Tamil Affairs

Tamil News

Latest news from and about the homeland

""
  The lawyer representing detained Tamil rapper Sangeethsan Ganeskumar challenged allegations that his client sought to revive the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) during proceedings before the Jaffna Magistrate's Court this week, arguing that the material cited by police contains no reference to the organisation or its leadership. Sangeethsan, better known by his stage name…

As long as you don't campaign against us' - UPFA bids farewell to SLMC

Sri Lanka Muslim Congress (SLMC), the island’s main Muslim party said it will be contesting independently at the eastern provincial councils.

The announcement comes as a U-turn, only a few days after the SLMC had declared it would be running under the UPFA banner - the ruling coalition.

SL central bank invests in Greek bonds, despite losses

Sri Lanka's Central Bank has invested reserve money into Greek bonds this year, despite a US$ 6.6 million loss made on Greek bonds last year.

According to the Central Bank, the loss is offset by higher returns from other investments.

Speaking in parliament, the senior minister for International Monetary Cooperation, Sarath Amunugama, said,

Diaspora groups seek to work with Australia on asylum seekers deaths

Tamil diaspora organisations from Australia, the US and Europe, have submitted a proposal to the Australian government's expert panel on asylum seekers, to work collaboratively to tackle the abuse and exploitation of Tamil asylum seekers.

The proposal, led by Tamils Against Genocide, submitted in partnership with PEARL (People for Equality and Relief in Lanka), Tamil Youth Organisation - Australia (TYO-Australia), and Voice of Tamils, Australia.

UPFA politicians involved in child rape

Amid rising incidents of child rape, the BBC reports 'several cases' involve politicians from Sri Lanka's ruling UPFA coalition.

In one case, a 13-year-old victim has identified on local government politician as one of four men who gang-raped her last month.

According to BBC Sinhala the past decade has seen over 100 Buddhist monks also charged with sexual assault, however very few have been convicted.

Sri Lanka envoy must be recalled' - Canberra Times

Extracts from opinion, by Bruce Haigh writing for the Canberra Times, on the Sri Lankan High Commissioner to Australia and New Zealand and the dropping of a case against him:

Indian proscriptions and Sri Lanka’s ethnic crisis: a policy of failure

The intemperate attacks against the Tamil Diaspora that accompanied India’s predictable decision to re-proscribe the LTTE earlier this month reflects more than anything the dismal failure of India’s attempts to shape a political solution to the island’s ongoing and escalating ethnic conflict.

Indian approaches to the Tamil crisis in Sri Lanka have long been driven by the belief that the LTTE and particularly its senior leadership remained the singular obstacles to an equitable political solution to the conflict. To this end the Indian political and military establishment provided unqualified support for Sri Lanka’s military efforts to crush the Tamil struggle.

However, three years after the end of the war and the military destruction of the LTTE, amidst Sri Lanka’s horrifying slaughter of Tamil civilians, the prospects of a political solution to the ongoing ethnic conflict are by all accounts remote.

Australian senator calls for SL envoy expulsion

Australian senator of the Greens party, Lee Rhiannon, called for the expulsion of Sri Lanka's High Commissioner Thisara Samarasinghe.

Accusing him of boasting about how Sri Lanka caught Tamil asylum seekers trying to flee the civil war, Rhiannon stated he was a war criminal.

According to the Canberra Times, Australian Federal Police dismissed the charges of war crimes against him 'more than four months ago'.

Tamil organisers of protests attacked

The homes of Tamil political figures who organised recent and upcoming protests were attacked with crude oil on Tuesday, reports TamilNet.

See here and here for photographs and video of TNPF leader, Gajendrakumar Ponnambalam, speaking after the attacks.

Sri Lankan defence personnel forced to cut short training in Tamil Nadu

Two senior defence officials were forced to cut short their training programme in the Nilgiris district of Tamil Nadu after strong protests by political parties in the state.

Air Vice Marshal Jegath Julanga Diaz of the Sri Lankan Air Force and Rear Admiral S Ranasinghe of the Navy left to an undisclosed location during the early hours of Tuesday.