Tamil Affairs

Tamil News

Latest news from and about the homeland

Pon. Sivakumaran, the first Tamil to die in the liberation struggle, was remembered today in Urumpirai, Jaffna, on the 52nd anniversary of his death.  Sivakumaran was a member of the Tamil Manavar Peravai (or Tamil Student Federation, TSF) and a leading militant in the early armed Tamil struggle. On 5th June 1974, Sivakumaran was surrounded by Sri Lankan security forces. He had…

Navy forcibly evicts resettled families in Mannar

At least 15 families were forcibly evicted from their homes overnight, just 2 weeks after being ‘resettled’ back in their native village.

According to Journalists for Democracy, 10-15 heavily armed Navy personnel marched into the Vetriman Housing Scheme, located between Pesalai and Thalaimannar in the Mannar district, late Friday evening and demanded the villagers vacate their homes before midnight.

The families, including those with children and the elderly, were then left at night to seek shelter at the Catholic Church in Pesalai almost 5km away.

Over 90 feared dead in boat tragedy

109 people have been rescued from a capsized boat north-west of Christmas Island according to the latest reports, but hope is fading for an estimated 90 asylum seekers still lost at sea.

The boat was thought to have been carrying over 200 men, with 109 having been rescued so far, including a 13-year-old boy. Home Affairs Minister Jason Clare stated that the chances of finding further survivors were "increasingly grim".

Indo-SL ties will not shatter – Rajapakse to Manmohan Singh

Mahinda Rajapakse has emphasised his commitment to the historical relationship between India and Sri Lanka to Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.

The leaders spoke on the sidelines of the Rio+20 summit in Brazil and discussed issues such as the power plant in Sampur and the project to build 50,000 houses.

Rajapakse stressed that he would never let the relationship disintegrate, while both leaders agreed that during crucial periods, the countries should arrive at solutions through negotiations.

Government accuses media rights group of fraud

The Sri Lankan government announced it will be launching a fraud investigation into the media rights groups, Free Media Movement (FMM), reports Colombo Page.

Citing an apparent police complaint from a foreign country accusing the organisation of 'massive fraud', the government has alleged misappropriation of millions of rupees by the leaders of the organisation.

Scores feared dead as refugee boat from Sri Lanka capsizes

A boat carrying about 200 refugees from the island of Sri Lanka has capsized off Australia’s Christmas Islands on Thursday.

The spokesperson for Indonesia's search and rescue service which is coordinating the searcha at present, Gagah Prakoso, said the boat "coming from Sri Lanka and going to Christmas Island".

Mahinda and Tamil Diaspora’s Olympian competition in London

Writing on the online sit for Journalists for Democracy in Sri Lanka (JDS), the Tamil journalist, J.S. Tissainayagam, criticised Rajapaksa's intentions on his recent trip to the UK.

See here for full article.

Extracts reproduced below:

Sri Lanka’s president hoped to enhance his image as an acceptable leader through his remarks at the Commonwealth Business Forum.

Rajapakse’s visit was therefore the use of diplomacy both as hard power and soft power.

As far as hard power went it would indicate to his enemies – especially the influential Tamil Diaspora in the UK – that he possessed the means to counter Diaspora activity because as Sri Lanka’s head of state he was essentially on par with the British monarch.

Therefore, Rajapakse went to the UK with an agenda and to use his power to influence certain outcomes. For the Tamil Diaspora this meant it had to not only to thwart Rajapakse’s agenda, but substitute it with its own.

While the objective of thwarting the Sri Lankan president’s agenda is understandable, why did the Tamil Diaspora choose the form of outraged street protests to do so? The display of outrage was partly because negotiations with British and Commonwealth authorities to prevent Rajapakse from attending the jubilee had failed. Further, outrage was the natural outpouring of sentiment from people whose brethren in Sri Lanka were killed and stifled from expressing their feelings or thoughts due to draconian control exercised by the Colombo government. Humiliating Rajapakse was to the Tamil Diaspora pay back to Sri Lanka’s president for the humiliation his government was heaping on the Tamils. Finally, outraged protests are good for the cameras.

The Tamil Diaspora’s campaign in the UK to thwart Rajapakse’s agenda has earned rich dividends. Autocratic leaders crave acceptance by association with symbols of legitimacy – the British monarchy, Oxford University – and strengthening themselves using hard and soft power potential of diplomacy. This, the Tamil Diaspora was able to overturn. Even a cursory glance of the British newspapers bear testimony to this.  

Sri Lanka slams S&P bank warning

The Central Bank of Sri Lanka rejected rating agency Standard & Poor's assessment of the country’s banking system, which deemed it of “very high risk” earlier this week.

Standard & Poor gave the country a rating of 8, on the Banking Industry Country Risk Assessment (BICRA), with 10 being the highest risk, grouping Sri Lanka with countries such as Nigeria, Tunisia and Kazakhstan.

In a statement released earlier this week, the agency said,

Army further accused of violating women’s rights in North-East

The Sri Lankan Army has rejected a statement from the European Centre for Constitutional and Human Rights (ECCHR) which accuses it of breaking a UN convention on discrimination against women, released last week.

The statement from the ECCHR said that women in the North-East were subject to harassment and abuse from military and police personnel, who have a huge presence in the Tamil homeland.

The human rights group also criticised the country’s Prevention of Terrorism Act which they said,

Sri Lanka criticises ‘ill-conceived’ resolution at 20th UNHRC session

Sri Lanka has said it is committed to implement the recommendations of the LLRC, despite the ‘setback’ of the resolution on Sri Lanka which passed in March.

Speaking at the 20th UN Human Rights Council Session in Geneva, Sri Lanka’s representative Manisha Gunasekera claimed some of the recommendations were already being implemented.

However she expressed displeasure at the ‘ill-conceived’ US-sponsored resolution that passed during the last session.