• Australian Minister accuses Tamil children of being “anchor babies”

    Australian Home Affairs Minister, Peter Dutton, has described Tamil children as “anchor babies” accusing activists of cost bullying the government in asylum seeker fights that cost taxpayers “millions of dollars”.

  • UN expert group to review cases from Sri Lanka
    <p>The United Nations Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances will examine more than 530 cases from 36 countries, including Sri Lanka, during their 119th session in Geneva.</p> <p>The Working Group, comprised of five independent experts, will meet relatives of the disappeared, state authorities, civil society representatives and other stakeholders to exchange information on individual cases and on the persistent practice of enforced disappearances.</p>
  • Northern governor orders schools to remain open, despite Tamil calls for protest
    <p>Sri Lanka's Northern Province governor, Suren Raghavan, has ordered the authorities to keep schools in the North open tomorrow.</p> <p>Politicians requested schools to close in support of a major rally in Jaffna tomorrow, which has been organised by the Tamil People’s Council. The Jaffna rally is being staged to demand the authorities to address issues and concerns of Tamil people in the North and East.</p>
  • Sri Lanka's STF open fire in Jaffna, one injured

    Sri Lanka’s Special Task Force opened fire in Jaffna on Saturday, with latest reports indicating that at least one Tamil youth has been admitted to hospital with gunshot wounds.

    The injured youth has been identified as 20-year-old Kisnarajah Sajeevan. He has been admitted to a Jaffna hospital with injuries to his leg.

  • ‘Connection to Chennai’ needed say Tamils in Jaffna

    Tamils in Jaffna have called for direct flights to Chennai, as part of a recent expansion of Palaly airport which will see commercial flights from India visiting the peninsula.

  • Gecko names anger Sinhala nationalists and Buddhist monks

    The naming of new gecko species after mythical Sinhala nationalist figures has angered nationalist parliamentarians and Buddhist monks in Sri Lanka.

    At least six new geckos were named by scientists after Sinhala mythical figures, including giant warriors Nandimithra and Gotaimbara, who reportedly fought against the Tamil Chola King. The practice follows that of the Sri Lankan military, which has named colonised villages and statues in honour of the mythical figures.

  • Father of disappeared Tamil passes away after long search for son

    The father of a disappeared Tamil man has passed away after years of searching for his son and receiving no information on his whereabouts.

    Sinnaya Nagarasa died earlier this month, after spending more than a decade in a search for his son Nakuleswaran. 

  • Japan provides Rs. 1.7 billion to Sri Lanka for ‘counter terrorism’

    The Japanese government announced a grant of almost Rs. 1.7 billion to Sri Lanka for the “procurement of equipment for enhancing its counterterrorism and public security capabilities” on Thursday.

  • Sri Lanka still not safe for Tamils'

     

     

    Chris Slee, a refugee rights activist in Melbourne and a founding member of the Tamil Refugee Council, wrote on how Sri Lanka continues to be an island where Tamils are under threat as the Australian government looks to deport a family of four this week.

    See extracts reproduced below. Read the full piece on Green Left here.

  • Sri Lanka’s Supreme Court rejects Gotabaya petition in split decision

    Sri Lanka’s Supreme Court rejected a petition by presidential candidate Gotabaya Rajapaksa to dismiss corruption charges against him, in a split decision on Wednesday.

    Gotabaya faces charges over the alleged misappropriation of 33.9 million rupees used to build a museum dedicated to his parents on the south of the island. Though he denies the charges, a lower court case is now scheduled to go ahead next month.

  • UN Working Group concerned over ‘climate of impunity’ in Sri Lanka

    Sri Lanka continues to have a “climate of impunity” said a UN Working Group report this week as it reiterated the importance of “international judges, prosecutors, lawyers and investigators” in an accountability mechanism for mass atrocities.

  • Eastern University disappearances and massacre commemorated with vigil

    A vigil was held in Batticaloa last week, where locals marked 29 years since the enforced disappearance and massacre of 158 Tamils from the Eastern University with calls for justice and accountability.

  • Tamil journalist brought before Mullativiu court after Sri Lankan navy complaint

    A court in Mullaitivu resumed its trial of Tamil Guardian correspondent Shanmugam Thavaseelan on Tuesday, following a resurgence of attacks on Tamil journalists by Sri Lanka’s security forces.

  • Sri Lankan police search Vavuniya hospital after bomb tip off

    Sri Lankan police armed with sniffer dogs conducted a search operation at Vavuniya Hospital earlier today, stating that they had been tipped off about a bomb on the premises.

  • Pakistani minister claims India ‘threatened’ Sri Lankan cricket players after tour pull out

    At least 10 Sri Lankan cricket players announced they are to pull out of an upcoming tour of Pakistan, leading to a Pakistani minister claiming India had “threatened” the Sri Lankans.

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