Tamil Affairs

Tamil News

Latest news from and about the homeland

""
Tamil Progressive Alliance (TPA) leader Mano Ganesan has accused the National People's Power (NPP) government of hypocrisy over the arrest of Tamil rapper Sangeethsan Ganeskumar under the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA), pointing to NPP politicians who had themselves circulated songs glorifying the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) during election campaigns. Sangeethsan, known…

Tamil Civil Society demands release of Tamil Political Prisoners before Sri Lanka's Independence Day

Speaking before a media conference in Jaffna, the organiser of the Voice of the Voiceless, M. Komagan, has demanded to release of all Tamil political prisoners before Sri Lanka's independence day on 4 February 2023.

Despite the armed conflict ending over a decade ago, Tamil political prisoners have not been able to integrate into society and as a result, this has barred reconciliation. An immediate first step towards this goal would be the release of 32 Tamil political prisoners.

Laththi - Does not stick the landing

‘Laththi’ is a prime example of a decent concept ruined by terrible execution. There were many factors which were haphazardly completed, which needed more time, care and attention for the potentially adequate thriller ‘Laththi’ could have been.

Raj Rajaratnam visits Jaffna Hospital

Tamil hedge fund manager Raj Rajaratnam has visited Jaffna Teaching Hospital to discuss the hospital services.

Raj Rajaratnam has long supported the Jaffna Teach Hospital and in 2006 donated an echo machine to the cardiovascular surgery unit of the hospital. 

No compensation, no death certificates, Abolish the OMP' - Relatives of Disappeared protest in Mannar


Relatives of the Disappeared persons in Mannar are demanding the abolition of the Office of Missing Persons following years of inadequate inquiries which, the UN High Commissioner notes, "has not been able to trace a single disappeared person or clarify the fate of the disappeared in meaningful ways".

Speaking to our journalists, the head of the Mannar District Disappeared Relatives Association, Manuel Udayachandra, stressed the need to do away with such institutions.

Tamil journalist summoned by Mullaitivu police over harassment at land grab protest

Tamil Guardian journalist Kanapathipillai Kumanan was summoned to Mullaitivu police station this morning to give a statement on the harassment he faced by Sri Lankan navy and police officers at a land grab protest earlier this year. 

Over 150 Tamil refugees returned to Sri Lanka despite protest

The International Organisation for Migration (IOM) has facilitated the return of 152 Tamil refugees to Sri Lanka despite continued protests and calls to be resettled in another country.

Get out of our land!' - Keppapulavu protesters demand land to be released from military occupation

Tamil families in Keppapulavu held a protest infront of the Mullaitivu Defense Headquarters, demanding the release of their land from Sri Lankan military occupation yesterday. 

"We want our land, the army should leave our land,” the protesters chanted. 

Tamils in Keppapulavu began their protests calling for the return of their homes in March 2017. 

Remembering the waves - 18 years on from the tsunami

On December 26th, 2004, over 35,000 people perished during the catastrophic tsunami that hit the coasts of the North-East and South of the island of Sri Lanka.

There is no point of dealing with the government without international involvement' - TNA MP Charles Nirmalanthan

 

Speaking at a media conference in Mannar, Tamil National Alliance MP, Charles Nirmalanathan, maintained "there is no point in negotiating with the Sri Lankan government without the mediation of a country like India, America, or Britain".

Tsunami victims remembered in the North-East


This week, Tamils across the North East commemorated the deaths of over 35,000 people during the 2004 Boxing Day tsunami that devastated North-East and South of the island of Sri Lanka.

The United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) reported five days after the disaster that almost two-thirds of those killed across the island were in the Tamil homeland of the North-East.