Tamil Affairs

Tamil News

Latest news from and about the homeland

Residents of Kepapilavu in Mullaitivu continued their protest for a ninth consecutive day on Wednesday, demanding the immediate release of 59.5 acres of ancestral residential land that they say remains under Sri Lankan military occupation. The protest, taking place in the Karaithuraipattu divisional area, is being led by families who have been unable to return to their original lands for more…

New film urges UN Human Rights Council to listen to Tamil calls for justice

The makers of the Emmy-nominated documentary “No Fire Zone” have released a new film on Sri Lanka urging the international community to listen to Tamil voices calling for an international accountability mechanism, ahead of the release of a United Nations report into mass atrocities on the island.

“Sri Lanka: The Search For Justice” was released on Thursday in English and Spanish and is addressed to members of the UN Human Rights Council.

Sri Lanka will ‘never bow down to foreign powers’ vows president

Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena pledged that his government “would never bow down to any foreign power” in a speech in Colombo on Wednesday.

Speaking at the swearing in ceremony of State and Deputy Ministers at the Presidential Secretariat, Mr Sirisena said his government had faced “criticism, insults, bitter abuse and brickbats… from its very inception”.

“They said a patriotic government has been replaced in a conspiracy hatched by the Western and Imperial powers with a government that danced to the tune of the West,” he added, before declaring,

“Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe and I are ready to answer to those allegations in the future. I must tell them that this government would never bow down to any foreign power or succumb to any pressure as we have a tradition, culture and civilization we can look up to”.

“We would never intend to put a black mark on that great history to the day we breathe our last,” the president emphasised.

He also
stated that "ours is a stable and a strong government. No one will be able to overthrow or weaken it".

Sri Lankan government confident of support for domestic inquiry

Sri Lanka’s Justice Minister Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe stated his government was confident the international community would support a government led domestic inquiry into war crimes and mass atrocities committed on the island.

Speaking to reporters at Kandy, Colombo Gazette quoted the minister as saying the international community had placed faith in the new Sri Lankan government following elections earlier this year.

He went on to add that at the upcoming UN Human Rights Council session, the United States will co-sponsor a resolution with Sri Lankan “which will also seek to cushion the impact” of a United nations report into the mass atrocities.

Torture and sexual abuse continues under new Sri Lankan government

Abduction, torture and sexual violence has continued in Sri Lanka, despite the change in government earlier this year, said the International Truth & Justice Project in a briefing note released this week.

The ITJP also detailed a series of minimum prior steps that Sri Lankan government must carry out before establishing an accountability mechanism, including repealing the Prevention of Terrorism Act and ratifying the Rome Statue.

The ITJP report detailed 11 such cases of torture and sexual abuse that occurred after the new Sri Lankan government came in to power in January. The cases had been corroborated by medical legal reports from international medical experts. Overall the ITJP has documented one hundred and eighty cases of torture in detention in Sri Lanka since the end of the armed conflict in 2009 and identified forty-eight sites, mainly in the Tamil North-East and Sri Lankan capital Colombo, where victims stated their torture took place.

“In addition to violent reprisals during 2015, surveillance and intimidation by the security forces has continued unabated under the Sirisena government,” said the ITJP.

“In this context of on-going violations it is extremely difficult for the victims and their families to envisage a domestic accountability process, even with some form of international involvement, in which they could safely testify against perpetrators who are members of the security forces,” it said.

At least 21 arrested under PTA in 2015 – report

A new report states that at least 21 people were detained under the draconian Prevention of Terrorism Act since the new government came into power in January this year.

The report, by the Watchdog SL organisation, said the act has continued to result in arbitrary arrest, prolonged detention without charges, long drawn out court cases, multiple cases against one suspect, inhumane detention conditions, torture, forced confessions, long years to release those who are innocent, post-release harassment and restrictions, including re-arrests.

Five people are said to have been on remand for the past 18-19 years without a resolution to their case and at least one person’s case has been ongoing since 1998, the year the person was charged.

Signature campaign reaches Mannar

The signature campaign calling for an international accountability mechanism, which has been conducted across the North-East, today reached Mannar.

The local campaign was launched by the Mannar Citizen’s Committee along with the Disappeared Parents Association.

Head of the organisation Father Emmanuel Sepamalai, Northern Province transport minister P Deneeswaran and TNPF leader Gajendrakumar Ponnambalam, took part, alongside religious leaders, civil society representatives and dozens of passersby.

Awareness campaign for international justice mechanism

Several politicians from the TNA are walking from Kilinochchi to Jaffna to raise awareness for the call on the UN Human Rights Council to establish an international justice mechanism for mass atrocities committed during the armed conflict.

Northern Provincial Councillor MK Sivajilingam, along with some of his supporters commenced the walk from Kilinochchi earlier this morning.

He was later joined by TNA parliamentarian S. Sritharan and fellow NPC councillor Ms Ananthy Sasitharan.

25 years since Sathurukondan massacre

Today marks the 25th anniversary of the massacre of 184 Tamil civilians by soldiers of the Sri Lankan army.

On September 9, 1990, the men, women and children from Sathurukondan and surrounding villages, on the outskirts of Batticaloa, were taken to an army camp by Sri Lankan soldiers, where they were killed.

The mass killings, which were carried out during the presidency of the UNP's Ranasinghe Premadasa, were investigated in a probe established by then-president Chandrika Kumaratunga in 1997. The probe identified three captains in the Sri Lankan army as being responsible for the killings. The retired judge who led the inquiry, K Palakidnar said that there was strong evidence for the massacre and urged Ms Kumaratunga to hold the perpetrators to account, however no action was taken by the government.

Disappearances campaigner Jeyakumary released on bail

Tamil disappearances activist Balendran Jeyakumary has been released on bail by a Sri Lankan court on Wednesday, despite objections by the police force.

Ms Jeyakumary was detained last week after being summoned to Kebithgollawa courts following the issue of an arrest warrant. The court subsequently remanded her as she did not have two sureties and the police objected to her bail application, according to campaigners.

National Patriotic Movement warns of international conspiracy against Sri Lankan military

Sri Lanka’s National Patriotic Movement (NPM) warned that an international conspiracy was underway to destroy Sri Lanka’s military intelligence.

NPM Secretary Wasantha Bandara said that foreign governments were part of the latest conspiracy and called on the Sri Lankan government to be wary. “They have broken into the inner cells of our intelligence network and are all out to destroy it,” said Mr Bandara.