Tamil Affairs

Tamil News

Latest news from and about the homeland

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The Vavuniya High Court has issued an interim order suspending the gazette through which the Northern Province governor removed the Vavuniya mayor, S. Kandeepan, from office, freezing the decision that had triggered protests across the town. The order was made on Friday, when the court took up a writ application filed by Kandeepan challenging the governor's move. Speaking to reporters…

Lack of will for meaningful transitional justice say civil society to UN chief

In a letter handed to the UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon, civil society organisations have criticised the Sri Lankan government lack of political will on meaningful transitional justice and its failure to establish a conducive environment for meaningful consultations on any process. 

The letter, handed to Mr Ban during his visit to Jaffna last week, was signed by Centre for Human Rights and Development, Centre for the Protection and Promotion of Human Rights, Home for Human Rights, Tamil Civil Society Forum and The Social Architects. 
 

 

UN chief tells Vali North IDPs will push for resettlement


The UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon told displaced Tamils from Vali North that he would push for their resettlement into their homes, as he visited an IDP camp in the region on Friday. 

Mr Ban had visited Jaffna as part of a three day visit to the island, where he also met with the chief minister of the Northern Provincial Council, the Tamil National Alliance, the Sri Lankan prime minister and president. 

Credible war crimes inquiry with international actors essential - Wigneswaran tells UN chief

 

The chief minister of the Northern Provincial Council (NPC), C V Wigneswaran told the UN Secretary General, Ban Ki Moon who visited Jaffna on Friday that a credible war crimes was essential and that the Tamil people would not be satisfied regarding its credibility unless international judges and prosecutors were included. 

‘We made big mistakes’ in Sri Lanka admits UN chief

United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki Moon admitted the global body made “big mistakes” and could have saved “many more human lives” during the final phase of the island's bloody armed conflict in 2009, where tens of thousands of Tamil civilians were massacred at the hands of Sri Lankan security forces.

UN chief realises Tamils' demand for international justice - TNA

The UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon told the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) in a meeting on Friday in Jaffna that he fully realises the Tamil people's expectation of justice and that it must include international involvement, the TNA's spokesperson, M A Sumanthiran told reporters after the meeting. 

 

Tamils voice their plight as UN chief visits Jaffna


Tamils in the North-East gathered outside the public library in Jaffna on Friday as the UN Secretary General, Ban Ki Moon visited to raise awareness of their plight. 

Reiterating their central demands of international justice for mass atrocities, end to the military occupation of their lands, release of Tamil political prisoners, repeal of the Prevention of Terrorism Act, and to find out the whereabouts of their missing loved ones, Tamils gathered carrying banners and placards, and called on the UN to make the Sri Lankan government to act.

The demonstration took place despite a number of armed Sri Lankan military personnel being deployed to the area along with a full-scale police presence. 

‘Access at a high price’ – Syria and Sri Lanka

The ongoing crisis in Syria shows the dilemmas faced by humanitarian agencies and their “persistent deficiencies in response” said the Guardian in an editorial on Tuesday, urging the international community to learn lessons from Sri Lanka.

“In November 2012, an internal report into the shortcomings of the United Nations in the final stages of the war in Sri Lanka urged: never again,” said the Guardian. “The secretary general embraced it, speaking frankly about the UN’s failure to meet its responsibilities and the need to learn lessons.”

‘Encouragement and pressure’ needed to sustain transformation in Sri Lanka

UN member states and Secretary-General Ban Ki Moon must ensure the Sri Lankan government feels the “right combination of encouragement and pressure needed to deepen and sustain the potentially historic transformation,” said Alan Keenan in a piece for Inside Story.

“UN agencies are actively supporting the Sirisena government’s reform agenda, but government efforts have been under-resourced and weakened by mixed messages and confused lines of authority,” said Mr Keenan, senior Sri Lankan analyst at the ICG.

“Clear direction from the president and from prime minister Ranil Wickremesinghe has been lacking.”

Ban Ki Moon must ‘send a strong message to Sri Lanka’ - FFT

The United Nations Secretary-General has been urged to “send a strong message to the Government of Sri Lanka” that it cannot fail to meet commitments to over accountability for human rights atrocities.

“The Human Rights Council Resolution on Sri Lanka in 2015 is widely held up as one of the Council’s greatest achievements but to be a true success, Ban needs to use the authority of his office during this visit to help move this political agreement from words to action,” said Ann Hannah, International Advocate at Freedom from Torture.

Tamils protest against Rajapaksa's visit to Malaysia

 

Tamils in Malaysia held a protest on Thursday against the former Sri Lankan president, Mahinda Rajapaksa's visit to the country for the Asian Political Parties summit during September 1 - 4.  

Burning an effigy of the former president, protesters decried him as a war criminal who had massacred Tamils in Sri Lanka.