• TYO Canada thanks foreign minister for rejecting Sri Lanka’s proscription

    The Tamil Youth Organisation – Canada has expressed its gratitude to the Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird, for rejecting Sri Lanka’s proscription of several diaspora groups, including TYO.

    A statement released by the organisation praised the Canadian government for confirming that the ban has no legal effect in Canada, and that the government showed “genuine concern for the wellbeing of its citizens”.

    “The proscription of entities and individuals that continuously showcase their determination for the liberation of the Tamil homeland has always been a tactic used by the Government of Sri Lanka. Exploiting the legal system in order to deny the Tamil people basic human rights is a method the Sri Lankan government used consistently throughout history,” the statement further said.

  • Sexual harassment by troops triggers surge in Murippu school dropouts
    01:27 BST

    Sexual harassment by military personnel has led to a surge in girls dropping out of school in Murippu, Kilinochchi, local sources said this weekend. Murippu is a small village on the Akkarayalkulam-Kilinochchi road.
  • Uthayan marks 8 years since deadly attack

    The Uthayan newspaper marked the 8th anniversary of a deadly attack on its premises, which left two people dead.

    Army-backed paramilitaries attacked the offices of the paper on the 2nd of May, 2006, with subsequent protests against the violence bringing Jaffna to a standstill.

    TNA MP Maavai Senathirajah, Northern Provincial Councillors P. Kajatheepan and E.Arnold, Valikamam North Regional Council chairman S.Sukirthan, Nalloor cooperative leader P.Kanakasabaabathi and Uthayan employees attended the event in the offices of the paper.

    See below for extracts of Tamil Guardian’s coverage of the event in 2006.

    A gang of five men armed with automatic rifles entered the Uthayan office and began firing. Marketing manager Bastian George Sagayathas, 36, also known as Suresh, was the first killed.

    The gunmen then moved to the circulation section and, while firing, ordered workers to lie down and not to raise their heads. S. Uthayakumar, 48, was injured during the shooting.

    Circulation supervisor S. Ranjith, 25, was killed when he raised his head to see what was happening to Uthayakumar. He was held down and shot dead.

  • UNP, JVP and TNA MP Sumanthiran unite to call for Right to Information Act
    Karu Jayasuriya signs petition, M.A. Sumanthiran stands behind.
  • We just came here to live' plead Tamil asylum seekers, arrested in India
    Ten asylum seekers, including five children, arrested by Indian security forces off Dhanuskodi coast today have pleaded not to be deported back to Sri Lanka, stating "we just want to live".

    The asylum seekers, who were picked up by police from two boats at 4.30am today, said that they were fleeing Mullaitivu, fearful of their lives amidst increasing arrests, interrogations and white van abductions.
  • DMK slams Indian decision to comply with Sri Lankan proscriptions

    The leader of the Dravida Munnetra Kazhakam, M Karunanidhi has condemned India’s decision to comply with Sri Lanka’s proscription of Tamil diaspora groups and the deportation of a Tamil man on the list, alongside his family, The Times of India reported.

  • Sri Lanka rejects claim it trains Pakistan-backed terrorists

    The Sri Lankan army has rejected accusations by a senior BJP leader in India that Sri Lanka trained Pakistani-backed terrorists, who are targeting India, reported PTI.

  • Uthayan editor named ‘Information Hero’ by RSF

    Reporters Without Borders (RSF) has included the editor of the Tamil daily Uthayan in its list of “100 Information Heroes”.

    The first such list, created by RSF to mark World Press Freedom Day, included a hundred journalists from around the world, for helping to promote the freedom “to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers”, RSF said.

    Mr MV Kaanamylnathan had 50 years of “tough experience in journalism”, the rights organisation said, adding that dozens of Uthayan journalists were killed in the armed conflict in Sri Lanka.

    “Five years after the official end of the conflict, Kaanamylnathan, who himself escaped an attack in 2001, and his newspaper are still making waves. Last year, a series of articles on land seizures by the Sri Lankan army was followed by a brutal attack on the paper’s offices by six masked men.” RSF said.

  • China’s loans to Sri Lanka reach nearly $4 billion

    China's loans to Sri Lanka over the past four years total over $3,836 million, reported The Sunday Leader.

    The loans are repayable over a 14 to 20 year period, at interest rates ranging from 1.53% to 6.5%, much higher than usual rates for infrastructure loans from the World Bank or the Asian Development Bank.

    Most of the loans had conditions, requiring Sri Lanka to buy everything, from raw materials to machinery, from China, and to give the contracts, and sometimes even sub-contract, to firms from China, the paper said. China’s current 42 projects employ more than 1,700 Chinese workers.

    China has financed key development programmes, including road construction, port development, power supply, water supply, irrigation and other infrastructure developments, and the equipment and machinery necessary for the projects.

    For example, the new 25.6 km (16 mile) airport highway was built with a loan of $248.2 million from Exim Bank of China, with China Metallurgical Group Corporation as the contractor, according to Reuters,

    One of the largest projects was the port in President Mahinda Rajapaksa's hometown of Hambantota, which was built with a loan of $1.3 bn from China's Exim Bank at an "exorbitant 6.3% interest", the Ceylon Today reported last November.

    The paper added:

  • TNA pledges to call for political solution that ensures self-rule
    The Tamil National Alliance (TNA) pledged to call for a political solution that ensures self-rule for Tamils and Muslims living in the North-East, and called for action regarding the socio-economic, educational and cultural needs of the Tamil people, in 32 declarations made at the party's May Day event on Monday.

    "While chauvinist forces are working within the state's agenda to erase a nation's identity, we will mobilise and strongly call for the international community to recognise a political solution that establishes self-rule for Tamils and Muslims living in their lands in the North and East of the island of Sri Lanka, using diplomatic and strategic approaches with regards to the support and opportunities that are arising within the international community to investigate war crimes and find a solution to the ethnic conflict which remains unresolved," the TNA pledged.
     
    Below is a translation of key resolutions published by the Uthayan:
    "Jobs opportunities should be given to those who are unemployed, as well as guaranteeing employment appropriate to university qualifications.

    Land belonging to Tamils and Muslims in the Northern and Eastern provinces, including temples, schools, public buildings, properties, should be freed from the military's possession.

  • We will work to ensure Tamils' right to self-determination vows TNPF
    The Tamil National People's Front (TNPF) pledged to work to "ensure an independent, respectful and peaceful life for the Tamil people, with the right to self-determination" and towards the party's political goal of "two nations one country", in series of 8 declaration made on May Day at the TNPF rally in Karaveddy.

    See here for TNPF's statement in Tamil, the declarations have been translated below:
    1. We will voice for the rights of Tamil workers, labourers and fisherpeople who are simultaneously facing racial discrimination and class oppression.

    2. We will establish and take forward political, economic, and socio-cultural policies based on the benefit/good of the Tamil nation.

    3. We will fight against the planned land grabs.

    4. We will fight together to ensure an independent international investigation into the genocide of the Tamil people takes place.

  • 4 Tamil students arrested in Eastern Uni amidst protests
    Four Tamil students have been arrested by police in Eastern University in Batticaloa, after defying a suspension and entering into the grounds of the University yesterday, reports Uthayan.
  • Youth attacked with a sword in Jaffna
    A youth was attacked last night by 12 men using a sword, the Uthayan reported.

    The 24 year old youth, identified as Uthayakumaaran Kumaaran, has been admitted to Jaffna hospital, with
    severe injuries.

    Kodikamam police force are reportedly investigating the attack.

  • 9th round of consultations with China 'highly successful' says Sri Lanka
    Sri Lanka described a visit by a delegation from China as "high successful", following the 9th round of bilateral consultations between the two countries.

    The event, co-chaired by Kshenuka Senewiratne, Secretary at Sri Lanka's Ministry of External Affairs and Liu Zhenmin, the Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs of the People’s Republic of China, took place on 29 April.
  • 54 asylum seekers detained by navy off Mullaitivu coast
    Photographs News.lk


    Fifty-four asylum seekers, including 13 children, attempting to flee on board a trawler, were detained by the Sri Lankan navy yesterday, off the coast of Mullaitivu.

    Thirteen children, 11 women and 30 men have been arrested, and handed over CID officers at Trincomalee harbour, reported the government's news portal.

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