• HRW calls for halt in deportations to Sri Lanka

    Human Rights Watch (HRW) have issued a press release demanding that the UK suspend immediately deportations of Tamils with links to the LTTE or those that may have been politically active against the Sri Lankan authorities in the UK.

    Extracts from the press release follow:

    “The Sri Lankan security forces have long used torture against people deemed to be linked to the LTTE,and growing evidence indicates that Tamils who have been politically active abroad in peaceful opposition to the government may be subject to torture and other ill-treatment.

  • Asylum seekers shifted offshore by Australia

    30 asylum seekers who arrived from Sri Lanka have been transferred from Christmas Island to Nauru, as Australia restarted its controversial offshore processing scheme.

  • UK plans to deport more Tamils ‘to face torture’

    The British Border and Immigration Agency is planning to deport hundreds of Tamils, reported The Independent.

    Three charter planes are reported to have been hired by the British government, with two scheduled to depart Wednesday and one on Thursday next week.

    There have been several instances of Tamil deportees being tortured on their arrival in Sri Lanka.

    The newspaper reported that although there are criminals and visa overstayers, several of those deported are failed asylum seekers.

    The Independent said it has seen a new report which details the cases of 24 individuals from Sri Lanka who returned voluntarily were tortured and interrogated.

    David Mepham, the UK head of Human Rights Watch, said the organisation had also documented several cases of tortured Tamils.

    "Given the very serious risk of torture facing many Tamils returned from this country, the UK should immediately impose a moratorium on these returns, pending a thorough review of UK policy in this area and the introduction of new risk assessment guidelines."

  • Blake reiterates call for accountability and power-sharing talks

    The US Assistant Sectretary of State for South and Central Asia, Robert O'Blake, urged the Sri Lankan government to show "accelerated progress" in ensuring political rights for Tamils in the North-East.

  • SL an 'uphill battle' for foreign investors - Blake

    Addressing the American Chamber of Commerce on Friday, the US Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia, Robert O'Blake described that foreign investors found Sri Lanka's marketplace an "uphill battle" although it was 3 years after the end of the armed conflict.

    Highlighting "opaque" rules, "unpredictable government regulations" and "corruption" as key causes of poor foreign investment, Blake urged Sri Lanka to open up the market, particularly through the liberalisation of rules for foreign direct investment.

    See here for Blake's address in full. Extracts published below:

    "USAID has established Public-Private Alliances with Sri Lankan companies to expand operations into the North and East to create new opportunities and better livelihoods.  These partnerships are helping to re-activate the local economies of the North and East and laying the groundwork for sustainable economic growth that provides opportunities for all Sri Lankans.  We believe that creating economic opportunity must go hand in hand with political reconciliation."

  • Tamil politicians highlight ongoing ‘systemic sinhalisation’

    Speaking after an investigatory visit to the former war zones of Mullaitivu, Vadamaradchchi east, Kokkilai and Naayaru areas, the leader of the Tamil National People’s Front (TNPF), Gajendrakumar Ponnambalam said that there is currently a systematic campaign, with a motive to “eliminate the very existence of the traditional Tamil nation as a whole”, reported JDS on Friday.

    Describing an evident mechanism that was decimating the traditional Tamil nation in the area, Ponnambalam said,

    "While preventing the war-affected Tamil people from carrying out fishing livelihood in their native places, the government and the security forces have established systematic Sinhala settlements in these areas and allowed them to carryout fishing at their will with full protection.”

  • A clear mission to destroy all of us because we were Tamil' - witness tells TAG

    Eye witness testimonies of the events of 2009 describe how Tamils were deliberately targeted by the Sri Lankan armed forces during the final stages of the conflict, and how such targetting continues despite the government's claims of victory.

  • Douglas must come to Tamil Nadu says public prosecutor

    Dismissing Douglas Devananda's recent attempt to fight his Indian arrest warrant through video conferencing from Colombo, the Tamil Nadu's public prosecutor M Prabhavathy, said:

  • UK parliament debates human rights violations faced by professionals in Sri Lanka
    The British Parliament debated the challenges of human rights violations faced by professionals on Wednesday, with a Conservative party report naming Sri Lanka as a region of the world where these violations occur.

    Leading the debate, Conservative MP Robert Buckland stated,
    "It is also known that in conflict zones, medical professionals are deliberately targeted by those involved.
  • Commonwealth urges Canada to drop CHOGM boycott threat

    The Secretary-General of the Commonwealth Kamalesh Sharma has requested Canada to drop the threat to boycott next year’s Commonwealth Head of Government Meeting in Sri Lanka, reported AFP on Thursday.

    "My message to all leaders is to participate at this (Sri Lanka) CHOGM," he told reporters in Colombo on Wednesday, after discussions with President Mahinda Rajapakse at the end of a five day visit to the island.

    "I understand a dialogue is going on between the two countries," he said, saying that he hoped the issue would be "resolved" so that Canada could attend the summit.

  • UPFA says SLMC coalition imminent in East

    As was always expected a UPFA-SLMC coalition appears likely in the Eastern Province.

  • Douglas attempts to fight Indian arrest warrant

    The infamous paramilitary leader Douglas Devananda has requested the IVth Additional Sessions court in Chennai to recall the arrest warrant issued against him, reports the Express News Service.

    The warrant, which is without bail, was issued in 1990, for his alleged part in a shootout and murder case in Chennai during 1986. He has also been accused of kidnapping a boy in 1988. In 1989, he was arrested and released later on bail.

    He was previously unable to fight the warrant, due to the risk of arrest if he were to land in India. Indeed, during a visit to India last year, a writ petition was filed against him seeking to arrest and prosecute him in relation to the previous and pending criminal case. However, the Indian External Affairs Ministry reportedly informed the Madras High Court that as a cabinet minister of Sri Lanka, Devananda enjoys diplomatic immunity.

    According to the Express News Service, Devananda maybe permitted to appear before the High Commissioner of India in Sri Lanka, and pursue the case via video conferencing.

    See more of Douglas' escapades: 

    The shame of being honoured by Douglas (11 Sep 2012)

  • Fear and loathing in the Eastern elections
    The results from the recently held Eastern provincial council elections have been brandished by Sri Lanka as a sign of wavering Tamil demand for self rule, and more perversely, that Tamils are now content with Sri Lanka’s rule. However, rather than signal a weakening of Tamil aspirations, the elections clearly revealed the true nature of the Sinhala state’s governance in the Tamil homeland; a mixture of violence, threats, intimidation and colonisation.
     
    The elections were a far cry from the free and fair expression of Tamil sentiments that they were trumped up to be. Instead, as became clear through the campaign, they were marked by ongoing incidents of violence against candidates and voters with hundreds of government thugs dispatched to the Tamil homeland for the purpose. The well documented and choking colonisation of the East also served its purpose – providing a reliable Sinhala vote base for Rajapakse’s UPFA.
     
    The brazenness of the intimidation during the campaign even prompted R. Sampanthan, the infamously timid leader of the TNA, to appeal to President Rajapaksa for “free and fair” elections to be allowed to take place. The appeal predictably failed and Sampanthan has recently released a statement slamming the “UPFA campaign of terror” and stating that it "violated all norms of democracy and good governance".
     
    The purpose of the Sinhala state’s violent electoral campaign was very clear. Tamil voters were warned of “unpleasant consequences” if they opposed the UPFA and told in no uncertain terms that they voted for the TNA at their own risk.
  • More transparency needed over OCHRC funding – Sri Lanka

    The Permanent Representative of Sri Lanka at the UN Human Rights Council a said that there is a need for increased transparency in the funding and staffing of the Office of the High Comissioner for Human Rights.

    Speaking on the opening day of the 21st session of the UNHRC in Geneva, Ravinatha Aryasinha said that most of the funding should come from the OCHRC’s own budget.

  • South Africa calls for “concrete effort” from Sri Lanka
    The South African government has called on Sri Lanka to address the issue of accountability following the end of armed hostilities in May 2009, stating “that there should be demonstrable and concrete effort and movement in that regard”.

    In a press release issued on Monday, South Africa stated that,

    “Since the end of the war in May 2009 and the release of the United Nations (UN) Secretary General's Report of the Panel of Experts in April 2011, as well as the Sri Lankan government's own Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC) Report in December 2011, there has been a heightened demand and urgency in the international community for the Sri Lankan government to implement the outcomes of these Reports and other decisions of the UN Human Rights Council, with specific emphasis on the need to address the accountability issues following the events of May 2009.”

Subscribe to Tamil Affairs