• EU Ambassadors meet with Gotabaya

    EU Ambassadors met with Sri Lanka’s President, Gotabaya Rajapaksa, to discuss economic and political development in Sri Lanka; where, Gotabaya rejected the possibility of devolving police control to the provincial councils.

  • Batticaloa Prison detainees protest following death of prisoner

    Detainees in Batticaloa Prison protested following the death of a fellow prisoner on Sunday.

    Jamaldeen Mohamadu Najeem, a 28-year-old who was serving a prison sentence for failure to pay maintenance died on Sunday morning at Batticaloa Hospital, where he had been taken after contracting a fever.

  • Sri Lanka police launch investigation into top CID investigator's departure

    Sri Lanka’s police headquarters have launched a ‘special investigation’ into the departure of top organised crime investigator Nishantha Silva from the island following the election of Gotabaya Rajapaksa.

  • Media under fire

    Several weeks into Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s presidency, journalists on the island are coming under increasing threat. Whilst the island has always been a dangerous place for the press, and for Tamil journalists in particular, over the last month there has been a worrying rise in intimidation, harassment and even physical assaults of media workers, alongside political activists and human rights defenders.

  • Tamil political prisoner arrested as teenager dies after 26 years imprisonment

    The longest serving Tamil political prisoner who was arrested at the age of 17 in 1993 has died.

    Sellapillai Mahendran was arrested during a round-up in Batticaloa on September 27, 1993. Two years later, he was sentenced to 70 years in prison and life imprisonment based on a confession produced following a month of torture in detention. After appealing the conviction at Sri Lanka's Supreme Court, the 70-year sentence was reduced to 10 years but the life sentence was upheld.

    While some sources claim that his 1995 conviction was in connection with the alleged killing of 600 police officers in the East - an incident which took place three years prior when Mahendran was aged just 14 - his family said that they were never told the reason for his conviction.

  • First Eelam film to screen across Western countries receives rave reviews

    Sinamkol, a film shot entirely in parts of Tamil Eelam has widely received rave reviews and is currently playing at a number of screens.

  • Tamil Eelam FA qualify for 2020 CONIFA World Cup

    Tamil Eelam FA will be among the 16 teams competing in the 2020 Confederation of Independent Football Associations (CONIFA) World Football Cup, after an impressing double victory in the qualifiers powered the team through to the tournament. 

    The team played two CONIFA World Football 2020 qualifiers in December against East Turkistan and West Papua. Victory in both games saw Tamil Eelam gain enough points to qualify for the 2020 World Football Cup taking place between 30 May - 7 June 2020 in Skopje, Republic of North Macedonia.

  • Iranian Ambassador offers training opportunities for Sri Lankan police and military

    Iran’s Ambassador to Sri Lanka Mohammad Zaeri Amirani met with Sri Lanka’s Defence Secretary Kamal Gunaratne at his office, to discuss possible training opportunities that could be offered to Sri Lankan Police and Armed Forces personnel in Iran, on Thursday.

  • Families of disappeared pay tribute to Tamil political prisoner

    Families of the disappeared in Vavuniya paid tribute to a Tamil political prisoner who passed away after 26 years of imprisonment, as they marked over 1,050 days of protest last week.

    Sellapillai Mahendran was arrested as a teenager during a round-up in Batticaloa on September 27, 1993. He passed away last week after 26 years of imprisonment, based on a false confession produced following a month of torture in detention. 

  • Sri Lankan police charge Tamil Guardian correspondent over reporting local government corruption

    Tamil Guardian's Batticaloa-based correspondent S Nilanthan has been charged and told to appear in court next week over his reporting on alleged corruption with regards to a local government official.

  • ‘Countries are angry with our armed forces,’ claims Sri Lankan prime minister

    Sri Lanka’s prime minister Mahinda Rajapaksa claimed that countries were "angry with our armed forces,” as he addressed new troops at a passing out parade in the south last month.

  • Slain Tamil journalist remembered in Amparai

    A Tamil journalist who was murdered by the Sri Lankan army in 1985 was commemorated by his family, colleagues and community members in Amparai last week.

    Ganapathipillai Devaraja was arrested in a Sri Lankan military roundup on December 25 1985, and assassinated at the Vattuvan army camp. He was working as a journalist for Virakesari at the time.

  • Sri Lankan police threaten family of Tamil Guardian correspondent with arrest warrant

    Sri Lankan police in plain clothing entered the house of a Tamil Guardian correspondent in Batticaloa, purportedly to arrest him, and threatened his family when it was discovered he was not at home.

    Police forcibly entered the home of journalist S Nilanthan on Thursday night at around 9.10pm. Since Nilanthan was not at the house, police threatened his family and warned them to tell Nilanthan to appear at Eravur police station the following morning.

  • Sri Lankan officer wanted over abduction and murder of Tamils is released on bail

    A former Sri Lankan intelligence officer, who had previously evaded arrest over the abduction and disappearance of 11 youths and the assassination of an MP, has been released on bail this week.

    Lieutenant Commander Chandana Prasad Hettiarachchi alias 'Navy Sampath' was in remand custody  over  the abduction of the eleven Tamil youth from 2008 to 2009, who were held in navy bases at Trincomalee and Colombo before being almost certainly murdered. He was also wanted in connection with the 2006 murder of Tamil National Alliance parliamentarian Nadarajah Raviraj.

  • Sri Lanka’s government to scrap Counter Terrorism Bill in favour of previous legislation
    <p>Sri Lanka’s cabinet has decided to scrap&nbsp;the&nbsp;Counter Terrorism Bill which was introduced by the previous government, in favour of the replaced Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA), the<em> </em>Daily Mirror <a href="http://www.dailymirror.lk/breaking_news/Govt-withdraws-Counter-Terroris…">reports</a>.</p>
Subscribe to Tamil Affairs