• Under cover of curfew, North overrun with Sri Lankan state violence

    On Friday night, Sri Lankan army personnel assaulted women and children at the home of a former LTTE cadre, hospitalising an elderly woman. The army had rounded the house in Nagarkovil, Jaffna, in search of the householder Aingaran, purportedly in connection with an attack on a soldier on January 15. In the last four months, several Tamils have been arrested and bailed for the incident, which involved the soldier being confronted by locals for speeding and narrowly missing hitting a child with his motorcycle. Aingaran’s wife said on learning that he was not inside, the army proceeded to assault the women and children that were present. They left, dropping army insignia including a hat with a logo and a mobile phone, only to return in three vehicles bearing groups armed with swords and poles. The returning group smashed two motorcycles parked at the property, as well as furniture and other possessions.

  • Families of disappeared slam Tamil National Alliance for breaking boycott

    Tamil families of the disappeared in Vavuniya voiced their criticism of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) last week, as it became the only major opposition party to attend a meeting convened by Sri Lankan prime minister Mahinda Rajapaksa, after all other major parties boycotted it.

  • "We were at the end" - memories of Mullivaikkal

    Thampi (little brother), our dog Singaa, my 30 pet doves and myself in Eelam at the end of 2008 moving from Vaddakkachchi to Visuvamadu.

    I was 15 years old at that time and thought it’d only be two or three weeks then we’ll be back to our place and continue with our normal lives. But I was wrong.

  • Familiar disruption, uncertain future'

    File photograph

    "As sale and exports of fish crash, another huge crisis is staring at Sri Lanka's fisherfolk," writes Meera Srinivasan for The Hindu

  • Reflections from Mullivaikkal: Remembering What was Lost Part 1

    I am from Vadduvaakal, Mullivaaikaal. I was a fisherman before the war. I used to do all my work, no matter how much work I have.

    I lost both my legs during a Kfir attack during the last days of the war.

    I wanted to die when I knew that I lost my legs. I asked the doctors at the hospital I was being taken care of, to please kill me with an injection; but they helped me recover.

  • Mother’s Day 2009

    11 years have gone by since the Tamil diaspora community mobilized and took our voices to the streets. We raised our voices in an effort to raise awareness on the genocide of Tamils in Sri Lanka. 

    I was 15 at the time, but I remember that day so clearly. It was Mother’s Day, and I was sitting with my family at my grandmother’s house feeling hopeless about what was happening to our people back home. My father and I quickly left to join the thousands of Tamils protesting on University Avenue. After chanting and pleading, we started marching, soon enough we ended up on the Gardiner Expressway. 

  • A pivotal protest

    The Gardiner protest was pivotal in shaping the political identity of many young Tamils. It inspired a new generation of activists and my own in continuing to demand justice for Tamils on the island while also carrying on the fight for liberation. 

    The protest, which occurred on Mothers day, had predominately negative public perception and media coverage, evidenced through their use of language - which often carried racial undertones - and played a role in delegitimizing the protest itself. Rather than centring the story around the genocide and international intervention – the purpose behind the protests, the coverage focused on dominant narratives surrounding the Tamil community as being ‘disruptive’, an ‘inconvenience’ and ‘ungrateful’ and labelling us as ‘others’ and ‘terrorists’ while also removing women from their political agency. 

  • 'It is a genocidal war' - Father Francis Joseph from inside the No Fire Zone

    On May 10, 2009, Catholic Priest Father Francis Joseph wrote to the Pope from inside the No Fire Zone, calling on the Church to break its silence on the massacre of Tamils. Father Francis Joseph disappeared after surrendering to the Sri Lankan Army alongside hundred of LTTE cadres and high ranking LTTE officials in May 2009.

  • Mapping resistance

    In cities around the world 11 years ago, the Tamil diaspora took to the streets in a historic series of protests, demanding international action to halt Sri Lanka’s massacres at Mullivaikkal.

    To mark 11 years since the protests, the ‘Mapping Resistance’ website has been re-launched.  

  • Sri Lankan air force commander joins US military teleconference

    The head of Sri Lanka’s air force joined a teleconference call organised by the US military last month, as part of continued military relations between the two governments.

  • Sri Lanka's war crimes accused PM congratulates UK trade Minister

    Sri Lanka’s war crimes accused prime minister sent a message of congratulations to British parliamentarian Ranil Jayawardena this morning, after the lawmaker announced he was appointed as a Minister at the Department for International Trade

  • Army altercation over found grenade causes tension in Kokkuvil

    The discovery of a hand grenade in a drain in Kokkuvil, Jaffna on May 4 caused an altercation between army personnel. Tamil youths that had captured photographs of the removal, replacement and retrieval of the grenade were interrogated by officers of the Terrorism Investigation Division (TID), who then erased all evidence from their phones. 

  • US National Security Advisor calls Rajapaksa

    US National Security Advisor Robert O’Brien had a telephone call with Sri Lankan president Gotabaya Rajapaksa this week, where he “reaffirmed the long history of U.S.-Sri Lankan friendship and cooperation”.

    A tweet from the US National Security Council  O’Brien also conveyed President Trump’s offer, on behalf of the American people, to provide needed ventilators to Sri Lanka.

  • New Indian High Commissioner arrives in Sri Lanka with 12.5 tonne gift of medicines

    The New Indian High Commissioner, Gopal Baglay, arrived in Sri Lanka today with 12.5 tonne gift consignment of medicine and medical equipment.

  • More than 250 prisoners released during Vesak Festival
    <p>Sri Lanka’s President, Gotabaya Rajapaksa, has released 286 male prisoners and four female prisoners under a presidential pardon during the Vesak festival, which commemorates the death of the Buddha.</p> <p>Those released were arrested on minor charges and included those over 65 years old. They remained imprisoned due to an inability to pay their fines. The prisoners released were from 30 prisons across Sri Lanka.</p>
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