Tamil Affairs

Tamil News

Latest news from and about the homeland

Tamil families of the forcibly disappeared in the North-East have announced that they will convene an international conference on 30 August, marking the International Day of the Victims of Enforced Disappearances, to renew their rejection of Sri Lanka's domestic accountability mechanisms and their demand for international justice. The announcement was made by representatives of the Association…

Further land appropriation in the North-East

The Sri Lankan military has continued the land grab and colonisation of the North-East reports Tamilnet.

Resettled Tamil farmers have had their agricultural land taken by the Sri Lankan military, who have been involved in resettling people form the South to form a new village in the North-Eastern region of Kokkuth-thoduvaay.

SL to follow same regulations as Australia for CHOGM journalists – Rambukwella

The Mass Media and Information Minister Keheliya Rambukwella has said that Sri lanka will follow the same guidelines as employed by the Australian government during the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Perth 2 years ago.

Rambukwella said background checks are currently being performed on foreign journalists who have applied to enter the country to cover CHOGM.

The CHOGM 2013 Task Force Secretariat in Colombo will be making the final decisions in this regard, he said.

TNA parliamentarian urges India to boycott CHOGM

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India remains undecided on attendence of CHOGM

The Indian Minister of Naval affairs G K Vasan, suggested today that 2 aspects would be taken into consideration before the final decision is taken regarding India’s participation at CHOGM.

Prince Charles offers help in Khuram Sheikh case

The representative of the Queen at the Commonwealth Heads of Governments Meeting in Sri Lanka, Prince Charles, has offered his help to win justice for the murder of Khuram Sheikh, who was killed on the island in 2011.

According to the Observer, Prince Charles has taken a private interest in the case, as pressure on David Cameron grows to pull out of the meeting.

Sri Lankan elected Vice-Chair of UN committee

Minister Counsellor of the Permanent Mission of Sri Lanka to the United Nations in New York, Waruna Sri Dhanapala, has been elected as the Vice-Chair of the Second Committee for its 68th Session.

The Asia-Pacific group unanimously endorsed his appointment to the Bureau of the Second Committee, according to the Defence Ministry's website.

It is time David Cameron woke up' - The Times

British Prime Minister David Cameron should immediately call to host the upcoming Commonwealth Heads Of Government Meeting in London, rather than Sri Lanka, wrote Rosemary Righter, an associate editor for The Times.

Righter, the author of 'Utopia Lost: the United Nations and World Order' also applauded Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper's decision as 'a display of leadership' stating that he was 'riding to the rescue of the Commonwealth'.

She went on to call upon Cameron to  move CHOGM away from Colombo, adding it was 'hardly beyond Britain to put on this show at short notice'.

Why we're boycotting Sri Lanka' - Canadian FM

Canadian Foreign Minister John Baird has stated there is 'no room for moral ambiguity' on Sri Lanka as Prime Minister Stephen Harper boycotts the increasingly controversial Commonwealth Heads Of Government Meeting due to be held in Colombo.

Writing in iPolitics.ca, Baird noted that Canada had made more than 30 public statements on Sri Lanka and that the opposition were united behind the Prime Minister's decision.

Extracts have been reproduced below. See the full piece here.
"Canada takes its membership in the Commonwealth very seriously. It is for this simple reason that we believe in upholding the basic principles it stands for: freedom, democracy, human rights and the rule of law. Without them, what does the Commonwealth stand for?"

"The Commonwealth failed to put any pressure on a regime that has so blatantly ignored international calls for change... As a consequence, we gave this regime a free pass to continue down this path."

"This was not a decision taken in haste. It was carefully considered with one aim in mind: for Canada to send a message about our displeasure with an organization that has failed to stand up for its fundamental principles. How can an organization like the Commonwealth reward a country like Sri Lanka, not just with hosting a summit, but by allowing it to chair the organization for two years? And after no meaningful reconciliation following a brutal and violent struggle?"

‘Media repression and Tamils’ – Tamils Against Genocide

In a preview of a report analysing media violence in Sri Lanka, Tamils Against Genocide (TAG) has determined that the Sri Lankan “state repression of the media mirrors the state’s wider ethno-chauvinist policies”, placing Tamil journalists at a greater risk of violence than their Sinhalese counterparts.
 
Examining data from, Journalists for Democracy (JDS), TAG found that of all the reported murdered or disappeared journalists listed by JDS since 2004, 37 are media workers of ethnic Tamil origin while 4 are ethnic Sinhalese and 2 Sri Lankan Muslims.

The advocacy group went on to observe that approximately 75 per cent have taken place in the majority Tamil-speaking regions of the island.

Extracts of their piece have been reproduced below. See the full piece here.

"Sri Lanka has gained a reputation as one of the most dangerous countries in the world for journalists alongside Afghanistan, Somalia, Eritrea and North Korea."
 
"Yet considering that much of Sri Lanka’s post-independence period has been entrenched in ethnic violence, the central question of race has been absent in the analysis of media attacks."

"Indeed, often ethnicities of attacked media workers remain unspecified in the reporting of human rights and news organisations. With the erosion of ethnic labels in the reporting of violence against media personnel, some core reasons for the Sri Lankan states repression of media personnel elude us."
 

CCR 'shocked' at treatment of asylum seekers

The Canadian Council for Refugees has called ‘more consistency in Canada’s response to the serious human rights abuses that continue to occur in Sri Lanka’, as evidence of asylum seekers being deported to torture has surfaced.

Applauding Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s recent statement on Sri Lanka, particularly the noting of “absence of accountability for the serious violations of human rights and international humanitarian standards during and after the civil war is unacceptable”, CCR called for this approach to be congruent.

The statement read,

On the other hand, CCR is shocked by Canada’s treatment of Sri Lankans who fled to Canada to escape those human rights violations, most particularly those on the MV Sun Sea who arrived on the West Coast in August 2010.”

CCR also noted a recently disclosed memo from the Canada Border Services Agency, calling on its officers to “use all legal means to detain the passengers as long as possible, to try to have them declared inadmissible and to argue against them being recognized as refugees”.

See the memo here.