• Over 90% of agricultural appointees to Northern Province are not Tamil says NPC minister

    Approximately 90% of the Agricultural research assistants appointed to the predominantly Tamil Northern Province Council are Sinhalese, said the Northern Provincial Council agriculture minister, P Ayngaranesan.
    Photograph: Tamil Guardian


    The NPC minister said that though over 5000 Tamils applied for the positions only 29 of the 361 appointments made were from the Tamil community.
  • ‘LTTE will never be allowed to regroup’ says Sri Lankan minister

    Sri Lankan Minister Champika Ranawaka said the LTTE “would never be allowed to regroup or be revived ever again” and assured that security was not under threat, reports Daily Mirror.

    Mr Ranawaka, who is minister of technology and research in Sri Lanka, told a news conference that current President Maithripala Sirisena “was elected on the promise of protecting national security and sovereignty and integrity and the UNFGG manifesto is based on this policy and our plans for the next five years”.

    “National security is in the forefront of everything,” he added.

    The minister continued to accuse former president Mahinda Rajapaksa of supporting federalism and devolving power to the North-East. “It was we who changed his mind and convinced him to support a unitary state,” said Mr Ranawaka.

  • US citizens warned of electoral violence in Sri Lanka

     The US issued a security warning on potential election related violence to its citizens living or travelling in Sri Lanka.

    Advising citizens to stay away from political rallies and demonstrations, the statement said,

  • Vehicle owned by Sri Lanka’s former first lady used in murder

    A vehicle owned by Sri Lanka’s first lady Shiranthi Rajapaksa has been linked to the murder of a Sri Lankan national rugby player Wasim Thajudeen.

  • UPFA accuses UNP of furthering interests of multinationals

    The United People’s Freedom Alliance accused the United National Party government of furthering interests of multinationals by privatising water rights to allow companies to provide services to Sri Lanka.

  • Sri Lankan army organises school volleyball tournament in North-East

     

    Sri Lankan soldiers organised a volleyball tournament for schoolchildren in Mullaitivu last month, reports an army website.

    Troops from the 62 division, dressed in full military uniform, alongside a parade of traditional Sinhala dancers, opened the tournament which was held in Weli Oya on 30 July.

    Brigadier KGD Perera, commanding officer of the 62 Division, was the chief guest at the event, which was also sponsored by Nestle, with a sales executive handing over prizes to the winning teams.

    See more of Sri Lanka’s militarisation of schools in the North-East in our previous posts:

    Continuing militarisation of Tamil school children across North-East (17 Feb 2015)

  • NPC Councillor urges international judicial process to address genocide

    Northern Provincial Councillor MK Shivajilingam in a letter today urged the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra'ad al-Hussain, to consider a purely international mechanism to address accountability in Sri Lanka.

    The councillor highlighted ongoing abuses and said the Tamil nation was being "systematically destroyed".

    He also requested the high commissioner to take measures to "judicially address the genocide against the Tamil people", and to press Sri Lanka to sign and ratify the Rome statute, in order to prevent further atrocities and protect the Tamil population.

    "The Tamil people have been subjected to Genocide and massacres, their churches and temples have been destroyed, their lands have been taken away, their rights have been denied, and they have been oppressed and occupied. The injustice against the Tamils continues even at this very moment," Mr Shivajilingam said.

  • Military holds Buddhist ceremonies in North-East

    The Sri Lankan military held Buddhist ceremonies across the North-East last month, to call for blessings to be invoked on soldiers.

    A ceremony was held in Kilinochchi and another in Mullaitivu, as Sri Lankan troops marked “Poya Day” on 31 July.

    Troops and commanding officers dressed in white and gave offerings to Buddhist monks, whilst praying at the viharas.

    A military website reported the events “invoked blessings on serving Army personnel and transferred merits on fallen War Heroes”.

  • UNP 'will do utmost to preserve Buddhism' - Ranil

    Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe vowed that the UNP-led UNFGG would do "its utmost to preserve Theravada Buddhism", while speaking to monks at a conference in Battaramulla.

    The prime minister pledged to set up a "dhamma council" to resolve issues affecting Buddhism.

  • Replacing killers with... killers

    The Sri Lankan president has ordered the Presidential Security Division (PSD) to step down due to reports it may have been involved with murders, and has instead chosen to replace it with the Special Task Force (STF).

    Economy Next reports a government official as saying "the PSD will be completely replaced by the STF", due to links to high-profile murders, including that of a rugby player in 2012.

    "The process is taking place as we speak,” said the official. “It will be completed in the next 48 hours".

    The unit is to however be replaced by Sri Lanka’s Special Task Force, an infamous elite unit that has also been linked to massacres of Tamils and egregious human rights abuses.

    The STF is accused of conducting numerous massacres including the killing of five students in Trincomalee in 2006 and the massacre of 17 aid workers of the French NGO Action Contre La Faim (ACF) in the same year. Reports of killings stretch even further back with STF officers also accused of killing 83 Tamils in Kokkadichcholai on January 27 1987.

    No member of the STF has ever been prosecuted for any of the killings.

  • Vote for people who put the Tamil nation first says Mannar Bishop
    The Bishop of Mannar, a prominent civil society activist in the North-East, urged Tamil voters to elect representatives who put the Tamil nation first, stating that the Tamil people's struggle for freedom was not yet over.

    “As the struggle for the freedom of the Tamil people has not ended yet, we can be an influential force in Sri Lanka politics by electing representatives who prioritise the welfare of the Tamil nation,” said Bishop Rayappu Joseph.

    “Tamils’ struggle for freedom started as a non-violence movement, then transformed into an armed struggle, and the armed struggle ended in 2009 due to different circumstances. Although the war ended, the struggle has not; therefore the only hope that is left for the Tamils is our democratic strength."

  • We held talks with TNA on response to OISL report says Ranil
    The Tamil National Alliance (TNA) held talks with the United National Party (UNP) leader, Ranil Wickremasinghe, on how to respond to the report by the OHCHR Investigation into Sri Lanka (OISL), Mr Wickremasinghe told the Uthayan newspaper.

    "We have held talks with the Tamil National Alliance on finding a political solution to the ongoing problems in the North-East and how to respond to the report to be presented to the UN Human Rights Council this September,"  Mr Wickremasinghe was quoted by the Uthayan's Saturday print edition as saying.

    "The understanding needed to create good governance was present between us and the TNA."

    "I am hopeful that the TNA will be support the continuous of good governance."

  • Sri Lankan army opens Buddhist temple in North-East

    The Sri Lankan army declared open a Buddhist vihara that it constructed in the Tamil North-East last week, proclaimed an official military website.

    Sri Lankan troops from the 661 brigade constructed the Buddhist vihara in Pooneryn (Poonakari), where Buddhist monks and soldiers held a religious ceremony at the opening on the 29 July.

    “Financial contributions” from the 661 brigade and troops from other divisions were also involved in the construction, according to the Sri Lankan army.

  • ‘Sirisena as defence minister would stop LTTE resurgence’ – Ranil
    Sri Lanka’s Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe assured that the LTTE would not be allowed to resurge under a future UNP government , as current president Maithripala Sirisena would become the government’s defence minister and pledged to make Sri Lanka a bastion of Buddhism.

    Speaking at an election rally at Kurunegala on Thursday, ColomboPage reported Mr Wickremesinghe as telling the crowd not to worry about the resurgence of the LTTE, as an “excellent defence minister” would be assigned to the post.

    He went on to state that current Sri Lankan President Sirisena would be given the role in a future UNP government in order to “safeguard” the country. Mr Sirisena previously held the post of defence minister during the final few weeks of the armed conflict in 2009, when the vast majority of Tamil civilian deaths occurred – mostly from Sri Lankan government shelling.

    Mr Wickremesinghe also stated that if his party were to succeed in the upcoming general elections, national security would remain its main focus.

    He also added that he would ensure “Sri Lanka would be made the centre of Theravada Buddhism to propagate and preserve Theravada Buddhism in the region and the globe as a whole”.
  • Plans for Palk Strait bridge aimed at 'annexing' Sri Lanka to India - Sinhala collective

    The Federation of National Organisations (FNO), a collective of Sinhala political organisations, businesses and civil society groups based in the south, has urged Sri Lanka’s Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe and former president Mahinda Rajapaksa to explain their positions on India’s plans to build a road link between Tamil Nadu and the Tamil-dominated North-East of the island.

    Speaking to media at the Abayaramaya Buddhist temple, co-chairman of the group Dr Gunadasa Amarasekara called on the candidates to reveal their positions before the elections on August 17, The Island reported.

    Dr Amarasekara said the proposed bridge was the “biggest challenge” Sri Lanka would face as it would “heavily damage the territorial integrity” of the island, as some powers were trying to “annex” Sri Lanka to India through the bridge.

    The co-chairman warned that if the bridge was built, Sri Lanka would not be able to be considered a separate country or an island, as it would become part of India.

Subscribe to Tamil Affairs