Tamil Affairs

Tamil News

Latest news from and about the homeland

A protest march was held last month opposing limestone excavation, mineral sand mining and a proposed wind power project across the villages of Veravil, Valaipadu, Ponnaveli and Kiranchi, in the Poonakary Divisional Secretariat division of Kilinochchi. The demonstration was organised against plans to establish wind power stations and to carry out mineral sand and limestone extraction in the…

Journalist killed in ‘No Fire Zone’ remembered in Jaffna

A memorial event was held in Jaffna this weekend, to mark the 8th anniversary since the killing of Tamil journalist Puniyamoorthy Sathiyamoorthy.

Witnesses cannot rely on Sri Lankan state for protection - ITJP

Witnesses and victims in Sri Lanka cannot rely on the state for protection, a report by the International Truth and Justice Project has found.

In the report ‘Putting the Wolf to Guard the Sheep’, ITJPSL underline that the Sri Lankan government has made three concerning appointments to a witness protection body, including alleged perpetrators of torture.

“We will not move from here until we get our land back”: from inside the Pilavu protest

The Pilakudiyirippu (Pilavu) protest for land return enters its third week. With each morning that breaks at their base outside a Sri Lankan air force camp, the protestors reaffirm their resolve.

Paramilitary leader Karuna forms new party

The former paramilitary leader who has been accused of war crimes, Vinayagamoorthy Muralitharan (alias Karuna Amman) on Saturday launched a new political party in Batticaloa - 'Tamil United Freedom Party'. 

Spaking at the launch, Karuna who was previously a deputy minister under the previous government, said the party would be based in Batticaloa and would have branches across the North-East. 

Families of the disappeared reject private deal in Colombo

Family members of disappeared Tamils rejected the government’s offer to set up a special inquiry to investigate the fate of just their missing relatives, rather than providing an acceptable solution to the 32,000 missing. 

"We came to get collective justice for thousands of our people who have gone missing, not only for our sake," said one family member.

The representatives that attended the meeting in Colombo were family members of the disappeared that ended a four-day hunger strike once given assurance by Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe that he would meet them with the Attorney General to help find the thousands missing.

Sri Lanka Campaign calls on UNHRC to pass robust follow-up resolution in March

Following a recent evaluation by the Sri Lanka Campaign for Peace and Justice – indicating that the Sri Lankan government has largely failed to implement Resolution 30/1, the organisation called on the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) pass a robust follow-up resolution.

UNHRC Resolution 30/1 called for the implementation of a credible process towards accountability and reconciliation in Sri Lanka.

Sri Lankan soldier accused of sexually abusing Tamil woman

A Sri Lankan solider was arrested this week after villagers in Uttuppulam, Kilinochchi accused him of sexually abusing a young Tamil woman. 

The soldier, who has not been identified, was deployed to the village to collect family details from each household, when he is said to have met the woman who lived at home with her parent who suffered with mental health difficulties.

Kumarapuram massacre victims remembered 21 years later

Villagers gathered in Muttur today to mark 21 years since the Kumarapuram massacre, where 24 Tamil villagers were killed by a group of Sri Lankan soldiers.

Tamil People's Council reiterates calls for self-governance and demilitarisation of North-East

The Tamil People’s Council reiterated its calls for transparency in the constitution making process, and the resultant formation of a sovereign institution of self-governance which recognised the Tamil people in the North and East as a distinct nation, whilst acknowledging their right to self-determination.

 In a declaration made at the second ‘Ezhuka Tamil’ gathering, which saw thousands of Tamils march through the streets of Batticaloa, the TPC said,

Sri Lankan foreign minister rejects foreign judges hearing war crimes cases

Sri Lanka’s foreign minister said his government would not allow foreign judges to hear cases in an accountability mechanism for human rights abuses committed during the final stages of the armed conflict, in which tens of thousands of Tamil civilians were killed.

Mangala Samaraweera said his government was in “no great hurry” to devise an accountability mechanism to try those accused of war crimes, but was clear on the level of foreign participation Colombo would allow.