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…

Callum Macrae: SL in no position to defend Commonwealth values

Writing on the blog on the 'No Fire Zone' documentary, director Callum Macrae called on the Commonwealth to listen to growing calls worldwide and ensure that Sri Lanka not be allowed to host the next Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in November.

He writes:

Gotabhaya Rajapaksa holds secret meeting on NPC elections

Sri Lanka's Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa held a secret meeting on the Northern Provincial Council elections with 24 other individuals in Jaffna, according to reports.

The meeting comes as government sources announce that Velayutham Dayanithy, or Daya master - a former LTTE media coordinator, will be standing for election at the NPC polls under the ruling UPFA banner.

19 remaininng in UAE say "in our country, we will die every day.”

As eleven of the 45 Tamil refugees, who found themselves in the UAE after attempting to escape Sri Lanka via shipk, arrive in Los Angeles this week, 19 others await to find out their fate.

The 19 remaining in Dubai are said to be well looked after, but fear deportation, stating that they will die if they are returned to Sri Lanka, reports The National.

One man, with the pseudonym Akaliniyan said:

"We don’t know when we can leave, we hope this ordeal will end soon."

If we go back to Sri Lanka, we will not remain alive. We don’t need any comforts or luxury. We are happy to live anywhere. But in our country, we will die every day.”

UNP tariff hike protest causes scuffles in parliament

Members of the UNP held a candlelight protest, calling on the government to scrap the recent electricity tariff increases, forcing the sitting to be adjourned.

TNA MPs MA Sumanthiran and S Yogeshwaran also supported the opposition in their protest.

While UNP and other opposition members shouted slogans, members of the ruling coalition threw water bottles at them, reported The Island:

Sri Lanka lauds Bahrain's enforcement of the 'law'

The Bharain Council of Representatives Speaker, Khalifa bin Ahmed Al Dhahrani, outlined the importance of fortifying parliamentary cooperation between the Bharaini and Sri Lankan parliaments, in a visit to Sri Lankan parliament Speaker Chamal Rajapaksa.

Whilst presenting an open invitation to the Sri Lankan parliament Speaker to visit Bahrain and discuss bilateral parliamentary cooperation, Al Dhahrani stressed the need of the two nations to coordinate stances at international and Asian gatherings,

Local politicians behind increase in tourist attacks' - Sunday Times

Sri Lanka’s Sunday Times has reported increased incidents of sexual harassment and other attacks on tourists.

The paper reported that police sources said local politicians are behind the attacks.

See excerpts below:

Bangladesh will back SL - says Rajapaksa's office

Bangladesh will stand by Sri Lanka on the issue of human rights, reported the Sri Lankan president's office on Tuesday.

Following a visit to Sri Lanka this week by the Bangladeshi Foreign Secretary, Shahidul Haque, he was quoted by Rajapaksa's office as saying to the president: 

UK judge affirms risk to Tamil protesters facing deportation

In an asylum appeal case last month, a UK judge deemed that the asylum seeker - a Tamil man who had taken part in numerous protests in the UK - was at risk on deportation purely due to his participation in anti-Sri Lankan government protests, and was granted asylum one this alone, not due to any association with the LTTE.

The First Tier Tribunal Judge Mailer in the Immigration and Asylum Chamber considered:

“The evidence relating to Sri Lanka is clear. Those who seek to appose the government by way of demonstrations, contending that the leaders should be implicated and charged for war crimes, would be treated harshly”.

“Having considered the background material produced as well as the evidence from the report of TAG, we find that the submissions relating to the potentially hostile treatment meted out by the Sri Lankan authorities in respect of a person perceived to have been involved in anti government protests in the diaspora, to be made out.”

See here for a report by Tamils Against Genocide (TAG) on the case. Extract reproduced below:

"The ruling is especially perspicacious in recognizing that risk is related not to facts alone but to perceptions. It was put to the appellant that his being part of protests did not amount to his being a member of the LTTE. The appellant concurred, “He said that it was not he who was saying that. The government might think that.” It is the question of perception that matters and that needs to be considered when assessing risk.
 
There are several sources for unearthing the Sri Lankan State perception with regards to protesters. In her evidence before the Tribunal, TAG Director, Janani Jananayagam enumerated many of these sources. She was quoted in the determination, speaking of a “history of hostility to and demonisation of diaspora organisations supporting a secession of the Tamil homelands in Sri Lanka” – indeed the GoSL attitude and actions today against those who call for accountability for crimes is not without precedent.

PEARL calls on CMAG to suspend SL

The US based advocacy group PEARL - People for Equality And Relief in Lanka - called on the Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group (CMAG) to suspend Sri Lanka from the Councils of the Commonwealth in a statement released on Wednesday.

See here for full statement, extracts reproduced in full below:

Tamil from Australia tortured in Sri Lanka

Photograph ABC

A Tamil man from Australia who returned to Sri Lanka last month to visit a sick family member was raped and tortured by Sri Lanka’s security forces.

Speaking to Australia’s ABC, the man, only identified as Kumar, made shocking claims regarding the treatment he was subjected to on return.

See video of news report here.

Kumar was abducted by a white van, soon after his arrival and taken to a blood-stained room by army intelligence officers.

"I was naked and no place to sleep, except the floor like a dog. I felt like dying but I thought of my kids and family back here,

"They came back and again started hitting me with a log at my back and now I've got a spine problem as well,

"The two guys were drunk and they came to me and they just put their hand on my body and they just rubbed me and I had some sexual torture as well,” Kumar said.