community, human rights activists, civil society…

Rajapaksa to visit India on astrologer's advice

Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa is set to visit the Tirumala Venkateswara temple in India, on the advice of his astrologer ahead of the Sri Lankan presidential polls next month.

The visit is set to spark protests from Tamil groups across Tamil Nadu with MDMK general secretary Vaiko announcing a black-flag demonstration against Rajapaksa in Tirupati.

PMK founder Dr S Ramadoss also commented on Rajapaksa's trip, saying,
“Nothing can hurt us, Tamils, more than this honour to this murderer, letting him worship at Tirupati with full temple honours despite his role in destroying over 2000 Hindu temples in Eelam.”

Fifa chief calls on Mahinda ahead of Jaffna stadium opening

 

 (news.lk)

The president of Fifa Sepp Blatter visited Sri Lanka last week, meeting President Mahinda Rajapaksa, before travelling to the North-East to inaugurate a new football stadium on the Jaffna peninsula.

"I was last in Sri Lanka in 2005 and I am delighted to be back again in your beautiful country. This is my third visit to Sri Lanka and I see a tremendous amount of development has taken place. The opening of the Jaffna Stadium is a significant achievement and Fifa is confident that this will serve to further develop football in Sri Lanka," said Blatter.

"Your President HE Mahinda Rajapaksa renewed his assurance to support the development of local football when we met him and of course FIFA and AFC will always stand behind you, guiding and channeling our resources to help Sri Lanka develop the game and bring its social benefits to your youth," he added.

Presidential election not addressing Tamil concerns says TNA

Sri Lanka's presidential election does not address Tamil concerns, the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) spokesperson Suresh Premachandran said on Sunday, stating that neither Mahinda Rajapaksa nor the common opposition candidate, Maithripala Sirisena were seeking to find solutions to problems faced by the Tamil people.

“We know that there is corruption, we know there is a family rule. We know those things must be removed. But at the same time Tamils are facing different issues,”

Premachandran told a press conference in Vavuniya at the weekend, the Sunday Leader reports.

"Tamils are facing various issues. There are hundreds of people who still can't go back to their own lands because Army is occupying them," the
Deccan Chronicle quoted him as saying.

"There are hundreds of political prisoners. Even after 5 years (of the end of war), people are still in camps".

Tamil family removed from Perth despite protests

Forced removal: The tearful Tamil father taken to the airport, after being removed from the Redcliffe detention centre. Pictures: Alf Sorbello/PerthNow

A Tamil family seeking asylum in Australia has been removed from a detention centre in Perth, in order to be taken to the government's detention centre in Nauru.

Protestors attempted to blockade the driveway of the detention centre in Redcliffe, but were dragged away by police, reported PerthNow.

US dismisses 'baseless' Sri Lankan bribery allegations

The United States Embassy in Sri Lanka released a statement dismissing claims by a Sri Lankan government minister that he was offered a bribe by US Ambassador to Sri Lanka Michele J Sison.

Sri Lanka's Rehabilitation Minister Gunaratne Weerakoon claimed the US Embassy in Colombo were offering bribes and were “pumping money” into defeating incumbent Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa at the upcoming presidential polls.

Sri Lankan authorities arrest Indian nationals

Sri Lankan police have arrested two Indian citizens for an alleged breach of their visas, reports Ceylon Today.

Police in Ella initially arrested a man, reportedly a textile merchant from South India, for alleged visa violations. After receiving information from interrogating the individual, Sri Lankan authorities in Badulla went on to arrest another Indian national on the same charge.

See our earlier post: Bilateral relations? (10 Apr 2012)

Sri Lankan military university budget larger than all other universities combined

Sri Lanka’s Kotelawala Defence University (KDU) was allocated a government budget almost double that of all the other universities on the island combined, reports Colombo Telegraph.

Last year the government invested 16.3 billion rupees in the KDU, which houses under 1,500 students, training cadets for the Sri Lankan army, navy and air force.

The island's other universities, with over 88,000 students attending, received a combined government budget of 9.7 billion rupees.


Infographic: Colombo Telegraph

Army detain Tamils registered to reclaim 'LTTE gold'

Tamils who registered to reclaim personal assets from the Sri Lankan government, that were confiscated from banks running in the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam’s (LTTE) de-facto state, have been detained by the Sri Lankan army.

Following a government announcement alleging that all gold that had been deposited in the LTTE banks would be returned to Tamil families, families in the North-East travelled to Kilinochi on Thursday.

LTTE remains significant threat to Sri Lanka - Gotabaya

Sri Lanka's Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa said the re-emergence of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam remained the foremost threat to the country's national security, reported Ceylon Today.

Sri Lanka unperturbed by UK travel warning

Sri Lanka's tourism industry is unlikely to be affected by the recent travel advisory from the UK, which warned of political violence ahead of the presidential election next month.

Industry experts told the Sunday Times that large-scale election violence was unlikely and the peak season was looking good.

“Bookings are great (for December) and I don’t expect any election violence that would deter arrivals,” one official said, adding: “These are routine advisories issued ahead of any election”.

Rumy Jauffer, managing director of the Sri Lanka Tourism Promotion Bureau, said that arrivals would reach the targeted 1.5 million this year with China closing in on the UK’s position as the second largest country of origin.