• Another step in a long and arduous path towards justice

    The Tamil Students Initiative (TSI) recognises the resolution passed by the United Nations Human Rights Council as a small but important step in the ongoing struggle for justice for the Tamil people in Sri Lanka.

  • India's abstention is a betrayal to Tamils - Bishop of Mannar

    India's decision to abstain from voting on the resolution at the UN Human Rights Council last week was a betrayal said the Bishop of Mannar, Rayappu Joseph, reports Uthayan.

    Accusing the Indian government of wanting to avoid unearthing their own involvement and complicity in the Sri Lankan government's genocide of the Tamil people, the Bishop called on India to work with the UN to help seek justice for the Tamils.

  • Proscription of diaspora orgs 'shameful' says former UK MP, GTF policy advisor
    The Sri Lankan government's decision to proscribe all major Tamil diaspora organisations is "shameful" said Joan Ryan, the former MP for Enfield North and currently Global Tamil Forum's (GTF) policy advisor.

    "This is the latest attempt by a Government hell-bent on intimidating and silencing those who demand truth, justice and accountability both for the alleged war crimes committed during Sri Lanka’s armed conflict and for the on-going perpetration of human rights abuses," said Ms Ryan Tuesday.

  • 61y woman arrested in Karavetti
    A 61 year old woman was arrested by officers from the Terrorism Investigative Division (TID) in Karavetti, reports Global Tamil News.

    According to the news site, the woman, Ganapathipillai Yogarani, was arrested
    by officers shortly after the government proscribed of 15 Tamil diaspora organisations, as all seven of her children were living abroad.

  • Extensive military search in Mulliyavalai, 2 arrested, 1 escaped
    An extensive search operation was conducted by heavily armed Sri Lankan military personnel in the Murippu region of Mulliyavalai on Monday, reports Uthayan.

    Two Tamil men, accused of being former LTTE cadres were arrested by TID operatives, however, one man later escaped.

    Over 200 Army tanks and armoured vehicles were deployed in the area. The search operation which began at 7.30am continued until 4pm.

  • Vipoosika ordered to remain in children's home
    The 13 year old daughter, Vipoosika, of the disappearances campaigner, Balendran Jeyakumari, was ordered to remain in a children's home today, by a Kilinochchi court, reported Uthayan.

    She was detained by the Sri Lankan military along side her mother on March 13th. Ms. Jeyakumari is currently detained in Boosa prison, accused by the military of harbouring an armed criminal with alleged links to the LTTE, named Gopi.

  • Britain will ensure full implementation of resolution - British Foreign Secretary
    In a written statement on the UNHRC resolution recently passed on Sri Lanka, the British Foreign Secretary, William Hague, outlined that the UK would continue to work with the UNHRC and international partners to ensure proper implementation of the resolution.

    Excerpts from Hague’s statement to British Parliament yesterday reproduced below.
  • The proscription of the Tamil Diaspora: War by other means
    Writing in JDS, on the recent blanket proscription of several Tamil diaspora organisations by the Sri Lankan government, the National Council of Canadian Tamils' (NCCT) advocacy and research director, Krisna Saravanamuttu, described the government’s attempts to isolate the Tamil people from their families in the diaspora as another step in the genocide of the Tamil nation.

  • The Beginning

    The UN Human Rights Council's adoption of a resolution last week calling on the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights to undertake a comprehensive investigation into Sri Lanka is a key milestone in the protracted Tamil struggle. The Council which in May 2009 praised Sri Lanka for its 'victory', now calls for it to be subject to an international inquiry. Whilst the intensification of Sri Lanka's militarised repression in the North-East, even during the Council's 25th session, underscores the inability of the resolution to lead to any immediate change on the ground, the significance of this moment - hard fought and long overdue – is nonetheless profound. Almost five years after the mass slaughter of tens of thousands of Tamils, in what international experts have described as war crimes, crimes against humanity, and even genocide, the international community has come to acknowledge what Tamils had consistently argued was the case: Sri Lanka lacks the will to deliver justice to the Tamil people, international intervention is essential.

  • Tamil Congress ministers unhappy with India abstention at HRC25

    India’s Union Shipping Minister GK Vasan said that he was “agonised and shocked” by India’s abstention at the UN Human Rights Council, on the resolution on Sri Lanka, reported The Hindu.

    “India’s abstention has caused agony and shock for a majority of Congress leaders and workers in the State. There could be no two opinions on the serious human rights violations that took place in Sri Lanka [in the last leg of the military conflict during 2009],” the Minister said.

  • Tamil prisoner dies in Jaffna

    A Tamil prisoner has died in Jaffna Hospital reported the Uthayan.

    Vairavanathan Nathan, 33, from Aanaikkottai was an inmate at Jaffna Prison and was taking to Jaffna Hospital after falling ill.

  • Sri Lanka bans Tamil diaspora organisations – Daily Mirror

    The Sri Lankan government has banned 15 Tamil diaspora organisations as “LTTE fronts”, reported the Daily Mirror on Monday.

    The government banned the organisations as “foreign terrorists” under UN Security Council Resolution 1373 which was brought about by the USA on September 28, 2001 after the attack on the World Trade Centre.

    A ban would make it a criminal offence for Sri Lankan citizens to maintain contacts with these organisations or its members, a move which is thought is likely to affect several members of Tamil political parties in Sri Lanka, the Daily Mirror said.

  • Sri Lanka: Living in fear of the 'white vans'

    Op-ed written for South Africa's Mail & Guardian, by Yasmin Sooka, who in 2010 was appointed by UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon to a panel of experts to advise him on the conflict in Sri Lanka. 

    The arrest on terrorism charges this week of two well-known human rights activists in Sri Lanka has sent ripples of fear through those who work for justice on the island, even though the two men were subsequently released. It was the timing, happening just days before the United Nations Human Rights Council votes on whether or not to hold Sri Lanka accountable for grave violations of international law during the final phase of the conflict in 2008-2009. An investigative mechanism under the office of the High Commissioner is envisaged in the current draft of the Resolution, which was tabled for voting on March 26.

  • Sexual assaults on tourists increase in Sri Lanka – The Sunday Times

    The Sunday Times has reported of an increase in sexual assaults on tourists in Sri Lanka.

    Last week, the chairman of the Weligama local government body was arrested for sexually harassing a 22-year old Swedish tourist at a resort in the town.

    Earlier this month two police officers were arrested for sexually assaulting a German tourist, who was dragged into a rickshaw by the constables. In another case an Australian University student was allegedly raped by a tour guide in Ambalangoda.

  • US and Sri Lanka co-host defence workshop
    A US delegation is scheduled to attend a workshop in Colombo, co-hosted by the Office of the Chief of Defence Staff on behalf of the Ministry of Defence and Urban Development and the United States Pacific Command on behalf of the US Department of Defence.

    The Multinational Planning Augmentation Team (MPAT) Tempest Express – 24 Staff Planning Workshop will take place from April 1, 2014 to April 9, 2014 at the Galadari Hotel, army spokesman Brigadier Ruwan Wanigasooriya said.

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