• What does the Vijay Sethupathi fiasco tell us about Tamil Nationalism?

    The recent controversy over actor Vijay Sethupathi’s announcement that he would be playing Muttiah Muralitharan in the Sri Lankan cricketer’s biopic escalated rapidly. No sooner did Sethupathi tweet that he was ‘honoured’ to be part of the film than a barrage of opposition began to pour in, with the actor seemingly forced into withdrawing from the project just days later. Though Muralitharan is a person who used to elicit the wrath of Eelam Tamils on account of his long-standing support for Sinhala-Budddhist extremists, the incident became a cause célèbre not just in these quarters, but also across Tamil Nadu. The episode throws the limelight upon the growing sway of Tamil nationalism in Tamil Nadu and the deep solidarity with the Eelam struggle, particularly amongst the youth of the state. Tamil nationalism, across the global Tamil community, has considerable strength. Whilst this bodes well for the ideology in the political sphere, the episode also gave rise to certain questions from the counter-opposition.

    It is asked, what is wrong with making an apolitical film that charts the growth of Muralitharan’s cricketing career? The problem lies centrally with Muralitharan himself. Over the years, he has gone on to give ringing endorsements to those that led the massacre of the very people to whom the film is intended to be peddled. It should have sounded crass to the makers. It would have been impossible the portray the man without his politics.

  • Sri Lankan president was warned 43 minutes before Easter Attacks

    The Presidential Commission of Inquiry (PCOI) revealed that former Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena received several a call from State Intelligence Service Director Nilantha Jayawardena warning him that an attack was imminent, just minutes before bombs ripped through churches and hotels on the island, killing hundreds.

  • Sri Lanka 'forced anal examinations' in homosexuality prosecutions - HRW and EQUAL GROUND

    Human Rights Watch (HRW) and EQUAL GROUND has called on Sri Lankan authorities to end forced anal and vaginal examinations in trials against homosexuality.

  • Sri Lanka ‘closely monitoring’ British ruling on LTTE ban

    The Sri Lankan government has responded to a landmark judgement from Britain’s Proscribed Organisations Appeal Commission, which found that the decision to keep the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) proscribed as a terrorist organisation was “flawed” and unlawful, by stating it will “continue to closely monitor the progress of the case”.

  • Murali's tainted legacy

    Sri Lanka’s famed cricketer Muttiah Muralitharan has always been a controversial figure. With tens of thousands around the globe airing their discontent over a Kollywood biopic to be made on the athlete, he has once more been pushed into the spotlight and sparked larger conversations over his legacy, Sri Lankan identity, and how sports and politics on the island are intrinsically entwined.

    As an athlete, Muralitharan broke several records. His unusual bowling action, which brought him fans as well as detractors, made him an international sensation. He toured the world, shrugging off the ‘chucker’ chants and abuse, to become the most successful bowler in test history. Despite his impressive record, he was never appointed captain of the national team - a fact simply accepted by many as simply part of the immovable everyday racism that all Tamils in Sri Lanka have to endure. Regardless, the fact that he was a Malayaga Tamil on a Sri Lankan team dominated by Sinhalese, won him fans. And though there was a small sense of pride that Muralitharan was the Sri Lankan cricket team’s lead wicket-taker, for many Eelam Tamils his rise to fame was coupled with a deep discomfort.

  • Britain’s decision to ban LTTE is ‘flawed’, rules commission

    A landmark judgement from Britain’s Proscribed Organisations Appeal Commission found that the Home Office decision to keep the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) proscribed as a terrorist organisation was “flawed” and unlawful, and paves the way for the organisation to possibly being legalised in the United Kingdom.

  • We have lost 77 parents from protests, yet Murali belittled our struggle' – Families of the disappeared urge Vijay Sethupathi to drop project

    The families of the disappeared in the North-East have urged Vijay Sethupathi to not play the biopic of Muttiah Muralitharan as he is “someone who lacks compassion and does not have empathy” whilst also stressing that he “belittled the protests by the mothers of the disappeared.”

  • Former Sri Lankan minister arrested in Dehiwela raid

    Former Sri Lankan minister Rishad Bathiudeen was arrested by the Criminal Investigations Department during a raid on Dehiwela on Monday morning, with 7 others for reportedly assisting the politician evade arrest. 

  • Bail rejected for men that attacked Tamil journalists

    The bail application of two men that attacked Tamil journalists from the Mullaitivu District last week was rejected by the Mullaitivu Magistrate Court Judge on Friday. 

    Kanapathipillai Kumanan and Shanmugan Thavaseelan, two Tamil Guardian correspondents who went to collect information regarding illegal logging and timber smuggling in the Murippu forest reserve in Mullaitivu, were beaten with metal rods and injured on 12th October 2020. 

  • Nishantha Silva received support from 'LTTE-linked NGOs', claims Sirisena
    <p><img alt="Image removed." src="/core/misc/icons/e32700/error.svg" title="This image has been removed. For security reasons, only images from the local domain are allowed." height="16" width="16" class="filter-image-invalid"></p> <p>Sri Lanka’s former president claimed that a senior police official who fled the island to seek asylum in Switzerland, had conducted his investigations to please certain “NGOs affiliated to the LTTE”.</p>
  • Murdered journalist Nimalarajan remembered across the North-East

    Tamil journalist, Mylvaganam Nimalarajan, was remembered today across the North-East on the 20th anniversary of his assassination. 

    Nimalarajan, a senior journalist who contributed to the BBC Tamil and Sinhala services, the Tamil daily Virakesari and Sinhala weekly Ravaya, was murdered on October 19, 2000. 

    The Committee to Protect Journalists stated shortly after his death: 

  • Muralitharan offers Vijay Sethupathi out from controversial biopic

    Tamil actor Vijay Sethupathi has seemingly announced that he will no longer play controversial Sri Lankan cricketer Muttiah Muralitharan in a biopic, by posting a letter from Muralitharan himself asking him to withdraw.

  • Sri Lanka conducts joint military exercise with UN peacekeepers in Lebanon despite human rights concerns

    Sri Lanka’s Force Protection Company (SLFP-Coy), a military unit serving under the United Nations’ Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) conducted jointed military exercises with the Lebanese army despite human right concerns relating to Sri Lanka’s military.

    Sri Lankan troops are currently deployed in UN missions based in Lebanon, South Sudan, Mali and the Western Sahara. This deployment follows a ban of all “non-essential” Sri Lankan troops deployed on peacekeeping missions, in response to the appointment of accused war criminal Shavendra Silva as head of the country’s military.

    Sri Lanka’s military has been accused of a litany human rights abuses both within Sri Lanka as well as abroad during peacekeeping operations.

  • Sri Lankan navy threaten and chase out Indian fisherman causing tension in Tamil Nadu

    Fisherman from Tamil Nadu, India were threatened and chased away by Sri Lankan navy patrol boats on Saturday, causing tense conflict in the coastal villages of Tamil Nadu.

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