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…

RSF, JDS call on UN to question former TID head Mendis

Reporters Without Borders (RSF) and Journalists for Democracy in Sri Lanka (JDS)  expressed their dismay at the presence of Sri Lanka's former head of the Terrorism Investigation Division at the UN Committee Against Torture meeting in Geneva on Tuesday.  

Sisira Mendis, who was in charge of the TID and the Criminal Investigation Department from March 2008 till June 2009, is accused of overseeing the routine use of torture and sexual violence against detainees. 

Sri Lankan government says reconciliation a priority

The Sri Lankan government reiterated that reconciliation was one of its priorities. 

“Reconciliation is not a box that can be ticked or a journey that can end as per a timeline. There are no magic portions to achieve what we set out to achieve,” the deputy foreign minister Harsha de Silva was quoted by LBO as saying at an event on transitional justice on November 9. 

“It requires hard work and constant striving, and a commitment towards which our nation should be bound across generations.”

Protest in Batticaloa against Buddhist monk's racist verbal abuse

A demonstration took place in Batticaloa on Tuesday calling for the arrest of a Buddhist monk who was captured on video shouting racist verbal abuse to a Tamil local government official. 

"You are a bloody tiger. My blood boils when I see you. You are a bloody dog. You are a Tamil Grama Sevaka," the monk, from Batticaloa Mangalaram, identified as Ampitiye Sumana said. 

(Photograph - @aroarun) 

 

 

 

 

 

Sri Lanka police arrests Sinhalese man threatening to bomb Muslims

Sri Lanka’s police arrested a Sinhalese man who threatened to bomb Muslims in Sri Lanka, following intervention from Parliamentarians who called for the arrest of the individual.

Inspector General Pujith Jayasundara, ordered for the police to take action against Dan Priyasad after receiving calls from parliamentarians over the lack of police action to address complaints by members of the public, reports Colombo Telegraph.  

Sri Lanka to allow foreigners to buy property

The Sri Lankan government last week announced it would allow foreign citizens to buy property, lifting a ban imposed by the previous government in 2014. 

Arguing that foreign investment was much needed in the construction sector, the finance minister Ravi Karunanayake was quoted by AFP as saying, "to further incentivise such investment, we will remove freehold right restrictions from the ground floor." 

"I wish to lay emphasis on the fact that the government is committed to eliminate existing socio-economic gap between North and East with the rest of the country by 2020," he added. 

38 arrested by TID over alleged 'Ava group' links

Sri Lanka's Terrorism Investigation Division has arrested 38 people over alleged links to 'Ava group' in Jaffna, the minister of law and order, Sagala Ratnayake was quoted by Adaderana as saying. 

Mr Ratnayake said a further 8 individuals are currently under investigation and the officers are seeking their arrest. 

The arrests have been severely criticised by families who argue they took place illegally. 

OMP Act will be operational from Jan 1 says Mangala

The Office of Missing Persons Act will be operational from January 1 said Sri Lanka's foreign affairs minister Mangala Samaraweera this week. 

"The Constitutional Council would then nominate seven members. and the Consultation Task Force would submit its report to the President with recommendations for a truth-seeking mechanism," he was quoted as saying to the Daily Mirror

The OMP bill was criticised by relatives of the missing and human rights organisations. 

 

 

Sri Lanka requires US $8 billion to stabilise economy says Prime Minister

Sri Lanka needs to raise US$ 8 billion  to bolster its economy said Sri Lanka’s Prime Minister Ranil WIckremesinghe in parliament after the country’s budget release.

Noting that Sri Lanka only gained USD600-700 million this year, Mr WIckremesinghe said the government would look to achieve the US $8 Billion by securing trade deals with several countries including China, India and Singapore.

Sri Lanka’s prime minister added that further income would be achieved, by securing the GSP+ trade concession from the European Union.

Welsh Tamils plant trees to remember genocide

Tamils in Swansea, Wales this month launched a campaign to plant trees in remembrance of the genocide of the Tamil people by the Sri Lankan state, and as part of the 'Tree for Justice' campaign in Wales. 

One of the organisers, Tharmalingam Luxshan  told South Wales Evening Post, "The Tamil community in Sri Lanka continues to face a genocide in various forms including enforced disappearances, extra judicial killings, sexual violence and ethnic discrimination over the last 70 years since the British left the island." 

"As a result, many Tamils were forced to flee in order to escape persecution and sought refuge in the UK."

Muslims protest over EU push to amend Muslim Personal Law

Muslims in the Eastern Province protested last week over the Sri Lankan government's proposed changes to Muslim Personal Law in order comply with EU conditions for GSP+. 

Accusing the EU of intervening in Sri Lanka's internal affairs, protest organisers, the Sri Lanka Thawheed Jamaath (SLTJ), told the BBC, "the EU has imposed conditions that certain amendments should be made to the Muslim Marriage and Divorce Law, the main special feature and the main part of the Sri Lankan Muslim Community's civil law."