• Asylum seekers transferred to Australian detention centre

    The 157 asylum seekers were transferred to a detention centre in Western Australia on Sunday, shortly after landing on Cocos Islands after four weeks on a boat at sea, the Guardian reported.

    Three aircrafts were used in the transfer with the first taking off at 12.40pm local time.

    See more here.

  • Only an international independent investigation will provide truth and justice - GTF
    Only an ‘impartial independent international investigation can establish truth and serve justice,’ said the Global Tamil Forum spokesperson, rejecting the recently announced Presidential Commission of Inquiry on Missing Persons.

    “When we do not have any faith in the commission or its limited mandate, why would anyone even consider being engaged in such a flawed process? The answer to your question is ‘No’,” said the GTF spokesperson Suren Surendiran, when asked by the
    Sunday Leader if the Tamil diaspora would contribute to the investigation.

    Questioning the credibility of a presidential inquiry, Suren Surendiran added,
    “When an alleged party to crimes is involved in the decision making process of choosing the investigators or the counsel of advisors and their terms of reference for the investigation, that may not be impartial.”

  • TNA remains sceptical over government commission
    The Tamil National Alliance (TNA) said it remained sceptical over the government's Missing Persons Commission, despite the government's attempts to increase its credibility through reportedly widening the mandate and appointed three international experts.

    Highlighting the government's previous high profile appointments that still failed to yield answers, the TNA spokesperson, Mr Premachandran said in an interview to the Sunday Leader on Sunday:
    "The question is why the government took all this time to do that.
    Previously under several occasions the government appointed commissions and international experts to overlook investigations but none was implemented successfully."
    "With regard to Udalagama Commission, the government did not let the experts to overlook the investigations and act independently. We have previous examples why we cannot rely on the government. We do not know exactly what is going to happen to this Commission. Therefore we will need to discuss its new mandate."
  • BFF...?
    Photograph Lalith Perera

    The TNA MP M.A. Sumanthiran engages with the former Sri Lankan army commander Sarath Fonseka.

  • Displaced families settled in Koppai dispute orders to vacate 'government land'
    Displaced Tamil families from the High Security Zones in Valli North that settled in occupied land vacated by the Sri Lankan Army in Koppai protested against an order from the Regional Secretary instructing them to leave ‘government land,' reports Uthayan.
  • Court case against SL navy postponed again
    The court proceedings against 7 Sri Lankan navy personnel accused of gang raping two Tamil school girls were postponed again on Friday until July 31st, reports Uthayan.

    The case was postponed as no one attended court on behalf of the victims, aged 9 and 11, the paper said.

  • Military stop Tamil journalists travelling to press workshop, driver detained
    08:45 BST

    The Sri Lankan security forces stopped and interrogated a group of 11 Tamil journalists travelling from Jaffna by road to a press workshop in Colombo on Friday evening for over six hours, before releasing the journalists and detaining the driver for further questioning.


    Unidentified men, suspected to be military intelligence, followed the group as they travelled through Jaffna town in a hired private vehicle, sources in Jaffna told the Tamil Guardian.

    Shortly after passing through Kilinochchi, the vehicle was stopped by police officers at Maankulam, who accused the occupants of failing to stop at the Elephant Pass check point.

    Questioning the occupants, officers attempted to search the vehicle, only allowing the group to continue the journey after they had identified themselves as journalists and informed the police of the details of the workshop they were due to attend.

    The check point and routine screening of vehicles at Elephant Pass stopped many months previously, locals told the Tamil Guardian.

    Shortly after, two plain clothed police officers and three army personnel stopped the vehicle at the Oomanthai check point, interrogating the journalists and inspecting the vehicle once again, when one of the soldiers was seen placing a small bag under the driver seat of the vehicle, the journalists said.

  • Judicial Medical Officer confirms rape injuries on school girl
    The Judicial Medical Officer at Jaffna Teaching Hospital confirmed the rape and sexual violence of two school girls following a physical examination of their injuries, TamilNet reported, citing legal sources in Jaffna who had access to the medical report.

    "The physical injuries suffered by the first victim have established repeated vaginal penetration by the abusive SL navy men. The girl has injuries also in other parts of her body," the news site said. See more here.

  • Protesters disrupt workshop in Colombo for Tamil journalists
    11:12 BST

    A press workshop in Colombo for Tamil journalists was disrupted today after protesters gathered outside Sri Lanka's Press Institute, where the workshop was to take place, the journalist Dushyanthini reports.

    Last night, eleven Tamil journalists travelling to the workshop were stopped and questioned by security forces, whilst the driver of the vehicle was detained. See more here.

    "This was the 3rd training for northern journalists which was disrupted in just 2 months (May-July 2014)," Dushyanthini tweeted.

  • Regions in the Jaffna unidentifiable after military flattening say Tamil IDPs
    Tamils that were allowed to temporarily leave the Sri Lankan Army’s enforced High Security Zones (HSZ) to return to visit their original areas of residence have found that homes,  schools and community buildings have been flattened, reports BBC Tamil.
  • Military intimidate media at inquiry into gang rape of Tamil school girls

    Sri Lankan military personnel on Friday threatened and evicted journalists from the court room where the inquiry into the gang rape of two Tamil school girls, aged 11 and 9, in Karainagar by Sri Lankan navy personnel is currently taking place.

    Dressed in civilian uniform, the military officers confiscated cameras and mobiles phones from the journalists, and deleted any photographs that had been taken, sources in Jaffna told Tamil Guardian.

    The media personnel were told not publish news related to the incidents and the parents of the victims were offered money and threatened to drop the case.

    Outside the court room, locals held a protest condemning the ongoing rape and sexual assault against Tamil children by military personnel, as well as calling for an end to the intimidation and harassment of victims.

  • CPA criticises expansion of presidential commission mandate

    The Colombo-based Centre for Policy Alternatives has expressed “deep concern” over the recent expansion of the presidential commission, which was initially found to solely investigate disappearances in the Northeast.

    A recent gazette notification by the government expanded the mandate of the Presidential Commission of Inquiry to Investigate into Complaints Regarding Missing Persons (COI), to include “from violations of International Humanitarian Law (IHL) and International Human Rights Law (IHRL) including the recruitment of child soldiers and suicide attacks, to the criminality of financial and other resources obtained by the LTTE”.

  • Important we never forget' Black July - Labour leader Ed Miliband

    The leader of the British opposition Labour Party, Ed Miliband has stressed the importance of not forgetting the lives lost during Black July, in a statement to commemorate the pogroms in 1983.

    “This month, in remembrance of Black July, we commemorate the lives of Tamil men, women and children that were lost and those who were displaced and exiled as a result of the regrettable violence,” Mr Miliband said in his statement, released on Friday.

    "We may never know exactly how many lives were lost, but it is clear that the memories of the violence that ensued still live on. And it is important that we never forget."

  • We stand with the Tamils in commemorating Black July - Jason Kenney MP

    Commemorating the thirty-first anniversary of Black July, an anti-Tamil pogram that took place in 1983, Jason Kenney MP of Canada's ruling Conservative party, reiterated the country's condemnation of the ongoing abuses and said they stood with the Tamil community in Canada.

    "As we reflect on the violence that swept through Sri Lanka in July of 1983, I am proud to say that Canada remains committed to promoting and upholding our fundamental values of freedom, democracy, human rights and the rule of law," Mr Kenney, the MP for Calgary Southeast, said in a statement released on Thursday.

    "We stand with the quarter-million-strong Tamil community in Canada in commemorating the tragic events of Black July," he added.

Subscribe to Tamil Affairs